Home » Jazz Articles » Keefe Jackson

Jazz Articles about Keefe Jackson

4
Album Review

Keefe Jackson / Jakob Heinemann / Adam Shead: Stinger

Read "Stinger" reviewed by Mark Corroto


Stinger marks the debut release from the trio of saxophonist Keefe Jackson, bassist Jakob Heinemann and drummer Adam Shead. Yet, from the cohesion and interplay captured on this recording, it is clear these three musicians have collaborated extensively. The group exemplifies the Chicago ethos of collective creation--both in compositional approach and improvisational execution. Jackson and Heinemann each contribute three compositions, while Shead handles the sound mixing, graphic design, and overall production, underscoring the project's collaborative spirit. Jackson has ...

5
Album Review

Keefe Jackson / Raoul van der Weide / Frank Rosaly: Live at de Tanker

Read "Live at de Tanker" reviewed by Mark Corroto


It is a fair conjecture to assume the axis of this recording is Frank Rosaly. The Puerto Rican drummer who caught jazz and improvised music listeners' attention during his years in Chicago now makes The Netherlands his home. Live At de Tanker connects Rosaly with his past, Chicagoan saxophonist Keefe Jackson and his present, Dutch bassist Raoul van der Weide. This live date from Amsterdam in 2022 is free, easy, and unconstrained. The six tracks flow one into ...

2
Album Review

Erb/Lonberg-Holm/Jackson/Reid: Duope

Read "Duope" reviewed by Giuseppe Segala


Fred Lonberg-Holm e Christoph Erb avevano già registrato in duo nel 2011 per l'interessante etichetta svizzera Veto Records/Exchange, gestita dallo stesso Erb, il CD Screw and Straw: ora la formula che abbinava violoncello e clarinetto basso (in quel caso anche sax tenore) viene semplicemente raddoppiata, con l'inserimento di Keefe Jackson ai clarinetti basso e contrabbasso, e di Tomeka Reid al violoncello. Ne nasce un singolare quartetto, un caleidoscopio di possibilità timbriche ed espressive, nonostante l'organico simmetricamente diviso tra due ance ...

2
Lyrics

I 10 CD nel CD-Player di... Keefe Jackson

Read "I 10 CD nel CD-Player di... Keefe Jackson" reviewed by Vincenzo Roggero


01. Luigi Nono--A Carlo Scarpa/A Pierre/Guai ai gelidi mostri (Edition RZ-1990). Nono è un grande esempio di come un artista ed il suo lavoro possano essere “politici" senza contraddizione tra l'essere artista e l'essere politico. Molti cambiamenti del ventesimo secolo sono profondamente ed in maniera esauriente riflessi nel suo lavoro. È sempre stimolante ascoltare la sua musica ed immaginare come questi suoni siano connessi alla sua percezione/visione del mondo. 02. Clusone 3-Soft Lights and Sweet ...

4
Album Review

Keefe Jackson’s Likely So: A Round Goal

Read "A Round Goal" reviewed by Libero Farnè


Anomalo, importante, problematico questo CD che testimonia una tappa ambiziosa nella ricerca dell'emergente Keefe Jackson. Registrato nel febbraio 2013 al Jazzwerkstatt Festival di Berna, vede la collaborazione fra tre improvvisatori chicagoani (Dave Rempis e Mars Williams oltre allo stesso Jackson), tre svizzeri (Thomas K. J. Mejer, Peter A. Schmid e Marc Stucki) e il polacco Waclaw Zimpel. La formazione è decisamente intrigante e poco usuale: un settetto di sole ance. Il pensiero corre automaticamente ai numerosi quartetti ...

4
Album Review

Keefe Jackson’s Likely So: A Round Goal

Read "A Round Goal" reviewed by Hrayr Attarian


Chicago based multi-instrumentalist and composer Keefe Jackson's intriguingly innovative live album A Round Goal is a modern choral symphony of sorts. Recorded during the Jazzwerkstatt festival in Berne Switzerland on February 20, 2013 Jackson utilizes, in lieu of human voices, woodwinds of various ranges creating brilliantly dramatic music. Western classical influences are apparent, throughout. On “There Is No Language Without Deceit" Polish clarinetist Waclaw Zimpel's agile, stimulating sonic dance emerges from a tightly woven backdrop of alternating refrains ...

417
Multiple Reviews

Keefe Jackson and Aram Shelton: Seeing You See and Two Cities

Read "Keefe Jackson and Aram Shelton: Seeing You See and Two Cities" reviewed by Clifford Allen


The city of Chicago continues to find itself in a jazz renaissance well into the waxing years of the 21st century--a status that many of America's cities can't easily lay claim to. With the pedigrees of individual improvisers and composers like reedman Ken Vandermark and flutist Nicole Mitchell well established in the 1990s, a slightly younger generation of players has assembled things in their wake, on both the North and South Chicago axis.

The most individual voices to step out ...


Engage

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.

Install All About Jazz

iOS Instructions:

To install this app, follow these steps:

All About Jazz would like to send you notifications

Notifications include timely alerts to content of interest, such as articles, reviews, new features, and more. These can be configured in Settings.