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22

Article: Interview

Greg Osby: Saxophone “Griot”

Read "Greg Osby: Saxophone “Griot”" reviewed by Victor L. Schermer


The griot is a West African historian, storyteller, praise singer, poet and/or musician, a repository of oral tradition who is often seen as a societal leader. Saxophonist Greg Osby recently was excited to meet some griots on his travels. While he is originally from St. Louis, he himself is a griot in many senses of the ...

16

Article: My Blue Note Obsession

Charlie Rouse: Bossa Nova Bacchanal – 1962

Read "Charlie Rouse: Bossa Nova Bacchanal – 1962" reviewed by Marc Davis


What a happy record! And what a delightful change from the usual 1960s Blue Note formula. You know the drill. In the 1960s, Blue Note was the go-to label for two kinds of jazz: hard bop and soul-jazz. But Blue Note was never the reigning bossa nova label. When the Brazilian phenomenon swept the ...

1

News: Recording

Thelonious Monk "Complete Riverside Recordings" Coming from Concord on May 19

Thelonious Monk "Complete Riverside Recordings" Coming from Concord on May 19

CONCORD MUSIC GROUP TO REISSUE GRAMMY AWARD-WINNING THELONIOUS MONK COLLECTION: THE COMPLETE RIVERSIDE RECORDINGS Reconfigured box set features monk’s entire output for Riverside label, extensive liner notes by compilation producer, the late Orrin Keepnews LOS ANGELES, CA: Concord Music Group is pleased to announce the reissue of its GRAMMY Award-winning Thelonious Monk anthology, The Complete Riverside ...

1

News: Recording

Watkins and Rouse's Jazz Modes

Watkins and Rouse's Jazz Modes

Yesterday I posted about the Jazz Lab, a little-known, short-lived East Coast jazz quintet co-led by Gigi Gryce and Donald Byrd in 1957. Today, continuing with my series on jazz supergroups of the mid-1950s, I'm turning to Les Jazz Modes, a little known quintet co-led by French hornist Julius Watkins and tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse that ...

13

Article: Top Ten List

Top Ten Jazz Songs of My Childhood

Read "Top Ten Jazz Songs of My Childhood" reviewed by Richard J Salvucci


For some reason, listening to the Great American Songbook was a big part of my Italian immigrant-boomer generation's experience. We learned the values, the rules, the moves and the customs of the folks we wanted to be like. And added a couple of distinctive touches of our own. We liked big bands too. But it wasn't ...

1,014

Article: Building a Jazz Library

Thelonious Monk

Read "Thelonious Monk" reviewed by Chris M. Slawecki


Thelonious Sphere Monk is one of the true great jazz originals. Monk's family moved from North Carolina to New York City while he was still an infant. He began piano lessons around age 12, playing Harlem rent parties then graduating to Harlem clubs such as Minton's Playhouse. Monk often played with Dizzy Gillespie and ...

32

Article: My Blue Note Obsession

Louis Smith: Smithville – Blue Note 1594

Read "Louis Smith: Smithville – Blue Note 1594" reviewed by Marc Davis


Sometimes, thumbing through the old Blue Note catalogue, you wish for something brand new. Something not the usual Jimmy Smith--Lee Morgan--Lou Donaldson--Horace Silver. And then you find it and wonder, “Who is this guy? And what ever happened to him?" Louis Smith is that guy. The trumpeter recorded exactly two Blue Note ...

25

Article: My Blue Note Obsession

Fats Navarro and Tadd Dameron – The Complete Blue Note and Capitol Recordings

Read "Fats Navarro and Tadd Dameron – The Complete Blue Note and Capitol Recordings" reviewed by Marc Davis


There aren't many jazz records I'd consider essential. This is one. Granted, Fats Navarro isn't in the pantheon of jazz trumpeters. For starters, he didn't live long enough. He died in 1950 at age 26, so his discography is short. For another, Navarro's brief career overlapped that of trumpet legend Dizzy Gillespie, and came ...

30

Article: My Blue Note Obsession

My Pet Peeve: The Mislabeled CD – Clifford Brown Memorial Album – Blue Note 1526

Read "My Pet Peeve: The Mislabeled CD – Clifford Brown Memorial Album – Blue Note 1526" reviewed by Marc Davis


And now it's time for a personal pet peeve, something far worse than a squeaky sax or a fumble-fingered pianist: The mislabeled CD. Today's example: The Clifford Brown Memorial Album. Let's start by noting that this is a terrific record--recorded in 1953, released in 1956, shortly after Brown's tragic death in a ...

9

Article: Book Review

Paul Combs: Dameronia: The Life and Times of Tadd Dameron

Read "Paul Combs: Dameronia: The Life and Times of Tadd Dameron" reviewed by Victor L. Schermer


Dameronia: The Life and Times of Tadd Dameron Paul Combs 264 Pages ISBN: # 978-0-472-03563-2 The University of Michigan Press2013 “There is enough ugliness in this world; I'm interested in beauty."--Tadd Dameron “Nature's first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early ...


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