Jazzweek with Airplay Data Powered by Jazzweek.Com • October 24, 2011 Volume 7, Number 46 • $7.95
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Download the Vocal of Frank Foster
1 The TENORSAX of FRANK BENJAMIN FOSTER Solographer: Jan Evensmo Last update: Oct. 7, 2020 2 Born: Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 23, 1928 Died: Chesapeake, Virginia, July 26, 2011 Introduction: Oslo Jazz Circle always loved the Count Basie orchestra, no matter what time, and of course we became familiar with Frank Foster’s fine tenorsax playing! Early history: Learned to play saxes and clarinet while in high school. Went to Wilberforce University and left for Detroit in 1949. Played with Wardell Gray until he joined the army in 1951. After his discharge he got a job in Count Basie's orchestra July 1953 after recommendation by Ernie Wilkins. Stayed until 1964. 3 FRANK FOSTER SOLOGRAPHY COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA LA. Aug. 13, 1953 Paul Campbell, Wendell Cully, Reunald Jones, Joe Newman (tp), Johnny Mandel (btp), Henry Coker, Benny Powell (tb), Marshal Royal (cl, as), Ernie Wilkins (as, ts), Frank Wess (fl, ts), Frank Foster (ts), Charlie Fowlkes (bar), Count Basie (p), Freddie Green (g), Eddie Jones (b), Gus Johnson (dm). Three titles were recorded for Clef, two issued, one has FF: 1257-5 Blues Go Away Solo with orch 24 bars. (SM) Frank Foster’s first recorded solo appears when he just has joined the Count Basie organization, of which he should be such an important member for years to come. It is relaxed and highly competent. Hollywood, Aug. 15, 1953 Same personnel. NBC-TV "Hoagy Carmichael Show", three titles, no solo info. Hoagy Carmichael (vo). Pasadena, Sept. 16, 1953 Same personnel. Concert at the Civic Auditorium. Billy Eckstine (vo). -
'Park' to House 1,200 Condos
Ratner gets 45 days to up ante MTA talks exclusively with Bruce despite his low offer By Jess Wisloski ner’s company, with the hopes of upping its the July 27 meeting that neither bid came commitment of her company to the proj- The Brooklyn Papers bid by the board’s Sept. 29 meeting. close enough to the state authority’s $214 ect, and reiterated Extell’s plans to develop Ratner’s bid offers $50 million up front. million appraised value for the rail yards to 1,940 units of new housing, with 573 As it once was, so it shall be again, It also includes $29 million in renovations justify the board’s interest. mixed-income units. the Metropolitan Transportation of the rail yards (to help pay for the reloca- Compared to Ratner’s bid — which was She said the costs of infrastructure and Authority board decided this week, tion of them required by Ratner’s plan), two years in the making and included any required platform would be paid for when it cast aside the high bidder — $20 million in environmental remediation dozens of support letters from elected offi- by Extell, and again raised an offer pre- / Jori Klein who offered $150 million to develop of the land (which needs to be done in or- cials, a myriad of minority contracting or- sented by Extell on Monday to work with the Long Island Rail Road storage der to develop the site for housing), $182 ganizations and numerous labor unions, Forest City Ratner to add an arena that / Jori Klein yards at Atlantic Avenue — and million to build a platform (to build the the Extell bid — hastily prepared to meet would be developed on private property. -
Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece When
MAY 2014 U.K. £3.50 DOWNBEAT.COM MAY 2014 VOLUME 81 / NUMBER 5 President Kevin Maher Publisher Frank Alkyer Editor Bobby Reed Associate Editor Davis Inman Contributing Editors Ed Enright Kathleen Costanza Art Director LoriAnne Nelson Contributing Designer Ara Tirado Bookkeeper Margaret Stevens Circulation Manager Sue Mahal Circulation Assistant Evelyn Oakes ADVERTISING SALES Record Companies & Schools Jennifer Ruban-Gentile 630-941-2030 [email protected] Musical Instruments & East Coast Schools Ritche Deraney 201-445-6260 [email protected] Advertising Sales Associate Pete Fenech 630-941-2030 [email protected] OFFICES 102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, IL 60126–2970 630-941-2030 / Fax: 630-941-3210 http://downbeat.com [email protected] CUSTOMER SERVICE 877-904-5299 / [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS Senior Contributors: Michael Bourne, Aaron Cohen, John McDonough Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred Bouchard, Frank- John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich; Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard; Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Bob Doerschuk; New Orleans: Erika Goldring, David Kunian, Jennifer Odell; New York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky, Norm Harris, D.D. Jackson, Jimmy Katz, Jim Macnie, Ken Micallef, Dan Ouellette, Ted Panken, Richard Seidel, Tom Staudter, -
Victory and Sorrow: the Music & Life of Booker Little
ii VICTORY AND SORROW: THE MUSIC & LIFE OF BOOKER LITTLE by DYLAN LAGAMMA A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate School-Newark Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Graduate Program in Jazz History & Research written under the direction of Henry Martin and approved by _________________________ _________________________ Newark, New Jersey October 2017 i ©2017 Dylan LaGamma ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION VICTORY AND SORROW: THE MUSICAL LIFE OF BOOKER LITTLE BY DYLAN LAGAMMA Dissertation Director: Henry Martin Booker Little, a masterful trumpeter and composer, passed away in 1961 at the age of twenty-three. Little's untimely death, and still yet extensive recording career,1 presents yet another example of early passing among innovative and influential trumpeters. Like Clifford Brown before him, Theodore “Fats” Navarro before him, Little's death left a gap the in jazz world as both a sophisticated technician and an inspiring composer. However, unlike his predecessors Little is hardly – if ever – mentioned in jazz texts and classrooms. His influence is all but non-existent except to those who have researched his work. More than likely he is the victim of too early a death: Brown passed away at twenty-five and Navarro, twenty-six. Bob Cranshaw, who is present on Little's first recording,2 remarks, “Nobody got a chance to really experience [him]...very few remember him because nobody got a chance to really hear him or see him.”3 Given this, and his later work with more avant-garde and dissonant harmonic/melodic structure as a writing partner with Eric Dolphy, it is no wonder that his remembered career has followed more the path of James P. -
Vut 20140303 – Big Bands
JAMU 20140305 – BIG BANDS (2) 10. Chicago Serenade (Eddie Harris) 3:55 Lalo Schifrin Orchestra: Ernie Royal, Bernie Glow, Jimmy Maxwell, Marky Markowitz, Snooky Young, Thad Jones-tp; Billy Byers, Jimmy Cleveland, Urbie Green-tb; Tony Studd-btb; Ray Alonge, Jim Buffington, Earl Chapin, Bill Correa-h; Don Butterfield-tu; Jimmy Smith-org; Kenny Burrell-g; George Duvivier-b; Grady Tate-dr; Phil Kraus-perc; Lalo Schifrin-arr,cond. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, April 27/29, 1964. Verve V6-8587. 11. A Genuine Tong Funeral – The Opening (Carla Bley) 2:14 Gary Burton Quartet with Orchestra: Gary Burton-vib; Larry Coryell-g; Steve Swallow-b; Bobby Moses-dr; Mike Mantler-tp; Jimmy Knepper-tb,btb; Howard Johnson-tu,bs; Leandro “Gato” Barbieri-ts; Steve Lacy-ss; Carla Bley-p,org,cond. New York, July 1967. RCA Victor LSP 3901. 12. Escalator Over the Hill (Carla Bley) 4:57 Michael Mantler-tp; Sam Burtis, Jimmy Knepper, Roswell Rudd-tb; Jack Jeffers-btb; Bob Carlisle, Sharon Freeman-h; John Buckingham-tu; Jimmy Lyons-as; Gato Barbieri-ts; Chris Woods-bs; Perry Robinson-cl; Nancy Newton-vla; Charlie Haden-b; Paul Motian-dr; Tod Papageorge, Bob Stewart, Rosalind Hupp, Karen Mantler, Jack Jeffers, Howard Johnson, Timothy Marquand, Jane Blackstone, Sheila Jordan, Phyllis Schneider, Pat Stewart-voc; Bill Leonard, Don Preston, Viva, Carla Bley- narrators. November 1968-June 1971, various places. JCOA 839310-2. 13. Adventures in Time – 3x3x2x2x2=72 (Johnny Richards) 4:29 Stan Kenton Orchestra: Dalton Smith, Bob Behrendt, Marvin Stamm, Keith Lamotte, Gary Slavo- tp; Bob Fitzpatrick, Bud Parker, Tom Ringo-tb; Jim Amlotte-btb; Ray Starlihg, Dwight Carver, Lou Gasca, Joe Burnett-mell; Dave Wheeler-tu,btb; Gabe Baltazar-as, Don Menza, Ray Florian-ts; Allan Beutler-bs; Joel Kaye-bass,bs; Stan Kenton-p; Bucky Calabrese-b; Dee Barton-dr; Steve Dweck- tympani,perc. -
Neglected Jazz Figures of the 1950S and Early 1960S New World NW 275
Introspection: Neglected Jazz Figures of the 1950s and early 1960s New World NW 275 In the contemporary world of platinum albums and music stations that have adopted limited programming (such as choosing from the Top Forty), even the most acclaimed jazz geniuses—the Armstrongs, Ellingtons, and Parkers—are neglected in terms of the amount of their music that gets heard. Acknowledgment by critics and historians works against neglect, of course, but is no guarantee that a musician will be heard either, just as a few records issued under someone’s name are not truly synonymous with attention. In this album we are concerned with musicians who have found it difficult—occasionally impossible—to record and publicly perform their own music. These six men, who by no means exhaust the legion of the neglected, are linked by the individuality and high quality of their conceptions, as well as by the tenaciousness of their struggle to maintain those conceptions in a world that at best has remained indifferent. Such perseverance in a hostile environment suggests the familiar melodramatic narrative of the suffering artist, and indeed these men have endured a disproportionate share of misfortunes and horrors. That four of the six are now dead indicates the severity of the struggle; the enduring strength of their music, however, is proof that none of these artists was ultimately defeated. Selecting the fifties and sixties as the focus for our investigation is hardly mandatory, for we might look back to earlier years and consider such players as Joe Smith (1902-1937), the supremely lyrical trumpeter who contributed so much to the music of Bessie Smith and Fletcher Henderson; or Dick Wilson (1911-1941), the promising tenor saxophonist featured with Andy Kirk’s Clouds of Joy; or Frankie Newton (1906-1954), whose unique muted-trumpet sound was overlooked during the swing era and whose leftist politics contributed to further neglect. -
Vanguard Jazz Orchestra Plans May Tribute to Thad Jones and Mel Lewis
JazzWeek with airplay data powered by jazzweek.com • March 30, 2005 Volume 1, Number 19 • $7.95 In This Issue: Mack Avenue to Sponsor Detroit Jazz Fest. 4 WGBH Ups Rivero to Radio/ TV GM . 5 Camilo Embarks . 6 441 Launches Test of Time . 9 Reviews and Picks. 15 Jazz Radio . 18 Smooth Jazz Radio. 23 RADIO Q&A: Radio WEMU’S Panels. 27 LINDA YOHN News. 4 page 12 Charts: #1 Jazz Album – Joey DeFrancesco #1 Smooth Album – Dave Koz #1 Smooth Single – Dave Koz JazzWeek This Week EDITOR Ed Trefzger ’m thrilled that we get to feature another of our favorite people CONTRIBUTING EDITORS in jazz radio this week, WEMU music director Linda Yohn. Keith Zimmerman Kent Zimmerman ILinda is a nominee for the Jazz Journalists Association Excel- Tad Hendrickson lence in Jazz Broadcasting/Willis Conover-Marian McPartland CONTRIBUTING WRITER Award. She has been there encouraging and supporting our ef- Tom Mallison forts even before there was a JazzWeek, as one of the first par- PHOTOGRAPHY ticipants on the Jazz Programmers Mailing List. Linda has been Barry Solof a key figure at each of JazzWeek’s Summits and an active part of PUBLISHER the industry tracks at IAJE for years. As host of the 9 a.m. to noon Tony Gasparre shift on WEMU, Linda shows everyone how jazz radio should be ADVERTISING: Contact Tony Gasparre done, and thanks to the ’net, those of us outside of Ypsilanti/Ann (585) 235-4685 x3 or Arbor/Detroit get to eavesdrop. email: [email protected] While we’re talking about the Motor City, hats off to Mack SUBSCRIPTIONS: Prices in US Dollars: Avenue Records for picking up the sponsorship of the Detroit In- Charter Rate: $199.00 per year, ternational Jazz Festival. -
Gerry Mulligan Discography
GERRY MULLIGAN DISCOGRAPHY GERRY MULLIGAN RECORDINGS, CONCERTS AND WHEREABOUTS by Gérard Dugelay, France and Kenneth Hallqvist, Sweden January 2011 Gerry Mulligan DISCOGRAPHY - Recordings, Concerts and Whereabouts by Gérard Dugelay & Kenneth Hallqvist - page No. 1 PREFACE BY GERARD DUGELAY I fell in love when I was younger I was a young jazz fan, when I discovered the music of Gerry Mulligan through a birthday gift from my father. This album was “Gerry Mulligan & Astor Piazzolla”. But it was through “Song for Strayhorn” (Carnegie Hall concert CTI album) I fell in love with the music of Gerry Mulligan. My impressions were: “How great this man is to be able to compose so nicely!, to improvise so marvellously! and to give us such feelings!” Step by step my interest for the music increased I bought regularly his albums and I became crazy from the Concert Jazz Band LPs. Then I appreciated the pianoless Quartets with Bob Brookmeyer (The Pleyel Concerts, which are easily available in France) and with Chet Baker. Just married with Danielle, I spent some days of our honey moon at Antwerp (Belgium) and I had the chance to see the Gerry Mulligan Orchestra in concert. After the concert my wife said: “During some songs I had lost you, you were with the music of Gerry Mulligan!!!” During these 30 years of travel in the music of Jeru, I bought many bootleg albums. One was very important, because it gave me a new direction in my passion: the discographical part. This was the album “Gerry Mulligan – Vol. 2, Live in Stockholm, May 1957”. -
Booker Ervin the Song Book Mp3, Flac, Wma
Booker Ervin The Song Book mp3, flac, wma DOWNLOAD LINKS (Clickable) Genre: Jazz Album: The Song Book Country: US Released: 1993 Style: Post Bop MP3 version RAR size: 1466 mb FLAC version RAR size: 1778 mb WMA version RAR size: 1408 mb Rating: 4.5 Votes: 541 Other Formats: TTA DTS DXD AU MP4 AC3 AIFF Tracklist Hide Credits The Lamp Is Low 1 7:13 Written-By – Shefter*, Ravel*, Parish*, DeRose* Come Sunday 2 5:37 Written-By – Duke Ellington All The Things You Are 3 5:19 Written-By – Kern*, Hammerstein* Just Friends 4 5:53 Written-By – Klenner*, Lewis* Yesterdays 5 7:42 Written-By – Kern*, Harbach* Our Love Is Here To Stay 6 6:25 Written-By – Gershwin*, Gershwin* Companies, etc. Copyright (c) – Fantasy, Inc. Recorded At – Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey Remastered At – Fantasy Studios Credits Bass – Richard Davis Drums – Alan Dawson Engineer [Recording Engineer] – Rudy Van Gelder Liner Notes [May 1964] – Dan Morgenstern Piano – Tommy Flanagan Producer, Design [Cover], Photography By – Don Schlitten Remastered By [Digital Remastering, 1993] – Phil De Lancie Tenor Saxophone – Booker Ervin Notes Recorded in Englewood Cliffs, NJ; February 27, 1964 Digital remastering, 1993 (Fantasy Studios, Berkeley) © 1993, Fantasy, Inc. Printed in U.S.A. Barcode and Other Identifiers Barcode: 02521867792 Other (SPARS Code): AAD Other versions Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year PR 7318, PRST Booker The Song Book Prestige, PR 7318, PRST US 1964 7318 Ervin (LP, Album) Prestige 7318 The Song Book Booker VICJ-41556 (CD, Album, -
Reggie Workman Working Man
APRIL 2018—ISSUE 192 YOUR FREE GUIDE TO THE NYC JAZZ SCENE NYCJAZZRECORD.COM REGGIE WORKMAN WORKING MAN JIM JONNY RICHARD EDDIE McNEELY KING WYANDS JEFFERSON Managing Editor: Laurence Donohue-Greene Editorial Director & Production Manager: Andrey Henkin To Contact: The New York City Jazz Record 66 Mt. Airy Road East APRIL 2018—ISSUE 192 Croton-on-Hudson, NY 10520 United States Phone/Fax: 212-568-9628 New York@Night 4 Laurence Donohue-Greene: Interview : JIM Mcneely 6 by ken dryden [email protected] Andrey Henkin: [email protected] Artist Feature : JONNY KING 7 by donald elfman General Inquiries: [email protected] ON The COver : REGGIE WORKMAN 8 by john pietaro Advertising: [email protected] Encore : RICHARD WYANDS by marilyn lester Calendar: 10 [email protected] VOXNews: Lest WE Forget : EDDIE JEFFERSON 10 by ori dagan [email protected] LAbel Spotlight : MINUS ZERO by george grella US Subscription rates: 12 issues, $40 11 Canada Subscription rates: 12 issues, $45 International Subscription rates: 12 issues, $50 For subscription assistance, send check, cash or vOXNEWS 11 by suzanne lorge money order to the address above or email [email protected] Obituaries by andrey henkin Staff Writers 12 David R. Adler, Clifford Allen, Duck Baker, Stuart Broomer, FESTIvAL REPORT Robert Bush, Thomas Conrad, 13 Ken Dryden, Donald Elfman, Phil Freeman, Kurt Gottschalk, Tom Greenland, Anders Griffen, CD REviews 14 Tyran Grillo, Alex Henderson, Robert Iannapollo, Matthew Kassel, Marilyn Lester, Suzanne -
SA-Bio-4.2017.Pdf
Scott Amendola: Drummer/Composer/Bandleader/Educator “Amendola’s music is consistently engaging, both emotionally and intellectually, the product of a fertile and inventive musical imagination.” Los Angeles Times “If Scott Amendola didn't exist, the San Francisco music scene would have to invent him.” Derk Richardson, San Francisco Bay Guardian “Amendola has complete mastery of every piece of his drumset and the ability to create a plethora of sounds using sticks, brushes, mallets, and even his hands.”Steven Raphael, Modern Drummer “...drummer/signal-treater Scott Amendola is both a tyrant of heavy rhythm and an electric-haired antenna for outworldly messages (not a standard combination).” Greg Burk, LA Weekly For Scott Amendola, the drum kit isn’t so much an instrument as a musical portal. As an ambitious composer, savvy bandleader, electronics explorer, first-call accompanist and capaciously creative foil for some of the world’s most inventive musicians, Amendola applies his wide-ranging rhythmic virtuosity to a vast array of settings. His closest musical associates include guitarists Nels Cline, Jeff Parker, Charlie Hunter, Hammond B-3 organist Wil Blades, violinists Jenny Scheinman and Regina Carter, saxophonists Larry Ochs and Phillip Greenlief, and clarinetist Ben Goldberg, players who have each forged a singular path within and beyond the realm of jazz. While rooted in the San Francisco Bay Area scene, Amendola has woven a dense and far-reaching web of bandstand relationships that tie him to influential artists in jazz, blues, rock and new music. A potent creative catalyst, the Berkeley-based drummer is the nexus for a disparate community of musicians stretching from Los Angeles and Seattle to Chicago and New York. -
The Recordings
Appendix: The Recordings These are the URLs of the original locations where I found the recordings used in this book. Those without a URL came from a cassette tape, LP or CD in my personal collection, or from now-defunct YouTube or Grooveshark web pages. I had many of the other recordings in my collection already, but searched for online sources to allow the reader to hear what I heard when writing the book. Naturally, these posted “videos” will disappear over time, although most of them then re- appear six months or a year later with a new URL. If you can’t find an alternate location, send me an e-mail and let me know. In the meantime, I have provided low-level mp3 files of the tracks that are not available or that I have modified in pitch or speed in private listening vaults where they can be heard. This way, the entire book can be verified by listening to the same re- cordings and works that I heard. For locations of these private sound vaults, please e-mail me and I will send you the links. They are not to be shared or downloaded, and the selections therein are only identified by their numbers from the complete list given below. Chapter I: 0001. Maple Leaf Rag (Joplin)/Scott Joplin, piano roll (1916) listen at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9E5iehuiYdQ 0002. Charleston Rag (a.k.a. Echoes of Africa)(Blake)/Eubie Blake, piano (1969) listen at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7oQfRGUOnU 0003. Stars and Stripes Forever (John Philip Sousa, arr.