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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD— Extensions of Remarks E1492 HON. DENNIS J. KUCINICH HON. DALE E. KILDEE HON. ROBERT HURT HON. DENNIS J
E1492 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — Extensions of Remarks September 12, 2012 sharing the stage with Coleman Hawkins, 2010 resignation. In 2009, he retired as Dep- RECOGNIZING VIRGINIA Slam Stewart, and Erroll Garner. One of the uty Court Administrator of Ohio’s Eighth Dis- INDUSTRIES FOR THE BLIND earliest of Mr. Heath’s own big bands (1947– trict Court of Appeals in order to fulfill a cam- 48) in Philadelphia included John Coltrane, paign promise for his election to the Cuyahoga HON. ROBERT HURT Benny Golson, Specs Wright, Cal Massey, County Council. OF VIRGINIA Johnny Coles, Ray Bryant, and Nelson Boyd. Councilman Gallagher was elected to the IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES He also played with and composed for Dizzy Wednesday, September 12, 2012 Gillespie, Miles Davis, Kenny Dorham, Milt Cuyahoga County Council in 2010 and is now Jackson, and Art Blakey. During his career, the Chair of the Public Safety Committee. Mr. HURT. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to rec- Mr. Heath has performed on more than 100 Some of his achievements outside of public ognize Virginia Industries for the Blind, an record albums, including 7 with The Heath office include his membership in the Ability One organization that began in Char- Brothers and 12 as a leader. He has also writ- Strongsville Rotary Club and Strongsville lottesville that empowers blind and visually im- ten more than 125 compositions, many of Chamber of Commerce. He has served as a paired Virginians in achieving their maximum which have become jazz standards, including Trustee on the Hospital Board of Southwest level of employment and career development. -
Mike Mangini
/.%/&4(2%% 02):%3&2/- -".#0'(0%4$)3*4"%-&34&55*/(4*()54 7). 9!-!(!$25-3 VALUED ATOVER -ARCH 4HE7ORLDS$RUM-AGAZINE 0/5)& '0$64)*)"5 "$)*&7&5)&$-"44*$ 48*/(406/% "35#-",&: 5)&.&/503 50%%46$)&3."/ 45:-&"/%"/"-:4*4 $2%!-4(%!4%23 Ê / Ê" Ê," Ê/"Ê"6 , /Ê-1 -- (3&(03:)65$)*/40/ 8)&3&+";;41"45"/%'6563&.&&5 #6*-%:06308/ .6-5*1&%"-4&561 -ODERN$RUMMERCOM 3&7*&8&% 5"."4*-7&345"33&.0108&34530,&130-6%8*("5-"4130)"3%8"3&3*.4)05-0$."55/0-"/$:.#"-4 Volume 36, Number 3 • Cover photo by Paul La Raia CONTENTS Paul La Raia Courtesy of Mapex 40 SETTING SIGHTS: CHRIS ADLER Lamb of God’s tireless sticksman embraces his natural lefty tendencies. by Ken Micallef Timothy Saccenti 54 MIKE MANGINI By creating layers of complex rhythms that complement Dream Theater’s epic arrangements, “the new guy” is ushering in a bold and exciting era for the band, its fans, and progressive rock music itself. by Mike Haid 44 GREGORY HUTCHINSON Hutch might just be the jazz drummer’s jazz drummer— historically astute and futuristically minded, with the kind 12 UPDATE of technique, soul, and sophistication that today’s most important artists treasure. • Manraze’s PAUL COOK by Ken Micallef • Jazz Vet JOEL TAYLOR • NRBQ’s CONRAD CHOUCROUN • Rebel Rocker HANK WILLIAMS III Chuck Parker 32 SHOP TALK Create a Stable Multi-Pedal Setup 36 PORTRAITS NYC Pocket Master TONY MASON 98 WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT...? Faust’s WERNER “ZAPPI” DIERMAIER One of Three Incredible 70 INFLUENCES: ART BLAKEY Prizes From Yamaha Drums Enter to Win We all know those iconic black-and-white images: Blakey at the Valued $ kit, sweat beads on his forehead, a flash in the eyes, and that at Over 5,700 pg 85 mouth agape—sometimes with the tongue flat out—in pure elation. -
Vindicating Karma: Jazz and the Black Arts Movement
University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 1-1-2007 Vindicating karma: jazz and the Black Arts movement/ W. S. Tkweme University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1 Recommended Citation Tkweme, W. S., "Vindicating karma: jazz and the Black Arts movement/" (2007). Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014. 924. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1/924 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. University of Massachusetts Amherst Library Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2014 https://archive.org/details/vindicatingkarmaOOtkwe This is an authorized facsimile, made from the microfilm master copy of the original dissertation or master thesis published by UMI. The bibliographic information for this thesis is contained in UMTs Dissertation Abstracts database, the only central source for accessing almost every doctoral dissertation accepted in North America since 1861. Dissertation UMI Services From:Pro£vuest COMPANY 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106-1346 USA 800.521.0600 734.761.4700 web www.il.proquest.com Printed in 2007 by digital xerographic process on acid-free paper V INDICATING KARMA: JAZZ AND THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT A Dissertation Presented by W.S. TKWEME Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 2007 W.E.B. -
Wall to Wall Miles Davis 2001 (Disc 1 and 2) [Relaxin’ Withthemilesdavis Quintet,1956] 03
Disc 2 Song & Surprise Mileselektronika Jane Ira Bloom - soprano saxophone, live Hagans/Belden Animation Project featuring electronics DJ Kingsize Bobby Previte - drums DJ Kingsize - turntables Cameron Brown - bass Tim Hagans - trumpet Vincent Bourgeyx - piano Bob Belden - tenor saxophone 04. How Deep Is the Ocean/Solar 20:49 Scott Kinsey - piano [Miles Davis, Volume 1 (1952)/Walkin] David Dyson - electric bass Zach Danzinger - drums Someday My Prince Will Come 01. Intro - Mother Dearest Mother 0:51 The Campbell Brothers [unreleased] Phil Campbell - guitar 02. Paraphernilia 14:56 Chuck Campbell - pedal steel guitar [Miles In The Sky, 1968] Darick Campbell - lap steel guitar Malcolm Kirby, Jr. - bass Live/Evil Carlton Campbell - drums Wall to Wall Sex Mob with Bill Frisell and DJ Logic 05. Someday My Prince Will Come 3:12 Bill Frisell - guitar 06. Summertime 3:59 DJ Logic - turntables 07. All Blues 6:45 Steven Bernstein - trumpet [Someday My Prince Will Come, 1961; Miles Davis Briggan Krauss - alto saxophone Porgy And Bess, 1958; Kind Of Blue, 1959] Symphony Space Tony Scherr - bass Kenny Wolleson - drums The Miles Experience New York, NY 03. Selim 18:12 Nora York - vocals [Live/Evil, 1970] Claire Daly - baritone saxophone March 24, 2001 Dave Hofstra - bass Ronnie Williams - drums Disc 1 and 2 08. So What/I Don’t Live Today 7:09 [Kind Of Blue, 1959; Are You Experienced, 1967] Thanks to GUITARS for sharing this at Dime; and to lilioriverio and abbcccus for keeping the show alive since 2007. Lineage: cdr in trade > eac > flac level 6 MP3 Version Various Wall To Wall Miles Davis 2001 (Disc 1 and 2) Miles Davis Wall To Wall Various Disc 1 The Hot Spot Bitches Brew Olu Dara Ensemble Bobby Previte’s Voodoo Down Orchestra Olu Dara - cornet, guitar, vox Bobby Previte - drums Kwatei Jones Quartey - guitar Ray Anderson - trombone Alonzo Gardner - bass Peter Epstein - soprano saxophone Larry Johnson - drums Adam Kolker - bass clarinet Coster Massamba - percussion Pete McCann - guitar 04. -
The 2016 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert Honoring the 2016 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters
04-04 NEA Jazz Master Tribute_WPAS 3/25/16 11:58 AM Page 1 The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts DAVID M. RUBENSTEIN , Chairman DEBORAH F. RUTTER , President CONCERT HALL Monday Evening, April 4, 2016, at 8:00 The Kennedy Center and the National Endowment for the Arts present The 2016 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert Honoring the 2016 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters GARY BURTON WENDY OXENHORN PHAROAH SANDERS ARCHIE SHEPP Jason Moran is the Kennedy Center’s Artistic Director for Jazz. WPFW 89.3 FM is a media partner of Kennedy Center Jazz. Patrons are requested to turn off cell phones and other electronic devices during performances. The taking of photographs and the use of recording equipment are not allowed in this auditorium. 04-04 NEA Jazz Master Tribute_WPAS 3/25/16 11:58 AM Page 2 2016 NEA JAZZ MASTERS TRIBUTE CONCERT Hosted by JASON MORAN, pianist and Kennedy Center artistic director for jazz With remarks from JANE CHU, chairman of the NEA DEBORAH F. RUTTER, president of the Kennedy Center THE 2016 NEA JAZZ MASTERS Performances by NEA JAZZ MASTERS: CHICK COREA, piano JIMMY HEATH, saxophone RANDY WESTON, piano SPECIAL GUESTS AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE, trumpeter LAKECIA BENJAMIN, saxophonist BILLY HARPER, saxophonist STEFON HARRIS, vibraphonist JUSTIN KAUFLIN, pianist RUDRESH MAHANTHAPPA, saxophonist PEDRITO MARTINEZ, percussionist JASON MORAN, pianist DAVID MURRAY, saxophonist LINDA OH, bassist KARRIEM RIGGINS, drummer and DJ ROSWELL RUDD, trombonist CATHERINE RUSSELL, vocalist 04-04 NEA Jazz Master Tribute_WPAS -
African Traditional Medicine Day Rganization Regional Office for Africa O Rganization of the World H Ealth a Serial Publication
august 2010 · special issue 14 · a serial publication of the World health organization regional office for africa · issn 2077 6136 tHe AfricAn monitor Healt 31 August 31 Day Medicine Traditional African special H issue r EG i O n AL O ffic E f O r Africa The African Health Monitor is a magazine of the World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa (WHO- AFRO) published four times a year (January, April, July and October). It is a multilingual publication with peer- reviewed articles in English, French and Portuguese. REGIONAL OFFICE FOR Africa The aim of the African Health Monitor is to promote and facilitate evidence-based policy and decisions to strengthening programmes for health promotion, protection, and restoration in the African Region. In order to achieve its aim, the Monitor serves as a medium for publication of articles that monitor the health n A situation and trends, and track progress toward the health-related Millennium Development Goals and other internationally agreed-upon goals. It will publish and disseminate relevant and scientifically rigorous public HealtH health information. It will also disseminate information on public health interventions carried out in the Member States with the cooperation of AFRO technical programmes. Afric e Prospective authors should follow the Monitor stylesheet, which can be obtained by sending an email H t monitor message to the Editorial Office at [email protected] or by using this intranet link http://intranet.afro.who.int/ guidelines/ahm.pdf african traditional Paul Lusamba-Dikassa (Editor-in-Chief) for the African Health Monitor Special Issue on Traditional Medicine medicine day, 31 august EditorialUche Amazigo Board ExpErt adviSorY panel special issue Rufaro Chatora Dr Kofi Busia, WAHO, Burkina Faso Alimata J. -
TOP 40ALBUMS Patrice Rushen out with Her First Elektra "Ain't Misbehavin'." So, for Those Who En- Album After Several Prestige Lps
ON JAZZ TOP 40ALBUMS Patrice Rushen out with her first Elektra "Ain't Misbehavin'." So, for those who en- album after several Prestige LPs. The joyed the show, this is the LP for you. album, called "Patrice," has ten titles, most Sam Noto and Kenny Drew set to record of which were authored or co-authored by for Xanadu in Los Angeles shortly, Dolo Weeks Weeks the leader, who also co -produced the Coker, Frank Butler and Charles McPher- On On 10/14 Chart 10/14 Chart album. son will also be involved in the projects. 1 CHILDREN 21 LEGACY Vanguard arrives with three new LPs. Idris Muhammad has finished his OF SANCHEZ first CHUCK MANGIONE (A&M SP 6700) 1 4 RAMSEY LEWIS (Columbia JC 35483) 26 2 "Jazz Violin" is by the late Joe Venuti and album under his new deal with Prestige. was recorded in Milan in October 1974. Fall release is scheduled. 2 IMAGES 22 BEST OF CHUCK CRUSADERS "BobMover" presentsthealto saxophonistin Richard Tee, ace New York keyboard MANGIONE (ABC/Blue Thumb BA 6030) 2 15 (Mercury SRM 2-8601) 21 9 a small group setting with Kenny Barron specialist, has signed with Tappan Zee and and the strong young trumpet player, is working on his album which, oddly 3 COSMIC MESSENGER 23 THE BLUE MAN JEAN-LUC PONTY STEVE KHAN (Columbia JC 35539) 24 6 Claudio Roditi. Mike Mandel's "Sky Music" enough, will be the first under his own (Atlantic SD 19189) 3 8 features the leader on keyboards with name. 24 HEAVY METAL BE-BOP 4 SOUNDS AND STUFF some heavy New York pros, incuding Dave Grant Green still recuperating in .. -
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”. -
The Jazz Record
oCtober 2019—ISSUe 210 YO Ur Free GUide TO tHe NYC JaZZ sCene nyCJaZZreCord.Com BLAKEYART INDESTRUCTIBLE LEGACY david andrew akira DR. billy torn lamb sakata taylor on tHe Cover ART BLAKEY A INDESTRUCTIBLE LEGACY L A N N by russ musto A H I G I A N The final set of this year’s Charlie Parker Jazz Festival and rhythmic vitality of bebop, took on a gospel-tinged and former band pianist Walter Davis, Jr. With the was by Carl Allen’s Art Blakey Centennial Project, playing melodicism buoyed by polyrhythmic drumming, giving replacement of Hardman by Russian trumpeter Valery songs from the Jazz Messengers songbook. Allen recalls, the music a more accessible sound that was dubbed Ponomarev and the addition of alto saxophonist Bobby “It was an honor to present the project at the festival. For hardbop, a name that would be used to describe the Watson to the band, Blakey once again had a stable me it was very fitting because Charlie Parker changed the Jazz Messengers style throughout its long existence. unit, replenishing his spirit, as can be heard on the direction of jazz as we know it and Art Blakey changed By 1955, following a slew of trio recordings as a album Gypsy Folk Tales. The drummer was soon touring my conceptual approach to playing music and leading a sideman with the day’s most inventive players, Blakey regularly again, feeling his oats, as reflected in the titles band. They were both trailblazers…Art represented in had taken over leadership of the band with Dorham, of his next records, In My Prime and Album of the Year. -
Lee Morgan and the Philadelphia Jazz Scene of the 1950S
A Musical Education: Lee Morgan and the Philadelphia Jazz Scene of the 1950s Byjeffery S. McMillan The guys were just looking at him. They couldn't believe what was coming out of that horn! You know, ideas like . where would you get them? Michael LaVoe (1999) When Michael LaVoe observed Lee Morgan, a fellow freshman at Philadelphia's Mastbaum Vocational Technical High School, playing trumpet with members of the school's dance band in the first days of school in September 1953, he could not believe his ears. Morgan, who had just turned fifteen years old the previous July, had remarkable facility on his instrument and displayed a sophisticated understanding of music for someone so young. Other members of the ensemble, some of whom al- ready had three years of musical training and performing experience in the school's vocational music program, experienced similar feelings of dis- belief when they heard the newcomer's precocious ability. Lee Morgan had successfully auditioned into Mastbaum's music program, the strongest of its kind in Philadelphia from the 1930s through the 1960s, and demon- strated a rare ability that begged the title "prodigy." Almost exactly three years later, in November of 1956, Lee Morgan, now a member of die Dizzy Gillespie orchestra, elicited a similar response at the professional level after the band's New York opening at Birdland. Word spread, and as the Gillespie band embarked on its national tour, au- diences and critics nationwide took notice of the young soloist featured on what was often the leader's showcase number: "A Night in Tunisia." Nat Hentoff caught the band on their return to New York from the Midwest in 1957. -
Sonny Clark: Melody and Melancholy
ESSAY Ss SONNY CLARK: MELODY AND MELANCHOLY Sam Stephenson Drugs and Jazz I first heard Sonny Clark’s piano in the floating, hornlike style, but it was Clark’s winter of 1999 in a coffee shop in Raleigh, piano playing that cast a spell. There was a North Carolina. The house stereo was natural, effortless quality to Clark’s right- playing a jazz record that featured gui- handed solo runs—the hypnotic trickle tar, piano, bass, and drums. I am a seri- of a mountain spring—yet his calm, light ous jazz fan, but I’d never heard anything touch was haunted by melancholy blues. quite like this, a remarkable blend of deep I began devouring all of Clark’s record- blues and relaxed, ventilated swing. The ings, some of which are available only in tattooed and pierced barista showed me Japan. From 1957 to 1962, he was docu- the two-CD set, Grant Green: The Com- mented on thirty-one studio recordings, plete Quartets with Sonny Clark, recorded by twenty-one as a sideman and ten as a leader, Blue Note Records in December 1961 and before dying of a heroin overdose in Janu- January 1962. I knew Green was a guitar- ary 1963 at the age of thirty-one. Most of ist from St. Louis, Missouri, who had a Clark’s recorded work is as singular as the 169 sessions with Green; his presence on piano his two surviving sisters, a number of his creates not only the sound of one instru- childhood friends, and many musicians, as ment but also an atmosphere. -
Downbeat.Com March 2014 U.K. £3.50
£3.50 £3.50 U.K. DOWNBEAT.COM MARCH 2014 D O W N B E AT DIANNE REEVES /// LOU DONALDSON /// GEORGE COLLIGAN /// CRAIG HANDY /// JAZZ CAMP GUIDE MARCH 2014 March 2014 VOLUME 81 / NUMBER 3 President Kevin Maher Publisher Frank Alkyer Editor Bobby Reed Associate Editor Davis Inman Contributing Editor Ed Enright Designer Ara Tirado Bookkeeper Margaret Stevens Circulation Manager Sue Mahal Circulation Assistant Evelyn Oakes Editorial Intern Kathleen Costanza Design Intern LoriAnne Nelson 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