Morgenstern, Dan. [Record Review: Chase: Chase] Down Beat 38
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Ratner Kills Mr
Brooklyn’s Real Newspaper BrooklynPaper.com • (718) 834–9350 • Brooklyn, NY • ©2008 BROOKLYN HEIGHTS–DOWNTOWN–NORTH BROOKLYN AWP/18 pages • Vol. 31, No. 8/9 • Feb. 23/March 1, 2008 • FREE INCLUDING CARROLL GARDENS, COBBLE HILL, BOERUM HILL, DUMBO, WILLIAMSBURG AND GREENPOINT RATNER KILLS MR. BROOKLYN By Gersh Kuntzman EXCLUSIVE right now,” said Yassky (D– The Brooklyn Paper Brooklyn Heights). “Look, a lot of developers are re-evalut- Developer Bruce Ratner costs had escalated and the num- ing their numbers and feel that has pulled out of a deal with bers showed that we should residential buildings don’t City Tech that could have net not go down that road,” added work right now,” he said. him hundreds of millions of the executive, who did not wish Yassky called Ratner’s dollars and allowed him to to be identified. withdrawal “good news” for build the city’s tallest resi- Costs had indeed escalated. Brooklyn. dential tower, the so-called In 2005, CUNY agreed to pay “A residential building at Mr. Brooklyn, The Brooklyn Ratner $86 million to build the that corner was an awkward Paper has learned. 11- to 14-story classroom-dor- fit,” said Yassky. “A lot of plan- “It was a mutual decision,” mitory and also to hand over ners see that site as ideal for a said a key executive at the City the lucrative development site significant office building.” University of New York, which where City Tech’s Klitgord Forest City Ratner did not would have paid Ratner $300 Auditorium now sits. return two messages from The million to build a new dorm Then in December, CUNY Brooklyn Paper. -
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. -
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. -
Wavebid > Buyers Guide
Auction Catalog March 2021 Auction Auction Date: Sunday, Feb 28 2021 Bidding Starts: 12:00 PM EST Granny's Auction House Phone: (727) 572-1567 5175 Ulmerton Rd Email: grannysauction@gmail. Ste B com Clearwater, FL 33760 © 2021 Granny's Auction House 02/28/2021 07:36 AM Lot Title & Description Number 12" x 16" Wyland Lucite Limited Edition Orca Family Statue - Free form clear lucite form reminiscent of ice with sun softened edges 1 holding family pod of 3 Orcas/ killer whales, etched Wyland signature lower left, numbered 105/950 lower right - in house shipping available 2 6" x 4" Russian Lacquerware Box Signed and Numbered with Mythic Cavalry Scene - Black Ground, Bright Red Interior - In House Shipping Available Tiffany & Co. Makers Sterling Silver 6 1/2" plate - 16052 A, 7142, 925-1000, beautiful rimmed plate. 5.095 ozt {in house shipping 3 available} 2 Disney Figurines With Original Boxes & COA - My Little Bambi and Mothe # 14976 & Mushroom Dancer Fantasia. {in house shipping 4 available} 2 Art Glass Paperweights incl. Buccaneers Super Bowl Football - Waterford crystal Super Bowl 37 Buccaneers football #1691/2003 & 5 Murano with copper fleck (both in great condition) {in house shipping available} 6 Hard to Find Victor "His Master's Voice" Neon Sign - AAA Sign Company, Coltsville Ohio (completely working) {local pick up or buyer arranges third party shipping} 7 14K Rose Gold Ring With 11ct Smokey Topaz Cut Stone - size 6 {in house shipping available} 8 5 200-D NGC Millennium Set MS 67 PL Sacagawea Dollar Coins - Slabbed and Graded by NGC, in house shipping available Elsa de Bruycker Oil on Canvas Panting of Pink Cadillac Flying in to the distance - Surrealilst image of cadillac floating above the road 9 in bright retro style, included is folio for Elsa's Freedom For All Statue of Liberty Series - 25" x 23" canvas, framed 29" x 28" local pick up and in house shipping available 10 1887 French Gilt Bronze & Enamel Pendent Hanging Lamp - Signed Emile Jaud Et Jeanne Aubert 17 Mai 1887, electrified. -
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 -
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, -
Impex Records and Audio International Announce the Resurrection of an American Classic
Impex Records and Audio International Announce the Resurrection of an American Classic “When Johnny Cash comes on the radio, no one changes the station. It’s a voice, a name with a soul that cuts across all boundaries and it’s a voice we all believe. Yours is a voice that speaks for the saints and the sinners – it’s like branch water for the soul. Long may you sing out. Loud.” – Tom Waits audio int‘l p. o. box 560 229 60407 frankfurt/m. germany www.audio-intl.com Catalog: IMP 6008 Format: 180-gram LP tel: 49-69-503570 mobile: 49-170-8565465 Available Spring 2011 fax: 49-69-504733 To order/preorder, please contact your favorite audiophile dealer. Jennifer Warnes, Famous Blue Raincoat. Shout-Cisco (three 200g 45rpm LPs). Joan Baez, In Concert. Vanguard-Cisco (180g LP). The 20th Anniversary reissue of Warnes’ stunning Now-iconic performances, recorded live at college renditions from the songbook of Leonard Cohen. concerts throughout 1961-62. The Cisco 45 rpm LPs define the state of the art in vinyl playback. Holly Cole, Temptation. Classic Records (LP). The distinctive Canadian songstress and her loyal Jennifer Warnes, The Hunter. combo in smoky, jazz-fired takes on the songs of Private-Cisco (200g LP). Tom Waits. Warnes’ post-Famous Blue Raincoat release that also showcases her own vivid songwriting talents in an Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Déjá Vu. exquisite performance and recording. Atlantic-Classic (200g LP). A classic: Great songs, great performances, Doc Watson, Home Again. Vanguard-Cisco great sound. The best country guitar-picker of his day plays folk ballads, bluegrass, and gospel classics. -
Jazzweek with Airplay Data Powered by Jazzweek.Com • October 24, 2011 Volume 7, Number 46 • $7.95
JazzWeek with airplay data powered by jazzweek.com • October 24, 2011 Volume 7, Number 46 • $7.95 Jazz Album No. 1: Poncho Sanchez and Smooth Album No. 1: Dave Koz, Hello Terence Blanchard, Chano y Dizzy (Concord Tomorrow (Concord) Jazz) World Music No. 1: Bill Frisell & Vinicius Smooth Single No. 1: Rick Braun, “Time Cantuaria, Lagrinas Mexicanas (eOne) after Time” (Artistry/Mack Avenue) Jazz Album Charts .................... 3 Jazz Add Dates ....................... 7 Smooth Jazz Album Charts .............4 Jazz Radio Currents ................... 8 Smooth Singles Charts ................. 5 Jazz Radio Panel .................... 11 World Music Album Charts .............. 6 Smooth Jazz Current Tracks............ 13 Smooth Jazz Station Panel............. 14 Jazz Birthdays October 24 November 1 November 10 Odeon Pope (1938) Lou Donaldson (1926) Paul Bley (1932) October 25 Gabe Baltazar (1929) Houston Person (1934) Eddie Lang (1902) Roger Kellaway (1939) Andrew Cyrille (1939) Jimmy Heath (1926) Lee Ritenour (1952) Hubert Laws (1939) Robin Eubanks (1955) November 2 November 11 October 26 Bunny Berigan (1908) Hoagy Carmichael (1899) Charlie Barnet (1913) Herb Geller (1928) Gunther Schuller (1925) Wayne Marsh (1927) Phil Woods (1931) Ernestine Anderson (1928) Eddie Henderson (1940) Frank Kimbrough (1956) Marvin Hannibal Peterson (1948) October 27 November 3 November 12 George Wallington (1924) Billy Mitchell (1926) Buck Clayton (1911) Philip Catherine (1942) Henry Grimes (1935) Charlie Mariano (1923) John McPhee (1939) November 13 October 28 Azar -
Disability and Music
th nd 19 November to 22 December UKDHM 2018 will focus on Disability and Music. We want to explore the links between the experience of disablement in a world where the barriers faced by people with impairments can be overwhelming. Yet the creative impulse, urge for self expression and the need to connect to our fellow human beings often ‘trumps’ the oppression we as disabled people have faced, do face and will face in the future. Each culture and sub-culture creates identity and defines itself by its music. ‘Music is the language of the soul. To express ourselves we have to be vibrating, radiating human beings!’ Alasdair Fraser. Born in Salford in 1952, polio survivor Alan Holdsworth goes by the stage name ‘Johnny Crescendo’. His music addresses civil rights, disability pride and social injustices, making him a crucial voice of the movement and one of the best-loved performers on the disability arts circuit. In 1990 and 1992, Alan co- organised Block Telethon, a high-profile media and community campaign which culminated in the demise of the televised fundraiser. His albums included Easy Money, Pride and Not Dead Yet, all of which celebrate disabled identity and critique disabling barriers and attitudes. He is best known for his song Choices and Rights, which became the anthem for the disabled people’s movement in Britain in the late 1980s and includes the powerful lyrics: Choices and Right That’s what we gotta fight for Choices and rights in our lives I don’t want your benefit I want dignity from where I sit I want choices and rights in our lives I don’t want you to speak for me I got my own autonomy I want choices and rights in our lives https://youtu.be/yU8344cQy5g?t=14 The polio virus attacked the nerves. -
Stylistic Evolution of Jazz Drummer Ed Blackwell: the Cultural Intersection of New Orleans and West Africa
STYLISTIC EVOLUTION OF JAZZ DRUMMER ED BLACKWELL: THE CULTURAL INTERSECTION OF NEW ORLEANS AND WEST AFRICA David J. Schmalenberger Research Project submitted to the College of Creative Arts at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts in Percussion/World Music Philip Faini, Chair Russell Dean, Ph.D. David Taddie, Ph.D. Christopher Wilkinson, Ph.D. Paschal Younge, Ed.D. Division of Music Morgantown, West Virginia 2000 Keywords: Jazz, Drumset, Blackwell, New Orleans Copyright 2000 David J. Schmalenberger ABSTRACT Stylistic Evolution of Jazz Drummer Ed Blackwell: The Cultural Intersection of New Orleans and West Africa David J. Schmalenberger The two primary functions of a jazz drummer are to maintain a consistent pulse and to support the soloists within the musical group. Throughout the twentieth century, jazz drummers have found creative ways to fulfill or challenge these roles. In the case of Bebop, for example, pioneers Kenny Clarke and Max Roach forged a new drumming style in the 1940’s that was markedly more independent technically, as well as more lyrical in both time-keeping and soloing. The stylistic innovations of Clarke and Roach also helped foster a new attitude: the acceptance of drummers as thoughtful, sensitive musical artists. These developments paved the way for the next generation of jazz drummers, one that would further challenge conventional musical roles in the post-Hard Bop era. One of Max Roach’s most faithful disciples was the New Orleans-born drummer Edward Joseph “Boogie” Blackwell (1929-1992). Ed Blackwell’s playing style at the beginning of his career in the late 1940’s was predominantly influenced by Bebop and the drumming vocabulary of Max Roach. -
Instead Draws Upon a Much More Generic Sort of Free-Jazz Tenor
1 Funding for the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Program NEA Jazz Master interview was provided by the National Endowment for the Arts. BILL HOLMAN NEA Jazz Master (2010) Interviewee: Bill Holman (May 21, 1927 - ) Interviewer: Anthony Brown with recording engineer Ken Kimery Date: February 18-19, 2010 Repository: Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Description: Transcript, 84 pp. Brown: Today is Thursday, February 18th, 2010, and this is the Smithsonian Institution National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Oral History Program interview with Bill Holman in his house in Los Angeles, California. Good afternoon, Bill, accompanied by his wife, Nancy. This interview is conducted by Anthony Brown with Ken Kimery. Bill, if we could start with you stating your full name, your birth date, and where you were born. Holman: My full name is Willis Leonard Holman. I was born in Olive, California, May 21st, 1927. Brown: Where exactly is Olive, California? Holman: Strange you should ask [laughs]. Now it‟s a part of Orange, California. You may not know where Orange is either. Orange is near Santa Ana, which is the county seat of Orange County, California. I don‟t know if Olive was a part of Orange at the time, or whether Orange has just grown up around it, or what. But it‟s located in the city of Orange, although I think it‟s a separate municipality. Anyway, it was a really small town. I always say there was a couple of orange-packing houses and a railroad spur. Probably more than that, but not a whole lot. -
Solo List and Reccomended List for 02-03-04 Ver 3
Please read this before using this recommended guide! The following pages are being uploaded to the OSSAA webpage STRICTLY AS A GUIDE TO SOLO AND ENSEMBLE LITERATURE. In 1999 there was a desire to have a required list of solo and ensemble literature, similar to the PML that large groups are required to perform. Many hours were spent creating the following document to provide “graded lists” of literature for every instrument and voice part. The theory was a student who made a superior rating on a solo would be required to move up the list the next year, to a more challenging solo. After 2 years of debating the issue, the music advisory committee voted NOT to continue with the solo/ensemble required list because there was simply too much music written to confine a person to perform from such a limited list. In 2001 the music advisor committee voted NOT to proceed with the required list, but rather use it as “Recommended Literature” for each instrument or voice part. Any reference to “required lists” or “no exceptions” in this document need to be ignored, as it has not been updated since 2001. If you have any questions as to the rules and regulations governing solo and ensemble events, please refer back to the OSSAA Rules and Regulation Manual for the current year, or contact the music administrator at the OSSAA. 105 SOLO ENSEMBLE REGULATIONS 1. Pianos - It is recommended that you use digital pianos when accoustic pianos are not available or if it is most cost effective to use a digital piano.