The Independent Ear

One Night @ Snug

 Any trip to New Orleans without at least one night at Snug Harbor on teemng Frenchman Street is incomplete.  A recent trip to the Crescent City on a NEA Jazz Masters Live site visit for the Contemporary Arts Center’s presentation of the great Phil Woods’ musical realization of A.A. Milne’s poetry, yielded one such splendid evening.  Eagerly heading towards a de rigeur plate of fried oysters at the funky Irish pub Parasols just up the street from our old crib on Constance, rental car radio happily blasting WWOZ, who should stop by the radio station to assist their pledge drive but Jason Moran!  Hmmm, this is interesting, what brings Moran to NOLA, I asked myself.  Of course… he was in town to teach for a week at the Monk Institute’s grad program at Loyola.  But more to the point of my visit, he was playing that evening at Snug. 

A quick call to friend & colleague Jason Patterson, who runs Snug, and I was on my way over to hoist a glass of red with Jason and his lovely wife Sylvia, joined at the bar by the tireless New Orleans scenester/writer Geraldine Wycoff.  Not only was Jason Moran playing Snug that evening, but he was doing so in the esteemed company of New Orleans finest drummer, Herlin Riley!  Soon fellow radio heads Scott Bourne and T.R. Johnson of WWOZ showed up and it was clear Snug was the place to be.

This proved to be a classic evening of spontaneous invention/mutual admiration between two very distinctive and original artists.  No matter how freely and furiously they improvised — and with Jason Moran things can get knotty with a quickness — they always found home, either through some finely-wrought melody, blues theme or irrisistable rhythm seemingly plucked out of thin air by either or both.  The ever-inventive and intuitive Riley employed hands-on-heads, brushes, and myriad permutations of those tight New Orleans rolls he’s patented.

Moran, an ancient-futurist to be sure, and noted old soul despite his boyish appearance, came equipped with one of the many ancient samples he employs as improvisational launching pads; this time it was a historic Bert Williams recording that he used as a springboard to advanced improvisation, bringing along Riley treading confidently and comfortably into the unknown, steeped in New Orleans antiquity himself. 

They played a beautiful "Thelonious" which they de-assembled down to the bare Monk essence.  Later they seamlessly morphed Moran’s improvisation on "Planet Rock" to "Moon River"!  Invention was on full display for this excellent evening at Snug!

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Broadening the Jazz Journalists Association

JJA Prez Howard Mandel

In light of recent postings in our ongoing series Ain’t But a Few of Us: Black music writers telling their stories, friend and colleague Howard Mandel, President of the Jazz Journalists Association (JJA www.jazzhouse.org) wrote the following open letter to stress the organization’s diversity mandate.

Dear Willard,

Thanks for your column "Ain’t But a Few of Us", highlighting jazz journalists who are of African-American heritage.  In a recent posting you mentioned the Jazz Journalists Association’s "Clarence Atkins Fellowships," a mentoring program for emerging music journalists from minority backgrounds, saying it was "short-lived."  However, that program basically continues, although it has evolved from principally "mentoring" (which sounds pretty paternalistic) to an initiative more along the lines of collaborations with equal professionals, which is what the people in the original Atkins group — several of whom you’ve featured [editor’s note: Ain’t But a Few of Us contributors Bridget Arnwine, Robin James, and Rahsaan Clark Morris] — have become.

As it has been since you first convened and co-founded the organization in the mid 1980s, the JJA is still on the lookout for and welcomes music journalists interested in jazz of all ancestry.  The organization doesn’t currently have the funds to sponsor journalists to five-day conferences in Los Angeles, as we were able to do in 2005, thanks in great part to sponsorship funds from BET Jazz that helped produce that year’s JJA Jazz Awards, also 2005 was the first and only year the National Critics Conference was produced, by a coalition including the JJA, the Music Critics Association of North America, the Dance Critics Association, the American Theater Critics Association, and the US chapter of the International Association of Arts Critics.  However, the JJA in September 2007 welcomed K. Leander Williams, Greg Tate, Stanley Crouch, Ashante Infantry, Ron Scott, and 28 other jazz journalists from around the world to participate in "Jazz in the Global Imagination," a day-long symposium at Columbia University, produced by that school’s Center for Jazz Studies (directed by George E. Lewis).  

The JJA’s January 2010 conference, five days of programming during the annual convention of the Association of Performing Arts Presenters included John Murph, Greg Thomas, Bridget Arnwine, Ron Scott, Norm Harris, Sheila Anderson, Martin Johnson, bassist Melvin Gibbs, and yourself as participants in town hall-style meetings, attendees at our party and guests at a luncheon prepared by the National Endowment for the Arts (where Farah Jasmine Griffin was one of three speakers).  I am in occasional correspondence with Atkins fellows Rahsaan Clark Morris, Michele Drayton, Laylah Amatullah Barrayn, and Robin James.  The JJA seems to have lost track of Sharony Green [author of the Grant Green biography] — the last I knew she was at University of Chicago getting an advanced degree [drop us a line Sharony!].

Forrest Bryant (who first came to a JJA program at an International Association of Jazz Education conference) is a JJA board member and arts director of Jazz Notes [the JJA publication].  Though she’s not a journalist, the JJA has encouraged Meghan Stabile’s "Revive da Live" music productions, featuring her artists who cross jazz and hip hop at the 2008 Jazz Awards.  Ms. Stabile, Greg Tate, and Robert Glasper were panelists at one of the Jazz Matters meetings held at the New School (we’ve revived those meetings as of March 9 after a hiatus of two years).  Reuben Jackson, a former JJA board member, W.A. Brower, and Ron Scott are among the members who have been on our panels and their writings (as well as Bridget Arnwine’s) in the pages of Jazz Notes or on www.Jazzhouse.org

Working with the folks at WBGO is not exactly helping "emerging" journalists, it’s just collaborating with fine broadcasters, and the JJA has a history of doing that with many other broadcasters from elsewhere — Bobby Jackson, Richard Steele, Eric Jackson, Clifford Brown Jr., and Mark Ruffin come to mind.  Photographers, including Chuck Stewart and Javet Kimble, are highly regarded friends of the JJA (as are A.B. Spellman and James Jordan from the world of arts funders).  The JJA has issued standing invitations to officially join us to many other black journalists who cover jazz among other things and have contributed to association projects.

But to get back to my original point, the struggle continues!  Some progress has been made in identifying and collaborating with the many (at least, more than a "few") journalists and jazz-identified activists (don’t forget the JJA’s A Team Awards recipients) of African-American heritage.

These details are meant to be informative, as you may not know how the association’s work has spread.  Whenever you run into a black writer, photographer, broadcaster, or new media professional who would benefit from JJA contact, I hope you will point them our way.  Same goes for any Asian, Hispanic, or Caucasion man or woman or LBGT person who wants to work on jazz/blues journalism, but the JJA is especially alert to identifying and encouraging African-American journalists or hopefuls.

The Jazz Journalists Association is right now consolidating its membership list, creating a new web platform, restructuring our journal Jazz Notes as a JJA news feed, and applying for funds for a January 2011 jazz journalism conference.  We’re producing the 14th annual JJA Jazz Awards next June; fundraising and ballot distribution is also on deck.  I offered arts presenters at the APAP conference JJA assistance in identifying and inviting appropriate jazz journalists in their local areas to come into their spaces to present enhancement programs during April Jazz Appreciation Month, and we seem to have a couple of takers on that project.  As you know, there’s much useful work to be done!  Thanks for your efforts on jazz journalism’s behalf, and best regards.

Howard Mandel, President, Jazz Journalists Association 

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Ancient Future Radio 3/11/10

 The Ancient Future radio program, produced/hosted by Willard Jenkins, is broadcast over WPFW 89.3 FM, Pacifica Radio serving the Washington, DC metro area.

International Women’s Month focus: Regina Carter

ARTIST                            TUNE                            ALBUM                            LABEL

Quartette Indigo            So What                Afrika! Afrika!                Savant

Straight Ahead            No Moe                    Body and Soul               Atlantic

Cassandra Wilson        Seven Steps to Heaven  Travelin’ Miles      Blue Note

Regina Carter interview segment

Regina Carter            Cook’s Bay                 Rhythms of the Heart      Verve

Regina Carter interview segment

Regina Carter            Mandingo Street          Rhythms of the Heart       Verve

James Newton w/Regina Carter    The Mooche    Tri-C JazzFest ’99

Regina Carter interview segment    

James Newton w/Regina Carter    Black Beauty    Tri-C JazzFest ’99

Randy Weston African Rhythms w/Regina Carter  Root of the Nile 2003 concert 

Soundviews: new/recent release spotlight

Orrin Evans                Wheel Within a Wheel      Faith in Action        Posi-tone

Orrin Evans                Matthew’s Song              Faith in Action        Posi-tone

Orrin Evans                Two Steppin’ With Dawn   Faith in Action        Posi-tone

Orrin Evans                Don’t Call Me Wally          Faith in Action   Posi-tone

What’s New: the new/recent release hour

Regina Carter            Full Time                        Reverse Thread        E1

Regina Carter            Artistiya                        Reverse Thread        E1

Cindy Blackman          Wildlife                          Another Lifetime        4Q

Allison Miller               Big Lovely               Boom Tic Boom        Foxhaven

Sharel Cassity            Love’s Lament          Relentless             Jazz Legacy

Antoinette Montague    What’s Goin’ On      Behind The Smile   In The Groove

Erica Lindsay & Sumi Tonooka    Mingus Mood    Initiation        ARC

 

contact:

Willard Jenkins  5258-G Nicholson Lane  #281 Kensington, MD 20895

willard@openskyjazz.com

 

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Tri-C JazzFest 2010 lineup

 

Bass master Charlie Haden will be in residence at the 2010 Tri-C JazzFest 

  By John Soeder, The Plain Dealer
February 23, 2010, 12:00PM

Pianist Ramsey Lewis, a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master, and the Grammy-winning hip-hop group the Roots are among the artists booked for the 31st annual Tri-C JazzFest’s eclectic lineup.
The festivities kick off Thursday, April 15, with a free parade around Cleveland’s Tower City Center and Public Square, and run through Sunday, April 25.
Also on the agenda is a “Happy Birthday, Henry Mancini!” concert Friday, April 16, at PlayhouseSquare’s Allen Theatre, on the 86th anniversary of the late composer’s birth. Mancini, who was born in Cleveland, is renowned for his film and television music, including “Moon River” (from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”), “The Pink Panther Theme” and “The Peter Gunn Theme.” The concert will feature his daughter, singer Monica Mancini, as well as trumpeter Sean Jones and the Cleveland Jazz Orchestra, among others.
Mancini “is an important figure in the development of jazz,” said Beth Rutkowski, the festival’s managing director. “He was a critical composer in terms of bringing jazz to the non-jazz world.”
JazzFest’s artist-in-residence will be bassist and longtime Ornette Coleman sideman Charlie Haden.
Following is the JazzFest schedule. Tickets go on sale at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24, at tricpresents.com, or charge by phone, 216-241-6000.
Thursday, April 15
• The Shaw High School Marching Band leads a parade at 5 p.m. around Tower City Center, 230 West Huron Road, Cleveland, and Public Square. Free.

Friday, April 16
• The “Happy Birthday, Henry Mancini!” concert features the composer’s daughter, singer Monica Mancini, at 8 p.m. at PlayhouseSquare’s Allen Theatre in Cleveland. She’ll be joined by trumpeter Sean Jones and the Cleveland Jazz Orchestra, clarientist-saxophonist Paquito D’Rivera, trumpeter Dominick Farinacci, trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, pianist Mulgrew Miller and saxophonist Ted Nash. The performance will include film clips from movies scored by Mancini, including “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” Tickets are $45-$65.

Saturday, April 17
• Pianist Joe Hunter presides over the “Jazz for Kids” concerts at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. at the Children’s Museum of Cleveland, 10730 Euclid Ave. Tickets are $5-$10.
• Evelyn Wright and others perform during a “Women in Jazz” concert showcasing the music of bossa nova maestro Antonio Carlos Jobim at 1 p.m. at Mt. Zion Congregational Church of Christ, 10723 Magnolia Drive, Cleveland. Free.
• The Roots, a Grammy-winning hip-hop group and Jimmy Fallon’s house band, headline a show at 8 p.m. at the Allen Theatre. Tickets are $25-$45.


                   The Roots

Sunday, April 18
• The Gerald Clayton Trio and the Theo Croker Group share the stage for a “Debut Series” gig at East Cleveland Public Library, 14101 Euclid Ave. Free.


Pianist Gerald Clayton

Monday, April 19
• Guitarist Jack Wilkins and the Cleveland Jazz Initiative perform at 7 p.m. at Brothers Lounge, 11609 Detroit Ave., Cleveland. Tickets are $10.

Guitar master Jack Wilkins

Tuesday, April 20
• Hammond B-3 organ virtuosos Eddie Baccus Sr. and Tony Monaco team up for a concert at 8 p.m. at Karamu House, 2355 East 89th St., Cleveland. Free.

Wednesday, April 21
• The Omar Sosa Afreecanos Quartet performs at 8 p.m. at MOCA Cleveland, 8501 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland. Tickets are $25.


Omar Sosa

Thursday, April 22
• Bassist Charlie Haden’s Quartet West and saxophonist Joe Lovano perform at 8 p.m. at the Tri-C Metro Auditorium, 2900 Community College Ave., Cleveland. Tickets are $30.

Friday, April 23
• Pianist Ramsey Lewis and singer Patti Austin perform at 8 p.m. at the Allen Theatre. Tickets are $25-$45.

Saturday, April 24
• France’s Orchestre National de Jazz headlines the “Around Robert Wyatt” concert at 8 p.m. at the Tri-C Metro Auditorium, featuring the music of prog-rock pioneer Robert Wyatt. Also on the bill is the Metta Quintet. Tickets are $15.
• The “Smooth Jazz All-Stars” concert at 8 p.m. at the Allen Theatre features singer-guitarist Nick Colionne, sax players Richard Elliot and Paul Taylor, singers Phil Perry and Brenda Russell and keyboardist Brian Simpson. Tickets are $25-$45.

Sunday, April 25
• Under the direction of saxophonist Howie Smith and bassist Glenn Holmes, TCJF SoundWorks performs bassist Charlie Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra works, with Haden as special guest, at 7 p.m. at the East Cleveland Public Library. Free.

The Festival closes with a performance of Charlie Haden’s Liberation Music

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Ancient Future Radio 3/4/10

The Ancient Future radio program, hosted & produced by Willard Jenkins, airs over WPFW 89.3 FM, Pacifica Radio for the Washington metro area, available online at www.wpfw.org.

ARTIST                        TUNE                    ALBUM TITLE            LABEL

John Coltrane        Tunji                Coltrane                    Impulse!

Babatunde Lea       Cousin Mary        Live at Yoshi’s        Motema

Randy Weston        Kucheza Blues    Uhuru Afrika    Roulette

Randy Weston        African Lady        Uhuru Afrika    Roulette

Idris Muhammad    Peace                Peace & Rhythm    Prestige

Gary Bartz            Black Maybe        JuJu Street Songs    Prestive

Courtney Pine        My Father’s Place    Back in the Day    Verve

Gilles Peterson        The Blessing Song    Build an Ark    Worldwide Exchange

Simphiwe Dana        Tribe                    Zandisile        Gallo

Gil Evans                Zee Zee            Svengali            Atlantic

Weather Report        Palladium        Forecast: Tomorrow    Legacy

SOUNDVIEWS

Bedrock (Uri Caine)    Count Duke    Plastic Temptation    Winter & Winter

Bedrock (Uri Caine)    Riled Up        Plastic Temptation    Winter & Winter

Bedrock (Uri Caine)    Mayor Goldie    Plastic Temptation    Winter & Winter

Bedrock (Uri Caine)    Leomanana Vasconcelos    Plastic Temptation    Winter & Winter

What’s New: The New Release Hour

Terell Stafford-Dick Oatts Quintet    The 6/20/09 Express    Bridging the Gap    Planet Arts

Randy Crawford & Joe Sample    Lead Me On    No Regrets        PRA

John Blake                Motherless Child        Motherless Child

Gail Pettus                Nature Boy        Here in the Moment    OA2

Danny Grissett        Without You        Form                        Criss Cross

Abdullah Ibrahim    Song For Sathima        Bombella        WDR

Manhattan Transfer    Spain    The Chick Corea Songbook    4Q

Contact:

Willard Jenkins  Open Sky   5268-G Nicholson Lane    #281    Kensington, MD 20895

 

 

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