Tuesday, October 4, 2011

They won't even vote on it

"Dear Mr. Arnaldo DeSoutiero --

You are receiving this message because you are registered and currently living in California's 30th Congressional District.

President Obama is in Dallas today urging Americans who support the American Jobs Act to demand that Congress pass it already.

Though it's been nearly a month since he laid out this plan, House Republicans haven't acted to pass it. And House Majority Leader Eric Cantor is out there actually bragging that they won't even put the jobs package up for a vote -- ever.

It's not clear which part of the bill they now object to: building roads, hiring teachers, getting veterans back to work. They're willing to block the American Jobs Act -- and they think you won't do anything about it.

But here's something you can do: Find Republican members of Congress on Twitter, call them out, and demand they pass this bill.

Be the first to use our new tool and tweet for jobs.
Here's why we built this new tool, and why it's important.

If you've written letters or sent email to Congress before, you know it can be a frustrating experience -- sometimes it takes them weeks to respond, and sometimes they don't respond at all.

But many members of Congress personally receive the messages sent to them on Twitter, so you have a better chance of getting your message directly to them.

And even if they don't respond, your message will be public -- front and center for everyone who follows you or your representative. That means their staff, other constituents, and the media will see the mounting pressure.

So tweet for jobs now:
http://my.barackobama.com/Tweet-for-Jobs

If you don't use Twitter, you can also contact someone else who needs to hear from you about this bill: The editor of your local paper. We have a tool that lets you send a letter to the editor, and even gives you facts and tips to help you write the most effective note you can. Write one now:
http://my.barackobama.com/Letters-for-Jobs

The American Jobs Act is not controversial legislation.

Ideas like rebuilding our roads and bridges, repairing our public schools, and keeping teachers in our classrooms are all ideas the Republicans have said they would support or have even proposed themselves.

But they're so dead set on preventing anything from getting done on President Obama's watch that they will reverse, deny, or ignore what they've said and done in the past -- even if it costs more American jobs.

And remember: They're willing to cost you and any other American your job, or your chance at a new job, because they think that doing nothing won't cost them theirs. Tweet at Republican members of Congress now and tell them you want a vote on the jobs bill right away:
http://my.barackobama.com/Tweet-for-Jobs

Or write a letter to the editor:
http://my.barackobama.com/Letters-for-Jobs

I know we've been asking a lot of you lately, and all of us here would have loved to give you a break this week after all the emails we've been sending. But the reality is that we're building a grassroots organization from the ground up even as we're supporting the President in battles that need to be won right now. And that means we've got to be willing to stay focused week after week from now through the election.

Thanks again to all of you who donated to the campaign before the end of the third quarter, and for everything else you do to have the President's back.

Thanks,

Jim Messina
Campaign Manager - Obama for America"

Monday, October 3, 2011

Le Poisson Rouge Ticket Giveaways

We've got a pair of tickets up for grabs for two great shows coming up at Le Poisson Rouge: Silver Mt. Zion on Thursday the 6th, and a week later on the 13th, the killer double bill of the Crystal Ark and Light Asylum. Thursdays at LPR are looking good. To enter, email tickets@othermusic.com, and make sure to list which show you would like to register for in the subject line.

LE POISSON ROUGE
158 Bleecker Street
NYC, NY

R.I.P.: Uan Rasey

'Chinatown' Trumpeter Dies at 90
Uan Rasey was considered one of H'wood's finest musicians
by Jon Burlingame for Variety - October 3, 2011

Uan Rasey, who played trumpet solos in hundreds of films from "An American in Paris" to "Chinatown," died of complications from a heart ailment Monday, Sept. 26, at Kaiser Hospital in Woodland Hills, Calif. He was 90.

Rasey was widely considered one of the finest musicians in Hollywood history, working over the years in radio, films, television and recordings. His playing can also be heard in such classics as "Singin' in the Rain," "Gigi," "West Side Story," "Spartacus," "Ben-Hur," "How the West Was Won," "Cleopatra" and "My Fair Lady."

Rasey was born in Glasgow, Mont., and began playing the trumpet at age 7. At 9 he was struck by polio, which left him without the use of his legs and on crutches for the rest of his life. His family moved in 1937 to Los Angeles, where he began playing professionally with such band leaders as Sonny Dunham, Ozzie Nelson and Alvino Rey.

During the 1940s he performed on many radio shows including "Your Hit Parade," "The Telephone Hour," "The Voice of Firestone," "Lux Radio Theater," "The Jack Benny Program" and his favorite, "Kraft Music Hall" with Bing Crosby, with arrangements by fellow trumpeter Billy May.

In 1949 Rasey joined the MGM studio orchestra and played primarily for MGM until 1974, although he also played at all the other studios. His many TV-show credits included "M Squad," "Bonanza," "Lost in Space," "Lassie" and "The Man from U.N.C.L.E."

According to some estimates, he played on as many as 3,000 film and television shows in his career, which lasted until around 1990. Rasey's jazzy trumpet in Jerry Goldsmith's 1974 "Chinatown" score was perhaps his best-known performance; later films included "Taxi Driver," "High Anxiety" and "Pennies from Heaven."

Rasey also performed on many albums in the 1950s and '60s, including those of Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Mel Torme, Doris Day, Frankie Laine, Judy Garland and the Monkees.

He began teaching in later years; his pupils included Arturo Sandoval and Jack Sheldon. In 2009, he was honored by the International Trumpet Guild and the Recording Musicians Assn.

Rasey's wife of 57 years, Margaret, died in 2008. Survivors include three children and three grandchildren. A memorial will be scheduled for a later date.

Los Angeles Jazz Society - 28th Annual Jazz Tribute Awards honoring Arturo Sandoval

28th Annual Jazz Tribute/Dinner/Concert Honoring Arturo Sandoval plus Jeff Clayton (Lifetime Achievement Award), Monica Mancini (Jazz Vocalist Award), Ira Nepus (Jazz Educator Award), Max Lesser (Shelly Manne Memorial New Talent Award) and Andy Garcia (Honorary Chair).

Sunday, October 9, 2011 @ Hilton Los Angeles
555 Universal Terrace Parkway
Universal City, CA
Valet parking available in front of the hotel

MC: Leonard Maltin
Awards Presenters include Quincy Jones, Jeff Hamilton, Peyton Glover, Howard Stone and a few surprisesThe Los Angeles Jazz Society (LAJS) was founded in 1985 by a group of musicians and jazz lovers committed to elevating the image of jazz and its artists in the community.

The mission of the Los Angeles Jazz Society is to excite, educate and engage public school students with the vibrant rhythms and sounds of the only indigenous American music – jazz. We present multi-cultural and interactive in-school and off-campus jazz education programs. We also promote and honor the legacy of jazz and ensure its future by identifying and nurturing the emerging jazz musicians of tomorrow.

The Los Angeles Jazz Society is a California nonprofit, educational corporation organized under the laws of the State of California, and under section 501C (3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The primary focus of the organization is on jazz education for young people; to identify and nurture emerging jazz musicians and to help create future audiences by stimulating an appreciation for jazz through its education programs.

•JAZZ IN SCHOOLS: Initiated in 1988 as a project to conduct free jazz concerts in schools during the month of February, Black History Month. Each year, over 23,000 children in 45 Los Angeles City elementary schools have an opportunity to see and hear a live concert performed by professional jazz artist/educators and learn about jazz, its history, styles and artists. Schools receive a set of preparation materials which includes a teacher outline, a supporting CD and a book about jazz which is donated to the school library.

•THE BILL GREEN MENTORSHIP PROGRAM: Designed to provide opportunities for selected music students in the public school system to receive training in advanced music techniques from professional musicians, individually and in small group workshops. Many graduates are now successful performing musicians.
•JAZZ COOLCATS : A ten-week series of jazz education classes in jazz and basic rhythms, conducted in association with LA's BEST After School Enrichment Program in LAUSD elementary schools.
•JAZZGIVING: Receives donated musical instruments and distributes them to the Los Angeles City School District .
THE VIBE SUMMIT : Hosted by the Society, the Summit is an all-day concert with performances by great jazz vibraphone artists who come from all over the West to participate in this popular celebration.

The ANNUAL JAZZ TRIBUTE AWARDS DINNER & CONCERT was established in 1983 to recognize and honor Los Angeles based artists for their contributions in furthering the art form of jazz. This major fund-raising event attracts musicians and jazz lovers from all over Southern California and supports the general operations of the organization and its education programs.

The Los Angeles Jazz Society presents an on-going calendar of activities throughout the year which includes a variety of concerts, mixers and other events. The Society keeps its members and others informed about its many activities as well as other "jazz news" through its quarterly newsletter, Quarter Notes.

Mr. Arnaldo DeSouteiro is an active member of the Los Angeles Jazz Society, which continuously works to recognize the contributions of jazz musicians and to promote the future of jazz.

Bar On Fifth Features Jazz Nightly in NYC

(Simona Premazzi, who appears Oct 5 & 6)

Bar on Fifth (located inside the Setai Fifth Avenue Hotel) welcomes guests to a sexy, yet classic urban oasis. The retro nouveau design and refined cocktail selection lures a communal clientele of elite New Yorkers and chic jetsetters alike. The intimate ambiance paired with plush, international elements creates the pinnacle bar experience.Join us in paying tribute to Italy’s Jazz Heritage Presenting Italian & Italian-American Jazz Artists performing October 1-10, 8-11pm during the Italian Jazz Days 2011 Festival:

Alberto Pibri Trio, Oct 1-4
On piano, this artist is highly sought after in Jazz venues throughout Europe marks his US debut with his new ensemble

Simona Premazzi, Oct 5-6
Gracefully melodic pianist Simona Premazzi, one of the most exciting new improvisers and composers in jazz, debuts her latest ensemble at the Setai. Drawing from her original compositions, Premazzi collaborates with tenor saxophonist Melissa Aldana to create a remarkable modern jazz sound. Also featuring: Sean Conly on bass (10/5), Shinnossuke on drums (10/5), Joseph Lepore on bass (10/6) & Luca Santaniello on drums (10/6)

Fara Music Trio with Fabio Zeppetella, Oct 7-8
Led by saxophonist Gianluca Vigliar, this trio performs a vital blend of time-honored standards and new compositions

Fabio Zeppetella with the Aruan Ortiz Trio, Oct 9
Inspired by Afro-Cuban culture, guitarist Fabio Zeppetella’s makes his last scheduled appearance at The Setai performs with the Aruan Ortiz Trio

All Star Jam Session, Oct 10
This will be a larger jam session showcase in which all participants of the festival will perform at the Setai

Eli Yamin, Oct 11-16
Pianist, educator, and cultural ambassador for the US Department of State, Eli Yamin leads his band in performances of standards, originals, and blues

Jaimeo Brown, Oct 17-23
A leading exponent of "world jazz," drummer Jaimeo Brown brings his trio to the Setai to present an exciting blend of African rhythms, straight-ahead jazz, and R&B

Antonio Ciacca, Oct 24-29, Oct 31
The Bar on Fifth’s Artist in Residence, Antonio Ciacca has delighted audiences with his soulful gospel-infused playing.

Ehud Asherie, Oct 30
A rising star in the jazz world, Israeli pianist Ehud Asherie performs swing and stride with stunning virtuosity

400 Fifth Avenue at 36thStreet
JazzBarOnFifth.com
Ph: (212) 695-4005

Pablo Held receives the WDR Jazz Award

The WDR Jazz Award 2011 in the "Jazz Improvisation" category goes to pianist Pablo Held, who earlier this year released "Glow," his third album for the Munich-based Pirouet label after the critically acclaimed debut "Forest of Oblivion" from 2007, followed by his masterpiece "Music" (2010), with which he gained international recognition. The Award Ceremony will take place on October 28th during the WDR Jazz Cologne festival. There Held will perform with a septet he put together especially for this evening. Niels Klein was the winner in the "Jazz Composition" category.
*************
Preisträger Pablo Held
WDR Jazzpreis 2011

Die Gewinner des WDR Jazzpreis 2011 stehen fest! In der Kategorie „Jazz Improvisation“ entschied sich die Jury für den in Köln lebenden Pianisten Pablo Held. Den WDR Jazzpreis in der Kategorie „Jazz Komposition“ erhält der Jazzmusiker Niels Klein. Beide Rubriken sind mit jeweils 10.000 Euro dotiert. Der Preis in der Kategorie „Jazz Nachwuchs“ NRW geht an Big Band der Fachhochschule Düsseldorf.

Der Ehrenpreis des WDR Jazzpreises wird in diesem Jahr für besondere Verdienste der Hochschulausbildung NRW vergeben. Preisträger sind die Jazz-Studiengänge der Musikhochschulen in Köln und Essen.

In diesem Jahr wird der WDR Jazzpreis zum achten Mal vergeben. Er ist mit 30.000 Euro die höchstdotierte Auszeichnung für Jazz und Improvisierte Musik in Deutschland und fördert Jazzmusikerinnen und -musiker, die ihren Lebens- und Arbeitsmittelpunkt in Nordrhein-Westfalen haben.

Der WDR Jazzpreis wird im Rahmen des Festivals WDR 3 jazz.cologne vergeben, bei dem sich internationale und regionale Jazz-Szene begegnen.

Die Verleihung findet in einem WDR 3 Konzert durch Hörfunkdirektor Wolfgang Schmitz am 28. Oktober im WDR Funkhaus Köln statt.

Bei der neunten Ausgabe des renommierten Festivals WDR 3 jazz.cologne (27. bis 30. Oktober) treten neben den WDR Jazzpreisträgern und der WDR Big Band unter anderem das Cologne Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, das neue Quintett des Trompeters Markus Stockhausen oder US-Saxofonist James Carter im WDR Funkhaus am Wallrafplatz bzw. im Kölner Stadtgarten auf.

* WDR 3 jazz.cologne 2011
* WDR Big Band

WDR Jazzpreis im Radio

WDR 3 Jazz sendet an mehreren Abenden eine Vorschau auf das Festival und stellt die WDR Jazzpreisträger vor. Das Preisträgerkonzert und weitere Veranstaltungen im Rahmen des Festivals WDR 3 jazz.cologne 2011 sind in der sechsstündigen Sendung WDR 3 Jazznacht zu hören.

18. Oktober 2011, 22:00 Uhr
WDR 3 Jazz
WDR Jazzpreis 2009 & 2010, Die WDR Big Band-Projekte von Stefan Schultze und Steffen Schorn
Mit Bernd Hoffmann

20. Oktober 2011, 22:00 Uhr
WDR 3 Jazz
Szene NRW. Vorschau auf die WDR 3 jazz.cologne 2001 (Teil 1)
Mit Cecilia Aguirre

27. Oktober 2011, 22:00 Uhr
WDR 3 Jazz
Szene NRW. Vorschau auf die WDR 3 jazz.cologne 2001 (Teil 2)
Mit Tinka Koch

28. Oktober 2011, 22:00 Uhr
WDR 3 Jazz
Preview. WDR 3 jazz.cologne: CD- und DVD-Neuerscheinungen
Mit Karsten Mützelfeldt

29./30. Oktober 2011, 00:05 Uhr
WDR 3 Jazz
WDR 3 jazz.cologne & Salzburger Jazz-Herbst
Mit Michael Rüsenberg und Herbert Uhlir

WDR Jazzpreis 2011

Der WDR Jazzpreis wird in vier Kategorien vergeben: "Jazz Komposition" - das Siegerstück wird beim Preisträgerkonzert von der WDR Big Band aufgeführt - und "Jazz Improvisation". Die Kategorie "Jazz Nachwuchs" zeichnet herausragende Schul- und Bildungsprojekte in NRW aus. In dieser Kategorie wird in diesem Jahr der "Ehrenpreis" für die Hochschulausbildung von Jazzmusikern in NRW verliehen.

"Die Förderung des Spitzennachwuchses", erläutert Karl Karst, Programmchef WDR 3, "gehört seit jeher zu den besonderen Leistungen des öffentlich-rechtlichen Rundfunks. Ein Gutteil der Programmmittel des Kulturradios WDR 3 fließt in die NRW-Musikszene und trägt zur Qualität und zur Vielfalt der aktivsten Musik-Landschaft Deutschlands bei."

Saturday, October 1, 2011

SHM-CD of the Month - "Gilberto with Turrentine"

SHM-CD of the Month
Astrud Gilberto: "Gilberto with Turrentine" (CTI) 1971


Rating: ***** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Produced by Creed Taylor
Engineered & Digitally Remastered for SHM-CD release by Rudy Van Gelder
Cover Photo: Pete Turner
Liner Photos: Price Givens
Album design: Bob Ciano
Recorded at Van Gelder Studios (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey) on January 13, February 1 & 4, March 19 & April 6, 1971

Arranged & Conducted by Eumir Deodato
Featuring: Astrud Gilberto (vocals), Stanley Turrentine (tenor sax), Eumir Deodato (acoustic piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, Hammond organ), Ron Carter (acoustic bass & electric bass), Russell George (electric bass), João Palma (drums), Dom Um Romão (drums, percussion, vocal effects), Dennis Seiwell (drums), Airto Moreira (percussion), Sivuca (acoustic guitar), Gene Bertoncini (acoustic guitar), Sam Brown (12-string acoustic guitar & electric guitar), Bob Mann (electric guitar solos), Toots Thielemans (harmonica), Hubert Laws, George Marge, Romeo Penque & Jerome Richardson (flutes), Paul Gershman, Emanuel Green, Julie Held, Harry Katzman, Joe Malin, Gene Orloff (violin), Harold Coletta (viola) & George Ricci (cello).

Historical CD of the Month - "Oscar Peterson: Unmistakable"

Historical CD of the Month
Oscar Peterson: "Unmistakable" (Zenph/Sony Masterworks) 2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Total Time: 78 minutes
Produced by David Lai, John Q. Walker & Anatoly Larkin
Recorded on May 22, 2010 @ Abbey Road Studio 2 in London, UK
Mixed by Todd Whitelock @ MSR Studios, NYC
SE2 reproducing system implemented by Richard Shepherd of Live Performance, Inc.

Sony Masterworks Jazz and Zenph Sound Innovations announce the fourth release in their ongoing collaboration: Oscar Peterson's "Unmistakable," a collection of re-performances® created from unreleased recordings Peterson made during the Seventies and Eighties. The re-performances® capture the renowned jazz pianist playing at the height of his powers, in crystal-clear sound, with six tracks never-before-heard by the public. Available October 4th here in the USA, "Unmistakable" extends the acclaimed technological breakthrough featured in prior Sony/Zenph releases of Glenn Gould, Sergei Rachmaninoff and Art Tatum.

Highlights: Gordon Jenkins' haunting ballad "Goodbye," Balladrd McDonalds/James F. Hanley's "Back Home in Indiana," Anthony Newley's "Who Can I Turn To" and Dizzy Gillespie's "Con Alma." The 16-page booklet includes pictures of the "re-performance sessions" and detailed liner notes by Bob Rae (yes, the former Premier of Ontario), producer John Q. Walker & piano technologist Richard Shepherd.

The final result is so superb & fascinating that the process deserves a brief explanation. Zenph Studios take audio recordings and turns them back into live performances, precisely replicating what was originally recorded. The Zenph software-based process extracts every musical nuance of a recorded performance and stores the data in a high-resolution digital file. These so-called "re-performance files" contain every detail of how each and every note was played, including pedal actions, volume and articulations - all with micro-second timings.

The re-performance files are played back on a real acoustic piano fitted with sophisticated computers and hardware, letting the listener "sit in the room" as if we were there when the original recording was made. The re-performance is then recorded afresh, using the latest microphones and recording techniques, to modernize monophonic or poor-quality recordings (which is not the case of these Peterson's tracks) of great performances.

“We collaborated closely with the Peterson family and a superstar team of professionals to create this album,” noted Dr. John Q. Walker, Chief Technology Officer and co-founder at Zenph. “What we’ve achieved is nothing short of miraculous: one of the world's greatest jazz pianists, playing one of the world's finest instruments, recorded in the most famous recording studio on Earth, Abbey Road. This is a high-water mark for our technology, and we are awestruck by the results.” Alex Miller, Senior Vice President of Sony Masterworks adds, “The results of the latest Sony/Zenph collaboration are truly breathtaking. We are incredibly proud to add to Oscar Peterson’s recorded legacy this level of technological and musical virtuosity.”

Zenph’s production team was led by composer, pianist and music researcher Dr. Anatoly Larkin, Director of Performance Analysis for Zenph. The process began with Peterson himself. In March 2007, after having heard about Zenph’s technology, Peterson invited Dr. Larkin and Dr. Walker to his home outside Toronto. The Zenph team set up a Yamaha® Disklavier Pro piano and Zenph computers in his living room to play him examples of their work. First, they played re-performances of his mentor and idol, Art Tatum.

Hearing his hero playing live again after all the ensuing years, brought Peterson to tears. The Zenph team spent the rest of the afternoon listening and reminiscing, including playing Peterson performances for Peterson, and taking copious notes. As a lifelong technology buff, Peterson understood and was enthusiastic about the implications of the Zenph technology on his legacy. The pianist passed away later in 2007.

Zenph employs a proprietary process that uses computer software to transform recorded music back into live performances, precisely replicating what was originally played but with vastly-improved sound quality. To create the Peterson re-performances, the Zenph team began with video recordings and several unreleased, private recordings of exceptional performances.

Recorded in Studio Two at Abbey Road Studios in London, the Zenph team used a specially-outfitted Bösendorfer Imperial concert grand piano (Peterson was a Bösendorfer artist) to authentically recreate the distinct sounds of Peterson’s artistry. Zenph and Sony assembled world-renowned talent including GRAMMY®-winning producer David Lai, GRAMMY®-winning recording engineer Arne Akselberg, famed piano voicer Marc Wienert, and British electronics wizard Richard Shepherd. The album was recorded in stereo, binaural and surround-sound. In addition to the CD, the tracks will also be released on HDtracks (at “better than CD” resolution) and iTrax (in high-definition surround sound). A must-have items for Peterson fans and audiophiles in general.

Zenph's website (www.zenph.com) offers more comprehensive info about the company and its re-performance process, including additional audio samples of original performances from decades ago along with the corresponding re-performances.

Tracklisting:
from 1 to 8 - Stereo Version
1. Body and Soul
2. Back Home Again in Indiana
3. The Man I Love
4. Who Can I Turn To?
5. When I Fall in Love
6. Duke Ellington Medley (Take the A Train, In a Sentimental Mood, C Jam Blues, Lady in the Lavender Mist, All of a Sudden My Heart Sings, Satin Doll, Caravan)
7. Con Alma
8. Goodbye
from 9 to 16 - Binaural Stereo Version (The Ultimate Headphone Experience - unbelievable!!!)
**************
Sony Masterworks USA comprises the Masterworks Broadway, Masterworks, Masterworks Jazz, RCA Red Seal and Sony Classical imprints.

Zenph® Sound Innovations is a music technology company based in Durham, North Carolina. The company’s work was named one of the “Best Ideas of the Year” by The New York Times Magazine and has received multiple GRAMMY® nominations. The astonishing fidelity and nuance of recordings produced by Zenph software has earned the company accolades from music lovers and critics the world over, including astonishing, back-to-back, perfect-10 reviews from The Absolute Sound and a “Record To Die For” distinction from Stereophile. Recent Zenph albums with Sony Masterworks include Glenn Gould playing Bach’s “Goldberg Variations,” "Rachmaninoff Plays Rachmaninoff," Art Tatum's "Piano Starts Here, Live At The Shrine" and "Joshua Bell: At Home with Friends."

MP3 CD Set of the Month - "George Benson"

MP3 CD Set of the Month
George Benson

Available through:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=170710649584&ssPageName=ADME:B:SS:US:1123
【Disc1】
├─01 - This Is Jazz (1965)
├─02 - Tell It Like It Is (1969)
├─03 - The Other Side Of Abbey Road (1969)
├─04 - White Rabbit (1971)
├─05 - Beyond The Blue Horizon (1971)
├─06 - Body Talk (1973)
├─07 - Good King Bad (1975)
├─08 - George Benson & Joe Farrell (1976)
├─09 - Livin' Inside Your Love (1977)
├─10 - Give Me The Night (1980)
└─11 - While The City Sleeps (1986)

【Disc2】
├─12 - George Benson & Earl Klugh_Collaboration (1987)
├─13 - Twice The Love (1988)
├─14 - Big Boss Band (1990)
├─15 - Love Remembers (1993)
├─16 - That's Right (1996)
├─17 - Talkin` Verve (1997)
├─18 - Standing Together (1998)
├─19 - Midhight Moods (2002)
└─20 - Irreplaceable (2003)TRACKS
【Disc1】
★01 THIS IS JAZZ 1965: Clockwise/ Myna Bird Blues/ Willow Weep For Me/ Stormy Weather/ The Cooker/ The Borgia Stick/ Ode To A Kudu/ Take Five/ I Remember Wes/ Good King Bad/ Summertime (Live)/ From Now On/
★02 TELL IT LIKE IT IS 1969: Soul Limbo/ Are You Happy/ Tell It Like It Is/ Land Of 1000 Dances/ Jackie, All/ Dontcha Hear Me Callin' To Ya/ Water Brother/ My Woman's Good To Me/ Jama Joe/ My Cherie Amour/ Out In The Cold Again/
★03 THE OTHER SIDE OF ABBEY ROAD 1969: Golden Slumbers/ Because/ Oh! Darling/ Here Comes The Sun/ Something/
★04 WHITE RABBIT 1971: White Rabbit/ Theme from Summer of '42/ Little Train/ California Dreamin'/ El Mar/
★05 BEYOND THE BLUE HORIZON 1971: So What/ Gentle Rain/ All Clear/ Ode to a Kudu/ Somewhere in the East/ All Clear (Alternate Take)/ Ode to a Kudu (Alternate Take)/ Somewhere in the East (Alternate Take)/
★06 BODY TALK 1973: Body Talk Part 1/ Top Of The Wold/ Dance/ When Love Has Grown/ Plum/ Body Talk/
★07 GOOD KING BAD 1975: Theme From Good King Bad/ One Rock Don't Make No Boulder/ Em/ Cast Your Fate To the Wind/ Siberian Workout/ Shell Of A Man/ Hold On, I'm Comin'/
★08 GEORGE BENSON & JOE FARRELL 1976: Flute Song/ Beyond The Ozone/ Camel Hump/ Rolling Home/ Old Devil Moon/
★09 LIVIN' INSIDE YOUR LOVE 1977: Livin' Inside Your Love/ Hey Girl/ Nassau Day/ Soulful Strut/ Prelude To Fall/ A Change Is Gonna Come/ Love Ballad/ You're Never Too Far From Me/ Love Is A Hurtin' Thing/ Welcome To My World/ Before You Go/ Unchained Melody/
★10 GIVE ME THE NIGHT 1980: Love x Love/ Off Broadway/ Moody's Mood/ Give Me The Night/ What's On Your Mind/ Dinorah, Dinorah/ Love Dance/ Star Of A Story (x)/ Midnight Love Affair/ Turn Out The Lamplight/
★11 WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS 1986: While The City Sleeps/ Kisses In The Moonlight/ Shiver/ Love Is Here Tonight/ Teaser/ Secrets In The Night/ Too Many Times/ Did You Hear Thunder/

【Disc2】
★12 GEORGE BENSON & EARL KLUGH_COLLABORATION 1987: Mt. Airy Road/ Mimosa/ Brazilian Stomp/ Dreamin'/ Since You're Gone/ Collaboration/ Jamaica/ Love Theme From Romeo&Juliet/
★13 TWICE THE LOVE 1988: Twice The Love/ Starting All Over/ Good Habit/ Everybody Does It/ Living On Borrowed Love/ Let's Do It Again/ Stephanie/ Tender Love/ You're Still My Baby/ Until You Believe/ Let Go/
★14 BIG BOSS BAND 1990: Without A Song/ Ready Now That You Are/ How Do You Keep the Music Play/ On Green Dolphin Street/ Baby Workout/ I Only Have Eyes For You/ Portrait of Jennie/ Walkin' My Baby Back Home/ Skylark/ Basie's Bag/
★15 LOVE REMEMBERS 1993: I'll Be Good To You/ Got To Be There/ My Heart Is Dancing/ Love Of My Life/ Kiss And Make Up/ Come Into My World/ Love Remembers/ Willing To Fight/ Somewhere Island/ Lovin' On Borrowed Time/ Lost In Love/ Calling You/
★16 THAT'S RIGHT 1996: That's Right/ The Thinker/ Marvin Said/ True Blue/ Holdin' On/ Song For My Brother/ Johnnie Lee/ Summer Love/ P Park/ Footprints in the Sand/ When Love Comes Calling/ Where Are You Now/
★17 TALKIN` VERVE 1997: Sunny/ Song For My Father/ That Lucky Old Sun (Just Roll/ Some Of My Best Friends Are B/ (You Make Me Feel Like) A Nat/ Thunder Walk/ People Get Ready/ Low Down And Dirty Blues/ Groovin`/ Doobie, Doobie Blues/ The Windmills Of Your Mind/ Giblet Gravy/
★18 STANDING TOGETHER 1998: C Smooth/ Standing Together/ All I Know/ Cruise Control/ Poquito Spanish, Poquito Funk/ Still Waters/ Fly By Night/ Back To Love/ Keep Rollin'/ You Can Do It, Baby/
★19 MIDHIGHT MOODS 2002: Shiver/ Give Me The Night/ Lady Love Me (One More Time)/ In Your Eyes/ Love x Love/ Midnight Love Affair/ Breezin/ Love Ballad/ Never Give Up On A Good Thing/ Feel Like Making Love/ 20,20/ Nature Boy/ On Broadway (Live)/ Kisses In The Moonlight/ Livin' Inside Your Love/ The Greatest Love Of All/
★20 IRREPLACEABLE 2003: Six Play/ Whole Man/ Irreplaceable/ Loving Is Better Than Leaving/ Strings Of Love/ Cell Phone/ Black Rose/ Stairway To Love/ Reason For Breathing/ Missing You/

Compilation of the Month - "Harry Belafonte: Sing Your Song"

CD Compilation of the Month
Harry Belafonte: "Sing Your Song - The Music" (Sony Masterworks) 2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
**** (remastering)

Compilation Produced by Nedra Olds-Neal & Alex Miller
Remastered by Mark Wilder @ Battery Studios, NYC
Original Tracks Produced by J. Lewis, Henri René, Bob Bollard, Dennis Farnon, Bill Eaton, Phil Ramone, Andy Wiswell, Joe Carlton, Hy Grill, Dave Kapp, Harry Belafonte & Herman Diaz, Jr.

"Sing Your Song - The Music" includes some of Belafonte's most treasured recordings and is the companion to his long awaited autobiography "My Song: A Memoir by Harry Belafonte" (co-written with Michael Schnayerson and published by Knopf in both hardcover & eBook) and to the critically acclaimed HBO documentary movie "Sing Your Song."

These 16 specially selected songs serve as a chronological musical narration of the film and the book, as they follow the extraordinary milestones of Belafonte's incomparable career.

My two personal favorite tracks are from the underrated 1977 album "Turn The World Around," recorded in the USA but only released overseas and never reissued on CD anywhere in the world: its sensational title track and "Can't Cross Over." Nothing less than five expatriate Brazilian musicians took part on the sessions: trumpeter Claudio Roditi, keyboardist Dom Salvador, and percussionists Dom Um Romão, Naná Vasconcellos (credited only as Nana) and Portinho (credited as Thelmo M. Porto). They add a fiery spice to the title track "Turn The World Around," using cuica, berimbau and other typical Brazilian instruments. Mauricio Smith, who recorded on Dom Um's legendary sessions for Muse, is heard on flute; Francisco Centeno plays electric bass; Dom Um's protegé Steve Thornton (who recorded with his master on the "Hotmosphere" album for Pablo) plays bongos; and Keith Loving is the electric guitarist.

Other highlights: "Mark Twain" (featuring Millard Thomas on acoustic guitar), "Sylvie" (with the Norman Luboff Choir), "Banana Boat Song" (orchestra & choir conducted by Tony Scott, a tune from Belafonte's groundbreaking 1956 "Calypso" album), the epic title song from the 20th Century Fox film "Island in the Sun" (Harry was the movie's star), "Man Smart, Woman Smarter" (with Mundell Lowe on guitar, a song covered by The Grateful Dead, The Carpenters and Robert Palmer), "A Hole in the Bucket" (an improvised comic duet with folksinger Odetta done for the 1959 TV special "Tonight with Belafonte" that won an Emmy, making Belafonte the first African-American to receive the prestigious Award), "Jamaica Farewell" (by Harry's most frequent collaborator, Irving Burgie, artistically known as Lord Burgess, this song was later covered by Bob James on his "Three" album for CTI), "My Angel" (aka "Malaika," featuring Miriam Makeba) and "Matilda," another big hit.
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Film Synopsis
"Sing Your Song" is the result of a confluence of many events, things as diverse as the passing of Marlon Brando, a look back at the lives of many other unsung heroes in the fight for justice as well as the faithful love (and gentle nagging) of two daughters. Like Brando, there are many public figures who are not known, primarily, for their activism, their compassion and their dedication to human rights. Harry Belafonte is one of them:

“Cecilia, the daughter of another silent warrior, my friend Gregory Peck, had just completed a documentary on her father’s remarkable life. Coincidental to this, was the tugging by my daughter, Gina, to document my own journey. For many years I had resisted prodding by several who felt that I should both write and film my story. The idea as an end in itself seemed too self-serving. But I was awakened to the possibilities of making such a commitment by revealing the stories that could be told of and by all those with whom I shared an unending quest for justice.”

"Sing Your Song" is an up close look at a great American, Harry Belafonte. A patriot to the last and a champion for worldwide human rights, Belafonte is one of the truly heroic cultural and political figures of the past 60 years. Told from Harry’s point of view, the film charts his life from a boy born in New York and raised in Jamaica, who returns to Harlem in his early teens where he discovers the American Negro Theater and the magic of performing.

From there the film follows Belafonte’s rise from the jazz and folk clubs of Greenwich Village and Harlem to his emergence as a star. However, even as a superstar, the life of a black man in 1960s America was far from easy and Belafonte was confronted with the same Jim Crow laws and prejudices that every other black man, woman and child in America was facing.

Among other things, the film presents a brief look at the Civil Rights Movement through the eyes of an insider, someone who despite his high profile, wasn’t afraid to spend time in the trenches.

From Harlem to Mississippi to Africa and South Central Los Angeles, Sing Your Song takes us on a journey through Harry Belafonte’s life, work and most of all, his conscience, as it inspires us all to action!

Cast & Creative:
Michael Cohl Presents A Film by Susanne Rostock
A Belafonte Enterprises and S2BN Entertainment Production In Association with Julius R. Nasso Productions
Produced by Michael Cohl, Gina Belafonte, Jim Brown, William Eigen and Julius R. Nasso
Co-Produced by Sage Scully
Edited by Susanne Rostock, Jason L. Pollard
Music Composed by Hahn Rowe

Video Blog: Truth or Dare
As part of his continuing social and political activism, Harry Belafonte is launching Truth or Dare. Comprised of a bi-weekly video blog (Truth) and a direct call to action (Dare), Truth or Dare aims to use social media and Harry's own stories to inspire people to take action in their communities.
http://singyoursongthemovie.com/truth-or-dare/

For more infos about the movie, please visit: www.singyoursongthemovie.com

DVD of the Month - "Ron Carter: Dear Miles"

DVD of the Month
Ron Carter: "Dear Miles" (Black-Lodge) 2008/2011

TV broadcast from a concert @ Europa Jazz Festival on April 1st, 2008, at the Palais des Congres in Le Mans, France, during Ron Carter's world tour to promote his "Dear Miles" album.

Featuring: Stephen Scott (piano), Payton Crossley (drums) & Rolando Morales-Matos (congas, bongos & percussion)

Tracklist:
1. Flamingo Sketches
2. Blues in the Closet
3. Camiñando
4. Joshua
5. Quiet Time
6. Cut & Paste
7. Orpheus (Manhã de Carnaval/Samba de Orfeu)
8. You and the Night and the Music

Blu-ray of the Month - "Diana Krall / Ray Charles: The Best of Jazz Legends"

Blu-ray Disc of the Month
Diana Krall & Ray Charles: "Jazz Box - The Best of Jazz Legends" (EagleVision/Edel) 2011


Release Date: September 23, 2011

Sound: LPCM stereo/Dolby True HD 5.1/DTS HD Master Audio;
Image: 1080i High Definition WS/16:9;Spr:E;Sub
Total Time: 240 minutes
Limted Edition

Disc 1
"Diana Krall - Live in Rio"
Arranged by Claus Ogerman, conducted by Ruriá Duprat
Tracklisting:
01 I Love Being Here With You
02 Let's Fall In Love
03 Where Or When
04 Too Marvelous For Words
05 I've Grown Accustomed To His Face
06 Walk On By
07 Frim Fram Sauce
08 Cheek To Cheek
09 You're My Thrill
10 Let's Face The Music And Dance
11 Every Time We Say Goodbye
12 So Nice
13 Quiet Night
14 Este Seu Olhar
15 The Boy From Ipanema
16 I Don't Know Enough About You
17 S'Wonderful
18 Exactly Like You
19 Promo Film/Conversations/Rooftop Sessions

Disc 2
"Ray Charles - Live at Montreux 1997"
Musical Director & Conductor: Al Jackson
Tracklisting:
01 I Don't Know
02 Ray charles Opener
03 I'll Be Home
04 Busted
05 Georgia On My Mind
06 Mississippi Mud
07 Just For A Thrill
08 You Made Me Love You
09 Angelina
10 Scotia Blues (Blues For Big Scotia)
11 Song For You
12 Do It To Me Slow (Raelettes Intro)
13 Watch Them Dogs
14 Shadow Of My Mind
15 Smack Dab In The Middle
16 I Can't Stop Loving You
17 People Will Say We're In Love
18 What'd I Say
19 Just Friends (bonus)
20 Beatrice (bonus)
21 Passeone Blues (bonus)

Book of the Month - "Diana Krall: The Collection, Volume Three"

Book of the Month
Diana Krall: "The Collection, Vol. 3" (Wise Publications)

Complete transciptions of 12 songs as performed by Diana Krall. Arranged for piano and voice, with guitar chord boxes. Includes her version of Gershwin's "'S Wonderful," originally arranged by German genius Claus Ogerman for Brazilian bossa nova genius João Gilberto's "Amoroso" album. Diana's version appeared on her 2001 CD "The Look of Love," which topped the Billboard charts here in the U.S. and went quintuple platinum in Canada, the first by a Canadian jazz artist to do so.

Songlist:
All or Nothing At All
And I Love Him
Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
Crazy
'Deed I Do
Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
I Love Being Here With You
I'm Just A Lucky So And So
Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't (Ma' Baby)?
I've Got You Under My Skin
My Love Is
'S Wonderful

XRCD of the Month - "Diana Krall: The Look of Love"

XRCD of the Month
Diana Krall: "The Look of Love" (Verve)

Arranged & Conducted by Claus Ogerman
Produced by Tommy LiPuma

Box Set of the Month - "Eumir Deodato: Original Album Classics"

Box Set of the Month
Deodato: "Original Album Classics" (CTI/Sony) 2011

3-CD box set released on September 23, 2011
Original albums produced by Creed Taylor & engineered by Rudy Van Gelder
Recorded in 1972 & 1973
Front Cover Photo: Alen MacWeeney
Original Album Photos: Pete Turner (front covers of "Prelude" and "In Concert") and Alen MacWeeney (front cover of "Deodato 2"), Duane Michals (liner photos of "Prelude" and "Deodato 2"), Dean Brown and Frederico Mendes (back cover photos of "In Concert")
Original Album Designs: Bob Ciano

Featuring: Eumir Deodato, Ron Carter, Stanley Clarke, John Giulino, Billy Cobham, Rick Marotta, Ray Barretto, Airto Moreira, Jay Berliner, John Tropea, Rubens Bassini, Gilmore Degap, Hubert Laws, Marvin Stamm, Bill Watrous, Burt Collins, Joe Shepley, Garnett Brown, Joe Temperley et al.

Also includes three bonus tracks not available in the original LP issue of "Deodato 2" ("Venus," "Latin Flute" and a demo studio version of Steely Dan's "Do It Again," later re-recorded on his MCA debut in 1974, "Whirldwinds") and two tracks ("Paraná" and "Branches - O Galho da Roseira") on which Deodato doesn't appears; both performed live by Airto's band @ the Felt Forum of the Madison Square Garden, and included by Creed Taylor on the "Deodato/Airto In Concert" album.

Track listing
CD 1 - "Prelude"
1. Also Sprach Zarathustra (Theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey)
2. Spirit of Summer
3. Carly and Carole
4. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
5. Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
6. September 13

CD 2 - "Deodato 2"
1. Super Strut
2. Rhapsody in Blue
3. Nights in White Satin
4. Pavane for a Dead Princess
5. Skyscrapers
6. Latin Flute
7. Venus
8. Do It Again

CD 3 - "Deodato/Airto In Concert"
1. Do It Again
2. Spirit of Summer
3. Parana
4. Tropea (Whirlwinds)
5. Branches (O Galho da Roseira)
6. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
7. Skyscrapers

CD Reissue of the Month - "Joe Farrell: Outback"

CD Reissue of the Month
Joe Farrell: "Outback" (CTI/Sony Masterworks) 1971/2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
**** (recording & mixing)
**** (remastering)

Featuring: Joe Farrell (flutes, piccolo, tenor sax), Chick Corea (electric piano), Buster Williams (acoustic bass), Elvin Jones (drums) & Airto Moreira (percussion)
Produced by Creed Taylor
Recorded & Mixed by Rudy Van Gelder @ Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, on November 4, 1971 (released in March 1972)
Front Cover Photo: Pete Turner
Liner Photos: Chuck Stewart
Album Design: Bob Ciano

Reissue Produced by Richard Seidel
Remastered by Mark Wilder & Maria Triana @ Battery Studios, NJ
At the time of its original LP release, "Outback" received in 1972 the "Best Engineering Award" from Japan's "late" jazz bible, Swing Journal.

Vocal CD of the Month - "Bryan Anthony: A Night Like This"

Vocal CD of the Month
Bryan Anthony & Gary Norian Trio: "A Night Like This" (Mercator Media) 2011

Rating:
**** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Backed by the Gary Norian Trio, vocalist Bryan Anthony's passion for GAS (the Great American Songbook) is in sumptuous display throughout "A Night Like This," his second solo album, recorded & mixed by co-producer Brad Sayles at the studio of a local station, KUHF 88.7 FM (Houston Public Radio), a tradition still common all over Europe, but that disappeared in the U.S.

Highlights: the opener "I'm in the Mood for Love," the two versions of Gary Norian's title track, "Stardust" (one of Hoagy Carmichael's masterpieces), Gordon Jenkins' "This Is All I Ask" (his best ballad along with "Goodbye," both loved by Sinatra), Irving Berlin's "What'll I Do" (it's interesting to compare Anthony's exuberant & impassioned rendition with Chet Baker's introspective singing on his CTI album "She Was Too Good To Me") and another Norian gem, "The One I Most Adore."

"These songs possess such wisdom and poetry about human emotions, the feelings, situations, and dynamics that run through every generation and tie us all together," Anthony says. "I really believe that along with jazz these songs are America's classical music, the greatest gift American culture has provided to the world."

Working with a deftly swinging trio led by Houston pianist Gary Norian, featuring bassist Thomas Helton and drummer Joel Fulgham, Anthony delivers exquisite renditions of 13 standards and three Norian originals. Norian also arranged and, along with Anthony and engineer Brad Sayles, co-produced the album.

"Gary's gotten to really know my voice and what works for me," says Anthony. "I love 'A Night Like This.' It's very moody, with a sexy vibe almost like a James Bond theme. He wrote it specifically for me to sing and incorporated the things that I do best vocally. It's not the easiest song to sing."

Much like Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett, popular artists who were inextricably linked to jazz while not belonging wholly to the scene, Anthony has honed an approach based upon jazz's rhythmic fluidity but that doesn't depart from the essential melodies. He's not a scat singer who uses songs as launching pads for extended improvisation. Rather, he improvises around the edges, extending a syllable to emphasize a phrase, or pausing to underline a feeling.

CD annotator Francis Davis singles out Bryan's ballad interpretation of "Then Can't Take That Away" as a performance "where his simpatico with Norian is worthy of comparison to Tony Bennett's duets with Bill Evans."

Bryan Anthony, 33, was born in Santa Rosa, California, and raised in Houston. In high school he got involved in musical theater, but experienced an epiphany when a friend gave him a copy of Sinatra's greatest hits from his Reprise years. While seeking out more Sinatra recordings, he got turned on to the jazz vocal pantheon, from Joe Williams, Tony Bennett, and Chet Baker to Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Carmen McRae. In 1995 he enrolled at Manhattan School of Music to study classical voice, then went on to earn a master's at NYU in jazz and studio music.

In 1997 he took a leave of absence from school to go out on the road with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. "It was incredible to perform five nights a week," Anthony says. "The bandleader Larry O'Brien was very much of the old school of big band singing. I learned a lot having him give me notes every night, really instilling that crooner tradition."

Anthony later toured with the Tommy Dorsey and Nelson Riddle Orchestras. He also released his first album in 2000, "Look at Me Now," which he expanded and re-released in 2006 as "Songs for Dreamers."

"The biggest compliment I get is when people tell me 'I've heard that song a million times, but that's the first time I heard it in that light,'" says Anthony. "I tried to learn the ropes out on the road with the Miller and Dorsey bands. I wanted to learn the tradition of American pop singing, and then find my own voice. At first I was drawn to Sinatra. I'm a baritone and I've got a similar timbre. But now I try to sound as far away as I can."

Bryan Anthony, who divides his time between New York and Houston, recently appeared with fellow Mercator Media artist Yvonne Washington and the Gary Norian Trio at Cezanne's in Houston. To see other dates in the works, please check: www.bryananthonymusic.com

Instrumental CD of the Month - "Marc Copland & John Abercrombie: Speak to Me"

Instrumental CD of the Month
Marc Copland & John Abercrombie: "Speak to Me" (Pirouet) 2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
**** (sonic quality)

Featuring: Marc Copland (acoustic piano) & John Abercrombie (electric guitar)
Produced, Recorded (March 14 & 15) & Mixed (July 8) by Jason Seizer @ Pirouet Studio, Munich, Germany
Mastered by Christoph Stickel @ MSM Studios, Munich, Germany
Cover Design & Photos: Konstantin Kern
Total Time 58:26

Tracklist:
Left Behind (Abercrombie)
Speak to Me (Copland)
Seven (Abercrombie)
If I Should Lose You (Ralph Rainger)
Blues Connotation (Ornette Coleman)
So Long (Abercrombie)
Falling Again (Copland)
Talking Blues (Copland)
Witchcraft (Cy Coleman)

Lyricism abounds. Subtleness reigns. The best piano/guitar album since the legendary Bill Evans/Jim Hall sessions from the '60s. No "extra" notes; only the essence matters for Copland & Abercrombie. They know how to play the silence. "Speak to Me," by far one of the best releases of 2011, is the CD premiere of a duo that has actually been in existence for some time.

Both musicians provide strong originals (Copland's "Left Behind" and Abercrombie's "So Long" are among the highlights), but my personal favorite tracks are the renditions of "Witchcraft," "If I Should Lose You" (on both songs, after their individual solos, they perform fantastic dialogues) and "Blues Connotation."

These takes by pianist Marc Copland and guitarist John Abercrombie are inspiring examples of the quiet, calm art of communication practiced at the highest level by two individuals with solid musical personalities. It is comparable to the finest chamber music - call it "chamber jazz" if you will. This is music from two of the most insightful players of jazz.

Producer-engineer Jason Seizer captured this magic feeling in the most natural way, achieving a warm sound with a beautiful ambiance. However, there's a small ammount of hiss - noticeable in the left channel - in the beginning of tracks 7 ("Falling Again") and 9 ("Witchcraft"). Anyway, I repeat: it's one of the best albums of the year.
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Copland's catalog on Pirouet doesn't stops to grow. "Alone" reveals Marc Copland solo, a facet that is especially exciting. When reviewing that album here on this blog, Arnaldo DeSouteiro wrote: "Marc Copland is one of the best pianists in jazz history, an underrated artist who's in the same creative level of Keith Jarrett and Ahmad Jamal, all with particular and peculiar musical styles. "Alone", Marc's solo adventure, comes out on the Munich-based Pirouet label after this pianist's extraordinary "New York Trio Recordings" series of three CDs."

Over and over it has been emphasised how sensitively Copland reacted to his trio partners (each of the trio CDs, by the way, were made up of different group members) - what a kaleidoscope of colours his playing can absorb and reflect. Despite (or is it because of) Copland's unique tonal language, the individual nuances of each playing partner are revealed. Born in Philadelphia in 1948, he began his professional career in the nineteen sixties as a saxophonist. Since the late eighties he has more and more made a name as a pianist with a totally unique aesthetic. His enigmatically suspended harmonies create textural nuances which have become an unmistakeable trademark of Copland's.

John Abercrombie had studied at the Berklee School of Music in Boston during the 1960's and had already become one of the most in-demand session musicians in New York. It was during this time that Copland and Abercrombie played together in drummer Chico Hamilton's band - and established a connection that continues to this day. With Copland having crossed over to piano, both have been playing together with different groups on a wide variety of CDs since 1988. In addition, the two musicians often played duo concerts one of which was celebrated by the Washington Post newspaper as "elegant and earthy at the same time". Now, at last, one can experience this great duo on "Speak to Me."

"Cadence"-October/November/December 2011

"Jazz Inside" - October 2011

Kenny Wheeler, trumpeter, composer, is featured in the October 2011 issue of Jazz Inside Magazine. This 64-page edition also features interviews with saxophonists George Braith, Sonny Simmons, Rabbi Greg Wall and 95 year old arranger, composer Russ Garcia. There are also performance reviews of the Ron Carter Big Band and Vijay Iyer Trio, CD reviews, articles to delight your jazz palette, and 16 pages of New York jazz activities.

The October 2011 issue of Jazz Inside Magazine (64 pages), available free in print and as a down-loadable digital edition, and designed for jazz lovers worldwide - features trumpeter, composer Kenny Wheeler. This issue also includes interviews with saxophonists George Braith, Sonny Simmons, Rabbi Greg Wall , and arranger-composer Russ Garcia . This issue also includes ample CD reviews, performance reviews of the Ron Carter Big Band and Vijay Iyer Trio, and much more jazz to delight your jazz palette.

In the interview with Kenny Wheeler, the trumpeter and composer, who has recorded and performed with Dave Holland, Lee Konitz, Keith Jarrett, John Taylor, Jack DeJohnette, Jürgen Friedrich (on his debut album for Creed Taylor's CTI label, "Summerflood") and many others, commented on playing inside and out: "I felt that the free music was kind of loosening up my straight-ahead playing – and my straight ahead playing was tightening up the free music a bit."

Kenny also commented on the how the quality of his performance impacts his outlook: "…sometimes if I get a little bit stressed out, and don’t play good, then that can depress me. I can handle everything else if I play good on the gig."

He went on to add his perspective about what a review can do: “A bad review will make you feel bad for maybe a week, but a good review only makes you feel good for the next day - and that’s it.”

George Braith, 72, is best known for playing multiple reed instruments simultaneously and for inventing the Braithophone - two different horns (straight alto and soprano) mended together by extensions, valves and connections to form a double horn with different bells on the end. He recorded for Blue Note Records in the 1960s and played with John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins and many others.

Braith told about his developing association with Coltrane after meeting in San Francisco in the early 1960s. “When [Coltrane] found out about the two-horn playing he said, ‘You’ve got to come to my house.’ We were in San Francisco at the Jazz Workshop and I went and sat in with him … He wired out 75 dollars right away and I headed to New York [in 1967] while I was trembling”

Braith had the opportunity to work with recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder during his series of recordings for Blue Note in the 1960s. "Rudy Van Gelder? … was always very secretive ... He’d go in the booth and wouldn’t want anybody to see what he was doing … His dials were set differently for Prestige than they were for Blue Note. We had a wonderful relationship.”

Composer-arranger Russ Garcia, now 95 and living in New Zealand, had a busy career in Hollywood. He composed music for TV and film, and for numerous big bands and singers including Sarah Vaughn, Mel Torme and many others, in addition to working as the A&R Director for Verve Records. He discusses his career and close association with Oscar Peterson.

“Sarah Vaughn had perfect pitch, so I started the arrangement of ‘My Ship’ with no one playing in back of her ... As we started rehearsing this, the great arranger Billy May walked into the booth, and seeing the whole big orchestra not playing, he switched on the intercom and said, ‘Hey, Russ. Is this what you get twenty dollars a page for?’”

“Once in Europe, we were backstage and Miles would play the first chorus and walk off stage, letting Coltrane play for 8 or 10 minutes and then Miles would walk on and play the last chorus. Oscar said, ‘Come on, Miles. These people didn’t pay 60 dollars a ticket just for a quick glimpse of your new Italian suit. Get out there and play for them.’”
Download here: http://jazzinsidemagazine.com/publications/guide/october-2011

Performance Reviews by Shannon Effinger include coverage of Ron Carter's Big Band at the Jazz Standard and Vijay Iyer Trio.

The CD Reviews section includes coverage of recordings by Bobby Broom, Jerry Costanzo, Carmen Cuesta, Tim Horner, Sachal Vasandani, Kenny Werner, Chip White, Ben Williams, Westchester Jazz Orchestra, Phil Woods & Bill Mays

Comprehensive monthly calendar and event listings for the number one jazz market in the world - New York - span 16 pages.
Download here: http://jazzinsidemagazine.com/publications/guide/october-2011

Jazz Inside Magazine is published monthly and is also available in print, free at 200 locations around the New York metro area, and by paid subscription for jazz fans.
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Interview With Saxophonist George Braith in Jazz Inside Magazine, October 2011

“When [Coltrane] found out about the two-horn playing he said, ‘You’ve got to come to my house.’ We were in San Francisco at the Jazz Workshop and I went and sat in with him … He wired out 75 dollars right away and I headed to New York [in 1967] while I was trembling”

This is an excerpt from the interview and photo by Ken Weiss with saxophonist George Braith in the October issue of Jazz Inside Magazine. Download the entire issue here:
http://maildogmanager.com/link.html?url=350&client=jazzinsidetv&campaign=220

George Braith, 72, is best known for playing multiple reed instruments simultaneously and for inventing the Braithophone - two different horns (straight alto and soprano) mended together by extensions, valves and connections to form a double horn with different bells on the end. Braith’s music has featured an unusual repertoire of original compositions, popular tunes such as “Poinciana” and “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” along with an original flare and robust playing. Born George Braithwaite on June 27, 1939 in New York, the youngest of 9 children to parents from the West Indies, he was encouraged to play music from an early age. Braith played clarinet and alto saxophone in junior high school, later adding bassoon and flute, and formed a band in the Catskills that included drummer Pete Sims (LaRoca) during high school.

Formal training continued at the Manhattan School of Music. Braith’s exploration on dual horns began in 1961 and the first Braithophone was created in 1976. He recorded three well-received albums for Blue Note between 1963-64, all of which included guitarist Grant Green and organ, and led dates for Prestige later in the decade. He also recorded as a sideman for organist Big John Patton. Additionally, Braith made an important contribution to the New York jazz scene by opening his own performance space, Musart, in 1966. Located on Spring Street, it allowed many of New York’s future stars to sharpen their craft and find work. Although his major label recorded output slowed after the ‘60s, he continues to perform and release recordings on the Japanese King Records label and over the past 10 years, by way of his own record company, Excellence Records. He’s also been busy perfecting his signature instrument, the Braithophone, which will soon be in production.

Jazz Inside: Playing two horns at once has forever linked you with Rahsaan Roland Kirk. What was your relationship with him?

George Braith: I first met him that night he came and played at the Purple Manor and we hit it off very good. He was blind and I had a straight alto that I used to play and he had this horn that he called a stritch. I said, “Hey man, that horn is exactly the same horn I have except that somebody put a trombone bell on it.” He said, “No man, no.” I was looking right at it, it was an alto with a trombone bell. So we had that little argument over the years. He insisted it was a different horn and I told him I wasn’t going to argue with him. He got a little salty when Blue Note signed me and he started telling critics stuff but we broke bread and had a good time the last time I saw him when he was at the [Village] Vanguard before he passed away. I admire him and he encouraged me a lot. I appreciated his talent and what he could do, not only on saxophone and flute, he was a fantastic player. There was competition, there’s competition all over the place, in all fields, right? Everybody was competing; some guys compete at a different level. Take someone like Coltrane. He was a very loving guy. He’d compete but he’d like to find out what was going on. When he found out about the two-horn playing he said, “You’ve got to come to my house.” We were in San Francisco at the Jazz Workshop and I went and sat in with him one Sunday and he was all like [worked up]. He said, “I’ve got to get you to come to my house.” I said, ‘Look, I’m out here and I can’t come to your house right now.’ He said, “I’m flying home tonight, here’s my number, call me and tell me how much it cost to get you to come to my house.” So I called him and I said it would be 75 dollars and in those days that was a lot of money. He wired out 75 dollars right away and I headed to New York [in 1967] while I was trembling – ‘Oh, my goodness, Coltrane!’ He used to make my hands freeze. I’d go down to Birdland to hear him play and all of a sudden my hands felt [frozen]. This guy was so tremendous that he would just freeze you, wow! He was a great gentleman. We finally got together and played for hours.

JI: You were recorded by the legendary Rudy Van Gelder. He wasn’t known as a great fan of the avant-garde, and I’m not saying that you fit that category, but you played the two horns at times. What was his response to your playing?

GB: Rudy Van Gelder? He’s a heck of a technician and was always very secretive about what he was doing in the booth. He’d go in the booth and wouldn’t want anybody to see what he was doing with his dials or anything like that. His dials were set differently for Prestige than they were for Blue Note. We had a wonderful relationship

JI: I have a quote about you from one of the musicians that you play with at times- violinist Fiidla. He said, “He’s part Sun Ra, part Sonny Rollins and part Miles Davis. His sense of rhythm is so advanced that I knew the tunes but after hearing him play them, I had never heard them before.”

GB: That’s what he said, huh? What would you like me to say?

JI: It was so nice, I really just wanted you to hear it.

GB: That’s an interesting compliment, if he hears it that way, I can’t deny. I study music and I play all the time and I write songs. It’s my life. Of course, I would like to be top shelf and want everybody to appreciate it. I try to put out love and hope to get it back.

JI: Lou Donaldson served an important role in your career. How did that strong relationship come about and exactly how did he help you?

GB: Lou Donaldson and Babs Gonzales recommended me to the Alfred Lion and that was great. Like I said, I grew up in the Bronx and right around the corner was a jazz club called Freddie’s and Lou Donaldson used to work there all the time and I’d see him and he’d give me advice. Also, I used to play gigs that he was on. When I was 15, there was a club downtown called The Pad and they would have contests every week and the band that would win would play opposite the cats Sunday afternoon. My band would win and we’d play opposite Bud Powell, Lou Donaldson, Art Blakey’s Messengers and Horace Silver’s group. My band had Pete La Roca on drums, John Maher on piano, Vincent McEwan on trumpet, Bill Salter on bass and Barry Rogers sometimes on trombone. I always had my band working someplace. Fridays and Saturdays I’d be doing some dance or some club. There were many things going on in those days, there were at least 30 different happenings going on. Now you can find maybe 6. There was really a scene when I was coming up, it was really marvelous. The music was beautiful, there was no avant-garde, there was no “out” stuff, at least until Ornette Coleman comes with this stuff but I’ll leave that alone. We had structure but his music was eccentric at that time, it kind of baffled everybody and we wondered why he couldn’t come and play regular, traditional music, which he still hasn’t done. I’m not saying that you’ve got to be able to do that because you’ve got guys like Frank Wright and Cecil Taylor. He tried but then you can hear why he chose to do what he did. There’s the record with Cecil and Kenny Dorham where they play “Just Friends.” Maybe he should play that because he sounded better playing that then when he came in. There was a problem there so there may be problems. I’m not against that, it’s good because I like analyzing music. That’s the enjoyment of music, it’s fun to analyze it but if it gets too challenging, the bells stop ringing. A song should grow just like a flower, it should flower. When a singer sings a song, the bells are ringing. There’s three parts of music, there’s rhythm, harmony and melody. The general public is into rhythm, when you get too much into harmony and melody you lose ninety percent of them. So that’s the problem with the progression of jazz, we lost them a long time ago. Guys like Bird played so pretty, I don’t know how he lost them. I guess it’s in the ear of the beholder. You hear something that is beautiful and you say, ‘Wow! That is fantastic,’ and somebody else doesn’t hear it, it just goes “thuuup,” right through their ears.

JI: You made three strong recordings for Blue Note Records in the early ‘60s. Each of the recordings featured the same format with you on horns along with an organ trio. What attracted you to that grouping?

GB: That’s the band I had working with me, we did 125,000 miles up and down the road working. It was great.

"DownBeat" - October 2011

Vibraphonist Gary Burton discusses his new album with his young, visionary Quartet, jazz vocalists step into the spotlight, and the Student Music Guide provides inside information on over 175 music programs! Also includes interviews with Steve Coleman and the NY-based Brazilian jazz pianist Eliane Elias.

Friday, September 30, 2011

R.I.P.: Sylvia Robinson

I became aware of Sylvia Robinson's talent as a composer through an album I bought, back in 1973, when I was 10 years, titled "860 - Sua Paz Mundial," released in my native Brazil by the Som Livre label, reuniting radio hits from the 860 AM Mundial radio station. On that compilation, which also included a version of Eumir Deodato's "2001 - Also Sprach Zarathustra" by Rosco & The Prophetic Band, Robinson's first big hit, "Pillow Talk" was sung by French singer-actress Nicolle Croisile. I've been a Robinson fan since then. Rest in Peace.

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-0930-sylvia-robinson-20110930,0,5571728.story

Sylvia Robinson dies at 76; produced first hip-hop hit
Robinson owned Sugar Hill Records. The label released 'Rapper's Delight' by the Sugar Hill Gang in 1979. It's considered the first mainstream hit. She also had a solo hit with 'Pillow Talk' in 1973.
Sylvia Robinson recognized the potential of hip-hop, which was bubbling on the streets of New York City, and sought to capitalize on it. (Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images)

Associated Press - September 30, 2011
The woman some call the mother of hip-hop has died.


Sylvia Robinson, who had a hit as a singer-songwriter with the sexually charged "Pillow Talk" but was later known as one of hip-hop's early founders for releasing "Rapper's Delight," rap's first mainstream success, died Thursday, according to publicist Greg Walker. She was 76.

Robinson, born Sylvia Vanterpool, died of congestive heart failure at the New Jersey Institute of Neuroscience in Secaucus.

Along with her late husband, Joe, Robinson was the owner of Sugar Hill Records. In 1979, the label released the song that would become widely known as rap's first hit, "Rapper's Delight," by the Sugar Hill Gang.

The song was released as hip-hop was beginning to emerge as a genre; for the most part, it was a budding phenomenon bubbling on New York City streets. Robinson recognized the potential of the music and wanted her struggling label to capitalize on it.

"She saw where a DJ was talking and the crowd was responding to what he was saying, and this was the first time she ever saw this before," her son Joey said in a 2000 interview with NPR. "And she said, 'Joey, wouldn't this be a great idea to make a rap record?'"

It turned out she was right. After gathering three rappers — Master Gee, Wonder Mike and Big Bank Hank — to record the 15-minute song, the party groove became a sensation. The condensed version was considered the first rap song to get radio play and reached the top 40 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart.

The Sugar Hill Gang faded into rap history, with no other songs that possessed the flourish of its original hit. But Sugar Hill Records would continue to play a part in the early years of hip-hop with a roster that included Grand Master Flash and the Furious Five.

Robinson's roots in the record industry were deep. She was a blues singer in the 1950s, recording for Columbia and Savoy Records on songs like "Chocolate Candy Blues." Later, she was part of the duo Mickey & Sylvia.

But she had perhaps her biggest hit as a solo artist with "Pillow Talk," a seductive song released in 1973. Robinson was also a producer and songwriter for others.

She is survived by three sons and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

54th Annual Monterey Jazz Festival Wraps Up Sensational Weekend of Music

38,000 Fans Enjoy Perfect Weather and Historic Performances, September 16 - 18

“Rollins could have been an emblem of the Monterey Jazz Festival itself —
which combined historic wisdom and youthful zest.” – Seattle Times

“‘Unbelievable’ was the oft-repeated adjective applied to [Sonny Rollins]...” – Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

“Highlights of the festival were undoubtedly the young American saxophonist Tia Fuller and the exceptional, Japanese pianist Hiromi Uehara…Her playing is so powerful that for certain parts of her music, she got off the piano bench and kept playing while standing.”– Der Spiegel

“A strong focus on female composers and bandleaders was the hallmark and highlight of the weekend, but only one aspect of a diverse roster that spanned genres and generations, opening with one of the music’s brightest young stars in Robert Glasper, closing with one of its mightiest veterans in Sonny Rollins.” – Jazz Observer

“Saturday at the Monterey Jazz Festival was a journey through eras, river basins,
continents, climate zones, you name it.” – International Review of Music

“The people who come here like this vibe, and follow this music enough to plan their whole vacations around it. There's a real loyalty to this whole experience. Not just gorging yourself on music, but being able to eat in the food court with Gerald Wilson or Poncho Sanchez.” – National Public Radio’s A Blog Supreme

“…the performances by Richard Bona/Raul Midon and India.Arie/Idan Raichel demonstrated a wider net than the usual predominant Latin jazz subset, and it was refreshing to experience the embracing collaborations between different cultures, a theme worth its weight in gold.” – Monterey County Herald

“…the Monterey Jazz Festival…a potent cultural institution, on the West Coast and in the world.” – Santa Barbara Independent

“…the best weekend of jazz you're ever going to witness.” – Monterey County Herald

“…this weekend’s festival was a joy, if an exhausting one – a 53-hour infusion of music…” – San Jose Mercury News

“This is a full-service, style-inclusive festival—still the best in the west and probably the best American festival overall…” – JazzTimes

“Long live Monterey!” – Sonny Rollins




Weekend Highlights
· Robert Glasper turns in three visionary sets
· Hiromi blows away Arena and Dizzy’s Den audiences
· Dumpstaphunk, Soul Rebels, Kermit Ruffins, and Terence Blanchard bring New Orleans to Monterey in raucous set in the Arena
· Sonny Rollins plays extra-long set to close the festival
· Still Ahead Orchestra plays a stunning, emotional set in the Arena Sunday night
· Tia Fuller, Bill Carrothers, Steve Coleman and others make high-impact debuts
· Huey Lewis plays crowd-pleasing set on Saturday
· Artist-In-Residence Joshua Redman and James Farm play inspired set in the Arena and Dizzy’s Den
· Next Generation Jazz Orchestra plays masterful, high energy set with special guests
Donny McCaslin, Benny Green and Joshua Redman
· Geri Allen’s “The Dazzler” amazes Arena audience
· Live Webcast from the Night Club reaches over 3000 viewers in 59 countries

The 54th Monterey Jazz Festival wrapped up Sunday, September 18th after a weekend of stunning weather and incredible performances by debut artists and old favorites alike.

38,000 fans came through the gates of the Monterey County Fairgrounds during the weekend of September 16-18, which featured music from around the globe and from all styles of classic jazz, compelling conversations and films, and engaging exhibits.

Musical Highlights: Friday

The thrilling weekend got off to an explosive start in the Arena on a warm Friday night with a high energy set from Hiromi: The Trio Project featuring Anthony Jackson and Simon Phillips (who was perhaps playing the largest drumset ever seen at the Festival in 54 years), followed by the debonair John Pizzarelli Quartet and Poncho Sanchez and his Latin Big Band featuring Terence Blanchard (who would appear at least three more times over the weekend).

On the Grounds, Robert Glasper, the festival’s Showcase Artist, put in the first of three world-class sets, followed by the electric Eric Telford Collective and the other-worldly Berklee Flamenco. In the Night Club, things got underway with the Festival’s first ever live Webcast, featuring Carmen Souza, John Santos and Juan-Carlos Formell -- a Latin-jazz extravaganza. Helen Sung put in three sets of alternately rollicking and delicate sets in the Coffee House, and in Dizzy’s Den, Raul Midon and Richard Bona put in a virtuoso set of world music and jazz, followed by fusion from Hiromi for her second set (after four golf carts transported Simon Phillip’s drumset from the Arena Stage).

Musical Highlights: Saturday

The Arena’s Saturday shows got the day off to a blistering start with An Afternoon in Treme when the Soul Rebels Brass Band marched into the Arena and took the stage by storm, alternating with the rowdy Dumpstaphunk, with actor Wendell Pierce as emcee in a tribute to the New Orleans Neighborhood that has spawned many important musical traditions. Augmented by trumpeters Kermit Ruffins and Terence Blanchard (subbing for Glen David Andrews), the set got the Arena on its feet and the sawdust in the air. Huey Lewis and The News followed, performing a crowd pleasing set of Memphis favorites and original hits to an appreciative crowd.

The evening shows were a varied bunch, beginning with Geri Allen and Timeline, performing “The Dazzler,” the Monterey Jazz Festival commission for 2011, featuring tap dancer Maurice Chestnut. Joshua Redman and James Farm put in an inspired set, followed by Herbie Hancock, who performed a set of his own jazz standards.

Saturday’s Garden Stage got off to a hot start with Mitch Woods and his Rocket 88s, followed by second sets from the Soul Rebels and Dumpstaphunk, this time with special guest, drummer Greg Errico, who reprising hits from Sly and the Family Stone. Richard Bona and Raul Midon also played an inspired second set, with Elio Villafranca closing out the Garden Stage’s for Saturday. Dizzy’s Den was the focus of conversations, with Donny McCaslin taking the DownBeat Blindfold Test, and a insightful discussion between Wendell Pierce, Clint Eastwood and Ashley Kahn about Jazz on the Screen. In the evening, Robert Glasper played his second set of the weekend, this time with special guest Lionel Loueke, followed by a repeat performance from the John Pizzarelli Quartet and Joshua Redman with James Farm, all to a packed Dizzy’s Den.

Saturday’s Night Club performance also featured diverse sounds including vocals from CSULB’s Pacific Standard Time; Chika Singer; and the Commanders Jazz Ensemble from the United States Air Force.

Continuing the live Webcast in the evening, the Night Club featured vocalist Pamela Rose’s Wild Women of Song; the angular bop from the Scott Colley Trio and plugged-in Donny McCaslin Group. In the Coffee House, fans were treated to sets from the Sarah Wilson Quintet, Berklee Flamenco and the Bill Carrothers Trio. On the West Lawn, the John Brothers performed their barrelhouse repertoire on beat-up pianos, adding a level of humor and lightness to the afternoon.
Musical Highlights: Sunday

Sunday’s Arena shows began with a youthful start with the winner of the Next Generation Jazz Festival, the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, making their fourth appearance on the Jimmy Lyons Stage in the last five years, followed by the outstanding Next Generation Jazz Orchestra, which featured the country’s finest high school student musicians. Alumni Benny Green, Donny McCaslin and Joshua Redman made special appearances with the NGJO – Donny McCaslin’s solo proved to be of the most exciting of the weekend! India.Arie and Idan Raichel made an inspiring and uplifting appearance, making very different and peaceful music. The evening’s performances in the Arena began with a setting sun and the Still Ahead Orchestra performing the music of Miles Davis and Gil Evans, bringing tears to some members of the audience in a profoundly moving experience. Sonny Rollins then closed out the weekend, performing an energy-filled 100-minute set that belied his 81 years.

Sunday’s Grounds performances included USC’s Thorton School of Music Jazz Orchestra, the John Donaldson Quintet and Cow Bop in the afternoon on the Garden Stage, followed by the standout performance of the Tia Fuller Quartet and Steve Coleman and Five Elements. The Night Club presented seven youthful groups from the Next Generation Jazz Festival, followed by the final Web streams from the Benny Green Trio with Donald Harrison playing Monk; and the Robert Glasper Experiment with special guest Bilal. Dizzy’s Den began with conversations about the Art of Impulse, followed by a lifetime of experience with NEA Jazz Master Orrin Keepnews. The Will Blades and Joey DeFrancesco Trios kept things greasy at the end of Sunday evening with the Hammond B-3 Blowout, with Bobby Hutcherson sitting in with Joey as a special guest. In the Coffee House, Zun Zun and the Chase Morrin Group kept things happening with a youthful edge, followed by two virtuosic sets of solo piano from Eldar Djangirov.

All weekend long, fans were treated to the gallery exhibit Art of Impulse and the films Cachao: Uno Mas, More to Live For and Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way; and Judy Roberts on the Yamaha AvantGrand with Greg Fishman on saxophone, greeting fans as they visited the Festival's Food Court.

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2011 Partners and Tech Add Excitement to the Weekend

MJF partners provided activities and events throughout the Festival weekend to enhance the Festival experience for fans. Amoeba Records was set up at the center of the Midway, featuring CDs, rare vinyl and artist meet and greets. North Coast Brewing Company, celebrating their 6th year as Official Monterey Jazz Festival Beers, offered Brother Thelonious merchandise on the Midway. Carmel Road Winery, Official Wines of the Festival, offered tastings in the Festival's Premier Access Club. The Inns of Monterey and The Jazz Cruise both had a presence on the Grounds, and media partner KGO Newstalk 810 AM hosted a tent on the Midway with a visit from popular KGO afternoon host Gil Gross. DownBeat, another Festival media partner, hosted a booth on the Midway as well. In addition to providing instruments for the Festival's needs, Yamaha hosted the popular Instrument Petting Zoo featured during Sunday's Family Day.

The free Webcast, one of the most anticipated developments of the 54th Monterey Jazz Festival, resulted in over 3000 people from 59 countries tuning into the stream all weekend, made possible by tech partners StreamGuys, Meraki, and Alvarez Technology Group, and was streaming live on the Festival’s website, NPR’s A Blog Supreme, and KUSP. The free Festival App was also a hit, with over 1000 people downloading it for their personal use during the weekend.

The announcement of 2012 Monterey Jazz Festival Arena and Grounds artists will be made in March 2012, when tickets for the 55th Monterey Jazz Festival will be available for purchase.

The 55th Annual Monterey Jazz Festival will take place on the Monterey Fairgrounds, September 21 - 23, 2012, with over 500 artists performing on 8 stages for 3 nights and 2 days of the world's best jazz.