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What live music are you going to see tonight?


mikeweil

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Roebke Octet was excellent. Personnel was:

Josh Berman

Mars Williams

Keefe Jackson

Matt Schneider

Jason Roebke

Jason Adasiewicz

Mike Reed

(But that's only seven; Jeb Bishop must have been on the road.)

Band sounded tightly rehearsed, the unannounced original pieces (I assume all Roebke's) all swung hard, except for one slow-motion ballad. Exceptionally striking was a medium tempo piece that sounded like a Monk-Dameron collaboration -- maybe two-thirds the former, one third the latter, and as solidly put together as the proverbial brick outhouse -- with daunting changes that were not an obstacle course but in effect traced out a subsidiary melody. Guitarist Schneider took a long, soberly brilliant, very linear solo here; his playing throughout the first set was striking, as an accompanist as well as a soloist. Wish he'd get a chance to get something of what he can do on record; my stored-in-my-memory collection of top notch Schneider is a large one; he's special and unique. Jackson was in fine form, too; more straight ahead at times than he usually is, which fit the material, though I certainly like him when he's not straight ahead.

Yep - Jeb's over here in the UK at the moment!

is he playing anywhere that you know of, Alex?

I'd love to see any or all of that Octet play here in London. We need a 'Chicago Now' night or season....

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Looking forward to this one in Southport on Sunday afternoon:

The Leon Greening Quintet

Alex Garnett (alt/ten), Ian Shaw (tpt), Greening (pno), Michael Janisch (bs), Steve Brown (dms)

This gig was originally advertised as the Leon Greening Quartet featuring Vincent Herring, but I hear that Herring cancelled his tour.

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Looking forward to this one in Southport on Sunday afternoon:

The Leon Greening Quintet

Alex Garnett (alt/ten), Ian Shaw (tpt), Greening (pno), Michael Janisch (bs), Steve Brown (dms)

This gig was originally advertised as the Leon Greening Quartet featuring Vincent Herring, but I hear that Herring cancelled his tour.

This could be a good one Bill. Both Garnett and Greening are pretty vigorous players.

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Ubu - I can't wait hear about the bands you are seeing - especially your comments on the playing of Tony Malaby

I'll try and write some... not yet 100% sure I'll make it to Lake.

There was a rather big fire at the venue were Taktlos (the festival w/Malaby and Shipp/Mateen) is starting right now... but seems they'll do all the concerts, possibly in other parts of the building... hope it wasn't too bad!

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Saw Benny Golson and the DePaul University Jazz Ensemble at The Jazz Showcase in Chicago. Great, particularly on "Along Came Betty," "Whisper Not" and "Blues March."

I don't normally ask for autographs, but Benny was so accessible and friendly between sets that I couldn't resist.

I asked him if he remembers much about The Jazztet's engagement at The Birdhouse in 1961, since the album they recorded there is a favorite. He said he seemed to recall that it was on the North Side; that the place didn't serve liquor, as it was a coffeehouse; and he remembered the arrangement the group did of "Round Midnight," which is on the LP. That's one of my favorite versions.

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Ubu - I can't wait hear about the bands you are seeing - especially your comments on the playing of Tony Malaby

I'll try and write some... not yet 100% sure I'll make it to Lake.

There was a rather big fire at the venue were Taktlos (the festival w/Malaby and Shipp/Mateen) is starting right now... but seems they'll do all the concerts, possibly in other parts of the building... hope it wasn't too bad!

Okay, so how was it... Taktlos is held the 29th time these days, it's long grown to be an institution, presenting the avantgarde of jazz and other related musics. Fire police have allowed them - on very short notice, it seems, since they did minimal five-minute sound checks ahead of each set - to use my favorite stage there, at the Rote Fabrik, the Clubraum, which is smaller than the regular venue for jazz concerts (the Aktionshalle) and hence looks half full, rather than three quarters empty. Anyway, I got there early, met a friend who showed me pictures from last week's Le Mans festival, where he heard plenty of amazing music (wish I'd been there!).

Tony Malaby, then... his quartet is named Paloma Recio and consists of Ben Monder on guitar, Drew Gress on bass and Flin Van Hemmen on drums. Never heard of Van Hemmen before, but he was great, with a lose yet controlled, swinging and fun style that could push the band quite some, if called for! Gress was way too low in the mix, alas, while Monder was often over-bearing, even more so when he started using distortion and other sound pedal effects. I'm afraid I didn't quite get how this group's music worked, though... they all had music stands in front of them but never changed pages (only once did Gress change something towards the end)... the dramaturgy of it lay in the dark to me, anyhow. They started playing rather quietly, until Monder for the first time fell out of his "jazz" style and started getting real loud. He and Malaby played complex lines in unison, while the rhythms kept changing underneath, solos would emerge - some great playing by Malaby, for sure! Wonderful sound, big at the bottom, but still rather slim... thin but beautiful in the high range - and he got pretty intense and wild doing plenty of falsetto stuff as the set unrolled. Monder fit in well mostly, but kept being somewhat overbearing throughout the concert. They reached a climax after some forty minutes of continuous playing, then took a break, but after Malaby announced the band he asked if there was time for one more, and off they went onto an amazingly powerful, exhilarating flight. At the end I was pretty pleased by it all, but it took a while for the band to catch flight and for me to get into this rather complex and coolish sound.

Then break, changing the setup, dragging the baby grand to the center, setting up new mics... and a short sound check (Mateen in orange t-shirt). On it went with Matthew Shipp and Sabir Mateen - first on clarinet, then on tenor, and back to clarinet for the encore. A most powerful set, digging right into the music from the very first tones. All music, so to speak. Mateen has a wonderful tone on clarinet and even more so on tenor, very big, deep, rough. Both of them had a few unacccompanied passages, and Mateen's tenor one was the highlight of the night for me. Shipp was both quick and sparse, both dense and pointed - never heard him live and have been kind of an on and off fan of his... but this concert easily convinced me! At the end, all was said and done, no need for any more music, really! Amazing set!

Third band was a Swiss one called Phall Fatale, featuring two singers (Joy Frempong and Joana Aderi), both also using samplers and electronics, John Edwards and Daniel Sailer on double basses, and drummer Fredy Studer (of OM-fame). Good beats and grooves from the basses (Edwards is wonderful, needless to say), but I found the whole thing pretty boring and the singers not too convincing (and the lyrics pretty... uhm, uninspired and flat). Anyway, I should have left after Shipp/Mateen anyway, so maybe I'm being somewhat unfair.

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Saw Benny Golson and the DePaul University Jazz Ensemble at The Jazz Showcase in Chicago. Great, particularly on "Along Came Betty," "Whisper Not" and "Blues March."

I don't normally ask for autographs, but Benny was so accessible and friendly between sets that I couldn't resist.

I asked him if he remembers much about The Jazztet's engagement at The Birdhouse in 1961, since the album they recorded there is a favorite. He said he seemed to recall that it was on the North Side; that the place didn't serve liquor, as it was a coffeehouse; and he remembered the arrangement the group did of "Round Midnight," which is on the LP. That's one of my favorite versions.

Pretty cool ! :tup

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Looking forward to this one in Southport on Sunday afternoon:

The Leon Greening Quintet

Alex Garnett (alt/ten), Ian Shaw (tpt), Greening (pno), Michael Janisch (bs), Steve Brown (dms)

This gig was originally advertised as the Leon Greening Quartet featuring Vincent Herring, but I hear that Herring cancelled his tour.

This could be a good one Bill. Both Garnett and Greening are pretty vigorous players.

Yes, it was very good indeed. The rhythm team were such a straight ahead swingin' machine that my wife said the horns were superfluous. I think she had something there.

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I had a similar experience the first time I saw Tony Malaby as the second set was with Ben Monder, a bassist I do not remember and Nasheet Waits. Monder was also overbearing that night and it masked to my ears the greatness of Mr. Malaby. As with the music you saw/heard it was in the end quite impressive but it could have been so much better if Monder showed a modicum of restraint. I also was mystified at times with Malaby's approach on the upper register at times and it has taken some time and numerous concerts for me to completely get with his approach. The last few times I have seen him (as you may have read) he has been as captivating a tenor saxophonist as I have heard/seen in recent years.

good news - looks like the Novella band will be within my sights on June 23rd @ Cornelia Street Cafe as well as an another appearance of the Sanchez/Malaby/Rainey trio:

fwiw - the 9 piece band is pretty damn great live....

Saturday, Jun 23 - 9:00PM

TONY MALABY TRIO

Tony Malaby, tenor saxophone; Angelica Sanchez, piano; Tom Rainey, drums

New music dedicated to an angel flying over the Iberian Peninsula by a trio of omni-directionally improvising masters of ecstatic lyrical elasticity.

$10 cover plus $10 minimum

Saturday, Jun 23 - 10:30PM

TONY MALABY'S NOVELLA

Tony Malaby, tenor saxophone; Ralph Alessi, trumpet; Michael Attias, alto saxophone; Ben Gerstein, trombone; JB Goodhorse, bass clarinet; Andrew Hadro, baritone sax; Dan Peck, tuba; Kris Davis, piano; Tom Rainey, drums

Later that night, Tony Malaby presented his new group, Novela, with improvised or notated music as conducted by the pianist Kris Davis. In its collapsing of structure and intuition it had roots in some older experimental jazz — Roscoe Mitchell, Butch Morris — but it was still strong and strange, properly bewildering. Ben Ratliff,NY Times

$10 cover plus $10 minimum

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Hm, guess it will take a few decades until I've heard Malaby dozens of times, alas...

Just returned from a highly energetic set by Tarbaby with guest Oliver Lake.

Lake has played in Zurich regularly over the past years... this was the fourth time I caught him, and I know of at least two concerts I've missed. Tarbaby is Orrin Evans (p), Eric Revis (b) and Nasheet Waits (d) and they're very powerful, very NYC tough - and very loud, too.

The tunes they did were pretty wild (I thought of Dolphy now and then), often rhythmically very tricky (I once thought of Monk very much, too), and left lots of space for free flights by Lake and Evans.

The biggest surprise to me was Revis, whom I've heard so far in mostly Wyntonite context... big sound, plenty of technique, lots of ideas, very good time and groove... he mixes with Waits and Evans very well. Evans was mostly in what seemed a McCoy bag... incorporating perfectly the tough, muscular, yet lyrical post-Coltrane/Tyner black music continuum.

Lake was all over the place, the first set could mostly be heard as in that Trane/McCoy tradition, I guess... but after the break they returned and shifted gears quite some, both in levels of energy and in style. They did some mean funk, with Lake overblowing his alto (no flute tonight, just alto) and going for broke each time he started to blow.

The most amazing thing though, all through the two sets, was watching and listening to Nasheet Waits... what a powerful, great drummer! Rather small set (bass drum, snare, hi-hat, one tom, the big tom standing on the floor, a ride, and one more big cymbal next to the ride, maybe a second ride, really?), sounding very good, and putting layer and layer of rhythm on top of each other... truly amazing, and all as good as I'd been expecting!

Very intense night, to say the least!

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yes - when Nasheet gets it going, there are few who can get the intensity and groove to that kind of level - one night with Ellery Eskelin and Gary Versace, he pushed the trio to some incredible heights plus my wife thought he was so great he should be on TV in prime time.

sounds like it was a great night

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WHOAH! Marcus Wyatt in Basel, doing his Blue Note Tribute - wonderful music, full of life - warm, celebratory, but not denying bitterness, sadness. When I approached Wyatt between sets, he said they were slowly getting there, but were not quite yet as crazy as the Blue Notes were. But it was more of a Blue Notes, Brotherhood of Breath and Dyani thing, really, repertoire- and style-wise.

Great band, a mix of South Africans and Swiss:

Marcus Wyatt (t), Siya Makuzeni (tb, voc), Donat Fisch (as), Domenic Landolf (ts), Afrika Mkhize (p, fender rhodes), Fabian Gisler (b), Ayanda Sikade (d).

Drummer Sikade had just flewn in from the Cape... he was on fire, and so was Gisler (Dyani lives! Goddam!) and the rhythms really were cooking like mad! Mkhize played a wonderful piano, running the gamut from Dollar Brand to McGregor to what sounded to me like some Don Pullen-like moments. An amazing flow of ideas, a very warm sound, plenty of humor and complete lack of fear as far as being melodic, elegic even, is concerned. These guys are warriors!

In front, there were Makuzeni on trombone (and a pair of stunning, intense vocals), a small lady with a big sound - her bell was pointed straight at me, sitting front row - wonderful to experience the 'bone sound, it's rare that one gets to hear some good trombone players, really! Then there were Landolf (he had two stellar solos in which he kind of fought against melody, against flow, and created his own microtonal stuff, licks, repetitions, turning into some rather frenzied moments) and Fisch (more melodically flowing with a nice bitter-sweet sound) and on the end of the stage, Marcus Wyatt. For long parts he was more like the guy running the game, but he played some wonderful solos too, full of wit and with great feeling for timbre and melody.

A marvelous night for sure - the spirit of the beloved gone ZA giants really was invoked, yet the resulting music was different and was these guys' (and the gal's) own, which makes it all the more wonderful.

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Just got back from Chattanooga, where I heard two great sets of free improvisation by John Butcher, Gino Robair, Thomas Lehn, and The Shaking Ray Levis (Dennis Palmer on synth and Bob Stagner on drums). Butcher's music is very controlled, in a way, so it was interesting to see/hear him respond to Dennis Palmer's unpredictable wildness. I'm not sure he had ever come up against anything like Mr. Palmer, especially when Dennis started speaking in tongues.

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