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kh1958

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Everything posted by kh1958

  1. It appeared to me he kept soloing with his hands after Hino took away his drumsticks.
  2. Ron Carter, Etudes (Elektra Musician/Discovery)
  3. And the other villain in the story is the numbskull holding his or her cellphone up in the air making the video, without the slightest consideration of the people sitting behind.
  4. When are the massed camera flashes?
  5. Your amp and your speakers are no longer in love.
  6. Phineas Newborn, Here is Phineas (Atlantic/Koch Jazz)
  7. Complete disagreement on Horn Culture. It's a wonderful album.
  8. I don't think there are many blues/rock fans around these parts (rock is the devil that destroyed the blues). However, I've been harking back to that genre a bit lately, so thanks for the recommendation. I definitely like Eric Gales and Joe Louis Walker of the guests on the record. The closest I've been to Walter Trout was that he was playing in the Blues Tent at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival a couple of years ago while I was in the Jazz Tent listening to Geri Allen.
  9. Yusef Lateef, The Gentle Giant (Atlantic)
  10. October 25 at Annette Strauss Square A classical tabla virtuoso of the highest order, Zakir Hussain is well-known for his constant explorations of music from around the world. His latest ensemble, CrossCurrents, attempts to portray all directions of inspiration between the idioms of jazz and Indian music. The great bassist Dave Holland, a player with one of the most distinguished careers in jazz, brings his singular vision to the group. The ensemble pays tribute to pioneering musicians and composers on opposite sides of the world who built a bridge which could be traversed in both directions. Hussain says of CrossCurrents: “The influence of Indian classical music on jazz is widely known. Less known, however, is the influence of jazz on the popular music of India. Jazz first came to India by way of the Hollywood musicals of the 1930s and’ 40s and quickly influenced the music of India’s burgeoning film industry. The improvisational nature of jazz was familiar to Indian composers and musicians, who found a way to incorporate jazz harmonies and chord progressions into their work. As a few decades passed, and as the West was enjoying the inspiration of Indian classical music, certain musicians came to influence popular music in India in a big way. Among these are jazz pianist Louiz Banks, jazz guitarist Sanjay Divecha, and superstar composer/vocalist Shankar Mahadevan.” CROSSCURRENTS IS: Zakir Hussain, tabla Dave Holland, bass Chris Potter, saxophone Ganesh Rajagopalan, violin/vocals Louiz Banks, keyboards Sanjay Divecha, guitar Gino Banks, drums FRIDAY OCTOBER 13 AT&T Performing Arts Center Dallas, TX Band: Herbie Hancock, Vinnie Colaiuta, James Genus, Terrace Martin
  11. CTI Summer Jazz at the Hollywood Bowl, Volume 1 (CTI)
  12. Mark Whitfield, Live & Uncut (Chesky)
  13. Eberhard Weber, Silent Feet (ECM)
  14. Yesterday afternoon, Josh Feinberg (sitar) and Nitin Mitta (tabla), at the Allen Public Library Auditorium.
  15. Oscar Peterson, Plays The Irving Berlin Songbook (Verve) Clifford Brown, Quartet in Paris 1953 (Prestige) Clark Terry, All American (Prestige Moodsville)
  16. The first time I ever liked him.
  17. Well, I attended the two Marathon nights last year, heard nine bands, and there was not a trace of politics in anything I attended.
  18. Eberhard Weber, Yellow Fields (ECM)
  19. 2018 NYC Winter Jazzfest Announced Source: Winter Jazzfest.
  20. Stan Getz, Voices (Verve)
  21. Dave Brubeck Quartet, The Last Time We Saw Paris (Columbia)
  22. October 10, 2017: Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge, Tobin Center San Antonio October 11, 2017: Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge, Cactus Cafe, Austin Bob Sheppard and Ben Wolfe, UNT College of Music, Denton October 12, 2017: Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge, Kessler Theater, Dallas Wadada Leo Smith Golden Quartet, Boyd Vance Theater, Austin October 13, 2017: Herbie Hancock, Annette Strauss Square, Dallas Julian Lage and Chris Eldridge, Heights Theater, Houston Wadada Leo Smith Golden Quartet, MATCH, Houston Ashlin Parker, Scat Jazz, Fort Worth October 14, 2017: Robert Cray, Guitar Lightning Lee, Louis Gearshifter Youngblood, King Edward, Grady Champion, Crescent City Blues Festival, New Orleans Lila Downs, Abraham Chavez Theater, El Paso Larry Lampkin, Duncanville Blues Festival Ashlin Parker, Kitchen Cafe, Dallas October 15, 2017: Bobby Rush, Little Freddie King, Walter Wolfman Washington, Robert Finley, Crescent City Blues Festival, New Orleans October 17, 2017: Guitar Shorty, Sam's Burger Joint, San Antonio October 19, 2017: Robert Cray, Paramount Theater, Austin Booker T. Jones, Antone's, Austin October 20, 2017: Robert Cray, Majestic Theater, Dallas October 25, 2017: Crosscurrents: Dave Holland and Zakir Hussain, Annette Strauss Square, Dallas October 26, 2017: Selwyn Birchwood, Last Concert Cafe, Houston October 27, 2017: Selwyn Birchwood, Keys Lounge, Fort Worth October 28, 2017: Anupama Bhagwat (sitar), Durgabari Auditorium, Houston Alam Khan and Ali Akbar Khan, Blanton Auditorium, Austin Kenny Neal, Blues at Unit D, Tulsa, Oklahoma October 29, 2017: Selwyn Birchwood, Antone's, Austin October 30, 2017: Lucian Ban and Mat Maneri, Blackerby Stage and Studio, Austin November 3, 2017: Carl Weathersby, Lucky Peterson, Antone's, Austin November 4, 2017: Sandip Chatterjee (santoor), Subhajyoti Guha (tabla), Allen Library November 9, 2017: Stanley Jordan, One World Theater, Austin November 10, 2017: Javier Limon, Charline McCombs Empire Theater, San Antonio Bria Skonberg, Starr Theater, Fayetteville, Arkansas November 11, 2017: Hariprasad Chaurasia, AISD Performing Arts Center, Austin November 18, 2017: Eddie Palmieri, Laurie Auditorium, San Antonio November 19, 2017: Eddie Palmieri, One World Theater, Austin November 21, 2017: Christian McBride with One O'Clock Jazz Band, Murchison Performing Arts Center, Denton November 30, 2017: John McLaughlin, Paramount Theater, Austin December 7, 2017: Latin Jazz All Stars (Steve Turre, Elio Villafranca, Nestor Torres), South on Main, Little Rock, Arkansas December 8, 3017, Latin Jazz All Stars, Starr Theater, Fayetteville, Arkansas January 28, 2017: Billy Hart Quartet, Charline McCombs Empire Theater, San Antonio February 1, 2018: Charles Lloyd, One World Theater, Austin February 2, 2018: Charles Lloyd and the Marvels, Cullen Theater, Houston February 10, 2018: Donny McCaslin, Starr Theater, Fayetteville, Arkansas March 24, 2018: Mingus Big Band, Cullen Theater, Houston April 5, 2018: Melissa Aldana, South on Main, Little Rock, Arkansas April 13, 2018: Brad Mehldau, Cullen Theater, Houston Antonio Sanchez, Charline McCombs Empire Theater, San Antonio April 14, 2018: Brad Mehldau, University of Texas at Dallas April 28, 2018: Conrad Herwig, Starr Theater, Fayetteville, Arkansas April 27, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival April 28, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival April 29, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival May 3, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival May 4, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival May 5, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival May 6, 2018: New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival
  23. Sweet As Broken Dates, Lost Somali Tapes From the Horn of Africa (Ostinato)
  24. From the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in 1887: Willson, Judge. This conviction is for an aggravated assault and battery. The facts are, substantially, that defendant was a school teacher conducting a school; that the party assaulted, one W. Z. Nugent, a boy nine years of age, was a pupil in said school. This boy fought with other boys, but the fighting occurred away from the school house, and not during school hours. Among other rules of the school was one prohibiting the students from fighting. When it came to the knowledge of the defendant that this pupil and other pupils had been engaged in fighting, he punished all so engaged for a violation of said rule, by whipping them. He whipped the pupil, W. Z. Nugent, with a switch of reasonable size, and struck him about nine licks on the legs, inflicting no severe bruises, abrasions or other serious injury. These are the facts upon which this conviction is based, and in our judgment they do not sustain the conviction. Our law wisely provides that the exercise of moderate restraint or correction by a teacher over a scholar is legal, -- does not constitute an assault or battery. (Penal Code, art. 490, sub. div. 1.) It is not shown by the evidence that the correction administered by the teacher to his pupil in this instance was immoderate. It was merely an ordinary whipping with a small switch, such as many parents inflict upon their refractory boys, and such as should perhaps be more common among parents and teachers. That the punishment was inflicted for an infraction of a rule of the school, which infraction was committed away from the school house, and not during school hours, did not deprive the teacher of the legal right to punish the pupil for such infraction. (Bouldin v. The State, ante, p. 172.) Believing this conviction to be contrary to the evidence and the law, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Reversed and remanded. Opinion delivered May 25, 1887
  25. Six a.m. Southwest flight home on the 13th?
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