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Posted

Go next Thursday. Kenny Werner is bringing in a killer band with Miguel Zenon on alto and David Sanchez on tenor.

Heck, next Tuesday (Eric Harland with Julian Lage and Walter Smith III) is looking good too but heading into town on a Tuesday & a Thursday in the same week is a bit much when the alarm goes off at 5:00 AM.

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Next week is tentatively booked for me. I am taking Wednesday - Thursday off from work for my birthday. If everything works out planning trips into NYC to possibly catch Gary Bartz/Sharel Cassity @ Dizzy's, Steve Coleman @ The Stone and Eric Revis Quartet with Darius Jones and Bill McHenry at the Jazz Gallery.

Posted (edited)

I enjoyed two very nice sets by survival unit III (Joe McPhee, Fred Lonberg-Holm Michael Zerang) tonite.

Sad that his was the last of the Immediate Sounds Series on wednesdays at the hiedeout. will miss it.

go Mitch!

Edited by uli
Posted

Saw the Brian Blade Fellowship last night. Interesting group - obviously been together a long time (16 years). Very long pieces with several transitions throughout each one and the musicianship was at a very high level. Definitely worth seeing.

Next week: the Cookers

Posted

I saw Jon Madof's group Zion80 at the World Cafe last night. The 10-piece ensemble has two CDs on Tzadik. My wife had a nice time as she's performed in the past with most of the horn section: Frank London, Jessica Lurie. Matt Darriau, Greg Wall & Zach Mayer. Bassist Shanir Ezra Blumenkranz was very good, drummer Yuval Lion had good chops and keyboardist Brian Marsella was pretty wild.

Posted

HIGH ZERO FESTIVAL 2014: The Festival of Experimental Improvised Music, Baltimore, MD.

Spent a pleasant afternoon and evening in Baltimore yesterday (Friday 19th). Checked out the gyros in Baltimore's Greek Village neighborhood, then headed over to the Studio Project venue for the 2014 edition of High Zero Festival. There is always a great vibe at this festival, almost like a big party. The emcee, M.C. Schmidt, is a wild and crazy and funny guy. The musicians and fans demonstrate a real community feeling. The 150 seat theater looked sold out.

The way the festival typically works: improvising and/or experimental musicians are invited individually. Each night of the festival (usually runs 4 nights), one musician opens with a solo. The other musicians are then placed in ensembles chosen by the organizers. IOW, nobody brings their own groups. The idea of course is to experiment.

Friday night, Okkyung Lee gave a strong solo on cello to open the evening, Group 1 was Jack Wright (sax), Dafne Vicente-Sandoval (bassoon), Paul Neidhart (perc, friction), M.C. Schmidt (store bought electronics), Charles Dube (electronics). This turned into a mostly lower-case affair, strongly atmospheric.

Group 2: John Kilduff (multitasking live art), Vicki Bennett ((found footage sample collage), Bob Wagner (perc, friction). This was definitely one of the strangest performances I've seen (at least where people keep their clothes on). Kilduff's performance last night consisted of making popcorn, painting a painting, making a popcorn egg omelet, answering questions from the audience, keeping up a rapid patter of comments and jokes, all while running on a treadmill in paint-bespattered suit and tie (and who says improvisors don't have a dress code!). You had to be there. It was actually pure Dada, and very funny. The painting was auctioned off to the audience for $150.

Group 3: LaDonna Smith (violin), Paul Neidhart (perc, friction), Harry Walker (electric bass), Michael Fischer (sax). This was one of the sets I had a lot of interest in. LaDonna Smith is well-known in experimental music circles, and this was my first opportunity to see and hear her. She and the ensemble did not disappoint, turning in a strong, intense performance.

Group 4: Charlotte Hug (viola, voice), JD Zazie (turntables, CDJ mixer, found sounds), Jenny Grafs (electronics, guitar), Stewart Mostofsky (electronics), Vicki Bennett (found footage sample collage). I had heard a lot about Charlotte Hug, she appears on several Emanem CDs, so again I was quite interested in her performance. She has a striking, wraithe-like appearance. She plays the viola with a sort of strap on the top of the viola, and bow under the instrument. I thought her individual performance was interesting, although I was disappointed she did not employ her voice more. While good, the set did not come up to the power of LaDonna Smith's set. Hug ended up playing against the found sounds, and while some of that was amusing, it did not allow her to generate much intensity. I would like to see her in perhaps a solo setting.She has played with Fred Lonberg-Holm, and that would be interesting,

If you've gotten this far, I'd like to offer some comments made by John Berndt in the Festival booklet. Berndt is one of the generators of the Festival, a major figure on the Baltimore experimental scene (which is very active), and an excellent saxophonist too. Berndt stated that "there is a way that the avante-garde...acts as a huge and unpaid R&D lab for mainstream culture .....The real question is what broader influences unusual thinking can have on the conscious mode of life.....From one perspective, if you want to have anything like a free mind, you have to have some appetite for an impressionistic vista of possibility where freedom can play and materialize.....this experimental activity is really about exposing and discovering that field of possibility with attenuated prejudgment [JB's italics] and a great deal of vitality, sensuality, and science.......Building activities into life which reboot the sense of possibility and redraw the lines of meaning in a core way rather swims up stream against heavy pressures of practicality, socialization, work, and ultimately mortality. Rather than being a reason to give up, that of course seems to be a source of ever-greater urgency.

Posted

Looks like I'm going to get to see the Mingus Big Band at Ronnie Scott's in London next month. Haven't seen these guys in a while and am pretty excited to see them over there!

Posted

Caught the Mike Flanigin Trio with Jimmie Vaughan last night in Austin. They laid down some tasty greaze and blues. As an added bonus blues legend Lazy Lester hopped up on stage and sat in for a bit.

Highlights of the show for me were Sugar Coated Love w/Lester, Thunderbird, and a sublime version of St. James Infirmary.

Mike, Jimmie, and Frosty:

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Lester sitting in:

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With board-member Mike:

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With Jimmie:

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Posted

Picked up a ticket for King Crimson at the Warfield on Oct 3. Been on the fence about this for a while, but I think I'll regret it if I DON'T go.

I saw them in New York tonight and it was really a great show.

I'm old enough to have seen the band with Belew, Levin and Bruford live (when in college) and I really liked it but to me, this was on a whole other level.....perhaps because they played a lot of the material from the original band(s) and that is my favorite material and they really played the shit out of most of it. Starless was incredible and it was a thrill to hear it live. Some of the other hits came off great but it was the newer tunes that really showcased the band the best (except for Starless). The three drum thing worked well for the most part (except for Red, which was still great to hear but the drum thing really didn't work well here).

I wasn't familiar with most of the band except for Tony Levin and Mel Collins but they were really strong.

So, if you are a fan of the band, it is certainly worth checking out. They really bring it and sound great.

To stay on my high school guitar hero kick, after the show I walked over to Iridium and heard Alan Holdsworth. He was great too actually and about halfway through the set, most of the King Crimson band and crew (sans Fripp) walked in to check out the show. I had a free seat next to me so I offered it to Mel Collins. Nice guy.....

Posted

Picked up a ticket for King Crimson at the Warfield on Oct 3. Been on the fence about this for a while, but I think I'll regret it if I DON'T go.

I saw them in New York tonight and it was really a great show.

I'm old enough to have seen the band with Belew, Levin and Bruford live (when in college) and I really liked it but to me, this was on a whole other level.....perhaps because they played a lot of the material from the original band(s) and that is my favorite material and they really played the shit out of most of it. Starless was incredible and it was a thrill to hear it live. Some of the other hits came off great but it was the newer tunes that really showcased the band the best (except for Starless). The three drum thing worked well for the most part (except for Red, which was still great to hear but the drum thing really didn't work well here).

I wasn't familiar with most of the band except for Tony Levin and Mel Collins but they were really strong.

So, if you are a fan of the band, it is certainly worth checking out. They really bring it and sound great.

To stay on my high school guitar hero kick, after the show I walked over to Iridium and heard Alan Holdsworth. He was great too actually and about halfway through the set, most of the King Crimson band and crew (sans Fripp) walked in to check out the show. I had a free seat next to me so I offered it to Mel Collins. Nice guy.....

Great review and Iridium story, David.

I'm looking forward to the Cookers on Friday, too!

Posted

MARK TURNER QUARTET
Mark Turner - tenor sax
Avishai Cohen - trumpet
Joe Martin - bass
Justin Brown - drums

Constellation Chicago 9/23

I liked Turner some early on, but this music seemed to me to be very dried up melodically and oddly traction-less harmonically and rhythmically. I say "oddly traction-less" because with a fairly active drummer and pieces that do have some harmonic patterning, albeit of a rather bland abstract sort, one has to work at it to make so little apparent contact with the pulse or the "changes," such as they are. Not that the playing was at all "free" either, more like a series of etudes that had been purged of zest or detectable (by me) purpose, though they were not easy to execute.

Posted

Angel City Jazz Festival is going on this week. Caught Bobby Bradford, Steve Adams and Vinny Golia last night at the Blue Whale. This weekend should be stellar, Wadada, Braxton, Taylor Ho Bynum amongst others playing. Unfortunately I have to leave town for a wedding so I can't catch them.

Posted

Last night, I saw a great show at the Regattabar in Cambridge, MA: Kenny Werner's Coalition band with Chris Potter as a last minute sub for David Sanchez. They only played about 6 tunes but they were all very well done. I was riveted to my seat for nearly 2 hours by this band. Highly recommended if they come through town. Hopefully, Potter has to keep subbing because he was truly great, although Miguel Zenon gave him a run for his money, especially on his own tune.

Posted

Just back from seeing the TSO (and I believe the Mendelssohn Choir) doing Beethoven's 9th Symphony. I don't see it that often (this may be the 2nd time I've seen it live). I had a strange seat that was sort of to the side of the stage, basically overlooking the symphony, though the sound was still decent and not too unbalanced. (Fortunately, the other seats in my subscription are a bit further back.) However, being that close to the choir meant being just surrounded by voices in the 4th movement. It's really hard to describe how overwhelming it was (but in a good way). I doubt I will ever feel the symphony that viscerally again.

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