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Tonight, Buddy Guy at the House of Blues. A rarity (blues at the House of Blues), and I don't much care for the venue, but it's a short walk from my office.

Edited by kh1958
Posted

Tonight, Roscoe Mitchell Quartet with Tomeka Reid, Junius Paul and Vincent Davis.

Interesting to realize last night that I don't find Roscoe fitting into the realm of the exciting per se, both in how his music affects me and, perhaps, in how he makes/conceives it. Incredibly intense, yes, but it's as though he and the music and its auditors are transported to a plane where things are at once coruscating, ordered, and even more or less calm, where the "flames" (so to speak) are not those of combustion but construction. To put it another way, there seems to be little or no sense of struggle or "outcry" involved. One is just, not so simply, invited to witness/participate in (again) an act of construction -- one that calls for an atmosphere of great heat, but it's not a heat that overwhelms the creator or us; it's just what's required to do what's novel and necessary.

Posted (edited)

Tonight in Toronto: Ryan Truesdell and the Gill Evans Project

Enjoy!

I did! It was the best concert I have been to in ages! Truesdell is an excellent and personable and enthusiastic leader who obviously loves Gil's music. Along the way he gave little insights into Gil's arranging craft which were not over the head of the laypeople in attendance (thankfully it was a full house, lots of grey for sure, but still full). The music was taken basically from the Thornhill years up to and including the Individualism album. ( I felt really good when Ryan said that The Individualism of Gil Evans was his favorite Evans recording, because it's mine too!) The only later chart was Gil's mid-seventies updating of The Meaning the Blues which on this night featured Scott Robinson on tenor.

And the band was superb, so in tune, so well-balanced. A lot of the names were new to me, but some there were some terrific solo performances - Robinson and Tom Christensen on tenor, Mike Rodriquez and Mat Jodrell on trumpet, (great lead by Augie Haas), Nick Finzer and Ryan Keberle on trombone and monster bass trombonist George Flynn. The rhythm section - Frank Kimbrough, Jay Anderson, and Dennis Mackrel was a model of taste and swing.

I bought the band's newest CD released just two weeks ago Lines of Color and Ryan signed with "Gil's Music Lives". Indeed it does.

An evening to remember, for sure.

Edited by John Tapscott
Posted

Tonight in Toronto: Ryan Truesdell and the Gill Evans Project

Enjoy!

I did! It was the best concert I have been to in ages! Truesdell is an excellent and personable and enthusiastic leader who obviously loves Gil's music. Along the way he gave little insights into Gil's arranging craft which were not over the head of the laypeople in attendance (thankfully it was a full house, lots of grey for sure, but still full). The music was taken basically from the Thornhill years up to and including the Individualism album. ( I felt really good when Ryan said that The Individualism of Gil Evans was his favorite Evans recording, because it's mine too!) The only later chart was Gil's mid-seventies updating from Miles Ahead of The Meaning the Blues which on this night featured Scott Robinson on tenor.

And the band was superb, so in tune, so well-balanced. A lot of the names were new to me, but some there were some terrific solo performances - Robinson and Tom Christensen on tenor, Mike Rodriquez and Mat Jodrell on trumpet, (great lead by Augie Haas), Nick Finzer and Ryan Keberle on trombone and monster bass trombonist George Flynn. The rhythm section - Frank Kimbrough, Jay Anderson, and Dennis Mackrel was a model of taste and swing.

I bought the band's newest CD released just two weeks ago Lines of Color and Ryan signed with "Gil's Music Lives". Indeed it does.

An evening to remember, for sure.

Sounds great, John!

Posted

Ab Baars and Ig Henneman last night.

beautiful duo concert of Ig Henneman on Violin and Ab Baars on Tenor Sax, Clarinet and shakuhachi.

The venue itself was also really nice; an old soup factory (Honig) nowadays transformed into a sort of cultural hot spot with many cultural entrepreneurs, a local beer brewery, restaurant and a venue/podium which overlooked the river "De Waal", so during the concert you could see the ships sailing by in the background.

Posted

Last night at the Kennedy Center, Washington, DC:

Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2, Daniil Trifonov, piano

Shostakovitch, Symphony No. 10,

National Symphony Orchestra, Krzystzof Urbanski, conductor.

Very enjoyable performances.

Posted

Open Loose is at the Blue Whale Monday. I might try and go. If it was on the weekend I'd make it for sure.

Please go if you have not seen the trio recently. People call me a fanboy but Malaby is playing the best saxophone of his life the past year.

Posted

fri i saw--- MAGMA. they were amazing. vocally they could be the greatest progressive rock band of all time, perhaps....the music was from another world. the original member is the drummer, who was pretty much a jazz, or jazz-rock if you will, drummer-, his wife Stella Vander who joined in 1973, is a french pop legend in her own right with a recording carreer going back 52 yrs and was the MVP of the all around incredible ensemble. they said it was their 1st trip the the USA since 1999....

sat i saw---FLEETWOOD MAC. had same seat as for last year shows, front row hard stage rt. however last nt in canada it was actually the most intimate arangement yet, im talking abuot the distance from seat-to-stage. every arena although shaped the same, all are really different and so the stage fits in them different ways. John McVie literally walked right next to the aisle when he decended the stage stairs. i was inches away from both McVies the entire show. i made a big effort not to focus on Lindsey at all, god i cant stand Lindsey.....Christine sounded incredible, so happy to hear her since her tunes one more time. so ive caught the tour now in CA OR WA + British Columbia......maybe they are going on never-ending tour, will they be back in fall?????

Posted

Kevin Mahogany was in town tonight, with a German/Dutch rhythm section that plays with him for years and had a nice, no-nonsense groove. Drummer missed the first set - one of the most important highway bridges across the Rhine is closed for repair, and neither did his GPS show it nor the touring agency inform him ...

The singer was in fine form, may be the last of his kind, I'm afraid - he appeared a bit tired or sick, and the way he sang "For Al We Know" as an encore, sans microphone or accompaniment, was so heartfelt that it left me a bit worried about him ....

Posted

Marius Neset Quintet in the place in Sheffield where they show the snooker.

Marius Neset: sax; Magnus Hjorth: piano; Jim Hart: vibes; Petter Eldh: bass; Joshua Blackmore: drums

Excellent couple of sets. Very composed music (but with lots of solo space), tricksy and nervy but full of passion. I've yet to get a sense of Neset as a distinctive saxophone voice but there's no doubting the overall excitement of the group.

Posted

Joshua Redman Trio at The Sage in Gateshead tomorrow followed by The Cookers there on Sunday.

I'm hoping this will end my recent run of watching pretty poor live jazz perfomances.

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