Steve Reynolds Posted May 30 Report Posted May 30 6 hours ago, mjazzg said: Glad you got to see them and they lived up to expectations Same here. Glad they are playing well. Quote
adh1907 Posted Monday at 03:02 PM Report Posted Monday at 03:02 PM Henry Lowther tonight at the Bull and Gate London NW5, the new home for jazz in Kentish Town. Last band I saw here was Half Man Half Biscuit in the early 90s…. Quote
sidewinder Posted Monday at 05:31 PM Report Posted Monday at 05:31 PM 2 hours ago, adh1907 said: Henry Lowther tonight at the Bull and Gate London NW5, the new home for jazz in Kentish Town. Last band I saw here was Half Man Half Biscuit in the early 90s…. Presumably that will be the 'Still Waters' Band? I caught them at Swanage last year - always a delight. Instead of Pete Hurt on tenor they had Tori Freestone subbing on that occasion. I don't think Henry will be appearing at the seaside this year, although he has done for the previous 3 years I think. Quote
adh1907 Posted Monday at 05:54 PM Report Posted Monday at 05:54 PM Yes, Still Waters. Veteran Dave Green on bass. Pete Hurt on tenor. Quote
mjazzg Posted Monday at 06:49 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:49 PM 3 hours ago, adh1907 said: Henry Lowther tonight at the Bull and Gate London NW5, the new home for jazz in Kentish Town. Last band I saw here was Half Man Half Biscuit in the early 90s…. Possibly The Woodentops for me Lowther plays local to me quite regularly, I really should go and see him Quote
adh1907 Posted Tuesday at 04:53 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 04:53 PM Yes, that would have been in the side room to the pub, now unrecognisable as a restaurant. Music is now upstairs. Henry Lowther was on great form (nearly 84). I knew he had played at Woodstock (for the only band not recorded or filmed) but I hadn’t realised the range of artists he had played with over the years, ranging from Elton John to Buzzcocks. Quote
sidewinder Posted Tuesday at 04:59 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 04:59 PM Also in the old Top Of The Pops Orchestra. He can sometimes be seen in the section on BBC repeats. Quote
GA Russell Posted Tuesday at 07:56 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 07:56 PM 3 hours ago, adh1907 said: I knew he had played at Woodstock (for the only band not recorded or filmed) but I hadn’t realised the range of artists he had played with over the years, ranging from Elton John to Buzzcocks. Quote
adh1907 Posted Tuesday at 09:34 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 09:34 PM Great! Henry deserves a thread in the Artists section. Quote
jlhoots Posted Thursday at 01:18 PM Report Posted Thursday at 01:18 PM James McMurtry, Dave Alvin, Jimmie Dale Gilmore tomorrow. Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted Thursday at 05:34 PM Report Posted Thursday at 05:34 PM Last night at Close Up in NYC two very strong sets from Ingrid Laubrock, Brandon Lopez & Tom Rainey Quote
T.D. Posted Friday at 01:42 PM Report Posted Friday at 01:42 PM Couple of small local things this weekend Paul Pinto and James Ilgenfritz Saturday, part of a new improv series @ a revived venue Tani Tabbal Quartet Sunday Quote
Rabshakeh Posted yesterday at 05:53 AM Report Posted yesterday at 05:53 AM Saw Kahil El Zabar at Ronnie's last night. A good gig. I have seen him often in the last few years as he has become a biggish star in the UK recently. He was with Corey Wilkes on trumpet and Kevin Nabors on tenor plus cellist Ismael Ali. There seemed to be some tension in the group which I read as being centred around Wilkes, who seemed a little bit off. But enjoyable nonetheless. It is a good summer and autumn for gigs here in London and I have lined up quite a few. Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted 14 hours ago Report Posted 14 hours ago (edited) Last Thursday night one of the best sets I’ve ever seen. at The Stone at The New School in the Glass Box Theatre: Kochi Makigami on wood flute, vocalizing, cornet & theremin Sana Nagana on violin Ned Rothenberg on alto sax, clarinet & wood flute Tim Dahl on electric bass Ches Smith on drums explosive, dynamic 52-53 minutes. 4 pieces each unique yet connected in some odd way. wowza on a million levels. Fully improvised yet seemed like a suite. the following night was very good with Myk Friedman, Erik Frieadlander & Nava Dunkelman joining Kochi. But after Thursday it paled in comparison. Tim Dahl & Ches Smith are an unstoppable force. And the violinist was a radical voice & Kochi didn’t over do his mind blowing vocal technique which he tended to do last night. as many times as I’ve seen Ches, he continues to astound me. And I’ve probably seen him in various groups about 40-50 times over the years. In some ways like John Henry Bonham. Meant as the highest compliment. It’s also great to be 10 feet from his bass drum. After Phil Lesh, Tim Dahl is the best electric bassist I’ve ever heard. Live in a small room, it’s life changing every time. He’s insane. Edited 14 hours ago by Steve Reynolds Quote
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