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Posted

Saw the Kurt Rosenwinkel Quintet yesterday. It was a fantastic show. It was my first time seeing Kurt....what an incredible improvisor he is! He had the crowd on its feet during some of his solos, which doesn't happen often at the Jazz Showcase. Mark Turner was struggling during the first set. He kept fidgeting with his horn and was looking frustrated, but he came back very strong in the second set with some really creative and intense solos. The highlight of the evening for me was a ferocious version of "Inner Urge" that went on for about 20 minutes. Check this group out if they play near you! Kevin Hayes was on the piano, which was a nice bonus. He gets better and better every time I see him.

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Posted

my wife and i had dinner last night at an ethiopian restaurant (following a movie called "live and become" - abought ethiopian jews and "operation moses").

live music by a local band called "mantra" - sax, keyboard, electric bass and drums

after the first set i went up and asked about the first song which vaguely sounded like coltrane - i was told " oh yeah that was a little afro blue, a little alabama and some other coltrane that i mixed in"

i did not offer him a record deal.

:cool:

Posted

Motian, Frisell and Lovano and the Vanguard tonight.

I've had a slight negative bias towards Lovano for some time. That was completely destroyed tonight ... shame on me :)

I was at that show.

I heard Jeff Beck last Monday, not jazz, but a kick ass show all the same.

Posted

Last night at Merkin Hall (nice venue), a Tribute to Don Cherry--first a short set by the Dave Douglas Quartet (with J.D. Allen on tenor, Henry Grimes, and Andrew Cyrille), next a short set by Roy Campbell (Mixashawn on sax, William Parker, and Hamid Drake)--both sets were intense and inspired. Then both groups combined to perform Don Cherry's A Symphony for Improvisers, recorded for Blue Note 40 years ago--a very inspiring and powerful performance, with Henry Grimes of course being on the recording.

Posted

Last night at Merkin Hall (nice venue), a Tribute to Don Cherry--first a short set by the Dave Douglas Quartet (with J.D. Allen on tenor, Henry Grimes, and Andrew Cyrille), next a short set by Roy Campbell (Mixashawn on sax, William Parker, and Hamid Drake)--both sets were intense and inspired. Then both groups combined to perform Don Cherry's A Symphony for Improvisers, recorded for Blue Note 40 years ago--a very inspiring and powerful performance, with Henry Grimes of course being on the recording.

Wow, that sounds like it was great! If I'd have known, I might have come up from Corpus for that show.

I also missed the Dave Holland show in San Antonio last night (and the Los Lobos show at Antone's in Austin). Was a good weekend for music in TX!

Posted

Last night at Merkin Hall (nice venue), a Tribute to Don Cherry--first a short set by the Dave Douglas Quartet (with J.D. Allen on tenor, Henry Grimes, and Andrew Cyrille), next a short set by Roy Campbell (Mixashawn on sax, William Parker, and Hamid Drake)--both sets were intense and inspired. Then both groups combined to perform Don Cherry's A Symphony for Improvisers, recorded for Blue Note 40 years ago--a very inspiring and powerful performance, with Henry Grimes of course being on the recording.

Wow, that sounds like it was great! If I'd have known, I might have come up from Corpus for that show.

I also missed the Dave Holland show in San Antonio last night (and the Los Lobos show at Antone's in Austin). Was a good weekend for music in TX!

Actually, I'm visiting New York for a few days, so it would be alot longer trip!

Posted (edited)

Doh! :w

I got flustered when I saw all those names I guess, didn't notice the location. My bad!

Still looks like it was a fantastic show... :tup

It really was fantastic.

Saw another very interesting one tonight, my last night here--Don Preston (of the early Mothers of Invention and who later recorded with John Carter), at The Monkey. The club was very small--there were actually only 21 seats. The room had a five channel sound system (3 in front, 2 in rear). Don Preston played a couple of solo keyboard pieces, in an avant garde jazz vein, that were quite good. The rest was a trio, with Preston on various electronic keyboards, Andre Choimondeley on guitar, and Cheri Hosne on some sort of electronic percussion keyboards. I'm not sure what genre of music this was--improvised electronica? It sounded really amazing in the small club, with a great sound system coming at you from every direction.

Edited by kh1958
Posted

Last night at Yoshi's in Oakland: Aaron Goldberg's trio with Reuben Rogers and the incredible Eric Harland. Exceptional modern jazz piano trio music...highlights from the set I saw included a clever, fractured arrangement of Epistrophy, an excellent new Goldberg tune ("The Rules"), and a gorgeous Jobim ballad. It was an extremely energetic show -- the audience was really feeling it, and the band sounded incredibly tight. Josh Redman showed up and sat in for a set closing I Mean You that was downright ferocious (and I'm not that much of a Redman fan in general). At the end of the set the crowd demanded an encore, cheering well after the lights had gone up and the band was already chatting to friends in the audience. The trio + Redman obliged. Good night.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I post in and check rarely this thread.

But I've had an interesting week until now:

On last Tuesday I saw in Gent (Gand), Belgium:

THE DAVE BURRELL TRIO (MICHAEL FORMANEK/ GREGORIO E. BROWN)

Followed the same night in the same town by THE KRIS WANDERS UNIT (KRIS WANDERS, TS, JOHANNES BAUER, TB, PETER JACQUEMYN, B, MARK SANDERS, PERC).

KRIS WANDERS is a Dutch tenor sax who plays (and sometimes) recorded with GLOBE UNITY, FRED VAN HOVE, PETER BRÖTZMAN before moving suddenly to AUSTRALIA (MELBOURNE) where he has vanish in the shadow.

People (and part of his family) believe he was dead.

Then suddenly he pops up few weeks ago, contact some people and put this incredible band to tour EUROPE the two last week!

I was glad to catch this great concert.

The guy looks like PETER BRÖTZMANN and plays at the same level!

The concert was incredible. I was back at the beginning of the seventies but without an once of nostalgia as the music wasn't particularly cultivating the past: MODERN FREE JAZZ/ EUROPEAN IMPRO for the new generation! The band should record on Monday or Tuesday in a studio in BRUSSELS. I will be there.

Last night in LILLE (FRANCE) in a place called LA MALTERIE (a desaffected place where they was long time ago make beer) I've seen the NEW YORK DOWN TOWN ALL STAR QUINTET featuring HERB ROBERTSON, TIM BERNE, SYLVIE COURVOISIER, MARK DRESSER, TOM RAINEY for another stuning concert!

And tomorrow there's some more LIVE music to come.

Posted (edited)

I post in and check rarely this thread.

But I've had an interesting week until now:

On last Tuesday I saw in Gent (Gand), Belgium:

THE DAVE BURRELL TRIO (MICHAEL FORMANEK/ GREGORIO E. BROWN)

Followed the same night in the same town by THE KRIS WANDERS UNIT (KRIS WANDERS, TS, JOHANNES BAUER, TB, PETER JACQUEMYN, B, MARK SANDERS, PERC).

KRIS WANDERS is a Dutch tenor sax who have play and (sometimes) recorded with GLOBE UNITY, FRED VAN HOVE, PETER BRÖTZMAN before moving suddenly to AUSTRALIA (MELBOURNE) where he has vanished in the shadow.

People (and part of his family) believe that he was dead.

Then suddenly he pops up few weeks ago, contact some people and put this incredible band together to tour EUROPE the two last weeks!

I was more than glad to catch this great concert.

The guy looks like PETER BRÖTZMANN and PLAYS at the same level!

The concert was incredible. I was back at the beginning of the seventies but without an once of nostalgia as the music wasn't particularly living in the past: MODERN FREE JAZZ/ EUROPEAN IMPRO for the new generation! The band should record on Monday or Tuesday in a studio in BRUSSELS. I will be there.

Last night in LILLE (FRANCE) in a place called LA MALTERIE (a desaffected place where they was long time ago making beer) I've seen the NEW YORK DOWN TOWN ALL STAR QUINTET featuring HERB ROBERTSON, TIM BERNE, SYLVIE COURVOISIER, MARK DRESSER, TOM RAINEY for another stuning concert!

And tomorrow there's some more LIVE music to come.

Edited by P.L.M
Posted

Randy, Jim, Ron, and I went to the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia to check out a student recital. The third performer on the bill was a 14 year-old boy from Shanghai named Hao Chen Zhang, playing the Fantasie in C major, Op. 17, by Robert Shumann. I liked this guy the moment he walked out on stage; just the way he presented himself, and the way he prepared himself at the piano. But holy shit - I was completely unprepared for those opening chords. He just electrified the whole room with his touch. Such incredible depth, power, and emotion. It was absolutely thrilling. He seemed totally at one with the music, and I didn't hear one single moment of hesitation, or notice any break in his state of concentration. Dynamics, tone, clarity, pacing; this kid had it all. The two movements that ended softly felt to me like the deepest of blessings: Amen. Unbelievable.

Afterwards, we went to Ortleib's to see Bootsy Barnes, with Byron Landrum on drums. Swinging hard in the tradition. Not a bad night of music, especially since it was all for free!

Posted

Tuesday night I saw the Mingus Orchestra at the Iridium. This is a 10 piece band--with two saxophones, trumpet, trombone, bassoon, bass clarinet, French Horn, guitar, bass and drums--They tend to perform the more orchestral Mingus pieces, and it was indeed a pleasure to hear, among other works, Half Mast Inhibition, the Shoes of the Fisherman's Wife, Noon Night, Just For Laughs Sap, Jelly Roll, Eclipse, Noddin' Ya Head Blues, and a few other great Mingus compositions performed live.

Wednesday night--James Carter Organ Trio at Birdland. I enjoyed this immensely as well.

Posted

Saw the Javon Jackson group that he's calling the "Superband", featuring Nat Reeves on bass, George Cables and Jimmy Cobb. A nice set with tons of swingin'. Great to hear GC and JC!!!

Posted (edited)

Two bands comprising members of London's 'F-IRE Collective' - 'Oriole' (led by flamenco-influenced guitarist Jonny Philips) and the Ingrid Laubrock Quintet, featuring the playings and compositions of this fine player. Both Ingrid and drummer Seb Rochford from the Quintet also featured as members of 'Oriole'.

Both of these bands are absolutely unique in style and and their tour of the UK regions (Windsor Art Centre tonight, I believe). Some of the best live jazz currently being produced in the UK from these guys. The Laubrock Quintet is particularly well integrated, with Laubrock and cellist Ben Davis really gelling these days as a front-line team.

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Edited by sidewinder
Posted

Saw the Stones Wednesday night at Soldier Field. The wind chill was down to about 20 degrees, and there were wind gusts up to 35mph, but that didn't matter. They opened with "You Got Me Rocking", and debuted "She Was Hot"! There was an excellent "Midnight Rambler" followed by "Tumbling Dice". Great show!

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