Soulstation1 Posted November 1, 2006 Report Posted November 1, 2006 Sonny Rollins how was the rollins' concert? Quote
king ubu Posted November 2, 2006 Report Posted November 2, 2006 Last night the Rabih Abou-Khalil Group: RAK (oud), Luciano Biondini (acc), Michel Godard (tuba), Gavino Murgia (ss,voice), Jarrod Cagwin (d,perc) Fantastic performance! Last Sunday, together with twelve other bold souls... Steve Swell/Gebhard Ullmann Quartet w/Hilliard Greene (b), Barry Altschul (d) short - due to obvious lack of interest - but 75 great minutes of music, very interesting compositions, and all four very skilled musicians. Quote
HolyStitt Posted November 2, 2006 Report Posted November 2, 2006 Sonny Rollins how was the rollins' concert? It was great! This was the third time I have seen him perform. The first time was really good, but the second time was disappointing with a little too much solo space for percusionist Kimati Dinizulu. This time he had the usual group, but with Kobie Watkins on drums and Bobby Broom on guitar, which seemed to add a different kind of spark to Sonny. He only played 90 minutes, but it was a solid 90 minutes. His tune selection leaned pretty heavy towards the new CD Sonny, Please. Quote
sal Posted November 2, 2006 Report Posted November 2, 2006 Sonny Rollins how was the rollins' concert? It was great! This was the third time I have seen him perform. The first time was really good, but the second time was disappointing with a little too much solo space for percusionist Kimati Dinizulu. This time he had the usual group, but with Kobie Watkins on drums and Bobby Broom on guitar, which seemed to add a different kind of spark to Sonny. He only played 90 minutes, but it was a solid 90 minutes. His tune selection leaned pretty heavy towards the new CD Sonny, Please. Wow....Kobie Watkins on drums! Good for him. He's moving up in the world, and he deserves it. Quote
sheldonm Posted November 3, 2006 Report Posted November 3, 2006 (edited) Sonny Rollins how was the rollins' concert? It was great! This was the third time I have seen him perform. The first time was really good, but the second time was disappointing with a little too much solo space for percusionist Kimati Dinizulu. This time he had the usual group, but with Kobie Watkins on drums and Bobby Broom on guitar, which seemed to add a different kind of spark to Sonny. He only played 90 minutes, but it was a solid 90 minutes. His tune selection leaned pretty heavy towards the new CD Sonny, Please. Wow....Kobie Watkins on drums! Good for him. He's moving up in the world, and he deserves it. Bobby plays with Sonny frequently and it's great to see Kobe on the scene....very good young drummer! Here's a small image of Kobe playing with Broom at the Jazz Kitchen. m~ Edited November 3, 2006 by sheldonm Quote
Peter Johnson Posted November 3, 2006 Report Posted November 3, 2006 Tonight, as part of Seattle's Earshot Jazz Festival, I'm going to see The Turbanator at 10:00! Can't wait--love seeing the good doctor live in concert. I'm hoping he'll play a few tracks from his latest--which I'm spinning right now in anticipation! Full report later... Quote
HolyStitt Posted November 3, 2006 Report Posted November 3, 2006 Bobby plays with Sonny frequently and it's great to see Kobe on the scene....very good young drummer! m~ I spoke to him after the show and he is a very nice cat. He seemed to really push Rollins to great places that night. Quote
EKE BBB Posted November 3, 2006 Report Posted November 3, 2006 Last Tuesday (XXV Festival de Jazz del San Juan Evangelista): Dave Douglas Quintet ("Meaning And Mistery" project), with Don MacCaslin (ts), Uri Caine (Fender Rhodes), James Genus (b) and Clarence Penn (d). Quote
mikeweil Posted November 4, 2006 Author Report Posted November 4, 2006 (edited) Didn't expect to get to hear some jazz here in Lindau, after listening to the sound samples I'm seriously considering to go see the Tonc Feinig Trio tonight ..... More info and samples on http://www.tonctone.com/. p.s. decided against it as my wife and myself were a little tired, and the hotel where the event took place appeared to be quite expensive ... Edited November 6, 2006 by mikeweil Quote
Joe G Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 Just got back from a great show at the Jazz Kitchen (Indy): Michael Wolff (p) Badal Roy (tabla) Mike Clark (d) Amit Chatterjee (g) Lincoln Goines (e.b.) Nice mix of material and players. Quote
sheldonm Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 ....and here are a few images from the show......Good to see you Joe! m~ Quote
sheldonm Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 ....Badal Roy.....on the tables !!! Quote
sheldonm Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 ...and my good friend Rob Dixon!!! Quote
Joe G Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 Nice! Got a good one of Amit? When he first came out, I thought they brought out the son of Yogananda to play some rippin' electric guitar! Quote
sheldonm Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 Nice! Got a good one of Amit? When he first came out, I thought they brought out the son of Yogananda to play some rippin' electric guitar! My thoughts too....not what I expected. No real good shots as I had a poor vantage point unless I wanted to sit on someones lap. Here are a couple throw-away images. m~ Quote
Joe G Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 Thanks. BTW, Rob Dixon is one hell of a player! Nice cat, too. Quote
sheldonm Posted November 5, 2006 Report Posted November 5, 2006 Thanks. BTW, Rob Dixon is one hell of a player! Nice cat, too. Yeah, nice guy....always laid back! I used Rob in the opening spread of a five page article I did for Northwest Airline earlier this year....got a lot of positive feedback for Rob and myself. I'm also working on a cd shoot with him.....he's recording a new cd....trio with Mel Rhyne. m~ Quote
mikeweil Posted November 6, 2006 Author Report Posted November 6, 2006 Just got back from a great show at the Jazz Kitchen (Indy): Michael Wolff (p) Badal Roy (tabla) Mike Clark (d) Amit Chatterjee (g) Lincoln Goines (e.b.) Nice mix of material and players. Is that the Mike Wolff from California who played with Cal Tjader in the early 1970's? How was it? Quote
Joe G Posted November 6, 2006 Report Posted November 6, 2006 http://www.michaelwolff.com/ Yes, it looks like he did play with Cal. Plenty of variety in the moods of the music, and lots of room for everyone to stretch. Michael had the audience (and the band) in stitches with his band introductions. Turns out he did stand-up comedy for 5 years. Rachel and I enjoyed his playing quite a bit. His tunes are nice, most of them fairly simple, although with good harmonic content. Deceptively simple, maybe. Badal Roy was interesting; not so much a Zakir-style virtuoso, but with unique ideas, and what he did worked with the group very well, which is more important than blowing us away with chops. A mostly quiet duet between Roy and Wolff was a highlight of the show. Actually, I have to confess that I did not recognize any of the band by sight, and had no idea, until they were introduced, that these were all well-known players. Well known to me, at least, with the exception of Amit. I didn't catch those Zawinal albums on which he plays, so this was my introduction. Heard some Scott Henderson type stuff, but he's no knockoff. Guess he plays a mean sitar, too. We came away with a good feeling. Quote
king ubu Posted November 8, 2006 Report Posted November 8, 2006 Tonight: Trio 3 here in Zurich (Oliver Lake-sax; Reggie Workman-bass; Andrew Cyrille-drums). Same venue where the Swell/Ullmann Quartet played ten days ago with 13 people in the audience... I certainly hope the names of Lake, Workman and Cyrille will draw some more attention! Quote
Niko Posted November 8, 2006 Report Posted November 8, 2006 Tonight: Trio 3 here in Zurich (Oliver Lake-sax; Reggie Workman-bass; Andrew Cyrille-drums). Same venue where the Swell/Ullmann Quartet played ten days ago with 13 people in the audience... I certainly hope the names of Lake, Workman and Cyrille will draw some more attention! one of my first jazz concerts was Dave Douglas when I was about 15... and I had thought he was famous it was rather 19 than 13 people - still I was quite surprised Quote
king ubu Posted November 8, 2006 Report Posted November 8, 2006 But it is *very* depressing, even more so as the Swell/Ullmann Quartet also features drum great Barry Altschul and their music, while likely not "new" or ground-breaking, is very intelligent and involving... trodding a path between free-ish improvisation and good compositions (by both the leaders, but mostly by Gebhard Ullmann, I think). Most depressing than is that you could attend *any* mainstream concert, regardless how boring the selection of standards that they'll play, you'd see three or four times as many people there... Quote
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