Michael Weiss Posted March 7, 2007 Report Posted March 7, 2007 George Colligan Quartet tonight at the Jazz Standard. One of the best pianists in NY today, with Steve Wilson, Vincente Archer, EJ Strickland. Quote
zen archer Posted March 8, 2007 Report Posted March 8, 2007 Tonight going to see Little Jimmy Scott at the Regattabah in Cambridge , Ma. Quote
Joe G Posted March 9, 2007 Report Posted March 9, 2007 I've been invited to see a private concert at someone's home in Williamston tonight: The California Guitar Trio w/ Tony Levin. Quote
Aggie87 Posted March 9, 2007 Report Posted March 9, 2007 I've been invited to see a private concert at someone's home in Williamston tonight: The California Guitar Trio w/ Tony Levin. That sounds REALLY cool, Joe! Let us know how it is. Maybe you can get up and jam with them! How much does a private CGT/Levin concert cost? Quote
Joe G Posted March 9, 2007 Report Posted March 9, 2007 For me, $20. These guys were supposed to be playing at the Creole Gallery this weekend, but all shows there have been cancelled for the time being. I don't know how this guy got ahold of them, but I guess they decided that since they were already routing through the area, they might as well play somewhere. A friend of mine was my hookup, otherwise I wouldn't have even known about it. I'll post about it later tonight! Quote
Joe G Posted March 10, 2007 Report Posted March 10, 2007 Well, pretty cool show. Didn't hit me where I live, so to speak, but there were some worthwhile moments. They did a Bach prelude in an interesting way: they cut the sound to the P.A., so we were hearing just the acoustic sound of their guitars. Then the each played every third note of the piece. It had a very nice cascading effect. That was probably my favorite work of the night. Tony Levin was cool to see in this context. He played only fretless electric, and got a good tone out of that thing. Just kind of a trip seeing him rockin' out in the dining room. Quote
J Larsen Posted March 10, 2007 Report Posted March 10, 2007 Cecil Taylor's mindblowing (imo) AHA 3 group w/ Masada opening at J@LC tonight. Isis on Tuesday night - my first metal show in at least 10 years. Quote
tonym Posted March 11, 2007 Report Posted March 11, 2007 Just watched my wife's orchestra tackle Shostakovich's Festive Overture, his Cello Concerto No.1 and Ravel's arrangement of Pictures At An Exhibition. The cellist was a young lass called Victoria Simonsen from New Zealand who was outstanding. Quote
Tom Storer Posted March 11, 2007 Report Posted March 11, 2007 Saw Pat Martino a couple of nights ago, with a trio of (I believe) Philadelphia dudes: Rick Germanson, piano; Craig Thomas, bass; Vic Stevens, drums. They're touring in support of Martino's Wes Montgomery tribute release. They spent the first set getting warmed up--nice, but coasting. Of course, Martino coasting is still top-level stuff. They were cooking in the second set, though. Martino ended with an especially inventive "Oleo" and then did "Sunny" as an encore. I was with a guitarist friend who was laughing with delight at Martino's prowess. Tomorrow night, it's Roy Haynes. Haven't seen him in six or eight years, I think. I'm hoping that at eighty-whatever he's still up to it--but I'm confident. Quote
J Larsen Posted March 11, 2007 Report Posted March 11, 2007 I saw Haynes about six months ago. His group was really good. Quote
TedR Posted March 12, 2007 Report Posted March 12, 2007 The James Carter Organ trio (Gerard Gibbs, B-3, Leanard King, drums) last night in Cleveland. Jaw dropping! And this group had so much infectious fun playing together. Charlie Parker died 52 years ago today. James Carter ended his set......then said he'd be remiss if he didn't pay tribute to Bird. His intensity after already playing 2 1/2 hours was something to behold. Quote
sal Posted March 12, 2007 Report Posted March 12, 2007 The James Carter Organ trio (Gerard Gibbs, B-3, Leanard King, drums) last night in Cleveland. Jaw dropping! And this group had so much infectious fun playing together. Charlie Parker died 52 years ago today. James Carter ended his set......then said he'd be remiss if he didn't pay tribute to Bird. His intensity after already playing 2 1/2 hours was something to behold. Were they really loud? Quote
Aggie87 Posted March 12, 2007 Report Posted March 12, 2007 Going to see the SF Jazz Collective on Sunday night. Can't wait. Tonight ... How was the show, BF? Douglas is in the band now, right? They're going to be in San Antonio on Friday, and I'm thinking about making the drive up there. Quote
Tom Storer Posted March 13, 2007 Report Posted March 13, 2007 Tomorrow night, it's Roy Haynes. Haven't seen him in six or eight years, I think. I'm hoping that at eighty-whatever he's still up to it--but I'm confident. Just back from this--a wonderful evening. Roy was playing brilliantly, as was his wonderful quartet (Martin Bejerano, piano; David Wong, bass; Jaleel Shaw, alto & soprano). Quiet as its kept, the Roy Haynes Quartet in its various guises over the past twenty years or so has been one of the great small groups in contemporary jazz. Aggressive, playful, virtuosic, with fantastic arrangements of a fine book of tunes drawn mostly from the musicians Haynes has played with--and that means a lot--and above all, a unique style of creative rhythmic interplay. I've seen them with Ralph Moore, Don Braden, Craig Handy, now Jaleel Shaw in the saxophone chair, and mostly with David Kikoski on piano. Bejerano is someone to watch, too. Tonight was the first time I had seen Shaw and I was greatly impressed. He reminded me of John Handy sometimes. On "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" and a Monk tune, can't place it, the band was just crazy good. Haynes reached peaks. Anyway, it turns out that at midnight, when it became March 13, it was Roy's 82nd birthday! He demanded champagne on stage for the whole band and kept the place in stitches with one of his long, ad lib monologues as he paced around the stage. Roy Hargrove was in the audience and he came up and played the second half of the second set, tearing the place up with fire-breathing solos. He got the band excited and the energy went up a notch. It was Hargrove who played waiter and served the band their glasses of champagne. At one point Haynes mentioned that he saw some young people in the audience, pointing to one kid in particular and asking him how old he was and if he played an instrument. He was 13, named Robin, and played the drums. Roy invited him up to show the crowd his stuff. After a split second of paralysis, up he went and started playing a very decent James Brown kind of beat. Roy stomped it out, singing "Shake it to the left! Shake it to the right!" and the band started playing along with the groove. The kid was even improvising some, keeping the beat and doing some fancy stuff. Naturally the crowd ate it up and gave him roaring applause when Haynes gracefully put an end to it. That's a moment the kid will never forget. As we left, Archie Shepp was hanging out with Hargrove near the entrance. All in all, a great jazz evening! And I had brought my son along and some friends, so it was all good. I should really get out more often. Quote
Joe G Posted March 13, 2007 Report Posted March 13, 2007 Wow Tom! Sounds like a great time. Thanks for posting. Quote
casanovas347 Posted March 14, 2007 Report Posted March 14, 2007 a dream come true.....one of my biggest influence on geetar has visiting switzerland tonight ......i vent and saw PAT MARTINO playing live! YEEEEEHAAAWW! Not a front row seat, but anyway....i was there! Pat needed a warmup in the beginning of the show, on the first two tracks were a bit behind the beat, but after a while...well he was awesome! I was in heaven for two hours. Drummer was ok, rock solid, bass player was too quiet (as always), piano was too loud and the player was a bit boring, well it's damn hard to play an interesting solo playing alongside with Pat. Overall, the sound engineer messed it all up, too much muddy lows and low-mids, well to much highs on the piano it would me much better when Pat join forces with an organist (Joey?) in my opinion..... i made some picts for ya (comin' soon) best wishes & take care Paco Quote
Soulstation1 Posted March 16, 2007 Report Posted March 16, 2007 SFJC w/ boobie hutcherson perform tonight in tucson i found out too late........ Quote
Aggie87 Posted March 16, 2007 Report Posted March 16, 2007 SFJC w/ boobie hutcherson perform tonight in tucson i found out too late........ You can fly out to San Antonio with BF and we can hit the Riverwalk prior to tomorrow night's show, SS! Quote
Joe G Posted March 16, 2007 Report Posted March 16, 2007 A week ago I saw Tony Levin as a special guest with the California Guitar Trio, and tonight I saw his King Crimson bandmate Adrian Belew as a special guest with Umphrie's McGee. Belew did a solo set to open the night, which we caught the last few tunes of. U.M. played a couple of hours before bringing him back out to noodle on one of their tunes, then launching into "Red", which was by far the hardest rocking tune of the night. U.M., btw, put on a tight show. Kind of a harder rocking Phish, I guess. Quote
jlhoots Posted March 16, 2007 Report Posted March 16, 2007 Ralph Alessi Quintet next week (Ravi, Andy Milne, Ben Street, Gerald Cleaver). Wow....that sounds like a cool show! Please post a review if you get the chance. 95 minute single set. Venue sold out (approx. 200). Serious music - tart, rigorous, abstract, intelligent. All original music, only names of 2 songs announced. Repaid close attention, I'd go again. Quote
Aggie87 Posted March 17, 2007 Report Posted March 17, 2007 (edited) SFJC w/ boobie hutcherson perform tonight in tucson i found out too late........ You can fly out to San Antonio with BF and we can hit the Riverwalk prior to tomorrow night's show, SS! The show was wonderful! I'm still in a daze this morning about everything, and still absorbing it. I'm inclined to agreed with Beef Rank that Miguel Zenon in particular was on fire! Every solo of his impressed me. Bobby Hutcherson played beautifully... what a master! Some of his spotlight moments just blew the audience away. Joshua Redman's playing (to me) seemed to mirror his laidback personality completely. He had one or two solos where he seemed to become more passionate (one almost "Trane-like", according to the lady sitting next to me). Dave Douglas seemed solid but not inspired, though he really seemed to get into the other's solos alot, almost dancing along to them. Of the others Renee Rosnes had a couple of wonderful solos, Andre Hayward had a great tone and played well, and Eric Harland really impressed me as a drummer. Matt Penman was solid and had a couple of nice solos too! I was able to nab Josh Redman's setlist afterwards: Alcatraz (part of Douglas' San Francisco Suite) Brilliant Corners Epistrophy Ugly Beauty SF Holiday Lions Gate Haast Pass Oska T Crepuscule Life at the End of the Tunnel (Hornin In) I Mean You Union Criss Cross (encore) Also, I was talking with the lady at the merchandise stand prior to the show, as I bought the limited ed. version of SF Jazz 3 (mine's #1465). I told her how excited I was about seeing the show, and that I was hoping to get Bobby's autograph afterwards. She was very friendly, and after the show she took me backstage, where I was able to meet Bobby and his wife Rosemary, and all of the other band members! Bobby wanted to talk fishing on the Texas coast It was wild just having a casual conversation about ordinary stuff like that. I also talked with Dave Douglas for a while. He signed a few things for me, one being his old "Sanctuary" cd cover. He was surprised I had it, and said he doesn't see it often at all. He said it was very "all over the map" in terms of energy and style, and I suggested that John Zorn had rubbed off on him on that recording. He laughed and agreed. Also got to talk with Eric Harland for a bit. He was cool. He said after the SF Jazz tour is done, he'll be going back out with Charles Lloyd in a quartet tour of Europe. He said Geri Allen wouldn't be on board in the quartet this time, but instead Jason Moran! So I was excited to hear that. All in all a great night of music, that hopefully will trigger some more jazz acts coming to San Antonio! Edited March 17, 2007 by Aggie87 Quote
Bright Moments Posted March 17, 2007 Report Posted March 17, 2007 http://www.clevelandorch.com/images/ftpIma...h%20logonew.pdf Quote
Soulstation1 Posted March 19, 2007 Report Posted March 19, 2007 A buddy saw the SFJC Concert w/ Boobie Hutcherson in Tucson He said the show was incredible I shoulda made the effort Quote
tjluke68 Posted March 19, 2007 Report Posted March 19, 2007 Saturday March 17 they had a Bix Beiderbecke birthday bash in Bridgewater NJ (say that 5X real fast). It was the first one I've been to and it was really good. The band playing that night was The Dreamland Orchestra, fronted by trombonist Michael Arenella. I must say I felt like I was transported back to the late 20s/early 30s. The band was spot-on and didn't play anything after 1929, dressed like they were in the era, the arrangements harkened back to the Hot Jazz times, the instrumentation was great - overall everything about the concert was wonderful. If you see the band coming to your neck of the woods, I would recommend seeing them if you like early Hot Jazz - dreamlandorchestra.com. Quote
Hot Ptah Posted March 19, 2007 Report Posted March 19, 2007 I saw the SF Jazz Collective on March 18 in Kansas City. It was great, one of the best concerts I have seen in recent years. Bobby Hutcherson was fine but did not play that much. Dave Douglas was amazing, and on fire. Joshua Redman blew me away for the first time ever. His tenor solo during the encore was incredible. Everyone else played very well. Eric Harland was super on drums throughout. It was a high energy show, very inspired. Renee Rosnes also really stood out. She is becoming a monster pianist, in my opinion. The set list was similiar but not identical to the one posted earlier today from another city. Quote
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