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Mike Watt & the Missingmen. Opening band was Lite. They're an instrumental outfit from Japan heavily influenced by Explosions in the Sky, Mogwai, etc... Good times.

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Yesterday: Circulasione Totale:

Frode Gjerstad, saxophones/clarinet; Sabir Mateen, saxophones/clarinet; Bobby Bradford, cornet; Børre Mølstad, tuba; Kevin Norton, vibraphone; Anders Hana, guitar; Lasse Marhaug, elctronics; Morten J. Olsen, percussion/electronics; Nick Stephens, bass; Per Zanussi, electric bass; Hamid Drake, drums; Louis Moholo, drums

Quite intense, and with many good moments! Bradford has a beautiful and strong sound on trumpet! And the three drummers were quite something... also Lasse Marhaug did some great stuff and it really made sense having him in this band! Kevin Norton was terrific as well!

Just noticed this. Bobby sent a cd by this band called Open Port and it is fine. Check it out.

Guest Bill Barton
Posted

Tonight it's Deep Listening Band at the Chapel Performance Space after a day at Folklife...

Posted

Went to go see Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey's Circus "Zing Zang Zoom" today with my wife & son. Tonight I'm going to see Marshall Allen and the Sun Ra Arkestra in honor of Marshall's 85th Birthday and Ra's 95th arrival on the planet.

Posted

Two really different shows on Thurs and then Sat. Thurs was Chicago Symphony - two pieces that mixed jazz and classical. Mercer Ellington finished his father's Three Black Kings suite (recorded a handful of times most recently by the American Composers Orchestra on Nimbus). Saxophonist Donald Harrison took chief solo duties. The middle section was played at a very fast clip. I still don't think orchestras can swing -- it just isn't what they are trained to do -- but the CSO was pretty game. The last section, dedicated to Rev. King, was really soulful. The second half was Mark-Anthony Turnage's Scorched, which is his reorchestration of John Scofield pieces. The piece has traditionally been played by Scofield himself, bassist John Patitucci, drummer Peter Erskine, and orchestra. I do wonder if it is one of those pieces that just couldn't be played by some other guitarist. Anyway, it is far more involved that one of those typical jazz with strings in the background. The orchestra cuts across the trio's playing. Sometimes only the guitar and orchestra play. Sometimes it is just the orchestra alone (usually then the trio plays the same tune -- considerably better). I probably would have enjoyed the trio just played their music more than Scorched but it was an interesting experiment. As it happened I had second row seats, so I could actually see the jazz trio close up, and could even watch them reading the music, again something that they wouldn't normally need to do. Still I had a good time, and it was so much better than my last trip to CSO!

Sat. I was visiting my dad, and he thought we should go see a bluegrass music show. I wasn't real big on this, but agreed to go. Well, we went to this small concert venue in a former strip mall church in Thomasville, NC and saw the opening act, which was fairly entertaining, esp. the rapport between the fiddler and the guitarist which was very much in the Sonny and Cher mode. Then the main act was Scott Fore and the Hillbilly Hot Club. The lead guitarist comes from the flat picking guitar tradition, but recently has gotten really, really interested in the music of Django Reinhardt. So these guys play gypsy jazz, with just a slight bluegrass inflection on the guitars and the bass is moved up in the mix. It was really great, much more interesting than a was expecting. I told the rhythm guitarist that I hoped they would record soon. They don't have a CD out yet, but they do have a myspace page with some songs. Hillbilly Hotclub I would encourage people to go see them, though they don't seem to be touring much outside of North Carolina and Virginia so far.

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Posted

This last Tuesday I saw Enrico Rava in Foligno Italy.

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Great show, he played songs off his last three records in Easy Living, Words and the Days and New York Days in a auditorium built in the 14 hundreds, I will never forget it. At the beginning of my trip I met Stefano Bolani at the Florence airport and got to talk to him for a half hour, he gave me his new cd which was very nice of him.

Posted

Abdullah Ibrahim solo at Jazz Standard - a lovely, subtle, 90 minute set with no breaks between tunes - one piece just melted into the next. He didn't see the person giving him the "10 minute warning" after 50 minutes, so he just kept going! Sublime...........

Posted

Abdullah Ibrahim solo at Jazz Standard - a lovely, subtle, 90 minute set with no breaks between tunes - one piece just melted into the next. He didn't see the person giving him the "10 minute warning" after 50 minutes, so he just kept going! Sublime...........

That's sounds awesome. Lucky you.

Today at Noon a free concert by the Meat Puppets. Later tonight - Sunny Murray and Odean Pope duo.

Posted

Yep; RonS tells me I'm going to see "Jim Alfredson", perhaps somehow related to the group J.H. mentions? :huh:

Nope--the Jim Alfredson we're seeing leads a melodica trio:

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Completely different group.

Posted

Saw a little less than two weeks ago, Dave Burrell with William Parker and Mike Wimberley. Fine show despite the poor acoustics and even worse piano. Burrell has an intriguing technique almost using the piano as a percussion instrument at times.

Saw this monday a gig that did make proud my Dutch nickname as i saw the trio BraamDeJoodeVatcher , the group should find his way in my best of 2009, great musicianship with beautiful compositions and at times quite catchy tunes. Near two hours of great music.

If they come in your neighborhood, it will be worth the trip.

Posted

Well after catching Organissimo on Tuesday night I was planning to stay in last night seeing how fuzzy I felt all day yesterday. So around 7:00pm a friend called w/ an extra ticket to see Dirty Projectors/Vieux Farka Toure/Skeletons. Had to go. Caught the last bit of Skeletons - they were okay, though I really didn't hear enough of them of them to base a stronger opinion either way. Next up was Vieux Farka Toure, who some of you might know is the late Ali Farka Toure's son. Vieux was amazing. Excellent guitarist, beautiful voice, and some killer songs. If he's coming to your area and you like this kind of thing then by all means go. Definitely a star on the rise. Dirty Projectors were excellent as too - well deserving of all the indie rock adulation that comes their way. Quirky songs w/ spazmatic guitar fills and angelic backup voices. Oh and they ROCK!

Beat as hell today....

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