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Posted
46 minutes ago, ghost of miles said:

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Interesting ... and apparently totally under everyone's radar with all that "Listening" talk about Prestige during recent months ... :g But ouch ... what a hefty price. 
I'm tempted but am very much on the fence, given how many Prestiges are on my shelves anyway and how many have been shown "for art's sake" in previous books such as "East Coasting" and "Jazzical Moods". 
We'll see ...

 

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Posted
Just finished "The Jazz Barn : Music Inn The Berkshires, and the Place of Jazz in American Life" by John Gennari,

Had to do with the Lennox School of Jazz, where Third Stream musicians like Gunther Schuller, Jimmy Giuffre, George Russell and John Lewis taught for the four years it was open.
It goes for 80 pages before anything relating to jazz is mentioned, just woke history of the Berkshires. 
When he mentions the School of Jazz and the concerts they had there, it begins to get interesting, and there are a lot of pictures of some of the teachers and students there that have never been seen before. 
The author is an English Prof. in VT, who thinks that Dave Brubeck composed "Take Five". The type on the book is so small that I had trouble reading iit.
 
Posted

Just finished "At the Jazz Band Ball" by Nat Hentoff. Sixty Years on the Jazz Scene"

I read his YA novel "Jazz Country" as a kid from my school's library, and liked it so much, I never returned it.

The book "ATJBB" is just a series of interviews and magazine pieces that he wrote from 2004-2009.

There's a lot of repetition by NH regarding quotes he repeats in each interview from Ben Webster, Dizzy, Clark Terry, Phil Woods, Hank Jones,etc... that could have been edited out, and there's a jazz and politics section that I just skipped over, but other than those two things, it had some great stuff.

Other than the free stuff, I liked his taste in music, and there was a chapter on Phil Woods which was great. I never knew NH was a Woods fanatic, and that he produced Woods' one release on Candid which Nat owned.

Towards the end, it starts to get deadly serious with two great interviews he did with Jon Faddis and Ron Carter.

Where else would you learn that the Black press in NYC plus Oprah both hated jazz, and did their best to kill it off?

Jon Faddis is very candid about the realities of being a jazz musician in those years, and doesn't sugarcoat anything.

Ron also tells it like it is, and it ain't very pretty.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted

Yeah, Hentoff just produced records for Candid, which meant he wrote down the names and times of the tunes, and then said "Do whatever you want to do."

Hentoff disclosed that he suffered from clinical depression that was cyclical, but he claimed that jazz brought him out of his most serious bout with it. Then he said that musicians used to put him down because he couldn't tell the difference between inside and outside ( which might explain his fervor over Ornette) or what chords they were playing. You've gotta give him credit for being honest about himself. 

 

Then he related a story about a Benefit concert at the Blue Note for Clark Terry. Clark struggled to get out of his wheelchair, and some guy from the audience yelled out, "So how are the golden years Clark?"

Terry turned toward the voice and picked up his trumpet and said "They suck"!- and proceeded to play like he was 20 year-old!  

 

Posted
6 hours ago, sgcim said:

Towards the end, it starts to get deadly serious with two great interviews he did with Jon Faddis and Ron Carter.

Where else would you learn that the Black press in NYC plus Oprah both hated jazz, and did their best to kill it off?

Jon Faddis is very candid about the realities of being a jazz musician in those years, and doesn't sugarcoat anything.

Ron also tells it like it is, and it ain't very pretty.

Ouch! Who would have thought that??

Did he hint at the reasons for these dislikes? Did they consider jazz too much of a "white thing " at the time they showed their dislikes? (The validity of which would surprise me ...) Or what else was there?

Posted (edited)
9 hours ago, sgcim said:

Yeah, Hentoff just produced records for Candid, which meant he wrote down the names and times of the tunes, and then said "Do whatever you want to do."

Hentoff disclosed that he suffered from clinical depression that was cyclical, but he claimed that jazz brought him out of his most serious bout with it. Then he said that musicians used to put him down because he couldn't tell the difference between inside and outside ( which might explain his fervor over Ornette) or what chords they were playing. You've gotta give him credit for being honest about himself. 

 

Then he related a story about a Benefit concert at the Blue Note for Clark Terry. Clark struggled to get out of his wheelchair, and some guy from the audience yelled out, "So how are the golden years Clark?"

Terry turned toward the voice and picked up his trumpet and said "They suck"!- and proceeded to play like he was 20 year-old!  

 

I remember when Clark Terry played at IAJE and visibly struggled to move from his wheelchair to his chair, then announced to the audience, "The golden years suck" to the audience. I'm sure it was a part of his routine at that point in his career. Sadly, what may have been Clark Terry's final public performance was with the Statesmen of Jazz in Chattanooga on March 30, 2008. He just had gotten over a bout with pneumonia and he stuck to playing flugelhorn for the entire show, with Red Holloway pretty much taking over the ensemble. A recording exists, but his volume is a shadow of what one would expect. Afterward, I remember him sitting alone in the lobby in his wheelchair and I walked up to him to thank him for his many recordings. I didn't see anyone else approach him after that, he probably wanted to get back to the hotel to get some rest. 

Here is the set list:

Blues Walk
Moten Swing
Stardust 
That Old Feeling 
Perdido 
Nuages 
St. Thomas 
Willow Weep For Me 
Locksmith Blues
Ow 
Robbins' Nest 
Mumbles 
Just Squeeze Me 
Don't Blame Me 
Stars Fell On Alabama 
Strike Up The Band

 

The band:

Clark Terry - Flugelhorn, Vocals
Red Holloway - Alto And Tenor Saxophone, Vocals
Harry Allen - Tenor Saxophone
Wycliffe Gordon - Trombone, Vocals
Norman Simmons - Grand Piano
Bucky Pizzarelli - Electric Guitar
Bob Cranshaw - Double Bass
Mickey Roker - Drums
 

Edited by Ken Dryden

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