Tuesday, March 31, 2009

April is Jazz Appreciation Month

As we always like to remind folks around this time of year, April is Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM), an annual event created by the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History "to draw greater public attention to the extraordinary heritage and history of jazz and its importance as an American cultural heritage."

In addition, JAM is "intended to stimulate the current jazz scene and encourage people of all ages to participate in jazz — to study the music, attend concerts, listen to jazz on radio and recordings, read books about jazz, and support institutional jazz programs."

To promote the event, once again the Smithsonian has commissioned a poster of a jazz legend; this year's poster (pictured) features a classic Al Hirschfeld caricature of clarinet player and bandleader Benny Goodman, in celebration of the 100th anniversary of Goodman's birth. The museum has printed 250,000 posters for free distribution to music and jazz educators, librarians, music merchants and manufacturers, radio stations, arts presenters, and U.S. embassies worldwide. To request a copy, send an email to jazz@si.edu. You can also download the poster (pictured) in PDF format.

To help interested listeners find jazz events during the month, The Smithsonian also publishes a calendar of JAM-related events nationwide.

And while no St. Louis presenters have announced plans for a formal celebration of Jazz Appreciation Month, the schedule of local concerts for April certainly has plenty of activity, including performances in the first two weeks of the month from banjo player Bela Fleck and the Africa Project; "The Genius of Eddie Henderson" with pianist Eric Reed and singers Carla Cook and Allan Harris; singer Jan Shapiro; poet/author Ntozake Shange with saxophonist Hamiet Bluiett; the Matt Wilson Quartet; Jazz Attack featuring saxophonist Richard Elliot, trumpeter Rick Braun and singer/guitarist Jonathan Butler; the Wee Trio; Gutbucket; saxophonist Greg Osby's "St. Louis Shoes" project with guest soloist Willie Akins; and the NIU Jazz Ensemble with special guest Benny Golson on saxophone.

Later in April, look for shows from trumpeter Sean Jones; guitarist John Jorgenson; the Greater St. Louis Jazz Festival with Peter Erskine, Jon Faddis, Lou Marini and John Pizzarelli; the Dixie Daredevils; ambient music group Mountains; and the Yellowjackets with guitarist Mike Stern. You can find listings for all these performances, and perhaps plan your own personal celebration of Jazz Appreciation Month, by visiting the St. Louis Jazz Notes Calendar.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Radio station KFUO is for sale

Over the weekend, St. Louis Post-Dispatch classical music critic Sarah Bryan Miller published a story and two blog posts detailing the possible sale of KFUO (99.1 FM), the area's only classical music radio station, by its longtime owners, the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod.

"On Feb. 19, its (board) members appointed a special committee with authority to sell St. Louis' only classical music station," the story said. "A sale would almost certainly mean the end of classical music broadcasting in this region. Most buyers would convert such a purchase to a more-profitable format, like sports, rock or country."

The news is relevant to jazz fans in St. Louis because KFUO last year became the home of Don Wolff's long-running weekly program "I Love Jazz," which airs at 10:00 p.m. on Fridays.

Miller's story goes on to say that the board committee has acted in near-secrecy in its plans to sell "Classic 99," even refusing to share terms with at least one group of potential buyers, and is reportedly asking $20 million for the FM station. It also says that while most members of the Synod who live within KFUO's broadcast range in the St. Louis region seem to be opposed to selling, thirteen of the 15 voting members of the board of directors live in other parts of the country.

Read the initial story here and the two follow-up blog posts here and here.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Notes from the Net: Rare Miles Davis photos online; Greg Osby, Bela Fleck reviewed; plus interviews, festival news, and more

Here's our weekly compilation of news and links related to jazz, improvisation, and creative music in St. Louis, including news of musicians originally from the Gateway City, recent visitors, and coming attractions, plus assorted other items of interest:

* There's some tasty Miles Davis-related material this week, courtesy of Lockwood & Summit, the staff blog of Euclid Records (and a site yr. humble editor hereby resolves to visit more frequently). Store owner, co-blogger and jazz fan Joe Schwab has written about Davis several times since the first of the year, most recently posting part one of the audio of a 1953 radio interview of the trumpeter by DJ Harry Frost on East St. Louis radio station KXLW.

L&S also has run some rare photographs of Davis, including a picture of him at Lincoln High School in 1944, and a number of photos shot by Bernie Thrasher, a St. Louis jazz fan and amateur photographer who took pictures at many jazz shows here, mostly during the 1950s. Two posts document a Davis gig (with John Coltrane on tenor) at the St. Louis club Peacock Alley, and several others show off previously uncirculated vintage photos of Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker and others.

In more Miles-related news, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Davis' landmark album Kind of Blue, Stanford University is presenting “50 Years of Kind of Blue: A Live Jazz Laboratory” on Saturday, April 18 on the Stanford campus, and Doug Ramsey's Rifftides had a compilation of Miles Davis quotes last week.

* Saxophonist and St. Louis native Greg Osby's composition "The Single Petal of a Rose" from his St. Louis Shoes CD was reviewed by Jazz.com as part of their ongoing series of reviews of single tracks (as opposed to entire CDs). Osby will be in St. Louis in two weeks for an educational residency with Jazz St. Louis and performances on April 10 and 11 at Jazz at the Bistro .

* And speaking of saxophonists, here's a recent video interview with former Webster University student turned tireless avant garde composer, performer and impresario John Zorn.

* Turning to the "coming attractions" file, AllAboutJazz.com has an interesting piece in which pianist Eric Reed discusses the impact of religious faith on his career as a jazz musician. Reed has recorded for the St. Louis-based label MAXJAZZ, and will be here next week to perform in "The Genius of Eddie Jefferson" at the Bistro.

* Here's a review from JamBase.com of a March 19 show at Yoshi's in Oakland pairing banjo master Bela Fleck and kora player Toumani Diabante on . Both men will perform at the Sheldon Concert Hall this Wednesday, April 1 as part of Fleck's Africa Project tour.

* Trumpeter Sean Jones, who's set to perform at the Bistro from April 15-18, has released a new CD, The Search Within.

* Guitarist and singer John Pizzarelli recently went on Seattle NPR affiliate KPLU to perform a few songs and talk about Richard Rodgers, George Gershwin and the "Great American Songbook." You can listen to an online stream of the broadcast here. Pizzarelli will be in town on Saturday, April 18 as part of the Greater St. Louis Jazz Festival at the Touhill Performing Arts Center.

* Guitarist John Jorgenson (pictured), who's bringing his Django Reinhardt-inspired quintet to the Sheldon in April, recently did an interview and live performance on a local talk show on the Washington, DC NBC affiliate. You can see a video of the segment online here. (Note: The link launches an embedded video player containing a .wmv (Windows Media) file.)

* Opening the "recent visitors" file, saxophonist Javon Jackson, seen here last fall at the Bistro with keyboardist Les McCann, was interviewed by DJ and blogger Leroy "The Jazzcat" Downs; you'll find the conversation in Downs' archives here.

* The Bad Plus, who opened 2009 at the Bistro, were in Philadelphia last week and were the subjects of two feature stories in the local papers.

* From the "Everybody likes free stuff" file: Down Beat magazine is offering online readers the chance to win free trips to the Telluride and Litchfield Jazz Festivals. The packages include airfare, lodging and tickets to the festival. The Telluride Jazz Festival in Colorado runs from June 5-7, and you can enter the Telluride contest here. The Litchfield Jazz Festival in Connecticut runs from July 31-August 2, and you can enter the Litchfield contest here

* And speaking of festivals, a recent article in the New York Times asked the question, "Will New York have a major jazz festival this summer?" It seems that "concert promoters, booking agents and others in the jazz world say that because of the economy and a rift between Festival Network and the impresario George Wein, it is possible that New York will lack a big festival for the first time in 37 years." You can read the whole Times article here, and Howard Mandel has more on the Wein-vs-Festival Network dispute here.

* NYC's festival woes notwithstanding, upstate in Rochester they've got big plans for the eighth annual Xerox Rochester International Jazz Festival, featuring headliners such as Smokey Robinson, Dave Brubeck, St. Louis native Michael McDonald and Taj Mahal as part of a nine-day event held June 12-20.

Impressively, the Rochester fest will include more than 800 musicians performing in 200-plus concerts, which raises a question: How is it that Rochester - which I'm sure is a nice place filled with fine folks, but is neither a major metropolis nor a particularly significant historic center of jazz activity - is able to successfully mount a festival on this scale, while the St. Louis Jazz and Heritage Festival, which actually began the year before the Rochester event, has been reduced to going "on hiatus" for 2009 because they were unable to marshal the necessary resources and/or moxie to organize a single day of programming? I'm just sayin'...

* Following up on last week's item about the possible demise of famed Detroit jazz club Baker's Keyboard Lounge, Clayton McDonnell of MAXJAZZ sent along a link to an item from the Los Angeles Times noting that long-running LA venue the Jazz Bakery has lost its lease. Fortunately, the Jazz Bakery's operators seem to have both the interest and the funding to re-open in a new location, though exactly where is unknown at this time. You can read the whole story here.

* Last, but not least, the UK newspaper the Guardian is running an ongoing series of articles about 50 key moments in jazz that defined the music's history. It';s the sort of thing that, even if you disagree with some of the specifics picks, provides some entertaining food for thought and/or discussion. The home page for the Guardian's "50 Great Moments In Jazz" series is here.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

StLJN Saturday Video Showcase:
Previewing "The Genius of Eddie Jefferson"



Today, we've got a wealth of material related to "The Genius of Eddie Jefferson", a tribute to the late jazz singer starring vocalists Allan Harris and Carla Cook and pianist Eric Reed that will be performed here in St. Louis starting Wednesday, April 1 through Saturday, April 4 at Jazz at the Bistro.

Jefferson, who was born August 3, 1918, first gained wide public recognition thanks to "Moody's Mood For Love," a lyric he wrote to a solo improvised by saxophonist James Moody on a recording of the standard "I'm In The Mood For Love." Although Jefferson didn't get a hit record out of it - the version recorded in 1952 by Clarence "King Pleasure" Beeks had a greater initial impact - the idea of writing lyrics to pre-existing jazz solos and compositions caught on, eventually becoming known as "vocalese."

Performers such as Lambert, Hendricks and Ross, the Manhattan Transfer, Al Jarreau, George Benson (who recorded "Moody's Mood"), and many others certainly owe a major creative and conceptual debt to Eddie Jefferson, who, after periods of relative inactivity during the 1960s, enjoyed something of a career renaissance during the 1970s. Tragically, Jefferson was shot and killed in May, 1979 after leaving a gig at Baker's Keyboard Lounge in Detroit; a suspect in the murder was tried and acquitted, and the case officially remains unsolved.

In addition to his legacy as one of the creators of vocalese, Jefferson left behind a number of fine recordings showcasing his rough-hewn vocal timbre and energetic, hard-swinging style; for a discography of his work, go here. And for even more on his life and career, check out "Music Makes the World Go Round: A Tribute to Eddie Jefferson," a program originally aired in 1980 by KPFA radio in Berkeley, CA and now available online in both downloadable and streaming forms via archive.org.

As for Harris, Cook and Reed, they did a similar tribute to Jefferson last year for Jazz at Lincoln Center in NYC, and it was the subject of one of JALC's audio "jazzcasts," which you can still hear online in streaming form here. You can even follow along with the script, in either HTML or .pdf format. (If you can't get the audio to stream from the link above, go to JALC's podcast archive page here and look for the program from 8/28/08.)

Alas, there doesn't seem to be any video online of Harris, Reed and Carr's JALC performances, instead, we've got some other relevant clips for you, starting up top with a extended excerpt from one of Eddie Jefferson's last performances.

This footage was recorded on May 6, 1979 at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago, just three days before Jefferson was shot and killed. It runs just under 50 minutes, and features Jefferson singing a number of songs from his then-current repertoire. He's accompanied by saxophonist Richie Cole, a frequent touring and recording partner in Jefferson's later years, and a rhythm section of Joel Spencer (drums), Kelly Sill (bass,) and John Campbell (piano).

(The video of this show was originally issued years ago on VHS by Rhapsody Films, but apparently has gone out of print. There are a number of shorter excerpts and individual songs from this show posted online at YouTube, Google Video and elsewhere, but this is the longest and most complete version I could find.)

Down below, we've got clips of the three performers who will be in St. Louis to pay tribute to Jefferson, starting with Carla Cook, seen in the first embedded video window singing "The Way You Look Tonight." This live-in-the-studio clip was put out to promote Cook's CD It's All About Love by her record label, St. Louis-based MAXJAZZ.

Next up is Allan Harris, in a video recorded in September 2007 at the Blue Note in NYC, where he was celebrating the release of Long Live The King, a CD paying tribute to Nat "King" Cole. The video features snippets from several Cole songs, as performed by Harris, Jesse Jones Jr. on sax and flute, Dan Kaufman on piano, Paul Beaudry on bass, and Ulysses Owens on drums.

Last, but not least, is pianist Eric Reed, who, like Cook, may be familiar to St. Louis listeners from his recordings for MAXJAZZ. This clip was made at the NYC club Smoke, and feature Reed in a trio setting playing a tune called "Why?"





Friday, March 27, 2009

Jazz St. Louis offering 2-for-1 deal
on tickets for Eddie Jefferson tribute

Via a local email list, Jazz St. Louis is offering two tickets for the price of one for a performance of "The Genius of Eddie Jefferson" next week at Jazz at the Bistro. The tribute to the late jazz singer Jefferson (pictured), who is credited as one of the inventors of vocalese, will feature pianist Eric Reed and singers Carla Cook and Allan Harris, and runs next from Wednesday, April 1 through Saturday, April 4 at the Bistro.

Tickets are $30, and the 2-for-the-price-of-1 deal is available ONLY for the performance at 8:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 2. To get the discount, buy your tickets in advance by calling 314-289-4030 and mentioning promotional code FC0901 when you place your order.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Bela Fleck's Africa Project featured in RFT story

Genre-busting banjo player Bela Fleck will be in St. Louis next Wednesday, April 1 for a performance at the Sheldon Concert Hall with his latest venture, the Africa Project.

A couple of weeks ago, I had a chance to talk with Fleck about the tour, which features performers that he first met in 2005 while traveling, recording, and making a documentary film in Africa. The conversation yielded a short feature story that appears in the print edition of this week's Riverfront Times and that also can be read online here.

Jazz this week: Chris Botti, Legacy Jazz Quintet, Oikos Ensemble, and more

With spring definitely in the air here in St. Louis, it's looking like another good weekend to get out and hear some live sounds. Here's what's going on around town over the next few days with jazz and creative music:

Tonight, the Jazz at Holmes series at Washington University will present a free concert from guitarist Chris Burchett and his quartet.

Also tonight, the new St. Louis Jazz Cafe, open for its first full week of operations, features the Usual Suspects, fronted by keyboard player Charles Brown and singer/saxophonist Jessica Butler (daughter of well-known local pop crooner Ralph Butler).

On Friday and Saturday, the Legacy Jazz Quintet performs at Jazz at the Bistro. The group is conceived "in the mold of the classic quintets of Miles Davis, Art Blakey and Horace Silver" and features Jazz St. Louis director of education Phil Dunlap on piano, Anthony Wiggins on trumpet, Jason Swagler on saxophones, Nick Jost on bass and Marty Morrison on drums.

On Saturday, trumpeter Chris Botti (pictured) will be in town to give a special benefit performance for St. Louis Children's Hospital at J. Buck's restaurant downtown. I don't know if there are any of the $175 tickets for the event still available as of this writing, but if you'd like to go, call Children's Hospital at 314-286-0974 to check.

Also on Saturday, longtime local favorites Trio Tres Bien perform at the St. Louis Jazz Cafe, while singer Kim Massie holds forth at Brandt's.

On Sunday morning, the Oikos Ensemble, which mixes jazz and world music with Christian spirituality, will give a free performance at Mount Tabor UCC in south St. Louis. Then on Sunday afternoon, Bud Shultz and the You Can't Beat Experience Jazz Band will present their monthly session of traditional New Orleans style jazz and swing at the VFW hall in Alton.

Of course, this is just a taste of what's happening around St. Louis over the next few days, so to see listings for more jazz-related events this weekend and beyond, please visit the St. Louis Jazz Notes Calendar.

(If you have calendar items, band schedule information, news tips, links, or anything else you think may be of interest to StLJN's readers, please email the information to stljazznotes (at) yahoo (dot) com. If you have photos, MP3s or other digital files, please send links, not attachments.)

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Bradford's culinary prowess featured in Post article

Jazz St. Louis executive director Gene Dobbs Bradford shared his recipe for Duck With Honey-Vinegar Sauce with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for an article in today's paper, which also reveals certain previously obscure facts about Bradford's well-documented love for cooking and food.

For example, I certainly didn't know that, in his student days, the classically trained bassist-turned-arts administrator (and occasional blues harmonica player) worked as a cake decorator. For more such mouth-watering revelations, read the whole thing here.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

"Jazz 101" class with Greg Osby
set for Thursday, April 9

Jazz St. Louis will present another of its "Jazz 101" classes at 8:30 p.m., Thursday, April 9 at Jazz at the Bistro.

The "Jazz 101" series is designed to help listeners of all ages and musical backgrounds to better understand jazz. For April's class, "Understanding The Blues," JSL director of education Phil Dunlap will discuss the blues' origins and structure and the difference between blues and jazz, and will play various musical selections as examples.

Sitting in as a special guest for the class will be saxophonist and St. Louis native Greg Osby (pictured), who will be in town that week for an educational residency with JSL and performances at the Bistro on Friday, April 10 and Saturday, April 11. Admission to the "Jazz 101" class is $10 at the door.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Notes from the Net: When Lester met Fela; Eric Person in Iowa; Boney James tops Billboard chart; and more

Here's our weekly compilation of news and links related to jazz, improvisation, and creative music in St. Louis, including news of musicians originally from the Gateway City, recent visitors, and coming attractions, plus assorted other items of interest:

* It's something of a tradition here to start this recurring feature with something Miles Davis-related, and this week there's just one such link, to a podcast tribute to Davis and Kind of Blue, hosted by Errington Thompson.

* However, one of StLJN's fave jazz/music sharing blogs, Destination: Out, currently has a post devoted to another St. Louis trumpeter, the great Lester Bowie (pictured), and his time working with famed African bandleader, saxophonist and vocalist Fela Kuti. As a bonus, one of the MP3s included in the post also features St. Louis' own Phillip Wilson on drums. If you're interested, we suggest you download immediately, as D:O's files only stay online for a short time. For more on Lester Bowie's stint with Fela Kuti, go here.

* Saxophonist and St. Louis native Eric Person was in the Quad Cities on the Iowa/Illinois border last week for a concert with his band Meta-Four and a workshop with local student musicians; read more about it here.

* Another former St. Louisan, saxophonist David Sanborn, will be one of the headliners at this year's Vancouver Jazz Festival, which takes place from June 26 to July 5. Also performing at the fest: the Monterey Quartet, featuring Dave Holland, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Chris Potter and Eric Harland; guitarists Al DiMeola and Derek Trucks; and pianists Fred Hersch, Kenny Werner and Chucho Valdés.

* The Wall Street Journal has an interesting article by Larry Blumenfeld about "Astronome: A Night at the Opera," the collaboration between avant garde theater director Richard Foreman and saxophonist/composer John Zorn, who once studied at our town's Webster University. "Astronome..." is running now through April 5 at Foreman's Ontological-Hysteric Theater in NYC.

* Saxophonist Boney James, who will be in St. Louis this Wednesday to kick off his spring tour at The Pageant, is topping the Billboard jazz charts with his new CD Send One Your Love.

* Last week's New York premiere of Martino Unstrung, the documentary about guitarist Pat Martino's comeback from a life-threatening brain injury, drew an overflow crowd. The movie played in St. Louis last November during the St. Louis International Film Festival, and Martino was here in February to perform at Jazz at the Bistro.

* Next up, a few items of general interest to jazz and creative music, starting with some bad news out of Detroit, as the famed Motor City jazz club Baker's Keyboard Lounge may have to close due to financial problems.

* Closer to home, and on a happier note, the School of Music at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale will host the third annual Outside The Box festival of new music from March 25 through April 11. The eclectic festival will include more than two dozen concerts and workshops, including performances of works by guest composers Bernard Rands and Olly Wilson, plus programs featuring theremin music, a sonic tribute to Buckminster Fuller, a concert by Carbondale's own New Arts Jazztet, and even "Mazurka Mania," a celebration of the Polish folk dance and the music that goes with it.

* Last but not least, the first annual Guthman Musical Instrument Competition held recently at Georgia Tech saw more than 60 musicians, inventors and hobbyists submit musical instruments of their own design to try to win a cash prize of $10,000. Wired magazine has the rundown on the competition and a photo gallery of some of the instruments here.

Coming attractions include Oikos Ensemble, Mountains, Ntozake Shange with Hamiet Bluiett

The weekend brought news of three upcoming performances of interest to St. Louis jazz and creative music fans, all happening at venues other than the usual clubs and concert halls:

* Mount Tabor United Church of Christ, 6520 Arsenal St. in south St. Louis, will present a program called "Jazz for the Journey" featuring the Oikos Ensemble at 10:15 a.m. next Sunday, March 29.

Led by saxophonist Rev. Cliff Aerie (pictured) and pianist Christopher Bakriges, the Oikos Ensemble is a world music/jazz group that is part of MICA (Ministry of Imagination, Creativity and the Arts), a national ministry of the United Church of Christ. Their multi-media live shows feature an "imaginative interplay of jazz, storytelling and spirituality." The performance at Mount Tabor UCC is free and open to the public, though a free-will offering will be received. For more information, call 314-645-9025.

* The Nu-Art Series' next offering is "Dangling Participles and Shady Syllables", a spoken word performance featuring author, poet and playwright Ntozake Shange and musicians Hamiet Bluiett (baritone saxophone) and Dr. London Branch (piano and trumpet), starting at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, April 4 at the Metropolitan Gallery, 2936 Locust St. in downtown St. Louis.

The performance is part of Nu-Art's ongoing series "Jazz and the Visual Arts," and also will feature the musical group JBMG, which includes the grandchildren of singer Fontella Bass and trumpet player Lester Bowie. Admission is $20 at the door.

That same weekend, the Metropolitan Gallery will host a free opening reception for its exhibition of photographs and paintings by St. Louis artists Adelia Parker and James Seitu Smith from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Friday, April 3. The exhibition runs through May 15. Also, Ntozake Shange will do a book signing from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. on Sunday, April 5 at Borders bookstore in Brentwood.

* The gallery and performance space Open Lot, 1310 South 18th Street, will present a concert by the ambient/electronic/psychedelic duo Mountains on Tuesday, April 21. Mountains, comprised of musicians Brendon Anderegg and Koen Holtkamp, "is often compared to artists such as Brian Eno and Fennesz, citing their extended melodies and their unique broad guitar work... Mountains seamlessly blend pastoral electronic sounds with both field recordings and a plethora of acoustic instruments." Show time and ticket prices are both to be announced; watch this space for updates.

(Edited 3/25/09 to fix a typo in Hamiet Bluiett's name.)

Saturday, March 21, 2009

StLJN Saturday Video Showcase:
Richard Elliot plays "Move On Up"
and "When A Man Loves A Woman"



This week, our video showcase features a couple of clips from saxophonist Richard Elliot, who's coming to the St. Louis area with the Jazz Attack show on Thursday, April 9 to perform at the Ameristar Casino St. Charles' Bottleneck Blues Bar.

The 2009 Jazz Attack tour features Elliot, his frequent collaborator Rick Braun on trumpet, and singer/guitarist Jonathan Butler, and odds are that the saxophonist will be working in a number or two from his new CD Rock Steady, which was recorded with Elliot's touring band plus guest stars Braun, Gerald Albright, Philippe Saisse and Jeff Lorber.

Rock Steady is basically a program of soul- and funk-styled material, including covers of tunes associated with Aretha Franklin (the title track) and Curtis Mayfield. That's Mayfield's song "Move on Up," originally recorded by the Impressions, that Elliot is doing in the first video window up at the top of this post. This brand-new clip is the only Rock Steady-related video released so far, but in the interest of a well-rounded post, down below we've added a 2006 live version of Elliot laying into another soul classic, the Percy Sledge hit "When A Man Loves A Woman."

Friday, March 20, 2009

Boney James interviewed in Post-Dispatch

Saxophonist Boney James will be in St. Louis on Wednesday night to play at The Pageant and kick off the tour in support of his latest CD Send One Your Love, and St. Louis Post-Dispatch pop music critic Kevin Johnson interviewed James about the tour and the disc for an article in yesterday's paper. You can read it online here.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Jazz this week: Dr. Lonnie Smith, Duke Ellington Orchestra, Boney James, the St. Louis Jazz Cafe's grand opening, and more

Better weather, the official onset of spring, and a nicely varied slate of musical attractions make this a good week in St. Louis to get out and hear some live jazz and creative music.

Here's a chronological look at the highlights of the next seven days, starting with veteran jazz organist Dr. Lonnie Smith (pictured), who opened last night and plays through Saturday at Jazz at the Bistro.

For this visit to St. Louis, Smith is joined by the bluesy guitarist Russell Malone and the drummer and New Orleans native Herlin Riley, who seem like they ought to be a very sympatico couple of bandmates. For more about Smith and some video samples of his funk-infused organ wizardry, see this post from Saturday before last. To hear Jazz St. Louis' podcast interview with the good Doctor, go here.

(And while we're at it, a couple of unusual facts about Dr. Lonnie Smith: He is not a physician, nor does he hold a doctorate, earned or honorary, in any academic subject. Also, he's not a Sikh (the religious faith that today is most commonly associated with turbans), nor is he a member of any other denomination that requires believers to wear a turban. Both the "Dr." designation and the distinctive headgear originally came about, so the story goes, for "no particular reason." Both, however, seemed to have served the purpose of making Smith more recognizable and/or memorable, which was probably mighty useful while he was coming up in the 1960s amidst a flock of popular jazz organists, and presumably still handy today.)

Also this evening, guitarist William Lenihan and pianist Kim Portnoy will team up to do a free concert for the Jazz at Holmes series at Washington University. This is being billed as a duo show, and the intimate confines of Holmes Lounge should provide a good opportunity to hear both players' contributions in fine detail.

On Saturday night, St. Louis Jazz Cafe has its grand opening, with music from Erin Bode. The cafe also will host its first jazz brunch on Sunday, with music from the Neal Conners Trio. For more about the St. Louis Jazz Cafe, including links to all previous StLJN coverage of the new downtown jazz club, see this post.

Sunday will be a busy day, with three noteworthy performances competing for local listeners' time and attention. First, there's the Duke Ellington Orchestra, now under the direction of conductor and trumpeter Barrie Lee Hall Jr., who will be in St. Louis for a matinee concert at the Touhill Performing Arts Center. While many of the present-day members of the Orchestra weren't even born yet when the Duke himself died back in 1974, Ellington's vast catalog of compositions and arrangements remains timeless, and always worth hearing.

Of course, if you're anywhere near St. Louis and already a big band fan, chances are that you've already made plans to attend this show. But if you've never heard a big band perform live before, and/or are just getting acquainted with jazz and want to learn more about it, you definitely should get to know Ellington's music - not just because it's historically important, but because, like all art of lasting value, it still is truly engaging, emotive and entertaining, even many years after its creation.

Also on Sunday, guitarist Matthew Von Doran will do a trio concert with bassist Nick Jost and drummer Miles Vandiver at Music Folk, 8015 Big Bend Blvd in Webster Groves. Van Doran hasn't done too many live performances since moving to St. Louis a couple of years ago, and that seems a shame, because based on what's available on record, the man really can play. This event will feature Von Doran, Jost and Vandiver playing both acoustically and electrically in the single-story, storefront space, which is intimate on the scale of someone's living room.

Last - but not least - on Sunday, the presenting organization St. Louis City Jazz is sponsoring a performance by smooth jazz saxophonist Tim Cunningham at the Schlafly Brewery and Tap Room downtown.

Looking beyond the weekend, on Monday the Black Wolf Consort, a new project involving trombonist John Wolf, guitarist Dave Black, and classically trained singer Jessica Heuser, is at BB's Jazz, Blues and Soups, and on Tuesday, The Gramophone will feature the Andrew Miramonti Trio.

Next Wednesday, the popular smooth jazz/funk saxophonist Boney James begins a tour in support of his latest CD, Send One Your Love, right here in St. Louis at The Pageant. James' CD came out around Valentine's Day and, as the name suggests, emphasizes love songs. However, while he will no doubt be playing some romantic songs from the latest release, I'd bet James will be serving up a few fan-pleasing funky jams as well.

As always, these are just a few of the noteworthy performances happening around St. Louis over the next few days. To see listings for more jazz-related events this weekend and beyond, please visit the St. Louis Jazz Notes Calendar.

(If you have calendar items, band schedule information, news tips, links, or anything else you think may be of interest to StLJN's readers, please email the information to stljazznotes (at) yahoo (dot) com. If you have photos, MP3s or other digital files, please send links, not attachments.)

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Jazz St. Louis CD Listening Club
meeting to be held Tuesday, April 14

The Jazz St. Louis CD Listening Club will have its next meeting at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, April 14 at the Brentwood branch of Borders bookstore, 1519 S. Brentwood Blvd.

Singer Jeanne Trevor, a longtime favorite of St. Louis audiences for her work in jazz clubs, concerts and musical theater, will be on hand to discuss the CD The Audience with Betty Carter (a fine live recording that, in addition to containing some great Carter vocals, also features St. Louis native John Hicks on piano). Jazz St. Louis executive director Gene Dobbs Bradford will serve as moderator.

The CD Listening Club is free and open to the public, but because space is limited, Jazz St. Louis asks that you reserve a spot in advance by calling Kedra Tolson at 314-289-4034.

A couple of other notes from Jazz St. Louis' weekly email newsletter:

* There are still two rooms available for the Jazz St. Louis group trip to New York City (.pdf file) on May 29 and 30, and the deadline has been extended to March 31. For more information or to sign up, you can email JSL director of development Melissa Jones at melissa@jazzstl.org.

* Jazz St. Louis will present the first Barbara Rose Memorial Award to Carol and Michael Staenberg at this year's annual gala, which is scheduled for April 5. The Staenbergs are being honored for their support of Jazz St. Louis through their company THF Realty. The Barbara Rose Award is named for Barbara Rose, the St. Louis jazz impresario who founded and ran the Just Jazz series, which began at the Mayfair Hotel downtown; later moved to Grand Center and became Jazz at the Bistro; and eventually evolved into Jazz St. Louis.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Is jazz coming back to downtown St. Louis?

Though many jazz clubs have come and gone in downtown St. Louis over the decades, in recent years it's been tough to find live jazz in the figurative shadow of the Gateway Arch.

In the nearly four years I've been writing StLJN, jazz bookings at the Adams Mark Hotel's lounges and restaurants, once a staple there, first dwindled, and then were eliminated when the riverfront property was sold and re-flagged as a Hyatt Regency. Elsewhere downtown, BB's Jazz, Blues and Soups has continued to book the Sessions Big Band on Mondays, as well as occasional gigs on Sundays featuring locals such as Good 4 the Soul, Todd Mosby and Anita Rosamond, but it remains primarily a blues club. Also, a bit farther to the west, George Sams' Nu-Art Series has presented occasional jazz and creative music performances at the Metropolitan Gallery. Beyond that, though, live jazz in downtown St. Louis proper has been relatively scarce here in the 21st century.

(UPDATE: A reader emails to point out that the concerts put on by the now-defunct Black Artists Group revival in 2007 and 2008 at the Scott Joplin House State Historic Site ought to be included in any accounting of recent jazz activity downtown, and he's right. Although BAG II didn't succeed in building a large audience, the efforts of the group, and particularly those of bassist and event producer Zimbabwe Nkenya, should not be forgotten.)

The deficit has not gone completely unnoticed. A couple of years ago, Jazz St. Louis made an attempt to establish a downtown beachhead of sorts, co-presenting a handful of free, cocktail-hour shows in conjunction with the Hilton at the Ballpark. Having played one of those gigs myself, backing singer Kim Massie, I can say based on first-hand observation that the hotel - how do I put this nicely? - did not seem strongly committed to making the series a success. As it turned out, the idea was abandoned after a few weeks.

More recently, though, there have been a few signs that jazz may be making something of a comeback in downtown St. Louis. Consider the following data points:

1) The St. Louis Jazz Cafe, located at 1500 St. Charles, and previously written about in this space here, here and here, appears to be on track for its grand opening celebration featuring music from Erin Bode this Saturday, March 21.

Someone associated with the cafe apparently has been reaching out to local food writers, as evidenced by these blog posts from the Riverfront Times and Sauce magazine, and Post-Dispatch pop music critic Kevin Johnson also mentioned the grand opening in a blog post here. (Curiously, any press releases intended for St. Louis Jazz Notes, and/or grand opening invitations for yr. humble editor, seem to have been mysteriously lost in the electronic ether and/or mail.)

The St. Louis Jazz Cafe also has updated parts of its Web site, particularly the music calendar, which now reveals who's booked for the first couple of weeks after the grand opening. 3 Central, a smooth jazz band seen in semi-regular rotation at the now-closed Cookie's Jazz and More, will play for the cafe's soft-opening "Friends and Family" night on Thursday, with the Usual Suspects taking over on subsequent Thursdays. (I'm reasonably certain that would be these Usual Suspects, fronted by keyboardist Charlie Brown and singer/saxophonist Jessica Butler, and not these Usual Suspects, who, save for a few videos on YouTube, seem to have evaporated without a trace in the two years since winning the RFT's "Best Cover Band" award.)

Other musical offerings now on the St. Louis Jazz Cafe calendar include the Neal Connors Trio, for the cafe's first Sunday brunch on March 22; Trio Tres Bien (pictured), who are set to appear on Saturday, March 28 and Friday, April 10; and Lamar Harris, who's booked on Saturday, April 4 and Friday, April 17. That's about as far as the calendar goes right now, though there is an RSS feed for those who'd like direct access to any updates.

2) St. Louis City Jazz, the fledgling not-for-profit organization whose mission statement, as their name suggests, involves "bringing live jazz back to the city of St. Louis," is presenting smooth jazz saxophonist Tim Cunningham at the Schlafly Brewery and Tap Room this Sunday, March 22. Cunningham plays from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., and tickets are $20 at the door.

3) Then there's the Jazz Spot, housed in the space at 400 N. Washington Ave. that once contained the Mandarin Bay restaurant, back when the surrounding hotel first opened a few years ago. The Jazz Spot came into being in 2008, when local real estate and media moguls the Roberts Brothers took over the hotel. However, to date, I haven't written anything about the place here on StLJN, because they haven't featured much in the way of actual jazz music.

Instead, the half-dozen groups listed on the club's Web site's "live music" page would seem to fall mostly into what might loosely be termed the "variety band" category, mixing jazz, R&B, pop, blues and other genres. Only one group listed there has its own Web site, the On Call Band, led by drummer Marty Spikener and saxophonist David Spruill. They're an entertaining band, featuring some good musicians, but not a jazz group per se; indeed, their own Web site emphasizes not their jazz chops, but their versatility, pitching them as able to play everything from blues to reggae.

That said, the Jazz Spot did present a show last October featuring singer and East St. Louis native Phil Perry, who works the boundary of smooth jazz and R&B, and the club will serve as the site for the upcoming CD release event for drummer Stan Hale, so perhaps they will yet begin booking live music on a regular basis that lives up to the implications of their name. For now, I'll be adding a link to the Jazz Spot's site, and to the site of the St. Louis Jazz Cafe, over on the StLJN sidebar, and keeping on eye on developments at both places.

Granted, these are but a handful of semi-random data points, there's a major recession happening, and a handful of shows do not a full-fledged resurgence make. But one would think jazz fans in St. Louis will be hoping for these new downtown presenters to meet with some success. It certainly would be good for local listeners, as well as tourists, left for for some time without adequate musical options in the heart of a city supposedly famous for its jazz heritage. And it would, of course, be good for St. Louis' jazz musicians, who can always use more work. For now, all we can do is wait and see what happens next.

Matt Wilson Quartet coming to
Black Cat Theatre on Sunday, April 5

Drummer Matt Wilson (pictured) and his quartet are coming to St. Louis for a matinee performance at 3:00 p.m., Sunday, April 5 at the Black Cat Theatre in Maplewood.

Critically acclaimed for his drumming chops, bandleading and composing skills, and sometimes-skewed sense of humor, Wilson has recorded eight albums as a leader for Palmetto Records, and also works with Joe Lovano, John Scofield, Charlie Haden, Lee Konitz and others. He was in St. Louis in January 2006 to do a concert with another of his ensembles, the group Arts and Crafts, at St. Louis University.

Wilson's quartet, which was formed back in 1996, includes Andrew D’Angelo on alto saxophone and bass clarinet, Jeff Lederer on tenor and soprano saxophones and clarinet, and Chris Lightcap on acoustic and electric bass. The quartet has recorded three CDs for Palmetto, with a fourth, That’s Gonna Leave a Mark, set for release this fall.

General admission tickets are $15 for adults and $10 for college, high school and middle school students with ID and are available at www.blackcattheatre.org, and at the Black Cat Theatre box office. For more information, you can call the Black Cat Theatre at 314-781-8300.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Erin Bode and band traveling to Japan
to perform at Cotton Club Tokyo

A couple of weeks ago, we noted that singer Erin Bode (pictured) was headed north to perform at the Dakota jazz club in Minneapolis.

Now word comes via her email list that, having returned from the Twin Cities, Bode and her group soon will be headed east - to the Far East, that is - as they're going to Japan to perform from March 26 through March 28 at The Cotton Club Tokyo, which features both visiting acts from overseas and Japanese musicians, with a strong emphasis on jazz. (For example, other touring artists playing there in March include singer Rebecca Martin, the Yellowjackets with Mike Stern, guitarist Ronny Jordan, and reggae legends Sly and Robby.)

This isn't Bode's first foray into international waters; she and her band have toured Italy several times before, and traveled to South Africa for the Themba Girls CD project, which benefited a South African girls school. However, it is, as best can be determined, her first trip as a performer to Japan, which, along with some other Asian nations, has proven to be fertile ground for musicians from the United States, particularly jazz musicians. Here's hoping Bode and band have a safe and successful journey.

Benny Golson to play with Ronald Carter and
the NIU Jazz Ensemble on April 12 at the Sheldon

Saxophonist and composer Benny Golson (pictured) is coming to St. Louis to join the Northern Illinois University jazz ensemble and its director, saxophonist Ronald Carter, for a benefit performance at 5:00 p.m., Sunday, April 12 at the Sheldon Concert Hall.

The event is the fifth annual "Youth in the Arts" benefit for the Genesis Academy of Arts and Fine Arts Ministry (GAAFAM), an organization founded and directed by Tracy Holliway-Wiggins, formerly of the Black Rep, that also includes local jazz trumpeter (and Holliway-Wiggins' spouse) Anthony Wiggins as music director.

Golson, who recently turned 80 years old, is the composer of jazz standards such as "Along Came Betty," "Killer Joe" and "I Remember Clifford," and was named an NEA Jazz Master in 1995. The NIU jazz ensemble under Carter's direction has become an internationally recognized, award-winning group that has shared stages with many jazz greats, including Dizzy Gillespie, Louie Bellson, Clark Terry, Slide Hampton, Jimmy Heath, Tito Puente, Wynton Marsalis and many others.

Tickets for the April 12 concert at the Sheldon are $25 for general admission, $15 for students, and can be purchased at the door the night of the concert or online at the GAAFAM Web site.

Miles Davis Jazz Festival to open
new Alton amphitheater on Saturday, May 16

The fourth annual Miles Davis Jazz Festival on Saturday, May 16 will be the official inaugural event for the new amphitheater on the riverfront in Alton, Illinois.

Saxophonist Willie Akins (pictured) and trumpeter Jim Manley will headline the event, which starts with opening ceremonies at noon and continues until 6:30 p.m. Other performers will include saxophonist Michael Anthony Fitzgerald with guitarist Brian White, the Scott Air Force Base Big Band, and drummer Howard Neal. Tickets for the Miles Davis Jazz Festival (a.k.a. the Miles Davis Jazz Celebration) are $20 in advance or $25 at the gate on the day of the show.

In related news, according to an article by Linda N. Weller in the Alton Telegraph, the city of Alton is looking for a outside producer to book concerts into the new facility:
"An unnamed, citizens-city committee has interviewed four music promotion companies about bringing larger-scale entertainment to the new Riverfront Park amphitheater...

...Unlike some other towns in the area, Alton officials' philosophy is that they will work with individuals and entities wanting to bring entertainment to the park - and people who are experienced in marketing and selling tickets - but not set up city-sponsored concerts.

"The city does not want to be in the business of promoting commercial entertainment," (Alton director of development and housing Phil) Roggio said. The city's priorities are to assist with the events, provide the facility and break even on its expenses for maintenance, electricity, traffic control and any after-event cleanup."

Recently on Heliocentric Worlds

Since we last shamelessly promoted StLJN's sibling site Heliocentric Worlds, even more marvelous music videos have been added to the site's solar system of scintillating sounds. In fact, there's a different clip posted every day, drawing from genres including jazz, blues, soul, funk, classic rock, prog rock and experimental.

So far this month, featured artists have included Billy Cobham, Mandrill, the Allman Brothers Band, Ornette Coleman, Carla Bley, Sarah Vaughan, Junior Wells, David Sanborn, Buddy Guy with Jack Bruce, Buddy Miles and Dick Heckstall-Smith, Roy Hargrove and the RH Factor, Lee Dorsey, Soft Machine, Herbie Mann, George Duke, Roswell Rudd and Lafayette Harris, and Bill Evans.

You still can see them all, plus hundreds more music video clips from the archives, by visiting http://heliocentricworlds.blogspot.com/.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Notes from the Net: Miles Davis on PBS, Pizzarelli plays Rodgers, plus news, reviews, and more

Here's our weekly compilation of news and links related to jazz, improvisation, and creative music in St. Louis, including news of musicians originally from the Gateway City, recent visitors, and coming attractions, plus assorted other items of interest:

* For our mandatory weekly portion of Miles Davis-related content, via Blogcritics, here's a review of Miles Davis: The Sound of Miles Davis, a newly restored and reissued 1959 television special featuring most of the band from Davis' Kind of Blue sessions that's airing on PBS stations this month during pledge drives.

Alas, from what I can tell, the Davis film is not scheduled to be shown on St. Louis' PBS affiliate KETC. If you'd like to express your feelings about that, here's the relevant information from the station Web site's contact page: "For questions about programs on Channel 9, changes of address, KETC Guide delivery, general station information and questions about membership or pledge, call (314) 512-9199 or 1-800-729-9966 or send your letters by e-mail to letters@ketc.org."

* Another of our favorite Notes from the Net subjects, alto saxophonist and one-time Webster University student John Zorn, is set to headline the Equinox Festival in London this June.

* Opening the "coming attractions" file, trumpeter Chris Botti, who's got two gigs in St. Louis on his "to do" list for 2009, kicked off the month of March by visiting a number of PBS stations around the country promoting his latest PBS special, Chris Botti In Boston, which is being released on DVD on Tuesday, March 31. Also, word comes this week that a performance by Botti with orchestra will be one of the headline events of the 30th annual Montreal Jazz Festival in July.

* Before a gig in Stuart, FL, guitarist and singer John Pizzarelli (pictured) talks with the local paper about performing the music of Richard Rodgers. Pizzarelli will be one of the guest artists at the Greater St. Louis Jazz Festival in April.

* Trumpeter Rick Braun is working on his first solo studio CD in several years, and it's a tribute to Chet Baker. Braun will be in the St. Louis area on April 9 to perform as part of the Jazz Attack show at the Ameristar Casino's Bottleneck Blues Bar

* Next up, we've got news of recent visitors to St. Louis, starting with a review of the Pat Martino Trio's February 28 gig at the Lakeland Jazz Festival in Ohio, penned by Mike Marshall for AllAboutJazz.com. Martino was in St. Louis last month to play Jazz at the Bistro.

* Then there's "Trying to Understand the Logic of The Bad Plus," in which Saby Reyes-Kulkarni of the Seattle Weekly wonders if the much-hyped, sometimes controversial trio, last seen here in January at the Bistro, is just covering the same old ground with their latest release For All I Care.

* As regular StLJN readers doubtless are already aware, the Blue Note 7 played St. Louis' Sheldon Concert Hall in February. More recently, Blue Note records recently had an event commemorating its 70th anniversary at Royce Hall in Los Angeles, and DJ and blogger Leroy "The JazzCat" Downs was there and has a story with photos.

* Here's a New York Times review of singer and actor Tom Wopat's latest cabaret/nighclub act. Wopat was in St. Louis last month to perform under the auspices of Cabaret St. Louis.

* And here's a short review of Return to Forever's new live CD Returns, written by John Kalman for AAJ.com. The CD is drawn from recordings made during last year's reunion tour, which included a stop at St. Louis' Fox Theatre.

* Following up on another story we've been tracking here recently, here's a nifty Fred Kaplan review for Slate of the recent Thelonious Monk Town Hall tribute that makes very nice use of audio clips from the album of the original concert and the tribute show. Also, Doug Ramsey's Rifftides has some "inside stuff" on the Monk tribute from Sam Stephenson of the Jazz Loft Project at Duke University, who helped produce the concerts.

* Finally, a couple of items of more general interest: Via the indispensible Avant Music News, the Los Angeles Times reviews the new music scene in the San Francisco bay area

* And Icons Among Us: jazz in the present tense. is a new four-part documentary film series that examines the world of contemporary jazz. It feature live footage and interviews of current jazz stars, including many musicians familiar to St. Louis audiences, such as The Bad Plus, Terence Blanchard, Jason Moran, Charlie Hunter, Dirty Dozen Brass Band and Medeski Martin and Wood, as well as predecessors and influences including Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter and Wynton Marsalis. The Documentary Channel will telecast the Icons Among Us series on four consecutive Mondays at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time beginning April 20, following its world premiere on April 15 at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

StLJN Saturday Video Showcase:
Three views of Peter Erskine



This week, we've a little video taste of the work of drummer Peter Erskine, who will be in St. Louis April 16-18 as a guest artist for the Greater St. Louis Jazz Festival at the Touhill Performing Arts Center.

Erskine has had a long and varied career, starting in the mid-1970s as a big band drummer with Stan Kenton and Maynard Ferguson, moving into fusion as a member of Weather Report and Steps Ahead, and continuing into the present day with a busy and eclectic schedule of gigs as a sideman, leader and clinician.

These days, Erskine plays with all sorts of musicians in all sorts of ensembles, from the small combo of singer/pianist Diana Krall to saxophonist Bob Mintzer's big band to the backup bands of pop artists such as Queen Latifah and Linda Ronstadt. He's also active in jazz education, and that makes him a good fit for the GSLJF, which involves its guest artists in workshops and clinics with local student musicians.

There are many Erskine video clips online, showing him playing with many different artists in many different styles. Here, the better to get a closeup look at the drummer himself, we've got a couple of videos of Erskine playing alone, and another featuring him in a small group setting.

The first clip up above shows Erskine playing a more-or-less free form drum solo. It was recorded in 2004 at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention (PASIC). The second video, down below, features the drummer in a trio with guitarist John Abercrombie and bassist Marc Johnson, recorded at NYC's Village Vanguard. Lastly, the third clip provides a glimpse of Erskine the teacher, as he demonstrates a New Orleans-style groove and solo.



Thursday, March 12, 2009

Jazz this week: Victor Wooten, Rachael Price, Funky Butt Brass Band, and more

There's plenty of interesting stuff on tap for jazz fans in St. Louis over the next few days, including visits from two touring musicians and a couple of free concerts featuring two of the area's talented jazz pianists.

The first of those free shows is tonight, when keyboard player Adaron "Pops" Jackson performs in a free concert at the newly renovated Soulard Preservation Hall as part of Jazz St. Louis' Whitaker Community Concerts series. Jackson, who also plays with Good 4 The Soul, and members of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra will perform the music of legendary alto saxophonist and bebop progenitor Charlie Parker.

On Friday, bass virtuoso Victor Wooten, best known for his work with Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, takes the stage at The Pageant. In general, Wooten's solo projects seems to be a bit more funk-oriented than the Flecktones, but the bassist also displays a similarly wide range of musical influences, and of course, he's got the sort of chops that bring out the guitar-magazine-reading, bass-fanboy contingent in droves. Depending on your point of view, this may or may not be a good thing, but there's no doubt Wooten can flat out play.

Also on Friday, the Funky Butt Brass Band opens a two-night stand at Jazz at the Bistro. The six-member group draws on jazz, funk and the New Orleans brass band tradition, mixing in some unexpected song choices and interpretations of their own. After a busy Mardi Gras season, they should be well-lubricated for their debut appearance at the Bistro.

On Saturday, singer Rachael Price (pictured) performs at the Sheldon Concert Hall. The 23-year-old Price, born in Australia and raised in Nashville, is considered by some critics to be one of the more promising new female jazz vocalists of the last few years. For example, writing in the Los Angeles Times, the respected veteran jazz critic and producer Don Heckman said that "she is clearly a talent with extraordinary potential."

However, from what (admittedly little) I've seen and heard of her so far, Price still seems a little green to be a major headliner, a talented youngster trying a bit too hard to mimic the sound and persona of an older, wiser and more world-weary woman. For my money, she sounds most natural on the country/jazz/bluegrass recording she made with the group The Tennessee Terraplanes, but Price seems determined to try to be another Ella Fitzgerald or Nancy Wilson.

As is always the case in such subjective matters, your mileage may vary, and I suppose if nothing else, it's good that the Sheldon is taking a chance on a new talent. (Price fans, if you're out there, please feel free to try to turn me around by pointing me to any online audio or video that showcases her jazz singing in a better light. )

On Sunday, there's another free concert, featuring the Ptah Williams Trio with singer Marsha Evans at Second Baptist Church in Richmond Heights as part of the church's St. Louis Jazz and Blues Vespers series. Williams' combination of harmonic sophistication and sheer pianistic force is always impressive, and it should be fun to hear Evans, a shrewd and gutsy singer and entertainer who's usually heard around town singing blues, soul and R&B with her own group, the Marsha Evans Coalition, go to work on some jazz material.

As always, these are just a few of the highlights happening around St. Louis over the next few days; to see listing for more jazz-related events this weekend and beyond, please visit the St. Louis Jazz Notes Calendar.

(If you have calendar items, band schedule information, news tips, links, or anything else you think may be of interest to StLJN's readers, please email the information to stljazznotes (at) yahoo (dot) com. If you have photos, MP3s or other digital files, please send links, not attachments.)

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Stan Hale CD release event
set for Sunday, April 19

Drummer and St. Louis native Stan Hale will perform at a CD release party celebrating The Stan Hale Experience, his debut recording as a leader, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Sunday, April 19 at the Jazz Spot, 400 N. Washington Ave. in downtown St. Louis. Admission to the show is $10, and includes a copy of the CD.

Known primarily as a blues drummer, Hale has worked with a number of well-known musicians and singers, including Joe Louis Walker, Maria Muldaur, Son Seals, Charlie Musselwhite, Angela Strehli, Ronnie Baker Brooks, Alvin "Youngblood" Hart, Kenny Wayne, Theo Peoples, and many others.

The CD includes Hale's original jazz compositions "Few and Far Between," "Active Ingredient" and "Red, White and Blue" plus his arrangements of tunes such as Wayne Shorter's "Footprints," and the standards "My One and Only Love," "Lullaby of Birdland," "It Could Happen To You," and "My Heart Belongs To Daddy."

In addition to the leader on drums, the cast of musicians on The Stan Hale Experience CD includes Carolyn Day (piano), Henry Taylor (guitar) and Jeff Anderson (bass, tenor sax), plus vocalists Erika Johnson and Ben Garrett and rapper Zaire Imani. As for the CD release party, Hale says he's still putting together the band, but has already secured the services of singer Ralph Butler to handle vocals.

Hale added that the CD also will be available for purchase at local retailers, such as Vintage Vinyl and Webster Records, soon after the release event.

(Full disclosure: Yr. humble editor has played a number of gigs with Stan Hale over the past couple of years, both as part of Hale's own group and backing up singers such as Uvee Hayes and Renee Smith.)

Chris Botti reschedules Fox Theatre
concert for Friday, September 18

Not only will he be in St. Louis later this month to play an intimate benefit for St. Louis Children's Hospital, but it now seems that trumpeter Chris Botti also will be returning to the Gateway City this fall. That's because Botti finally has rescheduled his concert at the Fox Theatre, which was supposed to have happened in September 2008, for Friday, September 18, 2009.

Tickets to Botti's concert at the Fox originally were offered as pledge drive premiums by local PBS affiliate KETC, and the Fox Web site says that all tickets sold for the September 2008 show will be honored for the new 2009 date. As for the unsold seats, the site says that "a new public on sale date will be announced later." We'll have more details for you right here as they become available.

Jazz St. Louis podcast interview
with Dr. Lonnie Smith now online

Jazz St. Louis has just posted the latest in their series of podcast interviews, and the new installment features organist Dr. Lonnie Smith, who will be in St. Louis from Wednesday, March 18 through Saturday, March 21 to play at Jazz at the Bistro. The conversation runs just under 16 minutes, and you can hear an audio stream or download the file for offline listening here.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Chris Botti to perform benefit show for
Children's Hospital on Saturday, March 28

Trumpeter Chris Botti (pictured) is returning to St. Louis to give a benefit performance for St. Louis Children’s Hospital on Saturday, March 28 at J.Buck’s restaurant, 1000 Clark St. in downtown St. Louis.

Tickets are $250 per person, and include valet parking, a premium cocktail hour with "heavy hors d’oeuvres," and Botti's performance for an intimate audience of just 175 people. Proceeds will support programs and services at St. Louis Children’s Hospital, which has provided specialized care for children for more than 128 years.

For more details on Chris Botti's performance or to purchase tickets, you can call St. Louis Children's Hospital at 314-286-0974.