Wyatt Flores: Tiny Desk Concert
4 hours ago
"We will soon reveal our new name, Jazz St. Louis, which will better communicate the depth and breadth of our educational and concert programming. The Jazz at the Bistro concert series will continue as before. Within our new image Jazz at the Bistro will be a specific part of a diverse program, encompassing innovative community partnerships, education initiatives and high-quaity performances. Jazz St. Louis will be unlike any other organization in the region."
"The Cellar Door Sessions, 1970, a new six-CD box set full of live Miles Davis music, represents a stretch when Davis was making organic, linear music. It is six musicians in a working band, making sense of a new paradigm on a nightclub stage in Washington, from a Wednesday to a Saturday...In everyday terms, this box set is too much music. One of these discs alone, perhaps the second or the sixth, can be nearly overwhelming; each demands concentration. But for now that's beside the point. It's filling a hole in general knowledge, and it establishes better than before that there was, in fact, a third great Miles Davis group beyond the quintets of the 1950's and 60's"
John Norment (photo by Roscoe Crenshaw/St. Louis American) |
Saxophonist and composer Oliver Lake, who flew in from New York, explained, “John was one of my first teachers. He helped me to get started on the instrument. We were neighbors. I definitely wanted to get here and see him off. He’ll be missed.”...Drummer Jerome “Scrooge” Harris called Norment “a friend for 40 years. Excellent writer, composer and performer. Loved him dearly - like a brother.” Another buddy, trumpeter Floyd LeFlore, remarked, “The saxophone was an extension of his soul. He played for God and you and you and you, ‘cause music was his life.”As mentioned earlier, though I was not a close friend or frequent musical associate, I did have the opportunity to work with John Norment a few times during the Nineties as both a musician (in the short-lived group Open End) and as a producer of several live events that included John or one of his groups. My thoughts about his musicianship are still best summed up by a brief item I wrote (unbylined) about him for the Riverfront Times on the occasional of his being named "Best Jazz Artist" in the 2003 "Best of St. Louis" issue:
Some jazz musicians stay inside, expertly navigating the changes while inventing fresh new melodies on the spot. Others go outside, discarding the boundaries of harmony and stretching music into pure sound with a restless yearning to grab the whole world and channel it through a horn. One of the things that makes saxophonist-composer John Norment distinctive is his ability to do both -- to play both inside and outside, sometimes even in the same solo, and yet have it all make perfect sense. A skinny man of average height with a frizzy mop of gray hair, Norment looks and talks like a mild-mannered individual -- until he picks up his horn and reveals himself to be part deep thinker, part slapstick comedian and all master musician. Equally adept on alto, tenor and soprano saxophones, Norment has a unique musical mind teeming with intriguing ideas, as well as the experience and technique to realize those ideas in a most satisfying manner.In addition to being an excellent musician, John was a fine person and always interesting and fun to be around. It's a shame he had to leave this plane of existence after a relatively short time, but he left many great memories of his music and his humanity. As Oliver Lake said so simply, he will be missed.