Here's the latest compilation of assorted news briefs 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.
Starting off, as we usually do, with a couple of items about
Miles Davis, it seems that
Kind of Blue drummer
Jimmy Cobb's So What band played last week at the Gem Theater in Kansas City, and the show was reviewed for the
Kansas City Star by
Bill "Plastic Sax" Brownlee here, for
Pitch Weekly by
Jason Harper here, and by local music blogger
Joel Francis here.
In other Davis-related news, Monster, the company that makes premium-priced audio cables and similar products, is coming out with Miles Davis
special edition headphones. The 'phones, which feature
a silhouetted image of the trumpeter, have a "pre-sale price" of $399 (!) and go on sale in November.
* Turning to news of other St. Louis natives and former denizens, the late trumpeter
Lester Bowie's first recordings as a leader, made in 1967 for the Nessa label, have been
reissued on a two-CD set.
All The Numbers: Complete Numbers 1 & 2 Sessions features Bowie, saxophonists
Roscoe Mitchell and
Joseph Jarman, and bassist
Malachi Favors in the first documentation of what would soon become the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and includes everything from the original LP plus much previously unreleased material and outtakes.
* Baritone saxophonist
Hamiet Bluiett performed with percussionist
Kahil El’Zabar last weekend at Sista’s Place in Brooklyn, NY.
* Meanwhile, multi-instrumentalist
Marty Ehrlich's Rites Quartet with
James Zollar on trumpet,
Erik Friedlander on cello and
Pheeroan akLaff on drums, just
played a concert at NYC's Miller Theater.
* And way out West, we learn via
LeRoy "The JazzCat" Downs that saxophonist
Eric Person and Meta Four West just
performed this past weekend at Santa Monica College.
* Saxophonist
David Sanborn will be featured in January by the
jazz series at the South Orange Performing Arts Center in New Jersey. Sanborn just wrapped a four-night stand at Yoshi’s Jazz Club in San Francisco.
* Saxophonist
Greg Osby (
pictured) will
lead a group of Berklee College of Music students on Monday for a gig in NYC at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola as part of the Lincoln Center Upstarts! program, where up-and-comers and veteran musicians jam together on one bandstand. Osby also is blogging now for the Web site Indaba Music, and his recent
entry on the sartorial choices and mistakes of jazz musicians has attracted some attention and sparked some conversations among musicians and fans.
* Here's a
review of saxophonist
John Zorn's new Masada CD, which feature tenor saxophonist
Joe Lovano.
* Electronic/experimental/noise composer and former St. Louisan
Andy Ortmann is now doing a podcast called "The Eternal Now" for NYC's eclectic public radio station WFMU. Get more info, subscribe to the podcast feed, or listen online
here.
* Opening up the "recent visitors" file, tenor saxophonist
Sonny Rollins and his band will perform
a special benefit concert for Hudson River Sloop Clearwater in December at the Tarrytown Music Hall in Tarrytown, NY. Rollins played here last month at the
Touhill Performing Arts Center under the auspices of
Jazz St. Louis.
* New photos from
DowntownMusic.net include shots of a recent concert by
Larry Ochs Sax & Drumming Core at NYC's Roulette. The pics were taken just four days after their St. Louis performance, presented by New Music Circle at the
Sheldon Concert Hall. And here's a
review of Och's show, written for AllAboutJazz.com by
Martin Longley and bundled with three other live reviews, including one of a
Kenny Garrett set two weeks ago at NYC's Iridium. Garrett was in St. Louis this weekend to play at
Jazz at the Bistro.
*Singer
DeeDee Bridgewater, who also was here earlier this month at the Sheldon Concert Hall, is in
Shanghai, China to perform with an international big band* Catching up with the "coming attractions" file: From the Huffington Post, here's an
interview with
Nellie McKay about her new CD, which is a tribute to singer and actress Doris Day. McKay will be St. Louis on November 18 and 19 to perform for
Cabaret St. Louis at the Kranzberg Arts Center.
* Here's a
review by the
New York Times' Stephen Holden of the new duet show featuring singer/guitarist
John Pizzarelli and his wife, singer
Jessica Molaskey, at the Carlyle in NYC. Pizzarelli will be back in St. Louis in April to play at the Bistro.
* Also from the
NYT, here's a
feature story about bassist
John Patitucci, who will follow Pizzarelli at the Bistro next spring.
*Singer
Kurt Elling and pianist
Bill Charlap were among the musicians featured on the recent
30th anniversary celebration of NPR's "Piano Jazz" program, hosted by
Marian McPartland. Elling will be in St. Louis the first week in December to perform at Jazz at the Bistro, while Charlap comes to town the following week for four nights at the Kranzberg backing singer
Sandy Stewart (who's also his mom).
* Our fave avant-jazz blog Destination: Out just featured a
guest post from pianist
Vijay Iyer with two tracks from his new CD. Iyer also recently performed live on the radio program "Studio Session," broadcast by WBGO radio in Newark NJ and available online
here. And here's a
review of Iyer's latest CD from Music and More's Tim Niland. Iyer will be here in January to play at the Bistro.
* In an interesting little review/essay, Popmatters'
Will Layman muses about virtuosity in jazz as it applies to saxophonists C
hris Potter and
James Carter. Carter returns to St. Louis in May, bringing his organ trio to Jazz at the Bistro.
* Singer/pianist
John Proulx, who has a new CD on the St. Louis-based
MAXJAZZ label, just kicked off
a new "After Hours" series at Feinstein's at Loews Regeny is NYC. performance Sunday, October 18 at 10:00PM. Meanwhile, another MAXJAZZ artist, singer and pianist
Dena DeRose, was among the performers at the just-concluded
Seasons Festival in Seattle.
*And finally, last week's "
Hearing Voices" program on NPR featured excerpts from “The Bushy Wushy Rag,” a new composition by
Phillip Kent Bimstein that combines sounds from a St. Louis Cardinals’ baseball game, motifs from
Scott Joplin’s "Maple Leaf Rag," and the distinctive calls of veteran Busch Stadium beer vendor
Robert Logan, a.k.a. "Bushy Wushy the Beer Man." Bimstein's piece was performed by the
Equinox Chamber Players, who premiered the work here in St. Louis. Although "Hearing Voices" isn't broadcast over the air here - it runs on KWMU-2, a digital subchannel of the local NPR affiliate - you can hear the broadcast with "The Bushy Wushy Rag" online at the program's
Web site.(Updated on 10/26/09 to correct the price of the Miles Davis headphones.)