Showing posts with label George Coleman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Coleman. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Sunday Session: January 10, 2021

Yellowjackets
Here's this week's roundup of various music-related items of interest:

* Rare find: Foundation has its eye on piano that belonged to 'Blind' Boone (Columbia Missourian)
* Exam board drops only black composer from music A-level syllabus (The Guardian)
* AFM Lambasts Metropolitan Opera for Hiring Non-Met Musicians for Virtual New Year’s Gala (OperaWire.com)
* Music Predictions for 2021: Adele and Rihanna Will Be Back… But Summertime Festivals Probably Won’t (Variety)
* Birdland Jazz Club, A Marquee NYC Venue, Sounds the Alarm to Raise Vital Funding (WBGO)
* What would a music streaming minimum wage look like? (AudioOxide.com)
* Yellowjackets Take Expansive Approach (DownBeat)
* Grammy Awards Postponed (Variety)
* The Real Swinging London: The Legacy of Brit Jazz (Bandcamp.com)
* A midsummer night's sax comedy: the return of the lost Shakespeare jazz musical (The Guardian)
* Celebrated musician finds new 'best friend' to replace smashed piano (The Guardian)
* Gibson Buys Mesa/Boogie (Reverb.com)
* Kid Ory Finally Gets the Encore He Deserves (Smithsonian)
* Posi-Tone Perseveres, Despite Pandemic (DownBeat)
* Everything’s a Drum: Percussion Hits Its Stride (San Francisco Classical Voice)
* 'A legend in her own right': Carolyn Franklin, Aretha's forgotten sister (The Guardian)
* The Institute for Composer Diversity: White Leadership, DEI Initiatives, and Ethical Advocacy (ICareIfYouListen.com)
* An Archival George Coleman Date Details Baltimore History (DownBeat)
* John Beasley Reflects on Miles, Herbie, and (of Course) Monk (Jazz Times)
* Blue Bird Inn in Detroit spared from demolition after historic designation (Detroit Free Press)
* Beloved L.A. jazz club Blue Whale shuts doors for good due to COVID-19 (Los Angeles Times)
* Discovering Flaws In The 1,000 Fan Theory [Video] (HaulixDaily.com)
* Giant steps: Why Soul is the film that finally got jazz right (The Independent)

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Sunday Session: December 27, 2020

George Coleman
Here's this week's roundup of various music-related items of interest:

* Three Reissues That Illuminate South African Jazz During Apartheid (Discogs.com)
* How Branford Marsalis Found Ma Rainey’s Sound (Vanity Fair)
* Har Mar Superstar's Latest Gig: Mail Carrier (MSPMag.com)
* Tenor Sax George Coleman Shines On Newly Released Live Record, 'In Baltimore' (NPR)
* New Releases from Sonny Rollins and Charles Mingus Reveal Crucial Conceptions of Political Art (The New Yorker)
* The Best Shot We Have To Play Live Music Again: News From The COVID Frontline (Offbeat)
* ‘The New Thing’: The Subversive Bridge From Bop To Free Jazz (UDiscoverMusic.com)
* Congress Passes Covid-19 Relief Bill With Funding for Live Music Venues (Rolling Stone)
* Kids Became A&R's 'Secret Weapon' In a Work From Home Year (Billboard)
* Listening to the Joy in James Baldwin’s Record Collection (Hyperallergic.com)
* The Importance Of Mary Halvorson’s Recordings During The Pandemic Year (DownBeat)
* The Royal Bopsters Keep Their Group Identity Alive (Jazz Times)
* When Will Live Music Return? (Rolling Stone)
* Thelonious Monk: An Alternative Top Ten Albums Of Deep And Staggering Genius (AllAboutJazz.com)
* Can a trippy VR film bring classical music to a new generation? (The Guardian)
* Dayna Stephens Fulfills Long-Held Dreams (DownBeat)
* 'Jazz is just a reflection of life': The musical genius of Jerry Granelli (CBC)
* Sonny Rollins: Bright Moments (Jazz Times)
* Ma Rainey’s Moment: The Mother Of The Blues Gets Her Due (Slate.com)
* R.I.P. Leslie West, Legendary Mountain Frontman Dies at 75 (ConsequenceOfSound.net)
* “Music is my way of being in the world”: remembering “Blue” Gene Tyranny (The Wire)
* Frank Zappa’s 10 greatest albums of all time (FarOutMagazine.co.uk)
* Holiday Shopping Sends Vinyl Album Sales Soaring to Another Record Week (Billboard)
* Modern Hollywood Discovers Its Jazz ‘Soul’ (The Nation)
* When Sonny Rollins Went Dutch (DownBeat)
* A Bessie Smith Christmas (Jazz Times)
* Paul McCartney: read the exclusive track-by-track story of ‘McCartney III’ (NME.com)
* Music made 2020 better, but we failed to make 2020 better for musicians (TechCrunch.com)

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Sunday Session: September 18, 2016

George Coleman
Some interesting music-related items that have landed in StLJN's inbox over the past week:

* Jazz pioneer Buddy Bolden and the Louisiana mental asylum band (NOLA.com)
* Record Bin: How Muddy Waters fused folk music and the blues on "Folk Singer" (Nooga.com)
* TIFF Review: ‘I Called Him Morgan’ is a Moody, Melancholic Study of the Late Trumpeter, Lee Morgan (ShadowAndAct.com)
* From 'Stairway to Heaven' to 'Damn Girl': 'Raging Bull' Remains Center Stage in Copyright Fights (Billboard)
* Metheny Quartet Plays SFJAZZ, Extends Guitarist’s Reach (DownBeat)
* Defeating The Jazz Zombies: America’s Music Is Alive & Well — These 7 Artists Are Proof (Stereogum.com)
* Interview: Sun Ra Commander Marshall Allen (Austin Chronicle)
* How Afrobeats Became Pop Music’s Next Big Thing (Buzzfeed)
* Artifact / Diagramming: An Interview with Mark Fell (Avant.org)
* Music with a Capital "M" - An Interview with Ethan Iverson of the Bad Plus (PopMatters.com)
* Donny McCaslin Takes 'Blackstar' Collaborators Beyond Bowie on New Album 'Beyond Now' (Billboard)
* Steve Buscemi and Elliott Sharp Talk William S. Burroughs, the 80s New York Scene, and the Creative Influence of Exhaustion (BlouinArtInfo.com)
* Fresh Pairings, Familiar Faces Delight at Chicago Jazz Fest (DownBeat)
* The Link Between Whitney Houston and the Rise of Auto-Tune in North Africa (Pitchfork.com)
* Why Apple is anything but the future of music (EricGarland.co)
* Heath, Weston, DeJohnette Shine in NYC Salute to Keepnews (DownBeat)
* The Summer in Jazz Releases (Bandcamp.com)
* Harmolodics: the truth at last (TheBlueMoment.com)
* ‘Play something they can enjoy,’ says jazz saxophone great George Coleman (Memphis Commercial Appeal)
* Q&A: Nels Cline - The guitarist and sonic provocateur invents a new brand of mood music on his Blue Note Records debut (Jazz Times)
* Hidden in plain sight: a global underground dance music scene with millions of fans (Medium.com)
* How Blockchain Startups Are Disrupting The $15 Billion Music Industry (Forbes)
* 8 Artists Exploding the Concept of Native American Music (Paste)
* Don Buchla, modular synthesizer pioneer, dies aged 79 (The Guardian UK)