Saturday, February 25, 2012

Jazz on television: Cab Calloway and Big Band Vocalists

Jazz programs on network television are as rare as unicorns, so the fact that two will air next week on PBS--one on Monday, Feb. 27 and another on Saturday, March 3--is noteworthy.

Cab Calloway
All Rights Reserved/Artline Films/J.-F. Pitet
"Cab Calloway: Sketches" premieres Monday, Feb. 27 on PBS's American Masters. Full of hot-cha razzmatazz and hi-de-ho, it's an intriguing portrait of singer, dancer, bandleader, and movie star (Stormy Weather, The Blues Brothers) most people today know little about. Born in 1907, Calloway broke barriers, charmed both black and white audiences, and was a lot more modern than we give him credit for being.

The many highlights include an animated map of Harlem with Calloway's commentary. "The Savoy Ballroom, where I bombed with my first band... Small's Paradise, one of the better spots, and next door, the brand-new police station. Heh heh heh heh!" Matthew Rushing, choreographer/principal dancer of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, dances with an animated Calloway drawn by Steve Brodner (the "Sketches" in the title has more than one meaning). Stanley Crouch, Gerald Wilson (who played in Calloway's band), Calloway's daughters, musicians Steve Cropper and Donald "Duck Dunne," director John Landis (The Blues Brothers, in which Calloway appears) and others comment on the man and his times. We also learn what Calloway's hit song "Minnie the Moocher" was all about; it's not as innocent as it sounds.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Jazz as background music

Created by The Brand Agency in Perth, Australia, for The Ellington Jazz Club in Perth.

See also "The Bass Solo" and "Table 4."

Does anyone know if these posters are available for sale?

Friday, February 17, 2012

Kurt Elling: "Any music that jazz encounters, it absorbs and transforms"

REUTERS/Miguel Vidal
Originally published at MinnPost.com on February 17, 2012


JazzTimes magazine once outlined a “royal bloodline of male jazz singers.” Here’s how it goes: from Louis Armstrong to Mel Tormé to Jon Hendricks to Mark Murphy to Kurt Elling.

Elling will perform at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis on Saturday, Feb. 18. The preeminent male jazz singer of our time, he is internationally known, praised and applauded. In 2011, he performed 138 shows in 74 cities in 24 countries. His baritone voice famously spans four octaves, and he knows how to use it, singing standards and vocalese (his own lyrics to improvised instrumental solos), scatting, quoting poetry, bending notes, hitting stratospheric highs, and (more recently) singing in multiple languages.

All nine of his CDs have earned Grammy nominations; he won Best Jazz Vocal Album in 2010 for “Dedicated to You.” His latest, “The Gate,” didn’t win the Grammy but did take the Edison Jazz/World Award for Vocal Jazz, the Netherlands’ equivalent. He routinely tops the DownBeat and JazzTimes readers’ polls for male vocalist of the year.

Elling and his family now live in New York, but he spent many years in Chicago and, before then, attended Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, where he majored in history and minored in religion, wrote his senior thesis on Teddy Roosevelt, and sang with the Gustavus Choir and Stage Band. The band gave him his first taste of being a jazz singer. While attending graduate school at the University of Chicago Divinity School, he sang club dates at night. Jazz won him over.

MinnPost spoke with Elling on Thursday morning. He was spending a few days at home between Tuesday’s performance at Chicago’s Symphony Center and Saturday’s date at Orchestra Hall. Earlier in the week, he attended the Grammys, and that same weekend was featured on public radio’s “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me.”

MinnPost: Did you have fun at the Grammys?

Kurt Elling: I had a great time. I’ve been fortunate because I’ve been able to go several times, and I was a volunteer before, and I’ve got so many friends to see that I don’t otherwise get to connect with. And the Grammys have updated the pre-telecast so remarkably since I was first involved that you really have a sense of an occasion as opposed to feeling like second- or third-class citizens, as it used to. They do the full red-carpet treatment and you feel like it’s a real occasion. So it’s worth doing.

MP: Do you have a favorite Grammys moment from this year?

KE: I was really excited about Bruno Mars. It wasn’t the most original thing I’d ever seen — it was clearly so James Brown, so Elvis and so throwback — but it was really fun. I wanted to get up and dance. I thought it was killing.

MP: Do you have anything to say about the outcome of the Best Jazz Vocal Album Grammy? [Note: This is the award Elling was up for; it went to drummer Terri Lyne Carrington’s “The Mosaic Project,” a collaboration by several female jazz artists including singers.]

KE: [He laughs.] I’m really happy for Terri, she’s a great musician, and she’s definitely paid so many dues over the years, and I respect what she brings to the table. She’s a real innovator and this Grammy is an important victory for her career—as a writer, producer, musician and as a friend.

MP: Changing the subject, it sounded like you had a good time on “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me.”

KE: [“Wait Wait” host] Peter Sagal is a friend, and it was lovely of him to have me on. I will say that it was very kindly edited. He interviewed me for another 10 minutes beyond that, and not every question he asked me gave a window to the funniest possible answer.

MP: I didn’t realize the shows were edited.

KE: Absolutely. I would say the show is a good half-hour to 40 minutes longer than it appears on radio. It’s recorded live, but they cut the parts that don’t work, and they’re very good at it, so it comes off as a seamless experience.
Live records are like that, too. It’s all played live, and there are no fixes, exactly, but you always edit things down for time, and you move things around for coherence. Listening to something without being present is different from being there in the flesh.
[During the show, Sagal played a sound bite from Ke$ha’s hit song “We R Who We R,” and Elling commented on the “throbbing, salacious money-making beat that is so prominent in successful music these days.” So, naturally, Minnpost asked ...]

MP: Do you have any plans to add any throbbing, salacious, money-making beats to your own music?

KE: [Laughs.] Uh ... umm ... you know, I’m just going down my road. I don’t specifically have a dance mix in mind. So ... no. Money-making? I don’t see that happening. Salacious? I suppose every once in a while the salacious thing is not a bad thing. It’s kind of monochromatic if that’s all you do. Throbbing? Maybe.

MP: Are things turning out the way you imagined they would when you 
decided to be a jazz singer?

KE: You know, I’ve got enough miles under my belt to know that whatever you envision in your mind, even if it comes true, will only keep a shape in the most general way. Yes, I’m a professional jazz singer, and here I am, but the specifics of what that feels like, looks like, and sounds like are different. You can never predict what the specific shape of your life is going to be, and you won’t really know its general shape until, God willing, you’re advanced in years and you have the time and opportunity to look back in a coherent way and see what your life was about.
I don’t mean to be evasive. I’m really, really happy with my life. At the same time, it does look different, in reality.

MP: You’re not just someone with a regular gig. You’re a highly lauded jazz singer who travels the world. You’re always winning polls and getting awards. You have worked really hard, and you have achieved a lot. Did you think it would turn out this way?

KE: It’s kind of you to say. I think you have to be confident when you’re young and before anything has happened, before you’ve really proven it to yourself or anyone else, you have to be confident that you can do such a thing. I remember early on reading about Charlie Chaplin, and it stood out to me that he said, basically, “even when I was living in the street, and I was a child, and nobody knew who I was, and I had coal on my face, and I was starving, I knew I was the greatest actor in the world.” That’s the kind of thing that you have to have if anything’s going to happen. I think that the confidence I had, whether it was justified or not, was the confidence that I needed.

MP: Did you have that confidence early in life?

KE: I didn’t know that it was going to come out as a jazz musician, but I certainly had a strong premonition that something marvelous was going to happen, and that it would be costly, and that I would want to dedicate my life to it. I might not have known what that was, but I did have a suspicion it was going to be something that played to my level of comfort in front of an audience. And I just hadn’t figured out what that outlet was going to be. I’m extremely grateful that it worked out the way it has, and I’m very dedicated to the proposition of justifying the attention that people have paid me so kindly.

MP: What can we expect to hear on Saturday night at Orchestra Hall?

KE: You’re going to hear one and maybe two arrangements that are in progress for our next CD — a sneak preview. We’ll do a couple things from “The Gate,” and probably a thing or two from “Passion World” [the program he performed last Tuesday in Chicago], because that’s fresh on our minds. So some things that you’ll expect, and things that will be new, or newish.

MP: One more “Wait Wait” question: At the end, you said that “jazz is the ultimate syncretic art form.” What did you mean by that?

KE: Any music that jazz encounters, it absorbs and transforms. It takes it into itself and transfigures that art form. It’s true when jazz musicians go after classical music, Afro-Cuban music, Brazilian music. It’s what jazz does. It encounters unforeheard propositions, and it absorbs and transforms those sounds into something new and amazing. It’s unlike any other traditional form of music that only wants to play by its own set of rules.

Kurt Elling on the Grammys, confidence, the jazz lifestyle, his next album, and more


Kurt Elling, courtesy of the artist
 I’ve seen Kurt Elling perform countless times—seriously, so often I’ve lost track of the number—but I’d never interviewed him until Thursday, Feb. 16, two days before his performance at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis.

On Saturday, Feb. 11, he was featured on public radio’s “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me” (in the segment called “Not My Job”). On Sunday he attended the Grammys. On Tuesday, Valentine’s Day, he performed a program called “Passion World” at Chicago’s Symphony Center. (I saw the first performance of “Passion World” in May 2010 in the Allen Room at Jazz at Lincoln Center.)

I reached him by phone at his home in New York City, where he was spending a few days before coming to Minneapolis. A condensed version of this interview appears on MinnPost.


PLE: I understand you did “Passion World” in Chicago on Tuesday. I was at the first performance in New York, with Richard Galliano.

Kurt Elling: We did kind of an updated version. We added a couple of compositions, and we were fortunate to have Anat Cohen and Regina Carter with us this time.

Was this the first time you performed with them?

No, Regina and I toured together with the Monterey Festival All-Stars, and Anat and I were on the same Jazz Cruise just now. She sat in with my band a couple of times there. She’s just a joy. Both of them are such lovely people, and such great musicians. [The Chicago concert] was a real pleasure for everybody. I think it was an ideal situation for Valentine’s Day.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Ch-ch-ch-changes

Some of you know that I have a new gig: writing a twice-weekly column called Artscape for MinnPost, covering all the arts in (mostly) the Twin Cities. I'm not writing previews or reviews, but news--about arts institutions, personalities, performances, money, and politics. In 2011, MinnPost had 3.7 million visits from Minnesotans.

I mentioned in an earlier post that the live jazz calendar would continue, along with this blog and my calendar-related radio bits on KBEM (with Ed Jones and Maryann Sullivan). But I realized almost immediately that I had to find more time in the week and something had to go. So Friday, Feb. 3 will be my last regularly scheduled appearance on KBEM.

It's been a good, long run--more than three years of getting up early (for me) on Friday mornings to talk about jazz with warm and charming Ed, and later (starting in May last year) working closely with delightful Maryann.

I'll continue updating the live jazz calendar, which many of you have said you find useful. It will stay on KBEM's website through Feb. 5, after which it will be available on this blog and its own page. The jazz88calendar@gmail.com email address will stay live for a while, but starting now, bebopified@gmail.com is where you should send information about gigs you want listed on the calendar.

I regularly search FaceBook, the live music calendars on venues' websites, and artists' own websites for information on who's playing when and where, but you make my life easier when you send me emails, so please use bebopified@gmail.com to keep me informed. Meanwhile, I'll do my best to make the live jazz calendar as comprehensive, accurate, and informative as I can.

This blog will also continue. Although I'll never be able to write as regularly (or anywhere near as knowledgeably) as many of the writers in my blogroll, I believe bebopified serves a useful purpose in this community. And it gives me a good excuse to pick up the phone and call people I want to talk to.

Jazz is my first love. When I began writing for MinnPost in 2007, I was a jazz writer. Now I'm an arts writer who thinks jazz is worth writing about, getting excited about, and going out to see. You won't hear my picks on the radio anymore, but you can still read them here (sporadically, I'm afraid), along with news, interviews, and whatever else seems worth writing about on a particular day.

This week's jazz picks and news

Tonight (Saturday, Jan. 28)  at the AQ: the Bryan Nichols Quintet. Pianist, composer, arranger, and educator (and new dad) Bryan Nichols is in a major creative music-making phase. Earlier this month, he played the music of Keith Jarrett at a special concert at the AQ. This time he’ll play his own music (and some Jarrett, too) with his excellent quintet: Brandon Wozniak, Michael Lewis, James Buckley, JT Bates. 9 p.m., $12.

On Saturday and Sunday, Century College in White Bear Lake hosts its 23rd annual Jazz Festival. The music starts at 8 p.m. on Saturday and 3 p.m. on Sunday. Trumpeter Roger Ingram is this year’s featured performer. He has played with Woody Herman, Harry Connick Jr., Wynton Marsalis, Ray Charles, and Frank Sinatra. Here he’ll perform with the 17-piece Century Jazz Ensemble. There’s a reception before each show with complimentary wine, cheese, and dessert. The Joel Shapira Quartet will perform during the receptions. $20/$10 students.

On Saturday at Studio Z in St. Paul’s Lowertown: Monk in Motian. This group reinterprets the music of Thelonious Monk through the musical style of late drummer Paul Motian’s Electric Bebop Band. Motian’s band was pianoless—remember that Monk played the piano—so already we’re hearing the music differently. Monk in Motian is Pete Hennig, JT Bates, and Davu Seru (drums), Brandon Wozniak and Scott Fultz (saxophones), Zacc Harris and Park Evans (guitars), and Matt Peterson (bass). Eight of our finest musicians. 7 p.m., $10.

On Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon at the Bloomington Center for the Arts, Joan Griffith and Sam Miltich will play a program called “Guitarists Extraordinaire,” with guest vocalist Connie Evingson. They promise the Brazilian styles of Samba, Bossa Nova, Choro, and Baiao, standards from Django Reinhardt and Cole Porter, and original compositions. 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday in the black box theater. $18 adults, $16 seniors and students, $15 TCJS members.

On Monday, the great blues singer Eric Bibb comes to the Dakota. I’ve seen him twice now, in April 2008 and May 2009, and he’s magical. Just a man in a hat with a guitar, singing songs about hope, loving kindness, and happiness. Excuse me, are we talking about the blues? Bibb calls his music “upside-down blues” because it’s about life’s joys, not life’s problems. BTW, Bibb is the godson of Paul Robeson, nephew of John Lewis (of the MJQ), and son of folk singer Leon Bibb. 7 p.m., $20.
A heads up: Kurt Elling comes to Orchestra Hall on February 18, sharing a double bill with singer Lizz Wright. It’s the perfect Valentine’s Day present for your sweetheart.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

New e.s.t. studio album to be released at the end of March

Awesome news from B.H. Hopper Management: A new e.s.t. studio album, "301," with all-original, never-before-released compositions, will be in stores on March 30, 2012 worldwide.

The press release:
In January 2007 e.s.t. were on tour in Asia and Australia performing shows in Tokyo, Osaka, Yokohama, Jakarta, Perth and Sydney. It was their third tour of Japan and their second time on the fifth continent and the venues and audiences had become noticeably bigger. Only a few weeks before they had finished their triumphant tour of Germany performing their now legendary “Live in Hamburg” concert (awarded ‘Album of the Decade’ by the London TIMES). It was undoubtedly the prime time of the style defining jazz band of the Noughties.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Graydon Peterson on his new band, and his goals

Graydon Peterson by John Whiting
In late April 2011, I went to see Connie Evingson sing at the Artists’ Quarter in St. Paul. In her band was Graydon Peterson, a first-call bassist for many vocalists in the Twin Cities.

Afterward, while waiting to pay our tab, I ended up standing next to him at the bar.

“This is a bands town,” I said. “When are you going to start your own band?”

It was a casual, making-conversation question to which he replied, in all seriousness, “That’s one of my goals for this year.”

When Peterson sets a goal for himself, he follows through. The Graydon Peterson Quartet played their first public gig at the Shanghai Bistro in Hudson, Wisconsin, on October 7. From there, they moved to Jazz Central in Minneapolis on October 25 and The Nicollet Coffee House on November 15.

On Wednesday, January 25, they will make their debut at the Artists’ Quarter, the nationally known jazz club in St. Paul. From zero to 60 in four steps.