Downbeat 14 10
Downbeat 14 10
Downbeat 14 10
DOWNBEAT.COM
U.K. 3.50
October 2014
VOLUME 81 / NUMBER 10
President
Kevin Maher
Publisher
Frank Alkyer
Editor
Bobby Reed
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Kathleen Costanza
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Contributing Designer
Bookkeeper
LoriAnne Nelson
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CONTRIBUTORS
Senior Contributors:
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OCTOBER 2014
On the Cover
24
Wycliffe
Gordon
The Gospel
According to Pops
BY FRANK ALKYER
32 Charlie Haden
Like No One Else
BY ED ENRIGHT
24
Cover photo and above photo of Wycliffe Gordon shot by Jimmy and
Dena Katz at the Louis Armstrong House Museum in New York City
38 Jason Moran
Other Ways of Operating
BY DAN OUELLETTE
44 Mark Turner
His Own Pace
BY PHILLIP LUTZ
48 Mark Guiliana
New Dialogue
56 Dr. John
58 Caterina Zapponi
66 Audio One
BY KEN MICALLEF
SPECIAL SECTION
73 Where To Study
Jazz 2015
76
Departments
8 First Take
10 Chords & Discords
13 The Beat
20 Players
Alon Nechushtan
Justin Robinson
Matt Pavolka
Joan Chamorro
53 Reviews
178 Master Class
BY GARY SMULYAN
184 Transcription
Terell Stafford
Trumpet Solo
186 Toolshed
190 Jazz On
Campus
194 Blindfold Test
Sean Jones
First Take
BY BOBBY REED
TODD ROSENBERG
Chords
Discords
Thumbs Up
Overall I am in agreement with your selections in The 80 Coolest
Things in Jazz Today
(July). However, I was
very disappointed with
some of the choices.
Sonny Rollins was a
better choice for The
Living Masters than Herbie Hancock. I caught
Hancocks show last
year in Chicago and was
very disappointed. The
inclusion of Esperanza
Spalding for The Gateway Artists was a poor
choice. I have heard
her twice this year, and
I think there are much better bassists and
singers out there. Spalding is one of the most
overrated musicians in jazz.
In your list of The Great Jazz Rooms, I think
Chicagos Jazz Showcase would have been a
much better choice than the Green Mill. The
Jazz Showcase features internationally known
musicians weekly for most of the year. The
Green Mill focuses on local acts. The Jazz Show-
MARC NEBOZENKO
EVANSTON, ILLINOIS
Happy To Help
RANDY PETTIT
[email protected]
MARK N. JONES
CORTLANDT MANOR, NEW YORK
Correction
In the September issue, the feature on Arturo
OFarrill should have stated that he earned an
undergraduate degree in classical performance from the Conservatory of Music of
Brooklyn College.
DOWNBEAT REGRETS THE ERROR.
News
The
Inside
15 / Montreal Jazz
Festival
16 / Al Jarreau
18 / Newport Jazz
Festival
19 / Billy Childs
Prestige Still
Vibrant at 65
A roll call of the artists who appeared regularly on Prestige during the
labels first two years of existence underscores why their documentation
remains an essential part of the jazz canon: Stan Getz, James Moody, Max
Roach, J.J. Johnson, Zoot Sims, Wardell Gray and Sonny Stitt. In many cases,
the Prestige dates were these artists first studio sessions as leaders.
The narrative history of Prestige Records and its founding by Bob
Weinstock in 1949 has been widely recounted. Certain elements of this story
come across today as quaint and harken back to a time when driven, obsessive personalities, swept up by a passion for music, could help change the
course of the music business.
Weinstock (19282006) grew up in Manhattan. When he was just 8 years
old, a trip to a local flea market resulted in an armload of jazz discs bought
for pennies apieceand an abiding interest in the intersection of culture and
commerce. In his teens Weinstock bought and sold recordings through magazine advertisements before finally renting space in the Jazz Record Center
on 47th Street, near the Metropole jazz club, with the support of his family.
Friendships with many of the jazz artists who frequented his store led him to
start his own label, New Jazz.
The first recording released on New Jazz was cut on Jan. 11, 1949, and featured a quintet led by pianist Lennie Tristano with saxophonist Lee Konitz,
who was later promoted to co-leader when the album (catalog number PRLP
101) came out. The following year Weinstock, now operating as Prestige
Records out of an office on West 50th Street in Manhattan, amped up his
NHUMI THREADGILL
Henry Threadgill
Honoring Threadgill: Harlem Stage has announced the programming for its fall season,
featuring Very Very Threadgill on Sept. 27,
a two-day festival of music curated by Jason
Moran that celebrates composer-reedist Henry
Threadgill. Other highlights include the monthly Uptown Nights music series, and a preview
on Oct. 26 at the Guggenheim Museum of
Harlem Stages new commissioned opera
Makandal, which weaves together the stories
of 18th-century Haitian revolutionary Franois
Makandal and a group of Haitian, Dominican
and Cuban immigrants in the 21st century.
More info: harlemstage.org
Riffs
or many fans, the banner moment at the ing in the backgroundshe deftly deflated the
35th annual Montreal Jazz Festival was a pomp and circumstance with laid-back wit
free outdoor concert on June 29 by the sar- and casual expletives.
donic Diana Krall, who first gained notoriety at
On the same night at the intimate Ges
the festival 20 years ago. My career started here, Centre de Crativit, the Jeff Ballard Trio providshe said the previous day at a press conference.
ed a perfect finale to a full day of music.
Formerly shy (she used to barely raise her
Ballard has long been a performer who leaves
head from the piano while playing), Krall still isnt audiences slack-jawed with his sheer energy and
smitten with blockbuster presentation, but she ingenuity. But for this years Montreal concert,
and an executive sextetfeaturing brilliant sty- Ballard was featured as a leader in his new superlistic gadabout guitarist Marc Ribot, bassist Dennis Crouch and drummer Karriem
Rigginsput on a classy show.
Kralls set drew from her 2012 album,
Glad Rag Doll (Verve), and her upcoming release, Wallflower (due out Oct. 21
on Verve), which features songs by Neil
Young, Bob Dylan and Paul McCartney.
She also nodded to old-school jazz la
Fats Waller with a rollicking Ill Sit Right
Diana Krall onstage at the 2014
Down And Write Myself A Letter, which Montreal Jazz Festival on June 29.
she played on a barrelhouse upright piano
that she joked featured a secret minibar.
Krall was refreshingly unpretentious given trio with unclassifiable West African guitarist
the enormity of the occasion. Despite the lar- Lionel Loueke and lyrical, driving alto saxophongesse of the refurbished main stage fes- ist Miguel Zenn.
tooned in red draperywith vintage Groucho
All three combatants contributed to the
Marx movie clips and macabre cartoons roll- intensely layered mix of Louekes Virgin Forest,
Caught
Al Jarreau Pays
Tribute to a Friend
hile working as a vocational rehabilitation counselor in 1965, Al Jarreau seized every opportunity to
sing. Dropping in on a jam at San Franciscos Half
Note, the budding vocalist eagerly watched a trio led by a college student named George Duke who was attracting serious
buzz. Getting the go-ahead, Jarreau grabbed the mic and the
electricity was instantaneous. He was invited to join the trio
and they played the room for three years. Following the clubs
closing, the two forged ahead with their own careers. The rest
is history. Throughout their journeys, Jarreau and Duke maintained a lasting personal friendship and musical camaraderie.
My Old Friend: Celebrating George Duke (Concord) is
Jarreaus heartfelt tribute to the famed keyboardist-vocalist-producer-composer-arranger, who passed away last August
at age 67 due to chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The album
gathers a stellar cast of musicians, many of whom were connected to Duke. Sharing the vocal spotlight with Jarreau are
Dianne Reeves (who is Dukes cousin), Lalah Hathaway, Jeffrey
Osborne, Kelly Price and Dr. John. Star instrumentalist guests
include Marcus Miller, Gerald Albright, Boney James and frequent Duke collaborator Stanley Clarke, who also shares producing credits.
DownBeat spoke with Jarreau during his brief break
between European touring and subsequent U.S. and Brazilian
dates.
MARINA CHAVEZ
Caught
Mostly Other People Do the Killing
onstage at Newport on Aug. 1.
LANITA ADAMS
DAVID KATZENSTEIN
Billy Childs
Players
ALON
NECHUSHTAN
Combining Worlds
of internationally acclaimed artists like guitarist Roni Ben-Hur, violinist Miri Ben-Ari and the
Cohen siblings (Anat, Avishai, Yuval) has helped
broaden the appeal of swing in Israel, where jazz is
now part of the sonic landscape.
The pianist is levelheaded when discussing the
current state of the Middle East. He diplomatically avoids any comment on the summers unrest,
focusing solely on the sounds coming from the
stage and his unrelenting desire to return. Prior to
his gig at Vitellos, he shared a bill with the mighty
Los Angeles-based Palestinian saxophonist
Zane Musa. The two got along so well that Musa
joined in the following night to blast through
Nechushtans newest material. Nechushtan is
happy to welcome as many voices to his compositions as he can.
From a very early age, I wrote for classical
ensembles but I always wanted to write a big band
chart, Nechushtan said. Sometimes I keep the
worlds separate. Sometimes I combine them. I
went to school fascinated by Third Stream, classical and jazz. You have to go from lead sheets
to incredibly descriptive music. When you work
with a small combo, they are an integral part of
making that music [come] alive. You dont have
to have every gesture written down. My music is
descriptive when it is a combonot as much as
when it is written downbut my creative process
is the same.
As an undergraduate, Nechushtan began his
jazz studies in earnest, taking up with pianists
Danilo Prez and Fred Hersch. They were great
JUSTIN ROBINSON
The Power of Dedication
ROBB D. COHEN/ROBBSPHOTOS.COM
Players
KEN MICALLEF
Players
MATT
PAVOLKA
Bookish Agent
Players
JOAN
CHAMORRO
Music Is Open
WYCLIFFE
Gordon
THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO POPS
By Frank Alkyer | Photo by Jimmy & Dena Katz
During his solo, Gordon locked in rhythmicallydisplaying a full, powerful tone, then
slipping, sliding, slurring and growling with
the swagger of the baddest trombonist on the
planetwhich, arguably, he is.
Wherever Gordon goes, the shock-and-awe of
his chops draws a crowd of studentsand fans of
all ages. Hes frequently on the move, hitting the
road for 250 to 275 nights a year. It might be the
Dallas Symphony Orchestra or the Kitano Hotel in
New York City, Jazz On The Green in Sacramento,
California, or The Jazz Kitchen in Indianapolis,
a residency at Prince Claus Conservatory in The
Netherlands or another at Columbia College
Chicago, The Jazz Cruise (where hes played
14 consecutive years) or Satchmo SummerFest
in New Orleans.
Satchmo. Pops. Louis Armstrong. Many of
Gordons travels these days are related to his love
and respect for Armstrongs legacy. Mention Pops
around Gordon and expect an entertaining and
insightful dissertation on Armstrongs enduring
tions, like the title cut. One of the albums highlights is the Gordon tune Meatball 123, where he
overdubbed himself playing trombone, trumpet
and tuba. Pops used to write songs about food, so
I guess he and I have that in common, and thats
just how my mind works sometimes, Gordon
writes in the liner notes.
Over the past few years, Gordon has traveled
around the globe to participate in events where
the worlds favorite trumpeter was being discussed, played or honored.
Ive gone on a
few vacations in
my life. Its nice,
but its not as nice
as sitting down
and finishing a
piece of music.
importance. After all, Armstrong was the first
jazz musician to catch the ear of a young Wycliffe
Gordon, and helped set his career path.
The recordings of Louis Armstrong are what
brought me into jazz, Gordon said over lunch in
Chicago on a crisp April afternoon. I wound up
liking the New Orleans music the most, and particularly Louis Armstrong. There was an early
track called Keyhole Blues. And, yeah, I was
playing trombone [at the time]. It was all acoustic instruments. Even though some of my buddies
were into pop musicwe were listening to electronic music like Kool & The Gang, Earth Wind &
Firebut I played in the band, and I would always
go by the record player and just listen to that music
because that sounded most like what I was playingacoustic instruments.
Gordon paid a high-profile compliment to his
hero in 2011 when he released Hello PopsA
Tribute To Louis Armstrong (Blues Back). The
album is a rollicking blast on which Gordon
playsand singsa number of Armstrong classics like Basin Street Blues, (Up A) Lazy River
and, of course, Keyhole Blues, but also adds
some fine Armstrong-inspired original composi26 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
MARK SHELDON
Gordon on
Music Education
W
hen asked about his views on the
state of music educationand jazz
education in particularthe evercandid Wycliffe Gordon pulls no punches. Gordon,
who studied music education at Florida A&M,
passionately told a group of educators at the
Midwest Band Clinic in Chicago last December
that music teachers deserve more support. Here
are edited excerpts from Gordons comments:
Its really a travesty when you cut arts out
of school. I have a friend; he was my freshman
brother in college. Hes teaching at a school in
New Jersey. A school system thereI think within
the past five yearsfired all of the music teachers,
and there was one arts high school. They did not
take into consideration [the fact] that the kids who
go to this arts school were fed in from all of these
other schools [where the arts programs had been
cut]. The program began to suffer from it, and
now theyre trying to build the program back up.
One time I went out to Arizona because they
were having their first annual jazz festival. I forget
if it was Mesa, or maybe it was Phoenix. They were
about to cut the school music program at this
school, but the parents were so supportive they
went to the meetinglike 1,000 parents showed
upand they said, You will not take music from
our kids. Sometimes, thats just what it takes.
We know how important music is. I run
into people in different vocations, in different
professions, and I tell students, Youre never going
to forget your days in band. Even if you dont
study music in college, youre always going to
remember being in a band. Because what are we
doing? We have a common goal in mind, whether
youre playing the oboe, trombone, trumpet,
28 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
Workin Man
Last December, in between guest artist
appearances at the Midwest Band Clinic, the
47-year-old Gordon sat down for a live interview
with DownBeat. In this lively, wide-ranging conversation, he discussed his early days as a musician; growing up in Waynesboro, Georgia; picking up the trombone at 12 because his older
brother had brought it home; being discovered by
Wynton Marsalis at Florida A&M University in
Tallahassee; and joining the Jazz at Lincoln Center
Orchestra in 1989. At the end of the interview, an
audience member asked Gordon what he liked to
do when he wasnt playing music.
I like to go fishing, Gordon chuckled. I havent gone in a while, but there are other things I
like to do. People used to ask me, Why do you
work all the time? Im like, I love what Im doing.
I dont get up and complain about going to work. I
look forward to gettin back on the computer. Did
you know I have a funk band? Most people know
me as a jazz musician, and have seen me do gospel
shows, but I play many different types of music. I
dont just play jazz; thats just what I have been cat30 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
LIKE NO
ONE ELSE
CHARLIE HADEN
REMEMBERED
By Ed Enright | Photo by Mark Sheldon
hen Charlie Haden passed away at age 76 on July 11, the jazz
community lost more than just an extraordinary bassist,
composer and bandleader. His death marked the departure
of a socially conscious artist and humanitarian whose music provided an
outlet for his deeply held political beliefs and reflected the evolution of jazz
itself from the late 1950s onward.
Hadens instantly recognizable melodic style and lyrical tone complemented his forward-thinking
concept of the double bass, which elevated the instrument from its traditional supporting role in jazz
rhythm sections to a front-line voice on equal par with woodwinds, brasswinds, keyboards and singers.
He helped to propel avant-garde improvisational concepts from their nascent stages into the present day
without ever losing his straightahead chops or his love for jazz standards.
When he wasnt leading one of his own groupswhich included the cooperative Old And New
Dreams, the politically charged Liberation Music Orchestra and the nostalgic Quartet WestHaden
IRXQGKLVULJKWIXOSODFHSOD\LQJDORQJVLGHVRPHRIWKHQHVWPXVLFLDQVRIKLVWLPH
Born in Shenandoah, Iowa, on Aug. 6, 1937, Haden began performing on radio before the age of 2 as
a yodeler in his familys then-prominent country music band, which traveled frequently for work and
OLYHGLQVXFKEURDGFDVWIULHQGO\ORFDOHVDV6SULQJHOG0LVVRXULZKHUHWKHIDPLO\RZQHGIDUPODQGDQG
Omaha, Nebraska. He continued to perform with the Haden Family Bandwhich played what he often
referred to as hillbilly musicthroughout his youth. After a teenage bout with bulbar polio, Haden lost
much of the range in his singing voice and switched to playing bass.
He became interested in jazz as a teenager and experienced a musical epiphany when he attended a
Jazz at the Philharmonic concert featuring Charlie Parker and Lester Young in Omaha with his father.
%DFNLQ6SULQJHOG+DGHQEHJDQWRVSHQGKRXUVDWDWLPHKDQJLQJRXWDW+RRYHUs Music Store listening to jazz records.
In 1956, Haden moved to Los Angeles to attend Westlake College of Modern Music. He began playing on the local scene with pianist Hampton Hawes and saxophonists Dexter Gordon and Art Pepper.
There, while working in a group with pianist Paul Bley, vibraphonist Dave Pike and drummer Lenny
McBrowne, he met free-jazz pioneering saxophonist Ornette Coleman, who would become his lifelong
friend and collaborator.
In the March 9, 1967, issue of DownBeat, Haden recalled the now-historic meeting: One night,
Lenny brought a gentleman into the club and introduced me to him. It was Ornette, and he invited me to
Charlie Haden
For Charlie
S
ECM
By Keith Jarrett
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War. Co-led by Haden and Bley, the ever-evolving ensemble of illustrious improvisers would go
on to record several albums over the next four
decades. Through the music of the Liberation
Music Orchestra, Haden made his most impactful
political statements.
Jazz has always been an art form of struggle,
+DGHQ VDLG LQ WKH 1RYHPEHU LVVXH RI
DownBeat. Its a political struggle to get the
music heard. Whether its my new album or the
Liberation Music Orchestra tour, were trying to
change the direction this country and this administration is going. Its not like a CD is going to
change the election. But voicing my concerns is
vital. ThatVZKDW,WULHGWRGRZLWKWKHUVWWKUHH
Liberation Music Orchestra albums.
Haden, who had a gentle, soft-spoken nature,
was arrested once for expressing his political views
from the stage. It was 1971, and he was performing with Coleman at a festival in Lisbon, Portugal.
Haden dedicated his Liberation Music Orchestra
composition Song For Ch to African anti-coloQLDOLVWVDQGDIWHUWKHFRQFHUWKHZDVEULH\MDLOHG
In 1976, Haden formed Old And New Dreams
with Redman, Cherry and Blackwell to perpetuate Colemans music as well as their own original
material. The group was active until 1987.
In 1986, he formed Quartet West with saxophonist Ernie Watts, pianist Alan Broadbent and
GUXPPHU /DUDQFH 0DUDEOH ODWHU UHSODFHG E\
5RGQH\ *UHHQ 7KH JURXS ZKLFK FRQWLQXHG WR
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BRIAN MCMILLEN
Caption
FHOHEUDWHG+ROO\ZRRGVOPQRLUHUD
Haden befriended Pat Metheny and played on
the guitarists double album 80/81(&07KHWZR
collaborated frequently over the years, and both
appeared on Coleman and Methenys acclaimed
1986 album Song X and subsequent tour.
A highly respected educator, Haden in 1982
established the jazz studies program at California
Institute of the Arts, which emphasizes small
'RZQ%HDW+DOORI)DPHLQ$XJXVW
Upon receiving the news of his Hall of Fame
induction last year, Haden expressed gratitude and
elation. You know, for a while there I wasnt getting very much recognition, he said. And I was
thinking, Im doing all of these different things, all
these different kinds of music, Brazil and Portugal
and Argentina and hillbilly music with my daughters, and doing all this different stuff that I dont
think any other jazz people do. I thought maybe
it was my political leanings that were keeping me
from getting recognition. So all of these recent
awards and honors have really made me feel good.
I have a lot to be thankful for. And I want to make
DB
sure I give back to everybody.
Jason
moran
Seeking Freedom
MICHAEL NAGLE
Finally free from his phone chat, Moran starts by saying that hes being offered
the opportunity of giving musical life to a new film, Selma, about the 1965 voting
rights marches led by a coalition of black leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr.,
in Alabama, from Selma to Montgomery.
I just got the call to do this, he says, excited but also a bit daunted.
Scheduled to screen on select theaters on Christmas Day before a full theatrical
release on Jan. 9, Selma is directed by filmmaker Ava DuVernay and produced by a
team of A-list backers that includes Brad Pitt and Oprah Winfrey (who also has a part
in the film). Selma stars an array of actors, from Tim Roth as segregationist Alabama
Governor George Wallace, to Tom Wilkerson as President Lyndon B. Johnson, to
Common portraying James Bevel, one of the primary organizers of the marches.
Selma will be a huge cinematic event, which, to Moran, conjures up both intrigue
and trepidation in composing the score. I know how to make music for a recording, and I know how to work with artists to make live performance art, he says. But
this is a different beast. I dont know anything about the process of what it actually
involves to make a film scorefinancially, physically or emotionally. They give you a
budget and then you record all the music. He shrugs and adds, Well see if it works.
Moranthe ecipient of a 2010 MacArthur Fellowshiphas been in the I-dontknow-if-I-can-do-that zone many times in his career. But hes overcome the odds
and sparked his way to new frontiers, whether launching a solo career in 1999 after
a long-term gig with saxophonist Greg Osby; subbing for Danilo Prez in Wayne
Shorters quartet at the Umbria Jazz Melbourne festival in Australia in 2005; collaborating with visual artist and activist Theaster Gates and a 25-member high
school band for a new multimedia piece commissioned by the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra (Looks Of A Lot premiered on May 30 at Symphony Space); or finding the
right groove in playing a club date backing pop vocalist-bassist Meshell Ndegeocello.
In 2011, when Moran was commissioned by the Harlem Stage Gatehouse to perform an homage to Harlem resident Fats Waller (its been said that when he died,
his ashes were spread around the neighborhood) and re-envision his music for the
new millennium, the pianist sought out Ndegeocello to help him create witty, soulful, deep-grooved interpretationstranslating the jazz tradition into contemporary
expression as a dance party. Meshell made the conversation so much more interesting when I asked her if she wanted to work on this with me, Moran says. And she
said, yeah, because she knows who she is. It was magical working with her and getting her support. She knows how to navigate. She knows how to make people feel
good, and she also kept me on my toes because I didnt know what to expect.
Moran collaborated with Ndegeocello again when recording All Rise: A Joyful
Elegy For Fats Waller, which she co-produced with Blue Note Records President Don
Was. Jazz-infused and featuring Bandwagon bassist Tarus Mateen and drummer
Nasheet Waits on two tracks, the album contains intoxicating deconstructions of
Waller music that fuse hip-hop, funk, house, r&b, soul, rock and Afrobeat.
I want to know other ways of operating, Moran says. Specifically, he wanted to
get dance into the music. One night after performing at Harlem Stage, Moran,
Ndegeocello and a few other musicians went across town to the (now defunct) Lenox
Lounge and played for a small crowd at 2:30 in the morning. Someone took a video
of that set, and just watching the crowdthe songs became vehicles for dance, to
keep bodies gyrating.
We wanted to get the party feel, says Ndegeocello, who charges into the stomp
and bump of their version of the Waller classic The Joint Is Jumping and takes
Aint Nobodys Business for a dark and slow ride. Party was the focus to celebrate
and praise Fats, who was a hit-maker in his time. Jason had a few arrangements in his
head and he asked me to approach the tunes as an MC. We really did have a party.
The record doesnt sound like anything my own intuition would take me
toward, Moran says. I told Meshell and Don, I can make a sound and I want you to
put your hand on it. Touch it like youre massaging meat. I told Meshell to [change]
the music any way she wanted to. I like working with her because she has a lot of
ideas, and I wanted her to be free with Fats lyrics. Theres no law that says you have
to sing all the lyrics of a tune. You can pull some out or use a minimal part of the lyrics and unearth a different narrative. Thats what Meshell did with Aint Nobodys
Business, talking about the church on Sunday because she knows Fats father was a
preacher at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem.
Before starting the commission project, Moran had to come to philosophical
grips about delving into the Waller songbook, worrying that the music was perhaps
too personal to the icon. I kept asking myself, Where am I treading on his narrative? he says. What was he thinking when he performed those tunes? But then you
have [filmmaker] David Lynch using Fats music in Eraserhead because he loved the
way he sounded. So, why not invite more conversations about him? Why play his
music the way that its always been? My goal was: Does it sound good?
Key to steering All Rise away from a jazz-oriented production was Ndegeocellos
have written and played. So, I had to play something for him that talks in a simple way about this
sadness that I have for a man who was so joyful. I
wanted to give something back to him.
Morans desire to broaden the scope of his
music has been augmented by looking outward,
especially to the visual arts. The walls of his house
are adorned with artworks by friends, including
Kara Walker, Whitfield Lovell and Leslie Hewitt.
I spend a lot of time with different artists
talking about the creative process, says Moran,
who grew up in Houston in a house with a lot
of artwork on the walls and with frequent visits to museums. We all improvise, but in different ways. We talk about it and it helps me so that
I wont be doing the same thing year after year. I
want to make sure I vary my process.
Moran frequently talks with conceptual artist
Glenn Ligon, a close friend whose art explores a
wide variety of topics, from race to sexuality to
identity. I pass a lot of my ideas through him,
says Moran, who notes, however, that his wife is
his biggest editor. In the last six months, Moran
jumped into the visual arts world and has representation by New Yorks Luhring Augustine
Gallery. Ive been fabricating objects now, like
small music boxes, he says. Im trying to challenge the ways in which I represent myself. Is it
just through jazz clubs, through recorded music?
As much as I love that, there are other ways that
Im trying to exercise to see what falls out.
This mindset made it easy for Moran to enlist
artist and activist Theaster Gates to bring a unique
visual viewpoint to Looks Of A Lot, the piece commissioned by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Morans goal for the piece was twofold: to create wonderful music and provide a meditation on
Chicagos impact as a communityboth the positive and negative. When I got the commission,
I was allowed to work with anyone I wanted,
Moran says. I wanted to use artists in Chicago
like Theaster for the piece to be more impactful.
What he does is collect stories from his neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago where he
grew up. He repurposes objectswhen buildings like churches and schools are ready to be
demolishedto use as parts of his pieces. Hes
Mark
TURNER
BY PHILLIP LUTZ | PHOTO BY MICHAEL JACKSON
Pace
Patience and processboth have served Turner well. And both have
been put to the test in recent years, not least in his decision to defer putting
out an album as a leader despite mounting pressure from the jazz-listening
public. The long-awaited Lathe Of Heaven (ECM), an intoxicating quartet
effort, is his first CD in 13 yearsa span of time that reflects the demands of
raising two young children and nursing a serious hand injury, to be sure, but
also a notable lack of ego.
Leading bands for me is a practical thing, he said over coffee on a hot
summer day in a caf near his home in Brooklyn. Its a way to learn about
composition, create a situation I might not otherwise have. It takes a lot of
energy.
Turners last stint as a bandleader ended in December 2001, when his
contract with Warner Bros. was not renewed. The association had been artistically fruitful, yielding four thoughtfully conceived and strikingly executed albumsall reflecting in some manner the transcendent quality that
trumpeter Tom Harrell, one of Turners current employers, hears in the saxophonists playing.
But that quality could not transcend the realities of the market. Although
Turner certainly was aware of the record industrys dynamicshis third
Warner Bros. album, Ballad Session, had been a luxuriant take on the standard repertoire that should by all rights have been accessible to a wide listen-
ing publichis sales were not strong enough to counter the forces of digitization sweeping the business. His fourth album for the label, Dharma Days,
was solid artistically, but it did not save his contract.
Nor, perhaps, should it have. Recalling the situation, Turner took a long
sip of espresso and allowed himself a thin smile.
It was too much for me, he said.
Truth be told, economic pressures were hardly new to him. A decade
before, newly arrived in New York City from Bostonwhere he had graduated from the Berklee College of Music after transferring from California State
University, Long Beachhe found himself busking and working in retail at
the now-defunct Tower Records on Times Square.
At the same time, he was sitting in on sessions at the Manhattan School
of Music, practicing relentlessly and maintaining his longstanding regimen
of close listening and methodical transcribing: Sonny Stitt; Warne Marsh;
John Coltrane, all eras. His notebooks, which had long been filling up, began
to overflow. But while his musical knowledge grew, so did his doubts.
I didnt know what to do with it, he said, alluding to an immense musical vocabulary that wasnt flourishing in the public eye due to a lack of career
direction.
While stuck at this dimly lit crossroads, he received what proved to be a
life-changing call. Delfeayo Marsalis needed him on a January 1992 record
HIS OWN
degree to which he had synthesized and ultimately personalized the art forms historya discipline
that is not especially prevalent among young players trying to define a musical identity.
Probably the easiest way to do that is to play
outside of the tradition, Iverson said. Mark has
always had his own sound, if not stylea command of the tradition and all the languages.
Turner has named two tunes for the pianist:
Iversons Odyssey, extended versions of which
appear on at least 11 albums, and Ethans Line,
which makes its recorded debut on Lathe Of
Heaven. On both, Turner constructs intricate
pieces from bits of information lifted from tunes
by Iverson.
One of the reasons Mark means so much to
me is that hes a dedicated improviser, Iverson
added. I would never be unsurprised by what he
would play. Its quite unusual for somebody with
such vocabulary and technique to be so committed to the search. Its really a tremendous gift.
Turner and Iverson recorded as recently as last
year, for One Is the Other (ECM) by the Billy Hart
Quartetboth have belonged to the group for
a decadebut Iverson is hardly the only chordal instrumentalist with whom Turner has a productive relationship. The saxophonist appears on
Joy In Spite Of Everything (ECM), the new album
by Italian pianist Stefano Bollani featuring bassist Jesper Bodilsen, drummer Morten Lund and
guitarist Bill Frisell. And Turner played a key
sideman role on Moscow-born pianist Yelena
Eckemoffs new album, A Touch Of Radiance
(L&H Production), alongside Hart, bassist George
Mraz and vibraphonist Joe Locke.
But when it came time for Turner to enter the
studio on his own terms, he opted to go piano-less
and guitar-less. The reason, he said, was a desire to
pare down his sound to its essentials.
I wanted to go back and write from the
ground up, Turner explained.
In June 2003, he headed into the studio with
Grenadier and drummer Jeff Ballardanother like-minded player whom he also knew from
high-school bands in Californiaas the collective Fly.
The three members first joint writing effort,
Fly Mr. Freakjar, appears on Fly (Savoy Jazz).
Like its title, which scrambles the letters of their
first names into an anagram, the tune scrambles the musicians duties. Turner and Grenadier
both assume responsibility for shaping the melody and harmony and contributing to the rhythmic
framework built by Ballard, who in turn feeds the
melodic flow.
Unlike many groups organized as a collective,
Fly lives up to the termin no small part,
Grenadier said, because of Turners dedication
to the whole. Mark says that when he solos hes
trying to make everybody else sound good, he
explained. As a bass player, I get paid to do that.
But for a sax player to say that is startling.
That same selflessness is evident with his current group, the Mark Turner Quartetincluding trumpeter Avishai Cohen, bassist Joe Martin
and drummer Marcus Gilmoreaccording to
Martin, who recruited Turner for his own leader
effort in 2001, Passage (Fresh Sound New Talent).
Mark responds subtly and alertly to whats
MARK
GUILIANA
NEW DIALOGUE
BY KEN MICALLEF | PHOTO BY DENEKA PENISTON
he electronic music style drum n bass had a watershed year in 1996. Initially labeled dance
music as fans in underground London clubs jolted their bodies to the musics jackhammer
rhythms and sampled cyber melodies, the far-reaching tendrils of drum n bass would
boil musicians brains for years to come. The year 1996 saw the release of such influential
albums as Squarepushers Feed Me Weird Things, Plugs Drum N Bass For Papa, LTJ Bukems
Logical Progression and the compilation Platinum Breakz on Goldies Metalheadz label. Jazz friendly,
DJ-driven and computer literate, these British artists enjoyed a quick burst of global success before the
style was co-opted by corporate advertisers and watered-down by four-to-the-floor music simpletons.
But 18 years later, the essence of drum n bass continues to influence shape-shifters across the globe,
including jazz drummer-programmer-composer Mark Guiliana.
dual worlds permeated his drumming as he gained popularity touring and recording with Brad Mehldau, Avishai Cohen
(bass), Lionel Loueke, Meshell Ndegeocello, Jason Lindner,
Avishai Cohen (trumpet), Dhafer Youssef, Tigran Hamasyan,
Matisyahu, Phronesis and vocalist Gretchen Parlato (who is
also his wife).
The first fruits of Guilianas labors as a leader would be
heard on his trio Heernts Locked In The Basement (2006)
and Beat Music (2012). Founding his own label, Beat Music
Productions, in 2013, Guiliana recently released My Life
Starts Now and Beat Music: The Los Angeles Improvisations.
Once again pursuing dual themes, Guilianas electro-acoustic
sounds are framed by equal parts seriousness and absurdity. My
Liferecorded with vocalists Parlato and Ndegeocello, bassist
Stu Brooks, keyboardist Yuki Hirano and guitarist Michael
Seversonis an inward-looking, occasionally bittersweet
record reflecting Guilianas life as a 33-year-old family man and
new father who is often away from home. Though largely electronic, My Life is poignant, the music infused with thoughtful
intent including the kalimba and wordless female vocals of the
centerpiece, This One Is For You.
mer and MPC-friendly programmer, transforming his acoustic drumming with the stutters,
jerks, delay effects and metric modulations common to the music of J Dilla, Squarepusher and
Luke Vibert (aka Plug). Any list of musicians who
are truly crossing jazz fundamentals with the
ever-evolving palette of electronic music must
include Mark Guiliana.
Mark is expanding whats possible on the
drum set, Mehldau wrote via email. Hes really
enriching my rhythmic and sonic palette, but also
leading me in a different direction musically. Hes
taking influences from electronically generated
and looped music, and putting it back in an acoustic, real-time setting with the advantage that he
can then react spontaneously to other musicians.
This is, to use a bandied word, a very postmodern
gambitthis backwards chain of influence, and
its very liberating and opens up a new dialogue
between electronic music and improvised music
that we place under a big heading of jazz.
Taming The Dragon had its genesis in the duos
improvisations and shared electronic explorations. Once a tour was booked, Mehldau and
Guiliana worked out their ideas in real time,
crossing improvisation and melodic fragments
with electronic textures and beats.
I had several stems, Mehldau explained, a
bass line and the beginning of a melody, or a few
harmonic progressions, and some sounds I made
on synths that would go with them. Then we developed the ideas on the road and recorded them.
The beginnings of the project was just us
improvising and exploring this sonic terrain,
Guiliana comments. Brad brought in maybe a
four-bar thing which he can manipulate in many
different ways, so a four-bar phrase could be a
12-minute voyage. Were always recording gigs so
later we would decide what to hone into a song.
So it was half pre-existing minimal ideas and half
ideas that we extracted from the improvisations
then shaped.
When it comes to his electronic instruments,
Guiliana favors vintage drum sounds, which can
often sound quite silly as heard on 12 BYOB
from My Life Starts Now or Bang Biscuit from
The Los Angeles Improvisations.
As an overall direction I lean towards blatantly electronic sounds: Roland 808s and
909s, a lot of older drum machines including my Casio SK-1, an 8-bit Nintendo sound,
Guiliana explains. If I am going to that world, I
wanted to exploit it.
For The Los Angeles Improvisations, the electronic sounds were recorded direct. We could
really place them volume-wise and feel-wise so
theyd sit nicely with the acoustic sounds, he adds.
I used the electronics live with Brad for ambience, maybe triggering samples off the Roland
pad. The ambient sound becomes another layer
in the music. I can trigger a spoken-word speech
where my intention is not to have the words really heard, filtering them with a little delay so they
become a layer inside the music.
Musicians looking to add electronic spice to
their music may see this as a highly daunting task.
But then, the older analog technology can be fairly inexpensive, and drum n bass is easily heard
online, along with tons of contemporary electron-
Masterpiece +++++
Excellent ++++
Good +++
Fair ++
Poor +
Inside
57 / Jazz
59 / Blues
64 / Beyond
67 / Historical
71 / Books
Stefano Bollani
++++
What a perfect title for a perfectly joyousand
lightly caressedset for chamber jazz quintet.
The ensemble creates shifting textures for piano,
electric guitar and tenor saxophone, playing with
the relaxed abandon and playful off-handedness
of what was once called West Coast jazz, with
some bonus free-improv sections. Everything
brims with lively intention, enhanced throughout by pianist Bollanis light touch and discrete
execution.
Setting the tone with a jaunty calypso, Easy
Healing, the band slips into the jaggedly swinging contours of No Pope No Party, which fea-
tures an appropriately deft mix of rolling phrases and staccato surprises from guitarist Bill
Frisell. Alobar e Kudra (presumably named for
the immortal lovers of the Tom Robbins novel
Jitterbug Perfume) takes an exotic turn in a quick
three, with Bollani soloing boldly and organically, like he was thinking out loud. Tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, with a slightly more throaty tone
mixed with his usual piping quality (love that
pure altissimo), swells to a lovely ensemble climax
on the also-mysterious Vale.
Perhaps no track on the album speaks as well
to this bands commitment to spontaneity as
Teddy, which started out as a tribute to pianist
Teddy Wilsonand, indeed, toward the end, a
bright little swing melody emergesbut wound
up sounding like the deliciously intricate interplay of Chick Corea and Gary Burton, as Bollani
Paquito DRivera
++++
Jazz and classical music once addressed each other
through the fog of class warfarea cold one maybe,
but still a culture war of lowbrow vs. highbrow.
Among the pushier of the social hustlers were the
jazz writers who celebrated whenever they caught
Debussy, Stravinsky or any European referencing
a hip chord or syncopated riff in their work, as if
such a flirtation revealed some element of cultivation in their own feral child: jazz. Classical critics seldom returned the courtesy. From the 20s
through the 50s there were countless interactions
that promised to tame the tension. Dance bands
Omer Avital
New Song
PLUS LOIN/MOTMA 161
++++
Ive always loved the finesse that shapes Omer
Avitals music. Yep, the bassist is an overtly physical player, often impelled to give his
strings a good whack in order to express himself. (Because of such ardor, the liner notes to
this new album reference him as an Israeli
Mingus.) But Avital has always been judicious about dispensing aggression, and as the
years have gone bythe 42-year-olds debut,
Think With Your Heart, dropped in 2001
hes refined the attack that earned him part of
his early acclaim. Hes still committed to the
whomp in his music, but these days its measured out in very wise ways.
That is to say: New Song feels like a balancing act
of sorts. While the insistence that helped craft the
bassists identity as a bandleader and composer is
obvious, a contoured approach is in play. Theres
a maturity to these pieces, and their mildly wistful
air enhances that vibe. Its as if hes trading eruption for beautyeach of the 11 tracks glow with a
sense of ease and authority that make them seem a
tad more eloquent than their predecessors. Could
be because Avital has surrounded himself with
pals. Saxophonist Joel Frahm and drummer Danny
Freedman both played on the bassists debut, and
along with trumpeter Avishai Cohen and pianist
Yonathan Avishai, their camaraderie is a nurturing
agent. This squad always works as one.
54 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
Medeski Scofield
Martin & Wood
Juice
INDIRECTO RECORDS 16
+++
Opening salvo on the CD: Want me to start it
like that? Tells us two things: They were loose
in the studio, spontaneously playing around,
making it up in the moment. Secondly, they
want us to know that.
In other hands, this could be a recipe for
disaster. And in point of fact, it doesnt always
serve pianist-keyboardist John Medeski, guitarist John Scofield, drummer Billy Martin and
bassist Chris Wood ideally, but the freewheeling approach works well often enough on the
groups third studio collaboration, following
1997s A Go Go (Verve) and 2006s Out Louder
(Indirecto).
If there was one jamband in the worldand
that might be one too manythis would be
the keeper. In three records over nearly two
decades, the collaboration between organ trio
and guitar hero has kept it light and loose, with
ample groove grease and enough unexpected
turns to keep the brain as invested as the booty.
Scofields indelible, super-saturated sound
sears brilliantlya red-hot iron just out of the
ashon Martins Louis The Shoplifter, alongside Medeskis shifty piano, a new element on
Juicy. A couple of tracks delve into dub territory, a lengthy and unrecognizably riff-less version of Creams Sunshine Of Your Love and
a less successful, outtake-ish poke around with
thunder claps and a faux Louie Louie theme
called Juicy Lucy.
Lots of party time fun, with second-line
rhythms and a hefty dose of Latin input, but
also wonderful curveballs like the guitarists
North London. A bright version of Light My
Fire has less going for it than an introspective version of Dylans The Times They Are
A-Changin, a lovely ballad vehicle for Sco with
Medeski simmering underneath.
John Corbett
Juice: Sham Time; North London; Louis The Shoplifter; Juicy
Lucy; I Know You; Helium; Light My Fire; Sunshine Of Your Love;
Stovetop; The Times They Are A-Changin. (63:27)
Personnel: John Scofield, guitar; John Medeski, organ, piano;
Chris Wood, bass; Billy Martin, drums, percussion.
Ordering info: mmw.net
The
Critics
John McDonough
John Corbett
Jim Macnie
Paul de Barros
Stefano Bollani
Joy In Spite Of Everything
+++
+++
++++
++++
Paquito DRivera
Jazz Meets The Classics
++++
++
+++
++
Omer Avital
New Song
+++
+++
++++
++
MSM&W
Juice
+++
+++
+++
+++
Critics Comments
Dr. John
Ske-Dat-De-Dat:
The Spirit Of Satch
CONCORD 35187
+++
Intergalactic Beings
FPE RECORDS 002
+++
Intergalactic Beings is the second installment in
flutist Nicole Mitchells ongoing translation of
Octavia Butlers fiction into music. Butlers novel
Dawn presents a dilemma: how to live with sexual subjugation and genetic transformation, if those
are the only ways to avoid extinction.
On the new album, Mitchell has set out to create a musical dialogue with Butlers literature.
Despite the presence of singer Mankwe Ndosi,
whom some might recognize from her appearances with reedist Douglas Ewart, Mitchell doesnt
expend much effort on lyrical exposition. Instead
she uses various sounds and texture to imply narrative and evoke emotions similar to what one
might experience while reading a disturbing but
vividly rendered story.
Unlike the overtly swinging music of her
recent Delmark CD, Aquarius, this suite encompasses contemporary chamber music, ritualistic vocal incantations and harrowingly violent
expressions of agitation. Strings clash, and woodwinds carve out eerie melodies against backdrops
that shift mercurially from emptiness to elastic
grooves to looming orchestral chasms.
Instrumental soloing is not really the point
here, so while there is plenty of marvelous playing, and guitarist Jeff Parker effectively summons a sci-fi vibe with an array of otherworldly
56 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
Charles Davis
++++
Veteran saxophonist Charles Davis has been
working for more than 50 years, and hes been a
reliable sideman to leaders ranging from Dinah
Washington to Archie Shepp. But theres no sign
of him slowing down, even in the face of personal
hardship. Two years ago, he lost his wife, and For
The Love Of Lori is dedicated to her memory. The
disc is a moving tribute and his playing is as sensitive as it is robust. This memorial for her and a
couple of Davis recently departed longtime colleagues conveys little melancholia.
The title track, which Davis composed, is the
discs emotional centerpiece, and theres no
doubt that he puts everything he has into performing this lovely ballad. He exudes a rounded tone with an ideal amount of vibrato over pianist Rick Germansons sparse chord changes.
Trumpeter Joe Magnarelli answers with just as
much warmth, and no notes are wasted or drawn
out for excessive pathos. Another Davis-penned
tribute, KD (for Kenny Dorham), has an equally
strong saxophone-trumpet dialogue, with drummer Neil Smith subtly changing up the tempo
in the background. Smiths solo during Into
The Himalayas features a surprising approach
to unexpected parts of the kit. Germanson also
arranged a new version of the late Cedar Waltons
Cedars Blues that succinctly shows off each
members skills at aggressive tempos. While
most of the disc centers around the solid postbop that has always been Davis forte, the saxophonist stretches beyond that terrain through his
new arrangement of Julian Priesters Juliano
that highlights a more exploratory solo from
trombonist Steve Davis.
For The Love Of Lori concludes with a spirited
rendition of the standard Ill Be Seeing You.
The overall feeling is that a lifes passing is to be
celebrated more than merely mourned.
Aaron Cohen
For The Love Of Lori: Begues; Whatll I Do?; Juliano; KD; For
The Love Of Lori; Into The Himalayas; Cedars Blues; Ill Be Seeing
You. (57:36)
Personnel: Charles Davis, tenor saxophone; Steve Davis,
trombone; Joe Magnarelli, trumpet; Rick Germanson, piano; David
Williams, bass; Neil Smith, drums.
Ordering info: readestreetrecords.com
Jazz /
BY SEAN J. OCONNELL
Andreas Varady
Andreas Varady
VERVE B0020893
+++
This Gypsy jazz guitarist was a child prodigy in
his native Slovakia. Like Birli Lagrne a generation ago, he began playing guitar at age 4 and
soon came under the spell of Django Reinhardt.
Varady gigged at Ronnie Scotts in London at age
13 and that same year was featured on the cover
of Guitar Player magazine. Now 17, and managed
by Quincy Jones, he flaunts his remarkable chops
on his self-titled Stateside debut while showing the
considerable influence of Wes Montgomery and
George Benson along with Django.
Surrounded in the studio by a crew of consummate West Coast session pros like keyboardist Greg Phillinganes, bassist Brian Bromberg and
drummer Harvey Mason, the talented teenager
offers a kind of Whitmans Sampler of styles here,
some more successful than others. Executive producer Jones has him reaching out to the smooth
jazz market on at least a couple of tunes, including
a mellow rendition of Michael Jacksons Human
Nature and a Wes-inspired take on Steely Dans
Do It Again. Roy Hargrove makes a nice cameo
on flugelhorn on the serene ballad Secret Garden
while Walt Fowler blows Miles-ish muted trumpet
over the EDM-inspired A Day In New York, which
showcases Varadys fluid fretboard work but in a setting that will fall flat with jazz fans.
Varadys love of Reinhardt is reflected on a
schmaltzy arrangement of Nuages (with full string
section arranged by producer David Paich) and a
crackling romp through Swing 42, accompanied
only by bassist Bromberg and his father, Ondrej, on
rhythm guitar. Clearly there is a huge talent beneath
the gloss here. Heres hoping he reveals it in a more
genuine sense on the next outing. Bill Milkowski
Andreas Varady: Do It Again; Come Together; Human Nature;
Baby; Secret Garden; A Day In New York; Dont Stop The Music;
Nuages; California Dreamin; Let The Good Times Roll; After Seven
In Beijing; Swing 42. (60:22)
Personnel: Andreas Varady, guitar; Greg Phillinganes, keyboards;
Brian Bromberg, acoustic bass; Harvey Mason, Dave Weckl (6,
7, 10), drums; Paulinho da Costa, percussion; Steve Lukather (3),
Aleks Sever (10), Ondrej Varady (12), guitar; Steve Pocaro (3), David
Paich (3), keyboards; Jonah Nilsson, keyboards, vocals (4); Aaron
Mellergrdh, drums (4); Drew Ryan Scott (4), Kevin Ross (5), Nikki
Yanofsky (7), Gregory Porter (10), vocals; Henrik Linder, bass (4);
Roy Hargrove, flugelhorn (5); Nathan East, bass (5); Jay Oliver,
keyboards, bass, programming (6, 7, 10); Walt Fowler, trumpet (6);
Michael Lang, piano (8).
Ordering info: vervemusicgroup.com
Andrew Downing/Jim Lewis/David Occhipinti, Bristles (Occdav 007; 60:13 ++++) The
average winter temperature in Toronto, Canada,
hovers breezily around the teens. It takes a hearty
soul to lug around an instrument in that kind of
weather, rather than crawl into a cave and wait
for the flowers to bloom. With just 10 strings and
three valves, Andrew Downing (double bass), Jim
Lewis (trumpet) and David Occhipinti (guitar) attack seasonal affective disorder head-on with a
sparse landscape of brief meditations on painters
like Cy Twombly and Wassily Kandinsky interspersed with a lengthier half a dozen standard
ballads recorded in mid-January. Occhipinti possesses a growly Jim Hall sound that occasionally
evokes a flute while Lewis embraces the spaces
between. Downing is equally patient, urging the
proceedings with gentle runs. This is the sound of
winter, cool and mysterious, stark but beautiful.
Ordering info: davidocchipinti.com
SIMON ATTILA
Caterina Zapponi
Romantica
MOTMA 146
+++
Karen Mantler
Business Is Bad
XTRAWATT 14
++++
Business may be bad, as the song goes, but this
music is not just goodits damn good.
Throughout, composer-pianist Karen Mantler is
back with another ode to the current times we live
in. (Her last XtraWatt album was 20 years ago, but
shes kept at it with multiple side projects.) In nine
nifty pieces, she narrates her tales of woe in a fascinating, minimalist context. Utilizing the services
of Doug Wieselman (guitar, bass clarinet) and
Kato Hideki (bass) selectively, the overall sheen
feels like a lullaby, even though its kind of like a
screed against the mighty forces of indifference,
callousness and greed.
Truth be told, the songs arent all that different
from each other. Instead, its that sheen that can
grab you, the implication being that Business Is
Bad should be fraught with incantations and diatribe, overtly expressed and in-your-face. Instead,
the listener hears Business Is Bad as a long-form
poem, an expanded medley, repeated over and
over againeasy on the ears, heart and mind.
The inclusion of Wieselman and Hidekis
instruments is frosting on the cake, astride such
caustic lyrics as, Homeless people in the park/
They get hungry after dark, or the apparently whimsical, My magic pencil wrote this melody/ Touch it to paper and wait and see. Business Is
Bad can be heard as a wake-up call or a late-night
58 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
ramble.
I kept imagining what Marilyn Monroe
would have done with this music. Mantlers
soft-spoken singing voice reminded me of
Monroes lilting voice, laced with an undertow of
longing, regret and outright disgust with the status quo of relationships. The song titles say a lot.
The music says even more. This is a collection for
the ages. All ages.
John Ephland
Business Is Bad: Catch As Catch Can; My Magic Pencil (Wrote
This Melody); Speak French; Wintertime; Surviving You; Business
Is Bad; I Cant Afford My Lawyer; My Solo; That Damn Volcano.
(45:45)
Personnel: Karen Mantler, vocals, harmonica, piano; Doug
Wieselman, guitar, bass clarinet; Kato Hideki, bass.
Ordering info: ecmrecords.com
Blues /
BY FRANK-JOHN HADLEY
Long Time
Comin
John Hiatt
MICHAEL WILSON
Pra Voc
DEXOFON 1401
++++
Dexter Payne has played several instruments
(including alto, baritone and harmonica) and
in many styles (bop, blues, folk-rock and world
music) in his wide-ranging career. But he is
most individual as a clarinetist, and it seems
that the music closest to his heart comes from
Brazil. A two-year period (199597) traveling throughout South America climaxed with
a meeting in Brazil with the late percussionist
Gaudencio Thiago de Mello, who became his
informal mentor. Payne dedicates the music on
this disc to de Mello.
+++
Deep Friendship
NEW ARTISTS 1058
++++
The five originals on Deep Friendship are hefty
expressions of post-bop that remain angular and
mysterious and, at times, step outside their forms
altogether, in a kind free playing. Once an important student of Lennie Tristano, Crothers style is also
reminiscent of late-50s, early 60s Cecil Taylor. Alto
saxophonist Richard Tabnik, Crothers stalwart collaborator since the early 80s, somehow manages to
bring the sound and energy of Ornette Coleman and
Archie Shepp, even as the band sounds contemporary and a bit more radical.
A good example of this interplay and spontaneous improvisation comes with Crothers opening number, the quirky, labyrinthine Ontology.
A medium-tempo piece, it swings when it isnt
pausing and reflecting, Tabniks wailing alto doubling up with Crothers busy single lines.
Recorded live in November of 2010, the CD
suffers from poor recording quality (another, more conventional historical reference being
Colemans live date with pianist Paul Bley,
also a quartet recording). That said, the playing throughout manages to overcome the audio
aspects, due in part to the intensity and surefootedness of everyone here, including drummer
Roger Mancuso (who joined Crothers in 1974 for
the album Perception) and bassist Ken Filiano,
musicians able to read the other twos deft moves
in and out of each songs involved structures en
route to extended blowing.
On Tabniks Linearity, Crothers goading
piano lines express a kind of alter ego to Tabniks
angular, swinging wails. Crothers playing is restless, delicate, her fluid lines punctuated by chord
clusters that evoke images of her wrists as well as
fingers getting in on the action. Deep Friendship
closes out the set, a medium-tempo waltz that
reflects back on the unity of all four members,
with Tabnik at the foundation. Deep Friendship
itself comes across like a special home recording
session, and everyones invited. John Ephland
Deep Friendship: Ontology; Roys Joy; Fortuity; Linearity; Deep
Friendship. (54:50)
Personnel: Connie Crothers, piano; Richard Tabnik, alto saxophone; Roger Mancuso, bass; Ken Filiano, drums.
Ordering info: newartistsrecords.com
Larry Goldings/
Peter Bernstein/
Bill Stewart
Ramshackle
Serenade
PIROUET 3077
++++
Corduroy
+++
Regarding his new album, Corduroy, guitarist
David Ullmann said, My last album was about
making music that was more challenging, but
with Corduroy I just wanted to make music that
I like. Ullmanns remark could describe the New
York City jazz experience, where challenging
music can be heard every night. But jazz as easily
enjoyable as a great pop tune? Thats another story,
the kind that fills Corduroy.
A relative newcomer to New York Cityhes
released two previous leader projects, 2005s
Hidden and 2012s FallingUllmanns standard
technique and clean tone are practically a rarity, and a welcome one. Ullmann calls Corduroy
a tribute to 1970s TV theme songs. Nothing
here recalls The Streets Of San Francisco or
Sanford And Son, but rather the sentimental afterglow those soundtrack classics evoke.
Surrounded by an exceptional octetvibraphonist Chris Dingman, saxophonist Loren Stillman,
trombonist Brian Drye, cornetist Kirk Knuffke,
clarinetist Mike McGinnis, drummer Vinnie
Sperrazza and bassist Gary WangUllmann sets
Corduroys tone with opener The Chase, a title
that suggests Bullitt, but whose playfully ethereal
mood is more contemporary European than early
70s San Francisco.
The title track sports a friendly eighth-note
groove and a simple melody, one you could
imagine as a 70s theme song. Ocelot increases the tension and the tempo, Sperrazzas driving cymbals and Dingmans mallet-work grounding the songs funky melodic accents while
McGinnis snorting bass clarinet solo pushes
its stylistic envelope. Champ is as sprightly as
Gregory Hines dancing tap; You Cant Go Back
floats via Dingmans glowing vibraphone and
Ullmanns lyrical solo.
Apparently, for David Ullmann, you
can go back home again.
Ken Micallef
Joe Magnarelli
Lookin Up!
POSI-TONE 8125
+++
Peter Lerner
Continuation
ORIGIN 82662
+++
+++
Dana Robbins
Dana Robbins
SELF-RELEASE
+++
Lotus Blossom
AMERICAN JAZZ INSTITUTE/CAPRI 77002
+++
After putting on Lotus Blossom, it will only take a
few moments before most seasoned listeners will
think of Bill Evans. Although he passed away
more than three decades ago, Evans is still one of
the most influential of all jazz musicians today,
particularly on the playing of many acoustic pianists. His use of dynamics, space and subtlety, his
democratic way of interacting with his bassists,
and his harmonically sophisticated chord voicings can all be heard in the playing of pianist Jeff
Colella and bassist Putter Smith on this duo disc.
Colella and Smith have performed together
many times in the Los Angeles area during the past
couple of decades, and they think along similar
musical lines. The pianist has worked with many
singers (including Jack Jones, Lou Rawls, Anita
ODay, Sheila Jordan and Diane Schuur) and is a
particularly tasteful and successful accompanist,
as can be heard whenever he plays behind the bass
solos. Smith has also worked with quite a few singers and instrumentalists in Southern California,
so he is used to adapting his style to whatever
musical situation in which he finds himself.
BY JENNIFER ODELL
Spheres of
Influence
Meshell Ndegeocello
JASON RODGERS
Beyond /
Wiring
INTAKT 233
++++
Many of jazzs elder statesmen tend to retreat into
well-earned comfort zones as they reach the twilight of their careersthey do what they do with
consummate skill and professionalism, but they
often lack the hunger to push their music forward.
Thats not intended to be a criticism, but I tend to
look elsewhere for music that will light a fuse.
Theres an awful lot of history carried by alto
saxophonist Oliver Lake, bassist Reggie Workman
and drummer Andrew Cyrille, and they certainly would be warranted in kicking back if they were
so inclined. But since working together as Trio
3, which formed in 1986, theyve demonstrated not only a continued excellence, but an ongoing curiosity and fire. While theyve got plenty of
ideas and spark on their own, theyve employed an
ingenious modus operandi to inject new energy
and material into most outings: Since partnering
with Switzerlands Intakt label about a decade ago,
theyve made a series of outstanding recordings
with guest pianists, including Irne Schweizer,
Geri Allen and Jason Moran.
Wiring, with Vijay Iyer, is the latest of those
collaborations, and its as superb as anything in
the bands growing discography. As usual, the
effort is well integrated with compositions from
all involved parties, including one sharp group
improvisation (Rosmarie). Iyer brings the
brisk, post-bop opener, The Prowl, as well as the
ambitious, three-part Suite For Trayvon (And
Thousands More), a brooding, shape-shifting
meditation thats imbued with palpable tension,
paranoia and fury provoked by injustice. Lakes
title track bristles with a different sort of tension
looseness on the verge of disintegration, albeit a
dissolution that never occurs.
Iyer connects with the group in a substantive
way; theres nothing tentative or overly polite, even
when they tackle Curtis Clarks soulful Chiara,
a luminescent ballad stripped of any hollow sentiment.
Peter Margasak
Wiring: The Prowl; Synapse II; Willow Song; Shave; Rosmarie; Suite
For Trayvon (And Thousands More), I. Slimm, II. Fallacies, III. Adagio;
Wiring; Chiara; Tribute To Bu. (69:55)
Personnel: Oliver Lake, alto saxophone; Vijay Iyer, piano; Reggie
Workman, bass; Andrew Cyrille, drums.
Ordering info: intactrec.ch
Juan Pastor
Chinchano
Jason Ajemian
++++
Folklords
+++
DELMARK 5016
Chinchano: Fina Estampa; Chakana; En Otro Talvez; Negra Presuntuosa; Lucia; Tiene Picante; Avellana; Amigo Stu; Andino. (48:41)
Personnel: Juan Pastor; drums, percussion; Jorge Roeder,
upright bass; Stu Mindeman, piano, percussion; Rich Moore alto
saxophone, clarinet; Marquis Hill, trumpet; Paul Mutzabaugh,
Hammond B-3 organ (5).
Ordering info: earsandeyesrecords.com
Audio One
An International Report
AUDIOGRAPHIC RECORDS 001
++++
Audio One
++++
Ken Vandermarks Audio One is the newest of his
16 active projects, but the 10-piece ensemble is
founded upon a web of relationships between the
assembled players that spans over 20 years, and it
owes its origin to a commission to explore music
older than that. Its genesis was a series of concerts
in Chicago that showcased his arrangements
of inspirational free-jazz compositionsfirst
those of Joe McPhee, and subsequently 70s-vintage pieces by members of the Chicago-based
Association for the Advancement of Creative
Musicians and St. Louis Black Artists Group.
After years of having to travel overseas to work
with the half-European Resonance Ensemble
when he wanted to lead a big band, Vandermark
knew better than to let this one go. In early 2014
he added some of his own tunes to the repertoire
and recorded the whole book during a weekend
stand at the Green Mill. To inaugurate his new
label, Audiographic Records, he is now simultaneously releasing one CD of covers and one CD of
his compositions.
The original versions of the pieces on The
Robin Eubanks +
Mental Images
++
Reshaping the Black Rock Coalition
aesthetic through improvisation and
modern effects hardware, trombonist Robin Eubanks creates klassik
rock that is both forward-thinking
and stuck in yesteryear. On one hand
its thrilling to hear Living Colours
Corey Glover singing Sly Stones Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)
over a guitar-scorched, madly displaced drum beat embellished by a witty
brass arrangement. Led Zeppelins Kashmir receives a similarly clever
treatment, brother Kevin Eubanks blasting sci-fi effects on guitar throughout
Robins solo, before the track shifts into Afro-Cuban terrain. Jimi Hendrixs
Fire bolts out of the gate like some CGI monster, quickly devolving into
solo overload: Kevin wrestling with his spewing Eddie Van Halen arsenal;
Robin soloing through a wah-wah pedal. Bahian Parade thankfully shifts
the focus to a Carnival-like groove, then its back to more hard rock for the
time-twisting Shifting Centers. Unwilling to leave worse-enough alone
for United Vision, Eubanks and crew resuscitate the wah-wah pedal, slap
bass and hoarse-vocal shout-outs (Kuumba Frank Lacy). Had enough? No?
Ostinato revisits smooth jazz for 8 torpid minutes; The Ocean dumps off
more wah-wah-treated Zeppelin riffs; and Between The Lines follows electric bass and drum solos over an Afro-Cuban groove.
Ken Micallef
Klassik Rock, Vol. 1: Thank You; Kashmir; Fire; Bahian Parade; Shifting Centers; United Vision;
Ostinato; The Ocean; Between The Lines. (63:00)
Personnel: Robin Eubanks, trombone, electric trombone, keyboards, percussion pads, vocals; Kevin
Eubanks, guitar; Corey Glover, Kuumba Frank Lacy, vocals; Duane Eubanks, trumpet; Antonio Hart, alto
saxophone; Mike King, Kris Bowers, keyboards; Boris Kozlov, bass; Nate Smith, Billy Kilson, drums; David
Silliman, Daniel Sadownick, percussion.
Ordering info: robineubanks.com
66 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
George Colligan
Ask Me Tomorrow
STEEPLECHASE 31783
++++
You were never meant to hear
Ask Me Tomorrow. George
Colligans 25th leader CD was
recorded as a demo to convince
promoters to book the pianists
new trio with bassist Linda Oh
and drummer Ted Poor after
a successful (musically, if not
financially) gig at New Yorks
Cornelia Street Caf. Like that
under-attended performance,
the session did little to generate attention for the trio, but it proved to be such
a strong recording that Colligan decided to release it, which may give a few of
those promoters cause to rethink their initial rejections. Like Colligans previous CD, The Endless Mysteries (Origin), the new disc is a textbook example of
piano-trio playing crafted by a trio with very little experience actually playing
together. The three fuse together into a taut and empathetic unit that spotlights
the leaders uncanny ability to react and complement his collaborators. Just check
out Colligans comping alone on Two Notes Four Chords, a shadowy blues
where his every gesture seems to spring organically from Ohs captivating solo.
She seems to weave a story in her solo that Colligan picks up and runs with in his
own intricate lines. Colligans choices almost always seem a perfect fit for the
moment, though closer Jet Blue jars somewhat, a sudden turn to frantic
freedom with Colligan switching to a blustery pocket trumpet.
Shaun Brady
Ask Me Tomorrow: Ask Me Tomorrow; Two Notes Four Chords; Prague; Return To Copenhagen;
Insistent Linda; Jespers Summer House; Cathexis; Jet Blue. (53:42)
Personnel: George Colligan, piano, trumpet; Linda Oh, bass; Ted Poor, drums.
Ordering info: steeplechase.dk
BY KIRK SILSBEE
The Bop
Wars
Historical /
Jemeel Moondoc
+++
Bells Of Sunday
ILK 219
++++
The young Danish pianist Simon Toldam has
emerged as one of the most impressive figures
on the bustling Scandinavian improvised music
scene in recent years, leading an excellent trio
and playing in some important groups, including the first-ever trio led by Dutch drummer
Han Bennink (alongside Belgian reedist Joachim
Badenhorst). But the second album by STORK (a
contraction of Toldams initials with the misleading orkester, which is, in fact, a sextet) suggests
his strongest gifts might be as a composer and
bandleader.
There are a few short, spiky themes around
which his excellent band engages in chaotic,
multi-linear improvisation, but the best material
features neatly calibrated use of his skilled collaborators. On Ind I Vggen, for example, Toldam
deploys gorgeous Mingus-like voicings over a
crawling tempo, with luxurious glissandos helping along a garrulous, bluesy trombone solo by
Mads Hyhne before the leader drops his own spartan, lurching solo of internal tinkering and glassy
runs. As graceful and sensual as that tune is, the
aptly titled Angst: t Stykke Musik For Sekstet
utterly turns the tables: a masterfully articulated
expression of anxiety and tension crowned by a
darting, tart-tones alto saxophone solo from Sture
Ericson.
68 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
Walt Weiskopf
Overdrive
POSI-TONE 8126
++++
On Overdrive, tenor saxophonist Walt Weiskopf
announces his presence with a three-note rhythmic
figure on the same pitch, giving each note enough
weight and drive to encapsulate his outlook for The
Path Is Narrow and the entire disc as a whole.
That short figure, which repeats four times,
gives way to a behind-the-beat, easygoing melody that in turn moves to a frenetic solo section. Weiskopf is then off, easily sliding up and
down the horn, maintaining his deep, reedy, but
impressively brilliant and bright sound even in
the upper register. All the while, his rhythm section keeps pace, letting Weiskopf push out as
many technically flawless musical ideas as his
fingers can find.
Weiskopf composed nine of the 10 tunes on
Overdrive, and the majority of them center around
the equivalent of musical tongue-twisters, with
melodies flowing this way and that, branching
out left and right, at a quick tempo. The tunes
are etude-like in their demands, but stand out
for their musicality. Weiskopf pairs these melodies with equally spellbinding solos, giving
equal opportunity to his bandmatesvibraphonist Behn Gillece, guitarist Yotam Silberstein, pianist Peter Zak, bassist David Wong and drummer Donald Edwardsand each of them turn in
admirable improvisations.
The tenor dials down the tempo for two
tunesJewel And A Flower and Waltz For
Dadand proves that his tenacious approach
to jazz doesnt wane when the tempo slows down.
Michel Legrands sultry What Are You Doing
The Rest Of Your Life? is given a bit more urgency than the originalwhich draws its power from
syrupy, liquid vocal linesbut in the end, this
cover comes off as a slight blemish on an otherwise formidable album.
Jon Ross
Overdrive: The Path Is Narrow; Like Mike; Jewel And A Flower;
Night Vision; Overdrive; Waltz For Dad; Four Horsemen; Midwinter
Nights Dream; What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life?; No Biz.
(50:36)
Personnel: Walt Weiskopf, tenor; Behn Gillece, vibraphone;
Yotam Silberstein, guitar; Peter Zak, piano; David Wong, bass;
Donald Edwards, drums.
Ordering info: posi-tone.com
Led Bib
++++
Led Bib
++++
When American drummer Mark Holub put
together a band as a graduation project while
a student at Middlesex University in North
London, little did he know that he would one
day celebrate the groups 10th anniversary. And
he does it with a bang on two new recordings.
The People In Your Neighborhood is Led
Bibs fifth studio album. Whether they capped
their first 10 years with their best album yet is
open for debate, but it definitely harbors the most
memorable tunes. Moreover, the band has lost
none of its ability to muster energy to create a joyous ruckus. In some ways, Led Bib is your typical
modern jazz outfit with a rock edge. What makes
it different are the instrumentation and the idiosyncrasies of the musicians.
The front line consists of two alto sax players,
Pete Grogan and Chris Williams, who play catand-mouse, reach for new heights of unbridled
lyricism and seem to have an inexhaustible supply of melodies and countermelodies. Pianist
one more evidence of the strength of their softer side; clearly, the bands abilities extend well
beyond fierce abandon, a powerful drive or
melodic hooks.
During the six months leading up to the
recording sessions, Holub and company had
the opportunity to road-test the material.
This is documented on The Good Egg, a limited-edition LP that includes three tunes from
the new album and one piece from their previous opus, Bring Your Own (Cuneiform). Most
of the compositions are culled from the second
of two sold-out nights at the Vortex, one of the
British capitals prime jazz venues. The vividly captured live versions have the same structure and framework as the studio takes, but
the improvisational parts offer different ideas
and backdrops. In addition, the soloists do
not really stretch out more than they already
do on the other recordings. The one exception is Imperial Green, where McLaren gets
to display much of his wizardry and which concludes with a return to the main theme instead of
remaining open-ended. And its just as riveting.
Alain Drouot
The People In Your Neighborhood: New Teles; Giant Bean;
Angry Waters (Lost To Sea); This Roofus; Recycling Saga; Plastic
Lighthouse; Tastes So Central; Imperial Green; Curly Kale; At The
Ant Farm; Orphan Elephants. (72:28)
The Good Egg: Giant Bean; Recycling Saga; Shapes And Sizes;
Imperial Green. (33:59)
Personnel: Mark Holub, drums; Liran Donin, bass; Toby McLaren,
keyboards; Pete Grogan, Chris Williams, alto sax.
Ordering info: cuneiformrecords.com
Darius Jones/
Matthew Shipp
Cosmic Lieder:
The Darkseid
Recital
AUM FIDELITY 088
++++
Matthew Shipp has an affinity for uncompromisingly powerful saxophonists;
consider his work with Sabir
Mateen, Evan Parker, Ivo
Perelman and, of course, the
late David S. Ware. While
Darius Jones is of an earlier generation than those
players, this is no mentor-elder encounter. Shipp has found in Jones a musician whose facility with classical forms, dynamic range and inventiveness in
the moment match his own. Take 2,327,694,748, for example. The changes in tone, from blue rumination to bold debate to conciliatory pleas, come
as fast as the shifts in pace and meter. Not only is Jones with Shipp every
step of the way, it feels like the music speaks his mind as much as the pianists. Theres something symbiotic about their shared use of extended techniques and their juxtapositions of bold melodies and intricate constructions
with avalanche-like pure-sound onslaughts. But part of what makes these
two musicians so compatible is Jones singularity. His instincts for where to
place individual notes and how to distress them cannot be reduced to a list of
antecedent influences. He is, like Shipps other saxophone-wielding partners,
his own man.
Bill Meyer
Cosmic Lieder: The Darkseid Recital: Celestial Fountain; 2,327,694,748; Granny Goodness;
Gardens Of Yivaroth; Lord Of Woe; Life Equation; Sepulchre Of Mandrakk; Divine Engine; Novus Final
Gift. (45:20)
Personnel: Darius Jones, alto saxophone; Matthew Shipp, piano.
Ordering info: aumfidelity.com
OCTOBER 2014 DOWNBEAT 69
Polarities
SONGLINES 1807
++++
From the first out-of-tempo double-stopped bass
drone and loose unison moan by alto sax and
trumpet, you know youre not in mainstream
bebop-land any more. Saxophonist Peter Epstein,
a former New Yorker who now runs the jazz studies program at the University of Nevada, Reno,
writes the kind of pieces that could as easily be
called structured improvisations as compositions. Which isnt to say that there arent attractive
themes throughout this CD, the kind of forms that
serve as armatures for free exploration.
Tiny Expanding Universe enters on a bass
Reggie Watkins
+++
On his second disc as a leader, Pittsburghbased trombonist Reggie Watkins takes a literal interpretation of the albums title, One
For Miles, One For Maynard, paying tribute to the musicians with one tune each
early on in the eight-tune recording. Using
a core group of local players as his rhythm
section, the alum of Maynard Fergusons Big
Bop Nouveau also picked some out-of-town
guests to beef up his horn section.
Davis Shhh, which is one half of 1969s
In A Silent Way, is compressed down by
about 13 minutes and given a vibrant but
restrained Latin feel. Vibes replace the original
tunes atmospheric, bell-like guitar effects, and
the tempo is brought up a few notches by a laidback but driving percussion section. Watkins
open, spread-out tone is pensive, but he focuses
the drifting sound Davis employs on the original with great purpose.
Chala Nata, the Indian-tinged tune from
Fergusons M.F. Horn, Volume 1, is updated with a few turntable screeches and scratches and a funkier, more immediate accompaniment. Saxophonists Matt Parker and Rick Matt
on soprano and tenor, respectively, churn out
concise, busy solos, adding to the immediacy of
the uptempo sections.
70 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
Helio Parallax
Helio Parallax
M.O.D. TECHNOLOGIES 0014
++++
Theres a slippery, slithering slope that blends a
jazz aesthetic with pop, rock, funk, hip-hop and
reggae. Helio Parallax envelopes itself within this
slope with distractingly pleasant results. The trio
of multi-instrumentalists Takuya Nakamura, Josh
Werner and Marihito Ayabe are joined by special guests throughout this disc of mostly instrumental music, though there are some tracks, like
the delicate rocker Strange Dream, featuring
the loquacious, slightly otherworldly vocals of
Dustan Louque.
Everything is inundated with some dicey
reverb and an overall swimming sound mix
courtesy of Bill Laswell. One could listen to this
CD as background music for a mind trip, or turn
it on up and dance along. Check out Kilgore
Trout Dub for an insistent backbeat and swirling recurrences that include unavoidable but very
welcomed drumming.
The disc is an assortment of 12 originals by
the trio, every tune laced with attitude, sometimes a tad tired or overwrought, but mostly filled
with enough unpredictability to keep you listening for more unexpected musical variety. Franks
Lament, for instance, could be all about Ol
Blues Eyes. Nakamuras plangent, wailing trumpet tone is bluesy and lament-like even as the
song cradles itself around a slow-rocking groove.
(Frank goes strolling.)
With all the programming onboard, Helio
Parallax could be considered an ambient adventure. And yet, with all the swizzle sonic sticks
splayed throughout, its more ear candy than
something to be mesmerized by. If you love
electronics smartly produced and played,
Helio Parallax is likely to please your sonically driven musical palette, not to mention your
mysterious, delicious soul.
John Ephland
Helio Parallax: Helio Parallax; Strange Dream; Another Broken
Human; Kilgore Trout Dub; Soft Blind Pony Ride; Speed Of Life;
Franks Lament; Nocturne For Secret Planets; After The Flood;
Happy Helio; City Of Glass; New Planet, Old Sun. (60:08)
Personnel: Takuya Nakamura, trumpet, organ, programming,
horn arrangements; Josh Werner, bass, double bass, piano, guitar,
programming, keys, vocals; Marihito Ayabe, dubbing mixing,
programming; Bianca Casady, Dustan Louque, Jahdan Blakkamoore, vocals; Doug Wieselman, Troy Simms, saxophones; Yoshio
Kobayashi, Gintas Janusonis, drums; Raja Kassis, guitar; Namiko
Ishikawa, backing vocals; Bill Laswell, dubbing.
Ordering info: mod-technologies.com
Books /
BY GEOFFREY HIMES
Restless
Curiosity
Like most modern memoirs by musicians,
Herbie Hancocks Possibilities (Viking)
has the feel of someone sitting down with
a tape recorder and telling old anecdotes,
leaving it to someone else to stitch it all
together into a coherent life story. In this
case, that someone else is Lisa Dickey,
whose name appears in much smaller type
on the cover. While a majority of the anecdotes are entertaining, the stitches have
the boilerplate dullness of a press-release
biography.
As a result, Possibilities has few visual
cues, little literary style and no narrative
momentum. Its as if a writer like myself
had gone beyond his area of competence
and had recorded a jazz-piano album. This
does not mean that the book is without
value, for Hancock does one thing very
well: He is able to explain musical concepts
in clear, non-technical language.
In the second chapter, for example, he
explains how he grew up as a classical-piano prodigy and doo-wop fan in Chicago, only to
get curious about jazz in high school. His explanation of how he taught himself improvisation by
obsessively listening to George Shearing records,
transcribing them, mimicking them and finally
inventing his own variations makes this murky,
mysterious subject surprisingly lucid.
In the next chapter, Hancock describes how
he wrote his most famous tune, Watermelon
Man, after he had moved to New York in 1961 to
join Donald Byrds band. Instead of talking about
chord progressions and dotted notes, he talks
about the remembered rhythms of a horse-drawn
produce wagon in Chicago, the melody of the
vendors cries and how he translated them into
music. His later description of writing Maiden
Voyage is just as clear and intriguing. The tune
started out as a TV jingle, set to an improvised
rhythm from another songs coda and completed
by an unresolved, circular chord progression.
In the fifth chapter Hancock joins the Miles
Davis Quintet and struggles to decipher Davis
notoriously cryptic instructions. One night the
trumpeter tells his young pianist, Dont play the
butter notes. I had no idea what he meant,
Hancock writes, but I knew that if hed bothered
to say it, it was important. Butter could refer
to something easy, obvious. Harmonically, the
most obvious notes in a chord are the third and
the seventh. What if I left out the third and the
seventh? Just didnt play them at all? He had to
try out this new approach on the bandstand because the quintet didnt rehearse and after some
early stumbles came up with new, more open
voicings that changed the groups direction.
After leaving Davis in 1968, the keyboardist
founded the Herbie Hancock Sextet (aka Mwandishi), which recorded four albums. It was one
JAZZ THRIVES AT
PORTLAND
STATE
UNIVERSITY
INSIDE
FIND YOUR FIT207
SCHOOL LISTINGS!
Choosing the
Right School
Building Your
High School Portfolio
Careers off the
Bandstand
FEATURES
SCHOOL LISTINGS
80
104
122
148
172
East
South
Midwest
West
International
By Matt McCall
CHOOSING THE
RIGHT
SCHOOL
Matt Carraher (front row, far left) with his students from Central Dauphin High School
For graduate students and transferring students, the decisions arent as tough because they
have some experience upon which to base their
decisions. But for high school students, selecting a
school can be dauntingbut it neednt be.
There are so many factors, arent there? said
John Daversa, chair of studio music and jazz at
University of Miamis Frost School of Music.
Youre going to be there for four years, and your
life becomes this university life. So you need to
trust and value the teachers and the community
that youre around.
Its hard to get an idea of a school unless you
visit in person, Daversa said. Sometimes its
impractical, but its really the best. Talk to studentsbecause they know whats going on. They
know the everyday vibe and if theres inspiration
coming out of those walls, or if it feels like its more
clinical. [Find out] if they feel they have enough
time with their mentors. See if they feel vibrant or
feel like theyre just going through motions.
Matt Marvuglio, a dean of the professional
performance division at Berklee College of Music
in Boston, said students should use the schools
website as a resource before visiting. With a few
easy clicks, they could save themselves an expensive trip.
You can learn a lot about all these schools by
going online, Marvuglio said. Berklee has a
YouTube channelcheck that out. You can compare who you are, and what youre doing, to those
other students that you hear. Its good to visit the
school and sit in on a class to get an assessment of
some sort from students.
Daversa said all institutions have advantages
and unique characteristics. Some may be based
in an urban environmentwhere students are
encouraged to be a part of the local scenewhile
others are more secluded, allowing students plenty of time to practice individually and enjoy a
more rural setting.
There are colleges that aim to wildly flex the
creative muscles of their students, but there are
others with rigidly structured curricula focused
on jazz fundamentals. According to Daversa, both
types of schools have benefits and drawbacks.
In a place where creativity and imagination
are encouraged, the benefits are obvious, Daversa
said. Youre able to explore anything you dream
up. You go to your teachers and say, Hey, I want
to try and do this, and theyll figure out a way to
make it happeneven if it doesnt fit into your
regular curriculum. They might have to create a
class for you or make special arrangements. But
by putting all of your energy into that at a formative time, you might miss out on creating really solid fundamentals in jazz. That will certainly come back to you when youre out there in the
workforce.
But, Daversa added, there might be disadvantages to a traditional, regimented program, too:
The drawback is that if you really work on fundamentals and getting all of this stuff down, it
may dampen your imagination. I certainly dont
think you need to do one before the other. Really
it depends where you are in your psyche. There are
some schools that are kind of right in the middle.
Daversa emphasized that schools are rarely
completely on one end of the spectrum. The
majority of schools can be placed on a gradated
scale ranging from strict, conservatory-style programs to very free, customizable options.
Matt Carraher, band director at Central
Dauphin High School in Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania, said that when determining
what kind of school is best for any student, one
shouldnt underestimate the importance of size
and location. While the decision of where to enroll
is ultimately up to his students and their families,
Carraher offers advice during the decision-making process.
There are students who will thrive in a school
of 50,000, and there are students who will just be
totally lost in the dark, Carraher said. You have
to weigh the personality of the student and how
are they going to function and how good of an
education they are going to get. With a lot of the
OCTOBER 2014 DOWNBEAT 77
New York schools, its a totally different experience from the Boston schools, the New England
schools. Its a building downtown: Thats school.
Some students are expecting a college experience
with a [large] campus and football games and all
that stuff, but it doesnt really work that way. You
just have to figure out whats best for each individual student.
Marvuglio said that students should choose a
school based on their personal interests, rather
than trying to become something they arent just
so they can study at a certain school.
Youve got to be true to yourself about what
you want to do and what you like, Marvuglio
explained. A lot of people, when they audition
for Berklee, they think we want to hear a Charlie
Parker solo. Its like, No, put your best foot forward. This is your education and you have to
think of yourself as the consumer. This is your
chance as a consumer to say, Lets see if I can get
what I want out of this school, rather than, What
do I have to do to get in? If its not what you want
and youre trying to play to get in to the school, it
might be a disaster.
One important step that young students need
to take in order to end up at the right school is to
evaluate their skill level honestly. Are you cut out
for the competitive top-tier school, or is a smaller,
hidden gem a better fit?
For Carraher, the evaluation of skills is followed by a close look at the faculties of those
schools that interest the student.
Well give the kids a very real assessment of
their skillswere not trying to give them any
unrealistic expectations, Carraher said. We
[consider the question] Who is the teacher at the
school? For us, thats even more important than
the name of the school. We recently had a student
whose choice was between Manhattan School of
Music and Shenandoah [University], Carraher
said. The big thing for him was that he got a very
large scholarship at Shenandoah, but he didnt
get anything at Manhattan. Its, Do I weigh the
name of the school and the area, where I know Im
going to be playing all the time versus this [other
option]. For him, it came down to the teachers,
and there wasnt enough difference between the
teachers to say, Well, I have to go to Manhattan.
Daversa said students need to find one particular faculty member that they can trust to take on
a mentoring role, which he said is one of the most
fulfilling parts of any musicians career.
Its huge: Its someone you can look to, its
someone that you can always talk to about a particular situation, and know theyve been through
it before, Daversa said. You know they want the
best for you. You have respect for them and what
theyve accomplished in their career and as people, as human beings.
Carraher stressed that any professor filling
the mentorship position should be an active musician: You need somebody who has done enough
to be recognized, but at the same time is out there
doing it right now. Id much rather study with
someone who is playing every night than study
with someone who is a huge name but hasnt
played in 20 years.
The scene changes so fast, he added. For
students these days, if they want to make a career
78 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
all of the wonderful musicians over the years that Ive played with who went
to that school. I lived in New York prior to coming to Texas, and I cant tell
you how many people Ive played with who said, Oh yeah, I went to North
Texas. Its amazing.
Michael Pellera, chair of the jazz department at the New Orleans Center
for the Creative Arts, believes that no matter where students plan to study,
they should keep an open mind and try to play as many kinds of music as
they can. He believes that focusing on one kind of jazz is too limiting and
possibly detrimental to a students career.
I like to see people be well rounded, who know all the styles of jazz,
Pellera said. Certain kids who just want to play bebop say, Those guys at
New England Conservatory are playing all this esoteric, modern, classical-type jazz in 9/4 and 7/4, Pellera said. Well, you need to know that you
might get gigs like that.
For many students, the cost of the school is the single biggest factor.
Marvuglio urges students to fund their education in the most fiscally responsible way they caneven if it means staying at home for an extra year or
two. He said that students should investigate ways to make their schooling
affordable, and ask themselves these questions: Can I do things online and
then do two years at school? Do I have to do a whole four-year residency at
school? Do I want to get into a school where I get a music education and I have
$100,000 worth of debt when Im done?
Look at the kind of financial assistance programs the schools have, as
far as internships and work study, Marvuglio added. That could make a big
impact on how affordable the place is.
It can be a struggle to make ends meet as a jazz student, but any experienced educator will tell you that studying jazz offers more than just the
opportunity to develop musical skillsit offers important lessons about life.
For example, the ability to improvise is an incredibly valuable skill, both on
and off the bandstand.
There are people who want to learn about the world through music,
Marvuglio said. Can you deal with change and can you improvise?
Everybody, if they want to learn how to improvise and be good performers,
they have to do it through their life. You cant just go onstage and improvise if
you dont improvise throughout your life. When youre looking for a school,
you have to improvise as you go along. As you gain knowledge by looking at
schools, your frame of reference is going to change; its going to get broader.
Seaton believes that after students enroll in a program, there are definite
ways to tell whether or not they made the right decision. How do they know
theyre at the right place? Well, if they can notice [musical] development.
Sometimes thats hard because its day-to-day, and its not so immediate. Its
a long progression. Its not like winning the musical lotterylike today you
can play and yesterday you couldnt. Its a continual process, and that process
is very important. You will notice after a while that your skills are better. But
thats one thing about being a jazz musician for life: Its a continual process. It
DB
never ends. Its a wonderful thing.
OCTOBER 2014 DOWNBEAT 79
EAST
Berklee College of Music
Boston, Massachusetts
Student Body:
4,000.
Tuition:
$18,900/semester.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor Of Music,
Professional Diploma.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. financialaid@berklee.
edu, (617) 747-2274.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Castleton, Vermont
Student Body:
Approximately 2,000.
Tuition cost:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$9,768, out-of-state: $24,432.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
castleton.edu/music/index.htm.
Financial Aid:
castleton.edu/
financialaid/index.htm.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Rolling applications.
Contact:
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$4,191, out-of-state: $8,530.
Student Body:
Jazz Degrees:
12,000 students,
approximately 300 music
majors,150 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
montclair.edu/financial-aid.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1, or as determined by
freshman audition deadlines. Visit
montclair.edu/music and click
on Apply to the Cali School for
details and directions.
Contact:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
The Collective
School of Music
New York, New York
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Contact:
Scholarships:
Columbia University
Apply by:
July 1.
Contact:
Tuition:
$28,036.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Required.
Financial Aid:
Apply By:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
350 students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $37,256/year;
Graduate: $1,267/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Auditions:
Scholarships:
Apply By:
Financial Aid:
Need-based available.
Undergraduate: Feb. 6;
Graduate: April 1.
Contact:
Scholarships:
None.
Apply by:
Contact:
Student Body:
Approximately 50.
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate:$46,150;
Graduate: $1,425.
Tuition:
$10,500/semester
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music,Master of
Music, Doctorate of Music.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Faculty:
Contact:
Tuition:
98 instructors.
Alumni:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
(631) 656-2164,
[email protected].
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Aid:
Available. financialaid.gmu.edu.
Scholarships:
Merit-based available,
(703) 993-1380.
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
hartford.edu/hartt.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 5.
Contact:
Howard University
Washington, D.C.
Student Body:
Approximately 9,000.
Tuition:
$19,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
coas.howard.edu/music.
Financial Aid:
howard.edu
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Ithaca College
School of Music
Ithaca, New York
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, $39,532/semester.
Jazz Degrees:
$41,190.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
HIROYUKI ITO
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
690.
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
peabody.jhu.edu/conservatory/
admissions/auditions.
Financial Aid:
peabody.jhu.edu/finaid,
(410) 234-4900,
[email protected].
Scholarships:
peabody.jhu.edu/finaid,
(410) 234-4900,
[email protected].
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact Name:
40.
Tuition:
$39,190.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Prescreening required.
Live auditions in March.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Need-based available.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Kutztown University
Auditions:
Kutztown, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
9,000.
Financial Aid:
Tuition:
Scholarships:
Jazz Degrees:
Available. liu.edu/SFS/
Tuition/Tuition.
Apply by:
Faculty:
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
www2.kutztown.edu/FinancialAid.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
$16,509.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Feb. 27March 6.
Financial Aid:
Available. msmnyc.edu.
Scholarships:
Available. msmnyc.edu.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Tuition:
$37,250.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
8,633.
Tuition:
750.
Tuition:
$40,950.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Performance,
Jazz Composition.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 1.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Student Body:
400.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Scholarships:
Faculty:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Student Body:
8,368.
Apply by:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$3,852.45, out-of-state:
$9,712.50 per semester.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Yes.
Financial aid:
Available. njcu.edu/Financing_Your_
Education.aspx.
Scholarships:
njcu.edu/NJCU_Scholarships.aspx.
Apply by:
April 1.
Contact:
Paul Robertson,
[email protected].
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $44,848;
Graduate: $1,479/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Auditions:
In-person undergraduate
auditions, online or video
auditions for undergraduate
and graduate programs.
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Financial Aid:
(212) 998-4444,
[email protected].
Scholarships:
Office of Undergraduate
Admissions, (212) 998-4500;
Office of Graduate Admissions,
(212) 998-5030.
Apply by:
Student Body:
250.
Tuition:
$40,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
52.
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey
Student Body:
40 jazz students
Tuition:
$58,965.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Supplemental CD insupport
of application.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 1.
Contact:
Purchase College
Purchase, New York
Student Body:
80 (60 undergrad).
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music,
Master of Music.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
purchase.edu/Departments/
SUBSCRIBE
DownBeat.com
877-904-JAZZ
OCTOBER 2014 DOWNBEAT 93
Admissions/ApplicationInstructions/
actingaudition.aspx.
Financial Aid:
purchase.edu/financialservices.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Auditions:
Emailprofessor Mossman at
[email protected].
Financial aid:
FAFSA\Work-Study opportunity,
Admissions Office, 718-997-5200.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Approximately 75 students.
Tuition cost:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$385/credit hour,
out-of-state: $745/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Rowan University
Glassboro, New Jersey
Student Body:
25 students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$6,308, out-of-state: $8,515.
Jazz Degrees:
Undergraduate in Jazz
Performance, Undergraduate in
Education with a Jazz Emphasis
and Graduate in Jazz Performance.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
rowan.edu/colleges/cpa/
music/auditions/.
Aid:
rowan.edu/provost/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
edu or pbarbarite@mason
gross.rutgers.edu.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
gradstudy.rutgers.edu.
Scholarships:
Scholarships and
teaching positions.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact Jennifer Nyeste,
[email protected].
Contact:
Shepherd University
Tuition:
In-state: $7,893,
out-of-state: $12,685.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
25 jazz students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate in-state:
$600/credit; out-of-state:
$900/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Alumni:
shepherd.edu/musicweb/audition_
requirements.html.
Financial Aid:
Available. shepherd.edu/faoweb/.
Jazz Bands:
Enrollment in bands
at nearby schools.
Scholarships:
Auditions:
No in-person auditions.
MP3s required.
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
Financial Aid:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Finacial Aid:
newpaltz.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
newpaltz.edu/financialaid/
foundation.html.
Apply by:
Contact:
7080 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Alumni:
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Combos.
Auditions:
skidmore.edu/summer
jazz/apply.php.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Student Body:
Apply by:
March 15.
Tuition:
Contact:
newpaltz.edu/student_
accounts/tuition.cfm.
Faculty:
SUNY Fredonia
Fredonia, New York
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
Jazz Degrees:
Degrees:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Required. On-campus
admission dates: Dec. 13, Jan. 24,
Feb. 7, March 14. potsdam.edu/
academics/Crane/admissions.
Financial Aid:
In-state: $6,170,
out-of-state: $15,320.
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
temple.edu/boyer/admissions/
index.asp.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Auditions:
vpa.syr.edu/prospective-students.
potsdam.edu.
Financial Aid:
Contact:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
$40,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Apply by:
Student Body:
Faculty:
Scholarships:
Alumni:
Available.
Syracuse University,
Setnor School of Music
Temple University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
Contact:
Towson University
Towson, Maryland
Student Body:
24,000.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$3,002, out-of-state: $8,841.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
new.towson.edu/music/.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
towson.edu/main/admissions/
applynow.asp.
Contact:
Tuition:
$38,410.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
uarts.edu/admissions/collegeperforming-arts-auditionrequirements#music.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Connecticut
Storrs, Connecticut
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
financialaid.uconn.edu.
Scholarships:
admissions.uconn.edu/content/scholarships.
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Tuition:
Approximately $7,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
uma.edu/jazz.
Financial Aid:
Available. [email protected].
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$9,161, out-of-state: $28,348.
OCTOBER 2014 DOWNBEAT 99
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of
Massachusetts, Amherst
Amherst, Massachusetts
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of
Massachusetts at Lowell
Lowell, Massachusetts
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$12,097, out-of-state: $26,146.
Jazz Degrees:
Auditions:
westfield.ma.edu/dept/music/
auditioninfo.htm.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact Name:
Faculty:
15 full-time, 45 adjunct.
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Some available.
Auditions:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Financial Aid:
uml.edu/financialaid.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 15.
Contact:
University of Pittsburgh
Western Connecticut
State University
Danbury, Connecticut
Student Body:
Approximately 5,000
undergraduates,215 music
majors, 30 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
28,769.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Nathan Davis.
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
music.pitt.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Scholarships:
Alumni:
Apply by:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Go to uri.edu/music.
Contact:
Available. Go to uri.edu/es/
students/finance/info.html.
Financial Aid:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 1, 2015.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Scholarships:
Available. Merit-based.
Apply by:
Contact:
5,368 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Approximately 14,000.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
SOUTH
Belmont University
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Commercial Music.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
(615) 460-6403.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
GLEN ELLMAN
Nashville, Tennessee
Visit ecu.edu/admissions.
Contact:
Christopher Ulffers,
Associate Director, (252) 328-6851,
[email protected].
Florida International
University
Student Body:
Tuition:
fiu.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Aug. 1.
Jazz Degrees:
music.fiu.edu or
[email protected].
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
fiu.edu.
Contact:
ecu.edu/financial.
Student Body:
Apply by:
Financial aid:
Faculty:
Furman University
music.fiu.edu/programs/
jazz/index.html.
Tuition:
Auditions:
$44,288.
Available.
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Faculty:
Apply by:
Jazz Degrees:
Available, contact
[email protected]
or (850) 644-6102.
Tuition:
Student Body:
Jazz Bands:
Scholarships:
Miami, Florida
8,995 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Marcus Roberts.
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
gru.edu/finaid/.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
gru.edu/admissions/.
Contact:
Jacksonville University
Student Body:
Approximately 3,500.
Tuition:
$31,370.
Jazz Degrees:
Atlanta, Georgia
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jacksonville, Florida
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Financial Aid:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
http://tiny.cc/
GSUSOM_UGRequirements.
Financial Aid:
tiny.cc/GSUSOM_UGRe.
Scholarships:
tiny.cc/GSUSOM_Scholarships.
Apply by:
Open enrollment.
Apply by:
admissions.gsu.edu/
how-do-i-apply/deadlines/.
Contact:
Contact:
Scholarships:
Up to full-tuition discounting
available, merit and talent
combined. (904) 256-7000.
Loyola UniversityNew
Orleans
New Orleans, Louisiana
Miami-Dade College,
Wolfson Campus
Miami, Florida
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Visit mdc.edu/wolfson.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Middle Tennessee
State University
Murfreesboro, Tennessee
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
(919) 530-7214,
[email protected].
Scholarships:
Applications:
Contact:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Auditions:
Visit artscience.nku.edu/
departments/music.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Financial Aid:
July 1.
Contact:
25,939.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Shenandoah Conservatory
Winchester, Virginia
Student Body:
4,003 students.
Tuition:
$28,298.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
su.edu.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Tuition:
$36,600.
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Faculty:
Joe Eckert, Joey Carter, Brian West, Tom Burchill, Kyp Green.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. tcu.edu.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 15.
Contact:
Tuition cost:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Financial Aid:
em.tsu.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
em.tsu.edu/financialaid/
scholarships/.
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
finaid.txstate.edu/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
June.
Contact:
Student Body:
Approximately 33,000.
Tuition:
departments/jazz-studies/
jazz-audition-info/.
out-of-state: $16,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Auditions:
music.ttu.edu.
Financial Aid:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Scholarships:
Available.
Contact:
Apply by:
Auditions in February.
Chris Kozak,[email protected],
(205) 348-6333.
Contact:
music.ttu.edu.
Tulane University
New Orleans, Louisiana
Student Body:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Eight ensembles.
Auditions:
Visitmusic.cah.ucf.edu/
admissionauditions.php.
Financial Aid:
Available. finaid.ucf.edu/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
6,500 undergraduates.
Tuition:
$46,930.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. [email protected].
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Andrew Farrier,
[email protected].
University of Alabama
University of Central
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$12,030 including fees, out-of-state,
$18,905 including fees.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Merit-based available.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 1.
Contact:
Auditions:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Georgia,
Hodgson School of Music
Athens, Georgia
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Faculty:
David DAngelo.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
music.uga.edu.
Financial Aid:
osfa.uga.edu/index.html.
Scholarships:
admissions.uga.edu/article/
scholarships-at-uga.html.
Apply by:
Contact:
David DAngelo,
[email protected].
University of Louisville,
Jamey Aebersold
Jazz Studies Program
Student Body:
Approximately 24,000.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Lexington, Kentucky
Auditions:
Student Body:
25,000 total.
Financial Aid:
louisville.edu/financialaid.
Tuition:
Scholarships:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Contact:
University of Memphis,
Scheidt School of Music
Memphis, Tennessee
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
memphis.edu/music/future/
auditionreq.php.
Financial Aid:
memphis.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
memphis.edu/scholarships/.
Contact:
Louisville, Kentucky
University of Kentucky
Faculty:
Apply by:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Paul Bollenback,Mark
Egan,Danny Gottlieb,Bruce
Hornsby, Jonathan Kreisberg.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Contact:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$23,416, out-of-state: $45,806.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Office of Undergraduate
Scholarships and Financial Aid;
Department of Music Scholarship
Committee (Brent Wissick, Chair).
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
finaid.uno.edu/.
Apply by:
admissions.uno.edu/default.cfm.
Contact:
(504) 280-6381.
University of North
Carolina at Greensboro,
Miles Davis Jazz
Studies Program
Greensboro, North Carolina
Student Body:
3,700 total.
Tuition:
In-state: $3,120.50,
out-of-state: $10,031.50
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Summer/spring/fall applications
at music.unca.edu/auditions.
Financial Aid:
Available. music.unca.edu.
Scholarships:
Available. music.unca.edu.
Apply by:
March 1.
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in
Jazz Performance.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
JEAN-PHILIPPE CYPRS
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
uncw.edu/music/admissions/
admissions-audition.html.
Financial Aid:
Denton, Texas
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 24.
Contact:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
music.arts.usf.edu.
Contact:
music.arts.usf.edu.
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. finaid.utk.edu/
apply/costs.shtml.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Alumni:
Scholarships:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Apply by:
Contact:
Contact:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Apply by:
music.arts.usf.edu.
Apply by:
Scholarships:
Student Body:
Alumni:
16,252 total.
Scholarships:
Jazz Bands:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Student Body:
Financial Aid:
University of
Texas at Arlington
Student Body:
Tuition:
Student body:
38,000 total.
Jazz Degrees:
Tuition:
Approximately $4,500
Arlington, Texas
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
In-state: $12,000,out-of-state:
$29,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
uta.edu/music/jazz.
Financial aid:
uta.edu.
Scholarships:
uta.edu/music/jazz.
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
Student Body:
30,000 total.
Tuition:
tuition.wvu.edu/.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
1013 ensembles.
Auditions:
In-person or electronically.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Merit-based available.
Apply by:
Aug. 15.
Contact:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
January 2015
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Student Body:
3,121.
Undergraduate: $19,100.
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Faculty:
Merit-based. Graduate
Assistantships and Fellowships
available. music.utexas.edu.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 15.
Contact:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Virginia Commonwealth
University
Richmond, Virginia
Tuition:
Apply by:
Student Body:
25 students.
By Matt McCall
PORTFOLIO
PREP
Tips to help high school
students prepare for
collegiate jazz studies
tudents need more than just desire to study at the top jazz schools in the
country. For high school students who want to pursue a career as a jazz
musician, the time to start preparing for the college audition process was
yesterday, and the time to catch up is now.
To be an attractive candidate for admittance, prospective students
need to show that they are active jazz musicians who are willing to go the extra mile.
Colleges will want to know if a candidate has played gigs, put a band together, joined
a community orchestra or participated in statewide events. By the time they apply for
college, high school students should already be seasoned performers.
Experts in the fieldfrom high school band directors to the department chairs of
celebrated universitiesagree that frequently practicing and playing with peers,
building a repertoire, working with a private instructor and dropping your ego are
important for any young player. Most importantly though, high school students need
to learn how to listen carefully and analytically.
DANIELLE PHAN
MIDWEST
Augustana College
Rock Island, Illinois
Student Body:
2,500 students.
Tuition:
$37,256.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz minor.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Rolling.
Contact:
Margaret Ellis,
[email protected].
Benedictine University
Lisle, Illinois
Student Body:
Visit ben.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Visit ben.edu.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Visit ben.edu.
Contact:
Visit ben.edu.
Bowling Green
State University
Bowling Green, Ohio
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$18,850, out-of-state:
$26,158; graduate,
in-state: $9,160,
out-of-state: $14,650.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Student Body:
April 6 (undergraduate).
Tuition:
$30,000/year.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
capital.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
capital.edu/scholarships/.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Susanna Mayo,
[email protected].
15 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
available. bgsu.edu/music.
Apply by:
Butler University
Indianapolis, Indiana
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, $34,750.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Auditions:
bgsu.edu/music.
Financial Aid:
Available. bgsu.edu/music.
Scholarships:
Jazz Band:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
bgsu.edu/colleges/music/directory/.
Tim Hagans, Rich Perry.
4,270 undergraduates,
200 music students.
Apply by:
Contact:
Capital University
Columbus, Ohio
3,000 total.
2,799 students.
Tuition:
$23,680.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts.
Faculty:
Mark Davis.
Jazz Bands:
One combo.
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available, merit-based.
Apply by:
No application deadline.
Contact:
Auditions:
Tuition:
$22,884.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Aid:
Performance Ensemble.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Apply by:
May 1.
Contact:
Cuyahoga
Community College
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
June 30.
Contact:
DePaul University
Chicago, Illinois
Student Body:
390.
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Cleveland, Ohio
Student Body:
Tuition:
tri-c.edu.
Alumni:
Rudresh Mahanthappa,
Orbert Davis, Brian Culbertson,
Matt Ulery.
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Elmhurst College
Elmhurst, Illinois
Student Body:
2,400 total.
Tuition:
$33,700.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Scheduled dates or by
appointment.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Talent-based available.
Apply by:
May 1.
Contact:
Indiana University
Jacobs School of Music
Bloomington, Indiana
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Aid:
Scholarships:
Nov. 1, undergraduate;
Dec. 1, graduate.
Contact:
75 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Audition:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
April 15.
Contact:
Lawrence University
Appleton, Wisconsin
Student Body:
1,425 total.
Tuition:
$40,926.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Financial aid:
lawrence.edu/info/offices/
financial-aid.
Scholarships:
lawrence.edu/admissions
/afford/scholarships.
Apply by:
lawrence.edu/admissions
/apply/conservatory.
Contact:
McNally Smith
College of Music
St. Paul, Minnesota
Student Body:
Financial Aid:
$24,310.
Jazz Degrees:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
See music.msu.edu/admissions
Financial Aid:
Available. admissions@music.
msu.edu.
Scholarships:
Available. admissions@music.
msu.edu.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
600 total.
Tuition:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Millikin University
Decatur, Illinois
Student Body:
600 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$13,800, out-of-state: $35,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Approximately 2,300.
Tuition:
$28,644.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
millikin.edu/financialaid/Pages/
default.aspx.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
June 1.
Contact:
Minnesota State
University Moorhead
Moorhead, Minnesota
Student Body:
Tuition:
mnstate.edu/admissions/
tuitionandfees.aspx.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Band:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
mnstate.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
mnstate.edu/financialaid/
scholarships/ or mnstate.edu/
music/talentscholarships.
Apply by:
mnstate.edu/admissions/.
Contact:
2,800 undergraduate
and 250 graduate.
Tuition:
$32,433.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Rolling admission.
Contact:
Office of Admission,
[email protected].
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$11,800, out-of-state: $21,000.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 21.
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois
Student body:
Tuition Cost:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial aid:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Oberlin College
Oberlin, Ohio
Student Body:
Tuition:
$61,788
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Performance,
Jazz Composition.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Contact:
Email [email protected],
(800) 693-3173.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$10,010, out-of-state: $25,726.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Financial Aid:
ohio.edu/finearts/music.
Scholarships:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Priority application
deadline: Jan. 15.
Contact:
Financial Aid:
sfa.osu.edu.
Apply by:
Feb. 1.
Scholarships:
Contact:
Student Body:
500 total.
Tuition:
$34,115.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Degrees:
Auditions:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Apply by:
Contact:
Ohio University
Athens, Ohio
Student Body:
Tuition:
Approximately $10,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Minor in jazz.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
(507) 457-1437.
Scholarships:
smumn.edu/music.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Southern Illinois
University, Edwardsville
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
uakron.edu/finaid.
Edwardsville, Illinois
Student Body:
14,000 students.
Scholarships:
uakron.edu/finaid.
Tuition:
$4,625.45/semester (in-state),
$9,836.45/semester (out-of-state).
Apply by:
Jazz Degrees:
Contact:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$213.15/hour, out-of-state:
$426.30/hour;Graduate, instate: $276.25/hour, out-ofstate: $552/hour.
Visit siue/financialaid or
call (618) 650-3880.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music,
Jazz-Commercial Music.
Scholarships:
Faculty:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Aid:
Scholarships:
Northfield, Minnesota
Student Body:
3,100 total.
Tuition:
$41,700.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Alumni:
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
wp.stolaf.edu/musicadm/.
Financial Aid:
wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
wp.stolaf.edu/musicadm/.
Apply by:
Dec. 15.
University of
Cincinnati College,
Conservatory of Music
Contact:
Student Body:
1,200.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$12,206, out-of-state: $27,540.
University of Akron
Akron, Ohio
Student Body:
27,000 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$9,920, out-of-state: $18,417.
Alumni:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Rick VanMatre.
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Combos.
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
ccm.uc.edu/admissions/
financial_aid.html.
Scholarships:
Available. Undergraduate
academic and merit-based
scholarships. Graduate merit-based
scholarships and assistantships.
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Financial Aid:
uiowa.edu/financial-aid.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Urbana-Champaign, Illinois
Student Body:
Tuition:
osfa.uiuc.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Undergraduate, go.illinois.edu/
musicundergrad; Graduate,go.
illinois.edu/musicgrad.
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
music.ku.edu/applyaudition.
Financial Aid:
Available. affordability.ku.edu.
Financial Aid:
Available. osfa.uiuc.edu.
Scholarships:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Iowa
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan
30,000 students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$8,061, out-of-state: $26,931.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
music.umich.edu/
prospective_students/
admissions/ug/auditions.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Thomas Crespo,
[email protected].
University of Missouri
at Columbia
Columbia, Missouri
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, 14 hours
in-state: $10,286, 14 hours
out-of-state: $24,312; Graduate,
8 hours in-state: $6,548, 8 hours
out-of-state: $15,554.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
music.missouri.edu
for further information.
Financial Aid:
financialaid.missouri.edu.
Scholarships:
financialaid.missouri.edu.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
University of Missouri,
Kansas City
Kansas City, Missouri
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$10,000, out-of-state: $23,000.
Amounts are approximate.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Student Body:
unomaha.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Karrin Allyson.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
unomaha.edu/music/audition.php
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Peter Madsen,
[email protected].
Auditions:
See conservatory.umkc.edu.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
University of Nebraska
Lincoln, Glenn Korff
School of Music
Approximately 12,000,
approximately 300 music students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$6,648, out-of-state: $16,546;
Graduate, in-state: $7,912,
out-of-state: $17,906.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
uni.edu/music/prospective_
students/index.html.
Financial Aid:
uni.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Student body:
350 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
University of Nebraska
at Omaha
Omaha, Nebraska
Christopher Merz,
(319) 273-3077, [email protected].
University of Toledo
///
Contact Name:
1934-2013
///
Undergraduate, in-state:
Jan. 15; out-of-state: May 1;
Graduate: Jan. 15.
Apply by:
th
ANNUAL
///
Contact:
Scholarships, Admissions:
Janet Sievert, (402) 472-6830,
[email protected].
78
///
Apply by:
15,000.
Tuition:
Toledo, Ohio
DECEMBER 2013
Student Body:
35 Jazz majors/minors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$10,300, out-of-state: $15,300.
Jazz Degrees:
DOWNBEAT.COM
20 DOWNBEAT
U.K. 3.50
DECEMBER 2013
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Open enrollment.
Contact:
Gunnar Mossblad,
[email protected].
University of
Wisconsin at Eau Claire
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
Student Body:
10,902 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$8750, out-of-state: $16,322.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Emphasis.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
uwec.edu/Mus-The/jazzstudies/
aboutjazz.htm.
Financial Aid:
Available. uwec.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
University of
Wisconsin at Green Bay
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts
with Jazz Emphasis.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
May 15.
Contact:
University of
Wisconsin at Madison
Madison, Wisconsin
Student Body:
42,000 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, Wisconsin
resident: $10,609, Minnesota
resident: $13,862,
out-of-state: $26,863.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
finaid.wisc.edu.
Scholarships:
Merit-based scholarships
available, info atmusic.wisc.edu/
undergrad/scholarships.
Apply by:
Contact:
University of
Wisconsin at Milwaukee
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Student Body:
300 undergraduate
music students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, Wisconsin
resident: $9,438, Minnesota
resident: $13,068,
out-of-state: $19,166.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Student Body:
Approximately 300.
Tuition:
reg.wayne.edu/students/
tuition-info.php.
Auditions:
Jazz Degrees:
Financial Aid:
uwm.edu.
Scholarships:
Scholarship information
given at time of audition.
Faculty:
Apply by:
uwm.edu.
Contact:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. finaid.wayne.edu.
Scholarships:
Merit-based available.
wayne.edu/scholarships/.
Apply by:
Contact:
Danny DeRose,
[email protected].
Jazz Bands:
University of Wisconsin
at Oshkosh
Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$7,360, out-of-state: $14,934.
Amounts are approximate.
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
(920) 424-3377.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 1.
Contact:
Webster University
St. Louis, Missouri
Student Body:
3,002 total.
Tuition:
$24,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Detroit, Michigan
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
April 1.
Contact:
Student Body:
9,873 undergraduates,
1,843 graduates.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $280.17/hour;
graduate: $308.96/hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
admission_info.php.
Apply by:
Financial Aid:
Contact:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Western Michigan
University
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Student Body:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
wmich.edu/jazz/
audition-information/.
Financial Aid:
Julie Nemire,
[email protected].
Scholarships:
13,000 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$8,087, out-of-state: $14,087.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Open admission.
Contact:
Kent Engelhardt,
[email protected].
By James Hale
PSU EXPANDS
HORIZONS
PSU
Darrell Grant
PSU
George Colligan
MARK SHELDON
WEST
Tuition:
$46/hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
August.
Contact:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$10,002, out-of-state: $23,654.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Available. students.asu.edu/
financialaid.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Student Body:
Student Body:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
scholarships.byu.edu.
Scholarships:
scholarships.byu.edu.
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
music.byu.edu.
Brigham Young
University Idaho
Rexbury, Idaho
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
byui.edu/music/
ensemble-auditions/
instrumental/jazz.
Financial Aid:
Available. byui.edu/financial-aid.
Scholarships:
Available. byui.edu/financial-aid/
scholarships.
Apply by:
byui.edu/admissions/
what-type-of-applicant-am-i/
new-freshman/step-2-learn-how
to-apply/application-deadlines.
Contact:
byui.edu/music/emphases/jazz.
5.
Tuition cost:
None.
Jazz Degrees:
Certificate.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Live auditions.
Student Body:
15,625.
Financial Aid:
None.
Tuition cost:
byui.edu/admissions/costs.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Feb. 16.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
California Institute
of the Arts (CalArts)
Valencia, California
Contact:
California Jazz
Conservatory
California State
University, East Bay
Hayward, California
Berkeley, California
Student Body:
45 jazz majors.
Student body:
Tuition:
$41,700.
Student Body:
60 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Tuition:
$525/hour, full-time;
$550/hour, part-time.
Jazz degrees:
Faculty:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
csueastbay.edu/
prospective/cost-and-financial-aid/
financial-aid/.
Scholarships:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
By appointment year-round.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available. calarts.edu/financial-aid.
Apply by:
June 30.
Apply by:
Contact:
California State
University Fullerton
Fullerton, California
Financial Aid:
Available. csulb.edu/depts/
enrollment/financial_aid/.
Scholarships:
34,168.
Tuition cost:
Undergraduate, in-state:
$2,736/semester,
out-of-state: $372/hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Student Body:
Apply by:
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $6,452;
Graduate: $7,718.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in
PerformanceJazz Studies.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Financial Aid:
fullerton.edu/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
fullerton.edu/financialaid/scholar/
scholarships.default.htm.
Apply by:
November.
Contact:
Chuck Tumlinson,
(657) 278-5523; fullerton.edu.
Auditions:
California State
University at Northridge
Northridge, California
Student Body:
70
Tuition:
csun.edu/stufin/tuition.
Jazz Degrees:
Undergraduate performance.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
csunjazz.com.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Nov. 30.
Contact:
California State
University at Los Angeles
Tuition:
$35,400.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Online pre-screening
submission, cornish.edu/
admission/review/music.
Financial Aid:
Available. [email protected].
Tuition:
web.calstatela.edu/univ/
finaid/COA.php.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
calstatela.edu/academic/
musictheatredance/audition.php,
(323)-343-4060. DVDs/CDs
acceptable.
Financial Aid:
calstatela.edu/univ/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Deadline:
calstatela.edu/student/
prospect.htm.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Available. [email protected].
Apply by:
Contact:
(800) 726-2787,
[email protected].
Eastern Washington
University
Cheney, Washington
Student Body:
12,791 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate,
in-state:$7,961,WUE: $11,334,
out-of-state: $19,931; Graduate:
$9,696 (waivers and stipends
are available).
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Sacramento, California
Student Body:
Tuition:
$3,301 undergraduate;
$3,934 graduate.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Auditions:
csus.edu/music/jazz.
Financial Aid:
Financial Aid:
ewu.edu/admissions/
financial-aid.xml.
Scholarships:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
November.
Contact:
Apply by:
Mid-February.
Contact:
Fullerton College
Fullerton, California
Student Body:
22,562 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
None.
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
financialaid.fullcoll.edu.
Scholarships:
fullcollfoundation.org.
Apply by:
fullcoll.edu.
Contact:
(714) 992-7000.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
pdx.edu/the-arts/sites/www.
pdx.edu.the-arts/files/Jazz%20
Audition%20Requirements.pdf.
Financial Aid:
Available. pdx.edu/finaid/home.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Saddleback College
Mission Viejo, California
Student Body:
24,793 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial aid:
Scholarships:
saddleback.edu/fao/
scholarship-information.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Apply by:
Nov. 30.
Contact:
Contact:
32,000 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Apply by:
Contact:
Tuition:
50 faculty members.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Nov. 30.
Contact:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
30,000 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Beginning of semester.
Financial Aid:
(707) 527-4471;
Fax: (707) 527-4499.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Aug. 17.
Contact:
NEW
!
DRUM SCHOOL
Student Body:
2,000 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Student Body:
Faculty:
Tuition cost:
$13,200.
Alumni:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
sonoma.edu/music/.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in
EthnomusicologyJazz Studies
Concentration, Performance and
Composition, Master of Music in
Jazz via Thelonious Monk
Institute of Jazz.
Jazz Bands:
Aid:
sonoma.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
sonoma.edu/music/.
Apply by:
November.
Contact:
Stanford University
Stanford, California
NOVEMBER 2013
DOWNBEAT.COM
U.K. 3.50
CHIEF MESSENGER
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $41,250.
Jazz Degrees:
85 undergraduate
Ethnomusicology majors,
40 undergraduate students
in Jazz Studies.
IV (instrumental, directed by
Charles Owens), Combo V
(instrumental, directed by Clayton
Cameron), Combo VI (jazz fusion,
directed by George Bohanon),
Combo VII (instrumental, directed
by Charley Harrison).
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. fao.ucla.edu/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Nov. 30.
Contact:
University of
Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, Colorado
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
colorado.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
University of
Colorado at Denver
Denver, Colorado
Student Body:
450 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $6,768,
out-of-state: $20,891.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Science in
Performance.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
(303) 556-2400.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Denver,
Lamont School of Music
Denver, Colorado
Student body:
11,656 total.
Tuition:
$40,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Art in
Instrumental Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
University of
Nevada, Las Vegas
BRET TATE
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
January 2015.
Contact:
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Jazz Degrees:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
uidaho.edu/financialaid.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Montana
Missoula, Montana
Student Body:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
unlv.edu.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Feb. 1.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
25 undergraduate, 10 graduate.
Tuition:
Financial aid:
unr.edu/financial-aid.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
University of
Northern Colorado
Greeley, Colorado
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
arts.unco.edu/ORunco.edu/
arts/music/forms/default.html.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Oregon
Eugene, Oregon
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Apply by:
Financial Aid:
Available. financialaid.
uoregon.edu.
Scholarships:
15.
Tuition:
$40,822.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Dave Brubeck.
Scholarships:
Jazz Bands:
Apply by:
Feb. 13.
Auditions:
Contact:
Financial Aid:
University of Southern
California, Thornton
School of Music
Los Angeles, California
Student Body:
Tuition:
Undergraduate, approximately
$46,000; Masters and Doctoral,
approximately $25,000; Graduate,
approximately $12,500.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Jan. 24.
Financial Aid:
Need-based available.
(213) 740-1111.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available. financialaid.utah.edu.
Scholarships:
Available. music.utah.edu/admissions/scholarships.php.
Apply by:
Contact:
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Cuong Vu, Luke Bergman, Tom Collier, Bill Frisell, Ted Poor,
Marc Seales, Huck Hodge, Richard Karpen, Fred Radke,
Greg Sinibaldi.
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
washington.edu/students/osfa/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
25,000 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Available. usu.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Faculty:
Alumni:
Jon Gudmundson,
(435) 797-3003, jon.
[email protected].
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 31.
Contact:
19,446 total.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
BELMONT UNIVERSITY
Bachelor of Music
By James Hale
CAREERS
OFF THE
BANDSTAND
omething to fall back on. Those five words are spoken at one
time or another in many households occupied by a high school
senior who has enough talent to consider earning a music degree.
Faced with a child determined to earn a degree in music, it is
in every parents DNA to suggest a more practical alternative
and utter those five words.
Its a really common thing to suggest that studying anything but music would
give your kid a safety net, even if they have their heart set on being a musician, said
Jody Espina, president of JodyJazz, the Savannah, Georgia-based saxophone mouthpiece manufacturer.
Espina was one of those single-minded kids with nothing but performing on his
mind before he headed to the University of South Florida and then on to the Berklee
College of Music in the early 1980s. It was all about playing for me. I knew I didnt
want to be a band director, but I was open to anything else.
CAPRIECE BATCHELOR
JAMES KORN
JOE DARWAL
INTERNATIONAL
Box Hill Institute
Melbourne, Australia
Student Body:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
bhtafe.edu.au.
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
bhtafe.edu.au/students/
scholarships/.
Financial Aid:
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Scholarships:
Contact:
capilanou.ca/services/financial/
financial/applications-online.
Apply by:
April 30.
Contact:
Camosun College
CREDIT
Tuition:
Auditions:
$18,689 total.
Tuition:
camosun.ca/learn/programs/jazzstudies/what-it-costs.html.
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
camosun.ca/learn/programs/
jazz-studies/.
Auditions:
camosun.ca/learn/programs/
jazz-studies/.
Financial Aid:
Available. camosun.ca/services/
financialaid/.
Scholarships:
Available. camosun.ca/services/
financialaid/bursaries.html.
Student Body:
Tuition:
camosun.ca/learn/future-student/.
Contact:
camosun.ca.
Faculty:
ahk.nl/en/conservatorium/
teachers/.
Jazz Bands:
Various settings.
Auditions:
ahk.nl/en/conservatorium/
application/application-andadmission/entrance-examination/.
Student Body:
Financial Aid:
Tuition:
Approximately $6,000.
Apply by:
March 15.
Jazz Degrees:
Contact:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
54 ensembles.
Auditions:
humber.ca/scapa/programs/
music-degree/auditions.
Financial Aid:
(416) 675-5000.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
February.
Contact:
Apply by:
Alumni:
Bachelor of Music
Faculty:
Conservatorium
van Amsterdam
Jazz Degrees:
Capilano University
Jazz Degrees:
Humber College
Tuition:
Tuition:
$12,400.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
See jazz.qld.edu.au.
Financial Aid:
Apply by:
January 2015.
Contact:
Student Body:
Tuition cost:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
lcm.ac.uk/courses/
Undergraduate/Jazz.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Contact:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
Faculty:
Auditions:
On-campus auditions.
International students may
send CDs, DVDs or cassettes.
Financial Aid:
None.
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
lcm.ac.uk/courses/how-to-apply/
undergraduate.
Tuition:
Canadians: $10,000,
International: $21,000.
Financial Aid:
None.
Jazz Degrees:
Scholarships:
None.
Apply By:
lcm.ac.uk/courses/
how-to-apply.
Contact:
lcm.ac.uk.
MacEwan University
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 15
Contact:
120 students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Auditions:
480 students.
Puerto Rico
Conservatory of Music
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Dec. 8.
Contact:
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
May 1.
Contact:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Tuition:
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Five offered.
Jazz Bands:
Five to nine.
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available. xavier.edu/
undergraduate-admission/
scholarships/academic.cfm.
Alumni:
Jazz Bands:
Apply by:
May 1.
Financial Aid:
Contact:
Scholarships:
Merit-based available.
Apply by:
Oct. 1.
Contacts:
Selkirk College
90 students.
Tuition:
$2,500/semester.
Jazz Degrees:
Performance, Production,
Song Writing, Composition,
Directed Studies.
Faculty:
selkirk.ca/program/music/faculty.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
https://selkirk.ca/program/music.
Financial Aid:
https://selkirk.ca/program/music.
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Scholarships:
https://selkirk.ca/program/music.
Apply by:
https://selkirk.ca/program/music.
Auditions:
nzsm.ac.nz/study-here/audition.
Contact:
Financial aid:
Senzoku Gakuen
College of Music
Tuition:
995,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
senzoku.ac.jp/music/en/.
Scholarships:
Application:
Admissions, [email protected].
Contact:
Admissions, [email protected].
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Contact:
Universidad San
Francisco de Quito
Quito, Ecuador
Student Body:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Auditions:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
May 15.
Contact:
University of Manitoba,
Desautels Faculty of Music
Apply by:
See music.utoronto.ca/site5.aspx.
Jazz Degrees:
Contact:
Faculty:
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
Scholarships:
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Tuition:
80.
$137/credit hour, $600
extra for private lessons.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
Faculty:
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Bands:
51,394 total.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, local:
$3,313$4,200, international:
$3,663$4,800.
Alumni:
Auditions:
Financial Aid:
www2.viu.ca/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
Various scholarships
based on GPA, performance.
Apply by:
Aug. 15.
Contact:
Jazz Degrees:
Student Body:
Tuition:
Faculty:
sydney.edu.au/arts/.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
music.sydney.edu.au/study/
audition-requirements/.
Student Body:
Financial Aid:
sydney.edu.au/future-students/
international/postgraduate/
research/financial-support.shtml.
Tuition:
Scholarships:
sydney.edu.au/scholarships/.
Jazz Degrees:
Apply by:
sydney.edu.au/future-students/
international/undergraduate/
apply/.
Contact:
sydney.edu.au.
Faculty:
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
York University
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Student Body:
600 undergraduates,
280 graduate.
Faculty:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in
Performance, Master of Music
and Doctor of Musical Arts.
Jazz Bands:
Financial Aid:
Available. futurestudents.
yorku.ca/funding.
Alumni:
Scholarships:
Available. futurestudents.
yorku.ca/funding.
Auditions:
Visit music.utoronto.ca/
home.htm, uoftjazz.ca/.
Apply by:
Financial Aid:
Entrance scholarships.
Undergraduate: Feb. 4
for guaranteed consideration;
Graduate: Feb. 1.
Scholarships:
Contact:
Woodshed
MASTER CLASS
BY GARY SMULYAN
Gary Smulyan
The basic theory behind the tritone substitution simply states that a V7
and a flat-II7 chord function the same, both wanting to resolve to a tonic, as
they both share a third and a seventh as common tones. They are different
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
Example 5
enough in sound to create a sense of tension and surprise, and their use can
add a lot to ones improvised solos. See Example 1.
The G7 (V) and D 7 (flat-II7) chords both share a B and an Fthe third
and seventh of both chordsand want to resolve to the tonic, which in this
case is C major.
One can include the newly implied ii7 chord in the tritone substitution as
well (in this case Am7), even though it shares common tones with the D 7,
setting up an interesting cycle to improvise over. See Example 2.
The first thing I have all my students practice to fully incorporate this
progression into their own vocabulary is to play it in all 12 keysboth
descending and ascending chromatically and through the cycle of fifths. See
Examples 3a, 3b and 3c. This will help internalize the sound of the progression and assist in greater understanding of how these changes function. One
also hears the voice-leading and resolutions through practice.
In addition to the above progressionwhich resolves to a tonicone can
also practice and use the cycle in a way that doesnt resolve. I also have my
students practice this progression in the same way regarding motion.
Application
Lets apply these ideas to a few well-known tunes. Example 4 shows the chords
to one of the first songs learned by beginning improvisers. My recommended substitutions are written on the staff lines, below the standard changes.
Charlie Parker altered the course of jazz with his recording Ko-Ko,
which is based on the changes to a popular song composed by Ray Noble.
See Example 5.
Next well look at two sets of changes that are good examples of non-resolving tri-tone substitutions. The Rodgers and Hart song represented in
Example 6 is typically played at a very fast tempo. Example 7 is the bridge
of what is without a doubt the most recorded popular song favored by jazz
musicians after the blues. Who can ask for anything more?
In conclusion, the possibilities are endless, and I hope many of you are
inspired to delve into this harmonic universe and discover for yourself new
ways to approach your own playing. You will find your world opening up and
your solos taking a different shape, form and color as you enter this world of
DB
harmonic creativity: the tritone substitution.
Example 6
Example 7
Gary Smulyan (garysmulyan.com) is a New York-based baritone saxophonist. His latest CD,
Bella Napoli (Capri), features actor-vocalist Dominic Chianese. Smulyan teaches at Mason Gross
School of the Arts (Rutgers University), SUNY Purchase and Manhattan School of Music.
Woodshed
PRO SESSION
BY MARK COLBY
Mark Colby
tion most frequently asked of me is about how to choose the right equipment.
A story I heard recently sums up how we saxophonists perceive ourselves
and our instruments. Phil Woods was recently a guest artist and lecturer at
DePaul University in Chicago, and he told us an enlightening story about an
encounter he had with Charlie Parker. Woods was working some strip club
in New York, and during a break he went across the street because he had
heard that Bird was sitting in. Woods had been lamenting the fact that he
wasnt happy with his horn, mouthpiece, reeds, neckstrap and ligature. He
walked into the club and heard Bird playing an old, funky baritone sax. He
went up to him and asked, Mr. Parker, would you like to borrow my alto?
Bird said that would be great. Woods ran across the street, picked up his alto
and brought it to Bird. Bird picked up the horn and played the hell out of it.
It sounded unbelievable!
From that time on, Woods said he was never again bothered by negative
thoughts about his horn and setup. Charlie Parker could pick up anybodys
horn and sound just like himself. I heard a similar story from pianist Jim
McNeely about Stan Getz leaving his horn on the plane and having to borrow someone elses horn and mouthpiece, and sounding completely the same
as he always did. We all are capable of getting our sound on any instrument we pick up.
Now that Ive passed on these stories to you, we can explore some things
to help us make good, sound decisions about our equipment. Sure, we can
conjure up our identity on a variety of horns and mouthpieces, but how do we
decide what makes us comfortable playing any piece of equipment, whether
its the horn or mouthpiece? Lets start with the instrument. Today, we have
so many choices because of vintage saxophones, for which there seems to
be no end, and all the new saxophones that are available from big and small
companies around the world. Ive heard that there are 4060 saxophone factories in Taiwan alone. How do we choose, having so many to choose from?
Lets talk about vintage saxophones first. Ive grown up listening to stories from saxophonists of all ages regaling the pluses and minuses of the
various brands from Conn, Buescher, Martin, King and Selmer. The truth
about most of the vintage horns is that they had great sounds but have somewhat primitive intonation and ergonomics. How did Coleman Hawkins, Ben
Webster, Lester Young and other early greats manage to make those early
horns sound so good? Well, the answer is that they learned their instrument so well that they were able to compensate for the notes that sounded out
of tune or were muffled.
Today, with the new saxophones, pitch is infinitely better, even on a lot of
the Chinese-made horns coming through. There are mid-priced saxophones
that are great for younger students. Myself and others played through many
prototypes and offered advice and suggestions. The horns that places like
Wal-Mart and Sams Club sell are definitely the bottom of the spectrum.
They are not made to last, hence the small price. Use for a short while and
throw away. An overhaul on a horn like that would cost two to three times
more than what the horn was worth. Someone just starting out in a band program should go to a reputable dealer and talk to someone who knows about
their product. Pick an instrument that comes from a reputable company and
that has a warranty. There are many to choose from. I endorse Selmer and am
partial to their saxophones. Selmer USA, Yamaha, Yanagisawa, Keilwerth,
P. Mauriat, Cannonball and Eastman are just some of the larger saxophone
manufacturers that have beginner, intermediate and professional saxes.
As the student gets more advanced and maybe starts thinking that he or
she might want to pursue music as a career, you should definitely think about
moving to a professional model horn. Here I have definite opinions about
which way to go. My opinions are based on more than 50 years of playing and
over 30 years of teaching.
180 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
chure have started to formyou should get a professional-quality mouthpiece. Now, this mouthpiece might not be the last one you ever buy, but
a good quality mouthpiece will allow you to get
better sound and better intonation. It will help to
compensate for playing a beginner model horn.
The mouthpiece can then travel with you as you
progress to a professional horn.
Ive done countless clinics with middle school
and high school students who are either playing the stock mouthpiece or a Selmer C* or a
Vandoren A25. The latter two are excellent pro
classical mouthpieces, but the openings are too
small for big band and jazz playing. The directors
wonder why their sax section doesnt project. They
are great for classical saxophone literature but lack
the projection that you need in a big band with
trombones and trumpets blaring at your back. I
always suggest that players start with something
in the middle. Maybe a size 5 or 6 tip opening. Not
too open, and not too closed. A lot of alto players
wind up playing Meyer and Vandoren mouthpieces. They have the right sound, and the majority of pros play them. On tenor, there seems to be
more choices: The obvious ones are Otto Link,
Vandoren, Meyer, Berg Larsen, JodyJazz, etc. The
same brand choices are also good for baritone.
All of these mouthpieces are potentially good.
It becomes a matter of personal choice. First, how
does the mouthpiece respond? Does it let you push
the air through without backing up on you? Next,
does it have the kind of sound you are looking for
(not too bright, and not too dark)? Can you find
reeds consistently? These are all important questions. When looking for a piece, take someone
with you to act as an extra set of earshopefully someone who is a player or teacher who can
help guide you. To me, one of the most important things for a student to deal with is to find
some role models as far as sound is concerned. It
is imperative that you listen to the giants who have
played this music.
Heres my short list of saxophonists to check
out. It is incomplete, for sure, but its a good starting place. First, on alto, listen to Cannonball
Adderley, Phil Woods, Bird, Johnny Hodges,
Sonny Stitt, Kenny Garrett and Dick Oatts. On
tenor, start with Stan Getz, Coltrane, Sonny
Rollins, Gene Ammons, Mike Brecker, Joe
Lovano, Chris Potter, Joshua Redman and continue from there. There are a lot of great tenor stylists. On baritone: Gerry Mulligan, Pepper Adams,
Serge Chaloff, Nick Brignola, Gary Smulyan and
Scott Robinson, to name a few. If you have a sound
in your head, it makes it easier to pursue it. Listen,
listen, listen.
Now on to reeds. Reed choice is another
unique pursuit. It takes some experimentation
to find what works for you. Different styles of cut
(e.g., filed, unfiled, etc.) and different tip strengths
and heart strengths determine what works best on
your mouthpiece. For example, I use Vandoren
traditional reeds on tenor because they respond
and give me the right amount of resistance. Im
very comfortable with a thicker heart. The other
cuts and brands dont respond the same way on my
mouthpiece. Next time youre at the music store,
ask them if they have a comparison chart from
Vandoren. For example, a traditional Vandoren
Franois Louis and the Optimum and M/O models from Vandoren. Without a doubt, the M/O was
the most comfortable for me. Its just like when I
thought Id never play anything but a Mark VI,
and I ended up playing a Reference 54.
There are a million choices. After all this
advice, the last thing to tell you is, Dont get hung
up on the equipment. Remember Phil Woods
story about hearing Bird. Just play your heart out
and let the music speak for itself. It just helps to
play setups that are comfortable so that you can get
straight to the matter at handmaking music. DB
Mark Colby is a recording artist, educator and clinician
for Selmer Paris Saxophones and Vandoren reeds and
ligatures. He lives in Chicago and is on faculty at DePaul
University and Elmhurst College. He can be reached at
[email protected].
Woodshed
PRO SESSION
BY MATT SHEVITZ
5 Rules of Practicing
IF THERE IS ONE THING THAT MUSICIANS
Figure 1
Practice routine for scales in all 12 keys with roots moving by:
Half Steps
Descending major thirds (when finished, begin sequence on A , then G, then F#)
Circle of fourths
Woodshed
SOLO
BY MATT DAVIS
Terell Stafford
Buddy Guy
his solo on Pegasus comes from trumpeter Terell Staffords 2007 release Taking
Chances: Live At The Dakota (MaxJazz).
The piece, written by pianist Bruce Barth, provides
the perfect framework for Stafford to demonstrate
the soulful and virtuosic playing for which he has
become known. His blues-infused phrases, rhythmic ideas and lyrical articulation are presented
with conviction, focus and, most importantly, a
deep sense of swing.
Lets first look at Staffords rhythmic approach
and his use of space. In the first eight bars, we see
Staffords penchant for storytelling. He takes his
time, letting his story unfold in a natural and
engaging way. The solo starts with a series of related descending phrases, all separated by a few beats
of rest. His use of space is noticeable throughout
emerges in these bars that emphasizes a 6/4 polyrhythm. After a short breath, this figure is followed by a
blazing 16th-note run that marks the top of the dynamic arc Stafford has been crafting since the beginning of his solo.
Looking at Staffords melodic approach in this solo reveals a deep understanding of the underlying
harmonic structures that Pegasus is built upon. His note choices are predominately diatonic to the
given chords and, with a few exceptions, contain no chromatic passing tones. On bar 40 there is a clear
chromatic movement on beat 4 with pedal points of F and G moving to F# and E, but this is only in
anticipation of the next bar by one beat. Its a great moment in the solo, as Stafford has established an
expected sonority and then breaks that expectation by shifting these pitches down a half step.
In bar 12, on the B 13 chord, Stafford uses an E natural within his phrasing, suggesting a lydian
dominant scale. This sound is present again in bars 4344 during the rush of 16th notes that rounds
out this transcription. This phrase displays the only other area in Staffords solo where chromatic passing tones are employed. The A naturals in bars 4344 are passing tones within the broader B lydian
dominant line that is being played. The concluding passage, which directly follows this, consists of the
dominant diminished scale starting from the low E. It is interesting to note that both times in the form
where this passage occurs, bars 14 and 44, Stafford uses the same pitches in the same order approaching the last bar: D, E, F and A.
Overall, Staffords solo on Pegasus is one that employs a great diversity of rhythmic variation and
DB
melodic clarity. This is playing the changes at its best.
Matt Davis is a jazz guitarist, composer and educator in New York City. He performs regularly with his own large group, Aerial
Photograph, as well various trios and small ensembles in the tri-state area. Davis currently serves as Senior Lecturer of Jazz Guitar
at The University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Visit him online at mattdavisguitar.com.
Toolshed
oberto Romeo, founder of Robertos Winds, has been repairing saxophones and woodwind instruments in New York City since 1982.
With 30-plus years of experience and many notable saxophone titans
as his clients, he has translated this knowledge into creating a well-crafted
and competitive line of professional-level saxophones.
The new RW Pro One-Piece Soprano from Robertos Winds is available
in a variety of lacquers and finishes. I play-tested a model with black nickel finish and polished silver keys, a visually stunning instrument thats
designed for a slightly darker sound, yet one that projects. I used my regular
amson Technologies has been in the audio business since 1980, when the fledging company
introduced its first wireless microphone. Over
the past 34 years, Samson has established itself as an
industry leader in its product offerings for the consumer and professional audio markets. The latest
additions to Samsons USB microphone lineupthe
Meteorite and the C01U PROare definitive proof
that it remains committed to providing innovation,
quality and great value.
Although aimed at different markets, the Meteorite
and C01U PRO share several features in common.
Both mics contain an onboard 16-bit, 44.1/48kHz analog-to-digital converter, allowing for direct connection
and recording to a computer or iPad without the need
for any external audio hardware. Conversion quality is
a critical link in the audio chain, and Samson delivers
vastly superior results when compared to using the builtin converters on your computer or tablet. Both products are also USB bus-powered, requiring no external
power source to operate.
The Meteorite is the little brother of Samsons
Meteor microphone. Like its older sibling, the
Meteorites look is extremely cool, featuring a retro feel
and unique ball design. The mic is compact and sits in
a small magnetic pedestal that allows it
to be repositioned by simply rotating it to the desired angle. The
Meteorite is aimed at users looking to enhance the built-in audio
recording quality produced by
most computer systems. Its
small size makes it very portable and capable of fitting
into even the most congested
workspaces. Although recommend for applications
such as Skype, FaceTime or
Toolshed
GEAR BOX
Range of Reeds
Zonda reeds are now available for
soprano, alto, tenor and baritone
saxophone as well as bass clarinet.
They are also available in two different
cuts (Supreme and Classico) for B
clarinet. All Zonda reeds are made from
premium Argentinean cane, and they
come in a wide range of strengths to
accommodate saxophone and clarinet
players of all types.
More info: stlouismusic.com
School Notes
Jazz On Campus
Sean Jones
JIMMY KATZ
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Japanese import CDs & LPs: Venus,
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CATS PAW RECORDS
Celebrating our 20th Anniversary;
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192 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
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DB Buyers Guide
3Sixteen Records ..................................................... 47
3sixteenstore.com
ACT Music ........................................................... 61, 63
actmusic.com
Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts ................. 67
arshtcenter.org
Antigua Winds .........................................................117
antiguapro-one.com
Bach ........................................................................ 29
bachbrass.com
Bari Mouthpieces .....................................................10
bariwoodwind.com
Blue Note Records .................................................... 31
bluenote.com
Bowling Green State University .............................. 136
bgsujazz.com
Brubeck Institute ...................................................154
brubeckinstitute.org
Butler University .................................................... 127
butler.edu/music
California Institute of the Arts CalArts................ 158
music.calarts.com
California Jazz Conservatory .................................. 162
cjc.edu
Cannonball Music ................................................... 103
cannonballmusic.com
Casio .......................................................................159
casio.com
Challenge Records ................................................... 65
challengerecords.com
Chicago Symphony Center ....................................... 12
cso.org
Claude Lakey ........................................................... 29
claudelakey.com
College of St.Rose .....................................................93
strose.edu
Columbia College Chicago ......................................... 4
colum.edu/music
Conservatory of Music of Puerto Rico .................... 175
cmpr.edu
Cornish College of the Arts .....................................149
cornish.edu
DAddario ................................................................. 11
daddario.com
DAngelico ................................................................. 2
dangelicoguitars.com
DePaul University ................................................... 130
music.depaul.edu
DW Drums ................................................................. 15
dwdrums.com
Eastman School of Music ......................................... 82
esm.rochester.edu
Eastman Strings......................................................... 9
eastmanmusiccompany.com
ECM Records ........................................................37, 51
ecmrecords.com
Elmhurst College .................................................... 125
elmhurst.edu/music
Finale .......................................................................115
nalemusic.com
Fishman .................................................................. 119
shman.com
Five Towns College....................................................93
ftc.edu
George Ls ...............................................................100
georgelsstore.com
George Mason University School of Music .............. 89
music.gmu.edu
Georgia Regents University ....................................109
gru.edu
Godin Guitars............................................................ 12
godinguitars.com
Greg Fishman Jazz Studios ..................................... 157
gregshmanjazzstudios.com
Hammond Organ .................................................... 118
hammondorganco.com
Harrelson Trumpets ..................................................52
harrelsontrumpets.com
Hartt School............................................................100
harttweb.hartford.edu
Humber College ........................................................72
humbermusic.ca
HW Products ...........................................................184
hwproducts.com
Indiana University Jacobs School of Music .................140
music.indiana.edu
Interlochen Center for the Arts .............................. 134
interlochen.org
ITI Records/Warrant Music ...................................... 58
warrantmusic.org
Jazz at Lincoln Center............................................. 167
jalc.org
Jazz Cruises .............................................................. 17
thejazzcruise.com
BY WILLARD JENKINS
Sean Jones
Blindfold Test
sounds like Wayne Escoffery a little bit to me. And then it sounds a little
bit like Billy Harper. Its someone who loves free rhythms; the phrasing
is very free but its regimented. You feel that looseness in the sound but
its very stable; definitely coming out of the spirit of Trane. Maybe its [a
track by] Nat Adderley; thats definitely Nat. That tenor is messing me up
a little bit. [after] Thats Joe Henderson? That doesnt sound like Joe Henderson! Ive gotta go get that. The thing that gave Nat away was his use
of the upper register; he has a very wonderful upper register on cornet
that a lot of people dont deal with. He has a great way of using extended
trumpet techniques but being very soulful with it. This is reminiscent of
the [1965] record Domination with Cannonball.
Randy Weston
Ifrane (Blue Moses, CTI, 1972) Weston, electric piano; Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Grover Washington Jr., tenor saxophone; Hubert Laws, flute; Ron Carter, bass; Billy
Cobham, drums; Azzedin Weston, Airto Moreira, percussion.
Little Boy With The Sad Eyes (An Attitude For Gratitude, Palmetto, 2012) Wilson,
drums; Terell Stafford, trumpet; Gary Versace, organ; Martin Wind, bass.
Im not sure of the exact piece, but thats gotta be Freddie Hubbard. Freddie
Hubbard is one of my heroes; his sound is distinct. His bravura is something
thats lacking in a lot of players today. The trumpet lends itself to having a certain kind of energy, a certain kind of presence, and I have a fear that its being
lost. Freddie Hubbard is the prime example of that kind of bravura. The last
half of the 1900s he carried that: in the 60s with Art Blakey, in the 70s when
he was with CTI. It almost sounds like the Mingus band, but I dont think it
is. [after] I need to go check out that record!
The choice of organ is interesting! Using organ and bass together, you
dont hear that a lot unless its a larger ensemble. It sounds like a couple
of different people on trumpet; very soulful, not afraid to play the blues.
Oh, thats Matt! Thats interesting; you hardly ever hear organ and bass
together. Normally organists like to control the roots, but with this particular organization I didnt hear a conflict there; so there was definitely
an understanding going on and thats probably from Terell. He probably
dictated what he wanted and Matt probably dictated as well. I know its
not Terells record, but I could hear Terell dictating [laughs].
Steve Khan
Leron Thomas
Bird Food (Subtext, Tone Center, 2014) Khan, guitar; Randy Brecker, flugelhorn; Reubn Rodriguez, bass; Dennis Chambers, drums; Marc Quiones, Bobby Allende, percussion.
Youre stumping me. Ive gotta hear the [flugelhorn] solo. Thats definitely somebody who checked out Freddie Hubbard. Im hearing somebody
who definitely knows the language, knows the history of the music, is
versed in certain Latin rhythms. Ill take a stab at it and say thats Michael Rodriguez. Whoever this is has a very beautiful, round sound.
[after] Thats Randy?! Randy Brecker is one of my favorite trumpet
players. I dont often get a chance to hear him on flugelhorn; we actually just did the Jazz Cruise together, and hes definitely coming
out of Freddie, and he admits thatso Im glad that I at least got the
influence correct [laughs].
Don Cherry
The Blessing (Art Deco, A&M 1988) Cherry, trumpet; James Clay, tenor saxophone;
Charlie Haden, bass; Billy Higgins, drums.
That sounds like Charlie Haden on bass. The tune is The Blessing, Ornettes tune. Whats interesting is Don Cherry is one of those cats whos
very overlooked because hes not the most trumpet-playing kind of
trumpeter, if that makes any sense. Hes kind of a stylist, in that whatever comes to his mind he just plays, no matter how crazy or how wild
it is, and sometimes it comes off as if he doesnt know what hes doing.
But if you listen to the humanity in his phrasing, you can understand
what hes doing.
Fools Paradise (Whatever, 2013) Thomas, trumpet; Taylor Eigsti, piano; Matthew Stevens, guitar; Eric Harland, drums; Harish Raghavan, bass.
Ron Carter
Opus 1.5Theme For C.B. (Ron Carters Great Big Band, Sunnyside 2011) Carter, bass;
Jerry Dodgion, alto and soprano saxophone; Steve Wilson, alto saxophone; Wayne Escoffery, Scott Robinson, tenor saxophone; Jay Brandford, baritone saxophone; Charles
Pillow, English horn; Jason Jackson, Steve Davis, James Burton lll, Douglas Purviance,
trombones; Tony Kadleck, Greg Gisbert, Jon Owens, Alex Norris, trumpets; Mulgrew
Miller, piano; Lewis Nash, drums.
Thats Ron Carter. Ron Carter is one of those people that I like to follow
because he has a very definitive approach to music. Those individuals
never waver in what theyre about and what they project. Ron is one of
those people. Now, hes Ron Carter, but in the 60s when he was playing
with Miles, he was kind ofmaybe I shouldnt say thisbut he was kind
of like the voice of reason. He was always where you went back to; he was
just there, solid. And he has maintained that kind of integrity throughDB
out his career. Its nice to see him do different projects now.
Nat Adderley
Painted Desert (Live At Memory Lane, Atlantic 1967) Adderley, cornet; Joe Henderson, tenor saxophone; Joe Zawinul, piano; Roy McCurdy, drums; Victor Gaskin, bass.
Its definitely the tenor players record because of the way its mixed. That
194 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2014
The Blindfold Test is a listening test that challenges the featured artist to discuss and identify
the music and musicians who performed on selected recordings. The artist is then asked to rate
each tune using a 5-star system. No information is given to the artist prior to the test.