DB1310 (Porter) PDF
DB1310 (Porter) PDF
DB1310 (Porter) PDF
Gregory Porter /// John Zorn /// Roberto Fonseca /// Glenn Miller Orchestra /// Where To Study Jazz 2014October 2013
Roberto Fonseca
21st Century Pianist
Glenn Miller
Orchestra
October 2013
downbeat.com
U.K. 3.50
e
on id
i
u zz
t
c
G
Se ic Ja
l
a us udy
i
ec t Mo St 4
p
S
n t 01
e ere 2
d
u Wh
t
S
OCTOBER 2013
Volume 80 / Number 10
Advertising Sales
Record Companies & Schools
Jennifer Ruban-Gentile
630-941-2030
[email protected]
Musical Instruments & East Coast Schools
Ritche Deraney
201-445-6260
[email protected]
Advertising Sales Associate
Offices
102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, IL 601262970
630-941-2030 / Fax: 630-941-3210
http://downbeat.com
[email protected]
Customer Service
877-904-5299 / [email protected]
Contributors
Senior Contributors:
Michael Bourne, John McDonough
Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Michael Point, Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred
Bouchard, Frank-John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael
Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich;
Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los
Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard;
Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Bob
Doerschuk; New Orleans: Erika Goldring, David Kunian, Jennifer Odell; New
York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky,
Norm Harris, D.D. Jackson, Jimmy Katz, Jim Macnie, Ken Micallef, Dan Ouellette,
Ted Panken, Richard Seidel, Tom Staudter, Jack Vartoogian, Michael Weintrob;
North Carolina: Robin Tolleson; Philadelphia: David Adler, Shaun Brady, Eric
Fine; San Francisco: Mars Breslow, Forrest Bryant, Clayton Call, Yoshi Kato;
Seattle: Paul de Barros; Tampa Bay: Philip Booth; Washington, D.C.: Willard
Jenkins, John Murph, Michael Wilderman; Belgium: Jos Knaepen; Canada:
Greg Buium, James Hale, Diane Moon; Denmark: Jan Persson; France: Jean
Szlamowicz; Germany: Detlev Schilke, Hyou Vielz; Great Britain: Brian Priestley;
Japan: Kiyoshi Koyama; Portugal: Antonio Rubio; Romania: Virgil Mihaiu;
Russia: Cyril Moshkow; South Africa: Don Albert.
OCTOBER 2013
26
On the Cover
26
Gregory
Porter
The Storyteller
By allen Morrison
Gregory Porter
onstage at the
Playboy Jazz
Festival in Los
Angeles on
June 15 (Photo:
Earl Gibson)
Features
38 John Zorn
Genius at Work
Cover photo of Gregory Porter shot by Jimmy and Dena Katz in New York City
w
vie
Re H
tar H
5-S HH
By Bill Milkowski
44 Roberto Fonseca
The Music Is Alive
SPECIAL SECTION
71
Where to Study
Jazz 2014
52 Parker/Guy/Lytton
67 Leo Genovese
Departments
10 First Take
49 Reviews
15 The Beat
22 Players
Jonathan Finlayson
Carmen Souza
Zach Brock
Vadim Neselovskyi
166 Transcription
168 Toolshed
174 Jazz On Campus
178 Blindfold
Test
Branford
Marsalis
By fred bouchard
First Take
By FRANK ALKYER
Happy Birthday,
Mr. Zorn
Michel Delsol
There are moments when you wonder where the time goes.
John Zorn turning 60 is one for me. In the early 80s, I lived across the Hudson
River from New York City. I moved there right out of college and took a newspaper job in Jersey City, N.J. It was close enough to see the skyline, but a world
away for someone trying to make it.
As you might guess, a reporters salary didnt go far in Manhattan, but
I spent most of my extra cash on live shows. Categories, genres and labels
didnt matter. It was just, Do you want to go see some music?
Wed go anywhere, hear
John Zorn, circa 1987
anything. It might have been
Dizzy Gillespie outdoors on Staten Island or John Lurie & The
Lounge Lizards somewhere in
Greenwich Village, Tom Waits
at the Beacon Theater or Junior Walker & The All Stars at
Lone Star Cafe (which included
a slightly bizarre guest appearance by Jaco Pastorius), The
Fleshtones at CBGB or John
Zorn at the old Irving Plaza.
That was my introduction
to Zorns music. He opened
there for Anthony Braxton. I
knew little about them other
than this would be an event. I
found Braxton interesting, but Zorn was a magnet, performing what I would
later learn were his Game Pieces. He was young and confident, flashing
cards to cue musiciansin some way putting sound into a blender and serving it up as something brand new. He had an artists vision, a composers decisiveness and a punks attitude. I was hooked.
Who knew at that time how expansive Zorns musical realm would become? But it was all there, and still is. He refuses to be categorized. He works
with a broad, eclectic circle of artists, in any context that strikes his fancy. And
he works obsessively at his craft.
Beginning on page 38, DownBeat contributor Bill Milkowski admirably attempts to cover that vast tapestry of Zorns artistic output. Its in no way a complete picture. How could it be when youre discussing an artist who recorded
13 albums last year alone? But we hope its a fitting way to say, Happy Birthday and mark a milestone in the life of one of our most important composers.
Then, There are moments when an artist Can steal a jaded
journalists music-loving soul. Gregory Porter, our cover subject this
month, did just that.
I became a fan from the first listen of Illusion, the opening track of Water, his 2010 debut recording for Motma Music. Usually, an artist (especially
a new artist) kicks off with something uptempo, toe-tapping, driving. But on
Illusion, Porter takes the road less traveled, delivering one of the most powerful heartbreak ballads youll ever hear.
Its the kind of surprise that Ive come to expect from Porter, a singer
whose voice is rich and songwriting brilliantly thoughtful. While Water introduced him to the world, his second album, Be Good (Motma, 2012), along
with critically praised live shows, helped him win the categories Rising Star
Jazz Artist and Rising StarMale Vocalist in the DownBeat Critics Poll this year.
On the heels of all of this, Porter delivers Liquid Spirit, his debut for the
Blue Note label and a disc that could make him an even bigger star.
Beginning on page 26, writer Allen Morrison offers a fascinating glimpse
into the art and life of an important new artist. DB
10 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Chords
Discords
Subscription
Saver
For some time, I have been
seriously thinking about
terminating my DownBeat
subscription after many
years. Your magazine covers
too much new music that
doesnt meet my musical
aesthetics and tastes, and
too many new musicians
who speak a language
unknown to me. I used to
read everything from page 1
to the end of the magazine.
Today, I hardly read more
than 50 percent of it.
But then I received the August issue and read Ed Enrights Hall of Fame feature on Charlie Haden
(Making the World a Better Place). And suddenly I decided to keep my DownBeat subscription.
Adriano Pateri
Milan, Italy
Darren McGuire
Fairfield, Conn.
Dave Dubinsky
Boston
Dick Mace
[email protected]
The
News
Inside
16 / C
harles Lloyd
at Montreal
18 / Umbria @ 40
19 / D
ee Dee
Bridgewater
as Lady Day
21 / T
oronto Jazz
Festival
Jamey Aebersold
Keith Jarrett
John Nation
Richard Davis
Ken Halfmann
Anthony Braxton
Carolyn Wachnicki
long with artistic accomplishment, the musicians who have been named
2014 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters share some similarities. Their careers started attracting notice during the late 60s/early 70s,
and three of the four have ties toor roots inthe American Midwest. Most
also draw from different idioms.
Pianist Keith Jarrett, whose lyricism reflects his jazz and classical inclinations, may be the most well known of the 2014 honorees. Bassist Richard Davis
developed an impeccable technique from working alongside colleagues that
include Eric Dolphy and Leonard Bernstein. Saxophonist Anthony
Braxtonwho, like Davis, is a Chicago nativehas pursued an experimental vision that embraces everything from 20th century compositional techniques to concepts inspired by marching bands, cool jazz and technology. Multi-instrumentalist and educator Jamey Aebersold (recipient of
the A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Award for Jazz Advocacy), who publishes influential jazz instructional materials from his home base of New
Albany, Ind., also runs popular Summer Jazz Workshops for musicians of
all ages. The awards ceremony will be held Jan. 13, 2014, at New Yorks Jazz
at Lincoln Center, and each recipient will receive $25,000.
Although only music excites me, and awards and ceremonies do not,
I feel honored to receive this NEA Jazz Masters Award, due to the many
players on the list since 1982 that have been influential in my life, Jarrett
said in a statement posted on the NEA website.
Davis said he was pleased to receive the award, but added that he
wasnt sure how he would utilize it. His wide-ranging resume points to
a variety of possibilities. He was a sideman on key Blue Note albums and
worked in major orchestras before releasing his own LPs, like 1972s Nows The
Time (Muse). Davis said that attending the Jazz Masters ceremony will provide
him an opportunity to just hang out with some of the guys I know.
For Braxton and his longtime advocates, the award is a vindication. Speaking
from his office on the campus of Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., he
said that he sees the recognition as a way of bringing back all of the members of
the family of the music. Im not a jazz musician in the traditional sense of how
we talk of jazz as an idiomatic proposition. Rather, jazz is part of the whole backbone of my being.
Braxtons ouevre includes landmark recordings of large-scale works (like
Creative Orchestra Music 1976), electronic interactive performances and operas.
Several of his projects, as well as his essays, are made available through his Tri-
Caught
Charles
Lloyd
Denis Alix
Charles
Lloyd
Enlightens
Montreal
Subscribe
877-904-JAZZ
16 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Riffs
Caught
Frank Lindner
Steve Berrios
Umbria
Jazz
Presents
Ambitious
40th
Summer
Edition
Jan Garbarek
Armando Trovajoli, the iconic Italian film composer who died in March at age 95. They exploited their
contrasting approaches, as did (on Pan-American
repertoire) efflorescent Colombian harpist Edmar
Castaneda and sublime clarinetist Gabriele
Mirabassi, the only Perugia native on the festival.
On a bill with Ramsey Lewis, Dee Dee
Bridgewaterwho debuted in Perugia in 1973 with
the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestrarevived a
soporific set with her outsized personality, while
r&b star John Legend presented a well-crafted,
blue flame concert. Joined by an excellent young
New York rhythm section, Allan Harris mixed
swing and rock roots on a nightly basis. Topping
a forceful set by Igor Butmans killer big band was
dynamic Russian-Dominican-Australian contralto Fantine Pritoula, who projects Lena Horneish vibrations. Gregory Porter performed for a
packed house at the Morlacchi, 18 hours after singing Goin To Chicago with the super-tight Jazz at
Lincoln Center Orchestra on an all-blues program.
Branford Marsalis guided his quartet through a
beautifully paced concert that referenced last years
Four MFs Playin Tunes (Marsalis Music).
The Robert Glasper Experiment deconstructed
covers like Sardines, Cherish The Day and
Smells Like Teen Spirit for an appreciative, vocal
young audience. Prodded by Glaspers on-the-spot
keyboard orchestrations and Mark Colenburgs
nuanced power-funk drumming, they sustained
interest throughout a two-hour midnight set.
On the penultimate evening, Italian piano
maestro Stefano Bollani played a superb Pops
concert with Romes Santa Cecilia Orchestra, rendering Ravels Concerto In G and Gershwins
Rhapsody In Blue and four phantasmagoric, Jaki
Byard-on-steroids solo extravaganzas on Gershwin
and Leonard Bernstein repertoire. Ted Panken
Carol Rosegg
Dee Dee
Bridgewater
eorge Dukethe Grammy-winning keyboardist and producer whose vast artistic output spanned the worlds of jazz, r&b, funk
and rockdied Aug. 5 in a Los Angeles hospital,
where he was being treated for chronic lymphocytic leukemia. He was 67.
Dukes new CD, DreamWeaver (Heads Up
International), released July 16, debuted at No. 1 on
Billboards Contemporary Jazz chart. The album was
dedicated to Dukes wife, Corine, who died last July.
Duke began his career as a keyboardist and bandleader in the 1960s and went on to collaborate with
some of the music industrys most prominent figures,
including Frank Zappa, Miles Davis and Michael
Jackson. A producer since the 80s, he crafted scores of
recordings for artists representing every corner of the
contemporary American musical landscape.
Little did I know that when George Duke produced my A Family Affair CD, the title would prove literal, bassist Christian McBride posted on his Twitter
account upon learning of Dukes passing. He became
family. I have no words.
Duke was born in San Rafael, Calif., on Jan. 12,
1946. He became obsessed with the piano as a child
after seeing Duke Ellington play. By his teens, his
influences had expanded to include keyboardists Ray
Charles, Les McCann, Bill Evans, McCoy Tyner, Cal
Tjader and Herbie Hancock, as well as horn players
Davis and John Coltrane.
Duke earned a bachelors degree in music compo-
sition and trombone from San Francisco Conservatory of Music in 1967 and a masters in music composition from San Francisco State University in 1969.
During the 60s, Duke maintained a trio gig backing singer Al Jarreau at the Half Note in San Francisco
for three years. He left the Half Note in 1967 and began
performing with the likes of Zappa, Dexter Gordon,
Sonny Rollins, Jean-Luc Ponty, Cannonball Adderley,
Dizzy Gillespie, Billy Cobham and Stanley Clarke.
Duke cut LPs for the MPS label in the 70s. He
began to veer more toward fusion, r&b and funk with
albums like From Me To You (1976) and Reach For It
(1978). One of his best-known recordings, 1980s A
Brazilian Love Affair, included vocals by Flora Purim
and Milton Nascimento and percussion by Airto
Moreira. By the end of the 80s, Duke had made his
mark as a versatile producer working with artists such
as Jarreau, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Melissa Manchester,
Barry Manilow, Smokey Robinson, Take 6, Gladys
Knight and Anita Baker.
Often the subject of controversy in jazz circles for
his tendency to cross over into popular forms like
r&b, rock and funk, Duke enjoyed more commercial
success than many of his straightahead peers. Each
style has validity, Duke said in a March 10, 1977,
DownBeat cover story. I can play [many] styles of
music reasonably well, and I gain invaluable experience with each one. While most people get involved
with only one style of music, becoming mono-thematic, Ive studied all of those styles and learned what
George Duke
Henry Diltz
Eliane Elias
Don Vickery
Caught
Players
Jonathan
Finlayson
No Compromise
n chess, the Sicilian Defense is a particularly combative opening maneuver, an
aspect that trumpeter Jonathan Finlayson
seized on when naming his quintet. I
thought it was the perfect name for my band
because of the aggressive nature of the Sicilian
Defense, Finlayson said. Its an opening that
I almost invariably play if I go out on the street
to play. The spirit in the opening is what I really love. The idea is always to win when you play
it. Theres no passivity; its always a gesture of no
compromise.
Looking over Finlaysons career, its easy to
see why he identifies with that particular gambit. Theres very little compromise involved in
the music hes made with such daring composers as Steve Lehman, Mary Halvorson and Henry
Threadgill, or in his 13-year stint as a member
of saxophonist Steve Colemans Five Elements.
While hes long been one of the most in-demand
sidemen on the progressive jazz scene, Finlayson
has waited until now to release his leader debut,
Moment & The Message (Pi).
I finally felt comfortable enough that my
ideas were being expressed how I wanted to hear
them, Finlayson said of his long-awaited album.
The vehicle for those ideas is Sicilian Defense,
his quintet with guitarist Miles Okazaki, pianist
David Virelles, bassist Keith Witty and drummer
Damion Reid.
The result showcases lessons learned from
collaborating with some of the musics most
advanced thinkers. It is also a distinctly personal
album. Moment & The Message combines skewed
angles and algebraic rhythms with an agile accessibility; as complex as these pieces may be, theyre
certainly not incomprehensible.
Perhaps Finlaysons fascination with chess
has something to do with that. His music shares
William Brown
the games combination of intellectual concentration and spirited playfulness. He began studying
chess in earnest in 2005, after finding an opponent he simply couldnt beat. I got tired of losing
and not understanding why, he said.
Chess explicitly inspired one song on the
album: Ruy Lopez gets its title from another opening move named after a 16th-century Spanish priest. The tunes first solo casts
Finlayson as the black pieces and Okazaki (a fellow chess enthusiast) as the white as the two trade
solo statements that translate the games maneuvers into musical terms.
Writing music based on chess moves is just
one of many adventurous pathways opened by
Finlaysons work with Coleman, who hired the
trumpeter straight out of high school in 2000.
Steve taught me that you can derive something
musical from almost anything, Finlayson said.
Music is a creation of man, and whatever youre
looking at is mans system for creating something else; so making the leap from chess to music
wasnt that difficult.
Finlayson, 31, grew up in Berkeley, Calif., and
began playing trumpet under protest at age 10.
The Oakland public school system insisted on his
learning an instrument, but he delayed choosing
one, hoping that he could get out of the obligation. The choice finally came down to trumpet or
violin. I weighed my options and thought, Miles
Davis plays the trumpet and that thing only has
three buttons, so thats the instrument for me.
Patricia Pascal
Carmen Souza
Recipe for Artistic Success
Players
Zach Brock
Versatile Violinist
ist Aaron Weistrop, who was forming a new original jazz group. At that time, all I wanted to play was
classic bebop, Brock recalls. But Aaron was a very
creative guy and was burnt out on that stuff. He said,
If you wanna be in this band and do this, it has to be
original and you have to write. I had written some
pop-rock and punk tunes on guitar in high school
but no jazz. It was an immediate challenge.
The ensuing years have found him honing his
compositional and performance skills at the helm of
modern indie jazz groups The Coffee Achievers and
The Magic Number for his own imprint, Secret Fort
Records. When The Coffee Achievers went on hiatus, Brock pursued lucrative work as a sideman for
bassist Stanley Clarke and guitarist Frank Vignola. I
always wanted to have an apprenticeship with a great
bandleader, Brock says. And certainly in the case
of Stanley Clarkea modern jazz figure, personality,
mentor and composerthat was a huge deal.
While studying with guitarist Pat Martino,
Brock received some career-altering advice. He said
people are not looking for a violin player in more traditional jazz, which was what I was into at the time,
says Brock. If that was my passion, he was saying,
dont not do that, but youve gotta take the reins and
make it happen yourself.
Along with bassist Matt Wigton and drummer
Fred Kennedy, he toured hard for more than two
years in the trio The Magic Number. While on the
road, he got a call out of the blue from Criss Cross
Jazz label founder Gerry Teekens. In short order,
Brock was given the opportunity to record his leader project Almost Never Was, with pianist Aaron
Goldberg, bassist Matt Penman and drummer Eric
Harland. The CD was released in 2012.
Brocks accolades include a victory in the category Rising StarViolin in the 2013 DownBeat Critics
Poll. Im always a little bit shocked and grateful that
there are people out there who enjoy what Im doing
enough to throw me in with all these other great
players, Brock says.
With new solo and ensemble recordings on the
horizon, as well as festival dates with Clarke and a
collaboration with pianist Phil Markowitz, its a safe
bet that people will be listening for some time to
Eric Harabadian
come.
Wolfgang Kleber
Vadim Neselovskyi
The Perpetual Quest
were matched by the stark originality of his writing, Burton said, noting his gift for fashioning a
simple melodic theme that is easy to follow but
not trite or predictable. A case in point: Last
Snow, which Burton included on his 2011 album
Common Ground (Mack Avenue).
Like most of his output, Last Snow is very
Russian, Neselovskyi said, adding that his Americanization is an ongoing process. Ive been 11
years in the United States and Im still a student of
the jazz language here. Im learning that language
in parallel with a constant search for who I am.
That search took him to New Orleans under
a scholarship from the Thelonious Monk Institute.
From 2007 to 2009, Neselovskyi collaborated with
leading musicians and thinkers in the Big Easy. He
went on to win top prize in the institutes 2010 International Jazz Composers Competition with an
extended work titled Grust, which includes passages of improvisation and classical composition
in the kind of organic weave that characterizes his
new solo CD, Music For September (Sunnyside).
Neselovskyi is concentrating more seriously
on composition these days. He was chosen for a
MacDowell writing fellowship last year, and his
tunes will be featured this November when he
and Burton reunite for a concert at Berklee, where
Neselovskyi has been teaching. Another current
project, Agricultural Dreams, recalls the Russian
rock bands of his youth with its agrarian name
and vocal-heavy aesthetic.
Its not clear whats next, he said. Its not
clear how I keep the balance between taking the
most sincere musical step and doing whats right
Phillip Lutz
for my career.
Gregory
Porter
The
Storyteller
By Allen Morrison / Photography by Jimmy & Dena Katz
photo credit
photo caption
gregory porter
Yes. When we moved there, it was to an allwhite neighborhood. And most of my experiences were beautifulgood friends, eating baloney sandwiches, swimming in the pool. But when
youre the first black friend of a white kid, you
get this stuff its not racism but curiosity. You
know, feeling your hair, and Does this wash off?
My mother knew we would have to be like little
ambassadors, so she would say, Let em touch
and then say, Its cool, isnt it? But dont let them
put you down about anything.
But that can happen as well. No matter what
you did, if you won in sports, if you hit a home run,
there was one way the kids could get you. It was,
Well at least Im not black. And it would hurt you
every time.
I know it sounds like something out of the
1960s South, but they burned a cross in our front
yard when I was 8 or 10. This may sound strange,
but I was fascinated by the construction of the
gregory porter
Adam McCullough
No, not much. When he was in the hospital, I gave my father an opportunity to say something to me that would send me on my way in life
and make me feel good about him. And he just
totally failed the test. I told him, I really enjoy
singing. I want to be a singer. And he said, Aaah,
theres a lotta good singers out there. I just threw
him this softball, and he totally missed it. I sang a
song for him there in his hospital room. All he had
to do was just say, Yep! But, who knows what
kind of suffering he was under at that time. That
moment I had with my father is represented in the
play [Nat King Cole and Me]. At 30 years old, I
needed an apology from my father. He was dead,
so I couldnt get one. So I created one. And he
apologized to me onstage. I know it sounds crazy.
It doesnt sound crazy; it sounds like theater.
Like, The Work Song. Moanin. That hardbop stuff that was taken directly from the church.
That helped me realize that one of the pillars of
[jazz] was where I was coming from as well. Yes,
theres European tradition; theres blues tradition;
theres gospel tradition. I found my place in it.
That strong Southern soul and gospel element in
your work sounds so new, for some reason, in 2013,
but its really not.
feature
Nick Hilscher (left, white jacket) is the music director for the Glenn Miller Orchestra
By John McDonough
n Feb. 5, the last surviving member of the original Glenn Miller Orchestra died at 94. But trombonist Paul Tanners death was hardly the end of an era, as we journalists are prone to write.
Seventy-five years after Miller formed that band in the spring of 1938, the Glenn Miller
Orchestra today is the busiest touring big band in America.
Arc
hives
glenn miller
for many years. Indeed, no big band has as deep a catalog of tunesthe ones
that must be played every night: In The Mood, String Of Pearls, Tuxedo
Junction and on and on. A cage? Yes, but a gilded one. More important, no
band had a collective sound that permeated its time with such rich emotional
texture and precision. Think of the 60s without the Beatles or the Byrds. Why
isnt there a Buddy Rich band today? Cassidy said. Because he had no songs.
People just came to see Buddy. People die, but music doesnt. And Miller had the
music. (The Buddy Rich Big Band still occasionally performs concerts booked
by Buddys daughter, Cathy Rich.)
Ironically, it was precisely the Miller bands lack of individual strengths that
made it possible to continue. For there was nothing in the Miller cocktail that
could not be easily substituted or replacedeven Miller himself, who had no
particular stage excitement or gifts on the trombone. His great achievement lay
in a collective scoring gimmick that any group of good musicians can approximatea clarinet lead on top of a quartet of saxes and framed in soft, muted
brass strokes.
But approximating is not good enough for Kevin Sheehan, who came to
the Miller band in 1997 for three months and has stayed for 16 years. His lead
alto and clarinet are at the heart of its sound, and it takes work. The section
vibrato is very difficult to get right, he explained. But matching saxes is no different than matching strings. The wave of the vibrato is exactly the same. The
players follow me on clarinet. He
uses a hard reed (Vandoren blue box
#4) and a short classical mouthpiece
(Leblanc Larry Combs LC3). Playing
a thin reed on top of a sax section just
doesnt work, he said. You need
something with resistance so you can
penetrate those saxes.
Some say that Miller experimented with these voicings as early as 1935
when he was the New York contractor and trombonist for English bandleader Ray Noble. Around that time,
DownBeat picked up on Millers early
career. It was not a good start. In June
1935, critic John Hammond described
Millers work for Nobel as pretty
stoggy. But DownBeat tracked him
Our May 15, 1945, issue
through his first failed band in 1937,
then his second try in the spring of 1938, when he began building on the clarinet lead sound. Within 18 months he had rolled past all competition, including
Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw, to become the most popular and successful
big band leader of the swing generation. He landed his first DownBeat cover in
December 1939, just as In The Mood was sweeping the country.
Miller would have the greatest run of success of any major big band before
or since. It was also the shortest. Within three years the civilian band dissolved
for the duration, and the Army Air Force became his patron. In June 1944 the
Air Force band shipped off to England to play concerts in B-17 hangars and
mess halls. That December, Miller was lost forever on a short, foggy flight from
London to Paris. But if Miller would never be heard from again, the same cannot be said for his music.
After the war, the audience and demand were as hot as ever, setting up a
unique opportunity that Millers lawyer, David Mackay, was quick to grab: to
continue the Miller music by proxy. After his disappearance, the Air Force band
had played on without a hiccup. In late 1945, Mackay and Millers widow, Helen,
turned to Tex Beneke, whose vocals and tenor had been central to the pre-war
band. On Jan. 24, 1946, the bandnow dubbed the Glenn Miler Orchestra
with Tex Benekeopened at the Capitol Theater on Broadway, playing the old
songs in the name of its founder.
Though no one realized it, the momentum of Millers fame had spawned an
unexpected stepchild: the worlds first successful ghost band. Time magazine noted the phenomenon in 1947, though without the impolite phrase. Its a
term critics and some musicians still use with a condescending smirk, suggesting a formulaic model that forbids innovation. The Miller-Beneke orchestra of
1946 was the first of the breed to make it. (Historian Karl Pearson points out
that a few minor bands had continued briefly after their leaders deaths: Orville
Knapp, Hal Kemp, Bunny Berigan). It became the matrix for a growth industry
that would one day blanket the world and transcend all styles.
Over the decades, the ghost band concept evolved beyond Miller, Count
34 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
glenn miller
DOwnBeat Archives
feature
Genius
John Zorn
At
Work
In honor
of his 60th
birthday,
DownBeat
examines
the career of
a composer
wholly
committed
to his art
By Bill Milkowski
Photography by
Jack Vartoogian/
FrontRowPhotos
john zorn
Jack Vartoogian/FrontRowPhotos
six of Zorns stirring string quartets (influenced by Concealed featuring the Tzadik all-star band Nova that he continues to work witha pool of virtuosos
Bartk, Schoenberg and Elliott Carter) were per- Express (John Medeski on piano, Wollesen on vibes, that includes Medeski, Dunn, Wollesen, Baron, guiformed at Alice Tully Halls Starr Theater by the Trevor Dunn on upright bass and Joey Baron on tarist Marc Ribot, keyboardist Jamie Saft and bassJack Quartet, Alchemy Quartet and Brooklyn Rider drums) augmented by Feldman on violin and Erik ist Shanir Ezra Blumenkranzis well documented. Zorn has said, I think musicians are saints to
Friedlander on cello.
Quartet.
This kind of diversity coming from one composer do what they do, to make the sacrifices they make to
It took more than 30 years, but John Zorn is now
regarded as an important composeruptown, down- is astonishing. And yet, Zorn insists its all of a piece. play music. And he rewards them with music that
All the various styles are organically connected to comes directly from his soul, the likes of which they
town and all around the world.
We were at Alice Tully last night seeing Zorns one another, he told The Guardian in 2003. Im an have never played before.
Zorns creative process is rigorous and monastic.
Complete String Quartets, which was the great- additive personthe entire storehouse of my knowlest thing I have ever seen, enthused Masada String edge informs everything I do. People are so obsessed When inspiration hits, he will go into silent retreat
Trio violinist Mark Feldman. What could be more with the surface that they cant see the connections, in the cramped confines of the same spartan walkuptown than that? And the place was 80 percent but they are there. Or as he told David Garland from up apartment he has lived in since 1977 and not see
packed. Thats a good crowd for even the Emerson WNYCs Spinning on Air show: Theres a strand the light of day until hes done with the task at hand.
Quartet or some other famous string quartet. I mean, running through all those musics, which causes mis- During these undisturbed streams of creativity, he
it just worked perfectly. You felt like in that moment understanding. Theres so many different things that will go without food or sleep, sometime for days,
finally emerging with a finished work. His joy is in
he had really broken that uptown-downtown barri- have fed my creativity and continue to feed it.
Since it was founded in 1995, Tzadik has released the discovery.
er. People in the press are just starting to view him as
You have to be obsessed with these things,
a whole rather than just dealing with the individual more than 450 recordings by a variety of artists on
pieces of his work, which can be so varied. Its the same the labels New Japan, Lunatic Fringe, Radical Jewish Laswell said. If its going to be believable and honattitude given to a respected composer like Stravinsky. Culture and Film Music series as well as on the est, you have to lose yourself in it. Thats the key. And
Composer Series and Archival Series (document- Zorn does that.
They look at his work as a whole.
John has a very detailed mind, and
Zorn is an utter enigma to the press
particularly to jazz critics, whom he gener- Zorn plays The Hermetic Organ, Office No. 8 at Lincoln Centers Alice Tully Hall on July 18 hes very direct, said Baron, who has
played in numerous Zorn bands, includally holds in contempt, as evidenced by one
ing Spy vs. Spy, Naked City, Masada,
Naked City tune he penned titled Perfume
Moonchild, Nova Express and The
Of A Critics Burning Flesh. Many writDreamers. He knows exactly what
ers have misunderstood the composers
he wants and he doesnt stray far from
ways. Zorn, in turn, doesnt seem to want to
thatunless he hears something that
be called a jazz artist, and he rarely grants
shines a light, and then hell take that and
interviews.
see how he can use it within the original
Maverick, visionary, activist, facilitator,
concept. And when he does a recording,
fearless dreamer, force of nature,
hes concerned with every detail, right
MacArthur Fellow, Radical Jewish Culture
down to the look of the package. He gets
guru, hardcore maven Zorn is all of this
an idea and he follows it through to the
and more. To the musical community he
nth degree in the quickest time possible.
helped establish, he is a genuine mensch.
He doesnt let anything get in the way
The difficulty in comprehending his
from the moment of its inception to the
work lies not only in its complexity, and
moment of its completion.
its diversity, but also the staggering size of
John is a very hard-working guy, but
his ouevre. In 2012, he released 13 recordhe also has a generous sense of humor,
ings of original music on his own fiercely
said Masada trumpeter Dave Douglas.
independent Tzadik Records label, ranging from hellacious grindcore (Templars: In Sacred ing Zorns own prolific output). Some of our records He demands complete focus and utmost effort from
Blood); to sweetly affecting tunes brimming with sell 50,000 copies, some sell 500 copies, the maestro the players, and at times he can be relentless to the
point of discomfort. But when you are in his band,
childlike innocence (A Vision In Blakelight, dedi- label head has said.
How can one artist produce 13 CDs of meaning- you quickly realize that every action is at the service
cated to the visionary writer William Blake); to the
of his musical vision, with no compromises. It is a
radiant trio project The Gnostic Preludes: Music ful music in a single year?
Zorn has managed to be so prolific because he profound feeling.
Of Splendor, featuring guitarist Bill Frisell, harpist
In terms of the different Zorn bands that I play
Carol Emanuel and vibraphonist Kenny Wollesen; has a very gifted way of deflecting distraction, said
to the evocative, minimalist Mount Analogue (based bassist-producer and longtime collaborator Bill in, my role depends on the concept, said bassist
on G.I. Gurdjieffs book about an invisible moun- Laswell, who plays with Zorn and former Napalm Trevor Dunn. In a piece such as Illuminations,
tain island linking Heaven and Earth). The result Death drummer Mick Harris in the hardcore band where the piano part is 100 percent written but the
of uncommon dedication and a unique carthar- Painkiller and also in an improvising trio with icon- rhythm section improvises, I am given full license
tic vision, Mount Analogue is a highlight of Zorns ic avant garde drummer Milford Graves. Hes very to make my own choices. But in ensembles like
career. In the album liner notes, he referred to it as quick to dismiss anything that might interfere with Moonchild or Nova Express, I need to play what is
his moving forward. Everybodys always coming to written, maintain tempos, make cues and improone of my greatest achievements.
Last year also saw the release of his contempo- you all the time saying, Lets do this project. And vise with a certain intent and in a specific context.
rary classical work Rimbaud, dedicated to the French he has the ability to say, No, absolutely not! He says In either case, being an integral part of the ensemble
writer Arthur Rimbaud. It included one outrageous it authoritatively and sometimes aggressively. But I is key, and Zorn keeps an eye on us to make sure we
file card piece, Conneries, that had Zorn playing dont have that ability. Zorn also knows how to uti- are realizing his vision as a composer and interacting
alto sax, piano, organ, guitar and drums. He also lize the time very well. As long as Ive known him, within the group in a way that benefits the music.
Zorn is a seeker. His pursuit is that place between
released two new volumes from his ongoing Book of hed never waste a second.
Its simple, Zorn once told me over stuffed the known and the unknown, the accessible and the
Angels series: Pruflas (Vol. 18) was a vehicle for clarinet virtuoso David Krakauer, while Abraxas (Vol. cabbage and pierogis at a 24-hour restaurant in the inaccessible, often fueled by his interest in mysti19) features Shanir Ezra Blumenkranz on Moroccan East Village. Im insulated against the chaos so I can cism, alchemy and magic. His works like Mount
gumbri accompanied by slamming drummer focus on my work. I dont have a TV, I dont go on Analogue sustain a mood of wonder and mystery.
Kenny Grohowski and screaming electric guitarists vacation . Where am I gonna go? I dont have any Composed during a three-week period of isolation
and intense creative activity, it consists of 61 musichildren; my compositions are my children.
Eyal Maoz and Aram Bajakian.
Zorns loyalty to the inner circle of musicians cal movements composed randomly. They fell into
There was also the beautifully evocative The
40 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Jack Vartoogian/FrontRowPhotos
Laurie Anderson (left), Zorn and Lou Reed perform at the Concert For Japan benefit in New York on April 9, 2011
Roberto Fonseca
The Music Is
Alive
roberto fonseca
photo credit
difficult
to express more ideas with fewer notes.
photo caption
This album is dedicated to my Afro-Cuban roots
and the folk music from Africa. The beat and the
bass add up to the heart of the song. The other
thing is the color; each tune is a story Im trying to
tell. Every instrument contributes to the cadence
like a different shade of paint, but the bass and
percussion are the primary colors.
Among contemporary pianists, who do
you like?
I respect all the pianists we knew in Cuba
[Robert] Glasper, [Brad] Mehldau. Gonzalo
Rubalcaba is really my brother. Yes, I know Osmany
Paredes and Luis Perdomo; they are all good, and
Im happy that they come from Cuba, even though
we dont have the same style. They believe in what
they do. We all have the same 88 notes; the philosophy you apply makes the difference.
Tell me about your influences, and how
you developed your vocal style. Before
Ibrahim Ferrer, was there a singer with
whom you identified?
Among singers, I love Abbey Lincoln. Pay
attention to one songA Heart Is Not A Toy
that gives me goosebumps. You think the line is
over but she adds a little grace note. She goes
beyond singing well, and shows the character to
live what you sing, put all of herself in there. That
was very impressive.
The other song of Abbeys is Africa. When I
first heard Abdullah Ibrahims Ishmael with
that bass line, I knew I wanted my music to sound
like that. Then I heard Abbey sing Africa and I
thought, I want my vocals to sound like that!
Will any of your future projects involve
poetry?
Im working with the concepts of African aesthetics put forth by poets Aim Csaire [from
Martinique] and Lopold Senghor [from Senegal].
Also Russian poetry. I love poetry combined with
music. A concert, like a movie, can tell a two-hour
story with a lot of detail and visuals.
Some people understand words easier
than music, but you give them both
bam!
Im not interested in just being a piano player.
A musician must have different ideas of sound.
Your remixes on Yo80s and Bibisause different keyboards.
If you make the right balance between electric
and acoustic, people then will accept that electronics dont hurt. Electronics can be the slave of
music, but not the other way around. I like to combine the sounds to make it a laboratory.
What other instruments do you play?
Percussion? Mbira?
I love percussion. I would love to play mbira,
but thats more an opportunity for Africans. Id
love to mess around with drums more. In my first
group, I played drums. It was a Beatles group. I
was Ringo! I play congas a little, too.
Where are your African players from?
Chrif Soumano, tonight on kora, is from
Masterpiece
Excellent
Good
Fair
Poor
Inside
53 / Jazz
56 / Blues
60 / Beyond
66 / Historical
68 / Books
Warren Wolf
Warren Wolf
Wolfgang
HHHH
Border-Free
HHHH
The virtuosity, energy and muscle power of pianist
Chucho Valds never fails to enthrall crowds, but
peel away the pyrotechnics and sometimes substance wanes. Not so on this thoughtful album,
which embraces family in a grand manner
and radiates to traditions from Africa, Spain,
Comanche America and black America. While
Valds is not the greatest storytellerhis solos
proceed in seemingly arbitrary rhythmic and tex-
David Binney
Lifted Land
Criss Cross 1358
HHHH
Whats nice about Lifted Land is alto saxophonist David Binneys willingness not
to follow a formula, even if its his own.
What starts with a multi-tracked chorus of
Binneys, on Fanfare For Basu, ends with
a solo from pianist Craig Taborn. And the
expectations are foiled from front to back.
Perhaps the model here is The Road
To Your House, with rather simple but
rhythmically demanding melodic material suggesting some terrain fully explored
in alto and piano solos. But Binneys willingness to depart from the clearest path
is made evident on As Snow Before A
Summer Sun, where any sense of conventional song play is upended, instead introducing a slower and more introspective sensibility
and an uncommonly open approach to the improvised material. The melodic themes do, indeed,
melt in the presence of precise and intuitive free
play from sensitive participants like Taborn and
Tyshawn Sorey.
The composed material has fascinations of its
own, for instance the piano accompaniment
on Curious About Texas is testament both to
Binneys ingenious direction and Soreys independent mindedness. Binneys tone is purposefully limited, rather narrow in a way. But he evinces
plenty from the small area in which he chooses to
50 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
John Scofield
berjam Deux
EmArcy 18605
HHHH
It seems impossible, but Im still meeting up with
people who are dubious of John Scofields groove-oriented music. Not on the basis of each disc, but for the
fact that hes chosen to put swing on the back burner for whatever hue of funk hes momentarily messing with. This stance is not only myopic, but flat-out
cluckish. Scofields rhythmic interests are many, and
theyve been in play for decades. His playing on the
followup to his 2002 berjam disc tells us that hes
becoming more pithy and more precise even as he
stretches out.
The guitarist references the African diaspora in
the album notes, and various rhythmic constructs
emerge from the range of pulse patterns that the
motherland has spread around the world. The most
effective tracks are afrobeat readymades that Team
Sco squeezes hard. Snake Dance cops its bedrock
personality from Fela Kuti but manages to wiggle its
way into a confluence of Motor City funk and bayou
swamp stomp.
The breezy approach that marks berjam Deux
bristles with the kind of tension that keeps the best
instrumental pop on its toes. Endless Summer is
a constant sizzle on the bottom and irresistible melody on top. In the large, Scofields string partner
Avi Bortnick comes up with beats, and the boss fits
them with thematic motifs that snuggle into place.
Sometimes it seems a tad modular, but the chemistry
the band brings to performances (bassist Andy Hess
and drummer Louis Cato are locked tight throughout) speaks for itself.
Borrowed ideas arent to be fretted over here.
Echoes of I Can See Clearly Now waft from the
reggae bounce of Dub Dub, and Al Green Song
bows directly to Willie Mitchells swagger. What
makes this stuff so individual is the guitarists grammar. Lots of note-bending, a sweet n sour tone and
the kind of ingenious improv tactics that leave you
wanting each solo to go on a chorus or two longer.
Jim Macnie
berjam Deux: Camelus; Boogie Stupid; Endless Summer; Dub
Dub; Cracked Ice; Al Green Song; Snake Dance; Scotown;Torero;
Curtis Knew; Just Dont Want To Be Lonely. (61:54)
Personnel: John Scofield, guitar; Avi Bortnick, guitar, samples;
Andy Hess, bass; Adam Deitch, drums; Louis Cato, drums; John
Medeski, organ, wurlitzer, mellotron.
Ordering info: deccarecords.com
Hot Box
The
Critics
John McDonough
John Corbett
Jim Macnie
Paul de Barros
Chucho Valds
Border-Free
John Scofield
berjam Deux
David Binney
Lifted Land
Warren Wolf
Wolfgang
Critics Comments
Warren Wolf, Wolfgang
Conventional, straightahead, no trickery or submerged agendas, and better for itWarren Wolf and his
gangs sound relaxed together in this comfort-food CD.The two different groups dont scream out their
differences; each has its pleasures, though the tracks with McBride are undeniably magical, as is the Bach-ish
duet with Diehl.
John Corbett
Great blues playing, right? But just a bit too fastidious, too, right? The precision blends with ardor, and along
Jim Macnie
the way things become a tad too steely. The gloss of the production aids this vibe.
Wolf is a masterfully melodic improviser who swings full-out, from the gut and heart, and hes aided and
abetted here by three pianists who get it. It will be interesting to see, as he develops, if Wolf moves beyond
Milt Jackson territory into more modern, personal statements such as the Lake Nerraw Flow, but even if he
doesnt, hes a pure pleasure. The vocal track is fine but feels slightly out of place.
Paul de Barros
HHHHH
Hip titles introduce these four lenghty sorties from a
supergroup of European improvisers. Chert seems
apt for Evan Parkers soprano excursion, beginning with Native American flute-like sounds before
building chirruping overtones around the initial
mid-range drone. Afterward, bagpipes are suggested by ballooning dynamics characteristic of circular breathing and the partials split again to create
Made Up Mind
HHH1/2
Christian McBride
Out There
HHH1/2
Jazz /
By brad farberman
john abbott
Carline Ray
Vocal Sides
Carlcat Records
HHHH
Catherine Russell isnt the only splendid vocalist
in her family. Her mother, Carline Ray, who died
on July 18 at 88, exhibited ringing authority.
After graduating from Juilliard with classical
voice and piano training in 1946, Ray had an estimable yet under-recognized jazz career as a singer, guitarist and bass player. Among her credits: the all-female International Sweethearts of
Rhythm, the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra, Mercer
Ellington, Mary Lou Williams and Ruth Brown.
Ray had a full, caramel-rich voice with a dra-
matic dimension that added a special immediacy to her singing of lyrics to favorite songs she
sang throughout her life. She brought a strong
sense of conviction to When I Grow Too Old To
Dream, nicely judging the narrative pace, and on
Somewhere, she emotes with great warmth, relishing every syllable for its expressiveness. After
capably scatting Donna Lee, Ray displays her
capacity for swinging in the standard Back Home
Again In Indianainterestingly, she returns to
the freedom of scat to finish the medley, possibly
in ironic commentary on the safe, cozy lyrics.
Ray was a paragon of righteous voice. With
pianist Mark Shane following along, she and her
daughter together kindled a sense of faith-inspired joy and contentment over the promise of
afterlife as they sing the old hymn Land Beyond
The River. They also humbly contemplate living the right life on the spiritual Hold On,
no supporting musicians needed. Ray, without
Russell, also followed a sacred course with Duke
Ellingtons Come Sunday and with two pieces,
Lazarus and Our Father, she first encountered
when singing on Williams jazzy Mary Lous
Frank-John Hadley
Mass, back in 1970.
Vocal Sides: When I Grow Too Old To Dream; Donna Lee/Back
Home Again In Indiana; Somewhere; Lazarus; Our Father; Land
Beyond The River; Come Sunday; Hold On; A Child Is Born; Without
A Song; Lucille. (41:45)
Personnel: Carline Ray, vocals; Catherine Russell, vocals (6, 8);
Yuka Aikawa (1, 2, 3, 5, 10), Mark Shane (6), piano; Atsundo Aikawa,
bass (1, 2, 3, 5, 10); Greg Skaff (guitar 4, 7, 9); Mark McLean, drums
(1, 2, 10); Akua Dixon, cello (7, 9); Frank Anderson, organ (11).
Ordering info: cdbaby.com
Drew Gress
HHHH
Given how often his name crops up on
other peoples projects, its not surprising that its taken bassist Drew Gress five
years to follow up his last disc, 2008s The
Irrational Numbers. On his latest, Gress
reconvenes the same quintet that hes
been writing for since his 2005 album
7 Black Butterflies, made up of frequent
collaborators in a variety of different
contexts.
Reshuffling these same cards makes
for quite a different game, however, and
Gress recordings with this band are
very different than, say, saxophonist Tim
Bernes work with similar configurations. The bassist favors a focused restraint, a sort of concentrated tension that wrings the maximum inspiration
from minimal elements, and which maintains a
taut severity even when spare free passages burst
into angular swing.
The albums centerpiece is the nearly 12-minute title track, which opens with Berne and Ralph
Alessi weaving intricate patterns before coalescing into Gress shimmeringly melancholy melody. Several such moments of gathering beauty
are laced throughout the piece, for the most part a
dark and ephemeral excursion made all the more
elusive through Gress use of electronics.
It may seem paradoxical, but while Gress mel54 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Pop-Culture Blues
Bell Production Company
HHH
The Michael Treni Big Bands Pop-Culture Blues is
a 10-part music history lesson. Conceived as a
compositional study of the development of the
blues in jazz since the 50s, the suite consists of a
series of original pieces, each of which adheres to
a formula derived from elements that major composers of bluesy jazz employed.
One For Duke, for example, leans on the
polytonality Duke Ellington used, along with the
double diminished chord voicings that became
another of his signatures. Treni approaches each
era similarly: the 12-bar Charles Mingus tribute Minor Blues employs dark harmonies and
hints at a bit of bawdiness; More Than 12 Blues
exemplifies characteristics of the cool school that
emerged with Gerry Mulligan; Smokin Blues
borrows McCoy Tyners affection for the 24-bar
form with minor pentatonic and augmented
scales; and so on. All of these technical details are
explained in Trenis liner notes, adding another
layer to the experience of the music itself. Listeners
already acquainted with these facts about each
great composers style and form can become
engrossed in the ways Treni met the challenge his
compositional exercise posed, while newbies can
learn the vocabulary for precise technical descriptions while hearing compelling examples of them.
Treni surrounds himself with strong soloists,
including Frank Elmo, who performs a beautiful
homage to the Breckers (Mr. Funky Blues), and
Freddie Hendrix, featured on the Herbie Hancockand-Wayne Shorter-centric Blues In Triplicate.
While some tracks underwhelmBluesy Bossa
never seems to get where its goingthe projects
scope offers plenty to admire. Jennifer Odell
Pop Culture Blues: One For Duke; BQE Blues; Minor Blues;
Bluesy Boss; More Than 12 Blues; Summer Blues; Blues In Triplicate;
Mr. Funky Blues; Smokin Blues; Pop-Culture Blues. (67:03)
Personnel: Bill Ash, trumpet, flugelhorn; Jerry Bergonzi, tenor,
soprano sax (1, 6, 7, 9); Charles Blenzig, piano (25, 8, 10); Vinnie
Cutro, trumpet; Rick Dekovessey, percussion (4, 8); Nathan
Ecklund, trumpet; Frank Elmo, tenor saxophone, alto flute, clarinet;
Bob Ferrel, trombone; Freddie Hendrix, trumpet, flugelhorn (6,
7); Ken Hitchcock, tenor sax, alto flute, clarinet; Philip Jones, bass
trombone, tuba; Joe Labelle, guitar (2, 4, 8); Roy Nicolosi, baritone
saxophone, bass clarinet, clarinet; Takashi Otsuka, bass; Chris
Persad, trumpet; Joe Petrizzo, trombone (lead); Jim Ridl, piano (1,
6, 7, 9); Sal Spicola, alto saxophone, flute; Michael Treni, trombone;
Ron Vincent, drums; Craig Yaremko, alto sax, flute, alto flute.
Ordering info: bellproductionco.com
Nameless Neighbors
Sunnyside 1340
HHH
The album concept in jazz remains essential. It
takes longer for the essence of a jazz artist to
reveal itself. Jazz also demands more effort from
the listener, who is rewarded with a pleasure
more nuanced than youll find on any Billboard
singles chart. So it is with the Nick Sanders Trio
on Nameless Neighbors, though the album also
raises the question of whether one can have too
much album to get your point across.
Simplicity guides Sanders, bassist Henry
Fraser and drummer Connor Baker. Thats not to
say there arent complex moments in their music.
There are plenty, in fact, since the trio cultivates
a modular feeling. They have no fear of 7/8 nor of
chopping it up, adding a beat or taking one away
in some brief passage. On Flip, for example,
they hit the home stretch at a busy polymetrical
clip, which they quickly whittle down to alternating bars of 7 and 8. But they also love triads
on the I chord. Sanders often spins independent
single lines, one of which might hark back to
the tunes opening motif while the other weaves
around it, like a web closing in on an angry fly.
That I chord is a powerful tool in Sanders arsenal. Chamberlain, Maine, and Row 18, Seat C
begin by laying out complicated themes studded
with unexpected and unadorned triads, which
can pop up in the middle of some motif. On the
former track, these rhythmic irregularities and
playful surprises map out the course for the collective improv that follows. Through minimal
gestures, all three musicians stretch out and find
their way back to the recapitulation.
The album as a whole provides more insight
into Sanders as a player and composer than any
individual track. Its an agreeable portrait, but
his adherence to medium dynamics in the uppermid range of the keyboard and his fondness for
minor ninths as a speaking device in his solos
become clear after two or three cuts.
Bob Doerschuk
Nameless Neighbors: Chamberlain, Maine; Sandman; New
Town; Row 18, Set C; Hymn; Dome Zone; Flip; Orse At Safari; Nameless Neighbors; Manganese; Simple; Motor World; I Dont Want To
Set The World On Fire. (58:13)
Personnel: Nick Sanders, piano; Henry Fraser, bass; Connor Baker,
drums.
Ordering info: sunnysiderecords.com
Blues /
By frank-john hadley
Blurring
The Lines
Tinsley Ellis
Various Artists: The Walter Davis Project (Electro-Fi 3435; 68:45 HHH1/2 ) German
pianist Christian Rannenberg advocates here
for little-remembered St. Louis bluesman Walter
Davis (his 78s date from 1930 to 1952), who was
an effective singer with a morose streak and a
pianist with a highly individuated, sparse style.
Recorded between 2002 and 08, Charlie Musselwhite, Billy Boy Arnold, Jimmy McCracklin and
Henry Townsend size up tunes once performed by
Davis in saloons. The results are stirring, though
singer-pianist Townsend, offering one showcase
(Nothin But Blues), is feeling his age and singer
McCracklin isnt at his best on two others. Rannenbergs playing throughout the session signals his
integrity and craftsmanship. DB
Ordering info: electrofi.com
Ellery Eskelin
HHHH
Ellery Eskelin/Susan Alcorn/
Michael Formanek
Mirage
HHHH
These recordings capture saxophonist Ellery
Eskelin in wildly divergent trios: one focusing on
standards, the other making things up on the fly.
The first recording by his excellent organ trio
with Gary Versace and Gerald Cleaver was dedicated to his mother, Bobby Lee, a Baltimore
organist. Eskelin has written that he considers
this group a free improvisation unit that just
happens to use the Great American Songbook for
structure. The first few minutes of The Midnight
Sun find Versace playing spacey, cascading note
runs while Eskelin deploys his gorgeously smoky
tone to spontaneously shape melodies that sound
recovered from half a century agothe tune is
almost half over by the time Cleaver enters with
gentle swing prodding and Versace traces the
changes. Versace sometimes lays down bass lines
using his foot pedals, but he also functions more
in the pianistic role la Larry Young.
Mirage is totally improvised. Pedal steel guitar player Susan Alcorn has a slippery quality
that allows her to function as a fluid glue, bridging the sometimes nubby, sometimes woody
notes knotted up and the sinuous, striated lines
bowed by Michael Formanek and breathy improvisation by Eskelin. The album is dominated by
ruminative pieces taken at ballad speed, with the
exception of the rare piece where things move
rapidly, like Saturation, with Eskelin playing
eighth-note flurries and Formanek plucking out
Peter Margasak
pointillistic lines.
Trio New York II: The Midnight Sun; Just One Of Those Things:
We See; My Ideal; After Youve Gone; Flamingo. (57:20)
Personnel: Ellery Eskelin, tenor saxophone; Gary Versace,
Hammond B3 organ; Gerald Cleaver, drums.
Ordering info: home.earthlink.net/~eskelin/
Mirage: Rain Shadow; Meridian; Divergence; Saturation; Absolute Zero; Refraction; Occlusion; Downburst; Mirage. (66:50)
Personnel: Ellery Eskelin, tenor saxophone; Susan Alcorn, pedal
steel guitar; Michael Formanek, double bass.
Ordering info: cleanfeed-records.com
HHH1/2
Kommeno is a Greek village that was the site of a horrific war crime. In 1943, the German army massacred
317 inhabitants. The town observed this event with
annual memorial services that have been replaced
with a cultural festival. German drummer Gnter
Baby Sommer knew nothing about the atrocity
when he was booked to play there in 2008. When he
first heard about the massacre, he was overcome with
Sonic Mandala
Meta Records 17
HHH1/2
Made To Break
Provoke
HHH1/2
Bob Mover
My Heart Tells Me
Motma 117
HHH1/2
Because of the sparseness of Bob Movers discography, nearly every time he drops a new
recording, it feels as if it should be the one to
catapult him into a realm of greater recognition. This delightful set arrives five years after
It Amazes Me (Zoho) with potential of shining a brighter spotlight on the charismatic saxophonist and vocalist. In addition to showcasing Mover exploring a program of classics with
sagacious aplomb, My Heart Tells Me comes
with a DVD, capturing some of the sessions and
some brief insights from Mover as to why he
chose the material.
Cynics may balk at that conceit, but theres
no denying the allure of the material. On saxophones and vocals, Mover brings a weathered
soul to the fore that works exceptionally well
on ballads such as Youve Changed and You
Must Believe In Spring. On the former, Movers
whiskey-soaked lament on both alto and vocals
casts a late, after-hours angst underneath Kenny
Barrons soulful yet economical piano accompaniment. A similar hypnosis takes over on You
Must Believe In Spring with Mover whipping
out a wonderful soprano sax solo underneath a
melancholy backdrop. Mover captivates equally on the mid-tempo selections, too. Such is the
case with his pithy rendering of My Heart Tells
Me and a subtly frolicsome reading of So Near
And Yet So Far.
The second disc displays more of Movers gift
for uptempo works as well as his compositional
acumen as he widens his band to include trumpeter Josh Evans. Movers own Survival Of
The Sickest is a bluesy tune, marked by dissonance that recalls Charles Mingus, whom Mover
worked with in the 70s. Still the standpoint on
disc two is Movers poignant rendering of Kenny
John Murph
Dorhams Fair Weather.
My Heart Tells Me: Disc One: My Heart Tells Me; So Near And
Yet So Far; I Hadnt Anyone Till You; Get Out Of Town; Penthouse
Serenade (When Were Alone); Gone With The Wind; Youve
Changed; By Myself; You Must Believe In Spring (53:50). Disc Two:
Dees Dilemma; Survival Of The Sickest; Muggawump; Fair Weather; Chets Chum; Sweet Basil; Carmen Calypso (46:17).
Personnel: Bob Mover, tenor, alto, soprano saxophone, vocals;
Kenny Barron, piano; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Steve Williams, drums;
Victor Lewis, drums; Steve Hall, tenor saxophone; Josh Evans,
trumpet.
Ordering info: motema.com
OCTOBER 2013 DOWNBEAT 59
Beyond /
By peter margasak
Africa
Roots
Revisited
jim mcguire
HHHH
Kassidat: Raw 45s From Morocco (Dust-ToDigital 2004: 34:31 HHHH1/2) vibrantly surveys
six different musical approaches from the post-colonial heyday of the nations homegrown record
industry from the late 50s to the early 60s, including the driving syncopation of Mohamed Bergams
chaabi song Zine Mlih and the local adaption of
the rai from neighboring Algeria performed by
Abdellah el Magana on Kassidat El Hakka. The
HHHH
It has been easy to view Wadada Leo Smiths
recent recordings in terms of dualities: large
versus small, acoustic versus electric, jazz
versus classical. He brings it all together on
Occupy The World. Recorded in Finland
with a 21-piece orchestra, it encompasses not only the diversity of musical methods and content, but also the internationalism and the ancient-to-the-future temporal
sense of Smiths mature work.
A key aspect of Smiths orchestral composing is the refusal to be bound by key. He
uses the instruments full range simultaneously. This yields an expansive sound field that
occasionally bristles with dissonance. To keep
things in check, he limits how many instruments
play at any given time. A subsection establishes
the action and further sections interject, so that
the music behaves like that of a smaller group but
has the tonal resources of up to 22 instruments.
TUMO (Todella Uuden Musiikin Orkesteri,
which translates as The Really New Jazz Orchestra)
comprises musicians who have played on other
TUM Records releases and convened to play this
music with Smith. There first performance was in
February 2012, and they then spent the next three
David Chesky
HHH
Pianist David Chesky touts Jazz In
The New Harmonic as blending
jazz and classical procedures, stating, I wanted to take the harmonic language of 21st-century classical music and make it groove.
The operative word here is
groove. Thats what most listeners are likely to hear: eight simmering tracks based on two-bar bass ostinatos and one- or two-chord vamps. The tempos are rarely faster than medium. Bassist Peter Washington and drummer Billy Drummond can hold
those grooves for as long as it takes while Chesky spells out spare, offbeat,
impressionistic classical chords and saxophonist Javon Jackson and trumpeter Jeremy Pelt ride the wave. The bass line in the title track recalls Sonny
& Chers The Beat Goes On, but the more typical connection here is jazzrock Miles Davis, especially in Broadway, where the insistent tock on
Billy Drummonds rims and Pelts upward-shout entrance both scream In A
Silent Way. Theres a deployment of space throughout the album, underlined
by Pelt both in his rhythmic licks and his use of Harmon mute. Those elements can be tasty, as on Burnout, its seductive eight-bar theme tagged by a
little melodic squiggle and a three-note hook, or the closing Transcendental
Tripping, where Chesky, Jackson and Pelt hang behind the fast-moving current of Washington and Drummond. Any one of these tunes by itself would
Jon Garelick
be awesome. But not eight of them.
Jazz In The New Harmonic: Jazz In The New Harmonic; Broadway; American Culture X; Dukes
Groove; Grooves From The Underground; Deconstruction; Burnout; Transcendental Tripping. (69:15)
Personnel: David Chesky, piano; Billy Drummond, drums; Javon Jackson, tenor saxophone; Jeremy
Pelt, trumpet; Peter Washington, bass.
Ordering info: chesky.com
HHHH
Beginning with the spring-taut
tension of Dance Of The
Macrocosmic People, pianist
James Weidman, bassist Harvie
S and drummer Steve Williams
signal their intention to create
music that emphasizes rhythm
and structure.
Although Weidman composed six of the eight compositions, the bass
plays the most prominent role in the trio, surging behind the piano like a
powerful wake on Re-Emergence, steering the motion on a highly textured
version of Stevie Wonders Send One Your Love, and holding down a jittery
rhythmic pulse on Time To Make A Move. On the title track, the dominant
bass motif links Weidmans opening balladic solo to a series of traded gestures among the bandmates, and provides a structural core that allows the
piece to shift easily to a much tougher ending.
Williams is deceptively quiet, low in the mix yet ubiquitous, adding color
on cymbals while providing propulsive energy. When he steps up on
Re-Emergence to add his voice in a more forceful manner, the trio begins
to sound like The Bad Plus, a resemblance that is heightened by the compositions episodic nature.
Only Weidmans Aperturistica relatively straightahead, mid-tempo
steamerstands apart as less than highly distinctive in this compelling set.
James Hale
Truth And Actuality: Dance Of The Macrocosmic People; Homily For Pastor B; Time To Make A
Move; Courage; Truth And Actuality; Re-Emergence; Aperturistic; Send One Your Love. (53:18)
Personnel: James Weidman, piano; Harvie S, bass; Steve Williams, drums.
Ordering info: innercirclemusic.net
62 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Live At Smalls
Michael Bates/Samuel
Blaser Quintet
HHH1/2
SmallsLIVE 32
Jim Snidero
ECM 2274
Savant 2127
City Of Broken
Dreams
Stream Of
Consciousness
HHH
HHH
City Of Broken Dreams: City Of Broken Dreams; Leonie; Just One More Time; The Forbidden Zone;
No Other Possibility; The Way Some People Live; The Impossible Divorce; Late Blue; Ocean View; City Of
Broken Dreams, var. (52:05)
Personnel: Giovanni Guidi, piano; Thomas Morgan, bass; Joo Lobo, drums.
Ordering info: ecmrecords.com
Stream Of Consciousness: Stream Of Consciousness; Nirvana; Fear One; Vantage; Black Ice;
Wisdoms Path; K-Town. (51:30)
Personnel: Jim Snidero, alto saxophone; Paul Bollenback, guitar; Linda Oh, bass; Rudy Royston,
drums.
Ordering info: jazzdepot.com
Tarbaby
HHH
Orrin Evans
It Was Beauty
Criss Cross Jazz 999 000
HH1/2
Historical /
By ken micallef
Rebellious,
Soothing
Paul Motian
Gilad Edelman
HHHH
roberto masotti/ECM
Theres a moment in this wonderful collection of Paul Motians early ECM recordings
where the drummer/composer strikes a
detuned ice bell mid-song, and it rings out
through the listeners consciousness, creating all the kinetic surprise of a gunshot. Motian always knew how to surprise, yet also
how to soothe.
A musician whose roots went back to
Thelonious Monk and 52nd Street before
working with Paul Bley, Bill Evans and Keith
Jarrett (Mose Allison too; Motian had an
affinity for pianists), Motian was the master musician who perfected his style then
reinvented itoriginal, rebellious, innovative, even outrageous. As such, upon first
listening to some of his later groups that
often covered the Great American Songbook he so loved, his drumming can be
something of a shock: boisterous tom tom
fills; declarative cymbal and snare punctuations
that surge through a songs flow; burly propulsions heading out to places unknown. Motian
led his many groups with the same intensity,
innovation and joyousness. Gathering his first
six ECM CDs as a leader, with liner notes by The
Bad Plus Ethan Iverson, Paul Motian (ECM
2260-65;41:22/38:05/39:52/43:14/48:26/40:47
HHHHH) is an unadorned tribute to a man who
could be charming, but also as playfully blunt as a
child, both in speech and in musical practice.
Ive heard drummers say, What Paul is doing
is easy. Anyone can do that, Motian told DownBeat in 2010. Bullshit. I could play totally free, but
if it doesnt fit with what else is happening, that
is bullshit.
Motians drumming is inspiring throughout
these recordings and the diversity of the musicians and the music breathtaking. 1972s Conception Vessel and 74s Tribute reflect their eras, dual
acoustic and electric guitars (unfurling aromatically like some Ennio Morricone soundtrack or the
faraway sounds of a Turkish bazaar) forecasting
Motians Electric Bebop Band; his love of hand
percussion filling the music with exotic fragrance
with Keith Jarrett, Charlie Haden and Carlos Ward
rounding out the casts. Motian swings galvanically on Tributes Tuesday Ends Saturday, then
agitates the time like a burgeoning storm on War
Orphans. Given their proximity to the psychedelic
1960s theres an undeniable spacey-ness to these
albums in their smoky atmospheres, but also a
warmth and spaciousness, a leavening of the time
in rubato, playful spasms, one of Motians rhythmic gifts. Dance, by contrast, is somehow more
abstract. Motian engages the cooler interactions
of saxophonist Charles Brackeen and bassist David Izenon in a more traditional, supportive role.
Theres less stuttering disturbances, and more
Paul Motian
Leo Genovese
Seeds
HHH
Esperanza Spaldings longtime accompanist Leo
Genovese doesnt get into the studio as a leader
frequently, but judging from the fearless approach
to writing he displays on Seeds, theres a wealth of
new music inside him that deserves to be recorded.
Forward thinking and playful, the Argentinaborn pianists compositions share an exploratory nature, whether the new terrain in question is
a marriage of electronic and acoustic sounds, an
unlikely use of chromatic scaling or the successful juxtaposition of otherwise disparate ideas. The
pieces also seem to share at least a strand of DNA
with the creative impetus of Spalding, whose
vocals on four tracksplus her contribution of
lyrics to Portuguese Mirrorsuggest that the
pair trades inspiration on a regular basis.
Genovese wrote the music for all but one
track: a gentle solo piano take on the Argentine
folk classic Los Ejes De Mi Carreta. Amid the
other tunes are more than a few nods to prog-rock
spaciness and the vaguely spooky, ethereal quality of early 90s electonica outfits like Stereolab,
which the gorgeously creepy timbre of Spaldings
voice evokes on Portuguese Mirror and the
whirr-and-click-filled PPH. The melody of A
Minor Complex feels prog-y, too. But taken with
the more traditional post-bop structures embedded in the tune, it becomes a good example of
Genoveses ability to unite unlikely musical bedfellows as a way of heightening a songs energy and
tension. The bluesier Lets Get High takes a different tact, with Genovese building a bass-heavy
bottom sound before taking a few time-shifting
risks in the high register. On the harder-to-digest
Chromatic Hymn, Genovese casts his instrumentation net wider, adding in the Farfisa organ,
melodion, accordion and andes. Jennifer Odell
Seeds: PPH; Father Of Spectralism; Left Hand Words; Our Historic
Future; Los Ejes De Mi Carreta; Letter From Wayne; A Minor Complex; Lets Get High; Posterior Mode; Portuguese Mirror; Chromatic
Hymn. (58:21)
Personnel: Leo Genovese, piano, Hammond B3, melodion,
Rhodes, keyboards, andes, accordion; Esperanza Spalding, voice;
Daniel Blake, tenor, soprano and baritone saxophone; John
Lockwood, acoustic and electric bass; Robert Gullotti, drums; Sergio
Miranda programming. Plus Thomas Six, programming (1); George
Garzone, tenor sax (11); Francisco Mela, drums (11); Ricardo Vogt,
electric guitar (11).
Ordering info: palmetto-records.com
Subscribe
DownBeat.com I 877-904-JAZZ
OCTOBER 2013 DOWNBEAT 67
Books /
By john murph
Musicians,
Authors
Hold Forum
on Jazz
Culture
The title People Get Ready: The Future Of
Jazz Is Now! (Duke University Press) certainly titillates as it references one of Curtis
Mayfields most treasured call to action gospel-soul hits and reiterates the long-held notion of jazz being an interminable genre that
continuously pushes itself at the front of contemporary vanguard and at times surpasses it,
while also being mindful of its past. Of course,
everyone doesnt see jazz the same way, especially many fickle listeners who are quick to
calcify jazz in whatever perceived glory years,
or worse, bury it as a bygone relic that refuses
to give up its last breathhence, the 14 essays,
contained in this academic compilation, edited by
English professor Ajay Heble and author/percussionist Rob Wallace.
Broken into seven thematic chapters, essays
from such illustrious thinkers and musicians as Greg
Tate, Vijay Iyer, DJ Spooky and John Szwed grapple
with many of the same issues that ignite heated
discussions surrounding the viability of jazz in modern times, whether gathered informally around
a coffee table or at a panel discussion. While the
erudition of all of the essays is noticeably high, its
often to the point of being effusive and dull. Those
searching a narrative to help digest all of the loftiness may be disappointed, and even for the most
ardent jazz fan, People Get Ready isnt easy reading. But some of its chapters fare better than others.
Tates Black Jazz In The Digital Age is one of
the books bright moments. In this essay he contemplates the contentious topic surrounding progressive jazz and its black audience. He juxtaposes
heady thought with personal anecdotes about
growing up in Washington, D.C., a mecca of black
American culture and education, and living in Harlem, another hotbed of black American music. One
of the most illuminating aspects of living in Harlem
for a quarter century is that you are constantly reminded how every decade of Harlems existence is
visible for inspection on a daily basis, Tate writes.
And this isnt just in the face of elders, but in the
architecture, in the fact that you can now go to hear
jazz in Mintons again, and in the fact that outside
of the Apollo you are more likely to hear live jazz in
H-town than live hip-hop or rhythm n blues. The
essay counters the often trite conceit that jazz has
lost its black audience as Tate smartly contextualizes jazz within a wider black American music framework that includes funk, hip-hop, blues, soul and
punk, illustrating how those genres feed off each
other, and more importantly, how listeners embraced those genres, sometimes without barriers.
Foolers Gold
HHH
Ralph Alessi
Baida
ECM 5304
HHHH
Ralph Alessi/Fred Hersch
Only Many
CamJazz 5048
HHHH
Not as well known as some other highly regarded
New York trumpeters, Ralph Alessi is nonetheless an individualist with a style and sound all
his ownand, abstractly, not his own. One of the
remarkable things about Alessi, who has worked
extensively with groups led by Steve Coleman, Uri
Caine and Don Byron, is his selflessness, his ability to lead and yet not lead his groups, while creating a springboard to engrossing improvisations, as
he does on Baida, his ECM debut, and Only Many,
a duet recording with pianist Fred Hersch. Alessis
2010 CamJazz release, Cognitive Dissonance, featured the same exceptional lineup heard on Baida:
Jason Moran, piano; Drew Gress, upright bass;
and Nasheet Waits, drums. And though Moran
and Waits know one anothers playing intimately as members of the pianists Bandwagon group,
their performances here are refreshingly fun,
free, loose and exuberant. Perhaps in part theyre
reflecting Alessis droll song titles. Alessis whisper-soft trumpet tone is like his improvisations:
transparent, full and pure, yet his language is also
curiously subliminal, if not restrained. Not for
Alessi is a brash flurry of notes or a terse statement
of cool; he works between the notes, his thoughtful, conversational solos as meditative as a calligraphers art, each line free-flowing and declarative
but with immaculate shape and beauty. Similarly,
the groups focus on low-level detail is a study in
exactitude, like a jewelers art set to music. The
slowly revolving examinations of Maria Lydia
hover in mid-air; Shank swings funkily like
some outtake from Miles Davis E.S.P.
Alessi and Hersch together produce one of the
most compelling duet albums of the year, Only
Many. These two dont inhabit the same wavelength; they expand their shared musical molecules into a new ionosphere. Performing original material and improvisations, and covering
Thelonious Monk and Paul Motian, the pair take
serious enjoyment in each note, finding inventive pockets of melody and rhythm within every
OCTOBER 2013 DOWNBEAT 69
A Jazz School
Blooms
Johannes Wallmann leads
the charge for a new Jazz Studies
department at University
of WisconsinMadison
Inside
Al Kay
Veteran drummer Jack DeJohnette with Canadas Humber College Jazz Ensemble
Features
74 A Jazz School Blooms
University of Wisconsin
Madison begins a new
jazz-degree program
School Listings
78
102
116
142
154
East
South
Midwest
West
International
Johannes
Wallmann, the
new director of
jazz studies at
UWMadison
A Jazz School
By Aaron Cohen / Photography by Michael R. Anderson
Blooms
A dream
comes true as
The University of
WisconsinMadison
works toward a new
jazz degree program
Its greatand its a lot of pressure, because we want to create something that really speaks to all the people who have an
interest in it.
A walk around Madison and the universitys campus shows
why some influential Madisonians have fought for a jazz program. Along with the universitys considerable reputation for
classical music, Madison itself conveys the open-minded culture that makes jazz as welcome here as the citys organic produce providers and listener-sponsored community radio station (WORT, 89.9 FM). Of course, challenges still abound. This
spring the Wisconsin State Journal frequently reported on legislative moves that have cut into funding for public college education. But local partnerships are helping the music department
face what could become a formidable budgetary situation.
UWMadison has developed its approach to jazz studies at a
deliberate tempo during the past 40 years. That determined
pace evolved into careful consideration and, now, its embrace.
Thimmig, a saxophonist, has been on the universitys faculty since 1971 and recounts this history. He was hired just to
teach composition, but because of his professional background,
he also led the universitys jazz band (which was established in
1968). Pianist Cecil Taylor, who was a lecturer, started the Black
Longtime
UW professor
Richard Davis
Professor Les
Thimmig said the
programs expansion
has been a long
time coming.
East
Berklee College of Music
Boston, Massachusetts
Student Body:
4,447 students.
Tuition:
$18,257/semester.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, professional
diploma.
Faculty:
Terri Lyne Carrington, Joe Lovano,
Alumni:
Quincy Jones, Esperanza Spalding,
Jazz Bands:
Thelonious Monk Ensemble,Wayne
Shorter Ensemble,Yellowjackets
Ensemble.
Auditions:
Live audition and interview. Sites
and dates are listed at berklee.edu/
admissions.
Financial Aid:
Available. Contact financialaid@
berklee.edu, (617) 747-2274.
Scholarships:
Need- and merit-based available.
Contact [email protected],
(617) 747-8681.
Apply by:
Nov. 1 (early action),
Jan. 15 (regular decision).
Contact:
Berklee Office of Admissions, (617)
747-2221 or 800-BERKLEE.
Student Body:
315 music students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $46,670; graduate:
Student Body:
2,000 students.
Tuition:
$9,000/$22,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music (Jazz Studies
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Glenn E. Giles, music department
Student Body:
12,000 students, 300 music majors,
Student Body:
Approximately 75 full-time students,
200-plus part-time.
Tuition:
$60,500 for two-year program,
Student Body:
300 music majors.
Tuition:
$25,722.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Science in Music
Columbia University
New York, New York
Student Body:
Approx. 125 in the Louis Armstrong
Tuition:
$41,160/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Studies special concentration,
Music major.
Faculty:
Paul Bollenback, Christine Correa,
Duquesne University
Mary Pappert School of Music
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
250 undergraduate, 40 jazz un-
Financial Aid:
Available. Contact Financial Aid,
Scholarships:
Talent and academic scholarships.
Apply by:
Feb. 7 (undergraduate), April 1
(graduate).
Contact:
Troy Centofanto, director of music
Student Body:
60 Jazz Studies students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate:$44,580/year;
graduate:$1,350/credit hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music,
Doctorate of Music.
Faculty:
Harold Danko, Bill Dobbins, Jeff
Auditions:
Conducted by appointment only.
Alumni:
Victor Provost. Many alumni
Tuition:
Undergraduate in-state: $9,708/
Tuition:
$31,804.
Jazz Degrees: Bachelor of Music, Jazz Studies, and
Faculty:
Kris Allen, Abraham Burton, Chris
Howard University
Washington, D.C.
Student Body:
8,500 students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $21,450/year; graduate: $29,000/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Studies: Instrumental, Piano, Voice; Bachelor of Music
Student Body:
550 undergraduate music majors, 1020 jazz studies
majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $38,400/year; graduate: $729/credit hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Mike Titlebaum, Gregory Evans, Nicholas Walker, Frank
Faculty:
Gary Thomas, Nasar Abadey,
jhu.edu.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
[email protected],
(410) 234-4848.
tuition-fees-and-expenses.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music,
Artist Diploma.
Faculty:
Approximately 25.
Alumni:
Christian McBride, Miles Davis,
Auditions:
Four audition dates between
Financial Aid:
Available. Contact Financial Aid
Office.
Scholarships:
Available. ContactKU Jazz Studies.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
KU Admissions, (610) 683-4000,
[email protected]
Kutztown University
Kutztown, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
100+ music students.
Tuition:
In-state: $4,297.90; out-of-state:
$9,210.90.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music.
Faculty:
Dr. Kevin Kjos, Scott Lee, Allison
Tuition:
In-state: $16,185.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Eddie Allen, Dwayne Broadnax,
Boston, Massachusetts
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey
Student Body:
45 jazz students.
Tuition:
$56,750/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music, Certificate
Purchase College
Purchase, New York
Student Body:
60 undergraduates, 20 graduate
students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $5,270,
Alumni:
Cyrille Aime, Jo Lawry, Jon
Queens College/CUNY
Aaron Copeland
School of Music
Flushing (Queens), New York
Student Body:
75 music students.
Tuition:
Subsidized by New York City and
Jazz Degrees:
Master of Music in Jazz Performance
Faculty:
Michael Mossman, David Berkman,
Rowan University
Glassboro, New Jersey
Student Body:
25
Tuition:
Visit rowan.edu/adminfinance/bur-
sar/tuitionfeesandrates.html.
Jazz Degrees:
Undergraduate, graduate degrees.
Faculty:
Eight.
Alumni:
Denis DiBlasio, George Rabbai, Bob
Sheppard.
Jazz Bands:
Two bands and five groups.
Auditions:
Visit rowan.edu/colleges/cpa/music/
auditions.
Financial Aid:
Visit rowan.edu/provost/financialaid/.
Scholarships:
Need- and merit-based available.
Student Body:
1,071 students. 194 undergradu-
[email protected].
edu.
Apply by:
Priority deadline Dec. 1.
Contact:
Mandy Feiler, director of admissions,
(848) 932-5208.
Student Body:
25 jazz students.
Tuition:
In-state: $600/credit, out-of-state:
$900/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Master in Jazz History and Research.
Faculty:
Lewis Porter, Henry Martin.
Alumni:
Vincent Gardner, Rhoda Scott, Melba
Shepherd University
out-of-state: $12,685.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Music
SUNY Fredonia
Fredonia, New York
Student Body:
70 jazz studies students.
Tuition:
In-state: $5,570, out-of-state:
$9,370.
board.
Jazz Degrees: Undergraduate credit available.
Faculty: Todd Coolman, Bill Cunliffe,
Curtis Fuller, John LaBarbera, Pat
LaBarbera, Dennis Mackrel,Hal
Miller, Mike Rodriguez, Bobby Shew.
Alumni: Kendrick Scott, Walter Smith, Richie
Barshay, Jonathan Batiste, Brandon
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music with a Jazz
Studies Concentration.
Faculty:
Bruce Johnstone, John Bacon Linda
Alumni:
Bob McChesney, Gary Keller, Joe
Scholarships:
Available, academic.
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
Professor Barry Kilpatrick,
(716) 673-4635,
[email protected].
Tuition:
In-state: $5,870, out-of-state:
$15,320.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz minor (for music majors
Alison Harbaugh
Financial Aid:
Available.
Lisa Vroman.
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Ensemble, Jazz Band, Latin
Auditions:
Students must audition for a degree
Syracuse University,
Setnor School of Music
Syracuse, New York
Student Body:
21,000 total, 330 total Setnor
students.
Tuition:
$38,970/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Art in Music, Bachelor of
Temple University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
750 Boyer College of Music and
Dance students.
Tuition:
In-state: $15,042, out-of-state:
$25,678.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz
Instrumental Performance,
Towson University
Towson, Maryland
Student Body:
265 undergraduate and graduate
Tuition:
$34,840/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Alumni:
Mark Small (Michael Bubl, Darcy
University of Connecticut
Storrs, Connecticut
Student Body:
200 music students, 15 jazz
students.
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts with a Jazz Studies
emphasis.
Faculty:
Ingrid Jensen, John Mastroianni,
Faculty:
Alumni:
Marc Ribot, Suzanne Dean, Will
University of Maryland.
Financial Aid:
financialaid.umd.edu.
Scholarships:
All students who audition are automatically considered for merit-based
scholarship.
Apply by:
Nov. 1. (undergraduate), Dec. 1.
(graduate).
Contact:
Jenny Lang, (301) 405-8435,
[email protected].
University of Massachusetts
at Amherst
Amherst, Massachusetts
Student Body:
300 music students, 45 jazz majors.
Tuition:
umass.edu/bursar/tuition-and-fees/.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Arts
University of Maryland
College Park, Maryland
Student Body:
450 in the School of Music.
Tuition:
In-state: $8,900/year,
out-of-state: $27,300/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Arts,
Master of Music.
Faculty:
Approximately 100 total.
Alumni:
Steve Fidyk, Jon Ozment, Kevin
Pace, Russell Wilson.
Jazz Bands:
Three big bands, four combos.
Auditions:
Regular auditions in January.
All students must apply to
the School of Music and the
Financial Aid:
Contact umass.edu/umfa
for information.
Scholarships:
Departmental merit-based
University of Massachusetts
at Lowell
Lowell, Massachusetts
Student Body:
16,000 students total,
Tuition:
In-State: $11,847, out-of-state:
$24,896.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Sound
Recording Technology.
Faculty:
15 full-time faculty, 45 adjunct
faculty.
Jazz Bands:
23.
Auditions:
Auditions required, visit uml.edu/
music.
Financial Aid:
Visit uml.edu/financialaid.
Scholarships:
Some need- and merit-based
scholarships available.
Apply by:
April 30.
Contact:
Amy Dinsmore, (978) 934-3850,
Bill wittkop
Edward Joffe conducts the New Jersey City University Jazz Ensemble as guest artist Ingrid Jensen performs.
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Student Body:
50 undergrad music majors and 40
graduate students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $16,240,
Afro-Cuban Ensemble.
Auditions:
Dec. 14, Jan. 25, Feb. 15. Visit uri.edu/
Financial Aid:
Visit uri.edu/admission.
Scholarships:
Available through admission appli-
Western Connecticut
State University
Danbury, Connecticut
Student Body:
Approximately 5,200 undergradu-
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
Dr. Karen LaVoie, Chair, (413) 572-
5356, [email protected].
Student Body:
65 undergraduate jazz majors, 18
graduate students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state including
Prepare to Nail
Your Auditions
By Geoffrey Himes
Tom Walsh
When a high school student auditions for a college or conservatory jazz program,
the stakes are enormous. The next four years of the
students life may well depend on what happens
during that one-day visit to campus. Nervousness
is almost inevitable, and preparation is the best
possible antidote.
tence but also confidence. You have to give the impression that Ive played
this piece a thousand times and the thousand-and-first time is no different
than it will be the thousand-and-second. If you didnt practice your audition
piece enough, I have to ask myself, How badly does this student want to get
into this school?
You dont want students who are waiting till September to become jazz
musicians, said bassist Michael Formanek, who teaches at Marylands
Peabody Conservatory. You want to hear some evidence that theyve already
started the process by listening to records and learning tunes. If we say, Play
a blues like Billies Bounce, you can tell if someone really knows Charlie
Parkers version or if theyve just taken it from a book. You can tell very
quickly if someone knows what their instrument should sound like. If they
play a series of eighth notes, does it sound like scales or are the notes grouped
into phrasing? Do they have the idea that theres more to the sound than just
playing the changes? Are they anticipating the chord change before it actually comes around?
Each college or conservatory runs its auditions a little differently, but
there are basic similarities. All schools ask for a recording, either audio or
video, with the submitted application to determine who should be asked to
audition in person. The student is usually asked to play scales and/or sightread unaccompanied and then to play the three or four prepared pieces with
an undergraduate rhythm section. The question-and-answer part of the process usually takes place during the performance part, but sometimes its separate. Often all of the auditioners on a particular day are brought back later
for a group jam session. At some schools, the auditioners have a chance to sit
in on classes, talk to current students and hear a student ensemble. At each
stage of the process, the faculty is hunting for clues as to which students they
want to work with over the next four years.
I gain more from two or three choruses of Billies Bounce, Campbell
said, than I can from an obscure Wayne Shorter tune that the rhythm section may not know very well. You can hear when a student is rambling or
when theyre just playing pitches rather than developing the melody. Another
factor is, does the musician play with a volume appropriate for the room? Do
they connect with the rhythm section, so they become musical collaborators
rather than neutral accompaniment? Does their improvisation have punctuation or is it just a run-on stream of notes?
Play the repertoire that you usually play, said James Gasior, who runs
the high school jazz program at Miamis New World School of the Arts. If
you want to play Epistrophy or something more challenging, thats fine, but
dont decide to do that a week before the audition. I dont believe in mock
auditions. I take the philosophy that if youre going to play All The Things
You Are for your audition and youve already played it a hundred times, why
should you think about it differently on the hundred-and-first time? Ive
found in my own auditions with students that if a student dresses sloppily,
it doesnt really matter to me. From what Ive gathered from faculty I know
at colleges, they dont put a lot of stock in those things. If the student comes
across as a complete jerk, of course, thats going to be a problem. Theres a
certain sense that whatever youve got, you want to show. So if you compose or double on another instrument, you should show that. On the other
hand, it doesnt help to show some mediocre clarinet playing if youre a good
saxophonist.
When they improvise, Formanek said, I want to hear a sense of basic
jazz vocabulary, which comes from listening to great performances, so you
know what it sounds like to play a bebop tune, maybe from transcriptions.
We want to hear the beginning of improvisation on tunes that has the characteristics of jazz improvisation; theyve heard other people do it; theyve played
along with recordings. They dont have to come in and sound like Clifford
Brown when theyre 17, but they should be familiar with Clifford Brown.
Given the compressed time of this process, Campbell explained, its
hard to do something complicated during the in-person audition. We do a
pre-screening, so we hear tapes [beforehand]. Thats where we like to hear
[original] compositions or more challenging music, where they have their
The Florida State University Jazz Combo rehearses in preparation for a performance at Dizzys Club Coca-Cola in New York City.
South
East Carolina University
Greenville, North Carolina
Student Body:
27,000 total, 350 in the School of
Tuition:
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Music perfor-
Jazz Bands:
ECU Jazz Ensembles A and B.
Faculty:
Jeff Bair, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr.,
Student Body:
30 Jazz majors.
Tuition:
Visit music.fiu.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music
in Jazz Performance.
Faculty:
Gary Campbell, Mike Orta, Jamie
Ousley, Rodolfo Zuniga, Tom
Lippincott, Jim Hacker.
Jazz Bands:
Big Band, Latin Jazz, Jazz Guitar
Ensemble, Combos.
Auditions:
music.fiu.edu.
Financial Aid:
Available. Visit music.fiu.edu.
Scholarships:
Need- and merit-based available.
Apply by:
music.fiu.edu.
Contact:
Prof. Gary Campbell,
[email protected].
Student Body:
41,000 total, 1,150 in the
College of Music.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $212.09/
credit, out-of-state: $717.64/credit;
graduate, in-state $477.70/credit,
out-of-state: $1,109.10/credit.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Jazz, Master of
Music in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Leon Anderson, William Kennedy,
Rodney Jordan, William Peterson,
Paul McKe, Marcus Roberts.
Alumni:
Marcus Roberts.
Jazz Bands:
Three full jazz bands.
Auditions:
January and February.
Live auditions preferred.
102 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Ray stanyard
Auditions:
Nov. 30, Feb. 8, Feb. 22 and March
Financial Aid:
Available, visit financialaid.fsu.edu
Student Body:
Approx. 490 students in
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $9,664/
Jacksonville University
Jacksonville, Florida
Student Body:
Approx. 3,000.
Tuition:
ju.edu/financialaid/pages/tui-
tion-and-costs.aspx
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Emphasis that can be applied
Loyola University
New Orleans
New Orleans, Louisiana
Student Body:
5,082 students
Tuition:
$35,504; fees: $1,416; residence hall
out-of-state: $27,586.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Performance
Miami, Florida
Faculty:
William Brian Hogg, John Zappa,
Student Body:
27,000 students on Wolfson
Student Body:
400 music majors, 26 jazz studies
Scholarships:
Connie Bowrey, (615) 898.2469,
[email protected]; mtsu.
edu/music/scholarships.php.
Apply by:
July 1 (Fall), Dec. 15 (Spring).
Contact:
Jazz Studies, james.simmons@mtsu.
edu; Music Industry: cedric.dent@
mtsu.edu; General Information:
[email protected].
Tuition:
In-state: $17,056/year,
Shenandoah Conservatory
Winchester, Virginia
Student Body:
3,500 students.
Tuition:
$27,550.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Student Body:
95,000 students, 300 music majors,
75 in Jazz Program.
Tuition:
$36,500.
Jazz Degrees: None at this time.
Faculty:
Joe Eckert, Joey Carter, Dr. Brian
Student Body:
10,000+.
Tuition:
Approximately $7,200/year.
Jazz Degrees: Bachelor of Arts in Music Education
Alumni:
Joe Sample, Wilton Felder, Wayne
Student Body:
Approximately 35,000 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $24,344,
out-of-state: $34,874.
Financial Aid:
Contact (806) 742-2270 ext. 233.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Auditions in February.
Contact:
Visit music.ttu.edu.
Tulane University
New Orleans, Louisiana
Student Body:
6,500 undergraduates.
Tuition:
$46,930.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
John Dobry, Adam Benjamin, Jesse
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz concentration only.
Faculty:
More than 50 music faculty.
Alumni:
Arlington Julius Jones.
University of Alabama
Jazz Bands:
Jazz I, II and III, combos.
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Auditions:
Visit music.ttu.edu.
Student Body:
Over 350 Music Majors, 15 Bachelor
Student Body:
59,785 students (includes main cam-
Tuition:
In-state: $208.23/credit hour, out-of-
University of Central
Oklahoma
Edmond, Oklahoma
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $169.70/
Jazz Degrees:
Undergraduate Minor in Jazz Studies,
Alumni:
Sharel Cassity, David Gibson, David
Jazz Bands:
Jazz Ensembles I, 2, 3 and 4,
University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky
Student Body:
25,000 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $7,500, out-of-state:
$18,000.
Jazz Degrees:
No degree, classes only.
Faculty:
Miles Osland, Raleigh Dailey.
Alumni:
Rob Parton, Bryan Murray.
Jazz Bands:
Two jazz bands, four combos.
Financial Aid:
Available. Contact Miles Osland,
(859) 257-8173.
Scholarships:
Merit-based scholarships available.
Apply by:
Feb. 1.
Contact:
Miles Osland, (859) 257-8173.
University of Louisville,
Jamey Aebersold Jazz
Studies Program
Louisville, Kentucky
Student Body:
400 music students, 4050 jazz.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $9,750,
Scholarships:
Admissions Counselor, (502) 852-
1623, [email protected].
Apply by:
March 1.
Contact:
A
dmissions Counselor or
Mike Tracy, (502) 852-6032,
[email protected];
louisville.edu/music/jazz.
Student Body:
430 (undergraduate),
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $41,580;
University of Memphis
Memphis, Tennessee
Student Body:
650 school of music students, 30
jazz majors.
Tuition:
In-state, approximately $7,800/year,
out-of-state: $19,400/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz
Student Body:
65 jazz students.
Tuition:
Visit uno.edu/admissions.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music (Jazz
Scholarships:
finaid.uno.edu/.
Apply by:
admissions.uno.edu/default.cfm.
Contact:
(504) 280-6381.
Tuition:
In-state: $3,120.50, out-of-state:
$10,031.50.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts in Jazz &
Student Body:
Approx. 125 jazz students.
Student Body:
Six, seven jazz majors per year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Tuition:
In-state: $3,950, out-of-state:
Faculty:
Lynne Arriale, ToddDelgiudice, Dr.
$17,750.
Jazz Degrees: Bachelor of Music in Performance
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Chad Eby, Steve Haines, Greg
Hyslop, Brandon Lee.
Jazz Bands:
Two big bands, six small combos.
Auditions:
performingarts.uncg.edu/
prospective/apply.
Financial Aid:
Available. Contact financial aid
office, (336) 334-5702.
Scholarships:
Merit-based. Contact Amanda
Hughes, (336) 334-3839.
Apply by:
Feb. 21.
Contact:
Steve Haines, [email protected];
jazz.uncg.edu.
Student Body:
100 music students, 30 in jazz.
Tuition:
In-state: $6,200, out-of-state:
$18,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in
Performance/Jazz.
Faculty:
Frank Bongiorno, Michael DAngelo,
110 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Tuition:
In-state, visit: unf.edu/anf/controller/
cashiers/tuition_and_fees.aspx.
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Jennifer Barnes, Richard DeRosa,
$27,244.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Faculty:
66.
Alumni:
Joseph Henson, Hans Teuber.
Jazz Bands:
Big band, combos, jazz strings.
Auditions:
Auditions run from December to
Student Body:
244 Jazz Studies majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $8,716/
Financial Aid:
Available. Visit: sc.edu/financialaid.
Scholarships:
Call (803) 777-6614 for music un-
$14,990.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Master of Music in Jazz Studies with
concentrations in Jazz Performance
and Jazz Composition.
Faculty:
Jack Wilkins, Chuck Owen, Tom
Brantley, LaRue Nickelson, Ian
Goodman, Dr. Jay Coble.
Alumni:
Corey Christiansen, Barry Greene.
Jazz Bands:
Two big bands, numerous combos.
Auditions:
music.arts.usf.edu.
Financial Aid:
music.arts.usf.edu.
Scholarships:
Auditions in January and Febuary.
Visit music.arts.usf.edu.
Apply by:
Jan. 1. Final scholarship audition
date in February.
Contact:
music.arts.usf.edu.
Faculty:
Mark Boling, Donald Brown,
University of Texas at
Arlington
Arlington, Texas
Student Body:
34,000.
Tuition:
Approx. $4,400/14 hours (flat rate).
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee
Student Body:
28,000 students, 450 music majors,
50 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $11,194,
Jazz Degrees:
(performance).
Faculty:
Scholarships:
uta.edu/music/jazz.
Apply by:
Accepting applications and audi-
Contact:
Tim Ishii, Director of Jazz Studies,
Virginia Commonwealth
University
Richmond, Virginia
Student Body:
55 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $12,000, out-of-state:
$29,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Victor Dvoskin, Michael Ess, Skip
$19,842/year.
Faculty:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Jazz Bands:
812 small and large ensembles.
Scholarships:
Available.
Contact:
Paul Scea, [email protected];
community.wvu.edu/~pes002/.
Charles James.
Jazz Bands:
Xavier University Jazz Ensemble,
Cool
Courses
By Kathleen Costanza
Sound Art I
Stanford University
(Stanford, Calif.)
Taught by sound art pioneer Paul DeMarinis, this
course presents techniques for listening, recording,
processing and producing sound art. Acoustic, digital and analog approaches are all covered, along
with the history and modern practice of sound art
through required listening and reading.
History of Jazz
Northwestern University
(Evanston, Ill.)
Scholar and DownBeat contributor John
McDonough covers jazz from 1917 through
the70s in this two-quarter survey. The course
emphasizes the genres early development in New
Orleans and Chicago, through swing, bebop and
other movements.Students explore jazz history in
the context of the larger American popular culture and race using original source material and
early audio technologies.
Audio Post-Production
Business of Jazz
University of Denver,
Lamont School of Music (Denver)
Designed for vocal performance majors, this
course introduces fundamental body awareness
principles that support long-term vocal training
and health. Methods for heightening kinesthetic awareness are taught through movement explorations, improvisations, structures and learned
phrases.
midwest
Augustana College
Rock Island, Illinois
Student Body:
2,500 students.
Tuition:
$43,000/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz minor.
Faculty:
Joe Ott, Steve Grismore.
Jazz Bands:
Auditions:
January, February and March.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Rolling admissions.
Contact:
Margaret Ellis, margaretellis@
augustana.edu.
Kevin reeves
Benedictine University
Lisle, Illinois
Student Body:
15 music students.
Tuition:
Visit ben.edu.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music, Bachelor
Student Body:
20,000 total, 500 in the College of
Musical Arts.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $18,457,
Columbus, Ohio
Student Body:
3,600 students.
Tuition:
$31,990.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in American
Chicago, Illinois
Student Body:
650 music majors, 175
Faculty:
Dennis King, Eun-Joo Kwak, Scott
Capital University
Wenzel.
Jazz Bands:
Jazz ensembles.
Auditions:
Required for admission, music
reading and improv ability.
Financial Aid:
Available, stritch.edu/financialaid.
Scholarships:
Available, merit-based.
Apply by:
No application deadline.
Contact:
Dennis King, (414) 410-4349,
[email protected].
Cuyahoga Community
College
Cleveland, Ohio
Student Body:
3035 jazz students.
Tuition:
In-county:$81.86/credit hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Full articulation with Berklee College
Alumni:
Orbert Davis, Rudresh
DePauw University
Greencastle, Indiana
DePaul University
School of Music
Chicago, Illinois
Student Body:
385 music students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $33,440; graduate/
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor in Jazz Studies, Master in
Student Body:
2,310 students.
Tuition:
$40,150.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music and Bachelor
Contact:
Daniel Meyer, (765) 658-4108,
[email protected];
depauw.edu/music/beheard.
Elmhurst College
Elmhurst, Illinois
Student Body:
3,000 students.
Tuition:
$31,450/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Faculty:
Doug Beach, Gayle Bisesi, Frank
Student Body:
60 jazz students, 1,600 music
students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: in-state: $5,959/
Alumni:
Jamey Aebersold, Chris Botti, Randy
Financial Assistance,
indiana.edu/~sfa.
Scholarships:
Available. All undergraduate applicants automatically considered for
merit-based financial aid based on
their audition, portfolio or interview.
Visit music.indiana.edu/admissions/
tuition. Limited merit-based scholarships and assistantships available
for graduate students.Contact:
[email protected].
Apply by:
Nov. 1 (undergraduates), Dec. 1
(graduates).
Contact:
Espen Jensen, (812) 855-7998, fax:
(812) 856-6086, [email protected];
music.indiana.edu/jazz.
Lawrence University
Appleton, Wisconsin
Student Body:
1,500 total, 350 in Conservatory of
Music.
Tuition:
$40,926.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Performance
students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $457/cred-
Millikin University
Decatur, Illinois
Student Body:
2,400.
Tuition:
$27,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Music
Student Body:
2,700 undergraduate, 300
graduate.
Tuition:
$30,891.
Jazz Degrees:
Music: Bachelor of Arts in
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
141 full-time (102 tenure track),
29 half-time.
Alumni:
JaKub Rojek.
Auditions:
Visit northcentralcollege.edu/
academics/dept-div-progs/music/
music-scholarships-auditioninformation.
Financial Aid:
Visit northcentralcollege.edu/
financial-aid.
Scholarships:
Visit northcentralcollege.edu/
academics/dept-div-progs/music/
music-scholarships-auditioninformation.
Apply by:
Visit northcentralcollege.edu/
admission/how-apply-freshman.
Contact:
northcentralcollege.edu/admission.
Student Body:
23,000 students, 350 music majors,
50 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $8,894/
year, out-of-state: $17,788/year;
graduate, in-state: $336/credit hour,
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music.
Faculty:
Victor Goines, Carlos Henriquez,
Oakland University
Rochester, Michigan
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois
Student Body:
19,000 students, 650 music
students.
Tuition:
$43,380.
Jazz Degrees:
Jazz Studies minor.
Faculty:
Miles Brown, Sean Dobbins, Scott
Contact:
Miles Brown, (248) 370-
2805,[email protected].
Alumni:
Regina Carter (OU
Artist-in-Residence).
Jazz Bands:
Big band, jazz singers and jazz
combos.
Auditions:
Feb. 15, March 8 and 22.
Financial Aid:
Available, contact the OU Financial
Aid Office, (248) 370-2550, finaid@
oakland.edu.
Scholarships:
Consideration during February and
March audition dates only.
Apply by:
Dec. 1. Set up audition by February.
Oberlin College
Oberlin, Ohio
Student Body:
2,900 students, 600 conservatory
Tuition:
$46,250/year plus fees.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies in
Performance or Composition.
Faculty:
Jay Ashby, Gary Bartz, Peter
Student Body:
Approx. 400 undergraduate,
Ohio University
Athens, Ohio
Student Body:
250 in the School of Music.
Tuition:
Approx. $10,500/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Minor in Jazz.
Faculty:
Paul Barte, Gail Berenson, Roger
Roosevelt University
Chicago College of
Performing Arts
Chicago, Illinois
Student Body:
7,500 students, 350 Music
Conservatory students.
Tuition:
$32,950/year.
Jazz Degrees: Bachelor of Music, Jazz &
Contemporary Music Studies.
Faculty:
Paul Wertico, Ruben Alvarez, Neal
Alger, Paulinho Garcia, Henry Johnson,
John McLean, John Moulder, Rob
Amster, Scott Mason, Marlene
Rosenberg, Jim Gailloreto, Paul
Mertens, Mike Smith, Steve Berry, Tom
Garling, Victor Garcia, Roger Ingram,
Corey Wilkes, Roger Harris, Fred Simon,
Faculty:
A. Eric Heukeshoven, Dr. John
Student Body:
14,000 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $4,625.45/semester, out-of-
40 music majors.
Tuition:
Approx. $28,000. Room and board
is $7,500.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music, Music
state: $9,836.45/semester.
Jazz Degrees:
David Gonnerman
The St. Olaf College Big Band plays in the Lions Pause performance space.
Auditions:
Contact Rick Haydon, [email protected].
Financial Aid:
Visit siue.edu/financialaid or
Scholarships:
Contact (618) 650-3900.
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Rick Haydon, (618) 650-3900, [email protected].
Northfield, Minnesota
Student Body:
3,100.
Tuition:
$39,560.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Music, Bachelor of Music in Performance,
Faculty:
Dave Hagedorn, Laura Caviani, Phil Hey.
Alumni:
Dan Cavanagh, Ben Baker.
Jazz Bands:
Three big bands.
Auditions:
Required for admission for music majors and scholar-
ships.Pre-screening deadline Dec. 15. Live auditions by invitation, Feb. 28, March 1. Visit stolaf.edu/depts/music/admissions.
Financial Aid:
Need-based available. Visitstolaf.edu/financialaid.
Scholarships:
Merit-based scholarships in academics and fine arts. Music
scholarships open to non-music majors as well as music
majors. Contact [email protected].
Apply by:
Jan. 15. Music screening recordings due Dec. 15.
Contact:
Mary Hakes, Music Admissions Coordinator, music@stolaf.
edu or David Hagedorn, Director of Jazz Ensembles,
[email protected].
University of Akron
Akron, Ohio
Student Body:
28,000 students, 300 undergraduates and 100 graduates in
Tuition:
In-state, approx.: $410/credit hour, out-of-state: $760/credit
hour.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
30 full-time, 33 part-time.
Alumni:
Paul Ferguson.
Jazz Bands:
Two full jazz bands and many combos.
Auditions:
Required. Visit uakron.edu/music/prospective-students/ or call
(330) 972-7590.
Financial Aid:
Available. Visit huakron.edu/finaid/.
Scholarships:
Merit-based. Visit uakron.edu/music/prospective-students/ or
Apply by:
The last audition is mid-February.Scholarship auditions are
Contact:
Dr. Ann Usher, Director, School of Music, (330) 972-7590,
Student Body:
11,800 students, 50 enrolled in
jazz classes.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $213.15/se-
University of Cincinnati
College Conservatory
of Music
Cincinnati, Ohio
Student Body: 1,400.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $11,990,
University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Urbana-Champaign, Illinois
Student Body:
42,000 students,800 music
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Student Body:
30,000 students.
Tuition:
In-state: $8,061,
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
Student Body:
Approx. 500 graduate and under-
Tuition:
In-state: $10,100/year, out-of-state:
University of Michigan
School of Music,
Theatre & Dance
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Student Body:
1,050 total students in the School
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts in Jazz
Subscribe
877-904-JAZZ
Apply by:
Dec. 1.
Contact:
Emily Perryman, (734) 763-7558,
University of Missouri at
Columbia
Columbia, Missouri
Student Body:
Approx. 100 jazz students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $9,272/14
University of Missouri
at Kansas City
Kansas City, Missouri
Student Body:
535 students at the Conservatory
Concentration.
Faculty:
Pete Madsen, Dana Murray,
University of Nebraska
at Lincoln
Lincoln, Nebraska
Student Body:
350 music students.
Tuition:
In-state: $7,984, out-of-state:
$20,734.
Jazz Degrees:
Master of Music, Doctorate
Student Body:
Approx. 12,000 students, approx.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $6,648,
University of Toledo
University of Wisconsin at
Eau Claire
Toledo, Ohio
Student Body:
21,000.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $7,598.
Jazz Bands:
Four jazz bands, numerous combos.
Auditions:
November, January, February,
University of Wisconsin
at Green Bay
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Student Body:
2030 jazz students and approxi-
Tuition:
Visit uwgb.edu/admissions/explore/
cost.asp.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts with Jazz Emphasis.
Student Body:
11,233 total students, 10,578
Faculty:
John Salerno, Adam Gaines,
undergraduates.
Tuition:
In-state: $9,240/year.
Jazz Degrees:
A Jazz Study emphasis available for
all degrees, no standalone
jazz degree.
Faculty:
Approx. 800 faculty members.
Alumni:
D
ave Whitman, Jamey Simmons,
John Raymond, James Yardley, Amy
and Todd Schendel, Jamie Andrews,
Aaron Doty, Andy Neesley.
Alumni:
Carl Allen, Todd Buffa, Ricardo Vogt,
Woody Mankowski.
Jazz Bands:
Two jazz ensembles, jazz combos,
Auditions:
Auditions take place during first
University of Wisconsin at
Madison
Madison, Wisconsin
Student Body:
42,000.
Tuition:
In-state: $10,609, Minnesota resi-
University of Wisconsin at
Milwaukee
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Student Body:
300 undergraduate music
students.
Tuition:
In-state: $8,698/year,
out-of-state: $18,512/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in
Music PerformanceInstrumental
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Curt Hanrahan, Steve NelsonRaney, Don Linke, Lou Cucunato,
Gillian Rodger, Dave Bayles,
Carl Storniolo, Tom McGirr,
Jaimie Breiwick, Ken Wiele Jr.,
Pete Billman.
Jazz Bands:
Two jazz ensembles, seven jazz
lab combos.
Auditions:
Five auditions annually.
Financial Aid:
Visit uwm.edu.
Scholarships:
Scholarship information given at
time of audition.
Apply by:
Visit uwm.edu.
Contact:
Curt Hanrahan, hanraha6@uwm.
edu (winds), Steve Nelson-Raney,
[email protected] (rhythm).
OCTOBER 2013 DOWNBEAT 133
University of Wisconsin at
Oshkosh
Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Student Body:
14,000 total, approximately 200
Student Body:
350 music students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state, approx-
Webster University
St. Louis, Missouri
Student Body:
2,200 on-campus population; 125
music majors.
Tuition:
$23,700.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz
Jazz Bands:
Webster Jazz Collective, 10 curricular
student combos.
Auditions:
On-campus audition includes
heard by appointment.
Contact:
Yvonne Oliver, (309) 298-1087,
[email protected]; wiu.edu/jazz.
Student Body:
450 in the School of Music, 80 Jazz.
Tuition:
In-state: $9,000/year, out-of-state:
$22,00/year.
$13,899.36.
Where Jazz
By James Hale
Thrives
Canadas
jazz education
programs continue
to expand, providing
multifaceted
opportunities
for student
musicians
Don Lee
Wadada Leo Smith (far right) with participants at the Banff International Workshop in Jazz and Creative Music on May 23
Sanja Antic
Gord Sheard (far right) of Humber College with students in a Brazilian music workshop
file visiting instructors, including trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, violinist Regina Carter and
drummer Herlin Riley.
At Torontos Humber, Christianson leads a
program that amplifies what Kirby is doing in
Winnipeg. The Humber experience, he says, has
been completely designed by its faculty members,
who include many of Canadas top players, such
as cellist Matt Brubeck, reedist Pat LaBarbera and
drummer Barry Romberg.
The program has a lot of focus on ensemble
playing, harmony, theory, and theres a mandatory piano component, Christianson explained.
But Sibelius and Pro Tools [software] courses are
also mandatory, as are music business courses. Our
overall goal is to make students better musicians,
but also to help them navigate through the music
business, to create a product and to get that product
out to an audience.
During the third year of the program students
learn how to structure a live performance, which
leads to a final recital. In their fourth year, they
work with a peer to create a finished recording, and
then sit on the other side of the glass to produce
the recording of a different colleague. Those sessions have resulted in some incredible recordings,
Christianson said. This year, Humber produced
86 recordings, and theyre all very professional.
The intangible component, he said, is the networking that occurs between students and faculty. The level of mentorship is high, and being
in Toronto means that students have a number of
opportunities to put bands together and perform.
These elements result in fierce competition for
the 400 spots in Humbers program, with about
240 students coming from 15 countries. Even
with that much international interestand the
extra revenue from foreign student tuition, which,
at $13,000, is about 50 percent higher than domestic tuitionChristianson still says he would like
to see Humber attract more U.S. students.
The University of Oregon Jazz Ensemble performs at the historic Beall Concert Hall.
west
American River College
Sacramento, California
Student Body:
40,000.
Tuition:
$46/unit.
Jazz Degrees:
Associate of Arts in Jazz Studies.
Faculty: Dr. Dyne Eifertsen, Dr. Joe Gilman,
Jazz Bands:
Studio Jazz Ensemble, Latin Jazz
Erin Zysett
Student Body:
750 students in the School of Music,
Tuition:
In-state: $9,000/year, out-of-state:
$20,000/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor and Master Degree of
Music in Jazz Performance.
Faculty:
Christopher Creviston, Ryan Haines,
Ben Hedquist, Michael Kocour, Jeff
Libman, Dennis Monce, Dom Moio,
Clarke Rigsby, Bryon Ruth.
Alumni:
Lewis Nash, Tony Malaby, Joey
Sellers, Robert Washut, Allan Chase,
Ted Hogarth, Phil Strange.
Jazz Bands:
Concert Jazz Band, Jazz Repertory
Band, Latin Jazz Band, Percussion
Jazz Band and seven combos.
Auditions:
Nov. 16, Jan. 18, Feb. 8, Feb. 22.
Financial Aid:
Available, students.asu.edu/
financialaid.
Scholarships:
Available. Call (480) 965-5348.
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Michael Kocour, (480) 965-5348;
[email protected]; music.
asu.edu/jazz
Student Body:
650 in school of music, 45 in jazz
Student Body:
Approx. 15,000 students
Tuition:
$3,650 (for Mormons), $7,300 (for
non-Mormons)
Alumni:
Fabian Almazan, Joe Sanders,
Student Body:
45 in the jazz program.
Tuition:
$39,976.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Fine Arts, Master of Fine
Arts.
Faculty:
David Roitstein, Larry Koonse, Darek
Jazz Bands:
Faculty and student ensembles.
Auditions:
calarts.edu/admissions/
portfolio-audition/music/jazz
Financial Aid:
Contact financial aid office, (800)
443-0480.
Scholarships:
Merit aid is available.
Apply by:
Jan. 3.
Contact:
David Roitstein, Chair, Jazz Program,
(661) 255-1050 ext. 2235.
Hayward, California
Student Body:
150 music majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $6,500/
year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts in
Music.
Faculty:
Dorsey Mitchell Butler III, Alan Hall,
state: $372.00/unit.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $6,240/
Financial Aid:
Available.
Scholarships:
Cole Scholarships, KKJZ 88.1 Jazz Scholarships, Beau and Jo
Apply by:
Call (562) 985-4781, [email protected].
Contact:
Arnel Ignacio, (562) 985-4782.
Student Body:
65 in Jazz program.
Tuition:
In-state: $3,260/semester. Non-residents must add $372/unit.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Performance.
Faculty:
Gary Pratt, Matt Harris, Rob Lockart, Katisse Buckingham,
Student Body:
30 undergraduate jazz majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state: $23,726,
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Music: Jazz Studies,
Student Body:
300 music majors, 50 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $3,301; graduate: $3,934.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies, Bachelor of Arts in Jazz
Faculty:
Dr. Steve Roach, Dr. Joe Gilman, Mike McMullen, Gerry
Alumni:
Steve Turre.
Jazz Bands:
Two Jazz Ensembles, Latin Jazz Ensemble, Two Vocal Jazz
Auditions:
csus.edu/music/jazz.
Financial Aid:
Contact Mark Allen, (916) 278-6543, [email protected].
Scholarships:
Contact Steve Roach, (916) 278-7987, [email protected].
Apply by:
November.
Contact:
Steve Roach, Jazz Studies Director, (916) 278-7987,
Student Body:
135 enrolled in music program.
Tuition:
$33,550/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Instrumental, Jazz Vocal or Jazz
Composition.
Faculty:
Jovino Santos Neto, Chuck Deardorf, James Knapp, Tom
Fullerton College
Fullerton, California
Student Body:
18,890.
Tuition:
$45/unit.
Jazz Degrees:
Two-year California Community College offering 93
Faculty:
315 full-time / 480 part-time.
Alumni:
Kai Palmer, Mike Bennett, Serafin Agular.
Jazz Bands:
Two jazz bands, four jazz combos, four vocal jazz ensembles.
Auditions:
Auditions are held the first week of
Graduate
student
Matt Lanka
performs
at the 2012
Washington
State University
Jazz Festival.
Jazzschool
Berkeley, California
Student Body:
60-plus jazz students.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music degree in Jazz
Studies.
Robert hubner
Tuition:
$500/credit for full-time enrollment
Faculty:
Charles Gray, Darrell Grant,
auditions are accepted. Live auditions are held during finals week
each term. Scholarship auditions
held during the first weekend in
February.
Financial Aid:
pdx.edu/finaid.
Scholarships:
Must audition by the first weekend
of February.Visit pdx.edu/music/
music-scholarships.
Apply by:
April 15.
Contact:
George Colligan, (503) 725-3180,
[email protected]; pdx.edu/music.
graduate: $7,124/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor and Master of Music in
Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Bill Yeager, Rick Helzer, Richard
sdsu.edu; musicdance.sdsu.edu.
Student Body:
300.
Student Body:
9,000 students.
Tuition: $3,235.
Tuition:
In-state: $7,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Music.
Faculty:
50 faculty members.
Jazz Bands:
Big Band, Jazz Combo, Vocal Jazz,
Improv.
Auditions:
Must be admitted to university first.
Students may audition before university acceptance. Auditions do not
determine university acceptance.
Financial Aid:
(415) 338-7000, [email protected].
Scholarships:
Available.
Apply by:
Nov. 30. Visit sfsu.edu.
Contact:
School of Music and Dance, (415)
338-1431, [email protected];
musicdance.sfsu.edu.
Faculty:
Doug Leibinger, Dave Scott, Kasey
Scholarships:
Merit-based, visit sonoma.edu/
music/apply/scholarships.
Apply by:
November.
Contact:
Doug Leibinger, (707) 664-4149.
Stanford University
Stanford, California
Student Body:
7,003 undergraduates, approx. 500
Student Body:
30,000 students, 50 jazz majors.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, $7,600/year; grad-
uate, $9,000/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies,
Student Body:
Approximately 30,000.
Tuition:
In-state: $36/unit.
Jazz Degrees:
Associate of Arts in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Bennett Friedman, Mark Anderman,
Faculty:
Fred Berry, Jim Nadel, Murray Low.
Jazz Bands:
Stanford Jazz Orchestra, Stanford
University of California
Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Student Body:
27,941 total, 85 in Jazz Studies
program.
Tuition:
In-state: $12,692, out-of-state:
$35,570.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts in Ethnomusicology,
Faculty:
Kenny Burrell, James Newton. Visit
ethnomusic.ucla.edu.
Alumni:
Gretchen Parlato, Nick DePinna,
University of Colorado at
Boulder
University of Denver,
Lamont School of Music
Denver, Colorado
Student Body:
11,000 total, 300 in the School of
Music.
Tuition:
Undergraduate and graduate:
$39,744/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz Studies.
Faculty:
Malcolm Lynn Baker, Thomas Ball,
Boulder, Colorado
Subscribe
877-904-JAZZ
Student Body:
Approx. 550 total music students.
Tuition:
$26,496.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music,
Student Body:
240 music undergraduates, 80 in
Tuition:
In-state: $6,212,
out-of-state: $19,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of MusicJazz Emphasis.
Faculty:
Carol Padgham Albrecht, Pamela
G. Bathurst, Daniel J. Bukvich, Barry
Bilderback, J. Roger Cole.
Jazz Bands:
Four big bands.
Auditions:
Audition by Feb. 23 for priority
consideration for admission and
scholarships. Visit uidaho.edu/class/
music/futurestudents.
Financial Aid:
Available, contact Financial Aid
Services, (208) 885-6312, finaid@
uidaho.edu.
Scholarships:
Available. See student financial aid
contact information above.
Apply by:
Feb. 15.
Contact:
Susan Hess, (208) 885-6231,
[email protected].
Student Body:
Approx. 200 music majors.
Tuition:
Visit unr.edu/tuition-and-fees.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor and Master of music in jazz
University of Montana
Missoula, Montana
Student Body:
250 music majors, 75 jazz students,
10 jazz majors.
Tuition:
In-state: $6,000, out-of-state:
University of Nevada at
Las Vegas
Las Vegas, Nevada
Student Body:
400 music students, 70 jazz
students.
Tuition:
In-state: $7,200/year.
Jazz Degrees: Bachelor and Master of Music with
University of Northern
Colorado
Greeley, Colorado
Student Body:
500 music majors, 55 jazz majors.
Tuition: Undergraduate, in-state: $7,500,
Apply by:
Feb. 15.
Contact:
Patrick Langham, (209) 946-3222.
Contact:
Kelsey Shiba or Dana Landry, (970)
351-2577, [email protected];
uncjazz.com.
University of Oregon
Eugene, Oregon
University of Southern
California Thornton
School of Music
Los Angeles, California
Student Body:
Approx. 75 in jazz program.
Student Body:
65 students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, in-state:
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $42,162/year;
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
Student Body:
31,000 students, 425 music majors,
40 jazz majors.
Tuition:
In-state: $7,835.88/year,
out-of-state: $25,006.34/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music (Jazz
Contact:
Russell Schmidt, Director of Jazz
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Student Body:
Approx. 42,400 total students,
Student Body:
18,232 students, about 200 music
international
Ashton Sellars (left), Umar Zakaria and Hikurangi Schaverien-Kaa perform during Te Koki New Zealands Lunchtime Series.
Camosun College
nzsm.ac.nz
Capilano University
North Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada
Student Body: Approximately 200 music students.
Tuition:
Approximately $4,500/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Performance, General Studies,
Education, Composition.
Jazz Bands:
Three big bands, three vocal jazz
choirs.
Faculty:
Brad Turner, Rejean Marois, Jared
Alumni:
Jeff Healey, Rik Emmett, Louise Petri,
ac.uk/courses/fees-and-funding/
international-tuition-fees.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts with Honors,
Bachelor of Arts in Music (Jazz).
Faculty:
Conservatoire.
Alumni:
Roller Trio, Matthew Bourne, Trio
VD, Pete Wareham, Polar Bear.
Jazz Bands:
Big Band, Contemporary Jazz
Orchestra.
Auditions:
Send recordings via email, Dropbox
or YouTube. Skype interviews/auditions can also be arranged.
Financial Aid:
Contact the Student Fees and
Funding, studentfunding@lcm.
ac.uk.
Scholarships:
International students eligible
for Excellence Scholarships
(three per year).
Apply by:
January via UCAS.
Contact:
Enquiries, (+44) 0113 222 3416,
[email protected], lcm.ac.uk.
Student Body:
120.
Student Body:
130 music students (Fall 2013), 175
Tuition:
Non-EU citizens: 7,500/year (schol-
Student Body:
550 music undergraduates, 300
music graduates.
Tuition:
Quebec: $5,000; out-of-prov-
ince:$9,000; international:
Faculty:
Joris Teepe, Don Braden, Gene
Student Body:
480 students.
Tuition:
$6,300/year.
Jazz Degrees: Instrumental Performance in
Alumni:
Pablo Menares, Camila Meza,
Elas Santos-Celpa.
Jazz Bands: Concert Jazz Band, Afro-Caribbean
Ensemble
Auditions:
Feb. 14. Auditions by DVD accepted.
Visit cmpr.edu/admisiones.
Financial Aid:
Available.
Apply by:
Dec. 18.
Contact:
Admissions Office, (787) 751-0160
ext. 280, 275, admisiones@cmpr.
edu; cmpr.edu.
Student Body:
392 students,92 jazz students.
Tuition:
Undergraduate: $3,780/year plus
Contact:
Alice Stewart, (902) 867-2106,
[email protected]; stfx.ca.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Arts
Apply by:
April 30.
Apply by:
Jan. 15 for fall admission.
University of Manitoba,
Desautels Faculty of Music
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Student Body:
60 in the undergraduate program,
Contact:
Shelley OLeary, Admissions
Student Body:
Approximately 80 undergraduates,
10 post-graduates.
international: AU$30,960.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music, Master of Music,
Faculty:
Craig Scott, Judy Bailey, Steve Brien,
Tuition:
EU citizens: 761.72/year, non-EU
citizens: 1,488.44/year.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Jazz
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Student Body:
800.
Tuition:
Undergraduate, domestic: $5,900,
international: $27,000.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Music in Performance
Alumni:
Andrew Downing, David Braid.
Jazz Bands:
Large bands, combos & jazz vocal.
Auditions:
Pre-screening process, live audition.
Visit music.utoronto.ca/students/
prospective.htm.
Financial Aid:
adm.utoronto.ca.
Scholarships:
music.utoronto.ca/students/prospective/undergrad/BMus_ArtD/
Scholarships.htm.
Apply by:
Jan. 15.
Contact:
Undergraduate Admissions and
Recruitment Officer, (416) 9783750, undergrad.music@utoronto.
ca; music.utoronto.ca/students/
prospective/undergrad/BMus_ArtD.
htm; uoftjazz.ca.
York University
$17,900.
Jazz Degrees:
Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Fine
Woodshed
MASTER CLASS
By anthony branker
Modal Approaches
to Jazz Composition
In this Master Class, we will explore the modal harmonic languagean incredibly rich source for chordal sounds and colors.
While melody writing will not be discussed here, it is central to the process
of crafting a composition and connecting with the listener. In fact, melodic
lyricism and rhythm can be used in powerful ways to bring others into our
musical world, because it is through these elements that most people come
to interact with music as listeners. (Three examples of engaging lyrical melodies set within a modal framework include Herbie Hancocks I Have A
Dream from his recording The Prisoner, Gush from Maria Schneiders
Evanescence and Wayne Shorters Ana Maria from Native Dancer.)
A modal approach to composing has many
benefits. First, modal harmony doesnt require the
use of the types of restrictive chordal root movement that are driven by the dominant-to-tonic relationship found in functional harmony; so,
bass motion can be more melodic in character. It
also promotes individuality of expression; accommodates both lyrical and virtuosic writing sensibilities; encourages experimentation with sound,
color, mood, etc.; and can add to our harmonic/
melodic palette as both composer and improviser.
Plus, the modal harmonic language is quite adaptable and can be used with many different music
genres or styles (classical, Latin, popular music,
funk, Brazilian, r&b, as well as jazz).
A wonderful resource for this approach is Ron
Millers Modal Jazz Composition & Harmony
(Volumes 1 & 2) from Advance Music. Professor
Miller was a pivotal teacher in my life, with whom
I studied while a graduate student in the jazz program at the University of Miami.
So, lets get started with a few suggestions on
how to organize your modal chord progressions
while also creating logical and effective linear
chordal flow.
A great way to connect chords is the common-tone approach, in which you select a pitch
that will be common to a series of chords you will
eventually link (the number of which is totally up
to you). Lets start with a common tone (C.T.) in
the upper voice.
First, pick a pitch in a comfortable range within the treble clef staff and write it out for at least
four whole notes (adding specific rhythms to
notes is not necessary now). Then experiment
with creating a bass line that is melodic in nature
(this could be anything from a simple motive to
a pattern). Now, begin to explore the sounds of
different modal chord types that incorporate the
selected C.T. and bass note within its parent scale
system. This is where having a solid understanding of the fundamentals of modal harmony (e.g.,
Anthony
Branker
modal scales and chords; recognizing the specific chord tones that
help us identify the unique sound of
each mode) becomes very helpful in
visualizing these kinds of relationships. Next, tweak your chords and/
or melodic bass movement until you
hear a combination you like.
Once you are happy with the
harmonic component, try adding
melody and then play them together to see what you think. Example
1, from the opening to Three Gifts
(from a Nigerian Mother to God)
from the recent CD Uppity (Origin
Records) by Anthony Branker
& Word Play, demonstrates this
technique.
Pedal Point as
Common Tone
You can also extend this common tone idea to the bass voice,
which will give us a pedal point
effect. Here, select a pitch that is in a suitable part
of the bass register. Then, create an upper voice
from a melodic perspective in the same way you
developed the bass motion in the previous C.T.
technique. Once again, experiment with different kinds of modal chord types that are now
functioning over this bass note pedal and make
slight adjustments until you hear something
you dig. Example 2 comes from my composition
Mysterious Ways from the CD Dance Music
(Origin Records) by Anthony Branker & Ascent.
Later on, you may also want to try creating
chordal flow by linking common interval relationships across chords (i.e., 2nds, 3rds, 4ths, etc.)
or by developing sequential melodic bass motives
that go beyond the circle of fifths or by another
method that comes to mind.
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
G b/C = C Locrian
G/C = C Ionian
Ab/C = Aeolian
A/C = C Altered bb7 (the seventh mode of
the Harmonic Minor scale)
B b/C = C7sus4 (Mixolydian-based)
B/C = C Lydian #2 (the sixth mode of the
Harmonic Minor scale)
To better familiarize yourself with the sound
of these major-triad slash chords and their associated modes, play them on piano and transpose
through all 12 root possibilities.
Another upper structure that has an interesting and contemporary sound is the Lydian upper
structure, which is based on the sus2 voicing and
its inversions. Example 3 (Lydian upper structure)
and Example 4 (inversions of the sus2 voicing) are
demonstrative of the 12 possible modal chords that
Multifaceted Approach
DB
Woodshed
Pro Session
By Matt shevitz
Matt
Shevitz
can sometimes pose a bit of a problem for a soloist. Whether there is more than one chord in a measure or the song has a fast tempo, it can be challenging to move from one change to the next. Of course,
its important for any player to be able to improvise
over these types of progressions, but there are other
ways to approach them. By becoming more knowledgeable about chord and scale relationships, a musician can either use one scale for more than one chord
(allowing for a more modal approach, thereby freeing the musician up rhythmically) or make smaller (rather than larger) alterations to a scale in order
to adapt to the next change. Well take a look at two
scales commonly used: jazz melodic minor (the
ascending version of the melodic minor scale used in
classical music, referred to as melodic minor for the
rest of this article), and minor pentatonic (1, b3, 4, 5,
b7, in relation to a parallel major scale).
Most players are familiar with the use of the
melodic minor scale over a minor chord with a major
seventh (or just a minor seventh chord in order to
alter it slightly), but the scale has other possibilities.
Another conventional use of the scale is over a dominant chord, though how consonant or dissonant it
sounds depends on how you approach it. For example, if you treat the root of the dominant chord as the
seventh scale degree of a melodic minor scale, you
will get a fully altered sound. By playing a melodic minor scale based off of the fifth in the dominant
chord, you will only have a #4 alteration.
Two other uses of the scale are over half-di162 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
Improvising on
Quick-Moving
Chord
Changes
All of this is most effective when you are playing with musicians who are attentive to your alterations and can make adjustments in order to bring
them out best. There are also various names for all
of these scales and numerous sources to find out
more, such as Gary Kellers The Jazz Chord/Scale
Handbook and Jamey Aebersolds Scale Syllabus.
These approaches arent meant to take the place of
learning how to play over quickly moving chord
progressions. Their purpose is to provide more
options and flexibility for your improvisations. DB
Matt Shevitz is a saxophonist and educator based in Chicago,
where he is an associate professor of music at Harold
Washington College. Visit him online at mattshevitz.com.
Woodshed
Pro Session
By Dan wilensky
have a few choices to make. Clearly, you have to practice and study a lot, play
with as many people as you can and recognize good opportunities when
they arise. But should you go to college? Or back to college? If so, should you
get a degree in composition or, say, physics? Where should you live to maximize your employment possibilities? Are you ready for the road? Is it a good
idea to transcribe solos? Should you take the time to master software like
Garage Band and Pro Tools? Do you want to focus exclusively on one type
of music, or become a jack of all styles? If youre not independently wealthy,
are you ready to face financial armageddon?
Its enough to make you reconsider your chosen vocation.
At 16, I was well along in my quest to be a professional musician: I developed voracious practice habits on saxophone, flute and piano, composed and
transcribed every day, gave lessons to younger kids, street-played, sat in and
gigged at local clubs, and spent a year studying with Joe Henderson. Then I
deferred a scholarship to Eastman School of Music to tour with Ray Charles
for six months. By the time I arrived in frigid Rochester, N.Y. for Eastmans
spring semester, I fancied myself a bona fide road warrior. Though Eastman
was and is a superb school, the lure of academia quickly faded, and I hightailed it down to New York. Thirty-five years later, I can say that it was the
right pathfor me.
Times have changed, and two trends have conspired to make things
more difficult for musicians of all ages: There are more musicians than ever,
and fewer places to play. Technologyalways a double-edged swordhas
done its part, and the occasional economic catastrophe hasnt helped. But
theres another culprit: the preponderance of college graduates with degrees
in jazz performance and the like. Lets deal with this thorny issue first.
Somewhere along the line, people stopped going to school merely
to get a good education. Now, even junior-high kids obsess about
their career paths, and a basic liberal arts education is viewed
by many as quaint. For the purpose of this article, I will
assume (somewhat reluctantly) that you were never
interested in procuring a B.A. in poetry.
But if youre harboring delusions of busting out of
music school, degree in hand, and living la vida loca
like some Duke Ellington or Dave Brubeck, get real!
Different times, different audiences. Youve always had
to play better than the next guy. But now, in addition to
being a superior sight-reader, doubler and arranger, you
have to master studio and computer skills, networking,
self-promotion and graphics, plus have a winning personality to get even a whiff of a career in music.
Shoot for the stars, but keep in mind that
success stories like Wynton Marsalis are
extremely rare.
A perfunctory look at the current
music marketplace should convince
any college-bound musician to
consider a variety of options.
If you are ready for the big
time (i.e., you can really play, and
a whole gaggle of experienced
musicians and teachers have told
you as much), it wouldnt hurt to
simply go forth and do your thing.
Youll never know unless you try,
and you can always go back to
school later if things dont work
out. If you lack the desire or confidence to pursue that dream,
Dan
Wilensky
think about what sort of degree
164 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
solo
By jimi durso
Ornette Colemans
Free-Leaning Alto
Sax Solo on Ramblin
Alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman
Ornette
Coleman
DownBeat Archives
Woodshed
Jimi Durso is a guitarist and bassist based in the New York area.
He can be reached at jimidurso.com.
OCTOBER 2013 DOWNBEAT 167
Toolshed
Crescent
Vanguard
Cymbals
Buttery Feel,
Warm Overtones
timbre- and volume-wise, when moving from the middle of the cymbal to the
bell area. I also didnt feel the need to compensate velocity-wise when playing
the bell in order to keep the volume in check compared to the rest of the cymbal.
The Vanguards thinness is especially noticeable when playing with brushes.
I found them to be very responsive to even the lightest touch, which makes them
100-percent approriate for playing jazz. These cymbals also have a great wobble
that is a telling sign of their thinness. The tone of each cymbal was nice and even
across the entire playing surface. The hi-hats had a similar matching timbre and
smooth delivery that complemented the rides and crashes.
With the Vanguards and other premium cymbal series constituting its product lineup, Crescent Cymbals seems to be doing a great job with its re-entry into
the market. Log on to youtube.com/user/cymbalmasters/featured to check out
video documentations of all of the companys cymbals.
Matt Kern
crescentcymbals.com
fect, with intonation remaining true all the way up to the 24th fret.
A big part of the Sadowsky sound is the double FET boost-only preamp. The controls are volume, pickup blend, stacked treble and bass boost,
and vintage tone control (VTC). I especially liked the simplicity of the VTC.
It works just like an old P- or J-Bass tone control and doubles as an active/
passive push-pull (functions in passive or active mode). In the active mode,
you can dial up a multitude of sounds in an instant, with the treble and bass
boost affecting subtle or dramatic changes. The bass I tested came with two
Sadowsky soapbar humbuckers, both placed closer to the bridge than in a
traditional configuration (to optimize the punchiness of the B string).
On gigs from concert halls to tiny clubs to hotel ballrooms, the NYC
24-fret 5-string gave me ample tonal shaping options. To get all of this you
must pay a price, though. The foot-in-the-door price on the NYC 24-fret
5-string is $4,275, and the bass I tested retails for $5,375. If budget is an issue,
the made-in-Tokyo Sadowsky Metro basses start at $2,350. Many bass makers
try to achieve modern vintage. Sadowsky succeeds, with style. Jon Paul
sadowsky.com
Toolshed
tures stereo monitors, dual headphone ports, eight individual lines out plus
ADAT and SPDIF input/output.
Although the Apollo can be controlled directly from the front panel, the real
power of the box is unleashed when running the console software, which emulates a full-blown mixer. In addition to its routing options, the console gives you
the ability to insert UAD Powered Plug-Ins into the recording and monitoring
paths with virtually no latency, thanks to the four on-board Sharc processors.
This is particularly attractive for use during studio trackingespecially vocals,
which typically require a considerable amount of processing.
As impressive as the UAD Powered Plug-Ins are, the Apollo also sounds
great with high-resolution 24-bit A/D converters capable of sample rates up to
192kHz. The on-board mic preamps are clean and transparent, adding almost
no color to the tracks. The DI inputs also work well, delivering great results when
tracking with plug-ins such as Universal Audios Softube Amp Room. Apollo
comes bundled with the companys Analog Classic plug-in package.
The Apollo shines in terms of its overall quality and the workflow options
it delivers. The UAD Powered Plug-Ins sound great, and the tight integration
with DAW software packages makes tracking a pleasure. Keith Baumann
uaudio.com
buffet-crampon.com
Toolshed
Gear Box
Studio Snare
Tama has added the LMP1465F Studio Maple
snare drum. With a clean, round tone and
no unwanted harshness, this 14- by 6.5-inch
snare is ideal for weekend warriors and studio
stalwarts alike. The six-ply, 5mm all-maple shell
is given extra clarity with the addition of Sound
Focus Rings on the top and bottom. tama.com
Fantastic Fuzz
MOD Kits DIY has debuted the
Ring Resonator, an octave-up
fuzz effect pedal kit in an
all-analog design that
captures late-1960s tones.
Transformer-coupled
germanium diodes
produce sounds
that range from a
subtle octave up
to thick sonic
textures and
synth-like tones.
modkitsdiy.com
Pocket Full of
Sound
Yamahas Pocketrak
PR7 is a portable linear
recorder equipped with
newly developed XY
stereo microphones.
The PR7 captures
high-resolution
stereo recordings and
achieves natural sound
regardless of its surroundings. yamaha.com
Jazz On Campus
AntonIo Garca
Saxophonist-educator Plunky Branch (right) rehearses with the combined students of VCU and UKZN in March.
Garca and Gonsalves had made the study of racism and segregation in the
history of these two cities an integral part of the experience for students and faculty alike. Music comes from people, and people come from a culture and a history, offered Garca. Richmond is the former Confederate capital, and The
Durban System had been the basis for what later became the policy of apartheid throughout South Africa. But out of oppression on both continents came
music that spoke for freedom. This teaches the next generation of jazz musicians
that you dont find your musical voice merely to express Gm7C7; you seek it to
express what you feel.
South African jazz has its own swagger, rooted in the many kinds of urban
music that are part and parcel of a migrant culture, said Gonsalves. Through
the gift of this educational exchange, we can proudly say that local South African
music forms and styles such as mbaqanga, maskanda and marabi have taken
their place alongside the blues, standard tunes and bebop as platforms for musical dialogue between our respective ensembles. This dialogue is rooted at least
partially in our common Southern heritage of migration from serfdom to global
citizenry, and we acknowledge the effectiveness of this jazz bridge that weve built
towards developing greater understanding.
The students resonated with that same feeling. Reading and playing music
werent the only purposes of the exchange, said Sikhakhane. This involved a lot
of spiritualism through sound and cultural experience. All the influences of our
forefathers came to action. And the best part of this was sharing all our understandings through jazz music of this caliber.
Schnabel agreed. Physical distance and cultural differences cannot blur our
universal humanity, he said. I can think of no better way to express this revelation than through the joy of music.
At press time a joint CD from live concert tracks, Leap Of Faith (VCU Jazz),
was slated for release in late September on both continents. The CD features the
students and faculty; guests Kunene and Branch; the commissions by Garca and
VCU student Victor Haskins and by UKZNs Professor Sazi Dlamini and alumnus Stephan le Roux; plus other originals and arrangements.
Plans are afoot to continue the partnership of these two jazz programs. As
marvelous as the musical output has been, enthused Garca, it still cannot compare to the knowledge we have all learned and especially the friendships we have
Antonio Garca & Neil Gonsalves
all made.
More info: wp.vcu.edu/vcujazz; jazz.vcu.edu;
music.ukzn.ac.za/Academic-Programmes/Jazz-Studies.aspx
DB Music Shop
albums & videos
Rates: Minimum 15 words per ad. Advertise in one issue for $1.70/word, 3 consecutive issues for $1.40/word, 6 consecutive issues for $1.25/word, 12 consecutive issues for $1.10/word. Display ads: call (630) 941-2030. All ads are prepaid,
no agency commission. Check, Money Order, Visa and MasterCard are accepted. Deadline: Ad copy and full payment
must arrive 2 months prior to DB cover date. Send your advertisement by MAIL: DownBeat Classifieds, Att. Maggie
Glovatski-Cuprisin,102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, Illinois, 60126, email: [email protected], FAX: (630) 941-3210.
lessons
ONLINE JAZZ LESSONS. Study all styles &
aspects of jazz improvisation and saxophone
with Jeff Harrington, Berklee Professor, MIT
Affiliated Artist, Harvard University MLSP
Instructor. http://jeffharrington.com/.
Email: [email protected].
617-332-0176.
Study Jazz Piano Online
Etc.
Neo-1930s songwriter
Large portfolio of songs in 1930s style.
Inviting singers to visit my website.
Bruce Kates, www.brucelloydkates.com
WWW.EASTWINDIMPORT.COM
Japanese import CDs & LPs: Venus,
Marshmallow, Sawano and more!
We ship worldwide.
RARE JAZZ LP AUCTIONS
All instrumental styles plus vocals and Latin.
Free lists sent worldwide. Armand Lewis, P.O.
Box 4834, N. Hollywood, CA 91617. Fax: 818762-3563, e-mail: [email protected]
www.jazzloft.com
Jazz, Avant-garde, Blues & Modern Classical
CDs & DVDs. Over 1000 titles of new VINYL
in all genres! CD & Vinyl Accessories plus
Space-Saving CD & DVD Sleeves.
Music for people who listen.
SeriouS CD Storage
Save space by replacing bulky jewel boxes
with the Jewelsleeve. Call for a free sample at
1-800-863-3312 or visit www.jewelsleeve.com
artists
Subscribe
DownBeat.com
877-904-JAZZ
Websites
www.gjazz.com www.vinyljazz.com
176 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
WWW.LIVEJAZZONTHETUBE.COM
Swing, BeBop, HardBop, straightahead,
inside-outside; Its all here - Internet Television
at its finger popping best! (215) 548-5894
WWW.THESHOWBIZBOOK.COM
Stay connected free worldwide.
DB Buyers Guide
AC Jazz Project........................................56
Northwestern University.....................131
UMASS.......................................................88
Alexander Reeds.......................................9
inDepth Jazz.............................................16
NS Designs............................................. 156
thinkns.com
ucojazzlab.com
Allegro Music............................................ 31
Indiana University
Jacobs School of Music.......................133
University of Cincinnati......................123
oberlin.edu/con
ccm.uc.edu
acjazz.wix.com/acjazzproject
superial.com
allegro-music.com
Antigua Winds.......................................147
antiguapro-one.com
Banff Centre...........................................158
banffcentre.ca
Bari Mouthpieces....................................25
bariwoodwind.com/
Brubeck Institute....................................151
brubeckinstitute.org
Cannonball Music.................................107
cannonballmusic.com
Capri Records..........................................59
caprirecords.com
Casio............................................................. 11
casio.com
College of St.Rose..................................92
strose.edu
DAngelico...................................................2
dangelicoguitars.com
Dare2 Records......................................... 24
daveholland.com
DePaul University.................................124
music.depaul.edu
humbermusic.ca
indepthjazz.com
music.indiana.edu
J.J. Babbitt................................................46
jjbabbitt.com
Jamey Aebersold..................................138
jazzbooks.com
JodyJazz Mouthpieces..........................81
jodyjazz.com
Kennedy Center.....................................113
kennedy-center.org
KoSA Music.............................................135
kosamusic.com
LaBella Strings........................................170
labella.com
Lawrence University
Conservatory of Music........................125
lawrence.edu/conservatory
Local 802..................................................62
justiceforjazzartists.org
MACSAX................................................... 161
macsax.com
music.northwestern.edu
pmauriatmusic.com
Palmetto Records..................................65
palmetto-records.com
Pearl...........................................................4-5
pearldrum.com
umass.edu
music.colorado.edu
University of Denver
Lamont School of Music....................149
du.edu/lamont
University of Kansas............................134
music.ku.edu
University of Louisville........................106
jazz.louisville.edu
University of Miami
Frost School of Music.......................... 103
Princeton University.............................93
miami.edu/frost
music.umich.edu
Purchase College...................................96
University of Missouri
Kansas City............................................. 130
princeton.edu/~puje
hanze.nl/prinsclausconservatorium
University of Michigan........................127
purchase.edu
conservatory.umkc.edu
Reed Geek..............................................108
reedgeek.com
Rico Reeds.................................................37
ricoreeds.com
Roosevelt University............................128
roosevelt.edu
RS Berkeley..............................................112
rsberkeley.com
Sabian ........................................................41
sabian.com/en
Sadowsky Guitars..................................96
sadowsky.com
Sam Ash...................................................167
samash.com
Samson...................................................180
samsontech.com
kug.ac.at/en
University of NebraskaLincoln.....135
unl.edu/music
music.unlv.edu
University of Washington..................153
music.washington.edu
Eastman Strings........................................5
Middle Tennessee
State University....................................106
ECM Records....................................36, 47
Fishman....................................................80
Motma Records..............................55, 57
Music Dispatch......................................170
Fuzzy Music............................................... 12
fuzzymusic.com
musicminusone.com
George Ls...............................................166
georgelsstore.com
njcu.edu/mdt
Godin Guitars..........................................29
New School..............................................83
Yamaha...................................................169
Zildjian..................................................... 165
Hartt School.............................................99
UAudio....................................................... 13
Zoom...........................................................73
eastmanmusiccompany.com
ecmrecords.com
elmhurst.edu/music
fishman.com
ftc.edu/
music.gmu.edu
godinguitars.com
gregfishmanjazzstudios.com
hammondorganco.com
harttweb.hartford.edu
mtsu.edu/music
midwestclinic.org
montereyjazzfestival.org
motema.com
musicdispatch.com
njpac.org
newschool.edu
nyjazzacademy.com
northcentralcollege.edu
niu.edu/music
Sher Music...............................................152
shermusic.com
Skidmore College................................... 82
skidmore.edu
Soprano Planet.......................................56
sopranoplanet.com
temple.edu/boyer
music.tcu.edu
theowanne.com
tri-c.edu
uaudio.com/apollo
University of Wisconsin
Madison.................................................. 130
music.wisc.edu
Virginia Commonwealth
University..................................................86
vcu.edu
Webster University...............................132
webster.edu
usa.yamaha.com
zildjian.com
zoomfx.com
Blindfold Test
By dan ouellette
Branford Marsalis
Branford Marsalis
at the 2013 North
Sea Jazz Festival
Dexter Gordon
Cheese Cake (Go, Blue Note, 1999, recd 1962) Gordon, tenor saxophone; Sonny Clark,
piano; Butch Warren, bass; Billy Higgins, drums.
Right off, its Dexter Gordon. If you dont know Dexter, buy this album. Then
put on a John Coltrane record from 1957, and youll realize that Trane is
playing Dexters licks, except his tone is different. Most musicians dont hear
specificity; they hear generally. But listen to the actual notes Trane was playing. He stole them from Dexter, who interestingly sounded like Lester Young
on his first album. Like a twin. Dexter learned Lester and Charlie Parker, and
his voice came from that. Its weird how Dexter isnt talked about as much as
he should be.
Ravi Coltrane
Who Wants Ice Cream (Spirit Fiction, Blue Note, 2012) Coltrane, tenor saxophone;
Ralph Alessi, trumpet; Geri Allen, piano; James Genus, bass; Eric Harland, drums.
I dont know who this is. A lot of guys today play this way. I didnt like it. Im
not a fan of small sounds, and everyone sounded small. The room they
recorded in is very small. The drums hit and the sound just dies. I understand
the economic reality of recording like that, but I like to hear music recorded
in rooms that reflect the actual sound of the people playing.
On this track, they dont sound like they know how to play together. The
tenor and trumpeter are playing their versions of the same licks. So theres a
clash. If they had spent a little more time listening to traditional New Orleans
groups, theyd hear how the trumpeter plays a straight line and the clarinet
plays arpeggios. That way the two dont step on each other.
The tenor player can play the horn, but whenever I hear something like
this, its like everyone starts out slow, then they go into playing 16th notes.
Thats the new rule. But then you get a lot of information coming out at you
at the same time, which, for a non-jazz listener, is problematic. After a while,
it just starts sounding the same. [after] Its Ravi? OK, but I didnt hear a lot of
communication in the band. Everyone sounds like it was a recording session,
like it was work. If Id be doing a session like this, Id pick something simple
to play, so everyone can have fun and sound fun on the recording.
The solo was cool. I dig the voice. The tone was thin. I prefer a more robust
tone, but it was imaginative. I could get into that. But the song? The Beatles
are much better at it. It reminds me of how a musician friend changed all the
chords of a popular song, but it wasnt successful. I said the person who wrote
the song didnt use those chords, and the tune sounded better that way. What
confuses me is, who is this for? The people who I know who like jazz dont
want to hear a Nirvana song, and the people who like Nirvana dont want to
hear a song thats been reharmonized to the point where they dont recognize
the song. So, I wonder, like here, what is the purpose? Its like what one of my
music teachers told me when I would reharmonize something: Why does a
dog lick his balls? Because he can. What makes Beatles songs so successful
is their simplicity. This isnt one of my favorite Beatles songs, so I wouldnt
have chosen to do this. It still comes down to the question, what is the purpose of the song?
178 DOWNBEAT OCTOBER 2013
I dont know who this is, but nobody in the band is a jazz musician. Its more
like smooth-jazz guys. The sax player is playing two scales consistently: the
blues and the pentatonic. Hes playing the same licks over and over again.
Now Stanley Turrentine was a swing musician who was also a bebopper.
When he started getting into funk, he tied it all together. But not this guy.
[after] Its Fathead Newman? Well, hes not a jazz musician. He grew up listening to swing music, which is why his solos with Ray Charles always sounded so good. But he was never a real jazz guy. I like the sound of his instrument. It has a fat sound, which is something rare these days. But the solo? Its
not based on a melody, which doesnt seem to exist here. [after] Its McCoys
Blues For Ball? I dont hear any Cannonball [Adderley] in here at all.
S.O.S.
News (Looking For The Next One, Cuneiform, 2013, recd 1977) John Surman, soprano
saxophone, synthesizers.
Ill guess. John Zorn? No, then it might be John Surman. Yeah, its that
anti-establishment movement, which I find amusing because none of the
players could play establishment material. When a guy says the establishment sucks, but he cant play it anyway, I wonder, does it suck because it actually sucks or does it suck out of necessity? Here, Im betting the latter. This
piece is not something Id listen to, but its cool. I like the way he uses a digital
delay the way a guitarist uses it. Its actually more a guitar piece than a saxophone number. I like the sound effects, but the repetitions bore me. Its why I
stopped playing r&b. My brain got bored, but it did feel good. This has repetitions but it doesnt feel so good.
Its David MurrayIve heard him a lot. He plays those swinging phrases the
way some cats played in the 30s. He plays the hell out of his horn. Hes got
a fine sound, which a lot of people dont have today. He scratches out all the
younger guys. The tune is not my thing. We have our ideological differences. Hes into the avant-garde. He invited me to record with him once, which
I enjoyed. After I finished, he said, Ill call you. Well, he fired me off the
record and didnt use my parts.DB
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.