The Jazz Voyager

The Jazz Voyager is jumping a train down to the City of Brotherly Love from the Big Apple to take a short residency at the hip café Chris’ Jazz Club. Nestled just around the corner from the Bellevue Hotel at 1421 Sansom Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102, it is just a few blocks walk from Center City, it is a perfect stop for relaxing and enjoying live jazz six nights a week.

Winner of two “Best of Philly” awards, this is a serious jazz club that’s open from 11:00am – 2:00am and features serious talent in the place jazz musicians go to hear jazz. So this weekend I will be enthralled by Larry McKenna, John Swana & The Tim Brey Trio while possibly being served choices from the dinner menu which includes crab cakes, duck and calamari. My palate awaits what may be a delectable dining and jazz experience. Reservations may be made at (215) 568-3131. #wannabewhereyouare

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Three Wishes

J. J. Johnson had only one wish to Nica’s query and that was:

  1. “To be able to play exactly what I have in my mind.”

*Excerpt from Three Wishes: An Intimate Look at Jazz Greats – Complied and Photographed by Pannonica de Koenigswarter

THE WATCHFUL EYE

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Requisites

Harold in the Land of Jazz was the debut album by saxophonist Harold Land recorded and released in 1958 on the Contemporary label. It was also released as Grooveyard. The cover design was created by Guidi/Tri-Arts and the photography was performed by Walter Zerlinden.

On this album, his first outing as a leader, Land was able to show with his distinctive style that hard bop was well and alive in Los Angeles, California in the late ’50s.

The compositions presented on this album are Speak Low, Delirium, You Don’t Know What Love Is, Nieta, Grooveyard, Lydia’s Lament, and Smack Up. He borrowed songs composed Kurt Weill and Ogden Nash, Gene De Paul And Don Raye, Elmo Hope, and Carl Perkins. Land contributed Delirium, Lydia’s Lament and Smack Upto this recording.

The tenor saxophonist is joined by Rolf Ericson playing trumpet, Carl Perkins at the piano, Leroy Vinnegar on bass and Frank Butler hitting the drums.

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The Jazz Voyager

Manhattan is calling the Jazz Voyager once again to its theater district wherein lies the famed jazz nightclub Birdland. This venerable jazz club opened on December 15, 1949 and though the original location, which was located at 1678 Broadway, just north of West 52nd Street closed in 1965 due to increased rents, it re-opened for one night in 1979. Then in 1986 a revival began with the opening of the second nightclub by the same name that is now located not far from the original nightclub’s location. The current site at 315 West 44th Street 10036 is in the same building as the previous New York Observer headquarters.

Too young to have gained admittance to the original club before it closed, this Jazz Voyager will enjoy revisiting the club, not  patronized since the Nineties, to hear one of the genres emerging vocalists Veronica Swift and of course for the late show at 10:30. The price of admission is $40 and if memory serves me, make a reservation at 212-581-3080#wannabewhereyouare

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Three Wishes

When the question of three wishes was directed to Roy Eldgridge he replied:

  1. “To finish my course as a radio and television technician, so as to not have to blow that horn anymore.”
  2. “Enough money to buy my own club.”
  3. “Hold the war off for ten years – that’s long enough, I’ll be sixty then – so I can collect some money!”

*Excerpt from Three Wishes: An Intimate Look at Jazz Greats – Complied and Photographed by Pannonica de Koenigswarter

THE WATCHFUL EYE

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