Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Mick Goodrick was born on June 9, 1945 in Sharon, Pennsylvania and began studying guitar in his pre-teens and was performing professionally a few years later. At sixteen he became interested in jazz at a Stan Kenton Band Camp. He moved to Boston, Massachusetts and attended the Berklee School of Music from 1963 to 1967, eventually teaching at Berklee,

After spending a few years touring with Gary Burton, he returned to Boston, he settled into a career largely as an educator. Goodrick’s notable students include Bill Frisell, Julian Lage, John Scofield, Lage Lund, Mike Stern, Avner Strauss, and Rale Micic.

During the 1980s to the late 1990s,Mick worked with Charlie Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra, Jack DeJohnette and with Steve Swallow. He performed in a duo with Pat Metheny at the Montreal Jazz Festival in 2005 and with Wolfgang Muthspiel at the Jazz Standard in 2008.

Guitarist Mick Goodrick died November 16, 2022 from the long-term effects of Parkinson’s disease at the age of 77.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Paul Lovens was born on June 6, 1949 in Aachen, Germany. In the early 1970s, he was part of a trio with pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach. He went on to work with Cecil Taylor, Harri Sjöström, Günther Christmann, Eugene Chadbourne, Peter Brötzmann, Teppo Hauta-Aho, Mats Gustafsson, Thomas Lehn, Phil Wachsmann, Rajesh Mehta and Joëlle Léandre.

He also played with Florian Schneider and Ebehard Kranemann in an early incarnation of Kraftwerk. Since 1967, Lovens has run the record label Po Torch with Paul Lytton

Drummer Paul Lovens, who also plays percussion, singing saw, and cymbals, has performed with the Aardvark Jazz Orchestra and Berlin Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, and continues his musical endeavors.

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Jazz Poems

FOUR BONGOS: TAKE A TRAIN for Vinnie

The drummer wears suspenders to look like  an old-timer, and plays a salsa “Caravan,” bad boy from the panyard with 

an evil, evil beat. The conga man  chants Yoruba and shakes his sweat loose on  a girl up front. His hand worries the drum 

like a live fish thrashing. Call the bassist  “Pops,” with his grizzly goatee, his Banshee  yelp, his rhumba step. Tha hall is fluorescent.

“Take a Train,” Lawrence Welk called that tune,  and played. Ellington, hovers above this group  like changeable weather, in gabardine.

ELIZABETH ALEXANDER | 1962

from Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young

SUITE TABU 200

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Jazz Poems

ELEGY FOR THELONIOUS

Damn the snow

Its senseless beauty pours a hard light through the hemlock. Thelonious is dead. Winter drifts in the hourglass; notes pour from the brain cup. Damn the alley cat wailing a muted dirge off Lenox Ave. Thelonious is dead. Tonight’s a lazy rhapsody of shadows swaying to blue vertigo & metaphysical funk. Black trees in the wind. Crepuscule with Nelly Plays inside the bowed head. “Dig the Man Ray of piano!” O Satisfaction, hot fingers blur on thosewhite rib keys. Comingon the Hudson. Monk’s Dream. The ghost of bebop from 52nd Street, footprints in the snow. Damn February. Let’s go to Minton’s & play “modern malice” till daybreak. Lord, there’s Theloniou wearing that old funky hat pulled down over his eyes.

Yusef Komunyakaa | 1947

from Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young

SUITE TABU 200

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Edgar Avenir was born on May 25, 1950 in Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines. As a child he grew up in the University of the Philippines and lived in Area One of the campus. As a young guitarist, Avenir played with the renowned jazz pianist and composer Bong Peñera, and the Sangkatutak Band, whose members included Cariño, Ivy Violan and Richard Merk. His neighbors included Ed “Sarge” Cariño and John Lesaca, both of whom would later play with Avenir in various bands.

While he sessioned for pop acts like the Apo Hiking Society, his associations with fellow jazz musicians allowed him to explore the more eclectic side of his music. His move to jazz had him rubbing shoulders and exchanging notes with Pinoy jazzmen like Sandra Lim Viray, Jun Viray, Romy Posadas and Roger Herrera.

An excellent musician who could play with anyone, Avenir regularly performed with singer Zenaida Celdran and De la Calzada at La Cuisine Francaise in Makati. Celdran took care of Avenir in the last few months of his life. He was always willing to help fellow artists who wanted to learn more about music.

Still playing until August even though he was ill, guitarist Edgar Avenir, affectionately known as Koyang, died on Saturday, September 17, 2017 of pneumonia arising from lung cancer. He was 61.

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