Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Eddie Blair was born into a musical family in Johnstone, Renfrewshire, Scotland on June 25, 1927. His father played cornet and violin and as the ten year old took after his father picking up the cornet. Playing with the Johnstone Silver Band gave him the musical grounding that facilitated dance band work before he joined the Royal Signals in 1945.

After demobilization in 1948 Blair attended Glasgow College of Technology, playing with jazz and dance bands in the evenings. He got his first brief taste of London, England with the Ken Mackintosh Band before returning to college. By 1951 his work with Mackintosh and Glasgow pianist George Scott Henderson, whose quintet won the runner-up 1949 Melody Maker ‘All Britain’ contest, had come to the notice of Johnny Dankworth, who invited Blair to replace the Germany-bound Deuchar.

After four years with Dankworth’s Seven and Orchestra, Eddie joined Ted Heath for 11 years, recording regularly and touring the US in 1956 but also recording with Johnny Keating, the Swinging Scots big band, Vic Lewis, Tubby Hayes, Stan Tracey and Ronnie Scott.

Along with Jimmy Deuchar and Aberdonian Bobby Pratt they formed the all-Scottish trumpet section on Hayes’ Jazz for Moderns and his absolute dependability made him a natural for session work. TV programs including The Avengers, Jimmy Rushing, Sacha Distel, blues band Savoy Brown and Mike Oldfield’s sister, Sally all figured in his performing and subsequent session recordings.

At sixty-five in 1992, he retired to concentrate on skiing and golf. Trumpeter Eddie Blair, who in the late 1940s and 1950s became absorbed into the London jazz scene and whose style influenced Deuchar and Kenny Wheeler, transitioned on Boxer Day, December 26, 2020 at age 93 in ​​Rustington, West Sussex, England.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Wilhelm Josef Grah was born on June 24, 1928 in Bergisch-Gladbach, Germany. He led his own quintet from 1949 to 1953, then performed and recorded with Fatty George 1954-1959. I

During the 1960s he moved to Austria where he hosted a radio show in Vienna. He officially became a citizen in 1970. In the 1970s he played with the Austrian Barrelhouse Jazz Band and also led his own quintet.

Pianist and vibraphonist, who led a trio, quintet, sextet, big band and orchestra, transitioned on September 17, 1996 in Vienna.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Luther Thomas was born on June 23, 1950 in St. Louis, Missouri. Known for his free jazz playing and drawing from funk. Coming out of the Black Artists Group (BAG) of St. Louis in the late Sixties, he was one of the original voices from a scene that also bred such names as Oliver Lake, Julius Hemphill, Baikida Carroll, John Zorn and Joseph Bowie.

Luther played in the Human Arts Ensemble with Charles Bobo Shaw in the 1970s, and led a group called Dizzazz in the early 1980s. He played saxophone for James Chance and the Contortions.

As a leader he had recording sessions from the early 1970s he has recorded eleven albums. They have been reissued on CD as part of Atavistic Records’ Unheard Music Series. In 1998 he settled in Denmark and became a cult musician in Christiania Freetown, performing there weekly.

Alto saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist Luther Thomas was a completely intuitive improvisor and a free spirit who reached a level of intensity on the saxophone reached by very few others, transitioned at the age of 59 on September 8, 2009 in Denmark.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Julia Feldman was born on June 22, 1979 in Samara, Soviet Union to Israeli parents and into a family with a large musical background; her father wa ajeweler who played jazz piano, and a grandfather who was an accomplished conductor and a leader of the city philharmonic orchestra. Classically trained by studying the piano from the age of 5 until the family’s immigration to Israel in 1990 where she continued her piano studies along with jazz improvisation at the High School Of Arts in Jerusalem.

Becoming interested in jazz singing in the last year of her high school studies Feldman began studying voice technique and jazz improvisation along with intensive studies of jazz with the saxophonist Arnie Lawrence at the International Music Center of Jerusalem. While there she studied and performed with known American jazz musicians, such as Evelyn Blakey, Larry Goldings, Armen Donelian, Bob Meyer, Sheila Jordan, Judi Silvano and composer Allen Gershwin, performing the latter’s Walk In The Wilderness.

The late Nineties had her continuing her education and performing with a host of musicians. She has put together her self-titled ensemble and quartet with the former releasing a tribute album in 2006 Words Are Worlds inspired and featuring many standards by Billie Holiday. Other projects she has worked on as a vocalist have delved her into progressive rock Musicca Ficta,  vocalist in Radical Shlomo, as pianist, vocalist, co-composer and co-lyricist in Ayulyul and collaboration with ethno-core Jerusalem band Shoom.

Vocalist, composer and educator Julia Feldman, whose singing combines elements of multiple jazz genres, free improvisation and modern classical music, continues to explore, perform and record.

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Three Wishes

Nica never missed a chance to travel and while in conversation with Jimmy Rushing she asked if he was given three wishes that would be granted what would they be and he said:  

  1. “I’m doing one of my wishes right now! Being in Japan.”
  2. “If I had my life to live over, I wouldn’t mind. I’ve always enjoyed every part of it.”
  3. “One thing I’d like to see is colored shows come back like it used to be in the twenties. Like Cotton Club days ~ entertainers going from table to table! And I’d like to see colored shows on TV, at the right times: not too early or too late. To see a complete show and band, and see the reactions of young people.”

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

SUITE TABU 200

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