Atlanta Jazz Festival… 1998

The year is 1998 and it is the inaugural year for Camille Russell Love as the new Director of the Bureau of Cultural Affairs. Mayor Bill Campbell is heading towards his second term as the city prepares for the annual weekend of jazz May 18th to the 26th in Piedmont and Woodruff Parks.

The lineup Ms. Love brought represented a host of the city’s finest vocalists and instrumentalist as well as national and internationally renowned jazz musicians Andy Milne, Bill Anschell, Bob Miles, Cascade Avenue Be-Bop Society, Dave Bass Quartet, David Freeman, Detroit All-Stars, Dianne Reeves, Georgia Grammy High School Band, Grout, GSU Faculty, Hilton Ruiz Quartet featuring Dave Valentin, Jeff Crompton Quartet, Joe Jennings with Life Force, Johnnie Eason, Kamal Abdul Alim, Kevin Mahogany, Lester Walker Project, Mark Turner Quartet, Miguel Romero, Mike Kelly Trio, Milkshake Quintet, Najmah Marchelle, Obie Jessie, Ojeda Penn, Phil Smith and the Atlanta Jazz Consortium, Rick Bell, Ron Taylor, Swing Association, The Trio and Tommy Macon and the Gentlemen of Jazz.

All the festivities are sponsored by The Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Company, The Atlanta Renaissance Hotel Downtown, the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Creative Loafing, Jazziz, WCLK 91.9 FM, WRFG 89.3 FM and  WJFZ. #AJF40


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Atlanta Jazz Festival… 1997

It was her final year that Barbara Bowser would lead the Bureau into the Memorial Day weekend festival. The programming was phenomenal and a fitting tribute as her swan song and the passing of the torch. Taking place in Woodruff Park with the Brown Bag Concert Series as well as in Piedmont Park.

The performance lineup was Bill Anschell, Bill Braynon’s Positive Energy Big Band, Bobby Hutcherson, Dave Bass Ensemble, Gloria Lynne, Jeff Crompton Quartet, Jerry Gonzalez and the Fort Apache Band, Jimmy Jackson All Star Band, Joe Campisi, Johnnie Eason, Kamal Abjul Alim, Life Force, Max Roach. Melody Cole Jazz Combo Quar-Tech, Mike Kelly, Naked Jazz, Ojeda Penn, Pharaoh Sanders, Philip Smith and the Jazz Consortium, Rick Bell Quintet, Rita Graham Duo, Swing Association, The Thad Wilson Quintet, Tommy Macon and the Gentlemen of Jazz and the World Saxophone Quartet.

The sponsors of the festival were The Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Company, The Atlanta Renaissance Hotel Downtown, Creative Loafing, JazzTimes Magazine, WCLK 91.9 FM, WRFG 89.3 FM, WJFZ and MediaOne.


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Review: Sweet Lu Olutosin ~ Meet Me At The Crossroads

Meet Me At The Crossroads immediately conjured up the myth of Robert Johnson, who stood at that famed intersection awaiting the sale of his soul to the devil. However, experience has taught me not to merely accept the obvious and with Lutalo Olutosin this is far from that legendary tale. Upon listening, the avid jazz devotee will quickly recognize the appropriateness of the title. What is gifted here is more of a convergence than a meeting. This is not a random gathering of songs but a carefully considered compendium. If there is any convention connected to this body of work, it is that this project has touched the soul of wisdom and versatility.

History meets style that goes well beyond this vocalist’s sense of fashion, though he continually pays homage to a time when musicians dressed to kill. The style of which I speak is his choice of compositions and the myriad of genres he presents as he travels through music’s evolution during the last century.

Affectionately known by his stage moniker Sweet Lu, he dives right in with the pacesetter Still Swingin’ that says it all for the tempo but leaves something to be desired in the story as he recognizes the past and reiterates that it ain’t over yet. He immediately switches gears and drops down to an outpouring of love that would melt any heart with a soulful rendition a la Eddie Levert on Love You More Than You Ever Know. I was immediately taken with a Roy Ayers like arrangement of How They Do That telling our stories of great determination and triumph over adversity.

Walking the wooden planks laid end to end across the backwater at the edge of the swamp, Lu’s vocal version of Intimacy of the Blues takes us to a juke joint envisioned in an atmosphere of an Ernie Barnes painting or Harpo’s Place as he belts out Sister Sadie’s Blues and how she turns a head and a heart. It is evident Sadie has been around a few joints in her life and one can imagine the crowd bumping and grinding through a hot and sticky night and singing and hand-clapping to a fervor pitch in church. Skin Game eradicates the lines of color and evens the playing field for humanity’s acceptance of each other. One unlucky traveler is set on the straight and narrow because Granny said it and nobody’s word is more trusting than hers.

Dancea Swing A Nova moves easily through a dream world of a dancer who woos a young man and teaches him about life with a bossa rhythm. Lu bravely embraces the classic Lou Rawl’s tune You’ll Never Find and intuitively arranges it to make it his own, adding a little more jazz to this rhythm and blues mix. Tunji Baby is a mid-tempo groove that hurts so bad with the pain of desire but everything about her is tantalizingly sexy and exquisitely distressful but he refuses to give it up. Where I come from we call that love and happy to be in it.

If one is responsible for his craft then he must delve into the classics and for this outing Sweet Lu respectfully delves into the catalogue of tenor great Joe Henderson and retrieves Recorda Me, pens lyrics, sings and scats his way across the charts of Don’t Forget To Remember. This is just one of the six songs he composed and or penned lyrics for on this project, adding the talents of Kevin Mahogany, Al Kooper, Antonio Ciacca, along with the venerable Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. And for those listeners who enjoy singing, he reprises two sing along tracks of Skin Game and How They Do That.

Let us not be bereft of our responsibility to acknowledge his powerhouse assemblage of musicians that reflects Atlanta’s finest with pianist Tyrone Jackson and Marty Kearns, trumpeter Lester Walker, saxophonist Mace Hibbard, bassist Kevin Smith, drummer Henry Conerway III, and legendary jazz pianist Donald Brown. Adding a little spice to the mix is vocalist Crystal Mone’t who we hear in all her splendor on How They Do That, Skin Game and You’ll Never Find. Not limiting his musicians to simply add their instrumental thoughts to the musical conversation, he collaborated with Tyrone, Antonio, Donald and also enlists the talents of Dwight Andrews to bring fresh arrangements to those borrowed songs and his original compositions.

To call Sweet Lu a griot is an understatement. He is a wise sage imparting age old lessons by deftly infusing our cultural history and family values utilizing a tapestry of blues, gospel and jazz that are pure entertainment from beginning to end. The messages are all too familiar but like that loving elder we all grew up with, he delivers them in different ways for a new generation. There is more here that meets the ear and the eye, so take a listen and your perspective on life may be altered.

carl anthony | notorious jazz | march 5, 2017

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The Jazz Voyager

Located at 56 Gold Street, 94133 this Jazz Voyager is catching a flight to San Francisco, California and looking forward to stepping into Bix Restaurant this weekend to experience going back in time to the opulence of prohibition. Jazz was the soundtrack of the 1920s and it’s the soundtrack of Bix.  Situated in the Barbary Coast enclave down an alley, Bix welcomes pianists and vocalists Sunday through Thursdays and jazz trios Friday and Saturday night. This supper club has a swanky 1930s ambiance, live jazz & a dining room serving American-French cuisine. Reservations recommended: opentable.com or 415-433-6300.

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Atlanta Jazz Festival… 1996

It’s an Olympic year in Atlanta and the eyes of the world are on the city as it prepares for the Summer Games that took place some 45 days after the jazz festival. Barbara Bowser has once again spearheaded the Bureau of Cultural Affairs and the Atlanta Jazz Festival took place in three locations this year, Woodruff Park, Justine’s Cafe and Grant Park.

With a small band of sponsors great things were accomplished and our thanks went out to Jazz Times, The Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Justine’s Cafe, Renaissance Atlanta Hotel, WCLK 91.9 FM and WRFG 89.3 FM for their unwavering support.

Over eight days from May 20th to May 27th we heard the talents of Kamal Abdul Allir, The Rick Bell Quintet, Dave Ferguson, Hunab Ku Quartet, Tom Harrell, Kenny Garrett, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Eric Reed, Christian McBride, Vanessa Rubin, Cecil Bridgewater Big Band with Joe Jennings, Stephen Scott, Kuumba Frank Lacy Big Band, Jon Faddis with Jimmy Heath and Slide Hampton, Stanley Clarke and George Duke. #AJF40


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