The Jazz Voyager

The Commander’s Palace is the destination at the end of this jazz voyager’s road trip and navigating through the Garden District in New Orleans, Louisiana for the jazz brunch fit for royalty. The restaurant is  located at 1403 Washington Ave, 70130 / 504-899-8221 / $$$ / Brunch: 10:30am – 1:30pm

This former 1920s bordello turned restaurant is run by the Brennan family and housed in a bright blue Victorian mansion, built in 1880. They have been serving up refined Creole fare in a chandelier-hung space, and it is an elegant way to leisurely spend a late morning-early afternoon listening to jazz while dining.

Insider Tip: In the summer, the restaurant sells off inventory from their wine cellar at half price. There’s one catch: You have to mention the phrase “GrapeNutes” when making a reservation, then you’ll receive the discounted wine list.

Reservations are recommended and no shorts or t-shirts are allowed. Jackets are required on Sundays. To discover menu offerings visit commanderspalace.com #preserving genius

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Atlanta Jazz Festival… 1988

The year is 1988 and the name of the festival was shortened to be billed as the Atlanta Jazz Series. The city was set for a summer of weekend performances beginning June 2nd and running through September 4th. On those weekends, the free concerts were held in Grant and Piedmont Parks, while the paid concerts were held at Chastain Park Amphitheatre. the concerts at Chastain served a dual purpose of raising funds so that the Bureau of Cultural Affairs could continue to operate at its high level of achievement and provide an elegant setting for some of the more venerable talent and their enthusiastic audiences.
In addition, the series of jazz concerts were made possible with sponsorship from the Wyndham Hotel/Midtown Atlanta, AT&T, WVEE/V103 FM, Southline, Bud Light, Phoenix Arts Society and WCLK 91.9 FM. The Atlanta Jazz Series and the Montreux Atlanta Jazz Festival were hosted by the city of Atlanta during the same time and cross-featured artists.
The performance lineup was a virtual who’s who featuring the Arthur Blythe Quintet, Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers, Benny Golson Quartet, Michelle Hendricks, Monroe Hatcher Quartet, Music South Orchestra with Tommy Stewart and John Peek, Joe Sudler’s Swing Machine, the Phil Woods Quintet, Azanyah, Duo Exchange, David “fathead” Newman Quintet, Henry Threadgill Sextet, Ojeda Penn Experience, Ellis Marsalis Trio, Cassandra Wilson Quintet with Steve Coleman, Sonny Fortune All-Stars, Joe Jennings & Life Force, Lester Bowie’s Brass Fantasy, George Adams/Don Pullen Quartet, Sonny Rollins Quintet, Out of Hear, The Real Band, Michael Pedicin, Jr., McCoy Tyner Trio, Michel Petrucciani Trio, The Bazooka Ants, Nancy Kahler, Flora Purim & Group, John Cloy Quartet, 29th Street Saxophone Quartet, Clark College Jazz Orchestra and the Dizzy Gillespie Quintet with Sam Rivers. #preserving genius

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Atlanta Jazz Festival… 1987

The record of the 1987 festival illustrates that it took place on August 1st in the Rich Auditorium on the Woodruff Campus. It was the final year it was called the Atlanta Jazz Festival and Concert Series.
The lineup of performers for the 1987 jazz festival has been lost to posterity and is currently unknown. However, the photographers who have documented the performances over the first 30 years of the festival, in alphabetical order by last name, were: Jim Alexander, Sheila Pree Bright, Michael Reese, Sue Ross, Eric Waters, Julie Yarbrough.
The sponsors were the Stroh Brewery Company, AT&T, Eastern Airlines, The Hyatt Regency Atlanta, Southline, WVEE/V-103 FM and the Phoenix Arts Society.
The poster commemorating the festival was designed by Doug Vachon Advertising, the illustration by Theo Rudnack, printing by National Graphic – Marty Richard and Color Separation by Graphics Atlanta.
The Office of Cultural Affairs is seeking any information or documentation on the musicians who performed at the 1987 festival. Please share by contacting atlantajazz@atlantaga.gov regarding the 1987 performance line-up.
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Review: Niki Harris & EC3 | Time & Rhyme

Every now and then, if you’re lucky, you run across a bandleader who understands how to make a joyful noise. The days of the solo arranger and set configuration of players have been replaced with diversity bringing new ideas to eleven old songs. On his latest project Time & Rhyme, producer and drummer EC has collaborated with Niki Haris (Gene Harris’ daughter) and together have selected an incomparable set list that is no small feat to honor. Kicking off the set is a Tyrone Jackson arrangement with vocalist Niki Harris swinging an upbeat, straight-ahead version of the Hart/Rodgers tune Falling In Love With Love.

Traveling across the musical landscape Niki again takes center stage to present a poignant and tender rendition of another Jackson arrangement of the Bell/Creed composition Stop, Look, Listen. Not many vocalists have made me sit down and listen as intently as she did with the clarity and beauty of her interpretation. I could attempt to describe the emotional delivery Ms. Haris rendered on this song that five guys out of the Philly sound machine made famous, but the effort would be feeble at best and would be an injustice as you listen to her immense talent.

To challenge oneself to play a master is EC’s forte and he delivers with aplomb Dizzy’s Night In Tunisia opening with a strong bass line and sliding easily into an Afro-Cuban beat that can only be viewed as homage to a rhythm so dear to Mr. Gillespie’s heart. I was immediately transported to the backstreets of Havana and the raucous clubs full of flute, percussion and mambo.

Jackson steps in again with an easy bossa nova arrangement utilizing Frankie Quiñones percussive endowment to compliment Niki’s voice on Abbey Lincoln’s Throw It Away. Interestingly modal, they take it to a middle-eastern groove towards the end of the song, which gives Lincoln’s tune a refreshing outlook.

One can only think of the hapless scarecrow in the Wizard Of Oz when you see the words If I Only Had A Brain. Having heard this catchy Arlen/Yarburg tune many times, I was curious about the arrangement that would set this apart from the pack. Wade Beach set the tone for bassist Zack Pride’s conversation with EC’s drums. One can actually envision walking down the yellow brick road as they playfully execute the melody.

Billy Paul pulled the world’s heartstrings with Me & Mrs. Jones, however, Niki emotes a sense of fun and enjoyment in her relationship with Mr. Jones. One gets the sense that she is as comfortable with the relationship the way it is as she is relating it with an under beat of this collaborative mid-tempo bossa nova arrangement by EC and Jackson. Artia Lockett adds her enjoyment in the background like two girls having fun on a double date.

Not much more than the title needs to be said about Swinging At The Haven. EC puts his foot in the stew on this arrangement and the guys stir it up well. If you aren’t tapping a toe, shaking a hip or snapping your fingers, then you don’t know swing. Let this be your introduction.

Lionel Bart sits alongside the many resident masters of the Great American Songbook having penned the music and lyrics to Where Is Love for the 1960 Broadway musical Oliver. It’s a ballad of a young orphaned lad longing to find someone to love him and Niki quietly portrays the emotional depth of the lyric causing one to sympathize for the plight of this lost waif.

Changing tempos, EC, Dominique Patrick-Noel and A.T. take us back to our roots in the motherland as the trio drums and chants through Black Codes. One can visualize the movements of the dancers in a celebration of raising their ancestors. Nice & Easy is exactly what Niki and company do with this mid-tempo 7/8 meter of straight swing and Afro-Cuban undertones. If an encore was ever warranted on a recording then this Mandel/Mercer classic Emily would be a fitting adieu. The guys maintain the light and airy touch of the composers had in mind, leaving this listener with a vision of blue skies, sundresses, laughter and play in a field of wildflowers. Allow them to take you where your heart wants to go.

On this session drummer Ernest “EC” Coleman enlists vocalist Niki Harris, pianists Tyrone Jackson and Wade Beach, bassists Craig Shaw and Zack Pride, Sam Skelton on tenor saxophone and flute, saxophonist Teddy Baker, percussionists Frankie Quiñones, Dominique Patrick-Noel and Arch A.T. Thompson and Artia Locke holding down the background vocals.

For the uninitiated to EC’s genius, as you listen to this compendium of talent and music, I implore you to keep in mind, these are not shy schoolboys or coy girls on their first date. They are uncompromising professionals who know how to swing as well as be that gentle giant in the room with an equally tender touch. They may make it look easy but it is far from being that simple. Time, patience and the talent of eleven musicians committed to their craft have given birth to this seamlessly entrancing orchestration of sound.

carl anthony | notorious jazz | april 11, 2016

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Tete Montoliu was born Vicenç Montoliu i Massana on March 28, 1933 in the Eixample district of Barcelona, Spain. Born blind, he was the only son of Vicenç Montoliu, a professional musician) and Àngela Massana, a jazz enthusiast, who encouraged her son to study piano. He first began piano lessons under Enric Mas at the private school for blind children that he attended from 1939 to 1944. By 1944, his mother arranged for Petri Palou to provide formal piano lessons.

From 1946 to 1953 Montoliu studied music at the Conservatori Superior de Música de Barcelona, where he also met jazz musicians and became familiar with the idiom in jam sessions. During the early stages of his career, Montoliu was particularly influenced by the music of pianist Art Tatum, although he soon developed a distinctive style.

He began playing professionally in Barcelona pubs where noticed by Lionel Hampton in 1956 he began touring with Hampton throughout Spain and France. After the tour Tete recorded Jazz Flamenco, setting off a prolific international career. In the 1960s, he played in various New York City concerts and established collaborations with drummer Elvin Jones and bassist Richard Davis.

The Seventies saw him traveling extensively throughout Europe, consolidating his reputation as a main referent in the hard bop movement. During the 1980s, he played numerous concerts, collaborating with Dexter Gordon, Johnny Griffin, Joe Henderson, Dizzy Gillespie, Chick Corea, Hank Jones, Roy Hargrove and Jess Davis, to name a few.

The man from Catalonia, pianist Tete Montoliu was given a public tribute by Spain in 1996 for his fifty-year career in jazz. He passed away the following year on August 24, 1997 in Barcelona. He left the jazz world an estimated catalogue of 52 albums as a leader and another 21 as a sideman with Anthony Braxton, Nuria Feliu, Dexter Gordon, Eddie Harris, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Charlie Mariano, Jordi Sabates, Archie Shepp, Lars Gullin, Buddy Tate, and Ben Webster.


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