All in Jazz

HPJF

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The 11th Annual Hyde Park Jazz Festival is just three months away, which is why the annual benefit gathering was held tonight.  About 175 people showed up at the Promontory Restaurant, Bar, and Performance Space to celebrate what has become one of the top jazz festivals in the country and certainly the top one in Chicago.

Ellis

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Tonight, Chicago's jazz community staged a benefit concert at the University of Chicago's Logan Center to help Ellis cover medical and rehab bills. That community loves her so much that the organizers had to turn away musicians who wanted to participate in the 2.5 hour concert.

Kevin Mahogany

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Kevin Mahogany opened his four-night engagement at Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase last night to an unjustly small audience that included four people from Iceland.  I last saw Mahogany 23 years ago at the Denver Botanic Gardens on a rainy summer night.  As I told Kevin after the second set, I should probably pay him for the blue rain slicker that I found on the ground that night.  I have traveled the world with it.

Dr. Lonnie Smith

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Woke up at 12:30PM today, worked on photographs, and then headed back to Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase for seconds.  Dr. Lonnie Smith and Company were still in the house.

Jazz Showcase

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I have always been a huge fan of Jimmy Smith, Brother Jack McDuff, and Jimmy McGriff, who I saw in a bar when I sixteen--the owner bought me a drink.  Dr. Lonnie Smith pushes the boundaries established by those luminaries, getting a lot of varied and interesting sounds out of his Hammond B3 organ.  Gotta love the spinning horn.  

Freddy Cole

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I love seeing our jazz treasures.  The years of performing and experimenting are often on display, as they were during Cole's set.  Accompanied by a bass player, drummer, and guitarist, Cole lead a very subtle, but powerful quartet, playing a number of selections from the American Songbook, as well as a tune by Sonny Boy Williamson, which reflects the influence of the blues that pervades the entire effort.  

Kurt Rosenwinkel

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Jazz guitarist Kurt Rosewinkel brought his six-piece band to the Jazz Showcase this weekend for the premiere of his new album, Caipi.  In a review of the Thursday night opening, Tribune reviewer Howard Reich was highly complimentary of Rosenwinkel, but he seemed skeptical about what he heard,

Joe Segal's Hero

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It's a love hate thing.  Joe Segal, the 90 year-old proprietor of Chicago's Jazz Showcase, loves Charlie Parker, which is why the photograph of Parker adorns the wall behind the stage.  Joe has been in the jazz impresario business for 70+ years.  Everybody who is anybody has been through that club.  Joe is an institution in the world of jazz, receiving all sorts of accolades, including the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master honor.

Hersch

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2017 Grammy-nominated jazz pianist Fred Hersch brought his trio to the Logan Center last night. For me, the standout was drummer Eric McPherson, who was the master of the subtlety, as exemplified by his use of brushes and the gentle tap here and there.  

Provocative

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Carrington and company performed selections from her tribute to Duke Ellington's Money Jungle, now 50-plus years old.  I was particularly impressed by saxophonist Mark Shin's guttural tone.  The notes had an edge that was more out there than one might have expected.  

Paquito

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Friday night saw an exciting take on Latin jazz come to the Logan Center.  Fourteen-time Grammy award winning Paquito D' Rivera brought his quintet to the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts for an evening of jazz that featured work from his 2014 album, Jazz Meets the Classics.  On the bandstand were Diego Urcola (trumpet and valve trombone), Alex Brown (piano), Oscar Stagnaro (electric six-string bass), and Mark Walker (drums).  Sitting in as a guest from Alejo Poveda on congas.

Indispensable

One of the highlights of this year's Hyde Park Jazz Festival was the opportunity to see and hear the great jazz trumpeter, Tom Harrell, together with TRIP, which also features saxophonist Mark Turner.  A tight unit that plays gorgeous music.  Still lots of humidty in the air, but the darkness and dark greenish-yellow hues portend Fall.

Avreeayl

The Good News from the Chicago Jazz Festival:  Legendary drummer, percussionist, and nice guy Avreeayl Ra was back in the saddle tonight, after having been jumped and then beaten by a group of thugs as he walked to the parking lot from Chicago's Green Mill Jazz Club a couple of weeks back.  From my seats, he looked fully recovered, but my photographs reveal some purple bruising around his left eye. He was in excellent form and spirits.

Bley

Photographically, the Jay Pritzker Pavillion in Millennium Park is a hot mess.  I didn't have a media pass, so I positioned myself just to the right of the media pit in the second row on the aisle, which gave me a relatively unobstructed view.  What those in the pit learned very quickly is that the video screen behind the stage creates all sorts of problems. 

Strings

Tonight we have Here and Now, a trio compromised of Tomeka Reid on cello, Mazz Swift on violin, and Sylvia Bolognesi on bass.  When I read list of instruments, I can only wonder whether this will sound like a Hayden string piece. 

McCann

Tonight it was vocalist Tammy McCann and guitarist Mike Allemana.  As was true back in the Seventies, you might not think that the two musicians could keep it going for two one-hour sets, but you would be very wrong.  Like Ella and Pass, and Eldridge and Peterson, tonight's performers captivated their audience.

Berman

Meanwhile, the crowd was enjoying a delicious dinner from the catering department, as well as the barbecue on the lower terrace.  The figs, Italian meats, and cheese looked particularly tempting. And this was the first evening where the skies were that rich blue color that everyone associates with summer.

8thBB

The music is very hard to describe.  Certainly there were bits of Ravel running throughout it, but I also heard Joe Sample's piano from the Crusaders, some Philip Glass minimalism, and some nice jazz bass solos.  If you pushed me, I'd also say that there were strains of Frank Zappa's orchestral music and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, but on a very unamplified basis.  Ulery even sang on the second from last number.  

Mallinger

The winter chill returned to Chicago today, but Chicago saxophonist Pat Mallinger brought a trio to the Museum of Contemporary Art warm the day and kick off the Tuesdays Jazz on the Terrace annual series.  With Mallinger, were Pete Benson on piano and Matt Ferguson on bass.