The Independent Ear

New Orleans Diary: Delightful Diversions

As mentioned in the recent I.E. entry which marked the first installment in our ongoing series of anecdotes from the forthcoming book African Rhythms: the Autobiography of Randy Weston, Composed by Randy Weston, Arranged by Willard Jenkins, to be published by Duke University Press in ’09, I’ve been holed up in New Orleans for the month of November (concluding Thanksgiving Day) putting the finishing touches on the book manuscript.  Friend, fellow WWOZ broadcaster and intrepid real estate agent Middie O’Malley referred me to a most agreeable studio apt. rental at the Hotel Storyville on Esplanade Avenue (an ideal location for those New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival trips I might add).  As I originally suspected the Crescent City has been an ideal place to complete this work; sans motorized transportation my bicycle has sufficed in this fairly compact city, the studio has offered the necessary peace & quiet quotient with a location convenient enough to various creature comforts, and the city certainly offers enough diversionary possibilities to effectively stave off stir crazyness; not to mention the Storyville is two blocks from the French Quarter, and the Marigny is across Esplanade from the Quarter. 

 

    Those diversions commenced shortly after arrival.  Lacking time or inclination to stock the kitchenette after a late afternoon flight arrival, I made the short stroll over to Frenchman Street.  Navigating the usual Saturday night revelers and assorted knuckleheads in the thriving Marigny brought the convenience and familiarity of the kitchen at NOLA’s best music club Snug Harbor, arriving just in time to catch the second set.  This night it was the always rambunctious and entertaining Willem Breuker Kollektief from the Netherlands, one of the sturdy and enduring jazz unitslegacies from that part of the world.

 

       Certainly staying on the Treme side of Esplanade Avenue in November would yield some Sunday afternoon Second Line action.  Sure enough later that first week the good folks at the Backstreet Museum (located on St. Claude Avenue in the historic Treme community, reputedly the oldest African American community in America) posted notice of that Sunday’s parade, the 25th anniversary Second Line of the Sudan Social & Pleasure Club.  Fellow writer Larry Blumenfeld and I made it over to Villere Street for the three brass band processional down to St. Bernard Avenue, touching base at several sites in Treme including nearby Sweet Lorraines and trumpeter Kermit Ruffins’ joint.  Hard to beat a good Second Line for no-cost fun.

 

    Later that afternoon a short drive over the St. Claude Bridge to the Lower Ninth Ward’s depressing  post-Katrina ghostliness did afford an encouraging look at several of the new homes built by Brad Pitt’s admirable Make it Right project.  From this perspective the actor’s effort is no rip-off or publicity-grab; it’s the real deal).  Despite the Lower 9’s continued gap-toothed appearance (street upon street of a house here, four slabs there, another house here, three weed fields there and a thorough absence of basic human needs services… you get the picture), these homes are starkly colorful and architecturally unusual amid the previously unyielding vacant tableau.  Spotting a resident on his balcony Blumenfeld engaged the gentleman who had moved back to the Lower 9 a few months prior and pronounced himself quite pleased with his new home.  Another effect of these new homes is that unfortunately they make the wasteland effect even more profound in a peverse sort of way.  Make it a point of visiting the Lower Ninth Ward on your next trip to the Crescent City.

 

    Also visible in the proud yet slowly rising-from-the-muck community were several visual arts installations under the rubric of Prospect 1, an ambitious, diverse and largely quite successful citywide exhibit of 81 artists from 39 countries in approximately 25 locations scattered around the city.  Host spaces range from gallery spaces and museums to an auto repair shop and assorted street corners and vacant lots.  The Lower Ninth Ward is appropriately the scene of several Prospect 1 installations.  The first site we located on the rather byzantine map devoted to what is referred to as P1 was adjacent to that first phase of Pitt’s "Make it Right" re-housing project.  Guided by the map we drove up to one of hundreds of blank lots in the Lower 9 to our first sampling of P1 installations, the Ladder to Nowhere… which about describes its impact… nowhere; a rather uncomfortable metaphor to what the Lower 9th Ward has tragically become amidst its historic neglect.  Rounding the corner, like a wilting flower amongst the overgrown weeds sprang another of P1’s signposts, outside the ironically named Battleground Baptist Church — established in 1868 — which appeared completely shuttered, leaving us wandering aimlessly around the lot wondering ‘where’s the art’?  On second blush perhaps Battleground itself is the P1 contribution of this particular street corner, which actually might be appropos.  Or was it the metaphorical sign of the times announcing that the Battleground congregation is "now worshipping in Center City"?  Another of America’s equivalent to the ruins of Pompeii, or going even further back in time, calling to mind the civic criminality of the Nubian treasures sunken under Egypt’s Aswan Dam project.

 

    Two more stops on the P1 map — reading same is an exercise in artistic construct unto itself — revealed more ho-hums.  However across the street from one of the installations sat the most rewarding stop on our journey — one which didn’t appear to be part of P1 — the L9 Gallery.  This modest house/gallery was the gem of the afternoon.  Operated by the spousal photography duo Shandra McCormick and Keith Calhoun, we were welcomed by the mild-mannered, informative Mr. Calhoun and thoroughly taken with the couple’s exceptional black and white photos of classic NOLA black neighborhood scenes, with a nice sampling of brilliant images of New Orleans musicians.  The eyes drifted immediately to a wonderful piece featuring the late patriarch Danny Barker and his grinning young protege Kermit Ruffins, and a raucous jam session piece with a youthful Dr. Michael White blowing clarinet.  Another part of the collection was a series of pieces that brought home the bleak realism of life inside the walls of the notorious Angola Prison and outside on the chain gang.  By contrast were several of the same images from the original pieces that were partially destroyed by the flood; the effect was not unlike the fractured-beauty experience of your first exposure to ancient ruins.  When visiting the Lower 9th Ward, which is scene to several encouraging redevelopment efforts, including a monthly farmer’s market and other hopeful social service activities, pay a visit to L9 Gallery — you’ll be all the richer for the experience.

 

    Mid-month Dr. Michael White, true keeper of the traditional New Orleans jazz flame as sacred trust, presented a program dealing with the African origins and connections between New Orleans music and the Motherland on a lovely late Saturday afternoon at Xavier University.  This was ably accomplished through White and an author’s opening remarks and driven home by contrasting sets of New Orleans drum and dance and a performance by drummer Seguenon Kone’s traditional African drum & dance ensemble.  Kone, who I had experienced on a prior Friday evening showcase at the Maple Leaf, has relocated to NOLA from Cote d’Ivoire via Orlando, FL.  He specializes in the three headed, tri-pitched dun-dun drum and a balaphone that he straps on and joyfully mallets.  Joining him was a countryman on djembe and a third hand drummer from Senegal.  They appear poised to take New Orleans by storm. 

 

    Later in the week Seguenon conducted the debut of his Africa-New Orleans connection at Snug Harbor.  He and his fellow percussionists were joined onstage by New Orleanians Jason Marsalis on vibes, reedman Rex Gregory, bassist Matt Perrine (a real 360 degree bassist equally at home on tuba, acoustic bass, and bass guitar), and Dr. White.  At first blush the traditionalist Michael White (hear his excellent latest disc  "Blue Crescent" on the Basin Street label) might seem like a fish out of water in this context, but he dove into the grooves with considerable relish.  Initially it seemed that perhaps Gregory was inviting a sonic train wreck in endeavoring to team his soprano sax with White’s keening clarinet, but they achieved remarkable synergy.  Marsalis was the glue, the bridge between these distinct traditions on vibes, gleefully dropping liberal quotes in particularly fine balance with his instrument’s African ancestor of the mallet family, Seguenon’s nimble balaphone.  Clearly this is a project that bears development, and from the outward joy of the participants and Seguenon’s growing Crescent City profile (he showed up again, this time with his folkloric unit, at that Saturday’s Rampart Street fair)… his evolution on the NOLA scene bears close watch.  He’s probably a lock to grace one of the stages on next spring’s New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

 

November 21 brought the jazz component of The Christ Church Cathedral’s annual All The Saints "festival of healing, celebration and jazz".  That evening’s free concert for an appreciative SRO audience delivered the now-customary annual performance in the sacred space by the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra (NOJO).  Led by the audacious trumpeter Irvin Mayfield, one of the most tireless civic hustlers and largely positive self-promoters I’ve ever interviewed (for a JazzTimes @ Home feature several months ago), NOJO is an ambitious 501(c)(3) built along the lines of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra; no surprise given that Mayfield is an avowed Wynton Marsalis acolyte and protege.  The music on this occasion, laden with the blues and Crescent City grooves, came almost exclusively from Mayfield’s pen; some of it apparently sprung at the 11th hour on the band, as announced openly by the leader as an ongoing bit of MC inside joke that grew a bit tiresome; if you’re going to perform an annual concert of this magnitude… rehearse, rehearse, rehearse…  As had been the case with their jazzfest performance last May, clearly one of the ongoing highlights of any NOJO performance is the brilliant work of clarinetist Evan Christopher, whose solos seem to transcend all that came before and lift the band to new heights.  While much of the critical buzz these days regarding the clarinet seems to center on the deserving young Anat Cohen, I’d advise you not to sleep on Evan Christopher, who is also quite an adept tenor player; seek out his records at your own reward.  Another anecdotal highlight of the evening was provided by vocalist Johnaye Kendrick, clearly the most promising of the current Thelonious Monk Institute student body. 

 

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African Rhythms: The Autobiography of Randy Weston 1

THE ADVENTURES OF RANDY WESTON

For the last several years I’ve been thoroughly immersed in the deep, broad and multi-faceted challenge of working with pianist-composer Randy Weston on his autobiography.  I’m very happy to say that our book, African Rhythms: the autobiography of Randy Weston, composed by Randy Weston, arranged by Willard Jenkins, after our many travels and painstaking work — not to mention the fact that neither of us is retired and must still work for a living, which stretched the project out a bit time-wise — will be published by Duke University Press in 2009.  NEA Jazz Master pianist-composer-bandleader Randy Weston is very much the underrated and somewhat overlooked artist whose story is full of life’s twists and turns, all informed by an abiding African-centricity that is arguably without peer in the jazz world.  His life has been touched equally by not only Duke EllingtonThelonious Monk, Coleman Hawkins and Melba Liston, but also by J.A. Rogers, Marshall Stearns, Cheikh Anta Diop, and the Gnawa Masters of Morocco, plus all manner of high masters, seekers, seers, soothsayers, and spiritualists across the globe… musical and otherwise.   

 

Thus we begin a series of anecdotes in this space from our book African Rhythms, leading up to the publication date.  One important figure in the life of Randy Weston is the great poet-author-social commentator and world traveler Langston Hughes.  You’ll find several mentions of Randy in Arnold Rampersad’s epic two-volume biography of Hughes and the pianist-composer speaks very fondly of his experiences with the writer, such as this tasty anecdote from their friendship.

 

    After "Uhuru Afrika" [Weston’s 1960 opus recording for United Artists, since reissued several times including most recently as part of the Mosaic Records "Randy Weston Mosaic Select" box set; for Uhuru Afrika Langston Hughes penned the liner notes and wrote lyrics for the suite’s lone vocal selection "African Lady"] Langston and I stayed close.  In fact when he died in 1967 at a French hospital in New York his secretary called and said "Randy, in Langston’s will he wants you to play his funeral with a trio."  I thought ‘man, Langston is too much!’  They had some kind of religious ceremony someplace else, which I was unable to attend.  But the ceremony Langston really wanted and had specified in his will took place at a funeral home in Harlem.  It was a big funeral home that seated over 200 people with chairs on one side of the place.  In the other room was Langston’s body, laid out in a coffin with his arms crossed.  The band was Ed Blackwell [drums], Bill [Vishnu] Wood [bass], and me.  They had arranged for us to play in front of the area of the funeral home where the guests sat, surrounded by two big wreaths.  Ed Blackwell got very New Orleans, very superstitious about the setting.  He said "man, I’m not gonna touch those flowers.  It’s weird enough we’re here in the first place."  So we had some guys move the flowers so we could set up the band.

 

    The people filed in and had a processional to view Langston’s body.  Lena Horne was there, so were Ralph Bunche, Arna Bontempts, and a whole lot of dignitaries.  We set up the band and I went outside for a minute to get a breath of fresh air.  Langston’s secretary came out and said "OK Randy, it’s time to start."  I said "where’s the minister?"  He said "there’s no minister, you guys start the service!"  I stayed up all night the night Langston died and wrote a piece called "Blues for Langston" because I knew he loved the blues more than anything else in the world.  He and Jimmy Rushing, those two guys really made an impact on me about the importance of the blues and what the blues really meant.

 

    Before we played I stood up and said "well folks, I wrote this blues for Langston Hughes since he loved the blues so much, so we’re going to play the blues."  We played one hour of all different kinds of blues and in between selections Arna Bontempts read some of Langston’s poetry.  The funniest thing I remember about it was that Lena Horne told me later "ya know, I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t know whether to pat my foot or not…"  But the story is that Langston put us all on.  Two weeks later I got a phone call from his secretary who said "Randy, I forgot to tell you, Langston said to be sure the musicans are paid union scale!"

 

Stay tuned to this space for further anecdotes from African Rhythms, detailing the rich life and singular life and times of NEA Jazz Master composer-pianist Randy Weston.  As the longtime member of Randy Weston’s African Rhythms band, trombonist  Benny Powell has said "…With Randy Weston we don’t play gigs, we have adventures…"

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Artist’s P.O.V.: The Return of Sumi Tonooka

What’s Up with Sumi Tonooka?

Pianist-composer Sumi Tonooka, a native of Philadelphia, has always been a very thoughtful artist with an exceptional touch at the keyboard and an uncommon cultural sensitivity based in equal parts on her diverse background and growing up in one of the crucibles of jazz.  She has always kept good company so it was no surprise when she showed up on piano in master bassist Rufus Reid’s band at the Kennedy Center Jazz Club some months back.  But for me this was my first Sumi sighting in many moons and it was a delight renewing acquaintances with an artist who has always had a distinctive point of view.  Her latest album Long Ago Today on the independent Artists Recording Collective was welcomed with open ears by listeners to my WWOZ radio shows, an exceptional date with a real working trio concept featuring Reid and the late drummer Bob Braye.  So what’s up these days with Sumi Tonooka?

 

 

Willard Jenkins: I was delighted to see you at the Kennedy Center Jazz Club with Rufus Reid because it had been some time since I last heard you.  Where have you been? Why the relative hiatus between records, and how long has it been exactly?

 

 

 Sumi Tonooka: It’s been ten years since my last release as a leader (Secret Places on Kenny Barron’s label Joken).   I am just glad that I could and did take things into my own hands regarding this state of affairs and got it together to release something on my own this year.   I’ve been doing what I always do:  staying active, at the piano playing, studying, teaching, and composing music.  I’ve been a member of the John Blake Quartet for 18 years (as well as Rufus Reid’s Quintet), I have also been performing and traveling with musicians who live upstate [New York] and there are quite a few of us. I have been composing for film and dance as well.

 

 

WJ: The differences between the issues that women practitioners of this music face as opposed to male musicians have been somewhat well-chronicled.  As something of a sub-set of those differences what issues might you consider particular to musicians who are also mothers raising children?  

 

  

ST: That answer depends on a lot of factors, such as what our personal situation is as far as our partner, financial picture, etc.  I think that what holds true is that there are always compromises that women make.  Its important to realize that you can’t have it all and all at once (not easily).  Motherhood is wonderful and demanding, and takes a lot of a certain type of energy.  It challenges you to not lose sight of your dreams.  You have to maintain a certain amount of discipline, and consistency of devotion to your art to keep growing, and all of that can be a bit of a balancing act, especially for a woman.  The word "multi-tasking" comes up a lot when I talk to other musician moms about this subject…  as well as needing a sense of humor.

 

WJ: As someone of blended heritage – Japanese and African American – what would you say those two cultural heritages have contributed to your music in the aggregate?

 

ST: A lot, especially in ways that I am not consciously aware of, which makes it difficult to articulate.  I had to purposely set out to explore my Japanese side because my mother was born in this country and her culture was present in my life mostly through contact with my grandparents, who lived with us for the last years of their lives.  Being around them helped me make the decision to compose a piece of music called "Out From the Silence" dedicated to al the Japanese and Japanese Americans interned during World War ll — my mother’s family among them.  This piece took me on a path of exploration into Japanese culture, music and poetry in a very specific way.  Had I not decided to compose that work, the windo into that way of seeing may have stayed blurry. 

 

African American culture was in my life in a more obvious way; I grew up in West Philadelphia in a very diverse neighborhood called Powelton Village.  My mother was the big jazz fan.  Both my parents took me to see Thelonious Monk for my 13th birthday at The Aqua Lounge on 52nd Street.

 

I think all of my siblings and me had to figure out for ourselves what being of "mixed heritage" means.  Each one of us has a different experience of that.  For me, it has to develop a stronger sense of self because it made me come to grips with the nuance of race, identity and culture in a very individual way.

 

 

WJ: Talk about your process for developing your latest record “Long Ago Today.”  

 

   

ST: My very generous friend John Hodian was leaving to go on the road for a month and basically handed me the keys to his studio, with the words "here, its yours".  I knew it had been too long since my previous recording and I wanted to do something about it.  So this presented the perfect opportunity.  The studio was in his home in Woodstock.  It had a wonderful Yamaha grand — I usually prefer Steinways, but this piano had something special.  During that month I produced the trio recording Long Ago Today — as well as co-produced a quartet date with tenor saxophonist and composer Erica Lindsay.  We hired a wonderful engineer, Bob Beleicki, a great rhythm section — Rufus Reid and Bob Bray — and went to work.  We had a whole week in the studio.  Erica and I had been playing together for a few years and had often talked about wanting to document our musical collaborations.  I also had quite a few new compositions for trio.

 

 

 

ST: The major difference is that all the responsibility, time and expense was mine.  It’s a big committment and investment and it took vision and patience to see it all through.  There are so many phases of producing a recording and releasing it on your own.  Its important to have a plan.  There is the creative and fun phase, that is making the music (hopefully under ideal conditions), then there is the production of the audio, recording, mixing, and mastering.  Then there is the packaging and design, the pressing of the CDs, and promotion, airplay, publicist, etc.  Many of the decisions that you make depend on what you can afford.  Ideally you want to be able to hire the best people for the things you are not able to do, or find creative ways of thinking outside the box to get things done.  It’s daunting, but the upside is at the end its yours. 

A lot of musicians run out of steam after the CD is released, as far as promotion and marketing, and that is very understandable (because of the physical, emotional, and financial exhaustion) but not wise to stop there, because yuo need to find ways to make the CD work for you and get people to the product.  That can entail a whole plan on the other side of the release.  The internet is a powerful tool and the world is just a click away, but the problem is there is so much music out there.  So what are you going to do to make your CD stand out?  I had a lot of help and support from Chris Burnett from ARC Records.  He helped me put together a business plan and once a week we would talk and check things off the list.  It helped me to stay focused and not get too overwhelmed.

 

 

ST: I’m working with Erica on the mixing phase of our quartet date.  It has the working titke of "Initiation".  Erica is such an outstanding player and composer and I am very excited about this recording.  I think that the album is very interesting in the way our material works together as a whole.  There is also an incredible musical chemistry on this recording that is hard to describe but easy to hear.  It also features the work of world class drummer Bob Braye who died early this year.  Erica and I are both deeply saddened by Bob’s passing and will miss him greatly, but we are also so grateful that we were able to document Bob’s playing before he left the planet.  Rufus and Bob sound so amazing together!

 

WJ: What other projects and activities are you working on these days?

 

ST: I’m composing a documentary film with the working title of "Mrs. Goundo’s Daughter".  It is about a Malian refugee mother living in West Philadelphia who is seeking asylum in order to keep her daughter from female circumcision in Mali, where it has been the custom for centuries.  I feel fortunate to have a working association with a wonderful group of women filmmakers in Philadelphia whose work centers on human rights.  This film is produced by Barbara Attie and Janet Goldwater and has received funding from the Sundance Institute.  Composing for film is challenging and enjoyable work.

 

 

Contact: www.sumitonooka.com 

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NOLA DIARY: Saved from Gustav by the Detroit Jazz Fest

TIME TO SPLIT…

Well good people, the Jenkins Family sojourn — more like a furlough to be sure — to New Orleans has concluded and we are back home in the DC area.  In September Suzan Jenkins’ tenure as the new CEO of the Arts & Humanities Council of Montgomery County (MD) commenced.  This new position has greatly energized us and presented Suz with some excellent challenges and opportunities to advance and grow this successful organization’s $6M+ annual budget.  For those of you not familiar, Montgomery County includes the prominent DC-metro area communities of Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Gaithersburg, Potomac, Rockville, and Silver Spring and is second only to Silicon Valley as home to the high tech industry.  Learn more about MOCO at www.creativemoco.com

 

So the month of September was one of furious packing and moving prep needless to say, but it was indeed a pleasure returning to our home, which our daughter Tiffany did an excellent job caretaking during our year in NOLA.  Our time in New Orleans was a real learning experience, not least being our growing sense of the depth of culture there — particularly from an African American perspective.  From the Second Line season, to brass band pioneer trumpeter  Doc Paulin’s amazing traditional New Orleans jazz funeral, to Mardi Gras, to Jazzfest, to the French Quarter Festival, to Satchmo Fest and endless festivals in between (can you dig a Creole Tomato Festival?), to Lolis Elie’s incredible film on Faubourg Treme, to learning and experiencing some of the deep culture of the Mardi Gras Indians (including the opportunity to shoot some amazing film on Super Sunday and  incredible night on St. Joseph’s Day at 2nd & Dryades; and stay tuned to these pages for news of a project I’m working towards involving one of the Mardi Gras Indian gangs), to the Hornets exciting season, to the endless array of great restaurants (and we just barely scratched the surface of Uptown neighborhood spots — with Upperline ranking at the top of my personal list and Big Al’s being my favorite casual spot), to experiencing the musical brilliance of the Jordan Family and numerous other of NOLA’s music masters, and interviewing some of the town’s historic music figures such the still-active 97-year old trumpeter Lionel FerbosHarold Battiste, Germaine Bazzle, Dr. Michael White and Clyde Kerr for the Dillard University project (see an earlier IE), to strolling the mere two blocks from home to Parasol’s for an oyster po’boy or their inimitable roast beef variety, our year in New Orleans was unforgettable.  Last but certainly not least was the familial open arms with which I was received during my stint on-air at WWOZ (stay tuned in November; see below)…  And we will be back… 

 

In fact I’ll be back in New Orleans for most of the month of November, holing up in a studio apartment to complete my book project, African Rhythms: The autobiography of (NEA Jazz Master) Randy Weston, composed by Randy Weston, arranged by Willard Jenkins, to be published by Duke University Press (read more about that in another section of this edition of IE).  And I’m looking forward to spending Sunday evenings throughout November hosting the new release show "What’s New" that Maryse Dejean and I launched in August in the 10-midnight Kitchen Sink slot on WWOZ.  But, how about a little Hurricane season drama.  As most of you know, Hurricane Gustav touched down in New Orleans on Labor Day, enacting a certain amount of fury, doing a measure of damage, but thank the Good Lord nothing like what Katrina wrought on that great city.  In the week leading up to Gustav’s scheduled arrival we found ourselves glued to the Weather Channel (ain’t it interesting how excited and energized meteorologists become at the approach of a weather calamity!).  Fortunately we had a built-in evacuation plan — that is as long as Gustav held off until Labor Day weekend, which it did.  We had booked a flight to Detroit weeks prior for the Detroit Jazz Fest as part of my work for the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters program.

 

The Detroit Jazz Fest (DJF) is quite simply a stellar event, and one that I had slept on far too long.  That slumber was primarily related to another great festival, the Chicago Jazz Festival, which for many years was a preferred Labor Day Weekend hang — and still is for that matter.  However the Labor Day festival menu has now broadened considerably after our first trip to the DJF August 30-September 1.  I always wondered why Chicago shut its festival down as of Sunday evening; perhaps that’s related to the annual Labor Day parade there.  However the folks in Detroit definitely know how to cover Labor Day as well!

 

Produced by friend and former Tri-C JazzFest colleague Terri Pontremoli, always an energy source unto herself, the DJF runs Friday evening through Labor Day and is presented on Detroit’s riverfront Hart Plaza, spilling out onto a good few blocks of adjacent Woodward Avenue as well.  The sprawling DJF encompasses six stages, craft and food booths, and includes the self-described Jazz Talk Tent and a children’s jazz stage.  The effect is less akin to Chicago Jazz Festival’s contained Grant Park venue and more like — as one person described it — a "midwest Monterey".  Like Chicago, DJF’s core appeal lies in it’s free admission which naturally draws families, all ages and economic strata to sample its delights.  And those delights were considerable this year.

 

Ironically for us the festival coincided with the scary mass evacuation of the Gulf Coast region ahead of Hurrican Gustav.  This would have been our first evacuation, but thanks to our pre-booked trip to Detroit to cover the DJF’s extensive lineup of National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters (full disclaimer: the writer works that program for Arts Midwest), we were spared the mass exodus (or "contraflow" as they call it when officials open up both sides of the highway for all traffic flowing out of town) across I-10 and its tributary roads.  After battening down the hatches at home as best we could we took no chances and left home a full four hours prior to our August 30 11am flight to Detroit, beating the evacuation crush by mere hours.  So while friends were reporting such tribulations as a 19-hour drive to Atlanta we made it to the airport in time to witness the scene of legions of other glassy-eyed Crescent City residents  endeavoring to make their way out of Gustav’s path.

 

Waking up Labor Day morning and anxiously watching the Weather Channel’s spot-on reporting from Hurricane Gustav (you know the by-now familiar drill: yellow raincoated reporters braving horriffic winds and rain to intrepidly report the fury) was no picnic.  Fortunately, after all was said and done, we were personally spared significant damage, other than to our wallet as the only vet we could find at the 11th hour to board our dog made a huge chunk of change from our last minute scurry out of town, what with his insistence on our laying out an exhorbitant "evacuation fee".  Turns out the house was the least of our worries as we wondered about the plight of 17-year old Miles, but he too made out just fine.  As the "street crier" on our block — a guy who makes a couple of passes down the street per day and is always good for the latest wit if you happen to be standing outside or on your porch when he passes by — exclaimed mock-angrily, "all that hoo-haw for what amounted to a big rain storm.."  That old cliche ‘better to be safe than sorry’ comes to mind but one wondered what the lack of significant damage would portend for the next time; and that next time arrived little over a week later when more scare was thrown into the game by the then-projected arrival of Hurricane Ike.  Old Ike whipped up some vicious winds as it passed nearby and slammed the Texas Gulf Coast.  But in the interim we heard many locals vowing not to evacuate if it had come to that, suggesting they were prepared to "ride" this one out.

 

Which raises many discussions about the perceived wisdom of some that the Gustav evac was a major case of the city crying wolf.  And this time very significantly the Superdome and the Convention Center were explicitly NOT open as refuges of last resort; the idea this time, apparently successfully achieved though once again a segment of the populace chose to ride this one out as it were.  Buses, trains and planes were engaged to ferry those without sufficient transportation to scattered evacuation points, though once again many of those masses had no idea where they were being taken.  Coupled with the fact that for two days after Gustav, access back into the city was limited to "essential" personnel (emergency and safety profession-related folks, etc.), and even once back home the electrical power wasn’t restored to the entire city until about the following Monday night (a week after what some now characterize as an insignificant storm), one wonders what will happen the next time such a "manditory" evacuation is ordered. 

 

Things were looking quite dire there for a minute. On Sunday afternoon, a good 12 hours before Gustav landfall was due, I got a voicemail message from the airline we flew in on that my return flight to NOLA had already been pushed back from the scheduled Tuesday morning to Friday morning!  By Tuesday, the day after Gustav, I was able to get re-scheduled to Wednesday, which was then bumped to Thursday.  By early Thursday evening when I arrived, after a laborious 3-leg flight, the power was down but what a relief to find nothing more than tree debris in my wake.  Slowly the streets came back to life and our power was restored on Friday morning.

 

But I digress, given that this started out as a bouquet tossed to the Detroit Jazz Fest.  The weekend was filled with enormous helpings of superb music, not least of which were the contributions of NEA Jazz Masters Jimmy Heath, Gerald Wilson, Slide Hampton, Kenny Burrell, Barry Harris and Benny Golson, all part of the festival’s Detroit/Philly focus — leavened with a tremendous Alice Coltrane tribute performed by Ravi Coltrane, Geri Allen, Jack DeJohnette, Charlie Haden et. al., and some rambunctious sets by such younger artists as the precocious pianist Gerald Clayton’s trio, rough & ready drummer Gerald Cleaver, and the promising vocalist Sachal Vasandani.

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New Orleans Diary Xll: Sultry Summertime

Dillard Interviews

The last week of July and first week of August were busy times for the Dillard University interview series mentioned previously in Independent Ear profiles of Harold Battiste, and Dr. Michael White.  Last week I had the great pleasure of interviewing some Crescent City legends: Bennie Jones and the inimitable dapper dan and man-about-town Uncle Lionel, the drumming duo and founding fathers of the Treme Brass Band; New Orleans leading jazz singer Germaine Bazzle; a session with New Orleans oldest living active jazz musician, 97-year old trumpeter Lionel Furbos, who continues to lead the band at the Palm Court, and concluding with a New Orleans modernist, trumpeter Clyde Kerr, frequent bandmate of the city’s free jazz icon saxophonist Edward "Kidd" Jordan.  More from those interviews later…

 

Satchmo Summerfest

Last week — and every week for that matter when you’re talking about the man I often refer to on-air at WWOZ as the Heavyweight Champion of New Orleans music — was surely Louis Armstrong week in the Crescent City.  As detailed below it was the culminating week of the annual Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp for youth which was capped off by some reportedly stellar performances from the youngsters at UNO on Pops August 1 birthday. 

 

As part of the weekend’s 8th annual  Satchmo Summerfest in the French Quarter there was a visual arts exhibition and good friend Rick Holton, who has painted some amazing jazz master collages, was in town to represent his wonderful piece on Pops.  Satchmo Summerfest kicked off in grand style with a keynote address at the Old U.S. Mint from the great record man George Avakian, who produced some important Armstrong discs, including the champ’s separate treatments of W.C. Handy and Fats Waller’s music.  Friday’s action began with a grand Satchmo Birthday Party at Louis Armstrong Park (home of historic Congo Square) with cake (where you gonna go in New Orleans without refreshments?), and music provided by Kermit Ruffins and Japanese Satchmo fanatic Yoshio Toyama.  Later Friday evening was the annual Satchmo Club Strut in the Marigny on poppin’ Frenchman Street, with live jazz in every club as well as on certain balconies (Geraldine Wycoff reports that the New Orleans Saxophone Quartet was a particular highlight).  As I remarked on WWOZ the preceding Wednesday drivetime show when Jason Patterson, ace impressario of key Satchmo Club Strut participant Snug Harbor (see below), was on for an interview — other burghs call such activities Pub Crawls; but in NOLA it was surely a "Club Strut" ("we don’t have pubs here," Jason said).

 

I had to head off to the Litchfield Jazz Festival in Litchfield, Connecticut for a NEA site visit so I missed the Club Strut and Saturday festival hits, but got back on Sunday in plenty of time for some good festival-closing sounds on the Traditional Jazz Stage, the Brass Band Stage, the Contemporary Jazz Stage, and the Children’s Stage.  The entire Satchmo Summerfest is free and some of NOLA’s finest representing the various stage genres, graced the grounds of the Louisiana State Museum.  New Orleans audiences ain’t shy about getting up to shake ’em down at these events, and strolling around the grounds I experienced the Algiers Brass Band, Treme Brass Band, trumpeter James Andrews & The Crescent City Allstars, and the irrepressible Kermit Ruffins & The Barbecue Swingers encouraging just that.  Over on the Traditional Jazz Stage, whose proceedings were broadcast live over WWOZ (www.wwoz.org), trumpeter Randy Sandke and a crew of New Orleans finest including pianist Steve Pistorius, drummer Shannon Powell, and the ubiquitous bassist Roland Guerin encouraged some fox trotters and free formers, as did stage closer Dr. Michael White (see our previous blog entry on him), with Guerin, Pistorius, and Powell reprising their roles and Detroit Brooks on banjo.  Brooks and Guerin proved once again the exceptional versatility of so many New Orleans musicians (see Snug Harbor below), both in entirely different contexts from other recent sightings, but no less effective.  Musically there was much ado about Pops on every stage; by evening’s end I’d heard "What a Wonderful World" on every stage!  And while that might sound a bit redundant, not to mention maudlin as that song can be, each time the tune was delivered with carloads of heart & soul, befitting the memory of Pops.  Both Sandke and White were quite generous in their Armstrong tributes.

 

Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp

Without question one of the summertime jewels of New Orleans is the annual Louis Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp.  This year approximately 100 aspiring musicians (age 10-18) bristling with youthful enthusiasm participated in this two-week intensive at Medard Nelson Charter School on St. Bernard Avenue.  They come mainly from New Orleans-area public schools, but through a cooperative agreement with Columbia College in Chicago several Chicago-area youngsters are attending this session, including one young clarinetist I met who was fortunate enough to stay at flutist Kent Jordan and his wife Christine’s lovely West Bank home. 

 

The Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp is a project of the New Orleans Arts and Council Host Committee, whose good work was represented at their press conference by member Mark Samuels, familiar from his other hat as CEO of Basin Street Records.  The heart & soul of this wonderful undertaking however is the executive director Jackie Harris and her spiritual godmother, or "sister" as she referred to herself in her warm remarks, the indomitable Phoebe Jacobs keeper of the Louis Armstrong flame through her Louis Armstrong Foundation.

 

Today’s press event was primarily in recognition of the kick-off of a week with this year’s Artist-in-Residence, the versatile keyboard wizard-producer George Duke.  The camp’s faculty is an exceptional assemblage of some of New Orleans finest, including the taskmaster with a heart of gold and a saxophone of pure steel, artistic director Edward "Kidd" Jordan, who was recently honored by this year’s Vision Festival in New York for his steadfast journey on the cutting edge of the music.  Other camp faculty included Kent Jordan, Maynard Chattters (trombone), Jonathan Bloom (percussion), Clyde Kerr (trumpet), Roger Dickerson (piano), Nicholas Payton (trumpet), Herman Jackson  (drums), Germaine Bazzle (voice), and an impressive crew of other teachers.  By way of introduction, the Jordans and Chatters are part of one of New Orleans’ most distinguished musical clans, as detailed in an earlier Independent Ear entry detailing violinist Rachel Jordan’s superb concert earlier this summer, a clan that also includes the late clarinet master Alvin Batiste.  

 

In addition to instrumental and vocal music the camp also boasts a dance program inspired by this year’s other artist-in-residence legendary Savoy Ballroom Lindy Hopper Norma Miller, who delighted those of us old enough to recall her references to working with Pops, and hopefully inspired the youngsters with her spinning of history.

 

Further information:

Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp

124 Roselyn Park Place

New Orleans, LA 70131

504/392-2002  or  212/987-0782

jazzcamp@louisarmstrongjazzcamp.com

 

Snug Harbor Joys

There simply is no better place for jazz in NOLA than Snug Harber, one of the jewels of the entertainment strip on Frenchman Street in the Marigny, the bustling neighborhood just below the French Quarter.  Much like Blues Alley in DC, Snug Harbor enjoys the tourist trade phenomenon.  At one point during last Saturday’s superb performance a woman two tables up leaned over and asked who that marvelous alto saxophonist was on stage who was delighting her so much.  Well, on this particular evening that saxophonist was Wessell "Warmdaddy" Anderson.  Though a native of Brooklyn, Wes Anderson is something of a homeboy, having prepped under Alvin Batiste at Southern University in Baton, Rouge.  The big man was clearly right at home, deep in the swinging shed with guitarist Detroit Brooks, who quite successfully and soulfully recalled vintage Wes Montgomery through the filter of George Benson but decidedly in his own sweet way; drummer Herman Jackson, pianist Larry Sieberth, and one of the most versatile, hardest working bassists on the scene today, Roland Guerin — who we’d just seen two weeks prior on bass guitar bottoming out a New Orleans R&B review at Harrah’s, the first weekend in May as the busiest bass player in town at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival where he played no fewer than six varied gigs throughout the second weekend, and a week prior to that as bassist with the Marcus Roberts Trio. 

 

Soulful and swinging straight out of the gate, Warmdaddy wasted no time diving headlong into "Billie’s Bounce."  From there it was on to Stanley Turrentine’s familiar "Sugar" and beyond.  There was no pretense, no grasping for some elusive newness, no sense of trying to confuse his audience, just pure, heartfelt jazz in its highest form, all served up with Anderson’s optimistic bounce.  In that respect, and also with the purity of his tone and adroit facility, not to mention his physical form, Wes Anderson has always reminded me of Cannonball Adderley, but his is very personal sound and approach.

 

Celebrating A Living Legend

It’s always a wonderful thing when deserving folks are celebrated while they can still smell the figurative roses.  Such was the case on Sunday, June 22 when a spirited crowd gathered at the Christian Unity Baptist Church to celebrate the legacy of saxophonist-composer-arranger and record man Dr. Harold Battiste (see our earlier Independent Ear profile for details of his rich life).  Dr. Battiste, who was bestowed an honorary doctorate degree by his alma mater Dillard University, was honored by several presentations, including music from the Treme Brass Band, Ellis Marsalis, vocalist Philip Manuel,  vocalist Germaine Bazzle, and a tribute from poet Kalamu ya Salaam.  Marsalis, Manuel, Bazzle, and Salaam have all recorded for Harold Battiste’s AFO (All For One) New Orleans modern jazz record label.  The program opened, appropos for a New Orleans tribute, with selections from the crack Edna Karr High School Band.  (Where else but New Orleans would a high school marching band have to excuse itself early from a Sunday program because they "had another gig"!)  There was also a rousing African drum and dance processional and heartfelt remarks from many, including Pastor Dwight Webster.  It was a beautiful afternoon, including the reception repast that followed — which we, despite alternate dinner plans, were implored to take part of in typical New Orleans parlance, by a kind sister who virtually blocked the door to prevent us from leaving without filling our plates.  As a good friend once remarked, you can’t go anywhere in New Orleans without there being food… good food… and lots of it!

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