Monday, September 28, 2015

Five Things To Know About Peter Bernstein, Larry Goldings, and Bill Stewart


  1. A working band for over 20 years, Bernstein, Goldings and Stewart are truly a telepathic unit and the most enduring organ trio in jazz, recording eight albums under Goldings’ name, a studio record and live DVD under Bernstein’s name, and a pair credited to all three including their latest, Ramshackle Serenade
  2. Larry Goldings has released 18 albums as a leader and done sideman duty on hundreds of others. He is one of the most sought-after organists (and pianists) in jazz and pop music, performing and recording with artists ranging from Norah Jones and Madeleine Peyroux to Christina Aguilera and Elton John. Since 2001, he has worked steadily with legendary singer/songwriter James Taylor. And, he may know the true identity of Austrian pianist Hans Groiner
  3. A protégé of the great Jim Hall, guitarist Peter Bernstein gained early experience with masters Lou Donaldson and Jimmy Cobb, and worked extensively with Joshua Redman, Diana Krall and organist Melvin Rhyne. He’s led nine albums and made appearances on over 80. Hall described Bernstein as “the most impressive guitarist I’ve heard”
  4. Iowa-born Bill Stewart is one of the most original, identifiable and influential drummers in modern music. He began working with saxophone giant Joe Lovano while still in college, and had lengthy partnerships with guitarists John Scofield and Pat Metheny, pianists Marc Copland and Bill Carrothers, and dozens of others. He’s recorded five albums as a bandleader, including his two most recent releases that feature an unusual trio lineup of two keyboardists and drums
  5. DownBeat magazine describes the band this way: “This is a killer organ trio barrage that’s deep in the pocket. Bernstein, Goldings and Stewart have a natural feel for this music, laying down a groove that lets each soloist float across the tunes”
Peter Bernstein, Larry Goldings and Bill Stewart perform in the Joe Henderson Lab 10/8-11. For more information, click here.



Friday, September 25, 2015

5 Things In The Jazz World This Week (9/25/15)


Thursday, September 24, 2015

The Jazz Connection to Michael Jackson

When the SFJAZZ Collective presents new arrangements of Michael Jackson’s music in October, they join the ranks of major jazz artists who have found inspiration and fertile ground for experimentation within the late King Of Pop’s oeuvre, going back to saxophonist Gary Bartz’ recording of “I Wanna Be Where You Are” on his NTU Troop album Juju Street Songs in 1972, the same year Jackson’s original hit the charts. Miles Davis recorded the Thriller classic “Human Nature” on his 1985 release You’re Under Arrest, and pianist Vijay Iyer deconstructed the tune on both his 2010 recording Solo and 2012’s Accelerando. Organist Joey DeFrancesco recorded an entire album devoted to Jackson’s music entitled Never Can Say Goodbye, and other artists including Lester Bowie, Mal Waldron, Stanley Jordan, Ramsey Lewis and Chico Freeman have recorded versions of Jackson’s memorable songs.

Fonce Mizell
Michael Jackson was a pop superstar from the time he was old enough to sing, joining the Jackson Brothers band at the age of seven and sharing lead vocal duties with his brother Jermaine a year later, when the band name was changed to the Jackson 5. Although Jackson’s music and that of his siblings had little to do with the improvisational basis that marks the jazz tradition, the Jackson 5’s early hit-making career at Motown had established connections to the jazz world, including the utilization of Motown’s stable of jazz-associated sessions musicians such as keyboardist Joe Sample, bassist (and saxophonist) Wilton Felder, guitarist Tommy Tedesco, and drummer Earl Palmer.
A primary member of the production and songwriting team working with the Jackson 5 at that time, known widely as The Corporation, was Alphonso “Fonce” Mizell; a composer, keyboardist, and producer who co-wrote and performed on nearly all of the group’s early hits including “ABC,” “I Want You Back,” “Maybe Tomorrow,” “One More Chance,” “The Love You Save,” and “Mama’s Pearl.” Mizell studied with jazz trumpet great Donald Byrd as a young man, and when Motown relocated to Los Angeles from Detroit, Mizell and his brother Larry began their own production company that worked closely with a number of the era’s greatest jazz artists, releasing a procession of albums that defined the soul-jazz sound of the early 1970s including Byrd’s Black Byrd and Street Lady, Gary Bartz’s Music Is My Sanctuary, and flutist Bobbi Humphrey’s Blacks and Blues.

Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones
On the set of Sidney Lumet’s 1978 musical The Wiz, Jackson met producer and composer Quincy Jones, who was doing arrangements for the film’s score, and enlisted Jones to produce his next solo album – a project that would change the course of Jackson’s career and make music history over their three album partnership.
Jones began his musical life prodigiously, beginning as a trumpeter at 12 and playing with a National Reserve band by 14 – the same year he met a young Ray Charles, who would be a huge inspiration to the budding musician and composer. Jones was fully immersed in the jazz world by his late teens, touring Europe with vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, and later with bebop pioneer and trumpet giant Dizzy Gillespie. By the time the two music giants met, Jones had already gained fame for producing and arranging Frank Sinatra’s albums with the Count Basie Orchestra and composing the soundtracks of In Cold Blood, In the Heat of the Night, and The Italian Job. Jones was responsible for some of the most memorable tunes in popular culture, from “Soul Bossa Nova,” a 1962 tune that became synonymous with Mike Myers’s hugely successful Austin Powers franchise, to 1973’s “The Streetbeater,” theme to the iconic TV comedy Sanford & Son. He is a seven-time Oscar nominee, holds the record for most GRAMMY nominations at 79, was named an NEA Jazz Master in 2008, and was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2013.

Jackson’s creative partnership with Quincy Jones was one of the most fruitful in music history, producing three albums that stand not only as the high watermark of the singer’s career, but of American popular culture. The compositions on all three records bear Jones’ stamp of sophistication, featuring guest sidemen from the jazz world including guitarists Eric Gale and Larry Carlton, keyboardist George Duke, saxophonist Tom Scott, drummer N’dugu Chancler, and jazz organ titan Jimmy Smith, who provided a soulful solo on the title track of Bad. Off The Wall, Thriller and Bad won eleven GRAMMY awards among them and sold in excess of 120 million copies combined, with Thriller remaining the best-selling album of all time in the U.S.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Billy Strayhorn Centennial: 5 Deep Cuts

Portrait of Billy Strayhorn
William Gottlieb Collection (c. 1946)

Billy Strayhorn's centennial is coming up in November! We're getting the celebration started early with Allan Harris Quartet with Eric Reed's Tribute (10/1-4). And to ready ourselves for the music of one of America's greatest composers, we've dug deep into Strayhorn's discography to bring you five deep cuts you must hear.

— — —

Most Strayhorn fans are well aware of "The Star-Crossed Lovers" off Such Sweet Thunder (a suite very personal to Strayhorn, an avid reader of William Shakespeare). However, this Johnny Hodges feature was actually recorded a few years earlier on Hodges' Creamy under the title "Pretty Little Girl."


Late in his career, Strayhorn gravitated toward classical composition. "Suite for Horn and Piano" might be the most beautiful thing Strayhorn ever wrote. Although classical in form, it is unmistakably Strayhorn in its dense harmony and ponderous, gorgeous melody.



While "Lush Life" is without a doubt his most famous composition, this lesser-known recording features Strayhorn himself on piano and voice. It's far from perfect. His voice cracks, and is out of tune at times. But this matter-of-fact, conversational rendition captures the essence of the song more than any other recording.


Strayhorn wrote "Upper Manhattan Medical Group" for the medical staff (in particular Duke Ellington's personal physician, Dr. Arthur Logan, a dear friend) who took care of him after his cancer diagnosis in 1964. Ellington & His Orchestra recorded "U.M.M.G" on ...And His Mother Called Him Bill (1967) shortly after Strayhorn's death.


Strayhorn was especially talented at writing ballads. "A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing" stands as one of his most beautiful ballads, in particular a 1961 recording done in Paris, featuring the Paris String Quartet and Strayhorn himself on piano (originally released on The Peaceful Side in 1963).


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Modern Jazz Quartet's Tribute To Django Reinhardt


One month after Django Reinhardt passed (May 16, 1953), the Modern Jazz Quartet (Milt Jackson, vibraphone; John Lewis, piano; Percy Heath, bass; Kenny Clarke, drums) entered the studio to record its third album for Prestige Records. The initial tracks put to wax included two Lewis compositions—"The Queen's Fancy" and "Delauney's Dilemma"—as well as standards "Autumn In New York" (Vernon Duke) and "But Not for Me" (George & Ira Gershwin). Over a year passed before the second session (December 23, 1954) when the MJQ laid down Lewis' iconic title track, "Django" (a tribute to the gypsy jazz legend), as well as "One Bass Hit" (Dizzy Gillespie) and "Milano" (Lewis). The MJQ added Lewis' "La Ronde Suite" a few weeks later (January 9, 1955) to complete the album, first released on two ten-inch albums, before the full LP dropped in 1956. To date, Django remains one of MJQ's most celebrated albums, in large part due to the popularity of its titular tribute to Reinhardt. In fact, "Django" has since been recorded by Grant Green, Vince Guaraldi and even Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey Buckingham/Stevie Nicks self-titled debut album.

Bay Area multi-instrumentalist Smith Dobson V plays material from the Modern Jazz Quartet’s Django for SFJAZZ's monthly Hotplate Tribute on Septemeber 24, 2015.

Monday, September 21, 2015

PLAYLIST: 15 Active Jazz-Rock Groups



From Hiromi's head-banging math-jazz and Mehliana's (Brad Mehldau & Mark Guiliana) atmospheric fusion, to Marc Ribot's edgy Ceramic Dog and Darcy James Argue's indie-rock big band Secret Society—here's a compilation of 15 groups in the intersection of rock and jazz you should hip yourself to.


Hiromi's The Trio Project performs at the SFJAZZ Center September 24-27. Dave Holland performs with Zakir Hussain October 1-4. The Brad Mehldau Trio performs November 10-11. The Bad Plus (Joshua Redman) performs December 10-13.

Friday, September 18, 2015

5 Things In The Jazz World This Week


50th Anniversary of Duke Ellington's 'Concert of Sacred Music'
Photos by Ronald Davis

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Through The Years: SFJAZZ at Grace Cathedral

With tonight's Clarinet Summit (David Murray, Don Byron, Anat Byron & Todd Marcus) in store, we've compiled a highlight reel of a number of artists SFJAZZ has presented at San Francisco's iconic Grace Cathedral through the years.

Yusef Lateef & Adam Randolph
1998 San Francisco Jazz Festival

Anthony Braxton
World Premiere of Composition No. 132
1986 Jazz In The City

Cecil Taylor
1991 San Francisco Jazz Festival

Tom Harrell & Charlie Haden
1998 San Francisco Jazz Festival

Bill Frisell
2007 San Francisco Jazz Festival

Zakir Hussain & Charles Lloyd
2001 San Francisco Jazz Festival

Le Mystere des Voix Bulgares
2006 Spring Season

Cameron Carpenter
SFJAZZ Season 2 (2014)

Branford Marsalis (2012)
(No photograph on record, however Marsalis released the performance in 2014)


Wednesday, September 16, 2015

A Concert Of Sacred Music, 50 Years Later


Duke Ellington & His Orchestra consecrated San Francisco's Grace Cathedral with the premiere of "A Concert Of Sacred Music" on September 16, 1965. The concert was filmed (above) by KQED, in partnership with San Francisco Chronicle jazz critic Ralph Gleason.

"I recognized this as an exceptional opportunity," Ellington wrote in his 1973 autobiography Music Is My Mistress. "'Now I can say openly what I have been saying to myself on my knees.'"

Read Jesse Hamlin's "Sanctified By Jazz: Music at Grace Cathedral."

25th Anniversary of Duke Ellington's "Concert Of Sacred Music" (Program Book Cover)

25 years later (1990), Jazz In The City (now SFJAZZ) presented the 25th Anniversary of Ellington's "most important work of his career" at Grace Cathedral, featuring The Duke Ellington Orchestra (dir. by Mercer Ellington), Brock Peters, Jimmy McPhail, Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir, and special guest Bunny Briggs.

Grace Cathedral

And then 50 years later, SFJAZZ presented the 50th Anniversary of Duke Ellington's "Concert Of Sacred Music." What was different this time around? While the 25th Anniversary sought to recreate the music and exact program premiered by Ellington in 1965, the 50th Anniversary was a reworking, with all-new arrangements by acclaimed saxophonist, bandleader and longtime SFJAZZ Collective member Miguel Zenón.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Sanctified By Jazz: Music at Grace Cathedral

Duke Ellington Orchestra at Grace Cathedral, 1965
by Jesse Hamlin

Fifty years ago, on September 16, Duke Ellington filled the soaring Gothic nave of San Francisco’s Grace Cathedral with the sublime and exultantly swinging sounds of his first “Concert of Sacred Music.” Commissioned by the Episcopal cathedral to help consecrate the new sanctuary, it was an offering to God in Ellington’s expansive idiom that gave the composer the chance, as he put it, “to say openly what I’ve been saying to myself on my knees.”

A deeply religious man, Ellington wove older themes of his like the spiritual “Come Sunday” from his 1943 suite Black, Brown and Beige with potent new gospel pieces – he wrote the music and the hip lyrics – in a stirring hour-long work brought to life by a great assembly of artists: his jazz orchestra, featuring the peerlessly lyrical alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges and the roaring tenor soloist Paul Gonsalves; the Herman McCoy and Grace Cathedral choirs; the vocal soloists Jon Hendricks, Esther Marrow and Jimmy McPhail; and the mesmerizing tap dancer Bunny Briggs, who seemed to float over the floor like a shimmering hummingbird as he clicked and whirred through a brisk-tempo nine-minute reworking of “Come Sunday” that Ellington called “David Danced Before the Lord with All his Might” (text courtesy of the Biblical Book of Samuel).

“It’s the most important statement I’ve ever made,” Ellington said of the piece, the first of his three sacred concerts, on the eve of its 1965 Grace premiere, which was filmed and aired on public television and, thankfully, can be seen on YouTube. It’s an inspiring performance. To celebrate the piece’s golden anniversary, SFJAZZ has assembled its own estimable cast of artists to recreate the “Concert of Sacred Music” at Grace on September 17.

Queen Esther Marrow
Alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón of the SFJAZZ Collective has re-arranged the music for an aggregation that features one of the original singers, Queen Esther Marrow, Kurt Elling in the Hendricks role and Terrance Kelly leading the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir and singing one of the solos. Zenón leads a prime 11-piece ensemble that includes trumpeter and new SFJAZZ Collective member Sean Jones, clarinetist Ben Goldberg, tenor saxophonist Melissa Aldana, bassoonist Paul Hanson and SFJAZZ Collective pianist Edward Simon. Stepping into “David Danced Before the Lord” his way will be the wizardly tap dancer Savion Glover, who was a teenage prodigy when he performed with Bunny Briggs in the 1989 Broadway musical Black and Blue and is supremely suited for this part.

Bill Frisell at Grace, 2007
SFJAZZ has a long tradition of presenting musicians in the Nob Hill cathedral, among them Joe Henderson, Zakir Hussain and Charlie Haden. It’s producing three other promising performances this fall at Grace, where the acoustics — particularly the seven-second echo — provide challenges and musical possibilities. On September 18, the creative and far-ranging guitarist Bill Frisell, a subtle master of space and silence who played solo at Grace in 2007, returns for an evening of improvisation incorporating the natural acoustics and electronic effects.

A hair-raising Gothic Halloween is on the bill for October 31, when the 1925 silent movie classic “Phantom of the Opera,” starring Lon Chaney as the deformed soul who haunts the Paris Opera house, screens in the sanctuary to live accompaniment on Grace’s massive pipe organ by Dorothy Papadakos, the noted organist who plays in the Paul Winter Consort and was formerly the organist at New York’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine. (That’s where Ellington premiered his “Second Sacred Concert” in 1968, and where his funeral was held in 1974. It closed with violinist Ray Nance playing “Come Sunday.”)

One can only imagine the rich woody sounds that will reverberate through those Gothic vaults on November 12, when four marvelous jazz clarinetists – Don Byron and Anat Cohen, playing B flat clarinet, and David Murray and Todd Marcus on the big bass clarinet – come together to make music in that inspiring space.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Old & New: Top 5 Billie Holiday Tributes

Billie Holiday & dog "Mister" (William Gottlieb Collection)

In honor of Billie Holiday's centennial year, and the tremendous influence the legendary singer has had on artists of every generation, we've pulled together five tributes (old and new) to Lady Day.


Although "Strange Fruit" isn't a Holiday original (penned by Abel Meeropol as a poem in 1937), Lady Day made it famous. (Legend tells that Holiday would close out sets with the song. Waiters would stop all service, the room would be in darkness except for a spotlight on Holiday, and there would be no encore.) Nina Simone, who acknowledges Holiday as one of her biggest inspirations, gives one of the most stirring renditions of "Strange Fruit" you'll hear.


In a recent interview with VH1, rising vocalist José James called Billie Holiday his "musical mother." James captures a beautiful mood on Yesterday I Had the Blues: The Music of Billie Holiday (2015), his third release on Blue Note Records. Even better, James brings this project to San Francisco on Saturday, September 20th.


Pianist Mal Waldron accompanied Billie Holiday regularly from April 1957 until her death in July, 1959. Although Waldron recorded Left Alone in 1959, he was reluctant to release it immediately, given a large outpouring of "bandwagon" tributes recorded and released immediately after Holiday's passing. In addition to a beautiful collaboration with Jackie McLean on "Left Alone," the album features an enlightening "Mal Waldron Interview: The Way He Remembers Billy Holiday."


Cassandra Wilson lends her rich, dusky sound and interpretive gift to a selection of Billie Holiday classics on Coming Forth By Day (2015) to celebrate the singer's centennial. Wilson's final song, "Last Song for Lester Young" is intended to fill a void left by the events surrounding the funeral of Holiday's long time companion, Lester Young. After hearing of Lester’s passing while touring in Europe, Billie immediately flew home to the States to attend his funeral. She wanted to sing a song for him as a final farewell. Unfortunately, Lester’s family, for whatever reason, denied Billie the opportunity to sing. Like José James, Wilson brings her centennial tribute to San Francisco in May, 2016.


Abbey Lincoln reflects on Lady Day in a rare interview conducted around the time she released Abbey Sings Billie, Vol. 1 & 2 (1987). An avid civil rights advocate throughout the 1960s, Lincoln cites Holiday as one of her biggest influencers. Referencing "Strange Fruit," Lincoln praises Holiday for having "the courage to defend herself. When they were lynching men and women in the south, she sang about it. None of the other women or men sang about it: that's why Billie is different from the rest of them."

SFJAZZ celebrates the centennial of Billie Holiday with José James and Cassandra Wilson in the 2015-16 Season.

Listen: East Meets West Playlist



Despite the geographical distance and a chronological separation spanning many centuries, ancient forms originating with Udgatar priests in 1500 BC and the African-American musical inventions of the early 20th century would eventually meet and build upon their common ground.

The East Meets West playlist below highlights some of the most influential of these collaborations. For additional context, read "East Meets West: Indian Classical Music and Jazz."



SFJAZZ Resident Artistic Director Zakir Hussain presents "East Meets West" featuring Amit Chatterjee, Louiz Banks, Shankar Mahadevan, Chris Potter, Dave Holland and Eric Harland on October 1 and 2, and with Dave Holland and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta on October 3 and 4. More information.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Five Things To Know About Aaron Goldberg


Were you there to hear pianist Aaron Goldberg tearing it up as a surprise guest with Chick Corea on Thursday night? To prep yourself for Aaron's trio performance in the Joe Henderson Lab on Sunday, here are five things you should know:
  1. He worked extensively with saxophone great Joshua Redman’s quartet, appearing on Redman’s 2000 album Beyond and 2001’s Passage of Time
  2. In addition to his five albums as a bandleader, he has recorded four as part of the collaborative OAM Trio with Israeli bassist Omer Avital and Spanish drummer Marc Miralta, and has performed with Nicholas Payton, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Freddie Hubbard, Stefon Harris, and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
  3. He was a founding member of late vocalist Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead program, which helps discover and promote promising young jazz artists. Other alumni include pianists Jason Moran, Jacky Terrasson, and Aaron Parks
  4. He attended Harvard College and graduated magna cum laude in 1996 with a concentration in Mind, Brain and Behavior, writing his thesis on scientific theories of consciousness. While still a freshman at Harvard, he received the Stan Getz/Clifford Brown Fellowship from the International Association of Jazz Educators (IAJE)
  5. His trio with bassist Reuben Rogers and former SFJAZZ Collective drummer Eric Harland was originally formed in 1998. Appropriately, standing in for Harland at Sunday’s performance is current SFJAZZ Collective drummer Obed Calvaire
Aaron Goldberg's trio performs in the Joe Henderson Lab on Sunday, September 13 with sets at 7pm and 8:30pm. Click here for more information. 



5 Things In The Jazz World This Week


  • Jazz legend Sonny Rollins blows out his birthday candles for the 85th time. In his own words: "85 is no jive."
  • 28-year-old pianist Jon Batiste gave an epic, star-studded performance of Sly & The Family Stone's classic “Everyday People” for his debut as music director of The Late Show w/ Stephen Colbert.
  • The New York Times jazz journalist Nate Chinen gave rave reviews for vocalist Lizz Wright's "new sensual register" on her new album Freedom & Surrender.
  • Popular French radio station France Radio broadcasts SFJAZZ's 2015-16 Season Opening Week, featuring Jacky Terrasson, Randall Kline, SFJAZZ Collective & more!
  • On her centennial year, Billie Holiday will be the first artist to perform (via hologram!) at the Apollo Theater.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

East Meets West: Indian Classical Music and Jazz

Zakir Hussain
Despite the geographical distance and a chronological separation spanning many centuries, American jazz and South Asian classical music developed along similar pathways, evolving from the intertwining of sacred and secular traditions while valuing improvisation and the integration of sophisticated rhythmic concepts. So it was only right that ancient forms originating with Udgatar priests in 1500 BC and the African-American musical inventions of the early 20th century would eventually meet and build upon their common ground.

The jazz world’s first serious embracing of Asian music began in the 1950s, focused not on India, but with the Middle East and the exotic sounds of the Fertile Crescent and North Africa. Albums including wind master Yusef Lateef’s Jazz Mood (1957), Prayer to the East (1957) and Eastern Sounds (1961) along with bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik’s Jazz Sahara (1958) and East Meets West (1960) were among the first notable records to document the cultural blend. But the first major session to integrate jazz musicians with South Asian music was sitar legend Ravi Shankar’s Improvisations (1962), featuring flutists Paul Horn and Bud Shank, bassist Gary Peacock, and drummer Louis Hayes, along with a number of Hindustani backing musicians. Within the course of Shankar's monumental career, this recording was just one facet among countless others, but it quietly pioneered a cultural partnership that remains a rewarding meeting place for musical exploration.

The development of modal jazz – a compositional and improvisatory approach popularized by Miles Davis and John Coltrane and based upon the use of scales rather than standard chord progressions as harmonic framework – paralleled the increased visibility of Indian music in the west, and Coltrane in particular was heavily influenced by the flexibility he found within Eastern concepts. One of his most enduring pieces, the modal re-imagining of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “My Favorite Things” from the 1961 Atlantic album of the same name, shows an unmistakable Eastern inspiration. His 1965 session Om (released in 1968) is named after the sacred Hindu syllable for the infinite and contains chanting from the Hindu Bhagavad Gita. Coltrane befriended Ravi Shankar in the late 60s, naming his son Ravi in honor of the sitarist, and Coltrane’s widow, pianist/harpist Alice Coltrane, heavily featured Indian musicians and concepts in her own music. She titled her 1970 album Journey in Satchidananda in honor of guru Satchidananda Saraswati, of whom Coltrane was a devoted follower.

After Shankar appeared at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, his profile and that of Indian classical music exploded into the American popular consciousness. His tabla drummer of choice, Alla Rakha, also participated in the cross-pollination of jazz and South Asian music, recording a seemingly unlikely duet album with jazz drumming giant Buddy Rich, 1968’s Rich à la Rakha, with the assistance of Shankar and Paul Horn. The pioneering Rakha was widely considered the instrument’s greatest virtuoso, and his eldest son Zakir Hussain has in many ways eclipsed his father’s accomplishments, pushing the tabla’s possibilities to its limits and engaging a wide array of musicians not only from jazz and pop, but also from Latin America, Africa, and the Celtic tradition.
Hussain’s career was firmly established by the early 1970s on recordings by the Grateful Dead’s Mickey Hart and ex-Beatle George Harrison, and by mid-decade he had made foundational contributions to two of the greatest Indo-jazz fusion records of all time, Shakti (1976) from British jazz guitarist John McLaughlin and Karuna Supreme (1975) featuring saxophonist John Handy and sarod maestro Ali Akbar Khan. Shakti in particular stands as a high water mark of East-meets-West collaboration, a live document of the 1975 performance at Long Island’s Southampton College with Hussain, violinist L. Shankar, and percussionists Ramnad Raghavan and T.H. Vinayakaram that, despite being entirely acoustic, displays as much fiery interplay and bewilderingly telepathic ensemble playing as McLaughlin’s electrified 1970s fusion juggernaut, the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Originating from
McLaughlin’s experiences while studying the Indian veena at the University of Connecticut in the 1971, Shakti has proven to be a richly rewarding musical entity, and has continued to perform and record in varying lineups into the 21st century. Since the flashpoint in the early 70s and continuing to the present day, Hussain has remained the primary motivator in engaging with the jazz world, recording with saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and George Brooks as well as guitarist Pat Martino and intriguingly, banjo non-conformist Béla Fleck. The tabla genius’ work with NEA Jazz Master Charles Lloyd and drummer Eric Harland in the trio Sangam has easily been some of the most stimulating world-fusion music produced in the last 40 years. Other notable musicians, including Bengali-born tabla player Badal Roy and sitarist Ashwin Batish, also moved widely within the jazz world. Roy appeared on Miles Davis' electrified releases On The Corner (1972), Big Fun (1974) and Get Up With It (1974), as well as Pharoah Sanders' Wisdom Through Music (1972) and recordings with saxophonist David Liebman, organist Lonnie Liston Smith and iconoclastic saxophone icon Ornette Coleman, who regularly employed Roy as part of his electro-acoustic Prime Time band.

Vijay Iyer
As with most cross-cultural mingling, the intersection of Western and Eastern music has freed artists inspired by the wealth of global influences to explore beyond the musical traditions of their heritages. A student of Ravi Shankar, the late American sitarist and tabla player Collin Walcott performed on Davis’ 1972 fusion album On The Corner and made a major impact with his late 70s albums for ECM Records, as a member of the revered world-jazz ensemble Oregon, and as part of the global trio Codona with jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and Brazilian percussionist Naná Vasconcelos. Hungarian-born tabla player Péter Szalai was a student of Alla Rakha and performs mainly in traditional Indian classical contexts, saxophonist Kadri Gopalnath pioneered the use of the instrument in Carnatic music in the 1980s, and multi-percussion virtuoso Trilok Gurtu blends Eastern and Western concepts into his own singular approach that seamlessly marries traditional tabla playing with the American drum set. Saxophonist George Brooks has worked extensively to marry Carnatic music and jazz, recording and performing with Hussain, American drummer Steve Smith, guitarist Fareed Haque, bassist Kai Eckhardt and guitarist Prasanna in the groups Summit and Raga Bop Trio.
A number of young Indian-American musicians including pianist Vijay Iyer, saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa, drummer Sameer Gupta, and Pakistani-American guitarist Rez Abassi have blurred cultural lines still further, and increasingly, Indian-born artists have devoted themselves to the intersection of jazz and Indian music. Guitarist Amit Chatterjee was a member of keyboardist, composer and Weather Report founder Joe Zawinul’s working band for over a decade, and has lent his searing guitar style to work with saxophonist David Liebman and pianist Michael Wolff. Pianist and composer Louiz Banks performed with John McLaughlin’s Indo-Jazz group Floating Point and contributed to producer Bob Belden’s expansive Miles From India project with a selection of Indian classical and jazz artists including Badal Roy. Mumbai-born vocalist Shankar Mahadevan is a renowned playback singer for Indian films, and worked with John McLaughlin and Zakir Hussain’s Shakti reunion, Remember Shakti.

Amit Chatterjee
Today’s musicians and audiences live in a time when global influences and cross-pollination are an integral part of the creative fabric of modern music. With so much of the world obsessed with borders and isolation, these artists remind us that great music has always been a melting pot, an art form pointing to an idealized future in which the definitions and boundaries that separate us gradually cease to exist.

Zakir Hussain, Amit Chatterjee Louiz Banks and Shankar Mahadevan perform with saxophonist Chris Potter, bassist Dave Holland and drummer Eric Harland on October 1 and 2, and with Dave Holland and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta on October 3 and 4. Click here for more information.