Showing posts with label Joe Lovano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Lovano. Show all posts

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.



Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Celebrating 'A Love Supreme'

“During the year 1957, I experienced, by the grace of God, a spiritual awakening which was to lead me to a richer, fuller, more productive life. At that time, in gratitude, I humbly asked to be given the means and privilege to make others happy through music. I feel this has been granted through His grace. ALL PRAISE TO GOD.”

John Coltrane

Photo: Chuck Stewart

So wrote John Coltrane in the liner notes to A Love Supreme, the rapturous 1964 masterpiece whose intensity and transcendent power continues to speak to people around the world and inspire musicians and artists of all kinds. Five decades after the towering saxophonist recorded the devotional four-part suite at Rudy Van Gelder’s New Jersey studio with his classic quartet – pianist McCoy Tyner, drummer Elvin Jones and bassist Jimmy Garrison – the music Coltrane called “a humble offering to Him” is still a shattering and stirring thing to experience.

To celebrate the 50th anniversary in December of this epochal and enduring recording (released by Impulse! in February of ’65), SFJAZZ has programmed a week’s worth of special events sponsored by the Bernard Osher Foundation and curated by Ravi Coltrane, son of the late jazz giant and himself a superior saxophonist with a probing improvisational style of his own.

He’ll perform in four different settings in which all or parts of A Love Supreme will form the core of each concert. Coltrane leads a group with the great tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano on December 11, and his own quartet December 12 on a bill with the Turtle Island Quartet, the sensational improvising string ensemble that won a 2007 Grammy for its rich A Love Supreme recording. Coltrane performs again with various special guests the following night, and the next afternoon with the SFJAZZ High School-All Stars. He’ll also appear at a symposium December 10 with writer Ashley Kahn, author of the revealing 2002 book A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane’s Signature Recording, and other speakers.

On December 14, the creative saxophonist and composer Steve Coleman, whose combustible music integrates free jazz, funk, soul and world music, performs with his explosive Five Elements band, exploring A Love Supreme his way.

A mostly improvised piece that ran 32 minutes on the original recording – Coltrane performed it live only once, in Antibes, France in ’65, two years before his death at 40 of liver cancer – the piece builds on a simple four-note motif: “a love supreme.” The saxophonist chants it verbally, multiple times, at the conclusion of the opening movement, “Acknowledgement,” which begins with the shimmering sound of a Chinese gong.

“It's the signal of something different. You don't hear that instrument anywhere else on any other John Coltrane recording,” notes Ravi in Kahn’s book. “A Love Supreme,” he says, is “not a tune on a record, it’s an offering to God.”

Joshua Redman absorbed this powerful music years before he began playing saxophone, stirred by its sheer passion and force. “I think that is the case for most people when they hear that record, whether they ever hear another lick of jazz or not,” Redman told an interviewer. “They may not have any understanding of what’s happening musically, the incredibly deep and complex musical issues that Coltrane is tackling, but the conviction and the intensity and the passion and the sincerity – the honesty – you feel these qualities, and that’s what makes it so compelling, what makes it one of the greatest jazz albums of all time.”

Early next year, two major artists closely associated with Coltrane will perform at SFJAZZ. The volcanic tenor saxophonist Pharoah Sanders, who came of age in Coltrane’s roiling free-jazz bands of the mid-1960s, performs in Miner Auditorium January 8-11. His spirited music encompasses late Coltrane, Moroccan grooves and the rocking R&B he played as a kid in Little Rock.

Then on January 18, Tyner, whose crashing chords and hypnotic solos were essential ingredients in Coltrane’s music from the modal period of My Favorite Things through A Love Supreme, returns with his prime trio. Joining him for a series of duets, solos and numbers with the trio will be two admiring fellow pianists: the brilliant Geri Allen and the elegant master Kenny Barron. Fifty years after leaving Coltrane to pursue his own path, Tyner still makes enduring, vital music.

Jesse Hamlin

Thursday, February 20, 2014

PHOTO: Joe Lovano, Jack DeJohnette, Esperanza Spalding & Leo Genovese at SFJAZZ Center

Spalding, Lovano & DeJohnette ©Ronald Davis

They call themselves The Spring Quartet, and their sound is without a doubt fresh. Joe Lovano pulled out an impressive collection of horns and woodwinds, using them interchangeably throughout the night and exploring altissimo on all. Jack DeJohnette, recently honored as an NEA Jazz Master, was ever youthful in spirit, listening and reacting to his younger bandmates, but still driving the bus. He also whipped out a melodica late into the set, playing countermelody to Lovano's delicate flute melodies. Bassist Esperanza Spalding was as eclectic and inventive as ever, from her intrepid bass lines, to her precise whistling, her (by now renowned) singing chops, and something new... she picked up a tenor saxophone, young pianist/keyboardist Leo Genovese suddenly wielded a soprano, joining Lovano for her squawky "Chasing The Shark." Genovese might not have as big a name as the others, but the longtime Spalding collaborator brings tremendous energy, creativity and sound (he rocked at least four keyboards as well as the Steinway). More photos from last night below.

"Chasing The Shark" (Esperanza Spalding)

Jack DeJohnette, Joe Lovano, Esperanza Spalding & Leo Genovese

The Spring Quartet

Four sold out shows this weekend with Bobby Hutcherson, Joey DeFrancesco, David Sanborn & Billy Hart! Keep up with the SFJAZZ Calendar. For more photos from last night, check out SFJAZZ Flickr.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

WATCH: Historic Opening Night Concert Footage



Historic Opening Night Concert(01/23) footage of legendary pianist/composer McCoy Tyner performing his spiritual jazz masterpiece "Walk Spirit, Talk Spirit" featuring Joe Lovano (tenor saxophone), Esperanza Spalding (bass) and Eric Harland (drums). The second piece welcomes Bay Area jazz legends John Handy (alto saxophonist) and Bobby Hutcherson (vibraphonist), as well as Resident Artistic Director Bill Frisell (guitar) to the stage as the group performs Tyner's bluesy jazz classic "Blues On The Corner".




Historic Opening Night Concert performance of Joe Lovano's (tenor saxophone) "Blackwell's Message," featuring Joshua Redman (tenor saxophone), Matt Penman (bass), Jeff Ballard (drums) and John Santos (percussion). Lovano wrote this piece as a tribute to legendary drummer Ed Blackwell.

Listen to the entire History Opening Night Concert by visiting NPRmusic.org.