Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Monday, June 8, 2015

2014-15 Season: By The Numbers

50th Anniversary of John Coltrane's A Love Supreme

John Coltrane © Bob Thiele

216 bottles of champagne to ring in 2015 (Maceo Parker's Funky New Years)


155 Sold Out Performances

Red Baraat © Ronald Davis

19 #ThankYouJoni Artist Testimonials


Dozens of #ThankYouJoni Notes Below the Joni Mitchell Art Installation

© Got Light

1 Epic Second Line Parade (SFJAZZ Gala), Courtesy of Brass Band Mission



11th SFJAZZ Collective Album: The Music of Joe Henderson & Original Compositions


53 Performances by the High School All-Stars, Nationwide

SFJAZZ High School All-Stars Combo collaborates with the
SF Ballet School Trainee Program © Erik Tomasson

1st Place at the Next Generation Jazz Festival in Monterey Awarded to High School All-Stars Orchestra. Combo Awarded 2nd Place.

High School All-Stars Spring 2015 Concert © Scott Chernis

11,000+ SFJAZZ Members

Charles Lloyd's Wild Man Dance (Member Discount Performance)
© Grason Littles

100+ Education Events at the SFJAZZ Center in 2014-15, Serving Nearly 9,000 People

The Amigos Family Workshop © Scott Chernis


Wednesday, January 7, 2015

2014: By The Numbers

4 new SFJAZZ Resident Artistic Directors



32 years of the San Francisco Jazz Festival, going on 33!


$64 million Capital Campaign for the SFJAZZ Center reached


50th Anniversary of John Coltrane's A Love Supreme

©Bob Thiele

1 home run by Wynton Marsalis


301 shows at the SFJAZZ Center
241 sell outs
101 shows presenting Bay Area artists

©Scott Chernis

10 year anniversary of the SFJAZZ Collective


300+ classes, rehearsals, and performances put on by SFJAZZ Education.
18 free concerts and clinics, for over 2,000 people.
300 education work opportunities for local musicians and poets.



1st place at NextGen Jazz Festival awarded to SFJAZZ High School All-Stars, earning them a spot at the 2015 Monterey Jazz Festival

©Scott Chernis

$1.4 million raised at the SFJAZZ Gala honoring Herbie Hancock

©Drew Altizer

11,000 SFJAZZ Members, and counting...

©Scott Chernis

20+ skaters in Miner Auditorium's half pipe (Jason Moran's Jazz + Skateboarding)

©Scott Chernis

216 bottles of champagne to ring in 2015 (Maceo Parker's Funky New Years)




Monday, December 22, 2014

Top 15 Albums of 2014 (Part 1)

We're fortunate to experience so much new music year after year at SFJAZZ—2014 being no exception! We've compiled a list (in no particular order) of our Top 15 albums of 2014 that we've also experienced live. The list isn't exhaustive—if you have any favorites from the year, comment below or give us a shout on social media! Below are the first five... look for the second batch tomorrow.
—  —  —


Drummer, California-native Jeff Ballard's debut as leader, Times Tales (Okeh Records) brings together a monster trio—featuring guitarist Lionel Loueke & 2013-14 SFJAZZ Resident Artistic Director Miguel Zenón—with unbelievable chemistry (as Ballard put it: "We’re all really drum-heads"). The trio kicked off the 32nd Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival back in June!


2013-14 SFJAZZ Resident Artistic Director Bill Frisell debuted Guitar In The Space Age (Okeh Records) during his January 2014 residency, before heading into the studio. Featuring slide guitarist Greg Leisz, bassist Tony Scherr and drummer Kenny Wollesen, the project pays tribute to the birth of the electric guitar. As Frisell told us back in 2013:

"We start talking, and I hadn't even heard [Greg Leisz] play, I didn't really know anything about him, but in that conversation, I just knew that we were sort of destined to be playing together. There are just some people like that, that I just know right away... We grew up with the history of that Fender guitar, you know Fender happened, and Rock & Roll happened in our childhood… So I've been wanting to do something, acknowledging all that guitar stuff."


Violinist Regina Carter treated San Francisco to the world premiere of Southern Comfort (Sony Masterworks) back in May 2013, part of her first residency as a 2013-14 SFJAZZ Resident Artistic Director (in which she also presented the late John Blake, Jr. and Carolina Chocolate Drops). In Southern Comfort, Carter traces her father's Alabama roots through music. After releasing the album earlier this year, Carter brought Southern Comfort back to SFJAZZ for her second residency.

Also: Carter gave an insightful interview and in-studio performance on KQED Forum.


Torch bearer of the afrobeat legacy, Seun Kuti (son of the great Fela Kuti) & Egypt 80's performance at the 32nd Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival in June remains one of our wildest dance parties ever (the show was seated too!). A Long Way To The Beginning (Knitting Factory) blends the sounds and stylings of contemporary music (enter producer Robert Glasper) with the traditional afrobeat sound—music for the head, heart and feet.


Concerts at Grace Cathedral are an SFJAZZ tradition going back to the origins of the organization. In My Solitude: Live at Grace Cathedral (Okeh Records), recorded live at the 30th Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival (2012), sees Branford Marsalis join the ranks of Joe Henderson, Pharoah Sanders, Charles Lloyd, Dewey Redman, Anthony Braxton and many others. Marsalis notes:

"Every room has a sound of its own... and there is definitely a difference playing in Grace Cathedral, with its seven-second delay. Playing solo interludes in other rooms where my quartet performs was not going to prepare me. I had to hear that Grace Cathedral sound in my head."

Read more on SFJAZZ's history with Grace Cathedral and Marsalis' solo album via our full review of In My Solitude.


Friday, February 14, 2014

REVIEW: Cecile McLorin Salvant + 'Getz/Gilberto' Hotplate at SFJAZZ Center

Cecile McLorin Salvant

A big night at the SFJAZZ Center—Cecile McLorin Salvant and sidemen Aaron Diehl (piano), Paul Sikivie (bass) and Pete Van Nostrand (drums) left a sold out Miner Auditorium breathless! In tasteful moments of silence, the audience was dead silent in anticipation. So much could be said, but San Francisco Chronicle's David Wiegand was right on point:

"I have never heard McLorin Salvant sing the same song the same way twice. Each time she approaches a song, it becomes something different. She probes and explores it with her insanely supple voice, lolling in the deepest contralto range and building back to a high, breathy soprano. Vibrato can flutter like Nina Simone, or swing slow and deep. She modulates tone like a sculptor models clay."


Definitely worthwhile to read the full article→"Happy birthday, SFJazz Center." On his way out, Wiegand also gave a shout out to the Claudia Villela / Harvey Wainapel 'Getz/Gilberto' Hotplate in Joe Henderson Lab. Looking into the transparent Lab with a few others, "...it was almost as if I could have touched the sound."

Claudia Villela / Harvey Wainapel 'Getz/Gilberto' Hotplate

Read more at SFGate Blog. Keep up with the SFJAZZ Calendar. For more photos from last night, check out SFJAZZ Flickr.