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THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER SANTANA TO PERFORM AT A STAR-STUDDED CONCERT IN GUADALAJARA, MEXICO ON DECEMBER 14TH AT THE VINCENTE FERNANDEZ ARENA HONORING HIS LATIN MUSIC HERITAGE | Musique Non Stop

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER SANTANA TO PERFORM AT A STAR-STUDDED CONCERT IN GUADALAJARA, MEXICO ON DECEMBER 14TH AT THE VINCENTE FERNANDEZ ARENA HONORING HIS LATIN MUSIC HERITAGE


THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER SANTANA TO PERFORM AT A STAR-STUDDED CONCERT IN GUADALAJARA, MEXICO ON DECEMBER 14TH AT THE VINCENTE FERNANDEZ ARENA HONORING HIS LATIN MUSIC HERITAGE

Link to THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER


Posted: 21 Oct 2013 12:23 PM PDT
Confirmed superstar performances at the concert in Guadalajara and on the album, CORAZÓN include Chocquibtown (Colombia), Gloria Estefan (Cuba), Los Fabulosos Cadillacs (Argentina),  Juanes (Colombia), Miguel (USA),  Niña Pastori (Spain), Samuel Rosa of Skank (Brazil), Salvador Santana (USA), Soledad  (Argentina), Diego Torres (Argentina),  among others.

Other superstar performances on the forthcoming album CORAZÓN include Lila Downs (Mexico), Pitbull (USA), Ziggy Marley (Jamaica), and Romeo Santos (Dominican Republic)

Ten time GRAMMY®-Award winning rock icon and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Carlos Santana announces today that he and his band SANTANA will be performing at a once in a lifetime concert event in Guadalajara, Mexico (in his native state of Jalisco) on December 14th at the Vicente Fernandez Arena, with a star-studded cast of musicians, all celebrating their Latin music heritage. Confirmed celebrity performances at the concert include Chocquibtown, Gloria Estefan, Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, Juanes, Miguel,Niña Pastori, Samuel Rosa of Skank, Salvador Santana, Soledad, Diego Torres, among others. More celebrity performances will be announced soon.

This concert is a homecoming for Carlos and a festive kickoff event to mark his forthcoming album project close to his heart entitled CORAZÓN. In addition to the superstars performing at the December 14th  show, Lila Downs, Ziggy Marley, Pitbull, and Romeo Santos will also be joining Santana on this star-studded album project CORAZÓN,release date to be announced soon.


CORAZÓN, the concert and album project brings Carlos back to his birthplace, in the city of Autlan, just south of Guadalajara and celebrates Carlos' love of his musical heritage, as well as showcases Carlos' own personal influence on Latin music and on today's generation of Latin superstars. Many genres of Latin music are represented in these collaborations including pop, rock, salsa, hip-hop, folk, reggae, traditional and bachata.

~ santana.com


Posted: 21 Oct 2013 12:09 PM PDT
Dave Bennett doesn't fit the mold.

For starters, you don't find many jazz clarinet players who name Alice Cooper, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Chris Isaak among their influences. You won't find many musicians under 30 who are equally conversant with the music of Benny Goodman (the "King of Swing") and Roy Orbison ("The Soul of Rock and Roll"). In fact, you may not find even one other clarinet virtuoso who occasionally breaks from his Swing Era repertoire to sing rock-a-billy hits while accompanying himself at the piano - where he plays a mean barrelhouse boogie-woogie.

In the early days of jazz, the clarinet joined with trumpet and trombone to create the music's signature sound, and it ruled the roost in the Swing Era, when jazz was America's popular music and dance-party soundtrack. If anyone can return the clarinet to its heyday, it's Dave Bennett, who fuses serious jazz improvisation with a host of modern pop influences.

On his Mack Avenue Records debut Don't Be That Way, he shows that his skills and interests make him perfectly suited for the job. He stays within the mainstream repertoire, and even covers several of the most famous hit records of the 1930s (by Goodman and such contemporaneous clarinetists as Woody Herman and Artie Shaw). But Bennett updates these songs with up-to-date twists and surprising new arrangements. The result is an album that blazes his own path while still acknowledging his predecessors, and spotlights the jazz clarinet for a new generation. Bennett hastens to share credit for the reconceptualization of this music with the album's arranger, Shelly Berger, whom he met through Tad Weed, the pianist in his group.

Even though he was growing up in a time far removed from the Swing Era and the technology (AM radio, 78 RPM records) that produced it, Bennett already had an appreciation for the era's music from the soundtracks of the old Abbott & Costello movies he watched at home. "And then about a month later, Grandpa bought me a cassette tape of Benny Goodman - and that's what did it. I completely flipped out: it hit me square between the eyes, and I knew at that moment that this is what I wanted to do with my life." He set out to model his clarinet playing after that of Goodman, as well as that of Pete Fountain, the New Orleans clarinetist who kept the trad-jazz sound vital throughout the 1960s and '70s.

Addressing this juncture of his life and career, Bennett says now, "I was trying to 'break free' [from the restraints of past styles] and couldn't quite get there. But Shelly [Berger] was able to make it very coherent, and in the studio he kept everything moving along." So in one sense, Don't Be That Way is more than the title for a collection of freshly imagined Swing Era classics. It could just as well be Bennett's admonition to himself on his Mack Avenue debut - to step out as a fully independent artist, steeped in but not beholden to the way things were done in the past.

Upcoming Dave Bennett Performances:
October 16 / Oakland Community College / Farmington Hills, MI
October 19 / Peabody's / Birmingham, MI
October 25 & 26 / Spencers Route 46 / Saginaw, MI
November 1 / Carnegie Hall (w/ New York Pops) / New York, NY
November 9 / Peabody's / Birmingham, MI
November 16 / Shield's Pizza / Southfield, MI
November 17 / Glendora House / Chicago Ridge, IL
November 27 - 30 / San Diego Jazz Festival / San Diego, CA
December 6/ NSU Center for the Performing Arts
(Benny Goodman Christmas Tribute) / Tahlequah, OK
December 10 / The Campanile Center for the Arts
(Benny Goodman Tribute) / St. Minocqua, WI
December 13 / Hart Public Schools / Hart, MI


Posted: 21 Oct 2013 12:03 PM PDT
The eminent saxophonist Clifford Jordan is best remembered as a tenorman with a powerful sound who bridged the world of Hard Bop and the adventurous newer forms of jazz expression. His work as a sideman with legends like Charles Mingus, Max Roach, Eric Dolphy, Horace Silver and Randy Weston sometimes eclipsed his own brilliance as a leader. But what is far lesser known is his remarkable talent as a discoverer of emerging artistry and his skills as a producer that allowed them to best express their vision as leaders. Mosaic's new release The Complete Clifford Jordan Strata-East Sessions is a sterling showcase for those lesser-known aspects of this giant's career.

Like those illustrious leaders with whom he played, Jordan shared a vision of musician self-empowerment. His initial forays into self-production were shaped under an intended business collaboration with literary publisher named Harvey Brown. Brown's pioneering Frontier Press was focusing on similar territory for literature and in early 1968 they came up with the idea for a label called Frontier Records. With Jordan as the in-the-trenches A&R director and producer, they embarked upon the groundbreaking plan with a stunning cross-section of musicians who bridged the innovative mainstream and the structured avant-garde. The initial dates were under the leadership of Jordan, drummer Ed Blackwell, bassist Wilbur Ware and trumpeter Don Cherry. Although the label never came to be, Jordan continued to produce albums with that same innovative slant, with additional sessions led by saxophonists Pharoah Sanders, Cecil Payne and Charles Brackeen.

When trumpeter Charles Tolliver and pianist Stanley Cowell launched the innovative Strata-East Records in 1971, with the goal of creating a label for artist-owned product, Jordan found the new home for his projects. Releasing them under a special title of The Dolphy Series, Jordan's productions were an ideal tribute to Dolphy's ability to embrace the classic jazz tradition while pushing the envelope into uncharted territory. This set brings together that amazingly diverse, yet fully congruent collection of music together in one 6-CD set. Comprised of seven distinct albums - including a previously unissued set by Ed Blackwell - these 43 tracks display the incredibly rich context of adventurous, yet totally accessible music that was being produced during this highly fertile period. The sidemen on all of these sessions are a veritable who's who of contemporary jazz. And it is all further enhanced by Jordan's brilliant brewing of musicians who blended together in ways that few would have thought possible. This set proves that his approach was not only viable, but truly visionary.

The two Jordan albums included here are widely considered to be among his finest. 1969's In the World features Julian Priester, Wynton Kelly and Wilbur Ware, with Don Cherry and Albert 'Tootie' Heath alternating with Kenny Dorham, Ed Blackwell and Roy Haynes on two tracks each. Glass Bead Games (1973) features the fiery tenorman with two separate rhythm sections: Stanley Cowell, Bill Lee and Billy Higgins; and Cedar Walton, Sam Jones and Higgins.

Zodiac: The Music of Cecil Payne was recorded in 1968, with the burly baritone saxophonist accompanied by Dorham, Kelly, Ware and Heath. This album also offers an unusual glimpse into Cecil's alto sax mastery on one of the five Payne originals that comprise the set.

Charles Brackeen's Rhythm X (1968) features the adventurous tenor saxophonist in the company of one of Ornette Coleman's classic rhythm sections, with Cherry, Charlie Haden and Blackwell on four Brackeen originals. Cherry and Blackwell are also on hand for Wilbur Ware's Super Bass, featuring Jordan on tenor. Unissued until 2012 - and only in a limited release by the Wilbur Ware Institute - this music is an unexpected bonus and a most important part of this set, and the under-recognized bassist's legacy.

Shades of Edward Blackwell is another gem that is being made available here for the very first time. Recorded in 1968, this was Blackwell's first recording as a leader and contains two highly contrasting sessions. The first features Cherry, Ware and the under-recorded tenorman Luqman Lateef on two Blackwell originals. The second is a dynamic percussion ensemble that somewhat bridges the span between Art Blakey's explosive 1950s forays into the spirit of the drum and Max Roach's spectacular M'Boom. Joining Ed here are two more Ornette graduates, Billy Higgins and Dennis Charles, along with Roger Blank, Huss Charles and Jordan (on log drum).

Pharoah Sanders' powerful Izipho Zam rounds out the set. Centered on the sprawling title cut of nearly 30 minutes, this 1969 album contains a lineup of high-powered and exceptional musicians, including vocalist Leon Thomas, who collaborated with the iconoclastic tenorman on some of his most popular recordings. Also on hand are Sonny Fortune, Howard Johnson, Lonnie Liston Smith, Sonny Sharrock, Cecil McBee, Sirone, and a bombastic drum ensemble of Billy Hart, Majeed Shabazz, Chief Bey, Nat Bettis and Tony Wylie.

An interesting element is that of the 43 tracks, there is not a single standard. Every piece is an original composition of either the session's leaders or one of the sidemen - another sign of the exemplary internal creativity that fueled all of these sessions. Mosaic founder and the set's producer Michael Cuscuna says of these recordings "I was always intrigued by Jordan's choice of who to record on the 1968-69 sessions. Musically, Jordan's always cast a wide net, but doing a number of sessions in the Ornette Coleman orbit and recording Pharoah surprised and intrigued me." One thing is absolutely clear. Those choices have resulted in a collection of enormous impact, historical importance and sheer musical transcendence.

As always, the highest production values that are the Mosaic tradition have gone into this set. The booklet contains rare photos taken at the sessions by fine photographer Martin Bough and highly informative liner notes by reputable journalist Willard Jenkins. Once again, Mosaic Records has made another special contribution to the great legacy of jazz with a must-have collection.


Posted: 21 Oct 2013 11:21 AM PDT
COUTURE CHIC – VELVET BOSSA

Not entirely the bossa set you might guess from the title – but a mighty sweet session by a group with a very jazzy vibe – one who deliver some very unusual takes on tunes from the 70s and 80s! Couture Chic features a female lead singer, and a core keyboard of guitar, bass, and drums – but often augmented by jazzy keyboards, sax, or flute – some really nice touches that help keep things interesting as the group serve up some very fresh versions of songs by Depeche Mode, Everything But The Girl, Deep Purple, Village People, Survivor, and others. The approach might be a bit gimmicky, but these guys really seem to embrace the songs and make them their own – finding their own personal way to interpret tunes like "Eye Of The Tiger", "Smoke On The Water", "Personal Jesus", "Jump", "YMCA", "Hey Soul Sister", and "Missing". ~ Dusty Groove

PEDRITO MARTINEZ – THE PEDRITO MARTINEZ GROUP

Pedrito Martinez has a mighty cooking combo on this set – only a quartet, but a group that's more than strong enough to serve up some plenty powerful Latin jazz rhythms – which are then augmented by help from a host of famous guest stars! Pedrito's percussion is at the core of every track – supported with more percussion, piano, and electric bass – a tight unit that also has Martinez handling a fair bit of the vocals too! Yet each new track seems to introduce a new guest – including Wynton Marsalis on trumpet, John Scofield on guitar, and Steve Gadd on drums – who also co-produced the record with Martinez too. Titles include "Conciencia", "Lengua De Obbara", "Despues De Todo", "Musica", "Memorias", and "La Luna". ~ Dusty Groove

REVELATIONS – THE REVELATIONS


A sweet sound library set from the early 70s Italian scene – the only album ever issued by The Revelations – a one-off studio combo with a very funky approach to electric jazz! The album's dripping with plenty of soul – and in a way, feels more like a sweet European take on late 60s soul instrumental modes – complete with fuzzy guitar and lots of Hammond, played at a level that's somewhere past beat group grooving, but before some of the more stretched out jazz funk styles of the 70s! The whole thing's instrumental – and both the organ and guitar are awash in some really wonderful colors – full of feeling, in lots of different flavors – with a depth that goes way beyond the obscure origins of the set. Titles include "Blue 1971", "Lively", "Good Morning Mr Gleen", "Dedicated To J Hendrix", "Old Wa Wa", "Spanish Theme", and "Drops". ~ Dusty Groove


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