Seattle Jazz Scene: Live Jazz Previews for Seattle

Monday Night Jazz Jam at Seattle Jazz Fellowship
Monday Nights at 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St.
The all-ages Monday night jam has become quite a thing, with an attentive, trending young listening audience standing side by side with a long roll call of musicians. Now in the new basement club occupied by the non-profit, the vibe is intimate as the evening begins with a short, half hour max set by the Thomas Marriott Quartet. There is a sign up list that enables settings that make musical sense, allowing the session to move along at a good pace, promoting the mentorship cycle. Most importantly, it’s just plain fun, and the hang is one of the weekly highlights on the scene. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Larry Goldings, Peter Bernstein & Bill Stewart Organ Trio
Tue & Wed Sept 30-Oct 1, 7:30 PM / Jazz Alley
Simply one of the great organ trios in jazz history, organist Larry Goldings, drummer Bill Stewart and guitarist Peter Bernstein play a must-see two night run at Jazz Alley. The music touches so many bases- soul, the blues, swing and just plain musical adventurism,. To say after thirty years that the trio has chemistry would of course, be a huge understatement. A vocal trio could be noted for their harmonies together, in some cases, the perfect match not only of natural voice timbre, but of inspired connectivity. Goldings and Bernstein are two chordal instruments that work close in tandem, with the organist supplying the bass. Stewart seems to portion it all out rhythmically, creating that special group mind that they possess each time they perform. They too seem as though they speak in inspired, intelligent dialog.
Goldings has a wonderfully intelligent sense of humor, something that gives the gig a kind of living room vibe. Bernstein is a friend to Seattle, having performed here in trio with top Seattle players many times. He’s one of best in the biz, as is Stewart. A great way to work up your game in preparation for the eventful month of October to come https://www.jazzalley.com/www-home/artist.jsp?shownum=8693

Free Fall / Marc Seales Tuesdays at Seattle Jazz Fellowship
Tuesdays at 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St.
As part of the Seattle Jazz Fellowship’s expansion to six nights of programming per week, Tuesdays take on a special designation. Iconic Seattle jazz pianist Marc Seales and the explorative quartet Free Fall will alternate Tuesdays residency style, to create a weekly highlight on the Seattle jazz schedule.
One of the stated objectives of the Fellowship is that people gather at the basement club simply to experience jazz, not necessarily a particular artist. The Seales slot of this weekly tilt will feature a rotating cast of top shelf Seattle musicians. The Free Fall end of it will feature the piano-less quartet of trumpeter Thomas Marriott, saxophonist Mo Green, bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop. A quartet with a collective improvisational spirit, Free Fall is the epitomy of experiencing jazz in the moment, with each performance approached from a slightly different perspective.
Tuesday nights are now an opportunity to see some of the city’s historic and present day best, in a room that sets the vibe right for such occassions. With the Owl ‘n Thistle jam around the corner following, Tuesday nights become the best night for jazz on a weekly basis in Seattle. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Tuesday Night Jam at the Owl
Tuesdays at 9:30 PM / Owl ‘n Thistle
The Tuesday night jam at the Owl is a Seattle tradition dating back to 1997, and a band known as Bebop and Destruction. It’s interesting, and often zany history includes wild antics, colorful characters and many a drop in from national touring musicians including Wynton Marsalis, Roy Hargrove, Branford Marsalis, Emmett Cohen and the Spanish Harlem Orchestra. Pianist Eric Verlinde guided the jam into more tranquil waters over his eighteen years directing the session, a tenure that recently ended. Pianist Matt Williams has now taken the reins, injecting a new found enthusiasm and freeing up Verlinde to come and hang and play! The 9:30 start enables musicians with gigs that evening to show up and play after the opening set that lasts forty five minutes or so.
The session is very important within the musical and social fabric of the Seattle jazz scene. The very interesting and often humorous history of the session is well documented in an article I wrote for All About Jazz a few years back. Link provided below.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/tuesday-night-jams-at-the-owl-a-25-year-legacy-in-seattle

Jay Thomas / Phil Sparks Wednesdays at Seattle Jazz Fellowship
Wednesdays at 7:30 / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St.
With the Seattle Jazz Fellowship expanding to programming six nights a week beginning in September, Wednesday nights will take on a special theme with a residency that alternates between two Seattle Jazz Hall-of-Famers in bassist Phil Sparks and multi-instrumentalist Jay Thomas. The veteran bandleaders will have the leeway to create different ensembles along the way, and present a full scope of their music. As things evolve personnel-wise, I will do my best to be itemize per each date on the calendar. Generally speaking however, no matter who accompanies them, getting out to see Thomas or Sparks on a Wednesday evening is a sure bet to experience live, modern jazz at a high level from tow of the finest to ever grace a stage in Seattle. Thomas has been gigging here since the mid-sixties when he was just a lad. Sparks arrived in the late 1980s and has been a rock solid presence on the scene ever since. This is going to be fun, with a top end hang to accompany the performances. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Skerik Quartet
Fri Oct 3, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St.
The highly adaptable and highly virtuosic saxophonist Skerik hits the Fellowship with a quartet of Seattle musical partners with whom he has shared a stage many times. Pianist Tim Kennedy is currently one of the finest and most active musicians in town, while basssit Geoff Harper shares Skerik’s passion for eclectic adventurism. Drummer Brad Gibson is comfortable and formidable behind the kit in a variety of settings. What makes the saxophonist’s sets at SJF special, even for fans who frequent his performances around town, is the acoustic nature of the music, and his dedication to modern, progressive jazz. All of the other elements of his style come into play within that context to create two hours of sound you won’t want to miss. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Alex Guilbert
Sat Oct 4, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 108 S. Main St.
Pianist Alex Guilbert is a unique stylist, with a reputation as being a trad-jazz musician. Sure, he is proobably the main man in that style around town, but as his hosted Royal Room series “Piano Starts Here,” has proven, he is a bit of a jazz chameleon. In any case, he is a fine player with great touch, a wonderful imagination and a subtle sense of humor as well. He welcomes in bassist Chris Symer and drummer Will Lone to create a formidable rhythm section. Additional band members TBA. Guillbert describes the evening fare as contemporary, with some Paul Bley influence in the making. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Ben Thomas Tango Quartet
Thu Oct 9, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 108 S. Main St.
If you missed Ben Thomas‘ tango gig at the Royal Room in September, here’s your chance to get even! Thomas performs the music from his new release on Origin Records, The Hat with the Grin and the Chuckle. In this ensemble, Thomas eschews the vibration in favor of bandoneon and percussion to perform tango music with a jazz influenced element of improvisation in the mix. Pianist Gabe Hall Rodrigues is a fine jazz pianist with a special immersion in South American sounds. Clarinetist Eric Likkel is a major soloist in this configuration, and bassist Steve Schermer the absolute bottom line in what amounts to a chamber-like gathering without a traditional kit drummer. Thomas is one of the finest musicians you’ll see in Seattle, or anywhere for that matter. He plays with intelligence, humor, and a good-natured major dose of plain old virtuosity. This one will be fun! https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Thomas Marriott Quartet
Sat Oct 11, 8:30 PM / Black and Tan Hall (Earshot Jazz Festival)
Trumpeter Thomas Marriott hits the south end at Black and Tan Hill with a special edition of his standard quartet. Marriott’s music is modern jazz that speaks to his time in and around east coast scenes in New York and Philadelphia.
Speaking of Philadelphia, young Philly drummer Maria Maramou will join two of the trumpeter’s regular Seattle quartet members in pianist Tim Kennedy and bassist Trevor Ford. With his 2025 release, Screen Time, he is now the author of fourteen albums as a leader or co-leader. The performance will feature a number of Marriott originals, as well as inventive interpretations of jazz standards. Adding to the intrigue is welcoming Black and Tan Hall to the fold as a festival stage.
Aside from his stellar musicianship, Marriott is the founder and driving force behind the Seattle Jazz Fellowship, the city’s vital jazz non-profit. His jazz legacy in Seattle is all about community, but when push comes to shove, his identity is secure as one of America’s finest trumpet players. https://www.earshot.org/event/thomas-marriott-quartet-3/

Elnah Jordan
Sat Oct 11, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 108 S. Main St
Elnah Jordan is a blues singer, first and foremost. It speaks to whatever she chooses to do on a given night. Whatever she decides to perform in the jazz lexicon, you can depend on it being soulful with a healthy helping of that foundational element in Black American music- the blues. Discovered as a street singer in San Francisco by the legendary Jon Hendricks, Jordan knows how to entertain an audience as well. Count on an evening of positivity delivered with love – after all, the blues are sad, whereas blues music is a healing form, and one from a place of joy. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Christian McBride & Brad Meldau
Sun Oct 12, 8PM / Town Hall-Great Hall (Earshot Jazz Festival)
Truly two of the most important figures in jazz, Christian McBride and Brad Meldau are generational talents, brought together here as a duet. This show should be conversational in nature, with both musicians master improvisers with gigantic vocabularies from which to draw. McBride is the very epitomy of sophistication and swing on the double bass. Meldau is a grand story teller, using a variety of musical elements to define his piano style. Every note of this performance will be firmly in the moment, never to be repeated, making attendance one of the necessities, and one of the true highlights of the year in Seattle. https://www.earshot.org/event/christian-mcbride-brad-mehldau/

Ray Vega
Wed Oct 15, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship
The great Latin and jazz trumpeter Ray Vega will be in town for Thomas Marriott’s trumpet summit performance at Town Hall the following Friday evening. Rhythm section is TBA, for this performance which is the first of four great nights of jazz trumpet in Seattle. Vega is a veteran of bands led by Latin jazz greats Tito Puente, Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, Mario Bauza, Luis “Perico” Ortiz, Hector LaVoe, Johnny Pacheco, Larry Harlow, Pete “El Conde” Rodriguez and Louie Ramirez to name a few. He is one of the great people in the music as well. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Miki Yamanaka Trio / George Colligan with Zyanna
Wed Oct 15, 7 PM / Baba Yaga
This performance is part of the 2025 Earshot Jazz Festival. Seattle jazz fans are well acquainted with George Colligan. The Portland resident has been teaching at Portland St. since 2011. He has performed mostly in trio as a leader in the area, while he maintains his alliance as pianist with the likes of Jack DeJohnette, John Scofield, Ravi Coltrane, Cassandra Wilson, Eddie Henderson and a host of others. Here he is paired with the trio of on-the-rise Japanese born, New York based pianist, Miki Yamanaka.
Colligan is simply one of the finest jazz musicians of his generation. While he is a widely acclaimed pianist, he is also a fine drummer and trumpeter. He will be joined by Zyanna Melada, a new generation funk, jazz and soul vocalist, bassist Robert Rodriguez and drummer Micah Hummel, three highly regarded players on the Portland scene. Yamanaka, who is known to Seattle fans from the quintet of Seattle’s Roxy Coss, will be joined by bassist Pablo Menares and drummer Jimmy Macbride. https://www.earshot.org/event/miki-yamanaka-trio-george-colligan-with-zyanna/

Ingrid Jensen
Thu Oct 16, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship
It will be great to see the trumpeter Ingrid Jensen as part of Thomas Marriott’s Earshot Jazz Fellowship residency at Town Hall the evening after this hit at SJF. On an international scale, it has been wonderful to see her perform with the all-female supergroup Artemis at festivals and clubs around the world. But to see the Nanaimo, BC native play in the intimate confines of SJF’s basement club in Pioneer Square is a rare bird. Band TBA.
Jensen has been a prominent force in the jazz world for a quarter century now, and is an important mentor to the new wave of musicians contributing to the rising female excellence in jazz. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/events

Thomas Marriott, Ingrid Jensen, Sean Jones & Ray Vega: Trumpet Summit
Fri Oct 18, 7:30 PM / Town Hall- Great Hall (Earshot Jazz Festival)
Trumpet summit indeed. Four of the finest trumpeters on this here ball spinning through space gather on one stage to celebrate the music’s most difficult and most expressive instrument. The concert is part of Thomas Marriott‘s festival residency. In many ways it is reflective of the Seattle trumpeter’s dedication to community and family. The great Latin jazz trumpeter Ray Vega has been a close family friend since he arrived in Seattle as part of Tito Puente’s band. Ingrid Jensen is not only a great player, but a great mentor and inspiration to two generations of strong, female artists in jazz. She stars in the all-female supergroup Artemis presently, part of her career path that has shined brightly as a leader and sideperson. Jensen is familiar with the coastal lifestyle along Salish Sea as a Nanaimo, BC native. Sean Jones is a favorite to many prominent trumpet players, high praise that is well deserved. His elegance can turn from pure ferocity to poetic grace in an instant. As far as Marriott is concerned, if you are unfamiliar with his trademark sound, you have been staying home way too often. He is very similar to his three mates here in a very important way- he is identifiable both by the cunning melodicism of his appoach, and the very sound that travels from his horn. To have these four voices on one stage, whether individually or in chorus, will clearly delineate these special traits that the foursome employ.
Then there’s the rhythm section. Bassist Trevor Ford and drummer Jon Wikan occupy the ground floor of this stunning ensemble, while multi-Grammy nominated artist Orrin Evans occupies the piano chair. Again, Evans’ appearance speaks to the qualities of community, friendship and family that Marriott chooses to value. It will make for a great evening of music. https://www.earshot.org/event/ingrid-jensen-sean-jones-ray-vega-thomas-marriott-trumpet-summit/

Sean Jones Quartet
Sat Oct 18, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St,
In town to perform as part of Thomas Marriott’s Trumpet Summit, the great trumpeter Sean Jones stops into SJF’s basement digs in Pioneer Square. Jones has released eight albums as a leader on the Mack Avenue label and has appeared with Billy Childs, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock and many others both on record and on the bandstand. Jones will lead a stellar rhythm section with Orrin Evans on piano. Drummer Jon Wikan and bassist Trevor Ford. Evans and Jones are two of the very best on the planet- early arrival a necessity. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/

Eric Verlinde Quartet
featuring Thomas Marriott, Chris Symer & Brad Boal
Fri Oct 24, 7:30 PM / Seattle Jazz Fellowship- 103 S. Main St.
Pianist Eric Verlinde has earned a reputation as a fine player, but frankly, I think he is highly underrated. He is known for his versatility, moving from hard bop, to latin to the blues with ease. But Verlinde can flat out swing, not only as a dynamic soloist, but as part of the rhythm section. His harmonic invention while comping is all too rare. As a young player, he was part of Hadley Caliman’s band, an education in itself. He has carried that legacy forward as one of the city’s finest musicians.
Verlinde will perform original material from his recordings as a leader, along with a few standard gems. Surrounded by the likes of trumpeter Thomas Marriott and backliners in bassist Chris Symer and drummer Brad Boal, he is not only embracing virtuosity, but familiarity as well. One not to miss. https://seattlejazzfellowship.org/