Review: East-West Trumpet Summit

Note: Thomas Marriott is heading out-of-town this weekend to perform at the Denver Jazz Festival with Ray Vega. Travis Shook, Phil Sparks and Matt Jorgensen round out the group.

via All About Jazz.com:

East-West Trumpet Summit is a rollicking showcase for longtime friends Ray Vega and Thomas Marriott. Vega, a New York native and the elder of the two, has served for many years as a mentor to Seattle’s Marriott. The two first met when Marriott was a student at the University of Washington in Seattle, and Vega was in town touring with the late Tito Puente. Friends ever since, the two trumpeters share an affinity for hard-blowing, grounded-in-bebop jazz. New York pianist Travis Shook and the Seattle rhythm team of bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer Matt Jorgensen round out this exceptional set of standards and original compositions.

A whirling rendition of “It’s You or No One,” featuring solo turns by the entire cast, gets the disc off to a feverish start. A faithful-to-the-original take on Horace Silver’s medium bouncer “Juicy Lucy” swings along nicely, with Vega paying homage to the spirit of Blue Mitchell. Two Marriott originals follow: the rocket-propelled “Pelham Gardens,” delivering an inspired back and forth between the two leaders; and “Bishop Island,” a free-flowing waltz with a matter-of-fact melody and lyrical turn by Johnson.

Vega contributes as a composer as well, with two strong pieces. The pensive “Only of a Season” and the energetic modal workout “It’s a New York Thing” are both disc highlights, the latter a vehicle for frenetic displays from Shook and Jorgensen. Following a straightforward ballad medley of “Round Midnight” and “In a Sentimental Mood,” featuring Vega and Marriott respectively, the disc winds down with “Big Brother,” Marriott’s Latin-tinged tribute to Vega.

With evident camaraderie, East-West Trumpet Summit is a joyful celebration of friendship and music from two heavyweights of jazz trumpet.

Friday Jazz

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Donny McCaslin Trio

JAZZ ALLEY: The Rippingtons

NEW ORLEANS: Mark Taylor

EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE: Grupo Amoroso

BAKE’S PLACE: Jake Bergevin with vibraphonist Susan Pascal

CYPRES LOUNGE: Geoffrey Castle

LAKESIDE BISTRO: Sandra Locklear

EL DIABLO COFFEEHOUSE: Jon Sheckler Group
1811 Queen Anne Ave N

THE CHAPEL: Bill Horist

LUCID: Tom Baker Quartet

SERAFINA: Djangomatics

Leading Questions: Greta Matassa

Note: Greta Matassa will be performing in Portland tonight through Saturday. Thursday, June 10 at Brasserie Montmartre and Friday-Saturday at Wilf’s Resaurant and Bar.

Interview and Photo by Steve Korn

Someone once told me, Success is getting what you want, but happiness is wanting what you get. I’ve based my career decisions on this advice

When I was 14 I knew I wanted to make music my life and become a professional singer. now, with 2 teenage daughters going through the trials and tribulations of high school, I realize how lucky I was to have discovered who I was at such an early age.

My voice is my vehicle of expression. My voice is me.

Some of my best ideas come to me while walking at Alki and talking to my friend Susan Pascal.

When I look at where I’m at right now, I couldn’t be happier or luckier. I have a career in the Pacific Northwest (a place I’m coming to realize is one of the most beautiful in the world). The opportunity to travel on small outings. A nice recording contract. A great teaching practice, a very wonderful man who loves me and great kids. I wouldn’t ask for more.

I’m happy whenever I’m listening to Blossom Dearie.

Teaching has been an education. As a self taught singer I’ve re-examined how I know what I know and am always finding that my students can often teach me to teach them if I listen closely and with empathy.

If I could play another instrument it would most likely be drums. I’m a very rhythm oriented singer and find watching and listening to drummers fascinating.

Improvisation is like my father described abstract expressionism. A uniquely in-the-moment experience based on years of experience and knowing when to “take the brush away from the canvas”

My parents were very supportive. My mother was a scientist and my father an artist. They are still a big part of my life.

People ask me, why aren’t you famous, living in New York or touring or on Letterman or something. I refer them to question #1 for the answer.

Music has taught me the best things in life are free!

Less is more because of Shirley Horn.

More is more because of Ella Fitzgerald.

Being a woman in jazz has meant nothing in particular. I am treated and in turn treat my fellow musicians as human beings and this seems to be a nice arrangement.

In my view my greatest achievement has been Gina and Franny Matassa

Trust is easy when you’ve been practicing, both in music and life.

Thursday Jazz

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Nelda Swiggett Trio

JAZZ ALLEY: The Rippingtons

NEW ORLEANS: Ham Carson Quintet

EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE: Chad McCullough Group, with Chad McCullough (trumpet), Bram Weijters (piano), Chuck Deardorf (bass) and John Bishop (drums)

BOXLEY’S: Dave Anderson and John Bishop

SHADOWLAND: Jose Gonzales Trio

THAIKU: Jon Alberts, Jeff Johnson and Tad Britton

SEATTLE ART MUSEUM: Art of Jazz: The Donny McCaslin Trio

BARCA: Clark Gibson Trio

LUCID: The Teaching

SORRENTO: Karin Kajita

WILD GINGER BELLEVUE: Jason Parker Trio

Earshot Jazz hosting JJA satellite party on June 14, 12:30pm

JJA Jazz Awards: Seattle Satellite Party
Monday, June 14, 12:30pm
The Triple Door, Musicquarium
216 Union Street, Seattle WA 98101
Free and open to the public

If you’re interested in jazz, and can join us in downtown Seattle Monday afternoon, June 14th, then we have a deal for you! Earshot Jazz will host a live screening the national Jazz Journalists Association (JJA) beginning at 12:30pm, Monday, June 14th. Come celebrate with other local jazz fans at a satellite party being held simultaneously with the Jazz Awards ceremony and reception in New York City. Video of the entire awards ceremony will be steamed live and will include performances by Ayako Shirasaki, guitarist Rale Micic’s trio, pianist Marc Cary’s Focus Trio, the Tia Fuller Quartet and the Bobby Sanabria Big Band.

The international cast includes these Pacific NW folks nominated this year:
Paul de Barros: nominated for a Lifetime Achievement in Jazz Journalism award
Jim Wilke: nominated for the The Willis Conover^Marian McPartland Award for Broadcasting
Doug Ramsey’s Rifftides: nominated for Blog of the Year
Bill Frisell: nominated for Guitarist of the Year

Wednesday Jazz

JAZZ ALLEY: The Jack DeJohnette Group

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Katie King Vocal Showcase

NEW ORLEANS: Legacy Quartet w/Clarence Acox

EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – Vocal Jam
9pm – Vocal Showcase featuring Susan Robinson, Mercedes Nicole and Ellen Marx

THAIKU: Ron Weinstein Trio

LUCID: Nick Sandy

COMET TAVERN: Owcharuk 5, Reptet, Inzinzac

Tula’s doorman Michael Orias

Michael Orias, the silver-haired doorman at Tula’s Jazz Club, suffered a heart attack at his home this afternoon. He is now on life-support at Providence Hospital, and it is not known if he will recover. Our thoughts are with his family during this difficult time.

Save on Jack DeJonnette at Jazz Alley

via Donn Bennett’s email list:

Jack DeJohnette at Jazz Alley – WED 6/9 – 2-for-1 Addmission.
Legendary jazz drummer Jack DeJohnette will be at Jazz Alley in Seattle tonight and tomorrow. Mention Donn Bennett Drum Studio and get 2-for-1 admission for the Wednesday night show. Jack is a true jazz icon. Coltrane, Miles, Getz, Rollins, Hancock and Jarrett are just a few of the jazz giants he’s played with. He will be performing with his own group and will certainly have plenty of room to shine. For more about Jack DeJohnette see www.jazzalley.com

Tuesday Jazz

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Emerald City Jazz Orchestra

JAZZ ALLEY: The Jack DeJohnette Group

TRIPLE DOOR: Roosevelt High School Jazz Bands

NEW ORLEANS: Holotradband

SHERMAN CLAY BELLEVUE: Michael Barnett Latin Jazz Quartet

MIX: Don Mock

OWL ‘N THISTLE: Jam w/ Eric Verlinde & Jose Martinez

MARTIN’S ON MADISON: Karin Kajita

Photos: Final Day at the Bellevue Jazz Festival

from Daniel Sheehan’s Eyeshot Jazz:

Bill Charlap and Renee Rosnes were wonderful. This was my first time to photograph a piano jazz duo, and it was delightful. “Husband and wife, Bill Charlap & Renee Rosnes, team up for select performances of impassioned, eclectic, and extraordinary piano duets.

Sachal Vasandani and his quartet were in prime form Sunday on the final day of the Bellevue Jazz Festival. It has been a while since I last saw him in Seattle at an Earshot event where he was good and he sounded even better today. According to the official program “Sachal Vasandani is a fresh, young vocal talent who displays a singular, deep-brewed voice and possesses an uncanny sensibility to straddle the fine line between jazz and pop with songs that teem with emotion and intellect.”

Monday Jazz

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Vocal Jam hosted by Greta Matassa

JAZZ ALLEY: José James with Jef Neve

TRIPLE DOOR: Edmonds-Woodway Jazz Band

AMORE: Ronnie Pierce Jazz Ensemble

NEW ORLEANS: New Orleans Quintet

EL GAUCHO BELLEVUE: Primo Kim

TOST: Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder

Bellevue Jazz Festival, Thursday Review

The first day of the 2010 Bellevue Jazz Festival got off to a respectable if not rabid start, a low-impact workout in preparation for the long weekend of shows. Thursday night’s performances were an all-local affair with familiar names playing five venues including the Theatre at Meydenbauer Center, where all the headline performers can be heard.

Pianist Overton Berry and vocalist Gail Pettis officially started off the festival, with Berry playing a 5 p.m. set on the first floor of the Lincoln Square shopping center and Pettis singing (also at 5 p.m.) three blocks away – Bellevue’s large blocks are car-sized, not people sized – in the year-old Grand Cru Wine Bar on the ground floor of the TEN20 apartment complex.

Organizers have programmed the festival in three layers, with performances by some of the area’s best high-school musicians and bands (mostly during the day), local professionals playing at night for free, and the big-name national acts performing in the Theatre. Only the Theatre shows require a paid ticket. Another attraction of the festival is downtown Bellevue itself, much of it newly paved and constructed. The shopping plazas, hotels, restaurants and bars have been turned into jazz clubs for the weekend.

Pettis, accompanied by pianist Randy Halberstadt, sang to a standing-room-only crowd at the year-old Grand Cru Wine Bar. The pair was tucked in a corner by the window, behind a steel-mesh, floor-to-ceiling curtain that served as a buffer to the intimate dining room.
Read More

Photos: Bellevue Jazz Festival

via Daniel Sheehan’s EyeShotJazz Blog

Once again the Bellevue Jazz Festival is here and kicking it off at the Meydenbauer Theater was The Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra (SRJO), the Northwest’s premier big band jazz ensemble. Founded in 1995, the 17-piece big band is made up of the most prominent jazz soloists and band leaders in the greater Seattle area. SRJO played a concert of highlights from their 2009-2010 concert season, including hits from their November 2009 “Tribute to Ray Charles” concert (“One Mint Julep,” “Moanin”), their March 2010 “Big Band Monk and Mingus” concert (“Haitian Fight Song” by Mingus, “Misterioso” by Monk), their April 2010 “Birth of the Cool” concert (Boplicity, Rocker), and a new Michael Brockman composition for the SRJO titled “Passage Noir.”

Meanwhile all over Bellevue, groups were performing free concerts at varous venues. Here Gail Pettis performed with Randy Halberstadt on keyboards at Grand Cru Wine Bar at TEN20.

Friday Jazz

BELLEVUE JAZZ FESTIVAL:
3:30 PM: Red Shoes – Cool Jazz Sounds
(Weather Permitting)
520 Bar & Grill [ FREE ]

5:00 PM: Bill Anschell Duo
Grand Cru Wine Bar at TEN20 [ FREE ]

5:00 PM: Murl Allen Sanders Duo
Lincoln Square First Floor [ FREE ]

6:00 PM: Josh Rawlings Trio
The Bravern (Inside Neiman Marcus) [ FREE ]

7:00 PM: The Bad Plus

Theatre at Meydenbauer Center [ Buy tickets ]
Forget categories and catch phrases the sound of The Bad Plus is distinctive, eclectic and formidable. The Bad Plus have exploded all notions of what a jazz piano trio should sound like whether at outdoor rock festivals, jazz clubs or symphony halls. … [ more ]

7:00 PM: June Tonkin
El Gaucho Bellevue [ FREE ]

7:30 PM: Mark Taylor Duo
Grand Cru Wine Bar at TEN20 [ FREE ]

8:30 PM: Thomas Marriott Trio
Cypress Lounge and Wine Bar at The Westin Bellevue [ FREE ]

9:00 PM: Origin Records Jam Session
Courtyard by Marriott Downtown Bellevue [ FREE ]

and the rest:

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Greta Matassa Quartet

JAZZ ALLEY: Cassandra Wilson

EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – Marti MacEwan and David Arteaga, with Randy Halberstadt (piano) and Larry Halloway (bass)
9pm – Black Math Quartet

LATONA PUB: Phil Sparks Trio

SERAFINA: Alex Guilbert Trio

BOXLEY’S: Janette West

BAKE’S PLACE: Jennifer Scott & Rene Worst Trio

LUCID: Motel 5

NEW ORLEANS: Hadley Caliman Quartet

Thursday Jazz

The Bellevue Jazz Festival kicks off today. Here is what’s happening:

5:00 PM – Gail Pettis Duo
Grand Cru Wine Bar at TEN20 [ FREE ]

5:00 PM – Overton Berry Duo
Lincoln Square First Floor [ FREE ]

6:00 PM – June Tonkin
El Gaucho Bellevue [ FREE ]

7:00 PM – Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra plus The Festival’s Rising Stars
Theatre at Meydenbauer Center [ Buy tickets ]
The Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra (SRJO) is the Northwest’s premier big band jazz ensemble. Founded in 1995, the 17-piece big band is made up of the most prominent jazz soloists and band leaders in the greater Seattle area. … [ more ]

7:30 PM – Eric Verlinde Duo
Grand Cru Wine Bar at TEN20 [ FREE ]

9:00 PM – Joe Doria Trio
Wild Ginger at The Bravern [ FREE ]

and here is what else is happening …

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Cornish Jazz Faculty

JAZZ ALLEY: Cassandra Wilson

NEW ORLEANS: Ray Skelbred/Bob Jackson Quintet

TRIPLE DOOR: Jane Monheit

BARCA: Clark Gibson Trio

THAIKU: Jon Alberts, Jeff Johnson and Tad Britton

LUCID: The Teaching

Wednesday Jazz

TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Smith/Staelens Big Band

JAZZ ALLEY: Pablo Menedez & Mezcla

TRIPLE DOOR MAINSTAGE: Geoffrey Castle

NEW ORLEANS: Legacy Quartet w/Clarence Acox

EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – Rachel Sedacca
9pm – Perry Robinson, with Marc Smason (trombone), Craig Hoyer (piano) and Dalton Davis (drums)

MEANY THEATER: UW Studio Jazz Ensemble

LUCID: Le Trio w/ Mike Dodge, Nate Omdal, Michael Owcharuk

SERAFINA: Passarim

THAIKU: Ron Weinstein Trio