Monday Jazz
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Darin Clendenin Jazz Jam
NEW ORLEANS: New Orleans Quintet
AMORE: Ronnie Pierce Jazz Ensemble
BOXLEY’S: Boxley Creek Blues Review
TOST: Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Darin Clendenin Jazz Jam
NEW ORLEANS: New Orleans Quintet
AMORE: Ronnie Pierce Jazz Ensemble
BOXLEY’S: Boxley Creek Blues Review
TOST: Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder
TULAS JAZZ CLUB:
3pm – Jazz Police
8pm – Jim Cutler Jazz Orchestra
JAZZ ALLEY: Spyro Gyra
BAKE’S PLACE: Sunday Blues, BBQ & Beer: Little Bill and the Bluenotes
SERAFINA: Ann Reynolds / Tobi Stone Duo
BOXLEY’S: Danny Kolke Trio
TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM: Sunday Night Salsa: Rumbeggae
CAFE RACER: Racer Sessions
5828 Roosevelt Way NE, 8pm
CONCERT: Stephanie Nakasian w/ Bill Anschell
Camano Island, jazzvox.com 2pm
On May 16 jazz musicians will gather at Central Washington University to remember the late jazz educator John Moawad in the way that he would most appreciate: a day-long jam session!
Moawad was a charismatic educator who brought jazz to high school and college classrooms before it was “normal” in the Pacific Northwest. During his 30-years at CWU he built what arguably was and still is the best instrumental and vocal jazz program on the West coast. He also built jazz programs at Nathan Hale High School and Stevenson High School in Seattle. His former students run many of the top Northwest Middle and High School jazz programs.
Location:
– Central Washington University in Ellensburg, WA–just 100 miles from Seattle!
– Student Union & Recreation Center Ballroom
Time:
1:00 – 5:00 PM, with tours of the CWU Music Building beginning at noon
An admission donation of $10 will cover costs of the event and help fund the Moawad Jazz Scholarship Fund.
The celebration will feature performances by alumni of CWU’s jazz program:
– Pre 1985 jazz band organized by Norm Wallen
– 1986-96 jazz band organized by Jake Bergevin
– Pre 1985 vocal jazz ensemble organized by Dave Barduhn
– 1986-96 vocal jazz ensemble organized by Dave Cazier
TULAS JAZZ CLUB:
7:30pm – Susan Pascal Quartet
JAZZ ALLEY: Spyro Gyra
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – The Anomalous Quintet, w/ Jason Newsom (guitar), Michael York (tenor sax), Daniel Covrett (baritone sax), Arcellus Sykes (bass), Ronnie LaGrone (drums)
9pm – Manghis Khan, w/ Yaw Amponsah (West African Ashanti drums/djembe), Tony Grasso (trumpet), Viren Kamdar (cajon/congas), Kevin McCarthy (bass)
BAKE’S PLACE: Uncle Bonsai
SERAFINA: Alex Guilbert Duo
GRAZIE: Haley Blackwell Olsby
LUCID: Leif Totusek
LOCAL COLOR: Leah Natale and Milo Petersen
CONCERT: Crepuscule & Jesse Canterbury’s Vertigo
Chapel Performance Space , 4649 Sunnyside Ave N, 8pm.
From Earshot Jazz: Southern California’s Crepuscule Trio features saxophonist Ken Kawamura, bassist Anthony Shadduck, and drummer Alan Cook. Performing freely improvised music rooted deeply in the jazz tradition, Crepuscule is an exciting, multi-directional ensemble. Opening is Seattle clarinetist Jesse Canterbury’s Vertigo. Canterbury leads an all-acoustic ensemble in a strikingly original mix of chamber music, improvisation, and tune-oriented melodic material. The quartet features Joanne DeMars on cello, Chris Stover on trombone, and Tom Baker on guitar.
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Hadley Caliman Quintet featuring Kay Bailey
NEW ORLEANS: Rick Mandyck Quartet
TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM: Tarik Abouzied Organ Trio
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE
7pm – Dave Dolengewicz Trio, with Dave Dolengewicz (saxophones), Lauren Hendrix (upright and electric basses) and Ben Morrow (drums)
BOXLEY’S: Bryant Urban Trio
SERAFINA: Djangomatics
NORTH CITY BISTRO: Scott Lindenmuth Trio
SOUTHPORT CAFE: Kelley Johnson
LATONA PUB: Phil Sparks Trio
JAZZ VOX: Stephanie Nakasian w/ Bill Anschell
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Ryan Burns Trio + Mark Taylor CD Release Party
NEW ORLEANS: Ham Carson Quintet
BOXLEY’S: Hans Brehmer Trio
LUCID JAZZ LOUNGE: The Hang w/ The Teaching
THAIKU: Jon Alberts, Jeff Johnson and Tad Britton
SEATTLE ART MUSEUM: Art of Jazz: BlueStreet Jazz Voices
from Earshot Jazz: The BlueStreet Jazz Voices is a musical collective whose mission is to promote vocal jazz music in the Seattle community and provide high-quality, entertaining, and moving musical experiences for audiences and performers alike. The new ensemble has built quite a following with their combination of original arrangements of jazz standards, lush ballads, and contemporary jazz. Boasting 20-members, BlueStreet is a diverse group of musicians who are united by their passion for jazz interpretation. As one critic has noted: βThe only thing matching the joy that the ensemble brings to the stage is the joy they feel while creating music together.β Ken Wilson and Andy Carr serve as artistic and instrumental director respectively. The BlueStreet voices perform on Thursday, March 11 at 5:30pm as part of the ongoing Art of Jazz Series at the Seattle Art Museum. Admission to the performance is free with your museum tickets. Also- catch the BlueStreet Jazz Voices in performance with guests Stephanie Nakasian and the Todd Beamer High School Vocal Jazz Ensemble at the West Seattle HS Performing Arts Center (3000 California Ave SW) on Saturday, March 13 at 7:30pm.
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Nelda Swiggett CD Release Party for This Time
featuring Chris Symer (bass) and Byron Vannoy (drums)
JAZZ ALLEY: John Scofield featuring Mulgrew Miller, Ben Street and Kendrick Scott
NEW ORLEANS: Legacy Quartet w/Clarence Acox
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – Jessica Stenson, with Darin Clendenin (piano) and Geoff Cooke (bass)
9pm – Vocal Jam hosted by Dina Blade, with Ed Weber (piano), Dan O’Brien (bass) and Bob Merrihew (drums)
THAIKU: Ron Weinstein Trio
BOXLEY’S: Clark Gibson Duo
Pianist Ryan Burns will celebrate the release of his new CD, Birds, at Tula’s this Thursday, March 11.
THURSDAY, MARCH 11 – RYAN BURNS QUARTET
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB
2214 2nd Ave, Seattle
7:30pm
Reservation: 206-443-4221
Mark Taylor – saxophone
Ryan Burns – keyboards
Geoff Cooke – bass
Jose Martinez – drums
The Pacific Jazz Institute at Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley presents for one night only the Sixth Annual Sister City Female Jazz Vocalist Audition. Doors open at 5:30pm, auditions start at 6:30pm and the evening will end around 9:30pm.
The 6th Annual Sister City Female Vocalist Jazz Audition at Jazz Alley is right around the corner so mark your calendars! The Seattle Kobe Sister City Association (SKSCA) is pleased to announce its sixth Seattle-Kobe Female Jazz Vocalist Audition. SKSCA will select one high school and one adult female jazz vocalist from the greater Seattle area to Kobe, Japan to perform at the Kobe Jazz Queen Vocalist Contest on a weekend on May (date to be announced in early January).
Every fall for the last ten years, the winner of the Kobe Jazz Queen Contest has flown to Seattle to debut in the US at Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley. Last year SKSCA sent local jazz vocalist Greta Matassa and high school vocalist Katherine Stuber to Kobe for the May 2010 Kobe Jazz Queen Contest. This year, the SKSCA is proud to host its sixth jazz vocalist audition as a reciprocal exchange to send two Seattle female jazz vocalists to Japan.
Finalists will be selected by late February, and they will perform at a live audition at Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley on Monday, March 22, 2010, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. (Doors open at 5:30 pm.) Family, friends, and community members are encouraged to come and support the finalists. The suggested donation will be $5.00/students and $10.00/adults with proceeds supporting this and future Seattle-Kobe Jazz competitions. Finalists will be announced the last week of February.
For interested singers, please go to the SKSCA website for further information and an application form:
www.sksca.org
Sponsors for this event include: Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley, Kobe Trade Information Office, Sankei Travel, Seattle-Kobe Sister City Association, and Shinkaichi Music Street.
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Emerald City Jazz Orchestra
JAZZ ALLEY: John Scofield featuring Mulgrew Miller, Ben Street and Kendrick Scott
NEW ORLEANS: Holotradband
SHERMAN CLAY BELLEVUE: Magnolia Big Band
MARTIN’S ON MADISON: Karin Kajita
THE MIX: Don Mock
(BELLEVUE, Wash.) – The Bellevue Downtown Association today announced the featured lineup for the 2010 Bellevue Jazz Festival presented by First Tech Credit Union at the Theatre at Meydenbauer Center, June 3-6. Festival packages and individual tickets go on sale March 11 at
www.bellevuejazz.com.
2010 FEATURED ARTISTS:
Terence Blanchard Quintet
The Bad Plus
Pat Martino
Bill Charlap and Renee Rosnes plus Sachal Vasandani Quartet Seattle
Repertory Jazz Orchestra also featuring the Bellevue Jazz Festival
Rising Stars
Celebrating its third year, the Bellevue Jazz Festival will also stage more than 30 free performances and jam sessions led by top regional artists at venues throughout Downtown Bellevue; the artists and schedule will be announced in April. All ticketed featured artist performances will be at the Theatre at Meydenbauer Center.
TICKETS AND PACKAGES:
Tickets will go on sale March 11 at www.bellevuejazz.com. Tickets may also be purchased by phone (800-838-3006) or at the Brown Paper Tickets box office at Meydenbauer Center in Downtown Bellevue.
Discounted ALL ACCESS and SATURDAY MARQUEE ticket packages also go on sale March 11 and offer up to a 30 percent savings. The ALL ACCESS Package ($119) includes premium seating to all featured performances, plus entry to a private festival reception. The SATURDAY MARQUEE Package ($59) includes premium seating to both featured shows on Saturday, June 5.
Student discounts are available for all individual shows.
FEATURED ARTIST SCHEDULE:
Thursday, June 3, 2010: 7:00 p.m. Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra, also featuring Bellevue Jazz Festival Rising Stars (tickets: $10-$20) Friday, June 4, 2010: 7:00 p.m.: The Bad Plus (tickets: $20-$30) Saturday, June 5, 2010: 2:00 p.m. Pat Martino (tickets: $20-$30); 8:00 p.m. Terence
Blanchard Quintet (tickets: $40-$50) Sunday, June 6: 2:00 p.m. Bill Charlap and Renee Rosnes plus Sachal Vasandani Quartet (tickets: $30-$40)
The Bellevue Jazz Festival is produced by the Bellevue Downtown Association, a non-profit, member-based organization charged with leading the evolution of Downtown Bellevue as the economic and cultural heart of the Eastside. 2010 Festival sponsors are First Tech Credit Union, the City of Bellevue, Microsoft, 4Culture and KPLU 88.5.
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Katie King Vocal Showcase
NEW ORLEANS: New Orleans Quintet
TOST: Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder
AMORE RESTAURANT: Ronnie Pierce Jazz Ensemble
A concert mash-up celebrating the Centennial of the first Seattle World’s Fair, the 1909 A-Y-P Exposition is featured on the next Jazz Northwest. Highlights from the concert premiere will air on 88.5 KPLU and kplu.org on Sunday, March 7 at 1 PM Pacific Time.
The 16 member band led by Greg Wiiliamson with singer Greta Matassa recreate some of the music from 100 years ago that was performed at the fair, and morphs into references to Duke Ellington, Quincy Jones, swing, boogaloo and modern jazz. There are moments when several musical threads are played simultaneously a la Charles Ives in a kind of musical time machine. Some period instruments were used and photographs from the A-Y-P were projected as a backdrop on stage.
This concert was recorded at the premiere performance at the Triple Door during the 2009 Earshot Jazz Festival. The music was recently given a second performance at the 2010 Golden Ear Awards also at the Triple Door.
Jazz Northwest is recorded and produced exclusively for 88.5 KPLU and kplu.org. The program airs on Sundays at 1 PM Pacific Time and a podcast is available after the airdate from kplu.org. More info at kplu.org/wilke and ponyboyrecords.com.
TULAS JAZZ CLUB:
3pm – Reggie Goings / Hadley Caliman Quintet
8pm – Jim Cutler Jazz Orchestra
JAZZ ALLEY: Mavis Staples
BAKE’S PLACE: Mark DuFresne – Sunday Blues, BBQ & Beer
TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM: Sunday Night Salsa: Orchestra Caribe
SERAFINA:
11am – Alex Guilbert
6pm – Jerry Frank
BOXLEY’S: Danny Kolke Trio
CAFE RACER: Racer Sessions
5828 Roosevelt Way NE, 8pm
CONCERT: SRJO w/ Gail Pettis Play Monk & Mingus
Kirkland Performance Center, 350 Kirkland Ave, Kirkland, 3pm. More info: www.srjo.org
CONCERT: Seattle Jazz Vespers: Cocoa Martini
Seattle First Baptist Church, Seneca at Harvard on First Hill, 6pm
Pony Boy Records Presents JAZZ and SUSHI
Friday Nights – Hiroshi’s Restaurant
2501 Eastlake Avenue East, Seattle, WA
ph: (206)726-4966, no cover, 7:30 – 10:00
A very fine line-up to swing into spring. Come check out some of the fine artists on Pony Boy Records, and preview some of our newest recording artists.
Sushi master Hiroshi and his gang prepare a full menu of Japanese cuisine that is fresh, tasty, and full of flavor – all matched with some very special sake and beverages (try the plumb wine) Favored by local Japanese and music lovers, Hiroshi’s has been featuring live jazz on Friday nights for over three years – presented by the Pony Boy Records stable of artists. Come by for some fine food, and see who will be sitting in with the band – Fridays have become a ‘happening’ on Eastlake! Cheers!
info on all Pony Boy CDs and artists: http://www.ponyboyrecords.com
Friday, March 5 – Greg Williamson Quartet
Alexey Nikolaev, sax
John Hansen, piano
Jon Hamar, bass
Greg Williamson, drums
Friday, March 12 – Jake Bergevin
Jake Bergevin, vocal & trp
Milo Petersern, guitar
RJ Whitow, bass
Greg Williamson, drums
Friday, March 19 – Dave Anderson Quartet
Dave Anderson, sax
band tba
Friday, Feb 26 – Carolyn Graye Quartet
Carolyn Graye, vocals
Christopher Woitach, gtr
Chris Symer, bass
Greg Williamson, drums
TULAS JAZZ CLUB:
3pm – Mike Vax brass clinic
7:30pm – Mike Vax / Fred Radke Quintet
JAZZ ALLEY: Mavis Staples
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – The Gloria Darlings and Judd Wasserman
9pm – Randall O’Dowd, w/ Eric Verlinde (piano), Robert Rushing (drums), Kevin McCarthy (bass), Russ Johnson (harmonica)
BAKE’S PLACE: Kelly Harland
SERAFINA: Leo Raymundo and Sue Nixon
EL GAUCHO BELLEVUE: Trish Hatley Trio
GRAZIE: Andre Thomas and Quiet Fire
CONCERT: SRJO w/ Gail Pettis Play Monk & Mingus
Nordstrom Recital Hall, 200 University St, 7:30pm. More info: www.srjo.org
CONCERT: Butch Morris Conduction
Poncho Concert Hall, 710 E Roy St, 8pm. More info: www.cornish.edu
from The Seattle Times:
On paper, the practice that Butch Morris calls “conduction” sounds like a recipe for musical chaos. But after more than three decades, Morris is a maestro of spontaneously directed ensemble performance, an artist capable of transforming an ad-hoc group of musicians into a thrilling vehicle for instantaneous arranging and composing.
Using a system of graphics and gestures, Morris has honed a semaphoric vocabulary that allows him to shape a performance in real time, initiating or altering harmony, timbre, dynamics, melody and any other musical dimension. After leading hundreds of conductions around the world, he doesn’t set out with a stylistic agenda, preferring to suss out his collaborators through rigorous workshops.
“Every situation is different,” says Morris, 63, who concludes a 10-day residency at Cornish College of the Arts with his first Seattle conduction on Saturday at Poncho Hall.
Continue reading at The Seattle Times.
from The Seattle Times:
Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra, led by Clarence Acox and Michael Brockman; 7 p.m. Saturday at Benaroya Hall, 200 University St., Seattle; 3 p.m. Sunday at Kirkland Performance Center, 350 Kirkland Ave., Kirkland; $15-$38; (206-523-6159 or www.srjo.org).
The pianist Thelonious Monk and bassist Charles Mingus were born and they died within a handful of years of each other. They both found early inspiration in Duke Ellington’s music and had a large hand in shaping what we know to be modern jazz, yet the record shows their paths did not cross much.
It might be because they grew up on opposite coasts, Monk in New York, Mingus in Los Angeles. Monk, sometimes credited with inventing bebop (an assertion many would argue against), was known for a spare and percussive style of playing, which his compositions reflect. He played mostly in trios and small combos.
Mingus’ music was, for lack of a better term, busier, layered with thick harmonies. He played in and composed for large ensembles, drawing comparisons to Ellington. But Monk and Mingus also had much in common, both using dissonance and angular melodies to create a new basis for jazz harmony.
Continue reading at The Seattle Times.
TULAS JAZZ CLUB: Marc Seales Group
NEW ORLEANS: Thomas Marriott Quartet
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE:
7pm – Guardian Ear, with Jeth Rollins Odom (guitar/tres cubano), Clark Battle (cello), Irene Alexander (oboe), John Delp (percussion) and Conor Apperson (percussion)
9pm – Chris Stover (trombone/percussion), Ben Thomas (vibes/percussion) and Alex Chadsey (piano)
BAKE’S PLACE: Greta Matassa and Jay Mabin
BOXLEY’S: Bryant Urban Trio
SOUTHPORT CAFE: Brooks Giles Band
SERAFINA: Kiko de Freitas
THE CHAPEL: Seattle Composers’ Salon
EL GAUCHO BELLEVUE: Trish Hatley Trio
LOCAL COLOR: Oghale
LATONA PUB: Phil Sparks Trio
HIROSHI’S: Jazz & Sushi
Gail Pettis and Hadley Caliman‘s recent release continue to rise up the JazzWeek national airplay chart. Last week’s Hadley’s Straight Ahead reached #3 and Gail’s Here In The Moment moved up to #5.
1 – AHMAD JAMAL A Quiet Time (Dreyfus)
2 – STEVE HOBBS Vibes, Straight Up (Challenge)
3 – HADLEY CALIMAN Straight Ahead (Origin)
4 – PAT METHENY Orchestrion (Nonesuch)
5 – GAIL PETTIS Here In The Moment (OA2 Records)
6 – DON BRADEN & MARK RAPP The Strayhorn Project (Premium Music Solutions)
7 – JOE LOCKE For The Love Of You (E1 Entertainment)
8 – JOHN STEIN Raising The Roof (Whaling City Sound)
9 – TOBIAS GEBB & UNIT 7 Free At Last (Yummyhouse)
10 – JEREMY PELT Men Of Honor (HighNote)