Thursday Jazz
TULA’S JAZZ CLUB: Thomas Marriott CD Release Party for Human Spirit
2214 2nd Ave, 206-443-4221, 7:30pm
JAZZ ALLEY: Keiko Matsui
2033 6th Ave, 206-441-9729, 7:30 & 10:00pm
MARTIN’S ON MADISON: Jerry Zimmerman
1413 14th Ave, 206-325-7000, 7:30pm
IMPfest: UW Big Band
Floyd and Delores Jones Playhouse, 4045 University Way NE, 7:30
NEW ORLEANS: Ham Carson Quintet
114 First Ave S, 206-622-2563, 7:00pm
THAIKU: Jon Alberts, Jeff Johnson, Tad Britton
5410 Ballard Ave NW, 8:30pm
LUCID: The Hang
5241 University Ave NE, 206-402-3042, 9:00pm
BOXLEY’S: Alexey Nikolaev & Tony Foster
101 West North Bend Way, North Bend, WA, 425-292-9307, 7:00pm
BARCA: Phil Sparks / Adam Kessler Trio
1510 11th Avenue, Seattle, (206) 325-8263, 9:00pm
FAIRE GALLERY CAFE: Silent Structures
1351 E Olive Way, Seattle, 206-652-0781, 8:00pm
VITO’S: Ivory Smith
927 9th Ave, Seattle, 206-682-2695
DISTRICT LOUNGE: Cassia Demayo Quintet
4507 Brooklyn Ave NE, Seattle, 206-634-2000, 9:00pm
EGAN’S BALLARD JAM HOUSE: Josh Deutsch and Nico Soffiato
1707 NW Market Street, 206-789-1621, 7:00pm
Katy Bourne’s route to jazz has been peripatetic to say the least. Back in the 1980s, when her focus was fully on acting and writing, she bounced from Oklahoma to Iowa to New Mexico to the Northeast. In 1992 she took an extended break, re-emerging a few years later as lead singer for two Seattle-based blues bands. Soon afterward she discovered teacher Greta Matassa and concurrently unleashed her inner jazz stylist.





For its fourth album, the Jason Parker Quartet takes a sharp departure from its previous three efforts. Rather than simply cutting another solid straight-ahead quartet date, trumpeter Parker has added vocalist Michele Khazak, and multi-woodwind blower Cynthia Mullis, to reinterpret an entire folk-pop album: Nick Drake’s Five Leaves Left (Island Records, 1969). Despite being far outside the typical jazz cannon, Drake’s music continues to receive coverage from a number of jazz artists, including pianist Brad Mehldau, proving that unexpected choices can yield truly inspired performances, and Five Leaves Left is just that, in spades.












Bassist Chuck Deardorf went into the hospital today to receive a kidney transplant from his brother.




