Kevin Whitehead appears in the following:
Michele Rosewoman Goes Back To Afro-Cuban Jazz's Future
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Holiday Music To Bring Folks Together
Monday, December 16, 2013
Ella Fitzgerald's Early Years Collected In A Chick Webb Box Set
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
William Parker's Abstract Grooves Collected In Box Set
Thursday, December 05, 2013
No Need To Cook The Books: Booker Ervin's Debut LP Reissued
Monday, November 11, 2013
Tenor saxophonist Booker Ervin came to New York in 1958. Pianist Horace Parlan heard him and invited Ervin to sit in one night with a band he worked in. That's how Ervin got hired by bassist Charles Mingus, who featured him on albums like Blues and Roots ...
Amir ElSaffar Navigates Uncharted Blue Notes On 'Alchemy'
Monday, November 04, 2013
Trumpeter Amir ElSaffar grew up near Chicago, playing jazz trumpet. In the early 2000s, while in his mid-20s, he began investigating the music of his Iraqi heritage, studying in Baghdad and with expatriate musicians in Europe. Then he began combining the two.
ElSaffar's new album Alchemy is a step ...
When Duke Flirted With The Queen
Monday, September 09, 2013
In 1958, at an arts festival in Yorkshire, Duke Ellington was presented to Queen Elizabeth II. They tied up the reception line for a few minutes, exchanging royal pleasantries; our Duke politely flirted with Her Majesty. Soon afterward, maybe that very night, Ellington outlined the movements of The Queen's ...
'Beauty' On Orrin Evans' Block
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
On Philadelphia pianist Orrin Evans' trio version of Ornette Coleman's "Blues Connotation," drummer Donald Edwards and bassist Eric Revis set a New Orleans second-line groove tinged with vintage hip-hop. A beat like that is catnip to Evans, who gets right down and rolls in it. He quotes from ...
'Looking For The Next One' Reveals An Underappreciated Sax Trio
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
The English trio S.O.S. — saxophonists John Surman, Mike Osborne and Alan Skidmore — was formed in 1973, and made only one LP for the Ogun label a couple years later. They didn't last long, but they were the first of many horn choirs born in the '70s and ...
'The Edenfred Files': Darryl Harper's Blues-Infused Jazz
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
In jazz, the clarinet went into eclipse for awhile, drowned out by louder trumpets and saxes. The instrument has long since made a comeback, and the modern clarinet thrives in settings where it doesn't have to shout to be heard.
Take "Spindleshanks," a little out-of-sync boogie-woogie for Darryl Harper's clarinet ...
Two New Jazz Albums Recall The Wide Open Spaces of The West
Tuesday, July 09, 2013
Portland, Ore. tenor saxophonist Rich Halley's quartet album Crossing the Passes on his Pine Eagle label commemorates a week-long trek over the Wallowa mountain range in Northeast Oregon, where Halley's been climbing since he was a boy. We could talk about his dual obsessions with music and nature ...
'My Ellington': A Pianist Gives Duke Her Personal Touch
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
At the keys, Duke Ellington abstracted from stride piano, which modernized ragtime. Ellington's own spare percussive style then refracted through Thelonious Monk and Cecil Taylor, as well as a generation of freewheeling pianists active in Europe, like Aki Takase. Her new solo piano album is My Ellington, ...
Cécile McLorin Salvant: Making Old Songs New Again
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Singer Cécile McLorin Salvant was born in Miami to French and Haitian parents, and started singing jazz while living in Paris. Back in the U.S., she won the Thelonious Monk vocal competition in 2010. The 23-year-old's first album, WomanChild, is now out — and few jazz debuts by singers or ...
Sarah Vaughan: A New Box Set Revels In Glorious Imperfections
Monday, May 20, 2013
Singer Sarah Vaughan came up in the 1940s alongside bebop lions Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, starting out in Earl Hines' big band. Hines had hired her as his singer and deputy pianist, while Gillespie praised her fine ear for chords as she grasped the arcane ...
100 Years Of Woody Herman: The Early Bloomer Who Kept Blooming
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Woody Herman, who would have turned 100 on Thursday, bloomed early and late — and then later still. He turned pro by age 9, singing and dancing in movie theaters on summer vacation. He'd perform one song deemed too risqué for radio when he recorded it decades later: "My ...
Bing Crosby: From The Vaults, Surprising Breadth
Monday, May 13, 2013
Bing Crosby was the biggest thing in pop singing in the 1930s, a star on radio and in the movies. He remained a top star in the '40s, when Frank Sinatra began giving him competition.
Crosby often sounded funnier, and more at ease, on radio than on records. ...
Earl Hines: Big Bands And Beyond On A New Box Set
Thursday, April 11, 2013
By 1928, Earl Hines was jazz's most revolutionary pianist, for two good reasons. His right hand played lines in bright, clear octaves that could cut through a band. His left hand had a mind of its own. Hines could play fast stride and boogie bass patterns, but then his southpaw ...
Barry Altschul: The Jazz Drummer Makes A Comeback
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
The release last year of a 2007 reunion by the late Sam Rivers' trio confirmed what a creative drummer Altschul is. He has been one for decades. Altschul was a key player on the 1970s jazz scene, when the avant-garde got its groove on. Now, as then, he's great ...
Ben Goldberg's Variations: Two New Albums From A San Francisco Jazz Staple
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Ben Goldberg has been a staple of San Francisco's improvisational-music scene ever since he helped put together the New Klezmer Trio two decades ago. More recently, as a member of the quartet Tin Hat, he's set e.e. cummings poems to music. In between, he's recorded in a wide variety ...