Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Billy Taylor, Jazz pianist and friend to millions, dead at 89 - Chicago Jazz music | Examiner.com

Billy Taylor
Today, Jazz Pianist, Composer, Educator and Jazz Ambassador leaves a legacy of musical greatness with the world.

Today, I am sharing some articles and blogs that speak to his history and contributions to the world stage.

Taylor has always been a great source of musical inspiration for me as a pianist and I have followed Billy Taylor's works with the Jazzmobile and his compositions and concerts since my own college years as a pianist, composer and music educator.
May he join those great pianists that he loved such as Fats Waller and Art Tatum in a heavenly Jam Session to be heard from above!!

Billy Taylor, Jazz pianist and friend to millions, dead at 89 - Chicago Jazz music | Examiner.com Neil Tessor (roll over link to see article)

IN THE MUSE • Performing Arts Blog (roll over link to see article)
Library of Congress Larry Appelbaum

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

A 'bit of Smithology at the Checkerboard

On the 1st super snowy night in Chicago this winter, Saxophonist Al (Alto) Smith showcased music from his new CD, titled Smithology at the Musician's Mecca set at the Checkerboard in Hyde Park on Monday, December 20, 2010.
The crowd who braved the weather were in for a warm treat because Al was in great form and very comfortable in presenting with some of his long time musical friends and compadres in a mellow jazz ensemble.
The group included pianist, Mike Logan, pianist, Genevive Smith (also his mom), and Mecca musicians, guitarist, Keith Henderson, bassist, Mike Sterling, drummer, Grady and percussionist, Tony Carpenter

Al had appeared at the Jazz Showcase earlier this summer with a full scale concert of his new CD, Smithology, which celebrates his musical family and legacy.

Tonight the music was fun and funky and a variety of genres including swing, straight ahead jazz, smooth jazz, R&B and funk were presented. Pianist, Genevive Smith set a musical foundation in her pianistic presentation as she covered a historical combination of jazz piano styles including classical technique, stride piano and even some deep boogie-woogie on After Hours!

Pianist, Mike Logan and guitarist, Keith Henderson kept their flow funky and contemporary while Al just kept swinging... through standards, Christmas Songs and songs from the album. Even Mecca's Crump sat in on Santa Claus Go Straight To the Ghetto!

The open mike part of the night included a outstanding young drummer named Taylor who sat in on several songs. Taylor is a Hyde Park Kenwood Academy alum and currently is a music student at UIC, in Champaign, Urbana. She was home for the holidays and stopped in to
play at the Musician's Mecca session. Taylor was excellent and she blew the audience away with her ability to hold her own with these seasoned musicians across several different types of songs.
To check out the music , pop the video!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Esperanza Spalding *A Night at the Chicago Symphony Center


Transcendental flight...
Esperanza took us with her
....into her own ethereal musical fantasy.......into her prive' musicale chamber
using her voice, her bass and her compositions and superb musical ensemble to transform the concert experience into an transcendental musical flight of fantasy.

Transcendent because the concert went well beyond the ordinary or common experience...


Traveling with Esperanza's voice is a journey in itself. In her musicale universe, she uses her own crayon colors..... her own musicale scalar systems... and her own musicale language which combines scatting and aria techniques....creating a sound that that is almost indescribable... but also mysterious, haunting and passionately unrelenting.
She uses her bass and voice and the gorgeous timbres of the string ensemble to create a chamber of sound, colors, moods and ritmo....rhythms.

In this concert the instrumentation of the ensemble included violin, viola, cello, bass, Grand piano, Fender Rhodes, trap drums and vocals. The ensemble includes Argentinean pianist, Leo Genovese, Award winning, Jazz violinist, Sara Caswell, Violist, Lois Martin, Cellist-composer, Jody Redhage, background vocalist, Lela Cyr and drummer, composer and producer, Terri Lyne Carrington.

Speaking of strings...the string arrangements were elegant, imaginative and simply stunning.
What was most surprising and unexpected was the way the string ensemble was used to play jazz chord voicings as "comps" (accompaniment) against the melody while the pianist played in and out of the changes on Grand piano and Fender Rhodes electric piano.
In many traditional jazz arrangements, the piano might used to play chord comps while the strings might be used to play the lines of background melody accompaniment.

If we didn't know already, in this concert, we found out very quickly that Esperanza is not a traditionalist by any means. Her choice of repertoire showed us that.... immediately!
Instead of playing expected songs that we may have experienced from watching her on video clips including the White House concert presentations, PBS or even her recent appearance as part of the tribute to Prince on the BET awards show,
she departed from the expected.....away from the light Brazilian tinged melodic songs that we could sing along with....
she departed and dared us to journey with her into a more classical journey into a forest filled with atonal and angular harmonies.
It was intense and intriguing performance filled with driving rhythms and haunting harmonies but...when one comes to a concert expecting to interact and hum along with light melodias and then the musica veers off into the dissonance reminiscent of composer, Bartok, it can be an unexpected turn in the road that can be almost off-putting.

As she showcased the deeper works of her new album, The Chamber Music Society's more instrumental pieces, the audience had a very visceral response. The Chicago Symphony center's patron capacity is 2350 and it was completely full to the rafters at this concert.
Many had come to experience the new hope of nu jazz fusion and neo soul.
Many had totally enjoyed the opening performance of violinist, Regina Carter and were quite vocal when she was performing. No polite golf claps here.
So it was a bit strange to see a few patrons leaving in the midst of Esperanza's performance.

In her first two songs in the concert at the Symphony Center Esperanza showed her command of polyphony and timing and harmonic depth as she weaved through an avant-garde tour de force of sound and rhythm. In her opening songs I felt the same rush and force... that I've experienced in watching live/or video performances of Jimi Hendrix, Prince, Coltrane, Jaco Pastorius, Santana or Aierto Moreira and Flora Purim. Such a unique musical voice and sound.

For some, her flight into an atonal ascent of harmonies was just too involved to follow....
The meter of the rhythms felt too complex to find a mellow R&B groove to bob your head to....and while it proved to be too much for just a few in the audience...
the majority of patrons stayed to see where she might journey next.

As a musician, I think I understood her taking an opportunity to present some complex compositions in a setting such as Symphony Center, the home of the great Chicago Symphony Orchestra and award winning classical performers but I also longed to hear the sounds and songs that brought me into the world of Esperanza's music..
Songs like... Antonio Carlos Jobim's, Inutil Paisagem" (known in English as "If You Never Come To Me") and the funk and flow of She Got To You and I Know You Know had been floating in my head all the way to the concert.
For her new and emerging audiences who may not have found her in the jazz world, it would have been interesting to see her play a combination of the multi-genres that she has become known for.

Esperanza creates her own flow ... her own vocal dance! Her vocals are laced with Gypsy-like harmonies and she weaves in the musical elements of Classical aria, Jazz scatting, Brazilian musical nuances and neo soul.. funk. She uses her voice like an instrument, swinging minor melodias against the backdrop of violin, viola, cello and her bass. She composes intriguing music that is sensual as well as fun... like a stroll on the beaches of Rio.

With vocals, light like souffle... and rhythms spicy like gumbo... she's fun to watch as she dances a tango with her bass, barefoot, light and free .. like an Argentine tango.. a Milonga... singing, scatting, playing all over the songs with a virtuosity that is scary.

Esperanza Spalding , 26, born in Portland Oregon is a young performer-composer growing.... and is described as a 'multi-instrumentalist, jazz bassist and vocalist who draws upon many genres in her own compositions.' She began playing violin at age four and by the time Spalding was five, she had taught herself to play the violin and was playing with the Chamber Music Society of Oregon. Spalding stayed with the Chamber Music Society of Oregon until she was fifteen and left as concertmaster. - Source-Wikipedia


In 2005, Esperanza Spalding become the focus of jazz magazines and has toured with major performers including Patti Austin and Stanley Clarke. She has released two albums of jazz fused with other genres and has achieved critical acclaim from the musical community as a performer-composer.
Recently, she has made two appearances at White House concert presentations, was picked by President Obama to perform at his Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony in 2009; at the Austin City PBS; on the Jimmy Kimmel's show; the David Letterman show and an appearance on the BET awards show as part of the tribute to the musician, Prince.

In December 2010, she was nominated for a Grammy as a best new artist.

For a interesting experience with Esperanza Spaulding
go to her website at: www.esperanzaspalding.com/ and check out her videos on Youtube.


Chicago Symphony Center performance
AA 12/10/2010

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Buy Black Age books for Holiday and Kwanzaa Gifts!

Give the great gift of reading...for the Holidays and Kwanzaa!
Parents and educators are encouraged to check out these exciting books from the new Black Age book rack at the DuSable Museum giftshop. Here you can find the best of the Black Age collection from artists from all over the country. Support literacy... and buy some great products for the holidays!
The DuSable Museum of African American History, the first and oldest institution of its kind in the country has been dedicated to the collection, preservation, interpretation and dissemination of the history and culture of Africans and Americans of African descent for more than 46 years. Visit www.dusablemuseum.org to learn more about the museum.
Artist, Afua Richardson signs her work at a recent book signing at the DuSable Museum gift shop during the Black Age XIII in Chicago.
Artist, Eric Battle signs his book for a young reader.
Got that Brother Man!
Artist, Arie Monroe shows buyers her art and her books for sale.
Artist and Art Teacher, Turtel Onli explains the works of two of his Black Age characters, Malcolm 10 and Sustah-Girl to students at the Out of Sequence Exhibit created by John Jennings and Damian Duffy.
On the Black Age rack you will find hard hitting urban Afrocentric action-packed graphic novels like BLANGA from Onli Studios.
Choices, Choices..... Which one shall I buy?
The DuSable Museum Gift shop
The Du Sable Museum is located in Chicago, Illinois at
740 East 56th Place
Chicago, IL 60637-1495
(773) 947-0600

For more information about the educational applications of
Graphic novels, increasing literacy
and about buying Black Age products go to: blackageofcomics.com
Photos by Aki Antonia c2010
(click on to enlarge)

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Celebrating Veteran's Day In Bronzeville!

3rd Ward Alderman, Pat Dowell  shows support for the Veteran's Parade on ML King Drive.
 
 
All photos by Aki Antonia c2010
(Click to enlarge)
BAB - Chicago area ROTC and Marching Bands were all spit. polish and shine in their military dress as they marched in a well organized parade for Veteran's Day in Bronzeville. This annual parade was presented by the The Chicago Defender  Newspaper Charities. The parade went north on Dr. Martin Luther King drive, starting at 43rd St. (Muddy Waters Drive) and ending at a Veteran's Day  memorial ceremony held at the Victory Monument on 35th and King Drive.  This monument was the first in Illinois and the United States erected to honor Black soldiers who fought in World War I. 

The Chicago area bands were excellent and the students honored the Veterans with  well rehearsed band performances and lively military chants.  This parade appeared about three times as large as the previous year (2009) with more Chicago area schools marching band participation. There was diversity,  dignity , discipline and respect on display in the  promenade. 
I saw many a tear and a salute from the crowd as the students brought honor to our nation's Veterans. 
It was a job well done
AA 11/11/10

Friday, November 12, 2010

Veteran's Day Parade in Bronzeville 2010

The Chicago Defender Charities held its annual Veteran's Day Parade in Bronzeville on Dr. Martin Luther King drive , starting from 43rd St. (Muddy Waters Drive) and ending at the Victory Monument on 35th and King Drive. ROTCs and Marching High School bands were in military dress as they marched with precision and discipline honoring Veterans in the 2010 parade.
The Victory Monument
was dedicated November 11, 1928 on Armistice Day. The bronze panels surrounding the base of the monument were sculpted by Leonard Crunelle, as well as the soldier standing on the top of the monument later added in 1936. The monument was erected by the people of Illinois in memory of the Black soldiers who died in France from the 8th Infantry of the Illinois National Guard during World War I which was reorganized as the 370th Infantry of the 93rd Division of the United States Army.
Thousands were present at the dedication ceremony where Governor Len Small delivered the principal address honoring the one hundred and thirty seven men who died serving their country. This monument, according to Governor Small, was the first in Illinois and the United States erected to honor Black soldiers who fought in World War I.
Wreaths were placed and community leaders and politicians spoke in a ceremony honoring Veterans at the Victory Monument.
Buffalo Soldiers celebrate Veterans Day 2010 at the Victory Monument in Bronzeville.
Parade organizer, Colonel Eugene Scott and community resident, Cyd Langston
Colonel Eugene Scott smiles at a little one at the event.
Tuskegee Airman, James J. McCastle
shows his Air Force papers. He graduated from high school at age 16
and joined the air force at age 17 because he wanted to learn to fly.
Chicago Defender Fine Arts Writer, Earl Calloway and Mayoral candidate,
William Dock Walls
Chicago Defender Fine Arts Writer, Earl Calloway, Aki Antonia and Mayoral candidate,
William Dock Walls
(Click on photos to enlarge)
All photos by Aki Antonia c2010