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This newsletter itself has been dormant since I gave up covering jazz regularly for the Boston Globe in fall 2006. It made more sense having it when I was sending out stories every week. Maybe one of these days I'll start it up again. My apologies to anyone who has been wondering what had become of it in the meantime. — Bill Beuttler

Newsletter

Tom Harrell, Eldar, Joshua Redman's Elastic Band and Meshell Ndegeocello

25-Jun-2005

Today's Boston Globe may or may not have my review of 18-year-old piano phenom Eldar's Thursday night set at Scullers in it. I couldn't find it when I looked for it this morning. But I did find it online. So maybe if it's not in today's paper, it'll be in Sunday's or Monday's.

Yesterday's Jazz Picks omitted the vocalist Nora York's appearance at Jimmy Tingle's Off Broadway Theater in Somerville. I meant to put her in there, but forgot. The picks are a pretty inexact science, especially when someone is playing in a venue not generally associated with jazz.

One odd-venue show that I did remember was tonight's pairing of Joshua Redman's Elastic Band with Meshell Ndegeocello at the Paradise Rock Club. And the week's column was devoted to the superb trumpeter and composer, who will be performing in Marblehead tonight.

* * * * *

Teenage pianist Eldar displays skill, passion beyond his years
By Bill Beuttler, Globe Correspondent  |  June 25, 2005

The future of jazz looked bright Thursday night at Scullers, where 18-year-old piano phenom Eldar packed the house with an audience ranging from teens younger than himself to folks in their golden years.

Eldar, who dispenses with his last name (Djangirov) professionally, sauntered onstage in blue jeans and an untucked black shirt, its sleeves unbuttoned at the wrist, and launched into "Point of View." The piece, a fiendishly fast and challenging original performed with sax virtuoso Michael Brecker on Eldar's debut album, showed off the pianist at his best.

"Point of View" is a tune requiring technical wizardry, and Eldar carried it off breathtakingly. Brecker wasn't with him at Scullers, but the tune didn't lack much for his absence, and Eldar's trio mates — bassist Marco Panascia and drummer Carmen Intorre — stayed tightly alongside the young leader despite it being Intorre's first night on the job.

Bobby Timmons's "Moanin'," made famous by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, followed. This one featured a lot of athletic pianism as well, somewhat to its detriment. The bluesy funkiness of Blakey's version got mostly stripped out in favor of flashy chops. It called to mind the veteran jazzman offering a young colleague the pseudo-compliment "You play a lot of notes" — the older guy's slyly made point being that fewer notes and more feeling would be an improvement.

Eldar also played more filigree than necessary on the ballad "Body & Soul" but revealed a refined touch to complement his ability to play at warp speed. When the others left the stage, Eldar dazzled the crowd with a blazing-fast run-through of Chick Corea's "Armando's Rhumba," hamming it up with a classical introduction before racing through the piece at a pace Corea might have had trouble keeping up with.

"Raindrops," an Eldar original from the CD, with a faintly new agey feel to it, was followed by a bland cover of "Fly Me to the Moon," its piano-bar prettiness propped up only slightly by Eldar's technique. The pace and interest level picked up again for Eldar's tribute to Herbie Hancock, "Watermelon Island," for which Panascia switched to electric bass.

Then the set ended as strongly as it began. Eldar took an unaccompanied encore on "Take the 'A' Train" that had him sounding like a hyper-caffeinated piano roll. Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn would have loved it. 

© Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
 
* * * * *

For Harrell, music soothes and inspires
By Bill Beuttler, Globe Correspondent  |  June 24, 2005

It's fine with Tom Harrell that his quintet gig in Marblehead tomorrow night will take place in the town's Unitarian Universalist Church.

"I always like to play in churches," he says by phone from Manhattan. "I become more centered, and I realize that in a sense the entire universe is a church. When I first played in a church in New York with [saxophonist] Arnie Lawrence, it had a very purifying effect on me."

Harrell's discomfort on bandstands is well-documented. Harrell, who turned 59 last week, is routinely ranked among the best trumpeters and composers of his generation. But he is also afflicted with schizophrenia, and the disease makes being onstage tougher for him than for other musicians. And yet, when the time comes to play, he is inevitably transformed.

"Harrell shuffles out of the darkness and onto the stage, where the four members of his band wait, and he begins shaking," Jonathan Eig wrote in a 1998 profile of Harrell for Esquire. "His eyebrows twitch. His lips smack. He stares at the ground, trying hard not to make eye contact with his audience. He doesn't want to give the voices or the hallucinations a chance to pop back into his head. 'I apologize for my lack of charisma,' he once told a club full of people."

Harrell's tendency toward withdrawal isn't limited to the stage. "Things can overstimulate him if there's a lot going on, or a lot of people in a room," says Xavier Davis, who was Harrell's pianist for more than eight years. "So sometimes he'll walk to a corner of the room and just face the wall, just to kind of get away from everything. But when he knows you he's actually pretty funny. When you start talking to him about something he's really into — usually music — he opens up, and he's got a great memory. He's very witty. Very quick."

In fact, he can be downright loquacious, with a memory that's awesome for its detail. Harrell doesn't merely recall having his dad take him to see Louis Armstrong perform a half-century ago. He'll tell you that Billy Kyle, Edmond Hall, and Trummy Young were in Armstrong's band that night. Ask him how Hank Jones, who recorded a version of Harrell's "Because I Love You" on his new CD, became acquainted with Harrell's work, and he'll rattle off the details of several semi-ancient connections.

"I first met Hank when we played a gig with Chuck Israel's big band at the New School in 1975, '76," Harrell begins. "And I did a small group thing with him I was lucky to do, and he complimented my playing then. Plus I think probably the fact that I had recorded in 1975 at Rudy Van Gelder's. We played a composition of mine with Idris Muhammad on the 'House of the Rising Sun' LP, Kudo Records, entitled 'Sudan,' co-composed by Idris Muhammad and myself. Roland Hanna was the piano player on that recording session." And maybe Jones first heard about Harrell from Hanna, he continues, and — well, you get the idea.

But if you ask whether he's prouder of his composing or his soloing, he demurs.

"To me, the difference between composing and improvising is that, well" — he laughs — "there is no difference, basically. An improviser is by definition a composer.

"All the great improvisers are also great composers," Harrell continues. "[John] Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, Ornette Coleman, Freddie Hubbard, Woody Shaw, Lee Morgan, Fats Navarro, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk — they're all great composers as well as players. It's true sometimes players are known more for their interpretations of other people's music. But they're also composers. When they improvise, it's composition, even though it's not notated. The conventional way of thinking may not be that it's composition, but once an improviser starts improvising, it becomes composition."

Harrell may not look like he enjoys himself onstage, but he relishes the opportunity to spontaneously create music.

"Spontaneity is the most important thing," he says. "I love playing in the moment, and in a concert situation especially, because for one thing you have the interplay with the audience."

Tom Harrell performs at Marblehead Summer Jazz 2005 tomorrow at 8 p.m. Tickets $25 in advance, $27 at the door. Unitarian Universalist Church, 28 Mugford St., Marblehead. Call 781-631-1528 or visit www.marbleheadjazz.org.

Jazz for kids: Youngsters will be getting a hands-on introduction to jazz via call-and-response, singing, scatting, and dancing at Zeitgeist Gallery Sunday afternoon, when Hayes Greenfield's Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz makes its Boston area debut. The program is aimed at families and kids ages 3 and up, and no instruments are required. Showtime is 2 p.m. Admission is $8. Call 617-876-6060 or visit www.zeitgeist-gallery.org. 

© Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

* * * * *

Calendar Jazz Picks

Sat 6-25

Joshua Redman's Elastic Band and Meshell Ndegeocello
Paradise Rock Club, 967 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. 617-562-8800. 9 p.m. $33.50.

What's a jazz musician like Joshua Redman (above) doing in a rock club like the Paradise? Something akin to the genre blurring Miles Davis was doing in San Francisco's Fillmore back in the early '70s beginnings of jazz-rock fusion. Redman is in town promoting his Elastic Band's late May release, "Momentum," on which he eschews the hard-core acoustic jazz of the SFJAZZ Collective in favor of electrified rhythms of his own, with his core group of Sam Yahel on keyboards and either Brian Blade or Jeff Ballard on drums joined by a parade of guest artists from the realms of jazz and rock. One of those guest artists, guitarist Jeff Parker, will join Redman, Yahel, and Ballard at the Paradise. Another guest from the album, Meshell Ndegeocello, will share the bill with Redman at the Paradise show, touting her just-released "Dance of the Infidel." Ndegeocello's orientation is generally more R&B and soul, but on the new disc she's joined by a long list of jazz stars including Jack DeJohnette, Don Byron, Kenny Garrett, Oliver Lake, Wallace Roney, and Cassandra Wilson. Ndegeocello calls the CD "spiritual groove music," a description that applies equally well to Redman's "Momentum."

Thurs 6-23 Eldar The piano prodigy Eldar Djangirov sounds more like Oscar Peterson or Art Tatum in his phenomenal technique than any 18-year-old has a right to. But his CD, "Eldar," shows he can play ballads with sensitivity as well. Scullers, DoubleTree Hotels Guest Suites, 400 Soldiers Road, Boston. 617-562-4111. 8 and 10 p.m. Ticket $14, $52 with dinner.

BILL BEUTTLER



Articles & Reviews

Jazz Profiles
No matter the genre, Brown's voice carries
Rhythm & blues great Ruth Brown
Two Nights of Jazz Royalty
Herbie Hancock, Jim Hall, Nancy Wilson
Hitting a High Note
Tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano
Forty years and still tuned in
Singer-songwriter-pianist Dave Frishberg
For Branford Marsalis, art changed his tune
Saxophonist Branford Marsalis
Saxophone Colossus
Unpublished Sonny Rollins profile
When Harry Met Stardom
It had to be him — Harry Connick Jr.
The Charlie Watts Interview
The Rolling Stones' drummer hits the road with a jazz big band.
Reviews (Books)
Parsing Paradise
On Paradise Drive, by David Brooks
Fussell's take on the dress code isn't 'Uniform'
Uniforms: Why We Are What We Wear, by Paul Fussell
Bright Lights, Big Egos
How to Lose Friends and Alienate People, by Toby Young
Books in Brief
Stan Getz: A Life in Jazz, by Donald L. Maggin
Reviews (Jazz)
Hancock bonds with friends in Boston
Herbie Hancock with Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette
The Bad Plus is worth all the fuss
The Bad Plus, Regattabar
Branford Marsalis keeps things current
Branford Marsalis Quartet, Regattabar
Energized Tyner quartet unchains the melodies
McCoy Tyner Quartet, Regattabar
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Life or Death Decision
Scott Turow discusses capital punishment
Black, White, and Crimson
The fallout from Lawrence Summers' rebuke of Cornel West.
Mourning in America
World Trade Center victim Michael Rothberg.
We Work Too Hard
Why Americans Are Working So Hard.
Sidebars, We Work Too Hard
John Kenneth Galbraith, Robert Reich, Juliet Schor, and others weigh in.
Travel, Food, Sports, Etc.
It's a lot nearer than Napa
Drinking and driving in the Hudson Valley
Father knows best
Hot dogs and ice cream sell, he said — and they do.
Casanova Rules
The legendary lover's guide to womanizing.
Learning Lebanese
Sampling Lebanese cuisine in Beirut with former hostage Terry Anderson.
The Great Cigar Debate
If you think Cuba makes the best cigars, guess again.
Underwater Park
Snorkeling in Key Largo
Baseball and Beaches
Spring training on Florida's Gulf Coast
Swain's Way
Racquetball champion Cliff Swain
Coach Newton's Law
Cross-country coach Joe Newton
Dance Your Breath Away
Chicago's Hubbard Street Dance Company
Literature & Theatre
Augie's March
Saul Bellow's Great American Novel turns 50.
The Provocateur
American Repertory Theatre artistic director Robert Woodruff.
Chicago in Their Sights
Nelson Algren and A.J. Liebling on Chicago.
O, Albany
William Kennedy's Albany
Tough Guy, Mad Poet
Jim Harrison's northern Michigan
Appetite for the Absurd
Mordecai Richler's Montreal
Hanging on in the Windy City
Studs Terkel's Chicago
Media
ESPN — The Magazine
A rival to Sports Illustrated is launched.
Spreading the "Gospel"
Washington Monthly founder Charles Peters.
A Paler Shade of Yellow
William Randolph Hearst III tries on the family crown.
Legends of a Hairy Man
Outside magazine publisher Larry Burke.
Meeting Citizen Wenner
Did Rolling Stone's editor and publisher really kill the New Journalism?
Whatever Happened to the New Journalism?
Unpublished master's thesis featuring interviews with its leading practioners.