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Saturday, 20 March 2010 |
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Written by Administrator
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Thursday, 24 June 2004 |
Arne Fogel has been called "...one of the Twin Cities' most interesting people -- A singer, musician, actor, composer, writer, producer, music-film-comedy and entertainment historian, collector and oral encyclopedia."
- Bob Protzman, St. Paul Pioneer Press-Dispatch
Arne Fogel appears frequently as a singer at the top jazz venues in the Twin Cities, and served as the opening act for Rosemary Clooney during her December 2001 appearance at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis. He has produced several concerts for the Twin Cities Jazz Society, and has performed in the leading Twin Cities seasonal jazz festivals. His singing appearances have frequently been broadcast "live" on radio and TV, and he regularly hits the high-school-college-community meeting lecture circuit with songs and historical presentations of popular music and entertainment figures, and was a lecturer, performer, and conference consultant to the Hofstra University (Hempstead, WWW.ARNEFOGEL.COM |
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Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor
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Wednesday, 16 June 2004 |
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Hot Summer Jazz Festival Profile I first heard Doug Little a few years ago when he joined forces with Twin Cities native Craig Taborn to burn up the stage at the Artists’Quarter. Shortly thereafter came the release of the Doug Little Quartet’s debut CD, Subtle Differences (2000, Touché Jazz). It remains one of my favorite modern sax recordings. Since then, Taborn has built his reputation in New York as a creative composer and keyboard artist; Little still calls the Twin Cities home but also has established himself as a significant performer and composer with particular success in Europe. Frequently heard locally, Doug Little and his quartet help kick-off the Hot Summer Jazz Festival on Friday, June 18th, at the Dakota.
A native of San Francisco, Little graduated from Macalester with a degree in political science and French, studied with Joe Lovano and conducted music research in Cuba, including studies at the National School of Arts in Havana. Director of the Twin Cities Jazz Workshop since 1996, he has received support from the American Composers Forum (as their youngest and only jazz scholarship recipient), the Jerome Foundation, the Minnesota State Arts Board, the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, the Minneapolis Arts Commission, the McKnight Foundation, the Bush Foundation, and was recently selected to participate in the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra’s Artist in the Schools Program. |
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Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor
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Saturday, 05 June 2004 |
In late October 2003, I attended the grand opening party at the new Dakota in downtown Minneapolis. The appetizers and wine added to the festivities and Bobby Watson provided the night’s headline entertainment. But the very first performer to take the new Dakota stage was a young pianist, still in high school, named Paris Strother. At that time, I was struck by her poise as much as her talent—after all, this was the Dakota, a world renowned jazz club, and this was the opening night. Not a bad gig for a 17-year-old senior who, in between classes at DeLaSalle High School and her jazz studies, was also working on the Dakota’s waitstaff.
My next opportunity to hear Paris was in March, during her month-long Sunday night stint down the block at Rossi’s Blue Star Room, with fellow students on bass and drums. Now I was hooked. Paris has chops to burn, speed, power, and artistic inspiration bubbling up from the springs of McCoy Tyner and Ahmad Jamal.
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Written by Tom Surowicz
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Saturday, 22 May 2004 |
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A sleek, well-schooled, engaging full-sized jazz ensemble, that's really got a lot going on at the low end of the timbral spectrum. Led by a trombonist, and featuring plenty more trombones and bass trombones, plus a standout baritone sax player, this funky and modern big band can sound like a bunch of happy elephants on parade. Bann and his troops have several great original numbers in the book, plus some inspired and atypical arrangements of old warhorses -- e.g., "My Favorite Things," which comes off nothing like the version from "The Sound of Music," and also sounds nothing like the John Coltrane modal period classic small group rendition. Toss in the accomplished vocal stylings of Steve Faison, who nails the old classic, "Angel Eyes," and it's no wonder these guys have a CD out on Sea Breeze Records -- a top national label servicing big band enthusiasts. Once-a-month favorites at O'Gara's in St. Paul, the Stan Bann Big Band can really wail the blues, or get fashionably funky.
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 19 May 2004 |
 Connie Evingson is based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She has appeared in clubs and concert halls across the U.S., in Europe and Japan, and has been a guest soloist with the Minnesota Orchestra and the Toronto Symphony conducted by Doc Severinsen, and the Vocalessence Music Series with Bobby McFerrin. She is the creator of the original stage production, Fever, A Tribute to Peggy Lee, which she has performed at theatres across the country and excerpted at New York's Town Hall and is co-host of Singers and Standards on KBEM, the Twin Cities' premier jazz radio station. She was featured on the Smithsonian's Jazz Singers radio series, Jazziz Magazine's Vocals on Fire CD, and has released four CDs on Minnehaha Music, I Have Dreamed, Fever - A Tribute to Peggy Lee, Some Cats Know, and The Secret of Christmas. Her latest disc, Let it Be Jazz - Connie Evingson Sings the Beatles, produced by Minnehaha Music for the Summit label, was released September, '03. Also released this fall, Sharper Image's new compilation disc New Sirens of Song features a track from Connie's CD Fever - A Tribute to Peggy Lee, along with tracks by Diana Krall, Norah Jones, Stacy Kent and others. Connie's tribute to jazz elders CD Some Cats Know, released in 2000 with guest artists Al Grey, Ray Brown, Toots Thielemanns, Jack McDuff and Doc Severinsen and her latest release, Let it Be Jazz, both charted in the Top 50 for 8 weeks in the U.S. and Canada.
Evingson has been a member of the vocal jazz ensemble Moore By Four since 1986, with whom she has toured the U.S., Europe and Japan, appeared on Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion, and opened for Harry Connick, Jr., Joe Williams, Sarah Vaughan, Carmen McRae and Dizzy Gillespie. Her voice is often heard on TV and radio commercials for clients such as Target, Chili's, Mervyn's, Andersen Windows and others. Connie was among the top 15 contestants in the 1998 Thelonius Monk Vocal Competition and received the McKnight Artist Fellowship Award in 2000. |
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