|
Page 1 of 2 I returned from a
long October weekend of jazz in the Big Apple with a greater
appreciation for the venues in the Twin Cities. The Blue Note was
packed and the Dizzy Gillespie Alumni Band was legendary, but the
seating was cramped, the waitstaff indifferent at best, and the
audience less than attentive. Jazz Standard was classier, and Fred
Hersch and Kenny Barron sublime, but every time the kitchen door
opened, they were nearly drowned out by the clatter and chatter. The
Village Vanguard was the best listening environment, hands down, and
our front row seats afforded both visual and aural perfection as Geoff
Keezer and Jim Hall performed. The Vanguard will never win accolades
for atmosphere and comfort, and no one cares. It's all about jazz and
nothing else. But back home at the Dakota and Artists Quarter, I
appreciate our local efforts to create serious listening environments
while also providing comfortable seating and earnest service, along
with that dose of Minnesota Nice. In downtown St. Paul, the Artists Quarter,
like the Vanguard, is a no-frills, basement level setting where jazz is
the single attraction; the décor and seating are a few cuts (and
decades) above the Vanguard, however; you are always greeted at the
door with a smile; and even on a busy weekend, you can maneuver around
the room. If St. Paul would just ban smoking, the AQ would surely
challenge the best of New York (and its Twin Cities sister, the Dakota)
for the most jazz-friendly club in the nation.
December
continues the AQ's tradition of top local musicians six nights per
week, with a sprinkling of national acts and an occasional Sunday show.
Be sure to include the AQ in your holiday plans!
Standing Gigs There
are some long-standing acts that give the AQ its crowd of regulars and
provide newcomers with predictable options. On Mondays (no cover),
you'll find Green, formerly the SKJ Trio (7-9 pm), followed by Open Poetry readings, 9 pm-1 am. Then of course there's B-3 Organ Night with Billy Holloman
(every Tuesday night): For nine years, organ master Billy Holloman has
been the center of a standing gig at the AQ and "a genius at
manipulating the sweet sound of the B3," according to Don Berryman (Jazz Police). The regular Tuesday Night Band, featuring Holloman, AQ owner/drummer Kenny Horst, and multi-saxist Gary Berg recently released its first recording, This is Organ Night. Notes
Don Berryman, "Under Holloman's control, [the organ's] sound can be
sweet and thick as molasses, or it can cut through the room like
sharks' teeth." If you're lucky, Holloman might add some vocals! How Birds Work
generally appears monthly at the AQ and is one of the most popular
bands in town. A collaboration of four well-known area
musicians—guitarist Dean Granros, bassist Billy Peterson, pianist Peter
Schimke, and drummer Kenny Horst, the band will be on the AQ stage on Wednesday, December 15th. Guitarist Dean Granros "blends
the vocabulary of bebop, acid rock, and delta blues into a delightful
and potent cocktail that may leave you shaken or stirred" (Don
Berryman, Jazz Police). Bassist Billy Peterson grew up as a member of the legendary Peterson family of musicians, appeared on Bob Dylan's Blood on the Tracks, toured with the Steve Miller Band, and has arranged for Prince and David Sanborn. And drummer Kenny Horst
is a "great hard-bop, soul jazz, and fusion chops and the sweetest guy
you could meet" (Don Berryman). In his role with How Birds Work,
pianist Peter Schimke also displays his
skills as a composer and adds vocals to the mix. Sophisticated, often
subtle, always working toward the edge from a firm foundation, How
Birds Work offers multiple layers of challenge to the listener. Don't
forget to pick up their first, self-titled CD, on sale at the AQ!
National Talent You can count on Kenny Horst to book at least one or two national touring artists each month. The special treats for December:
Pianist David Hazeltine (December 10-12)
is no stranger to the Twin Cities or the AQ, having spent his childhood
and early career in the midwest. A native of Milwaukee, Hazeltine fell
in love with jazz when his mother gave him a Jimmy Smith recording. He
played his first professional gig (on organ) at age 13, switching to
piano at 15. Still in college, he became the house pianist at
Milwaukee's Jazz Gallery, where he played with such legends as Charles
McPherson, Eddie Harris, Sonny Stitt, Pepper Adams and Chet Baker. In
the 1980s he expanded his horizons, moving briefly to New York and
playing venues in Chicago and the Twin Cities as well as Milwaukee.
Settling permanently in New York City in the early 1990s, Hazeltine
played with Freddie Hubbard, James Moody, Louis Hayes, the Carnegie
Hall Jazz Band, and Marlena Shaw, for whom he also serves as arranger
and musical director; he also toured with John Hendricks.
Today,
Hazeltine has 15 recordings as leader to his credit, and six with the
collaborative ensemble, One for All, which includes sax giant Eric
Alexander. Hazeltine's most recent recordings (Manhattan Autumn, Sharp Nine, 2003; Close to You, Criss
Cross, 2004) show off his penchant for adventurous harmonies and
rhythms, with echoes of Art Tatum, Bill Evans, and Cedar Walton,
straddling the worlds of hard bop and 21st century
invention. Also heavily involved in jazz education through the
Wisconsin Conservatory of Music and Berklee College of Music, Hazeltine
was a recent guest on Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz. Noted Aaron Steinberg in Jazz Times,
"A player and writer with great respect for the melody, Hazeltine can
be surprisingly inventive with the harmonic and rhythmic possibilities
in a tune. Unobtrusive yet frequently exciting, Hazeltine always sounds
as if he is digging what he's playing, and his approach makes
well-known tunes sound fresh."
New York pianist Rick Germanson (also
transplanted from Milwaukee) returns to the Twin Cities following
sizzling performances at the AQ in October and at the Dakota last month
(with Louis Hayes and the Cannonball Legacy Band). And what better way
to close out 2004 (December 31st New Year's Eve Party with Carole Martin and Irv Williams) and usher in 2005 (January 1,
trio with Terry Burns and Kenny Horst)? Germanson "performs with
delicate grace...using just the right touch to evoke a variety of
textures" (Mark F. Turner, All About Jazz). Winner of the
Grand Prize in the American Pianist Association Jazz Piano Competition
in 1996, Germanson has performed and toured with a long list jazz
greats, including Elvin Jones, Wynton Marsalis, Slide Hampton, the
Mingus Big Band, and vocalists Kevin Mahogany and Carla Cook. In 2003,
Germanson released his first recording as leader (Heights, Fresh Sound New Talent), prompting Bill Donaldson (Cadence)
to note, "Germanson has grown into an artist who is as comfortable
accompanying a lead musician as he is performing his own music with
clarity and grace." On New Year's Day, Germanson will be joined by
local heavy hitters, Terry Burns on bass and Kenny Horst on drums.
Special Holiday Shows A Christmas Night tradition at the AQ, multi-instrumentalist Dave Karr
and his quartet can help you recover from an overdose of relatives, egg
nog, and holiday shopping. Most often heard locally on tenor, flute,
and clarinet, Karr also breaks out the baritone for his Gerry Mulligan
tribute band, Mulligan Stew. A native New Yorker, Karr has been a
fixture on the Twin Cities jazz scene for nearly 50 years, and has
appeared on multiple recordings with local artists, ranging from
vocalists (Connie Evingson) to small bands (Pete Whitman's X-Tet). Dave
blows a sweet horn and is always in the company of the best area
musicians.
Photo by Howard A. Gitelson Carole Martin & the Irv Williams Quartet has been the AQ's New Year's Eve tradition for nearly a decade. Notes Matt Peiken ( St. Paul Pioneer Press), "Veteran saxophonist Irv Williams
has always been about sweetness not power, and he's still gigging
strong" at 85. Raised in Cincinnati and Little Rock, Williams first
performed in the Twin Cities as a clarinet and sax player with the Navy
during Word War II. Turning down invitations to play with Count Basie
and Duke Ellington, he made the Twin Cities home and by now, has played
every conceivable local venue. Throughout his sixty-year career,
Williams has focused on the Great American Songbook and the tenor sax
as a solo vehicle. His knowledge of the idiom is legendary and fellow
musicians marvel at his ability to play any song in any key. "Mr.
Smooth" recently released a new recording, That's All? and
appears during Happy Hour every Friday night at the Dakota. A special
addition to Williams' quartet this New Year's Eve will be New York
pianist Rick Germanson (see above). Torch singer Carole Martin is also riding high on the release of her new collection of beautifully rendered standards, Pieces of a Dream.
Despite her longevity as a performer (she's worked venues like the
Point Supper Club, Mar-key Club, the Radisson, the AQ, and the Dakota),
it's been 35 years since her last recording. The AQ New Year's Eve
Party was a blast last year and, in the hands of Carole Martin and the
Irv Williams Quartet with Rick Germanson, promises to raise the roof
once again. Who needs Times Square?
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>
|