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13th ANNUAL CHARLIE PARKER JAZZ FESTIVAL Print E-mail
Written by Ronaldo Oregano   
Saturday, 23 July 2005
Image A free music festival featuring jazz giants on Saturday, August 27 at Marcus Garvey Park, in Harlem and on Sunday, August 28 at Tompkins Square Park in the East Village presented by the City Parks Foundation.

The influence and inspiration that Charlie Parker bestowed upon his fellow musicians and listeners was so profound that its effects are still being felt strongly today. His rhythmic and harmonic inventions, partly responsible for the creation of bebop, can be heard coming from the instruments of musicians around the world. The Charlie Parker Jazz Festival annually assembles some of the finest musicians in the world who reflect Parker’s musical individuality and genius, to promote appreciation for this highly influential and world-renowned artist. The two days of concerts take place in the neighborhoods where Parker himself lived and worked.

Saturday, August 27:
  • -Bobby Watson & Horizon
  • -Odean Pope Saxophone Choir
  • -Hiromi
  • -Soweto Kinch with special guest Abram Wilson
Sunday, August 28:
  • -Geri Allen
  • -Odean Pope Saxophone Choir
  • -John Hicks Trio featuring David "Fathead" Newman
  • -Cindy Blackman Quartet
Detais follow:

Saturday, August 27, 2005 Beginning at 3:00 PM
Marcus Garvey Park

Bobby Watson & Horizon:
One of the most versatile alto saxophonists currently making jazz, Bobby Watson is equally at home playing hard-bop, free jazz or swing. He first made his mark as a member of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, acting as musical director for the legendary drummer (and helping a young Wynton Marsalis make his first recordings). Watson recently reunited with Horizon, the hard-bop quintet he founded in the early ‘80s. Featuring pianist Edward Simon, trumpeter Terel Stafford, bassist Essiet Essiet and drummer Victor Lewis, Horizon allows Watson to fully explore the subtle dynamics of his instrument.

Odean Pope Saxophone Choir:
Fiery post-bop tenor saxophonist Odean Pope got his start in the pit band of Philadelphia’s Uptown Theater, playing backup for people like Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and Aretha Franklin. But when John Coltrane asked him to sub for him in the Jimmy Smith trio, his jazz chops came to the fore. Pope is perhaps most famous for his long association with legendary drummer Max Roach, a collaboration which helped the saxophonist evolve his propulsive style. His mastery of circular breathing and multiphonics allows his to create unique improvisations and explore far-flung sonic possibilities before returning to earth with a solid swing sensibility. Pope will be appearing with his Saxophone Orchestra, a group consisting of nine saxophones and a rhythm section. Explosive creativity is sure to result.

Hiromi:
Only twenty-six years old and a piano prodigy with two critically acclaimed albums already under her belt, Hiromi Uehara is a creature of intensity. A native of Japan and a graduate of Berklee School Of Music, Hiromi’s music is marked by piano pyrotechnics, harmonic adventurousness and sheer unadulterated energy. Originally trained as a classical musician, her decision to pursue jazz came at age 17, after Chick Corea invited her to appear onstage with him. Reviewing her 2003 debut Another Mind, Jazziz magazine said: “This virtuoso has the mindset of a modern-jazz musician, discarding very little music because of potentially valuable influences that might be lost. Thus, Another Mind sounds like a convergence of Hiromi's influences, from Bach and Oscar Peterson to King Crimson and Sly & the Family Stone.”

Soweto Kinch with special guest Abram Wilson :
Over the years, everyone from Max Roach to Gang Starr’s Guru has tried to map the tricky common ground between jazz and hip-hop. But young British saxophonist Soweto Kinch may be one of the most adept at synthesizing the two genres. Son of a Barbadian father and a Jamaican mother, the young Birmingham-based musician is an intense improviser, who effortlessly throws reggae and hip-hop elements into his firmly post-bop musical style. His 2003 debut album Conversations With The Unseen won the prestigious Mercury Prize and his astonishing live shows have made him a rising star on the international jazz scene.


** Directions to Marcus Garvey Park: Located just south of the 125th Street shopping corridor along the axis of Fifth Avenue in Central Harlem, Marcus Garvey Park is easily accessible by public transportation. Take the 7th Avenue Express number 2 or 3 trains; the Lexington Avenue number 4, 5 or 6 trains; or Metro North to 125th Street. The M1 bus passes along the park and the M7, M60, M98, M100, M101, M102 and Bx15 buses all stop just a short walk away.

Sunday, August 28, 2005 Beginning at 3:00 PM
Tompkins Square Park

Geri Allen
Geri Allen is the quintessence of what today’s mainstream musician should be. Well versed in a variety of modern jazz styles, from bop to free, Allen steers a middle course in her own music, speaking in a cultivated and moderately distinctive voice, respectful of, but not overly impressed with conservatism. Allen plays with a spontaneity and melodic gift that greatly transcends rote imitation. Her improvisational style is at various times spacious and dense, rubato and swinging, blithe and percussive. She has a genuinely expressive, personal voice; her music an amalgam honestly conceived, intelligently accessible and well within the bounds of what is popularly expected from a jazz musician of her generation.

Odean Pope Saxophone Choir
Fiery post-bop tenor saxophonist Odean Pope got his start in the pit band of Philadelphia’s Uptown Theater, playing backup for people like Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and Aretha Franklin. But when John Coltrane asked him to sub for him in the Jimmy Smith trio, his jazz chops came to the fore. Pope is perhaps most famous for his long association with legendary drummer Max Roach, a collaboration which helped the saxophonist evolve his propulsive style. His mastery of circular breathing and multiphonics allows his to create unique improvisations and explore far-flung sonic possibilities before returning to earth with a solid swing sensibility. Pope will be appearing with his Saxophone Orchestra, a group consisting of nine saxophones and a rhythm section. Explosive creativity is sure to result.

John Hicks Trio featuring David "Fathead" Newman
Pianist John Hicks has been a vital part of the international jazz scene since the early 1960s. A veteran of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Betty Carter’s backing band and the Woody Herman Big Band, his style incorporates blues, swing, hard bop and free jazz. In addition to critically acclaimed trio, big band and duet recordings, he is a prolific sideman, recording with Sonny Rollins, Freddie Hubbard, Frank Foster, Roy Haynes, Sonny Stitt and many others. In each case, his playing is sheer improvisatory brilliance. For his performance at this year’s Charlie Parker Jazz Festival, Hicks will be joined on stage by legendary sax-man and Ray Charles associate David “Fathead” Newman. Hicks played on Newman’s recent tribute to his late boss I Remember Brother Ray on High Note Records.

Cindy Blackman Quartet
Touted as one of the top drummers in the world, Cindy Blackman has been hailed by Mike Zwerin of the International Herald Tribune as having, “…extraordinary finesse…obviously exceptional…Some drummers act, some react. Some keep time, others create it. Cindy Blackman is among the few who can.” She is a solid, dependable drummer who can easily move from straight-ahead jazz to rock to funk and back again. From her beginnings as a New York street performer, Blackman’s rising star has been seen by millions of people all over the world performing with her own group as well as providing the percussive backbone for retro funk rocker Lenny Kravitz. A force in her own right, Blackman puts the heart and soul of her music above all else. A true artist, she plays for the moment as if she’s directly inside each note, playing each beat as if it were a melody.



** Directions to Tompkins Square Park: Located between 7th to 10th streets in the East Village, Manhattan, between Avenue A & B. Take the L train to First Avenue. Walk South and East.
 
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