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Hot can be cool, and cool can be hot, and each can be both. But hot or cool, man, jazz is jazz. - Louis Armstrong |
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Wednesday, 07 January 2009 |
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3rd annual Portland Jazz Festival- February 17-26 |
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Written by Ronaldo Oregano
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Monday, 09 January 2006 |
Dee Dee Bridgewater, New Orleans trumpeter Nicholas Payton, guitar wizard Bill
Frisell, young vibes master Stefon Harris, vocalists Susan Werner and Rene Marie, sax man
Miguel Zenon, pianist Geoff Keezer, and the son of the legendary John Coltrane, Ravi Coltrane,
will join McCoy Tyner, Eddie Palmieri, and Jim Hall for an all-star lineup at the 3rd annual Portland
Jazz Festival, presented by Qwest, February 17-26.
Dee Dee Bridgewater, the only American artist to receive both a Grammy Award (in 1997) for her
Ella Fitzgerald tribute, Dear Ella, and a Tony Award 30 years earlier for her portrayal of Glinda in the
original Broadway production of The Wiz, has now created a new, highly theatrical jazz project, J ai
Deux Amours.. This series of lush French love songs has been a project in the works for almost 10
years. A passionate cycle of songs that traces the arc of a love affair-literally and figuratively-of a
young African-American woman expatriated to Paris with all of the emotions that emanate from the
heart. Utilizing her magnificent vocal range, intensity of expression and keen wit, Ms. Bridgewater
reflects upon her own life while simultaneously presenting various periods of time in the history of
French music.
Bridgewater now splits her time between the US and France, and was recently made a member of
the Haut Conseil de la Francophonie, an organization that recognizes individuals with an international
perspective who have made significant contributions to French culture and society. As an Honorary
French Ambassador to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization,
Bridgewater dedicates
much of her personal time to an appeal for international solidarity to finance global, grass roots efforts
in the fight against world hunger. She has also announced that she will spend a majority of 2006 in
the former French colony of Mali, Africa, working with underprivileged female musicians.
After her first professional experience as vocalist with the Thad Jones/Mel Louis Big Band, she
became a frequent collaborator throughout the 70's with such jazz notables as Max Roach, Sonny
Rollins, Dexter Gordon, and Dizzy Gillespie. She moved to France in the early 80's before reestablishing
US residence in Las Vegas 2 years ago. In all, J ai Deux Amours is her 16th album.
Simultaneously, she has pursued a theatrical career in musical theater with The Wiz, Ellington's
Sophisticated Ladies, Black Ballad, Carmen Jones, and a London production of Lady Day, a Billie
Holiday tribute for which Bridgewater received the British Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a
musical. She also became the first African-American to portray the role of Sally Bowles in Cabaret.
"ai Deux Amours is my way of thanking France, a country that opened its arms to me," explains
Bridgewater. "Me, a little Black girl from Flint, Michigan! Like Josephine Baker, J ai deux amours,
mon pays et Paris!"
Dee Dee Bridgewater's J ai Deux Amours, presented by Enterprise Rent-A-Car, will be staged on
Saturday, February 18, 8:00 PM, at the Portland Marriot Downtown on the Waterfront, Oregon
Ballroom.
 Nocolas Payton, Photo by Don Berryman
Nicholas Payton, who will be in residence during the first of the two Portland Jazz Festival
weekends, February 17-19, will appear with his own quartet on Saturday, February 17, 4:30 PM, at
The Crystal Ballroom, and will collaborate as a special guest with Eddie Palmieri on Sunday,
February 19, at 2:00 PM, at the Portland Marriott Downtown on the Waterfront, Oregon Ballroom. In
comparing Payton's trumpet sound to other contemporary, New Orleans trumpeters, the New York
Times has said, "Payton's tone is the most magnificent with the biggest sound as if it were not made
from sound waves but from something more tactile."
Like many New Orleans jazz musicians, Payton started playing the trumpet at a very early age (age 4
to be exact). Between the influence of his mother, a classical pianist, and his father, Walter, a
renowned New Orleans jazz bassist, young Nicholas developed quickly. He went on to graduate
from high school at New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts, which also has such alumnus as
Donald Harrison, Branford Marsalis, Marcus Roberts-all of whom worked under the tutelage of jazz
director Clyde Kerr, Jr. Then, like the others, went on to study at the University of New Orleans with
Ellis Marsalis.
After 8 recordings, he has been referred to as one of the primary "keepers of the flame" of traditional
jazz emanating from New Orleans. He has received 5 Grammy nominations, and 2 Grammy
Awards-one for his collaboration with the late, legendary Doc Cheatham, and another for his tribute
to Louis Armstrong-all before the age of 30!
During his final semester at the University of New Orleans, Ellis Marsalis wrote, "Nicholas is a great
musician, who is very serious about learning and developing all aspects of jazz musicianship. He has
tremendous talent and a work ethic that matches his talent. This rare combination ensures an
originality fundamental to jazz." Nothing has changed
Guitar wizard Bill Frisell moved to Seattle in 1989 after a long association with John Zorn and other
members of the New York avant-garde jazz community. Since moving to the Pacific Northwest,
Frisell has found his own voice, which has been described as Americana Music, blending jazz with
various other American music art forms from country and bluegrass to jazz and rock. With such
acclaimed recordings as Nashville, Have A Little Faith, and Good Dog, Frisell knows no musical
boundaries as evidenced by his most recent jazz collaboration with Elvin Jones and Dave Holland
and Unspeakable, which won the 2004 Grammy for Contemporary Jazz.
Over the years, Frisell's various projects have primarily featured trios, but Unspeakable features a 7-
member ensemble which Frisell calls the “Unspeakable Orchestra.” Besides Frisell on electric
guitar-with his various, trademark techniques for recorded loops, screamer and distortion pedals,
modular delays and multi-effects processors-plus the 858 String Quartet, Tony Scher (bass), Kenny
Wolleson (drums), plus turntables and samplings. One critic noted that the Unspeakable Orchestra is
"industrial strength jazz."
With all of his musical changes, Frisell commented in a recent Down Beat interview: "It's weird how all
the time there are these things happening simultaneously, but later they get extracted from each
other. First, I was an ECM (elitist) guy, then I was a downtown' (avant-garde) guy, then I was the
Americana Guy, the Nashville Guy, a Jazz Guy- Nothing much changed." Frisell notes that he
never saw the Unspeakable Orchestra as a touring group, but will premiere the collective in New York
and Washington, DC prior to the west coast premiere at Portland Jazz Festival.
Bill Frisell's Unspeakable Orchestra will be the finale of the first weekend of the Portland Jazz Festival
on Sunday, February 19, 8:00 PM, at the Portland Marriott Downtown, Oregon Ballroom.
 Stefon Harris, Photo by Andre Canter
Stefon Harris' artistry, energetic stage presence, and astonishing virtuosity have propelled him into
the forefront of the contemporary jazz scene. Widely recognized and lauded by musicians, critics,
and audiences around the world, the 30-year old vibraphonist is committed to exploring all elements
of jazz from composing to blazing new trails on the vibraphone. In less than 10 years, Harris has
recorded 5 straight-ahead jazz albums, performed with the late Joe Henderson on a Grammy Award
winning Porgy & Bess project, and was center stage for the Classical Jazz Quartet program that also
featured Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, and Lewis Nash. Now, he has formed Blackout, a new group
that blends both acoustic and electric music with jazz, hip hop, classical, African, and rock
sensibilities.
Stefon Harris & Blackout will perform on Saturday, February 18, 10:30 PM, at The Governor Hotel,
Heritage Ballroom, having played to sold out crowds from the Kennedy Center to the North Sea Jazz
Festival The 4-time Grammy nominee has been named Top Vibes Player in 2004 by Jazz Times,
Down Beat, JazzIz readers polls, as well as by Rolling Stone, Los Angeles Times, and Chicago
Tribune. He is also an active jazz educator, and has been Artist-in-Residence at both San Francisco
Jazz Festival and the Isabelle Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, and is a member of the Executive
Board of Directors for Chamber Music Northwest.
Singer/songwriter Susan Werner describes herself as a “… reformed folksinger.” She has put down
her guitar and traded in her jeans and flannel shirt for a black dress and piano. Influenced by
Gershwin, Strayhorn and Cole Porter, Ms. Werner now creates new, and sometimes twisted, versions
of the Great American Songbook. Her recent recording, I'm Not New, was cited as one of the Top
Albums of 2004 by The Oregonian's music critic Marty Hughley. Werner describes her own (new)
music as a “… subversive meeting of Carole King and Ella Fitzgerald.” Susan Werner is slated for
Sunday, February 19, 4:30PM, at The Governor Hotel, Grand Ballroom. With Werner's musical
training (a Master's degree in Classical Voice), plus a reputation for live, compelling performances,
she has created a hybrid musical style to act as a counterpoint to more traditional jazz offerings.
Puerto Rican native and sax man Miguel Zenon at the tender age of 22 has become a central figure
in the new Latin jazz, music more complex and unified than the term has ever implied before.
Influenced heavily by the great Charlie Parker, Zenon left Puerto Rico at age 16 with a full scholarship
to Berklee School of Music, and recently completed graduate studies at Manhattan School of Music.
Beside regular gigs with such luminaries as David Sanchez, Charlie Haden's Land of the Sun and
Liberation Orchestra projects, Danilo Perez, Ray Baretto, and the Mingus Big Band, Zenon has
recorded 2 critically acclaimed albums for the new Marsalis Music label produced by Branford
Marsalis. In 2004, he received The New Composer's Award from the New York State Arts Council,
and was singled out for the “Rising Alto Sax” by Down Beat and was nominated by the Jazz
Journalist Association for Best New Jazz Artist. Because of his longstanding interest in Puerto Rican
music, Zenon's compositions are based upon the jazz music genre of La Musica Jibara, or
"instrumental storytelling."
Ravi Coltrane comes from a rich jazz heritage as the son of John and Alice Coltrane. Like his father,
Ravi has become a virtuoso on the tenor and soprano saxophones, and on his new release In Flux
has furthered his reputation as a musically diverse, rhythmically eclectic artist. Like his father, he
plays within a quartet of piano, bass and drums, and on his new release has recorded 5 of his father's
compositions. This is the first time that Ravi has recorded his father's work, stating that he simply wasn't ready to tackle such a challenge before. In addition to working with his own group, featuring
some of New York's finest young musicians, including Luis Perdomo (piano), Drew Gress (bass), and
E.J. Strickland (drums), Ravi will join the McCoy Tyner Trio in replicating his father's Classic Quartet
with Tyner and the late Elvin Jones and Jimmy Garrison. Ravi, however, maintains that his primary
influence was Sonny Rollins, who was a close friend, and sometimes competitor, of this father. Also
recognized as a great jazz educator, Ravi Coltrane will present a workshop on Jazz Improvisation at
Portland State University that is open to the public on Friday, February 17, at 2:00 PM. He will then
perform that evening with Tyner at 8:00 PM at the Hilton Portland Grand Ballroom, and later with his
quartet at 10:30 PM at the Governor Hotel, Heritage Ballroom-all of which will be performance
highlights of Chasin' the Trane-Remembering John Coltrane.
With separate and collective performances by NEA Jazz Master McCoy Tyner and young Ravi
Coltrane as its center piece, the Chasin' the Trane programming will extend over 2 days, February
17 & 18, and will include 2 lectures by Ashley Kahn, biographer and writer, who has written 2 widely
acclaimed books, ‘Kind of Blue', The Making of the Miles Davis Masterpiece, which chronicles
Coltrane's early collaborations, and A Love Supreme, The Making of the John Coltrane Masterpiece,
that details Coltrane's final, and most fertile years between 1961 until his early death in 1967. Kahn,
who is also an editor at Rolling Stone and a music correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR),
will have a new book, The House That Trane Built, The Making of Impulse Records, an exhaustive
study of Coltrane's Classic Quartet. In addition, these lectures will be followed by roundtable panel
discussions led by Howard Mandel, President of the Jazz Journalism Association, a specially
commissioned Jazz Story, titled "Reflections on Trane," by Lynn Darroch with Rob Davis and John
Stowell, and a Jazz Dialogue featuring McCoy Tyner, presented by Jazz Society of Oregon. Other
related Chasin' The Trane programming will be announced next month. While the Tyner and
Coltrane concerts are ticketed events, all of the education and outreach programs are free and open
to the public.
Previously announced performances by Jim Hall and Eddie Palmieri with special guest Nicholas
Payton, plus McCoy Tyner with special guest Ravi Coltrane, are also scheduled
Most of these artists will appear during the Festival's first weekend, February 17-19, as part of PDX
Jazz cultural tourism initiative, which was the driving force in starting the Festival in 2004 in
conjunction with Portland Oregon Visitors Association (POVA). During its first two years, Portland
Jazz Festival has been credited with selling several hundred hotel packages with its downtown hotel
partners. The popular ticketing packages, including the Gold Circle and Jazz Passport, have
attracted audiences from across the nation as well as drawing international attention.
The exceptions to first weekend scheduling will be jazz guitar virtuoso Jim Hall, who will headline
Jazz Society of Oregon's 2006 First Jazz, in a duo with keyboardist Geoff Keezer on Sunday,
February 26, at the Hilton Portland Grand Ballroom. Programmed by Portland Jazz Festival for JSO,
Denver vocalist Rene Marie will open JSO's annual fundraiser that will include performances by local
artists to be named, presentation of the 2006 JSO Hall of Fame recipient, and the Jim Hall & Geoff
Keezer duo as a grand finale to '06 PDX Jazz.
Portland Jazz Festival was recently named as one of the select beneficiaries of funding by the
National Endowment for the Arts, and has been recognized as the official Oregon site for NEA Jazz
Masters on tour.
Tickets for all Portland Jazz Festival concerts are now on sale through the Portland Jazz Festival
website at www.pdxjazz.com or by calling 503-228-JAZZ (5299), at any Tickets West/Safeway
Outlets, or by calling locally 503-224-8499 or toll free 800-992-8499. Various hotel and discounted
ticket packages, including the popular Jazz Passport and the reserved seating ticket package the
Gold Circle Pass, are also now available. For the Jazz Passport, call 1.87.PORTLAND (877-678-
5263) or visit www.TravelPortland.com. For the Gold Circle package, call the Festival office at 503-
228-5299 or visit www.pdxjazz.com.
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