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“Jazz
is music made awake, with open eyes and ears.” –Geoffrey Keezer,
July 2005
Already
one of the most popular jazz clubs in Manhattan, Jazz Standard just
cranked it up a notch with a renovation and exciting series of shows
during IAJE week. Kicking off the re-opening on January 10th
will be a duo of dynamic innovators, vocalist Nancy King and pianist
Geoffrey Keezer. Individually, their talents always promise an
evening of intrigue, but together—the possibilities stretch the
imagination!
Of
vocalist Nancy King, Karrin Allyson said, “She
is, I think, one of the best singers that ever walked the planet.”
Similarly, Herb Ellis labeled her “the
greatest living jazz singer.” Arriving in San Francisco from
Springfield, OR in the 1960s, she met
future husband Sonny King at the Jazz Workshop and joined his band.
In addition to performing for the next two years at the Workshop, she
worked with Vince Guaraldi, John Handy, Sonny Donaldson, and Flip
Nunez in San Francisco, and studied with Jon Hendricks. After moving
to Las Vegas and then back to Oregon to raise her sons, King recorded
her first album and made some appearances in New York before starting
a collaboration with pianist/composer Steve Christofferson, with whom
she has performed on the west coast since the 1980s. She released
Straight Into Your Heart (Mons, 1997) with Christopherson and
the Dutch Metropole Orchestra and appeared with Ray Brown on his Some
Of My Best Friends Are Singers (Telarc, 1998), touring with Brown
and his trio during the next year.
Recent
collaborations include performances with Karrin Allyson and Elvis
Costello, as well as continued recordings with Steve Christofferson;
she appears (delightfully!) on several tracks of Allyson’s
acclaimed 2006 release, Footprints. MaxJazz released her Live
at Jazz Standard (with pianist Fred Hersch) in 2006. Notes
vocalist Mark Murphy, “Her singing flies between our ears
with a certainty of inevitable rightness that is at least... simply
thrilling.”
 Geoffrey Keezer © Andrea Canter While hinting at a fantasy blend of Bud
Powell, Bill Evans, Herbie Hancock, and McCoy Tyner, Geoffrey
Keezer has evolved a singular style of intellectually
abstract lyricism woven over exotically complex rhythms and
harmonies. Just in his mid 30s, his highly regarded discography,
unique compositions, and acclaimed performances in a variety of
configurations command the attention typically reserved for the
living legends of jazz.
A child prodigy, Keezer grew up
surrounded by musicians and music educators (father Ron Keezer headed
the jazz band program at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire),
and performed at the Dakota Jazz Club in nearby Minneapolis when he
was only 16, three years before his stint with Art Blakey’s last
edition of the Jazz Messengers. He has since forged an amazing early
career, including ten recordings as leader, touring as a very young
collaborator with James Williams, Mulgrew Miller, Donald Brown, and
Harold Mabern in the Contemporary Piano Ensemble in the early 1990s,
and recently touring and recording in the company of such heavy
hitters as the late Ray Brown, Christian McBride, and Jim Hall. His
most recent solo release, Wildcrafted: Live at the Dakota, was
celebrated with a stint at the Village Vanguard. This past summer,
the Joe Locke/Geoffrey Keezer Group released the highly regarded Live
in Seattle, documenting a long-standing partnership.
The new partnership between Keezer and
King promises to be as remarkable as is the career of each artist. If
you’re attending IAJE, this will be a memorable way to start your
convention experience while enjoying once of the most user-friendly
jazz clubs in town—and some of the best jazz club food anywhere.
Nancy King and Geoffrey Keezer
appear for one night only (January 10th) with two sets,
7:30 and 9:30 pm; visit www.jazzstandard.com
or call (212) 576-2232 for reservations. Check out the rest of the
week at Jazz Standard—January 11th—Steve Wilson
Quartet; January 12th, Eric Reed Quartet; January 13th,
Terell Stafford Quintet. |