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“I am convinced that all art has the desire to leave the ordinary,and to say it one way, at a spiritual level, a state of the exaltation at existence. All art has this in common. But jazz, the world of improvisation, is perhaps the highest, because we do not have the opportunity to make changes. It’s as if we were painting before the public, and the following morning we cannot go back and correct that blue color or change that red. We have to have the blues and reds very well placed before going out to play. So for me, jazz is probably the most demanding art.” - Sonny Rollins from a recent interview for the Catalan magazine Jaç
 
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THE BIRTH OF COOL Featuring The Bill Charlap Trio plus Frank Wess, and more 3/30-31 Print E-mail
Written by Ronaldo Oregano   
Tuesday, 27 March 2007
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Bill Cahrlap
On March 30 & 31 Jazz at Lincoln Center will present the Bill Charlap Trio joined by some very special guests Frank Wess, Warren Vaché , Jerry Dodgion, Mary Stallings & others for THE BIRTH OF COOL in The Allen Room at 7:30pm and 9:30pm in Frederick P. Rose Hall, home to Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Bill Charlap (piano) and his trio consisting of Peter Washington (bass) and Kenny Washington (drums) will anchor an ensemble that includes Frank Wess (tenor), Warren Vaché (trumpet), Mark Turner (sax), Jerry Dodgion (sax) and Mary Stallings (vocals). Additional musicians include: Jon Gordon (sax), Scott Robinson (baritone sax), Joe Magnarelli (trumpet), and Gene Bertoncini (guitar). Highlights include Ms. Stalling's interpretation of the Billie Holiday standards "Pennies From Heaven" and "Laughing at Life."

"The concert will be essentially a history of cool from Lester Young through Miles Davis," explains Bill Charlap. "We're going through Lester, how the music met the bop esthetic, the innovations of Bird and Dizzy. We'll be playing some of the 'Birth of the Cool' album, not recreations, but our own interpretation of 'Cool School' arrangers like Gerry Mulligan and Johnny Carisi. "

Critics have described Charlap's style variously as hard swinging, romantic or rigorous, but his musical roots can be found in a childhood home filled with songs and songwriters. His father, Moose Charlap, was a Broadway composer, known especially for his work on Peter Pan. His mother, Sandy Stewart, is a singer who, forty years ago, had a hit with the Kander and Ebb ballad, "My Coloring Book." House guests often included legendary figures from the great American songbook.

After attending the New York High School of Performing Arts and studying with jazz pianist Jack Reilly, classical pianist Eleanor Hancock, and jazz great (and distant cousin) Dick Hyman, he went on to college-but only temporarily.

"My classical foundation was very important, of course," he now says. "But the conservatory atmosphere was getting in the way of my jazz studies. Pianist Bill Mays and I had struck up a friendship and one day he said, 'Why don't you come up to my place? I've got a Fender Rhodes set up and we can play duo pianos.' After we played he said, 'Listen, I'm going to be leaving Gerry Mulligan's band, I think you're ready to replace me.' I didn't think I was, but I went to Gerry's place and auditioned, and we hit it off very well. Mulligan's famous line was, 'I shot for 42nd Street and ended up on 52nd.' And there is something about that I relate to." Both artists had arrived in Jazz Alley via Broadway song.

Charlap was on his way. He has been influenced, he claims, by every musician he has ever worked with, including the members of his current trio, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington (no relation). The list includes such stellar jazz artists as Benny Carter, Clark Terry, Jim Hall, Frank Wess, Grady Tate, Phil Woods and Tony Bennett. But he has also been influenced by his mother's singing ("Her phrasing influences the way I play melody. In many ways I approach the song from a singer's perspective, music and lyrics are of equal importance").

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Frank Wess, NEA Jazz Master
Charlap's influences reflect the seriousness with which he has studied the entire jazz lineage. "I admire the elegance of Tommy Flanagan, the harmonic language and bebop phrasing of Hank Jones, the linear aspects of Lenny Tristano. Then there are Teddy Wilson, Earl Hines, Art Tatum, Jimmy Rowles, Errol Garner, Thelonious Monk, Ellis Larkins, Oscar Peterson, Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner, Kenny Barron, Roger Kellaway, Bobby Timmons, Wynton Kelly, Red Garland. People usually think of Bill Evans as a harmonist and romantic, but I'm influenced by Bill the bebop player, the rhythm section player he was when he worked for Miles. But I'm also influenced by non-pianists, like Charlie Parker, Stan Getz, Coltrane, Miles, Wayne Shorter and Chet Baker."

Multi-instrumentalist Frank Wess was just honored as one of the most influential and innovative flutists in jazz history. Master alto saxophonist Phil Woods has been named an NEA Jazz Master in the composer-arranger category, in recognition of his contributions to the modern jazz repertoire. As for Dan Morgenstern, director of the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University, he has devoted himself to jazz advocacy as an historian, archivist, author, editor, and educator.

Hear The Birth of Cool with The Bill Charlap Trio & Special Guests Frank Wess, Warren Vaché , Jerry Dodgion, and Mary Stallings on March 30 & 31, 2007 / 7:30pm & 9:30pm at The Allen Room, Frederick P. Rose Hall, Broadway at 60th St. Tickets are $60 and are available at Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P. Rose Hall box office on Broadway at 60th Street / open Monday - Saturday, 10am-8:30pm and Sunday 11am-8:30pm, CenterCharge at 212-721.6500 or via www.jalc.org
 
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