JAZZ IMPROV NY
JULY 2009FREE DOWNLOAD! CLICK ON
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Enjoy the #1 monthly Jazz Magazine that is absolutely FREE! This issue features PAT MARTINO, plus our PIANO LOVERS CELEBRATION, and Part 2 of our SUMMER JAZZ FESTIVAL GUIDE.
July in NYC has some of the best jazz artists in the world!
We focus on Pat Martino who will be performing at The Iridium, July 23-26. PIANISTS interviewed include Lynne Arriale, Bob James, Bill Cunliffe, John Escreet, Dave Fox, Danny Grissett, Donald Vega. There is also an excerpt from our comprehehsnive feature on Herbie Hancock that is published in our quarterly, Jazz Improv Magazine (and is still available for purchase with companion CD. Also check out our new Avant Jazz section featuring an extensive look at the recent 2009 Vision Festival, in the journal created by David Budbill. See the preview of the 92nd Street Jazz In July Series, and a venue focus on Small's.
Performance reviews include: Marian Petrescu, Brad Mehldau,
Irene Atman and more.
Don't miss the CD SPOTLIGHT and PERFORMANCE SPOTLIGHT sections.
There's also a comprehensive Calendar of Events in the Tri-State area, and a Directory of jazz resources. Legendary jazz critic, Ira Gitler, continues to amuse with his monthly column Apple Chorus.
Hard copies of Jazz Improv NY can be found at 200 locations including jazz clubs, concert halls, record stores, music stores, hotels, tourist centers, colleges and universities all around the New York City/NJ/TriState area.
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Stan Getz - The ABCs Decade:
Adaptation, Bossa Nova,
Collaborations and Crossover
Success
What do Ben Webster and Oscar Peterson, Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Smith, John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman and Frank Sinatra and Count Basie have in common? Each of the men in these pairings, at some point in their respective careers, joined the other on record in a marvelous musical dialogue. The idea of two major artists leaving the comfort of their own working groups and situations to go out into uncharted waters, in order to grow and have a meaningful musical experience, is inspiring and at the core of what jazz is all about. Stan Getz, during a (roughly) ten year period from 1953 to 1963, had more than ten such encounters, with a huge variety of musicians, arrangers and composers...and he used this knowledge in his collaborations of the 1950’s and 1960’s. Blues, ballads, bop, Brazilian flavors, big band sounds and bold orchestral works were all embraced by one of the greatest saxophone players to walk the planet during the mid-to-late twentieth century... Click here to read more

Jeff Coffin
In-Depth Interview
JI: Jeff, why don’t you talk a little bit about the clinics you do and working with students all over the country and the world? How does that impact your own playing?
JC: One of the ways that it has affected my playing is that it sort of focused me in on certain things. Normally what I’ll do is I’ll go and I’ll play for between fifteen and thirty minutes, just solo and I’ll try to throw a whole lot of stuff at them. Different articulations, multi-phonics, different slap tonguing, growling, flutter tongue, altissimo stuff, double horn, taking the horn apart and playing it, using the keys as kind of percussion sounds. And then I’ll also throw different styles in at them. And at the end of that, rather than standing up there and going, “Well this is what I think and this is what I do,” I say to them “Well what did you hear?”...
Click here to read more
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SPRING V8N3
HERBIE HANCOCK
2009 JAZZ EDUCATION SOURCEBOOK
ANNUAL RHYTHM SECTION DIRECTORYNOW SHIPPING TO SUBSCRIBERS
INTERNATIONAL SUBSCRIBERS
PLEASE ALLOW SEVERAL
WEEKS FOR DELIVERY!
- 1 CD with 14 Full-length tracks
- 173-Page Music e-Book on our Enhanced CD: Includes song charts, note-for-note transcriptions and analyses of improvised solos by master practitioners, as well as "how-to" features and columns
- 224 pages of Interviews, Commentary, Music & Motivation with the Featured article on Herbie Hancock: Possibilities. Other interviews include Harvey Mason, Bob Mintzer, Dave Holland, Michael Abene, Mark Weinstein, Dena DeRose, Sumi Tonooka.
- Fourth Annual Piano, Bass, Drums, Vibes Directories – Are You Listed?!
- 40 pages of detailed jazz CD reviews
- Enrico Pieranunzi: The Man, The Music and Beyond - By Gilbert Mathieu
- Columns & Articles by Ira Gitler Estate Italiano), Sue Terry (The Sport of Listening), Todd Coolman (The Real World), Curtis Davenport (Browsing The Bins), Bob Gish (Notes On Wiritng & Jazz), Eric Nemeyer (Mind, Body & Spirit: Peace Of Mind - What We Want Most of All)
Sam Rivers
In-Depth Interview
JI: You will celebrate your 85th birthday this September and you are busier than ever. Can you talk about your current large project?
SR: I am spending a lot of time in the studio, trying to record all the music that I have written. There are many compositions that have never been finished so I am also working hard to complete them and get them recorded. I have enough compositions to do a CD a month for the next four years. I doubt if I will finish it but I have to try. My grandfather wrote down the spiritual music he heard from my great-grandmother, who was a slave. He actually wrote and published the first slavery plantation hymn book and I will also be recording those songs. I have a lot on my plate but I really enjoy it... Click here to read more
Wayne Shorter
In-Depth Interview
JI: JI: You’ve won a number of Grammys yourself, the last one coming for 2006’s Beyond the Sound Barrier. Do you feel that you’ve gotten your just due for all that you have accomplished in your career to date?
WS: You know, that kind of thing sometimes becomes larger then the mission. If I sat around thinking about [what I should get credit for], that’s almost like the blame game. I’d like to say this to the musicians who may read this. They need to think about why they are playing music in the first place. If they are thinking that they are just out to have fun, have a good time or make some money, then they can go ahead and pursue that, but to me, that’s temporary. I’m going after the constant. I’m going after the ultimate law of existence, the path of enlightenment... Click here to read more
Photo Credits: Photos of Stan Getz courtesy of Verve; Sam Rivers & Wayne Shorter by Ken Weiss; Jeff Coffin courtesy of Yamaha.
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