Features

Jazz from India tops international charts!

Apr 10th, 2012 | By

Saxophonist Colin Laguna from the Netherlands has been a regular visitor to Goa ever since his mother first brought him to Goa as a four year old child. He has ancestral roots in Goa and has always felt at home on every visit. He heads the saxophone department in the Holland College of performing arts
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Beatty’s “Jazz: Rockabilly” in Free Online Magazine

Mar 21st, 2012 | By

1957 jazz pianist Dean Fontessa experiences his first rockabilly dance in Gary Scott Beatty’s “Jazz: Rockabilly” fiction, featured in the free online magazine MuskegonOnline.NET this month only. The story, in Beatty’s modernist retro style, explores Dean’s take on the scene from his viewpoint as a cool jazz musician. “We all know rockabilly will lead to
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AMERICAN IDOL’S EFFECT TROUBLES SINGER

Oct 15th, 2011 | By

American Idol’s unintended effect on the public is felt at nearly every performance, according to up-and-coming Los Angeles-based singer Jules Day. “There are at least a few people at every gig that insist on trying to mold me into an American Idol-type singer with their after-the-show suggestions.  They feel they’ve been given the green light
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A Week at the Historic Home of Seattle Jazz

Jul 26th, 2011 | By
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Earshot Jazz July 2011, Vol. 27, No. 07 By Steve Griggs Four members of the Seattle Jazz Hall of Fame can be seen in one place every week of the year – the New Orleans Creole Restaurant. During a recent week, seven Hall of Fame inductees were spotted there. This heart of Seattle jazz beats where the
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Mike Portnoy’s Dream Plays Out; Wins Drummer Of The Year; Stanton Moore “Best Funk Drummer”

Jul 11th, 2011 | By
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San Jose, Calif., — Mike Portnoy, considered one of the most powerful players in the world, has garnered his first “Drummer” Of The Year” award in Enter Music Publishing’s 16th Annual Drummies reader’s poll awards. Definitely a dream come true for Portnoy, he also took “Best Metal Drummer” and came in second place in the
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One on One: Bob James still rings the fusion changes

Jun 9th, 2011 | By
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Interview by John Stevenson Robert McIlhiney James, a.k.a Bob James, continues to spearhead the smooth jazz genre. Born on Christmas Day, 1939, this jazz fusion dean, keyboardist, producer and arranger is also presently known as co-leader of the group Fourplay. Their new CD, Let’s Touch the Sky, seals in those magical ingredients that have characterised
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Seeing It His Way: The Gerald Cleaver Interview

Jun 8th, 2011 | By
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By John Stevenson On Be It As I See It, drummer Gerald Cleaver casts his creative gaze on a seminal moment in 20th century African-American history: The Great Migration from the agrarian South to the industrial, frigid North. Released on the FSNT label, the recording showcases Cleaver’s captivating aggregation, Uncle June. The CD is dedicated
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Hristo Vitchev: Modern-Day Jazz Pilgrim

Jun 7th, 2011 | By
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By John Stevenson Reggae superstar Bob Marley spoke of a “natural mystic blowing through the air” on one of his many hit songs. Hristo Vitchev, the Bulgarian-born jazz wunderkind, also conveys a strong sense of the mystical and listeners get a fair taste of this aspect of things on his potent debut offering “Song For
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Thunder-struck by the Duke: A Conversation with Delfeayo Marsalis

Jun 6th, 2011 | By
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By John Stevenson You could call it a case of Shakespeare’s bout with the blues. That’s one way of describing Duke Ellington’s 1957 masterpiece, “Such Sweet Thunder”, written in response to a commission from the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Ontario, Canada. According to noted jazz commentator A. B. Spelman, the Duke’s tribute to the plays
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Good News Week for Britain’s Live Music Industry

Jun 6th, 2011 | By
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Hot on the heels of recent announcements that Adele eclipsed Madonna’s record for the longest spell at the top of the album chart, selling millions of records in the process, that Take That sold out a record eight consecutive shows at Wembley Stadium in minutes, and that The O2 Arena is once again the most
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