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Posted
8 minutes ago, Steve Reynolds said:

Ballister>>>>>>>>>>>>any game 

So...are steaks better than Venetian blinds?

Are clothespins better than lightbulbs?

Are aquariums better than grocery stores?

Are day games better than banjo picks?

Posted (edited)

Ballister is more rare! No improvising trio sound remotely like them. The opportunity to see them up close is very very special to those of us interested in this type of music. Grand Masters at play/work. 

 

I do understand the idea of a dude from England seeing a game at Wrigley. Maybe once in a lifetime.  I love games/sports too.

But I’m a music guy. Avant-garde guy. I go to over a hundred shows a year. 

plus I’m an objectavist (if that’s a valid term) as are most of my music friends & the few close musician friends I have. What’s great is great. When my musician friend is chatting with Mark Helias the other night we both agreed it’s not our opinion that he’s a master, it’s the truth. We both don’t “think” Randy Peterson & Nasheet Waits are genius level drummers, it’s obvious to those of us who witness it. 
 

The performance a week ago tomorrow was better than any game, save for Boston championship victories. 
 

Among the best 10–15 shows I’ve seen the last couple of years. They are great. 

Edited by Steve Reynolds
Posted

Mark Helias is certainly a master, but so is Corey Seager. And he had a pretty good game this afternoon!

But don't be fooled - it's baseball and bass playing, so direct comparisons are really kinda silly.

 

Posted

Look, it was indoors. I was able to wear a tee shirt. Chicago is, it turns out, very cold. Have some mercy.

Good gig. A different feel to your average Wednesday night OTO crowd or my comparatively limited NY experiences. 

Posted

Last night at Roulette

Gerry Hemingway: drums, marimba, etc.

Earl Howard: alto saxophone, saxello & electronics 

Anthony Davis: grand piano 

Kyle Motl: double bass

2 sets 45 & 50 minutes

disparate, brilliant & organic improvisations. Each set 2 pieces. 
 

stunned by two of the four saxophone sections / each was maybe 7-8 minutes of each piece interspersed with the group which played from short solo through duos, trios and the full quartet. WAY beyond my high expectations.

 

 

 

Posted

I saw Dweezil Zappa last night, his band was tight and they had a sense of the absurd. Especially the new guy, who insisted that they play "Punky's Whips." Even funnier was a cover of Lionel Richie's "Hello," with a duck call in place of the vocal.

 

Posted
2 hours ago, Steve Reynolds said:

Last night at Roulette

Gerry Hemingway: drums, marimba, etc.

Earl Howard: alto saxophone, saxello & electronics 

Anthony Davis: grand piano 

Kyle Motl: double bass

2 sets 45 & 50 minutes

disparate, brilliant & organic improvisations. Each set 2 pieces. 
 

stunned by two of the four saxophone sections / each was maybe 7-8 minutes of each piece interspersed with the group which played from short solo through duos, trios and the full quartet. WAY beyond my high expectations.

 

 

 

THE Anthony Davis?

Posted
10 minutes ago, JSngry said:

Wish I could have been there!

Not sure how often he plays out these days?

I’ve not seen him listed in years. Great to see him say hello to Marty Ehrlich. Seems like they had seen each other in years. 
 

my guess is with Hemingway being in town prompted the gig. Gerry hasn’t been here in almost 2 years. He lives in Switzerland. Summer 2023 he played with Marilyn Crispell & Mark Dresser on 7/1. Played with BassDrumBone a couple of days earlier with Ray Anderson & Mark Helias. Was hoping for a reprise this trip but alas, not happening. 

Posted

Two drummer-centric shows at SFJAZZ this weekend - both with Joe Warner & Tarus Mateen:

Give the Drummer Some: Nasheet Waits
Give the Drummer Some: Marvin 'Smitty' Smith

Unfortunately I couldn't go on Thursday for Billy Hart

Posted

Tyshawn beyond great. Roscoe played mostly bass sax with small percussion with a little sopranino. His last solo on the bass saxophone was a work of genius. Brought tears to my eyes. 

44 minutes with 2 very short encores.

A very moving experience for me. 

 

Posted
On 4/20/2025 at 3:43 PM, Steve Reynolds said:

Tyshawn beyond great. Roscoe played mostly bass sax with small percussion with a little sopranino. His last solo on the bass saxophone was a work of genius. Brought tears to my eyes. 

44 minutes with 2 very short encores.

A very moving experience for me. 

 

A friend of mine saw Tyshawn/ Roscoe in Philly. Would have liked to see the two of THEM for sure!

I got a good dose of Tyshawn at Big Ears this year. He was all over the place. He's an amazing talent in many settings.

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