Hardbopjazz Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 I've seen Randy Weston 25 times in the past 15 years. Next I've seen Lee Konitz and Jimmy Heath 20 times. Sonny Rollins 15 times. Mulgrew Miller I was able to see live 10 times before he departed. Renee Rosnes also 10 times. Cecil Taylor 9 times. Who have others here seen several times? Quote
medjuck Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 In 5 decades I've seen Sonny Rollins 6 times in 4 different cities. Quote
GA Russell Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 I have seen Miles Davis, Herbie Mann and Roland Kirk three times each. Quote
LWayne Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Over the years, I have probably seen Bill Frisell 20-25 times in different formats, Paul Motian about 20 times, and Joe Lovano about 12-15 times. (Bet you can't guess who my favorite trio was)... LWayne Quote
Homefromtheforest Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 (edited) Probably Han Bennink; since 1993 I've seen him at least 20 times. Edited February 22, 2014 by Homefromtheforest Quote
danasgoodstuff Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Bill F 7-8 times, Sonny R maybe 6 times, lots of locals 20+ Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Mat Maneri 4 times with his dad Joe Probably about 10-12 times the last 3-4 years Tony Malaby probably 12-15 times the last 4 years Peter Brotzmann probably 8-10 times the last 15 years Han Bennink 6-8 times the last 15 years Andrew Cyrille 10-12 times those last 15 years Hamid Drake 12-15 times those last 15 years Gerry Hemingway 8-10 times the last 15 years Least for those I love: Barry Guy - once Mark Sanders - once Alexander Von Schlippenbach - once Paul Lovens - once Never have I seen: Louis Moholo-Moholo John Edwards Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 The only journal I've ever kept is of my New Orleans visits; I realized pretty early on that I wanted a record of where I went and who I heard on my annual (and sometimes more-than-annual) visits. I see to my surprise that I've seen the Preservation Hall Jazz Band 37 times - 32 times at the Hall and five times on tour. Of course, that may not really mean anything, since the "Preservation Hall Jazz Band" is a brand more than it is a band - it was a different band almost every time. But among those concerts, I heard Percy Humphrey four times and Willie Humphrey three times, and those shows were as meaningful as all the others put together. I heard my hero, Steve Lacy, seven times. That may not sound like much, but - he's been dead for nearly ten years (which still seems hard to believe), he lived in Europe for most of my life, and I never heard him outside of the Deep South. So that's not bad. I'm grateful for each of those occasions. Quote
BFrank Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 I've seen Billy Harper a bunch of times - with the Cookers, his own group, Randy Weston and Max Roach. Also saw Blakey a number of times through the 70s-80s. More recently I seem to catch Jason Moran on a regular basis. Quote
JohnS Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 David Murray in just about every configuration. Maybe one or two local players run him close. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Probably Kenny Wheeler and John Taylor in the jazz world. Though I imagine the record would go for a bass player like Andy Cleyndert or a drummer like Seb Rochford who seem to turn up backing all manner of people. Richard Thompson, Martin Carthy, John Kirpatrick - more times than I can imagine. Quote
BillF Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Bill F 7-8 times I deny this! For me, it's the ubiquitous Alan Barnes of course. http://www.alanbarnesjazz.com/gigs.html Quote
mjazzg Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 without doubt London's ever marvellous rhythm section John Edwards with Mark Sanders or Steve Noble. Evan Parker, John Russell, Peter Brotzmann, Kenny Wheeler, Tim Berne Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 without doubt London's ever marvellous rhythm section John Edwards with Mark Sanders or Steve Noble. Evan Parker, John Russell, Peter Brotzmann, Kenny Wheeler, Tim Berne Of course the rhythm sections I want to hear live more than any others Of course we are not lacking great drummers in NYC Quote
kh1958 Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 In jazz, I've seen McCoy Tyner and David Newman twelve times each. Ornette Coleman, nine times. Ronald Shannon Jackson eight times; Freddie Hubbard and Mike Stern, seven times each. In blues, Buddy Guy, at least twenty-seven times. Lucky Peterson, twenty-two times. Quote
sidewinder Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 (edited) It must be Cedar Walton and Billy Higgins. John Taylor and Kenny Wheeler well up there too.. and McCoy.. Edited February 22, 2014 by sidewinder Quote
Leeway Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 I don't keep very good track of my concert attendance, but I have a good idea of whom I've seen most often. It occurred to me that I would have to say William Parker, even though many of those instances I did not go to see William himself. It's just that he is so ubiquitous on the Downtown scene. Anyway, I've seen Parker, Hamid Drake, Rob Brown, and Matthew Ship at least 15 times each, probably more with Parker. I go to see Peter Brotzmann whenever he comes through NYC or DC/Baltimore, and that so far has been at least a dozen times for me. Ditto Ken Vandermark (even when I am carping about him, I still go see him). Interestingly enough, Nate Wooley is getting into the most attended category as well. I've seen Tim Berne fairly often, but I have had to go to Baltimore, Philly or NYC to do it, as he has only done one DC gig in the last decade or so, and that was just in 2013. Evan Parker-- not so many individual appearances, but attended both of his week long residencies at The Stone in NYC, 2 sets a night. Plus I've caught some additional shows (great when he came to Baltimore!). I'm probably forgetting someone. There are plenty of others I've seen two or three or four times each; that's a different post. Quote
Cyril Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 The most? Let me think...The Rein de Graaff trio, Piet Noordijk, Eric Ineke, Benny Bailey, Marius Beets, Houston Person, Benjamin Herman, Jarmo Hoogendijk, John Marshall, Han Bennink, Ali Haurand, David Murray, Lee Konitz, Abraham Burton, Roy Hargrove, James Carter, Mal Waldron, Steve Lacy, Andrew Cyrille.... Quote
Bill B Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Bill Evans trio -10 times 1963-1973 once @ The Vanguard Quote
Larry Kart Posted February 22, 2014 Report Posted February 22, 2014 Easy -- Wilbur Campbell. He was pretty much the house drummer at the various incarnations of the Jazz Showcase from about 1968 (when he got out of Stateville, where he had been imprisoned on a drugs charge) until his death in 2000 at age 73. I also heard him a good many times before that, beginning in 1957. Thanks be, he was a great drummer, too. Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted February 23, 2014 Report Posted February 23, 2014 yes 17 times Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted February 23, 2014 Report Posted February 23, 2014 Evan Parker must be up there with me too - in various Nottingham dives in the 80s, at Appleby over several years, at the RFH in one long day of various improvised music in the early noughties, at Cheltenham (the last time I saw him a few years back) and sat in the Kenny Wheeler Big Band a couple of times. Quote
brownie Posted February 23, 2014 Report Posted February 23, 2014 My all-time champion is Cecil Taylor. Saw him at dozens of appearances between 1965 and 1980 in France, Holland and the US. Jimmy Lyons and Andrew Cyrille are in a tight group right behind him (some of CT's appearances I attended were solo performances). Quote
king ubu Posted February 23, 2014 Report Posted February 23, 2014 Hey, good to see you around, hope all is well! Here, I think Oliver Lake leads with five appearances (Trio 3 or co-led affairs all), Bob Dylan four times ... not sure how often I saw some rhythm section players, really. Quote
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