BillF Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 I'm sure we'd all concede that jazz was always less popular than vocal music, but instrumental singles were still feasible in the 60s and perhaps even the early 70s. And don't forget the huge popularity of instrumental electronica in the 1990s and early 2000s. Yes, though I am not sure how much of that charted aside from something like US3 Cantaloop (which if I recall accurately, many here loathe). Looking through these various posts and key threads, with a semi-detached eye, there really is just so much snobbery it is pretty sickening. Any artist that is under 50 that gets halfway popular is almost immediately knocked off the pedestal. I have indulged from time to time, though try to stay out of it, mostly since my emotional attachment to jazz is probably half of what it was 10 to 15 years ago. But yes, in terms of its overall cultural relevance, I do think jazz is now dead. Sure, there are some legacy projects (perhaps more in Europe where there is some public funding keeping this stuff going) and a few cities where jazz seems truly alive, but not for the majority of people who couldn't care less. "But yes, in terms of its overall cultural relevance, I do think jazz is now dead." Neatly put, and perhaps controversial, but accurate. Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 Oh, you misunderstood me. I am not saying that it is a bad thing that these people like later pop, country and hip hop, and have no interest in jazz. I think that there is much worthy music in those genres. They seem happy listening to what they like. Live and let live, I say. I was just commenting that it is unrealistic that adults with no interest in jazz could develop such interests if only.....if only they heard swing instead of avant garde........if only there was more jazz radio......if only something else. No, I think it is not realistic that they will ever like jazz no matter what. I don't have a problem with that. I was making the observation that some of the discussion on this thread seems to assume that more people have more of a knowledge and interest in jazz, or could have such an interest, than is realistic. Ah, yes I completely misread you. My apologies. Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) @Larry Kart/Hot Ptah: I admit I cannot give comprehensive evidence of what effects of the "post-neo-swing" the were on jazz at large in the USA and to what extent they stimulated (or did not stimulate) the demand for jazz there but I can tell you this from over here: Before that neo-swing wave made splashes over here in the mid-90s (with a surprising amount of exposure in (music) mags not normally devoted to any music where you'd promote old masters such as the three Louises - Armstrong, Prima, Jordan, for example), live swing-style jazz OUTSIDE concerts by the remaining heroes from decades gone by really were very much a matter of compratively stiff concert played to a somewhat older seated audiences. Even in long-established clubs with a long tradition of hosting jazz gigs (local/regional bands but also touring artists/bands) there was hardly ever any dancing room. This changed markedly from, say, the mid-90s. (BTW, I doubt that concert by legend Benny Waters I attended here in 1997 would have attracted THAT many younger listeners if the neo-swing craze hadn't already been going on. ) And even after that neo-swing fad ebbed off things calmed down but a fairly healthy following has remained ever since. It still is very much a niche phenomenon but a stable one, and the share of younger people is really quite large (some of them being even too young to have consciously witnessed all of the mid-90s neo-swing craze, unless they started out really early). We have two local associations that do swing/lindy hop dancing classes and organize concerts as well as special events (such as Frankie Manning tributes - Norma Miller has been over at least twice), And even this is less than what's happening in places like Hamburg or Berlin. For EVERYBODY interested it is fairly easy to search out the venues and gigs where you can listen to swing (and dance to it, of course) - not just events featuring swing bands but also record hops where the DJ plays your records all night long. I've been to quite a few of these, have very occasionally DJed myself, and the music that the audience and dancers pick up on spontaneously is pretty amazing - a lot of stuff they cannot possibly have heard before ever (not nearly all of them are inveterate collectors) but many have asked the DJs "what's this, what's that .." so at least sometimes the curiosity to explore is there and one thing may well lead to another ... And even if this exposure only occasionally gets people to move consciously into other styles of jazz as well, it still is a good thing IMO that THIS style of jazz still has its subculture. And as long as cases like that chap browsing through my swing record crate at a 50s rockabilly festival late last year and enthusing about that Erroll Garner record I had for sale (because he thought "Errol was just great") can still happen I feel that not all hope is lost ... Like I said - easing people into jazz (even if only 1 out of 100 will then venture into any sort of bop or post bop or whatever) instead of alienating them via all too free jazz for a FIRST "jazz experience" is not the worst thing in the world and not something to be sneered at, even if it does not immediately help those avantgarde artists you wish to support. Jazz IS a wide field, stylistically speaking, and like i said here repeatedly, you cannot expect everybody to like every style of jazz to the same degree (I certainly don't either ). But whatever style of jazz those people I have referred to feel attracted to, it STILL is jazz. BTW, IMO all those Nat/Natalie Cole or Bette Midler tune examples cited above were just flashes in the pan compared to the swing subculture I have tried to describe. Here it is NOT a case of some elements of swing creeping into pop charts. Sustaining a subculture of ongoing events and venues that cater to this music and its lovers on a regular (!) basis is QUITE something else. It IS a niche segment of music but I'd BET you a dime many avantgarde/free improvisation musicians would LOVE to have that kind of audience on a regular basis. Edited March 16, 2015 by Big Beat Steve Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 Who says the music I love is filled with "far-out wierd noises"? You do!!! Young people who are into rock or techno or hip hop will not and do not necessarily hear a tenor saxophone being played brilliantly which might include altissimo or overblowing as "far-out wierd noises". Your stereotyping and generalizations about music you are barely familiar with can only be matched by the volume of words you apply to denigrate such music. These potential new listeners might, in fact, find more subdued or historical forms of jazz limited in sound and not nearly aggressive, bracing, striking or intense enough based on many modern forms of music that include many sounds/approaches that they have listened to - sounds that the free jazz and avant-garde masters have incorporated into their music over the past 50 years. Why the best of these forms remain vibrant, fresh and alive. Because they are still in the process of creation. Often seemingly timeless - but if one's ears are open, the music is there to be heard. This is exactly why you don't give current potential jazz listener's ears the credit they deserve. Many are much more likely (as I was 25 years ago) to be more turned on by current jazz/improv than historical music - let alone by sorry ass recreation of such music. Certainly rock fans who listen to hardcore or metal or alternative have a much larger chance of hearing something in the DKV Trio or Atomic or Tony Malaby or The Bad Plus or Trio 3 or Peter Brotzmann than some Lindy Hop band. Blood and Guts, baby Quote
Hot Ptah Posted March 16, 2015 Author Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) @Larry Kart/Hot Ptah: I admit I cannot give comprehensive evidence of what effects of the "post-neo-swing" the were on jazz at large in the USA and to what extent they stimulated (or did not stimulate) the demand for jazz there but I can tell you this from over here: Before that neo-swing wave made splashes over here in the mid-90s (with a surprising amount of exposure in (music) mags not normally devoted to any music where you'd promote old masters such as the three Louises - Armstrong, Prima, Jordan, for example), live swing-style jazz OUTSIDE concerts by the remaining heroes from decades gone by really were very much a matter of compratively stiff concert played to a somewhat older seated audiences. Even in long-established clubs with a long tradition of hosting jazz gigs (local/regional bands but also touring artists/bands) there was hardly ever any dancing room. This changed markedly from, say, the mid-90s. (BTW, I doubt that concert by legend Benny Waters I attended here in 1997 would have attracted THAT many younger listeners if the neo-swing craze hadn't already been going on. ) And even after that neo-swing fad ebbed off things calmed down but a fairly healthy following has remained ever since. It still is very much a niche phenomenon but a stable one, and the share of younger people is really quite large (some of them being even too young to have consciously witnessed all of the mid-90s neo-swing craze, unless they started out really early). We have two local associations that do swing/lindy hop dancing classes and organize concerts as well as special events (such as Frankie Manning tributes - Norma Miller has been over at least twice), And even this is less than what's happening in places like Hamburg or Berlin. For EVERYBODY interested it is fairly easy to search out the venues and gigs where you can listen to swing (and dance to it, of course) - not just events featuring swing bands but also record hops where the DJ plays your records all night long. I've been to quite a few of these, have very occasionally DJed myself, and the music that the audience and dancers pick up on spontaneously is pretty amazing - a lot of stuff they cannot possibly have heard before ever (not nearly all of them are inveterate collectors) but many have asked the DJs "what's this, what's that .." so at least sometimes the curiosity to explore is there and one thing may well lead to another ... And even if this exposure only occasionally gets people to move consciously into other styles of jazz as well, it still is a good thing IMO that THIS style of jazz still has its subculture. And as long as cases like that chap browsing through my swing record crate at a 50s rockabilly festival late last year and enthusing about that Erroll Garner record I had for sale (because he thought "Errol was just great") can still happen I feel that not all hope is lost ... Like I said - easing people into jazz (even if only 1 out of 100 will then venture into any sort of bop or post bop or whatever) instead of alienating them via all too free jazz for a FIRST "jazz experience" is not the worst thing in the world and not something to be sneered at, even if it does not immediately help those avantgarde artists you wish to support. Jazz IS a wide field, stylistically speaking, and like i said here repeatedly, you cannot expect everybody to like every style of jazz to the same degree (I certainly don't either ). But whatever style of jazz those people I have referred to feel attracted to, it STILL is jazz. BTW, IMO all those Nat/Natalie Cole or Bette Midler tune examples cited above were just flashes in the pan compared to the swing subculture I have tried to describe. Here it is NOT a case of some elements of swing creeping into pop charts. Sustaining a subculture of ongoing events and venues that cater to this music and its lovers on a regular (!) basis is QUITE something else. It IS a niche segment of music but I'd BET you a dime many avantgarde/free improvisation musicians would LOVE to have that kind of audience on a regular basis. It appears that the Neo-Swing movement may have had more of an impact, and more of a lasting one in Germany compared to the U.S. Edited March 16, 2015 by Hot Ptah Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 I don't get poetry. I'm bored by 18thC French vases. My taste buds don't have the sort of memory to allow me to 'appreciate' wine. Somewhere over on Poetryissimo or French Porcelainissimo or Viticulturissimo someone will be moaning about my lack of interest and claiming that it's because I'm an air head or have had my taste devalued by Bob Dylan, Pound Shop crockery or Sainsbury's plonk. Quote
Shawn Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 I really wasn't exposed to jazz when i was growing up (70s/80s). None of my friends listened to it, nobody in my family listened to it and it really wasn't played anywhere. Around the late 80s when I was learning to play guitar I stumbled upon some fusion stuff like John McLaughlin and Al DiMeola but that was because I read about them in the guitar magazines I had subscriptions to. Fast forward to the late 90s and I ended up working in a used CD store with a couple guys that were major jazz fans. That was really the first time I had ever been directly exposed to it and my subsequent studying of the music lead me to the old Blue Note board and then here. But, if I had never gone to work in that store I may never have been exposed to it sufficiently to get interested in it. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) With me jazz as genre was already passing in the early 70s. There was no jazz at home though a fair bit of Crosby/Sinatra type MOR with a distinct jazz feel. What you got on the TV was programmes by living legends like Oscar P or Ella; or rather lumpen big bands behind variety programmes. That did not appeal at the time. But what caught me was jazz rock (especially the British variant - Soft Machine, Henry Cow etc); the name-dropping by rock musicians at the time especially McLaughlin and Santana (I first heard Coltrane tunes there); and the fact that the NME/Melody Maker still had a jazz page. I got curious but had to seek the music out because it was not easy to locate. I suspect that plenty of young people today with a thing for music but who get a bit tired of what is easily available might find their way towards a music like jazz (more likely via the younger bands who at least look like them and might also know who significant rock players of their time are). Not to make it a substantial part of the music industry, but enough to keep it ticking along. Those of us inside just need to make sure it is not seen as a world where you need to know the secret handshakes. [i do recall sometime around '73 listening to a Buffalo Springfield compilation and taking to the cocktail jazz ending of 'Broken Arrow' - decided I'd like to hear more of that but hadn't a clue where to start] Edited March 16, 2015 by A Lark Ascending Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) It appears that the Neo-Swing movement may have had more of an impact, and more of a lasting one in Germany compared to the U.S. Like I said - it really is a a subculture/underground/"niche market" but consistently viable enough to keep a number of venues, events and gigs going on a regular basis (though of course you don't get to hear this music every weekend). IMO it is all about giving people a chance to get exposed to that music in a setting that does not frighten them away (such as at more "formal" concerts where any 30-year old would be by far one of the youngest ones and where the atmosphere to the younger ones would be a bit ... er ... "stifling" if you know what I mean ) and creating enough of a stimulus for them to explore the music further on their own, even if slowly and piecemeal. Edited March 16, 2015 by Big Beat Steve Quote
Hot Ptah Posted March 16, 2015 Author Report Posted March 16, 2015 My experience with this large number of adults in the past few years is that virtually no one knows anything about jazz, no one ever thinks about jazz, and if jazz is brought up in passing, they react very negatively, as a knee jerk reaction. If someone suggests going to a bar where live jazz is playing, a common reaction is that the group would rather be dipped in hot oil than have to enter a room where jazz is playing. I was surprised at the lack of awareness of jazz and the negativity toward jazz. Basically it seems to me that these adults like catchy songs with singing (pop, country and hip hop, for the most part), and do not think about expanding their cultural horizons. Also, adults in their 30s and 40s seem to have a different frame of reference for pop music than the "classic rock" of the 1960s/70s/80s. a whole other world of pop music which came later and which they think is just great. Certainly true, overall, but the non-presence of jazz (which again invariably raises the question "WHICH STYLE OF JAZZ are we talking about"?) in the awareness of the music-listening public AT LARGE to a certain degree is of the own making of the jazz "in-crowd" (the self-professed "true jazz fans"). Small wonder many occasional listeners would not venture into jazz places if the only jazz foisted unto them was "far-out weird noises" that they could not relate to at first listening. You cannot expect people to embrace music (which ALWAYS is a matter of very personal TASTE) if you confront them with something radically different they have never been exposed to before instead of EASING them into it and providing them with opportunities to gradually find their way into the music and then let them decide for themselves. Expecting people to expand their cultural horizons when it is just about a night out in a bar is maybe not the best approach for hardcore jazz zealots to make converts. In the 90s certain styles of jazz (yes, Neo-Swing or "Retro Swing" or whatever you would like to call it) was indeed comparatively big and had its following (and some of it is still going on today). And of course the keepers of (self-professed, again) "true" jazz faith had nothing better to do but to blast everything from that corner - too diluted, too much watered-down, not enough art in it, musically dissatisfying, pale imitations, etc. etc. And all this without even bothering to distinguish between what's good (there were/are good bands with quite some originality) and bad (yes, there were/are weak bands, just like eversywhere else - I'd bet avantgarde has its share of "emperor's clothes" cases too if you look closer). OTOH, even if hardcore jazz fans would fault many of these bands for the above in one swipe (which I still feel is unfounded if you do not differentiate) they'd have to admit a lot of what has been played by these bands (and still is, in certain places) is much closer to jazz than a lot of really non-jazz pop music that the general public is exposed to everywhere today. And those who went to live gigs by these bands (and not all of them had been diehard jazz fans before - far from it) certainly knew what a trumpet looked like and would have been able to tell a trumpet, a trombone and the various saxes apart (as well as their sounds). Regardless of whether you'd loathe these bands because, for example, they combined (oh horror!) punk rock influences with big band sax sections and lounge vocals. After all, where's the fundamental difference betwen the influences these band sworked under and the influences from non-jazz at work in some of those "world-music-cum-jazz" projects? One man's meat is another man's poison. Everywhere, all the time ... And at least over here, those neo-swing bands spawned a subculture of fans, listeners, dancers and bands that do keep playing their own variations on a SWING theme. They do listen to the old masters and just as much to current bands playing in that idiom. Can't find much wrong with that. There are MUCH worse stepping stones into other (maybe more advanced) styles of jazz. But if jazz cannot or won't reach out to the straw that might help to keep jazz above water, then ... well ... Overall I do not agree with this post, as to the U.S. I think that most people in the U.S. find anything which is not contemporary pop, country or hip hop to be way too strange for them to even contemplate trying to listen to. Blues, folk, jazz, traditional ethnic music from anywhere, classical--none of it is going to be easier to get into than any of the rest of it. And is doesn't matter if it Delta blues, acoustic blues, Chicago 1950s blues, current white guitar blues, swing jazz, bop jazz, fusion jazz, avant garde jazz, vocal jazz, traditional folk, 1960s folk, contemporary folk, string quartets, Baroque classical, Romantic classical, 20th century classical, symphonies, music from any nation--it just doesn't matter. If it is not Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake, Lil Wayne, Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, or JayZ, forget it, people in the U.S. are not even going to try to listen to any of it and you can't force them to. I am not saying this in a spirit of snobbishness at all. I think it is just the way it is. At times jazz has had more of a niche popularity than now, to a somewhat greater (but still small) extent in the U.S. Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) Maybe that formulaic radio programming of most of your radio stations is to blame in part that people just don't get exposed to anything but the most obvious acts and styles of music? OTOH I hear ever so often from people over here who spend some (holiday) time and travel in the U.S. that they were amazed how they were consistently able to tune in to some radio station (not internet but in their car) that played their favorite music (which in the case of those people is older music off the beaten paths of pop charts, ranging from older styles of jazz to pre-1960s R&B, country or rockabilly, i.e. not some typical oldies/nostalgia Top 40 either). Who ARE these radio stations airing their sounds to? Edited March 16, 2015 by Big Beat Steve Quote
GA Russell Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 I would be interested to see a list of the best-selling jazz CDs sold over the past 30 years. Excluding smooth jazz. I bet that most of those artists are today dead. So I wonder, are many musicians today making similar records? I think that (outside of classical music) there has never been much of a market for the recordings of the now-deceased. And if today's musicians are making records which don't remind anyone of the most popular sold over the past 30 years, why would anyone expect those new records to be popular? Just because they are new? Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 These are the gigs put on by my closest regular jazz club in Sheffield in the last few years. Nottingham has a similar history (I've been going there on and off since 1980. It might not indicate a genre that is central to current music. But it shows that there is a thoroughly healthy circuit. Most of those names won't mean much beyond Britain and Europe. But a lot of them are young players who have somehow stumbled into the music. Friday 3 October Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon’s Orient House Ensemble Gilad Atzmon: saxophones Frank Harrison: piano Yaron Stavi: bass Chris Higginbottom: drums Friday 10 October Millennium Hall Zhenya Strigalev’s Smiling Organizm Trio Zhenya Strigalev: alto sax Michael Janisch; bass James Maddren: drums Friday 17 October at 19.15 Crucible Studio Enrico Pieranunzi Trio Enrico Pieranunzi: piano Pete Turner: bass Dave Walsh: drums Friday 24 October Millennium Hall Ollie Howell Quintet Ollie Howell: drums Max Luthert: bass Matt Robinson: piano Duncan Eagles: tenor sax Mark Perry: trumpet Friday 31 October Millennium Hall Sheffield University Big Band Friday 7 November Millennium Hall Beats & Pieces Big Band Ben Cottrell: director Anthony Brown, Sam Healey, Ben Watte: saxophones Ed Horsey, Simon Lodge, Rich McVeigh: trombones Owen Bryce, Graham South, Nick Walters: trumpets Anton Hunter: guitar Patrick Hurley: piano Harrison Wood: bass Alex Tod: drums Thursday 13 November at 20.00 Auditorium, Sheffield University Students Union Polar Bear Mark Lockheart: tenor sax Pete Wareham: tenor sax Tom Herbert: double bass Leafcutter John: electronics, guitar etc. Seb Rochford: drums Friday 21 November Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy: saxophones Cecilia Coleman: piano Simon Thorpe: bass Matt Home: drums Friday 28 November at 19.30 Crucible Studio Gwilym Simcock/Yuri Goloubev Duo Gwilym Simcock: piano Yuri Goloubev: bass Friday 5 December Millennium Hall Neon Quartet Stan Sulzmann: tenor sax Kit Downes: piano Jim Hart: vibes Tim Giles: drums SPRING 2014 Friday 24 January 2014 Millennium Hall Ian Shaw Ian Shaw: vocals Barry Green: piano Friday 31 January Millennium Hall Gary Crosby’s Groundation Gary Crosby: bass Nathaniel Facey: alto sax Moses Boyd: drums Shirley Tetteh: guitar Friday 7 February Millennium Hall Kit Downes Quintet Kit Downes: piano Calum Gourlay: bass James Maddren: drums James Allsopp: bass clarinet Lucy Railton: cello Friday 14 February Millennium Hall Dennis Rollins’ Velocity Trio Dennis Rollins: trombone & electronics Ross Stanley: Hammond organ Pedro Segundo: drums & percussion Friday 7 March Millennium Hall MJQ Celebration Jim Hart: vibraphone Barry Green: piano Steve Brown: drums Matt Ridley: bass Friday 14 March at 19.30 Crucible Studio Jay Phelps Sextet: Projections of Miles Jay Phelps: trumpet Denys Baptiste: tenor saxophone Logan Richardson: alto saxophone Jonathan Gee: piano Tim Thornton: bass Shane Forbes: drums Friday 21 March Millennium Hall Jean Toussaint Quartet Jean Toussaint: tenor sax Andrew McCormack: piano Larry Bartley: bass Troy Miller: drums Thursday 27 March at 20.00 Auditorium, Sheffield University Students Union Get The Blessing Jim Barr: bass Clive Deamer: drums Jake McMurchie: saxophone Pete Judge: trumpet Friday 4 April Millennium Hall Brandon Allen Quartet Brandon Allen: saxes Ross Stanley: piano Mick Hutton: bass Chris Higginbottom: drums Friday 11 April Millennium Hall John Turville Trio John Turville: piano Calum Gourlay: bass Ben Reynolds: drums Friday 25 April Millennium Hall Led Bib Mark Holub: drums Pete Grogan: alto saxophone Chris Williams: alto saxophone Liran Donin: double bass Toby McLaren: keyboards Friday 2 May Millennium Hall Michael Wollny’s [em] Michael Wollny: piano Tim Lefebvre: bass Eric Schaefer: drums Friday 9 May Millennium Hall Julian Siegel Quartet Julian Siegel: saxophones & clarinet Liam Noble: piano & synthesisers Oli Hayhurst: bass Gene Calderazzo: drums Friday 16 May Millennium Hall Anita Wardell/ Dave O’Higgins Quintet Anita Wardell: vocals Dave O’Higgins: saxophones Mike Gorman: piano Oli Hayhurst: bass Tristan Mailliot: drums AUTUMN 2013 Friday 4/10 2013 Millennium Hall Tina May 4 Tina May – vocals Nikki Iles – piano Mark Hodgson – bass Stephen Keogh - drums Friday 11/10 Millennium Hall Alan Barnes/ Bruce Adams 5 Alan Barnes - saxes/ clarinet Bruce Adams – trumpet Robin Aspland – piano Simon Thorpe – bass Matt Home - drums Friday 18/10 Millennium Hall Liam Noble 5 Liam Noble – piano Shabaka Hutchings – tenor saxophone and clarinet Chris Batchelor – trumpet Dave Whitford – bass Dave Wickins – drums Friday 25/10 Millennium Hall Louis Moholo-Moholo 4 Louis Moholo-Moholo – drums Alex Hawkins – piano Jason Yarde – saxophones John Edwards – bass Friday 1/11 Millennium Hall Sheffield University Big Band Friday 8/11 Millennium Hall Scenes in The City - The Music of Charles Mingus Tony Kofi – saxophones Karen Sharp – saxophones Jeremy Price – trombone Mark Edwards – piano Arnie Somogyi – bass Clark Tracey – drums Friday 15/11 Millennium Hall Stuart McCallum Trio with Reel Strings Stuart McCallum - guitars/laptop Pete Turner – bass Dave Walsh – drums Thol Mason, Steve Cordiner – violins Tanah Stevens – viola Ben Cashell - 'cello Friday 22/11 Millennium Hall Pinski Zoo Jan Kopinski – saxes Steve Iliffe – keys Karl Bingham – bass Stefan Kopinski – bass Patrick Illingworth - drums Friday 29/11 at 19.30 Crucible Studio Zoe Rahman Trio Zoe Rahman – piano Alec Dankworth – bass Gene Calderazzo - drums Friday 6/12 Millennium Hall Apitos Dave Hassell – timbales Steve Gilbert – drums Chris Manus – conga Steve Williams – bass Paul Kilvington – piano Glen Cartledge – guitar Nick Smart – trumpet John Hinch - 2nd trumpet Andy Scott – saxophones John Barber – trombone Orli Nyles - vocal SPRING 2013 Friday 18 January 2013 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon Orient House Ensemble Gilad Atzmon: sax Frank Harrison: piano Yaron Stavi: bass Eddie Hick: drums Friday 25 January Crucible Studio Stan Tracey Octet Stan Tracey: piano Mark Armstrong: trumpet Mark Nightingale: trombone Sam Mayne: sax Simon Allen: sax Mornington Lockett: sax Andy Cleyndert: bass Clark Tracey: drums Friday 1 February Millennium Hall Karen Sharp Quartet Karen Sharp; sax Nikki Iles; piano Dave Green; bass Steve Brown; drums Friday 8 February Millennium Hall Empirical Nathaniel Facey; alto sax Tom Farmer; double bass Shaney Forbes; drums Lewis Wright; vibraphone Friday 1 March Millennium Hall Liane Carroll Trio Liane Carroll; vocals & piano Roger Carey; bass Mark Fletcher; drums Friday 8 March Crucible Studio Mark Lockheart’s Ellington in Anticipation Mark Lockheart: tenor sax Emma Smith: violin Finn Peters: alto sax James Allsop: clarinets Liam Noble: piano Tom Herbert: bass Seb Rochford: drums Friday 15 March Millennium Hall Paul Booth Quintet Paul Booth; saxes Phil Robson; guitar Mike Janisch; bass Ross Stanley; piano James Maddren; drums Friday 22 March Millennium Hall Get The Blessing Jim Barr; bass Clive Deamer; drums Jake McMurchie; sax Pete Judge; trumpet Friday 12 April Millennium Hall Troyka Kit Downes: organ Chris Montague: guitars, loops Joshua Blackmore: drums Friday 19 April Millennium Hall Soweto Kinch Trio Soweto Kinch; sax etc Karl Rasheed-Abel; bass Shaney Forbes; drums Friday 26 April Millennium Hall Peter King Quartet Peter King; alto sax Steve Melling; piano Geoff Gascoyne; bass Mark Fletcher; drums Friday 10 May Millennium Hall Alex Hutton Trio Alex Hutton; piano Yuri Goloubev; bass Asaf Sirkis; drums Friday 17 May Millennium Hall Printmakers Norma Winstone; voice Nikki Iles; piano, accordion Mark Lockheart; tenor & soprano sax & bass clarinet Mike Walker; guitar Steve Watts; double bass James Maddren; drums AUTUMN 2012 Friday 28 September 2012 Millennium Hall Iain Dixon/Mike Walker Quintet Mike Walker: guitar Iain Dixon: saxophones Les Chisnall: piano Gary Culshaw: bass Caroline Boaden: drums http://www.mike-walker.co.uk/ Friday 5 October Millennium Hall Disassembler Trevor Warren: guitar Pete Wareham: sax Annie Whitehead: trombone Dudley Philips: bass Winston Clifford: drums www.myspace.com/disassembler Friday 12 October Millennium Hall Kate Williams Septet Kate Williams: piano Gareth Lockrane: flute, alto and bass flutes Steve Fishwick: trumpet/ flugelhorn Ben Somers: tenor saxophone Julian Siegel: tenor and soprano saxophones/bass clarinet Oli Hayhurst: bass Tristan Maillot: drums www.kate-williams-quartet.com Friday 19 October Millennium Hall Christine Tobin: Sailing to Byzantium Christine Tobin: vocals Liam Noble: piano Phil Robson: guitar Kate Short: cello Dave Whitford: bass http://www.christine-tobin.com/index.html www.myspace.com/ctobes Friday 9 November Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy: saxes John Donaldson: piano Simon Thorpe: bass Josh Morrison: drums http://www.bennclatworthy.com/ Friday 16 November Millennium Hall Tim Lapthorn Trio with Bobby Wellins Tim Lapthorn: piano Bobby Wellins: saxes Arnie Somogyi: bass Stephen Keogh: drums http://www.myspace.com/timlapthorntrio http://bobbywellins.co.uk/ Friday 23 November Millennium Hall Neon Stan Sulzmann: tenor sax Kit Downes: piano Jim Hart: vibes Tim Giles: drums http://stansulzmann.co.uk/neon/ Thursday 29 November Crucible Studio Django Bates’ Beloved Django Bates: piano Petter Eldh: bass Peter Bruun: drums www.myspace.com/djangobates Friday 7 December Millennium Hall Heads South John Harriman: keyboards Steve Waterman: trumpet Buster Birch: drums Chino Martell Morgan: percussion Adolfredo Pulido: bass http://www.headssouth.com/ SPRING 2012 Fri Jan 20 2012 Millennium Hall Alan Barnes Quintet featuring Scott Hamilton Alan Barnes – alto, baritone sax Scott Hamilton – tenor sax Dave Newton – piano Chris Hill - bass Sebastiaan de Krom - drums Fri Jan 27 Millennium Hall Chris Biscoe Quartet Chris Biscoe - saxes, clarinet, flute Tony Kofi - alto sax Larry Bartley - bass Stu Butterfield - drums Fri Feb 3 Millennium Hall Zoe Rahman Quartet Zoe Rahman – piano Idris Rahman - clarinet Davide Mantovani – bass Gene Calderazzo - drums Fri Feb 10 Millennium Hall Ambulance Arnie Somogyi – bass Paul Booth – sax Tim Lapthorn – piano Dave Smith - drums Fri Feb 17 Millennium Hall Jim Mullen’s Reunion Quartet Jim Mullen - guitar Gareth Williams – piano Gary Husband - drums Mick Hutton - bass Fri Mar 2 Millennium Hall Damon Brown’s International Quintet Damon Brown – trumpet Christian Brewer – alto sax Yutaka Shinna – piano Martin Zenker – bass Matt Skelton - drums Fri Mar 9 Millennium Hall Dave O’Higgins Quartet with Eric Alexander Dave O’Higgins – tenor sax Eric Alexander – tenor sax Andrew McCormack – piano Arnie Somogyi- bass Kristian Leth - drums Fri Mar 23 Millennium Hall Kit Downes Quintet Kit Downes – piano Calum Gourlay – bass James Maddren – drums James Allsopp – bass clarinet Lucy Railton - cello Fri Mar 30 Millennium Hall Ivo Neame Quintet Ivo Neame – piano Tori Freestone – sax Jim Hart – vibes Jasper Hoiby – bass James Maddren – drums Fri Apr 13 Crucible Studio Gwilym Simcock / Klaus Gesing Gwilym Simcock – piano Klaus Gesing – saxophones and bass clarinet Fri Apr 20 Millennium Hall Michael Janisch New York Standards Quartet Michael Janisch – bass David Berkman - piano Tim Armacost – sax Gene Jackson - drums Fri Apr 27 Greystones Dagda Quartet featuring Jean Toussaint Jean Toussaint – tenor sax Tom Harrison – alto sax Billy Adamson - guitar Tom West – bass Mike Clowes - drums Fri May 11 Greystones Chris Allard Band Brandon Allen – sax Chris Allard – guitar Ross Stanley – piano Oli Hayhurst – bass Nick Smalley – drums Fri May 18 Crucible Studio . Tina May Quartet Tina May – voice Nikki Iles – piano Julie Walkington –bass Karen Street – accordion Fri June 8 Greystones Martin Speake Trio Martin Speake – alto sax Mike Outram – guitar Jeff Williams - drums AUTUMN 2011 September 23 2011 Millennium Hall Mark McKnight Trio with Seamus Blake Mark McKnight – guitar Seamus Blake – saxophone Ross Stanley – organ James Maddren – drums September 30 Millennium Hall Denys Baptiste Quartet Denys Baptiste – saxophone Andrew McCormack – piano Gary Crosby – bass Rod Youngs - drums October 7 Millennium Hall Jay Phelps Quartet Jay Phelps – trumpet Jonathan Gee – piano Tim Thornton – bass Matt Home – drums October 14 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon Quartet Gilad Atzmon –saxophone, clarinet, electronics, Frank Harrison –piano Yaron Stavi -bass Eddie Hick –drums Oct 21 Millennium Hall Will Vinson / Tom Cawley Quartet Will Vinson -saxophone Tom Cawley –piano Calum Gourlay –bass James Maddren –drums November 4 Millennium Hall Liane Carroll Trio Liane Carroll - voice & piano Roger Carey - bass Mark Fletcher – drums November 11 Millennium Hall Dennis Rollins Velocity Trio Dennis Rollins –trombone Ross Stanley –Hammond organ Pedro Segundo –drums November 18 Millennium Hall Geoff Simkins Quartet Geoff Simkins –alto sax Nikki Iles – piano Martin France – drums Simon Woolf – bass November 25 Millennium Hall Neon Stan Sulzmann – tenor sax Kit Downes - piano Jim Hart - vibes Tim Giles - drums Wednesday November 30 Crucible Studio John Taylor Trio John Taylor – piano Palle Daniellson – bass Martin France – drums December 9 Millennium Hall Jamil Sheriff big band Saxophones/Flutes - Russell Henderson, Simon Kaylor, Tori Freestone, Joel Purnell. Trumpets - Simon Bedows, Sean Hollis, Mark Chandler, Simon Nixon. Trombones - Kevin Holborough, Stuart Garside, Chris Hibbard, Rosie Nicholl. Drums - Eryl Roberts Guitar - Jamie Taylor Bass - Garry Jackson Piano - Jamil Sheriff December 16 Millennium Hall Julian Siegel Quartet Julian Siegel – tenor sax Liam Noble – piano Gene Calderazzo – drums Oli Hayhurst – bass SPRING 2011 Saturday January 22nd 2011 Millennium Hall Phil Robson & the Instant Message Quintet featuring Mark Turner Phil Robson - guitar Mark Turner - sax Michael Janisch – bass Gareth Lockrane - flute Ernesto Simpson – drums Friday January 28th Millennium Hall The Mick Hutton Group Mick Hutton – double bass Andy Panayi – saxes, flute Mark Edwards – piano Paul Robinson - drums Friday February 11th Millennium Hall Jay Phelps Quintet Jay Phelps – trumpet Shabaka Hutchings – saxes/clarinet Gene Calderazzo – drums Karl Rasheed-Abel – bass Jonathan Gee - piano Dylan Howe Quartet Brandon Allen – tenor sax Ross Stanley – piano Chris Hill – bass Dylan Howe - drums Friday March 4th Millennium Hall Steve Waterman Quintet ‘Buddy Bolden Blew it’ Steve Waterman - trumpet Chris Allard - guitar Anthony Kerr - vibes Alec Dankworth – bass Dave Barry – drums Friday March 11th Millennium Hall Sam Crockatt Quartet Sam Crockatt – tenor sax Kit Downes – piano Oli Hayhurst – bass Ben Reynolds – drums Friday March 25th 2011 Millennium Hall John Donaldson Sextet plays the music of Bheki Mseleku John Donaldson – piano Peter King – alto sax Ian Price – tenor sax Simon Thorpe – bass Tristan Banks - drums Quentin Collins - trumpet Saturday April 2nd Crucible Studio Storms / Nocturnes Tim Garland – saxes Joe Locke – vibes Geoffrey Keezer - piano Friday April 15th Millennium Hall Kairos Quartet Adam Waldmann – sax Jasper Hoiby – bass Rob Barron – piano Jon Scott - drums Friday May 6th Millennium Hall Trio Wah! Jason Yarde – saxes Larry Bartley – bass Mike Pickering – drums Friday May 13th Millennium Hall Mike Walker Sextet Mike Walker – guitar Iain Dixon – saxes James Maddren – drums Les Chisnall – piano Malcolm Edmonstone – keys Friday May 20th Millennium Hall Arnie Somogyi’s Scenes in the City Alan Barnes – sax Tony Kofi – sax Alistair White – trombone Mark Edwards – piano Arnie Somogyi – bass Clark Tracey - drums AUTUMN 2010 Friday 17th September 2010 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon ‘Orient House Ensemble’ Gilad Atzmon – tenor sax Frank Harrison – piano Yaron Stavi - bass Eddie Hick – drums www.gilad.co.uk Friday 24th September Millennium Hall Karen Sharp Quartet Karen Sharp– tenor & baritone sax Nikki Iles – piano Dave Green – bass Steve Brown – drums www.karensharp.net www.myspace.com/karensharpsax Friday 1st October Millennium Hall Tony Kofi ‘Standard Time’ Tony Kofi – alto sax David Chamberlain – bass Rod Youngs – drums www.myspace.com/tonykofi www.tonykofimusic.com Friday 8th October Millennium Hall IDST Tommy Evans - drums Johnny Tomlinson –piano Nick Tyson - guitar Seth Bennet - bass Simon Beddoe -trumpet Simon Kaylor - tenor sax www.myspace.com/idstmusic Friday 15th October Millennium Hall Simon Purcell Quintet Simon Purcell – piano Julian Siegel – tenor sax Chris Batchelor – trumpet Gene Calderazzo – drums Steve Watts – bass www.simonpurcell.com www.simonpurcell.wordpress.com www.juliansiegel.com www.genecalderazzo.com Friday 22nd October Millennium Hall £5 / 3 Sheffield University Jazz Orchestra Friday 29th October Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy – tenor sax Cecilia Coleman – piano Simon Thorpe - bass Gene Calderazzo – drums www.bennclatworthy.com www.ceciliacoleman.com Friday 5th November Millennium Hall Kit Downes Trio Kit Downes – piano Calum Gourlay – bass James Maddren drums www.kitdownes.com www.myspace.com/kitsmusic Saturday 20th November at Crucible Studio Stan Tracey Octet Stan Tracey – piano Andy Cleyndert – bass Clark Tracey – drums Guy Barker -trumpet Mornington Lockett – tenor & soprano sax Sammy Mayne – alto sax Simon Allen – tenor sax Mark Nightingale – trombone www.stantracey.com Friday 26th November Millennium Hall Sweet Chorus John Etheridge - guitar Christian Garrick – violin Dave Kelbie – rhythm guitar Pete Kubryk-Townsend – bass www.johnetheridge.com Friday 3rd December Millennium Hall Mike Walker Sextet Mike Walker – guitar Iain Dixon – saxes James Maddren – drums Les Chisnall – piano Malcolm Edmonstone – keys Steve Watts - bass www.mike-walker.co.uk Friday 10th December Millennium Hall Michael Janisch Quintet Michael Janisch – bass Paul Booth - tenor sax Jay Phelps - trumpet Jim Hart - vibes Andrew Bain - drums www.michaeljanisch.com www.myspace.com/michaeljanisch Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) Who says the music I love is filled with "far-out wierd noises"? You do!!! Young people who are into rock or techno or hip hop will not and do not necessarily hear a tenor saxophone being played brilliantly which might include altissimo or overblowing as "far-out wierd noises". Your stereotyping and generalizations about music you are barely familiar with can only be matched by the volume of words you apply to denigrate such music. My deepest apologies - really. I am aware of your musical inclinations and certainly did not mean to dismiss YOUR jazz. No offense meant - honestly - what I DID try to do (hence this "generalization" in QUOTATION MARKS) is to describe the reactions to jazz by many non-jazz fans as I unfortunately have encountered them myself time and again. And to make this clear - this "far out weird noises" description (that sums up how THEY'd describe it, not me) would have applied indiscriminately to anything from Bird via high-note big band sounds such as Maynard Ferguson's or their more recent equivalents up to Coltrane (even before his "free" period) and to any other sort of more forceful modern jazz. I.e. what they experienced as "weird" was not necessarily free jazz/avantgarde - quite to the contrary and to my dismay. But that's how it all too often is ... unfortunately ... I have tried some convincing there myself and sometimes have even succeeded, but not by playing them more of what they'd file under "noise" at first hearing but something a LITTLE less alien to them (to give them a chance to adjust their ears gradually instead of forcing a sonic assault on them in one single go the first time around). As for this statement of yours .. These potential new listeners might, in fact, find more subdued or historical forms of jazz limited in sound and not nearly aggressive, bracing, striking or intense enough based on many modern forms of music that include many sounds/approaches that they have listened to - sounds that the free jazz and avant-garde masters have incorporated into their music over the past 50 years. Why the best of these forms remain vibrant, fresh and alive. Because they are still in the process of creation. Often seemingly timeless - but if one's ears are open, the music is there to be heard. This is exactly why you don't give current potential jazz listener's ears the credit they deserve. Many are much more likely (as I was 25 years ago) to be more turned on by current jazz/improv than historical music - let alone by sorry ass recreation of such music. ... I hear you and I'd be the first one to appreciate being proven wrong. And if they get into your favorite style of jazz via that entry route - fine. But how come, then, that everybody is complaining about "jazz" (again: WHICH style of jazz?) being such a dying music form? If sonic experiences overlap to that extent and the kids are all open for this kind of jazz there should be no lack of fresh blood? As for that "sorry ass recreation", well, i won't go into this at length, except that I'm wondering whose ears aren't open enough now (to nuances, anyway). Maybe a generation gap thing? I have been told the younger'uns need utter intensity and extremeness in order to be really stimulated, otherwise they won't be stimulated enough at all. (Which should tie in with your "aggressive and intense enough" statement above ... ). Edited March 16, 2015 by Big Beat Steve Quote
BillF Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 These are the gigs put on by my closest regular jazz club in Sheffield in the last few years. Nottingham has a similar history (I've been going there on and off since 1980. It might not indicate a genre that is central to current music. But it shows that there is a thoroughly healthy circuit. Most of those names won't mean much beyond Britain and Europe. But a lot of them are young players who have somehow stumbled into the music. Friday 3 October Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon’s Orient House Ensemble Gilad Atzmon: saxophones Frank Harrison: piano Yaron Stavi: bass Chris Higginbottom: drums Friday 10 October Millennium Hall Zhenya Strigalev’s Smiling Organizm Trio Zhenya Strigalev: alto sax Michael Janisch; bass James Maddren: drums Friday 17 October at 19.15 Crucible Studio Enrico Pieranunzi Trio Enrico Pieranunzi: piano Pete Turner: bass Dave Walsh: drums Friday 24 October Millennium Hall Ollie Howell Quintet Ollie Howell: drums Max Luthert: bass Matt Robinson: piano Duncan Eagles: tenor sax Mark Perry: trumpet Friday 31 October Millennium Hall Sheffield University Big Band Friday 7 November Millennium Hall Beats & Pieces Big Band Ben Cottrell: director Anthony Brown, Sam Healey, Ben Watte: saxophones Ed Horsey, Simon Lodge, Rich McVeigh: trombones Owen Bryce, Graham South, Nick Walters: trumpets Anton Hunter: guitar Patrick Hurley: piano Harrison Wood: bass Alex Tod: drums Thursday 13 November at 20.00 Auditorium, Sheffield University Students Union Polar Bear Mark Lockheart: tenor sax Pete Wareham: tenor sax Tom Herbert: double bass Leafcutter John: electronics, guitar etc. Seb Rochford: drums Friday 21 November Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy: saxophones Cecilia Coleman: piano Simon Thorpe: bass Matt Home: drums Friday 28 November at 19.30 Crucible Studio Gwilym Simcock/Yuri Goloubev Duo Gwilym Simcock: piano Yuri Goloubev: bass Friday 5 December Millennium Hall Neon Quartet Stan Sulzmann: tenor sax Kit Downes: piano Jim Hart: vibes Tim Giles: drums SPRING 2014 Friday 24 January 2014 Millennium Hall Ian Shaw Ian Shaw: vocals Barry Green: piano Friday 31 January Millennium Hall Gary Crosby’s Groundation Gary Crosby: bass Nathaniel Facey: alto sax Moses Boyd: drums Shirley Tetteh: guitar Friday 7 February Millennium Hall Kit Downes Quintet Kit Downes: piano Calum Gourlay: bass James Maddren: drums James Allsopp: bass clarinet Lucy Railton: cello Friday 14 February Millennium Hall Dennis Rollins’ Velocity Trio Dennis Rollins: trombone & electronics Ross Stanley: Hammond organ Pedro Segundo: drums & percussion Friday 7 March Millennium Hall MJQ Celebration Jim Hart: vibraphone Barry Green: piano Steve Brown: drums Matt Ridley: bass Friday 14 March at 19.30 Crucible Studio Jay Phelps Sextet: Projections of Miles Jay Phelps: trumpet Denys Baptiste: tenor saxophone Logan Richardson: alto saxophone Jonathan Gee: piano Tim Thornton: bass Shane Forbes: drums Friday 21 March Millennium Hall Jean Toussaint Quartet Jean Toussaint: tenor sax Andrew McCormack: piano Larry Bartley: bass Troy Miller: drums Thursday 27 March at 20.00 Auditorium, Sheffield University Students Union Get The Blessing Jim Barr: bass Clive Deamer: drums Jake McMurchie: saxophone Pete Judge: trumpet Friday 4 April Millennium Hall Brandon Allen Quartet Brandon Allen: saxes Ross Stanley: piano Mick Hutton: bass Chris Higginbottom: drums Friday 11 April Millennium Hall John Turville Trio John Turville: piano Calum Gourlay: bass Ben Reynolds: drums Friday 25 April Millennium Hall Led Bib Mark Holub: drums Pete Grogan: alto saxophone Chris Williams: alto saxophone Liran Donin: double bass Toby McLaren: keyboards Friday 2 May Millennium Hall Michael Wollny’s [em] Michael Wollny: piano Tim Lefebvre: bass Eric Schaefer: drums Friday 9 May Millennium Hall Julian Siegel Quartet Julian Siegel: saxophones & clarinet Liam Noble: piano & synthesisers Oli Hayhurst: bass Gene Calderazzo: drums Friday 16 May Millennium Hall Anita Wardell/ Dave O’Higgins Quintet Anita Wardell: vocals Dave O’Higgins: saxophones Mike Gorman: piano Oli Hayhurst: bass Tristan Mailliot: drums AUTUMN 2013 Friday 4/10 2013 Millennium Hall Tina May 4 Tina May – vocals Nikki Iles – piano Mark Hodgson – bass Stephen Keogh - drums Friday 11/10 Millennium Hall Alan Barnes/ Bruce Adams 5 Alan Barnes - saxes/ clarinet Bruce Adams – trumpet Robin Aspland – piano Simon Thorpe – bass Matt Home - drums Friday 18/10 Millennium Hall Liam Noble 5 Liam Noble – piano Shabaka Hutchings – tenor saxophone and clarinet Chris Batchelor – trumpet Dave Whitford – bass Dave Wickins – drums Friday 25/10 Millennium Hall Louis Moholo-Moholo 4 Louis Moholo-Moholo – drums Alex Hawkins – piano Jason Yarde – saxophones John Edwards – bass Friday 1/11 Millennium Hall Sheffield University Big Band Friday 8/11 Millennium Hall Scenes in The City - The Music of Charles Mingus Tony Kofi – saxophones Karen Sharp – saxophones Jeremy Price – trombone Mark Edwards – piano Arnie Somogyi – bass Clark Tracey – drums Friday 15/11 Millennium Hall Stuart McCallum Trio with Reel Strings Stuart McCallum - guitars/laptop Pete Turner – bass Dave Walsh – drums Thol Mason, Steve Cordiner – violins Tanah Stevens – viola Ben Cashell - 'cello Friday 22/11 Millennium Hall Pinski Zoo Jan Kopinski – saxes Steve Iliffe – keys Karl Bingham – bass Stefan Kopinski – bass Patrick Illingworth - drums Friday 29/11 at 19.30 Crucible Studio Zoe Rahman Trio Zoe Rahman – piano Alec Dankworth – bass Gene Calderazzo - drums Friday 6/12 Millennium Hall Apitos Dave Hassell – timbales Steve Gilbert – drums Chris Manus – conga Steve Williams – bass Paul Kilvington – piano Glen Cartledge – guitar Nick Smart – trumpet John Hinch - 2nd trumpet Andy Scott – saxophones John Barber – trombone Orli Nyles - vocal SPRING 2013 Friday 18 January 2013 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon Orient House Ensemble Gilad Atzmon: sax Frank Harrison: piano Yaron Stavi: bass Eddie Hick: drums Friday 25 January Crucible Studio Stan Tracey Octet Stan Tracey: piano Mark Armstrong: trumpet Mark Nightingale: trombone Sam Mayne: sax Simon Allen: sax Mornington Lockett: sax Andy Cleyndert: bass Clark Tracey: drums Friday 1 February Millennium Hall Karen Sharp Quartet Karen Sharp; sax Nikki Iles; piano Dave Green; bass Steve Brown; drums Friday 8 February Millennium Hall Empirical Nathaniel Facey; alto sax Tom Farmer; double bass Shaney Forbes; drums Lewis Wright; vibraphone Friday 1 March Millennium Hall Liane Carroll Trio Liane Carroll; vocals & piano Roger Carey; bass Mark Fletcher; drums Friday 8 March Crucible Studio Mark Lockheart’s Ellington in Anticipation Mark Lockheart: tenor sax Emma Smith: violin Finn Peters: alto sax James Allsop: clarinets Liam Noble: piano Tom Herbert: bass Seb Rochford: drums Friday 15 March Millennium Hall Paul Booth Quintet Paul Booth; saxes Phil Robson; guitar Mike Janisch; bass Ross Stanley; piano James Maddren; drums Friday 22 March Millennium Hall Get The Blessing Jim Barr; bass Clive Deamer; drums Jake McMurchie; sax Pete Judge; trumpet Friday 12 April Millennium Hall Troyka Kit Downes: organ Chris Montague: guitars, loops Joshua Blackmore: drums Friday 19 April Millennium Hall Soweto Kinch Trio Soweto Kinch; sax etc Karl Rasheed-Abel; bass Shaney Forbes; drums Friday 26 April Millennium Hall Peter King Quartet Peter King; alto sax Steve Melling; piano Geoff Gascoyne; bass Mark Fletcher; drums Friday 10 May Millennium Hall Alex Hutton Trio Alex Hutton; piano Yuri Goloubev; bass Asaf Sirkis; drums Friday 17 May Millennium Hall Printmakers Norma Winstone; voice Nikki Iles; piano, accordion Mark Lockheart; tenor & soprano sax & bass clarinet Mike Walker; guitar Steve Watts; double bass James Maddren; drums AUTUMN 2012 Friday 28 September 2012 Millennium Hall Iain Dixon/Mike Walker Quintet Mike Walker: guitar Iain Dixon: saxophones Les Chisnall: piano Gary Culshaw: bass Caroline Boaden: drums http://www.mike-walker.co.uk/ Friday 5 October Millennium Hall Disassembler Trevor Warren: guitar Pete Wareham: sax Annie Whitehead: trombone Dudley Philips: bass Winston Clifford: drums www.myspace.com/disassembler Friday 12 October Millennium Hall Kate Williams Septet Kate Williams: piano Gareth Lockrane: flute, alto and bass flutes Steve Fishwick: trumpet/ flugelhorn Ben Somers: tenor saxophone Julian Siegel: tenor and soprano saxophones/bass clarinet Oli Hayhurst: bass Tristan Maillot: drums www.kate-williams-quartet.com Friday 19 October Millennium Hall Christine Tobin: Sailing to Byzantium Christine Tobin: vocals Liam Noble: piano Phil Robson: guitar Kate Short: cello Dave Whitford: bass http://www.christine-tobin.com/index.html www.myspace.com/ctobes Friday 9 November Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy: saxes John Donaldson: piano Simon Thorpe: bass Josh Morrison: drums http://www.bennclatworthy.com/ Friday 16 November Millennium Hall Tim Lapthorn Trio with Bobby Wellins Tim Lapthorn: piano Bobby Wellins: saxes Arnie Somogyi: bass Stephen Keogh: drums http://www.myspace.com/timlapthorntrio http://bobbywellins.co.uk/ Friday 23 November Millennium Hall Neon Stan Sulzmann: tenor sax Kit Downes: piano Jim Hart: vibes Tim Giles: drums http://stansulzmann.co.uk/neon/ Thursday 29 November Crucible Studio Django Bates’ Beloved Django Bates: piano Petter Eldh: bass Peter Bruun: drums www.myspace.com/djangobates Friday 7 December Millennium Hall Heads South John Harriman: keyboards Steve Waterman: trumpet Buster Birch: drums Chino Martell Morgan: percussion Adolfredo Pulido: bass http://www.headssouth.com/ SPRING 2012 Fri Jan 20 2012 Millennium Hall Alan Barnes Quintet featuring Scott Hamilton Alan Barnes – alto, baritone sax Scott Hamilton – tenor sax Dave Newton – piano Chris Hill - bass Sebastiaan de Krom - drums Fri Jan 27 Millennium Hall Chris Biscoe Quartet Chris Biscoe - saxes, clarinet, flute Tony Kofi - alto sax Larry Bartley - bass Stu Butterfield - drums Fri Feb 3 Millennium Hall Zoe Rahman Quartet Zoe Rahman – piano Idris Rahman - clarinet Davide Mantovani – bass Gene Calderazzo - drums Fri Feb 10 Millennium Hall Ambulance Arnie Somogyi – bass Paul Booth – sax Tim Lapthorn – piano Dave Smith - drums Fri Feb 17 Millennium Hall Jim Mullen’s Reunion Quartet Jim Mullen - guitar Gareth Williams – piano Gary Husband - drums Mick Hutton - bass Fri Mar 2 Millennium Hall Damon Brown’s International Quintet Damon Brown – trumpet Christian Brewer – alto sax Yutaka Shinna – piano Martin Zenker – bass Matt Skelton - drums Fri Mar 9 Millennium Hall Dave O’Higgins Quartet with Eric Alexander Dave O’Higgins – tenor sax Eric Alexander – tenor sax Andrew McCormack – piano Arnie Somogyi- bass Kristian Leth - drums Fri Mar 23 Millennium Hall Kit Downes Quintet Kit Downes – piano Calum Gourlay – bass James Maddren – drums James Allsopp – bass clarinet Lucy Railton - cello Fri Mar 30 Millennium Hall Ivo Neame Quintet Ivo Neame – piano Tori Freestone – sax Jim Hart – vibes Jasper Hoiby – bass James Maddren – drums Fri Apr 13 Crucible Studio Gwilym Simcock / Klaus Gesing Gwilym Simcock – piano Klaus Gesing – saxophones and bass clarinet Fri Apr 20 Millennium Hall Michael Janisch New York Standards Quartet Michael Janisch – bass David Berkman - piano Tim Armacost – sax Gene Jackson - drums Fri Apr 27 Greystones Dagda Quartet featuring Jean Toussaint Jean Toussaint – tenor sax Tom Harrison – alto sax Billy Adamson - guitar Tom West – bass Mike Clowes - drums Fri May 11 Greystones Chris Allard Band Brandon Allen – sax Chris Allard – guitar Ross Stanley – piano Oli Hayhurst – bass Nick Smalley – drums Fri May 18 Crucible Studio . Tina May Quartet Tina May – voice Nikki Iles – piano Julie Walkington –bass Karen Street – accordion Fri June 8 Greystones Martin Speake Trio Martin Speake – alto sax Mike Outram – guitar Jeff Williams - drums AUTUMN 2011 September 23 2011 Millennium Hall Mark McKnight Trio with Seamus Blake Mark McKnight – guitar Seamus Blake – saxophone Ross Stanley – organ James Maddren – drums September 30 Millennium Hall Denys Baptiste Quartet Denys Baptiste – saxophone Andrew McCormack – piano Gary Crosby – bass Rod Youngs - drums October 7 Millennium Hall Jay Phelps Quartet Jay Phelps – trumpet Jonathan Gee – piano Tim Thornton – bass Matt Home – drums October 14 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon Quartet Gilad Atzmon –saxophone, clarinet, electronics, Frank Harrison –piano Yaron Stavi -bass Eddie Hick –drums Oct 21 Millennium Hall Will Vinson / Tom Cawley Quartet Will Vinson -saxophone Tom Cawley –piano Calum Gourlay –bass James Maddren –drums November 4 Millennium Hall Liane Carroll Trio Liane Carroll - voice & piano Roger Carey - bass Mark Fletcher – drums November 11 Millennium Hall Dennis Rollins Velocity Trio Dennis Rollins –trombone Ross Stanley –Hammond organ Pedro Segundo –drums November 18 Millennium Hall Geoff Simkins Quartet Geoff Simkins –alto sax Nikki Iles – piano Martin France – drums Simon Woolf – bass November 25 Millennium Hall Neon Stan Sulzmann – tenor sax Kit Downes - piano Jim Hart - vibes Tim Giles - drums Wednesday November 30 Crucible Studio John Taylor Trio John Taylor – piano Palle Daniellson – bass Martin France – drums December 9 Millennium Hall Jamil Sheriff big band Saxophones/Flutes - Russell Henderson, Simon Kaylor, Tori Freestone, Joel Purnell. Trumpets - Simon Bedows, Sean Hollis, Mark Chandler, Simon Nixon. Trombones - Kevin Holborough, Stuart Garside, Chris Hibbard, Rosie Nicholl. Drums - Eryl Roberts Guitar - Jamie Taylor Bass - Garry Jackson Piano - Jamil Sheriff December 16 Millennium Hall Julian Siegel Quartet Julian Siegel – tenor sax Liam Noble – piano Gene Calderazzo – drums Oli Hayhurst – bass SPRING 2011 Saturday January 22nd 2011 Millennium Hall Phil Robson & the Instant Message Quintet featuring Mark Turner Phil Robson - guitar Mark Turner - sax Michael Janisch – bass Gareth Lockrane - flute Ernesto Simpson – drums Friday January 28th Millennium Hall The Mick Hutton Group Mick Hutton – double bass Andy Panayi – saxes, flute Mark Edwards – piano Paul Robinson - drums Friday February 11th Millennium Hall Jay Phelps Quintet Jay Phelps – trumpet Shabaka Hutchings – saxes/clarinet Gene Calderazzo – drums Karl Rasheed-Abel – bass Jonathan Gee - piano Dylan Howe Quartet Brandon Allen – tenor sax Ross Stanley – piano Chris Hill – bass Dylan Howe - drums Friday March 4th Millennium Hall Steve Waterman Quintet ‘Buddy Bolden Blew it’ Steve Waterman - trumpet Chris Allard - guitar Anthony Kerr - vibes Alec Dankworth – bass Dave Barry – drums Friday March 11th Millennium Hall Sam Crockatt Quartet Sam Crockatt – tenor sax Kit Downes – piano Oli Hayhurst – bass Ben Reynolds – drums Friday March 25th 2011 Millennium Hall John Donaldson Sextet plays the music of Bheki Mseleku John Donaldson – piano Peter King – alto sax Ian Price – tenor sax Simon Thorpe – bass Tristan Banks - drums Quentin Collins - trumpet Saturday April 2nd Crucible Studio Storms / Nocturnes Tim Garland – saxes Joe Locke – vibes Geoffrey Keezer - piano Friday April 15th Millennium Hall Kairos Quartet Adam Waldmann – sax Jasper Hoiby – bass Rob Barron – piano Jon Scott - drums Friday May 6th Millennium Hall Trio Wah! Jason Yarde – saxes Larry Bartley – bass Mike Pickering – drums Friday May 13th Millennium Hall Mike Walker Sextet Mike Walker – guitar Iain Dixon – saxes James Maddren – drums Les Chisnall – piano Malcolm Edmonstone – keys Friday May 20th Millennium Hall Arnie Somogyi’s Scenes in the City Alan Barnes – sax Tony Kofi – sax Alistair White – trombone Mark Edwards – piano Arnie Somogyi – bass Clark Tracey - drums AUTUMN 2010 Friday 17th September 2010 Millennium Hall Gilad Atzmon ‘Orient House Ensemble’ Gilad Atzmon – tenor sax Frank Harrison – piano Yaron Stavi - bass Eddie Hick – drums www.gilad.co.uk Friday 24th September Millennium Hall Karen Sharp Quartet Karen Sharp– tenor & baritone sax Nikki Iles – piano Dave Green – bass Steve Brown – drums www.karensharp.net www.myspace.com/karensharpsax Friday 1st October Millennium Hall Tony Kofi ‘Standard Time’ Tony Kofi – alto sax David Chamberlain – bass Rod Youngs – drums www.myspace.com/tonykofi www.tonykofimusic.com Friday 8th October Millennium Hall IDST Tommy Evans - drums Johnny Tomlinson –piano Nick Tyson - guitar Seth Bennet - bass Simon Beddoe -trumpet Simon Kaylor - tenor sax www.myspace.com/idstmusic Friday 15th October Millennium Hall Simon Purcell Quintet Simon Purcell – piano Julian Siegel – tenor sax Chris Batchelor – trumpet Gene Calderazzo – drums Steve Watts – bass www.simonpurcell.com www.simonpurcell.wordpress.com www.juliansiegel.com www.genecalderazzo.com Friday 22nd October Millennium Hall £5 / 3 Sheffield University Jazz Orchestra Friday 29th October Millennium Hall Benn Clatworthy Quartet Benn Clatworthy – tenor sax Cecilia Coleman – piano Simon Thorpe - bass Gene Calderazzo – drums www.bennclatworthy.com www.ceciliacoleman.com Friday 5th November Millennium Hall Kit Downes Trio Kit Downes – piano Calum Gourlay – bass James Maddren drums www.kitdownes.com www.myspace.com/kitsmusic Saturday 20th November at Crucible Studio Stan Tracey Octet Stan Tracey – piano Andy Cleyndert – bass Clark Tracey – drums Guy Barker -trumpet Mornington Lockett – tenor & soprano sax Sammy Mayne – alto sax Simon Allen – tenor sax Mark Nightingale – trombone www.stantracey.com Friday 26th November Millennium Hall Sweet Chorus John Etheridge - guitar Christian Garrick – violin Dave Kelbie – rhythm guitar Pete Kubryk-Townsend – bass www.johnetheridge.com Friday 3rd December Millennium Hall Mike Walker Sextet Mike Walker – guitar Iain Dixon – saxes James Maddren – drums Les Chisnall – piano Malcolm Edmonstone – keys Steve Watts - bass www.mike-walker.co.uk Friday 10th December Millennium Hall Michael Janisch Quintet Michael Janisch – bass Paul Booth - tenor sax Jay Phelps - trumpet Jim Hart - vibes Andrew Bain - drums www.michaeljanisch.com www.myspace.com/michaeljanisch Many, many familiar faces there - they also find their way to my part of the world. But I don't know why you mention young players, as the average age would be at least in the forties on my reckoning. However, that's a couple of decades younger than the audience for these people in my experience! Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 And to make this clear - this "far out weird noises" description (that sums up how THEY'd describe it, not me) would have applied indiscriminately to anything from Bird via high-note big band sounds such as Maynard Ferguson's or their more recent equivalents up to Coltrane (even before his "free" period) and to any other sort of more forceful modern jazz. The bolded part really tells the story, does it not? The underlined sections gave me a laugh. Though "recent" and "modern" shouldn't apply, they actually do. Unfortunately. And as the infamous Seinfeld line went, "there's nothing WRONG with that!" Really, there isn't. Which is a point that some folks in the Jazz circle of friends don't seem to get. If nobody else ever played a Jazz-related note and the genre officially died right here and right now, there'd still be a lifetime a wonderful music for someone to explore and enjoy. Unless mankind started living to be 200 years old. Master Reynolds, what's wrong with 'far-out, weird noises'?! Those of us who enjoy them should revel in the fact that they ARE "different". Does "popularity" really matter to any of us that much? Quote
ejp626 Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 It's also a bit less impressive when you realize the list covers several years (not one season) and more than a few players have passed away due to old age. This always happens when someone starts questioning the significance or self-sufficiency of something that is pretty evidently in decline yet has a few fervent adherents.Upthread someone said it best, talking about jazz lovers being in a cocoon, tuning out unpleasant news. And for the most part paying far more attention to remastered material they own on 2 or 3 releases already than to new music, which is either too hot (brash avant jazz) or too cold (boring retreads of bop and postbop music by young lions who aren't fit to carry Miles' mouthpiece). It's just the stuff from the past that is just right... Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (edited) (re: Bill Fs last post) I said there are a lot of young players there - 20s/30s - merely to illustrate how there are still plenty of young people getting excited enough about jazz to play it as a profession (probably alongside other things). Agree on the audience age difference. Reflects something I said a few days back about the financially/career insecure young making a living serving the entertainment needs of the more affluent older generations. Interesting that a couple of more recent gigs - Troyka and Polar Bear - have not been held in the usual venue but in Sheffield University students' union (apart from work commitments I found the idea of going to a students' union a bit worrying; maybe students feel the same way about going to a jazz club). Didn't get to either but would be interesting to have seen if there was an age difference. Edited March 16, 2015 by A Lark Ascending Quote
ejp626 Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 (re: Bill Fs last post) I said there are a lot of young players there - 20s/30s - merely to illustrate how there are still plenty of young people getting excited enough about jazz to play it as a profession (probably alongside other things). Agree on the audience age difference. Reflects something I said a few days back about the financially/career insecure young making a living serving the entertainment needs of the more affluent older generations. Interesting that a couple of more recent gigs - Troyka and Polar Bear - have not been held in the usual venue but in Sheffield University students' union (apart from work commitments I found the idea of going to a students' union a bit worrying; maybe students feel the same way about going to a jazz club). Didn't get to either but would be interesting to have seen if there was an age difference.To be fair, I did make it to an Electric Ladyland gig (many of the members are also in Polar Bear) at a street fair in London and the crowd was pretty young. This is a crossover thing (also Get the Blessing) that seems to be succeeding in the UK in a way that I don't see in North America (except perhaps for New York of course, which is the ultimate outlier). Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 It's also a bit less impressive when you realize the list covers several years (not one season) and more than a few players have passed away due to old age. This always happens when someone starts questioning the significance or self-sufficiency of something that is pretty evidently in decline yet has a few fervent adherents. I'm not claiming that this is on a scale with 52nd Street. Just that their is a sustainable circuit at work for a niche music. I noticed recently that several who play in Sheffield are just up the road in Wakefield a night before or after. I'm sure the finances are all on a knife edge. But there are a lot of people still passionate enough to do it, despite that. Most of the bands there are neither avant nor neo-bop. We get our fair share of 'Tribute to ....' type bands through but most of the ones I go to see are playing original music. It might not be reinventing-the-genre-different (though some of the punkier bands' publicists would like us to think they are) but its distinctive stuff that captures my interest. Quote
A Lark Ascending Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 To be fair, I did make it to an Electric Ladyland gig (many of the members are also in Polar Bear) at a street fair in London and the crowd was pretty young. This is a crossover thing (also Get the Blessing) that seems to be succeeding in the UK in a way that I don't see in North America (except perhaps for New York of course, which is the ultimate outlier). I don't think Acoustic Ladyland exist any more. But they were at the forefront of a whole group of bands who were heavily linked into Indie-rock (probably a wrong term on my part). Seb Rochford, a great jazz drummer, makes a big thing about his links there. Get the Blessing also lean that way - I think they have a connection with the rock band Portishead. I lost touch with much of that - a few too many thrash-metal jazz bands for me! But all part of the varied web. But there really are scores of practising younger musicians who often play music we'd all recognise as primarily jazz that is neither comfortably within a past style (not that there's anything wrong with that) or right out on the edge. Quote
Hot Ptah Posted March 16, 2015 Author Report Posted March 16, 2015 Maybe that formulaic radio programming of most of your radio stations is to blame in part that people just don't get exposed to anything but the most obvious acts and styles of music? OTOH I hear ever so often from people over here who spend some (holiday) time and travel in the U.S. that they were amazed how they were consistently able to tune in to some radio station (not internet but in their car) that played their favorite music (which in the case of those people is older music off the beaten paths of pop charts, ranging from older styles of jazz to pre-1960s R&B, country or rockabilly, i.e. not some typical oldies/nostalgia Top 40 either). Who ARE these radio stations airing their sounds to? That is not the case all over the U.S. The majority of that kind of programming occurs on not-for-profit, very small community radio stations, which barely exist on a shoestring thanks to listener contributions and volunteer DJs, or not-for-profit college radio stations, or not-for-profit public radio stations. In large metro areas and college towns, you may come across this type of programming. In parts of the U.S., you would not get much or any of it. Quote
Scott Dolan Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 That is not the case all over the U.S. The majority of that kind of programming occurs on not-for-profit, very small community radio stations, which barely exist on a shoestring thanks to listener contributions and volunteer DJs, or not-for-profit college radio stations, or not-for-profit public radio stations. In large metro areas and college towns, you may come across this type of programming. In parts of the U.S., you would not get much or any of it. Parts = most. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 Move on folks, nothing to see here, just move on. Quote
jlhoots Posted March 16, 2015 Report Posted March 16, 2015 Move on folks, nothing to see here, just move on. Thumbs up! Quote
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