Dr. Rat Posted March 16, 2004 Report Posted March 16, 2004 (edited) From the Newark (NJ) Star-Ledger BY ZAN STEWART Star-Ledger Staff In the '50s, '60s and '70s, Newark was a haven for Hammond B3 organ groups, when notables such as the blues-minded Jimmy McGriff, the hard-cooking Charles Earland or the innovative Larry Young could be found in such rooms as the Key Club and Sparky Jay's. Though that once-thriving Newark organ scene has all but disappeared, interest in the Hammond has not. The Tuesday jam at the Crossroads in Garwood boasts an organ, and organ bands can be heard now and then at Trumpets in Montclair, the Cornerstone in Metuchen and Bula in Newton. But the instrument's chief Garden State home is Cecil's Jazz Club in West Orange. At Cecil's, the organists include Adam Scone, who plays Sundays; Jared Gold, part of alto saxophonist Bruce Williams' jam session band on Tuesdays; and Radam Schwartz, a co-leader of the Crossroads jam who holds forth on Wednesdays. Occasionally, Cecil's will host an organ group on the weekends, as it did on Friday, when Exit 13 appeared. The splendid Exit 13 is co-led by Sylvia Cuenca, a powerhouse drummer who has worked with Clark Terry for over a decade, and Jersey City-based organist Kyle Koehler, a rising star on the Hammond. West Orange guitarist Dave Stryker -- who joined his partners on their 2003, self-titled CD on Etoile Records -- fleshes out the trio. One of Exit 13's strongest aspects is that it can dig as deeply into pure, driving jazz as it can into the shake-your-body party mood that an organ trio is known for. At Cecil's, where Stryker served as de facto leader, calling tunes and setting tempos, both aspects were explored, sometimes in the same tune. Take the opening "Miss C's Shuffle," a back-beat blues. Here Stryker, using his thumb on his strings to coax forth a honey-colored sound, mixed lines that had a down-home, bluesy flavor with those that flowed in a bebop manner. Koehler, whose sound can be rich and fat like the dynamic organist Jimmy Smith but more often favors the dry, dreamy tones concocted by Young, also shifted his stance, going from brief, punchy thoughts to waves of crying tones to ideas that bordered on abstraction. All the while, Cuenca made her beat fluid, changing the color of her sound with varying hits on cymbals and drums. Similarly approached was "Speak Low," where altoist Williams guested with lines that ranged from sweet to edgy. Stryker unleashed undulating thoughts that often had a blues swagger, and Koehler maintained a hard swing via seemingly hollered notes, and others that careened purposefully. Cuenca again supplied essential rhythmic heat. On "Our Miss Brooks," where Stryker issued statements that recalled Jimi Hendrix or Muddy Waters, and the bouncy "More Today Than Yesterday," the band's "let's party" groove was celebrated. Exit 13 can be heard on April 15 at the Dancing Goat Cafÿ in South Orange and on April 17 at the Cape May Jazz Festival. Additionally, Cuenca and Koehler will play with guitarist Ed Cherry on April 9 at Bula (973-579-7338). Stryker, in non-organ settings, also plays Bula on April 2 and 23, and appears with his Stryker-Slagle Band on March0 26-27 at Trumpets (973-744-2600). For information on organ groups at Cecil's, call (973) 736-4800. Edited March 16, 2004 by Dr. Rat Quote
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