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Birds of a feather

The jazz flocks gather at Newport
By JON GARELICK  |  August 15, 2007

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INSTRUCTIVE: Gunther Schuller explained the pieces — and then Sue Mingus explained them again.

Watch a slideshow of images from the JVC Jazz Festival at Newport. Photos by Jean Hangarter
What continues to make the JVC Jazz Festival at Newport so vital these days isn’t just the variety but the depth of the variety, the cross-references, the styles within styles that bump shoulders from set to set, stage to stage, minute to minute. Swing, bebop, hard bop, post-bop, avant-garde, downtown nerd, Latin, funk, blues. And within those styles, individual voices. Music that, yes, maybe you can hear spread over a couple of seasons of local clubgoing, but here it was, last weekend, concentrated into two eight-hour days on three stages.

I say “these days,” because not that long ago Newport had become a pop-heavy affair, with not much for the serious jazz fan. But in recent years — and especially since the 50th-anniversary show in 2004 — the festival has been looking at its own history. And Festival Productions boss George Wein has been looking at his legacy — which more and more he sees as Newport. (He also produces, among other events, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.) If the living history of Dave Brubeck, Chico Hamilton, and B.B. King (all over 80) wasn’t enough, there were legacy shows all over the place. There were two “Newport ’57” acts: the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band on Saturday, and a match-up of the Count Basie Orchestra and singers Nnenna Freelon and Dianne Reeves at the Friday-night preamble at the Newport Casino that was meant to recall a concert with Basie, Billie Holiday, and Ella Fitzgerald. Other tributes at the Fort Adams State Park shows on Saturday and Sunday: the Monk Legacy Septet (celebrating Thelonious at 90), the Mingus Orchestra (Charles at 85), and the musics of Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Getz & Jobim, and Bill Evans.

None of this was fusty or pedantic (with the possible exception of the Mingus, but we’ll get to that). You’d think if any tribute would be meaningless without the principal, it would one to Rahsaan Roland Kirk — isn’t this music completely identified with the volcanic personality at its center? But former Kirk bandmember Steve Turre fronted a powerful septet that brought back Kirk not just as a solo personality but as a songwriter: here was the gospel fervor of “Volunteered Slavery” and “One Ton,” and the medium-groove of “Donathan’s Walk,” which pressed forward like a chant. Kirk was known for playing three horns at once, but trombonist Turre did his routine with multiple conch shells, or engaged tenor-saxist Billy Harper and alto/soprano man Vincent Herring in collective sparring. (Another reason to go to Newport: where has Billy Harper been since, oh, 1979?)

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Related: Teachers and students, The long view, In action, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Eliane Elias,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
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  •   GETTING THE STORY  |  December 01, 2009
    Full-length written histories of jazz can be a slog. Especially since "the story of jazz" (as critic Marshall Stearns titled his 1956 tome) only gets longer and more complicated. Personally, on these prose-narrative trips along the New Orleans–New York axis of musical development, I usually bog down somewhere outside Chicago.
  •   MISS TESS | DARLING, OH DARLING  |  December 02, 2009
    Boston singer-songwriter Miss Tess has always had the pipes and the taste to carry off her various ventures into country, blues, and multi-hued swing, but Darling, Oh Darling underlines her overall sound.
  •   ERIK DEUTSCH | HUSH MONEY  |  November 25, 2009
    Having played in projects from jam bands to jazz and as a singer-songwriter accompanist, keyboardist Erik Deutsch led an acoustic jazz album for his debut.
  •   MIXED MEDIA  |  November 18, 2009
    Film noir has been a running theme in composer/pianist Ran Blake's work since the beginning of his career — his very first album, The Newest Sound Around (RCA, 1962), with singer Jeanne Lee, began with David Raskin's theme to Otto Preminger's Laura .
  •   LIVE AND ON RECORD  |  November 04, 2009
    To call Darius Jones’s music avant-garde seems almost beside the point. In its way, it’s older than old — it’s ancient.

 See all articles by: JON GARELICK

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