Iridium Jazz Club
Kevin Williams, Manager JazzPromo@earthlink.net
, Iridium Press
1650 Broadway, Corner of 51st St, NYC
212.582.2121
Mingus
Big Band
With:
Wayne Escoffery on Tenor Sax
David Lee Jones on Alto Sax
Jaleel Shaw on Alto Sax
Abraham Burton on Tenor Sax
Lauren Sevian on Baritone Sax
Randy Brecker on Trumpet
Kenny Rampton on Trumpet
Earl Gardner on Trumpet
Ku-umba Frank Lacy on Trombone
Conrad Herwig on Trombone
Earl Mcintyre on Bass Trombone
George Colligan on Piano
Boris Kozlov on Bass
Donald Edwards on Drums
Manager: Sue Mingus
"Charles Mingus was a virtuoso bass player, accomplished pianist, bandleader
and composer. Born on a military base in Nogales, Arizona in 1922 and raised in
Watts, California, his earliest musical influences came from the church-- choir
and group singing-- and from ‘hearing Duke Ellington over the radio when [he] was
eight years old'….Eventually he settled in New York where he played and recorded
with the leading musicians of the 1950' s-- Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Bud Powell,
Art Tatum and Duke Ellington himself…He toured extensively throughout Europe, Japan,
Canada, South America and the United States until the end of
1977 when he was diagnosed as having a rare nerve disease."
(Quoted from Mingus
Website Notes).
The Charles Mingus legacy lives on, through the dedicated management
of his widow, Sue Mingus, and the exemplary Mingus Big Band, composed
of numerous regular musicians and some special guests, who shift each performance
at Iridium and on tour, to create a musically mesmerizing evening. At tonight's
second set, fourteen musicians included one lone woman, Lauren Sevian, on
baritone sax.
As it happened, the blazing brass of saxophone and trumpet led this set,
with wild sensational sharpness in abstract, echoing themes. Flashes of swing mixed
with dissonant, driven dynamics, as bass and piano soon extended and exercised the
theme. The piece ended with a burning bass solo and muted horns, before a full band
finale. Lauren Sevian and Randy Brecker began the second piece with
mournful, soulful refrains, as the deep baritone sax played the slower theme and
imbued it with energy and even a danceable melody.
Don't Let It Happen Here
included Frank Lacy's dramatic, spoken words about the right of freedom and
the yoke of oppression. (Tonight was just in the midst of the Hurricane Katrina
aftermath). With Abraham Burton on sax, the volume built around words of
community and religion. Kenny Rampton had a solo trumpet riff, followed by
blasts of a full compliment of trombones and horns. Another piece included audience
rhythmic clapping and a marching motif. Edgy, eerie brass tremolos accented the
surreal effect.
Toward the end of the set, George Colligan, on piano, brought a classical
approach, mixed with Donald Edwards' percussive swing and Boris Kozlov's
buoyant bass. Trombones blared, and suddenly a theme of
Shortnin' Bread appeared.
The spoken vocals of African diamond mines, shortnin' bread, freedom schools, and
a pot pourri of politically infused lyrics, merged into melodic madness and a double
bass bow solo. Kudos to Sue Mingus and the Mingus Big Band.
Check
Iridium Jazz Club's Website
for the detailed schedule of the Mingus Big Band, appearing most Tuesdays.
Check Mark Millen's
Website to see true art photography.
Photo courtesy
by Mark Millen
Insert an opinion
© 2000 - 2024 All the material published on Jazzitalia is exclusively owned by the author. Moreover it is protected by International Copyright, so it is forbidden any use of it which isn't authorised by the rights' owner.
|
This page has 4.890 hits
Publishing Date: 31/12/2005
|
|