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- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: The Hot Box
Read more: The Hot Box #013 – A to Z of Jazz Piano Part 4 - The Letter D
In the 13th edition of The Hot Box, Donald looks for pianists filed under the letter D, and plays pieces from Aaron Diehl, Kenny Drew Jr, and Jim Doherty. Some omissions of course but as a generality, surnames beginning with D seem not to provoke adoption of the piano as an instrument of choice!
As widely celebrated, the year 1917 saw the beginning of recorded jazz, but was also the birth year of Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonius Monk. Ella at 100, a 4-CD box has just been released on Verve, and Jon Beasley’s MONK-estra Volume 1 offers some tempting examples of Monk restated for a big orchestra. (Don’t worry, Dizzy comes along in the next Hot Box!)
The “Unreliable Memory” in HB13 continues reflections on The Fox Inn in Ashbourne Co. Meath, epicentre of jazz in Ireland in the late 1960s, where unbelievably, Keith Jarrett was in residence for a week at the precise moment he was starting out as a leader, after his popular sideman role with the Charles Lloyd Quartet. And the Fox also hosted one of the most important figures in vocal jazz, Jon Hendrix, on two separate occasions, plus another third of the popular vocal group Lambert, Hendrix & Ross, Scotland’s Annie Ross.
Read more: The Hot Box #013 – A to Z of Jazz Piano Part 4 - The Letter D
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- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: All Other Jazz
Read more: Jazz Mine No. 106 Saturday 13th. May 2017
Jazz from deep within the Mine plus closer to the surface. Chet Baker - CD The Essential Collection Small Groups & with Strings 1953, Clarence Gatemouth Brown, John Grass Octet & Quintet, Steely Dan, Scott Flanigan & Fabrice Mourlon and more.
Full Link to image sand more details on Jazz Spec
Jazz Mine is a play on jasmine which is one possible originator in respect of JAZZ as a description of the music being featured on this weekly show. Jazz keeps developing so the intention is to keep the focus on newer stuff with many forays into the Jazz Mines to illustrate past jazz musical triumphs.
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- Written by: Werner Lewon
- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: All Other Jazz
Read more: Tales from the far Side 11.05.2017
On this edition I continue my feature of life, career and music of Ron Carter with a selection of tunes favored by the bassist himself and some of his best solos according to some Jazz critics.
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- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: All Other Jazz
Read more: Jazz Mine No. 105 Saturday 6th. May 2017
Lots of British Trad Jazz on this edition incl. Joe Daniels JazzBand, Dick Charlesworth & Ken Colyer and more.
Full Link to image sand more details on Jazz Spec
Jazz Mine is a play on jasmine which is one possible originator in respect of JAZZ as a description of the music being featured on this weekly show. Jazz keeps developing so the intention is to keep the focus on newer stuff with many forays into the Jazz Mines to illustrate past jazz musical triumphs.
- Details
- Written by: Werner Lewon
- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: All Other Jazz
Read more: Tales from the far Side 04.05.2017
On this edition I celebrate bassist Ron Carter's 80th Birthday with a selection of his music as sideman, leader, composer and arranger.
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- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: All Other Jazz
Read more: Jazz Mine No. 104 Saturday 22nd April 2017
5. Silliest Game ( 4.09 ), 9. Night Lights ( 5.16 ), 7. Dream Of A Quiet Place ( 4.19 ), 3. Hobusemang ( The Horse Game ) ( 4.16 ), 2. Scarborough Fair ( 3.10 ) and more.
Full Link to image sand more details on Jazz Spec
Jazz Mine is a play on jasmine which is one possible originator in respect of JAZZ as a description of the music being featured on this weekly show. Jazz keeps developing so the intention is to keep the focus on newer stuff with many forays into the Jazz Mines to illustrate past jazz musical triumphs.
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- Parent Category: Jazz Ireland Blog
- Category: Talking Jazz
Read more: Talking Jazz with Brian Priestley
It might seem strange to have an English person, however well-intentioned and jazz-oriented I may be, writing Jazz Ireland’s first “think-piece”. But I am assured that other contributors will follow in the fullness of time, such as bassist and researcher Damian Evans. Well, actually he’s Australian, I know, but you get the point. And it would be good to be told here of other existing Irish jazz blogs, such as the stimulating comments from Ronan Guilfoyle, and others that we may not know about so far.