Posts in Photos
Thanks + Photos + Bonus Audio


I just wanted to say thanks to everyone who came out to our shows last week at the Parc 55—I had a great time playing with Adam, Ron, and Noah, and with any luck I'll be able to play there some more in the future. For those of you who weren't able to make it, here's our version of the standard "I Love You," from Friday night.

  • I Love You (Cole Porter) With myself on trumpet; Adam Shulman, piano; and Ron Belcher, bass. Recorded live, 10/05/07.

Also: last Saturday, I played with one of three pickup jazz groups (mine had Jeff Marrs, Eugene, and Evan Francis) that performed for the Fillmore Street "Indian Summer" Stroll, which culminated in a wild sidewalk jam session featuring 15 or so musicians wailing away amid the pedestrians. I told another musician it would be cool if random jam sessions just broke out all the time on sidewalks around the city--kind of like "Critical Mass." (Which then led to the mental image of thousands of jazz musicians clogging the streets and stopping traffic to play 500 or so choruses on "Now's the Time," as well as the unfortunate nickname "Critical Jazz.")

For more photos of this and many of my other gigs, visit my Flickr site here.

Audio, Photos, ThoughtsIanComment
Photos: Last Saturday at Octavia

First of all, thanks to everyone who came out last weekend to the Octavia Lounge. We had a great time playing and the room was perfect——intimate without being cramped. (And I hear the food was good, too.)

In addition to playing tunes from our CD, we premiered a couple of new compositions ("Disinvited" and "Contextualizin'"), and revisited some Thelonious Monk gems ("Ask Me Now" and the thorny "Four in One")——but I think the audience would agree that the highlight of the evening was Evan's blazing solo on "Chick's Tune" (by Chick Corea, naturally). Unfortunately the performance wasn't recorded, but hopefully we'll play there again and I can plan ahead to do some self-bootlegging.

The excellent photographer, writer and occasional pastry chef James Knox was also in attendance, camera in hand. Here are a few highlights:

Me and Dad and the sandwich board ("Chef's Cheesesteak"!)

It was especially good to hear Adam on a real piano.

Fred and Jon layin' it down.

Me and Evan trying to read and swing at the same time.

The entire set of 52 (!) photos can be viewed here. (If you like what you see, be sure and drop some compliments in James's comment box.)

We hope to have some more gig announcements for you soon. I'll also be posting some "recommended listening" notes on albums I've recently been wearing out. In the meantime, enjoy your summers and stay cool. (I mean that literally. Not "cool" like Snoopy when he puts on his sunglasses and listens to jazz. Although if you want to put on sunglasses and listen to jazz, don't let me stop you.)

PhotosIanComment
Kansas City: The Four-Day Tour

I am the giant head of Charlie Parker!

I Am the Giant Head of Charlie Parker! Photo by Alan Watt.

"Oakland? That hellhole!"

This was the reaction of the bass player after I answered his middle-of-the-tune question of where I was from, as we slugged through "Confirmation" at 3:20 a.m. But let me back up a moment.

My girlfriend and I were in Kansas City last week for a friend's wedding, but since we were in the town which produced so many jazz giants--Charlie Parker (of the giant green head above), Jay McShann, Count Basie, and many others--I decided to throw in a pilrgimage to what's believed to be the oldest jam session in the country: the Mutual Musician's Foundation, which has been hosting late-night sessions since 1930, give or take a few years for renovations. The session was listed as beginning at 11 p.m., but when we arrived after midnight the man behind the bar said, "music starts at one." So we sat in the arctic air-conditioned chill, surrounded by framed photos of Kansas City legends past, and waited.

A trio began to play a little after 2 a.m.--unfortunately I didn't get anyone's names, but they were very good, playing mostly standards. I was wondering if they played a set before opening up the session, but there didn't seem to be anyone else waiting to sit in, and after listening for five or six tunes and hearing some ruckus coming through the ceiling, I finally asked someone, and was told that the session was upstairs, and downstairs was for performances. But it worked out well, since I would've missed out on hearing the good music downstairs if I'd gone straight up to the session.

Downstairs at the M.M.F. Photo by Alan Watt.

We made our way upstairs, and found three musicians playing in a much larger (and less freezing) room, surrounded by oblivious drinkers. I played three or four tunes with the group, which featured a great pianist named Oscar Williams II (who according to a Google search studied with Bobby Watson at UMKC), the aforementioned bassist with the anti-Oakland bent, and a pair of drummers including a nice guy who told us he'd toured with the Ojays. (Linda said he approached her while I was playing and politely said, "Excuse me miss, are you waitin' on someone?") Unfortunately we had to split around 3:30 a.m., though a lot of drinkers were starting to show up as the bars closed. I don't know whether more musicians joined them, although I've since heard that the session really only picks up after 3--next time, I guess.

We also made it to the American Jazz Museum and Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, which are in opposite sides of the same building, but could not be further apart in terms of content and execution.

The baseball museum had a ton of material, but seemed to think it needed everything to be visible at once. The result was overwhelming, and not in a good way. Overall, I'd recommend it, however, since the exhibits managed to present many of the compelling stories of the Negro Leauges days (even if in a somewhat cluttered way). Unfortunately they didn't have the throwback-N.Y. Cubans hat that I wanted to buy, but I suppose I have enough hats as it is.

The jazz museum was another story, unfortunately. The space was set up well, and it's connected to what looks like a nice jazz club called the Blue Room (where a saxophonist was just finishing up a little improvisation demonstration on "When the Saints"--too bad he wasn't around when that tune was requested at the House of Shields)--but the exhibit was pretty short on substance. Other than Charlie Parker's plastic alto (as used for the famous Massey Hall concert where Mingus had to redub his bass lines) and a few contracts, there wasn't much to look at: lots of record sleeves which could've been seen at a record store, some photocopied gig contracts, and a late-model trumpet with the label "A Trumpet and Mouthpiece. Louis Armstrong was a famous trumpeter" or something like that. They also had a listening library with a couple of hundred in-print CDs--nice, I suppose, but probably no better than the average university or library collection. In fact, the most interesting thing I saw was a container of "Louis Armstrong Lip Salve," which Linda suggested would probably sell pretty well today. Hell, I'd buy some (although God knows what people rubbed on their chops in the thirties).

Although the museum was a little bit sad, it was luckily only a few blocks from the world-famous Arthur Bryant's, where we were able to smother our disappointment with ribs, "burnt end" sandwiches, and cole slaw the color of lime jello. (We also made it to Gates Barbecue but preferred Bryant's in pretty much every way). Other highlights included catching an entertaining K.C. T-Bones baseball game--the T-Bones' mascot is a bull named "Sizzle," who is, as far as I know, the only mascot in professional sports whose name celebrates his own death. (We also made multiple trips to Sheridan's Frozen Custard, which is so damn good that I can't believe it hasn't yet made its way to the Bay Area.)

Anyway, it was a nice short visit, and I'd like to go back and meet some more of the local musicians, since it seems like there's still a pretty vibrant scene for such an otherwise economically-depressed town. We kept thinking that any moment thousands of Bay Area refugees were going to come over the hill hungry for lower rent, backyards, and custard. It could happen any day, so you better snatch up one of those $50,000 houses fast.

Photos, ThoughtsIanComment
Audio & Photos: Tuesday's Performance

Tuesday's gig went well, and I was happy to see some familiar faces and return visitors. The group has really developed over the past year or so, and it feels good to know it hasn't been in a vacuum.

Alex Budman (who heads up the Contemporary Jazz Orchestra) also sat in for a few tunes, including the Evan Francis-suggested Have You Met Miss Green Dolphin Jones?, which actually worked out better than you would've thought.

The photo is by James "in2jazz", an avid jazz photographer and writer, who stopped by and took some pictures. You can see them all here. An added benefit of this is that I can clearly see that my posture is atrocious. (Especially when you compare it to James's photos of Nicholas Payton, who looks like you could hit him with a wrecking ball while he's playing and it would bounce off.)

In keeping with our policy of offering something for those who couldn't make it this week, here's a long excerpt (the entire song lasted 18 (!) minutes, but I whittled it down to 13 and change) from a familiar tune by Herbie Hancock.

  • D*lphin D*nce (Hancock) Soloists: Evan, tenor saxophone; Adam, piano; and Ian, trumpet; with Fred, bass, and Jon, drums.

Enjoy! (Bonus points for finding the spot where a bar patron shouts, "You picked the wrong scene, man!" Never a dull moment at the House of Shields.)

Audio, Gigs, PhotosIanComment