Tag Archives: Jazz

Miss You: Jacqui Naylor at Snug Harbor

He Said:

So, you’re in the middle of doing whatever, some kind of something else, and you hear that piece of music for the first time, and you stop. Stop whatever that something else was and just listen with a who the hell is that?

In my head, I understand that music just isn’t that visceral for many people, but my heart can’t figure out how that can be. So if you can’t immediately think of where you where and what you were doing the moment you first heard song x or artist y, the rest of this probably won’t mean much. But if you are similarly afflicted, maybe you’ll get where I’m coming from.

After she died, I wrote about having exactly that experience the first time I heard Amy Winehouse. And it was like that the first time I heard Kind of Blue. And those are just a couple of examples.

Shortly after a divorce, I found myself, the clothes on my back, and two or three other random possessions in a furnished apartment on Frenchmen Street, tapping away on my laptop with WWOZ in the background. And that was my introduction to Jacqui Naylor.

The San Francisco based jazz vocalist was scheduled for two sets at Snug Harbor that week, and ‘OZ previewed the show with her take on Miss You. The Stones’ homage to the 1970’s New York City disco scene was transformed into a moody rainy day jazz meditation, perfectly arranged. It is as good today as when I first heard it.

Back then, you had to venture out into the real world to get your hands on a piece of music, and so within 24 hours I’d made the trip to acquire Shelter, her new release, and stopped by Snug to get tickets to the show.

Naylor plays one set a year at Snug Harbor, and for awhile I’d been to each of them. I missed her last year, but she’s back again this Saturday night, and we’ll be there for the 10pm set. If you like vocal jazz she’s an artist you may not have heard of who is very much worth checking out. For those of you on Spotify, here’s a link to a quick five song Jacqui sampler, including both Miss You and a version of My Funny Valentine as set to Back in Black (really).

Hope we’ll see you there.

In a Sentimental Mood: Happy Birthday John Coltrane

He Said:

This Friday, September 23, would have been John Coltrane’s 85th birthday, but I wanted to take a moment to celebrate a few days early, because today from 4pm-7pm Jazz From the French Market on WWOZ will feature three hours of the sax legend.

If you’re familiar with Coltrane, well then you know. If not, and you labor under the misapprehension that jazz is sleepy elevator music, check out the frenetic pace of Mr PC, from 1960′s Giant Steps:

Coltrane remains one of the most influential musicians ever to record, and his work from fifty years ago retains a modern sensibility. The sessions for Giant Steps (named for the unorthodox chord progression in the title track) occurred just weeks after Coltrane completed work on Miles Davis’ landmark Kind of Blue, perhaps the most significant jazz recording ever produced. The troubled musician battled heroin addiction and died of liver failure in 1967, leaving a brief but prodigious body of work including collaborations with Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington and Thelonius Monk, among others.

So tune in to ‘OZ this afternoon and chase the ‘Trane for awhile today. John Coltrane makes pretty much everything better.

And finally here’s his amazing take on Sentimental Mood, with Sir Duke on piano:

100 Years of Jazz: Lionel Ferbos at Palm Court

He Said:

Lionel Ferbos is the oldest performing musician on earth.

That’s my claim, not his, and I’m not entirely sure it’s accurate, but Ferbos turned 100 Saturday, so there can’t be many rivals for the title.

My youngest daughter and I were lucky recipients of an invite from a friend to see the trumpet player perform at Palm Court this past Friday night on the eve of his centennial. I’d seen him before at Preservation Hall and the Blue Nile, but for some reason never at his home base on lower Decatur. I’m glad we made it. Continue reading

Love, Lust, Liquor, and Jazz: Snug Harbor

He Said

The third Long Island Tea was usually very good; it was the first two that took some work.

I wasn’t what you’d call a sophisticated kid. Formative years in suburban Jefferson Parish had left me with a predictable sense of diversity; which is to say none at all. I distinctly remember being perplexed to learn that JFK was the only Catholic President. Where the hell, I wondered, did they find 38 Protestants? I recall reading about anti-Semitism and being similarly puzzled, unsure but curious as to what anyone could possibly have against a Jewish person, never having managed to meet one myself.  Basically I was about as cosmopolitan as a ham sandwich. With the crusts cut off.

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