News & Updates — out-jazz
Sam Rivers / Sept 25, 1923 - Dec 26, 2011
One of my favorite multi-reed improvisors, Sam Rivers was born on this day in 1923. He came from Oklahoma, his father and grandfather were gospel singers and helped give little Sammy the music bug. After some time as a youth in Chicago & Little Rock, he started his professional career on the West Coast in the '40s, playing in Jimmy Witherspoon's band, as well as with Quincy Jones. In Boston he started working with teenage drummer Tony Williams, who in turn brought him into the Miles Davis Quintet in '64, if only for a brief spell (captured on the Miles In...
Billy Bang / Sept 20, 1947 - April 11, 2011
Happy birthday to Billy Bang, avant-jazz violinist of the NYC downtown loft jazz scene of the '70s & '80s and beyond. A unique presence, his style merges contemporary "classical"/avant-garde, fire music/free-jazz, blues, swing and funk and he always chose great sideman. He could work well as a solo performer, in duos, jazz combos, as part of an orchestra or with dancers (he himself was a great dancer onstage). Born William Walker in Alabama, he grew up in the Bronx & Harlem. He was given a violin because he was small. He learned to play it as a youth but quit...
Tom Cora / Sept 14, 1953 - April 9, 1998
Here's a birthday nod to the late Tom Cora, improvising cellist of out-rock, free-jazz, underground experimental and avant-garde styles. He modified and prepared his cello, often playing it violently like a guitar and through loud amplification. From Richmond, Virginia, he was originally a drummer before moving to jazz guitar in the DC area. Picking up the cello in college, he studied with Karl Berger and moved to NYC in '79. He quickly joined the rising Downtown avant-garde/improv scene, touring with Eugene Chadbourne and forming Curlew with George Cartwright & Bill Laswell and others. In '82 he formed the improvising duo...
Marion Brown / Sept 8, 1931 - Oct 18, 2010
Happy birthday to the alto sax icon Marion Brown! He made so many great records, from the ESP Disks to the records with Gunter Hampel, the awesome early '70s trilogy (Afternoon of a Georgia Faun, Geechee Recollections and Sweet Earth Flying), some records for Freedom and Baystate and on and on. Plus he started his Sweet Earth label out of Western Massachusetts. He played with John Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Stanley Cowell, Harold Budd and others and was an educator and a fine artist (drawing, painting). I was fortunate enough to meet him in the '90s. His son Djinji was in...
Makanda Ken McIntyre / Sept 7, 1931 - June 13, 2001
Today we honor another underrated reedsman of the '60s/70s creative jazz scene, Makanda Ken McIntyre. While his main axe was the alto sax, he recorded on many different wind instruments: flute, oboe, bass clarinet, tenor sax, soprano sax, bassoon. In addition he was a capable pianist and drummer. He wrote or arranged hundreds of tunes, incorporating bebop, blues, calypso, avant-garde into his style. He composed for jazz combos, chamber groups, orchestra, woodwind quartets, film & television scores and made several classic, if under-known, albums as a leader. He had a long and distinguished career as an educator, both in the NYC schools...