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2003 Tanglewood reviews

Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis at Tanglewood

May 28, 2011 by Dave Read

June 27, 2003 Article by Dave Read

Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis performed at Tanglewood June 27, 2003.
Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis performed at Tanglewood June 27, 2003.
The Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis gave a spell-binding concert in the Shed at Tanglewood for an audience of 5,378; two sets with the whole contingent, 15 brilliant jazz players duded up in matching Brooks Brothers suits, followed by a mini-gig featuring Mr. Marsalis accompanied by the rhythm section and saxophonist Wes “Warmdaddy” Anderson. And you gotta know something about spelling to write about it because the titles of the compositions played include words such as “rhapsody,” “diminuendo,” “crescendo,” and “blues.”

This is the LCJO’s “Rhythm is our Business” tour so let’s mention the rhythm section first: Eric Lewis, piano, Carlos Henriquez, bass, Herlin Riley, drums. Second thing to say about them is that the second set was their’s, a set consisting of but one number, John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme, which we didn’t time but must have run 45-50 minutes. The first segment of the piece built up to Henriquez’ haunting bass solo with the rest of the band chanting/intoning “a love supreme, a love supreme…”. Instead of being a tasty coda, that just gave way to a searing sax solo and then came “top professor” Eric Lewis’ virtuoso piano solo that not only kept the audience rapt for a long time but also seemed to stun his colleagues, who peered at him in awe and looked at each other with expressions that ranged from disbelief to joy.

All the while in the back sat Herlin Riley, keeping time, always smiling, glancing over his left shoulder at Mr. Marsalis, and then he started hitting the rim and sides of his drums and we were off to rhythm heaven – all we can report is that it’s a beautiful place. Mr. Riley’s tour de force elicited movement from everybody in the house, of course, except for professor Lewis, who looked as if he were alone in a mountain-top monastary, head bowed before an altar. The collegial leader Wynton Marsalis, who was a warm and witty m.c. throughout the concert, and spoke of his special affection for Tanglewood (but mumbled the not-that-long-ago year of his T.M.C. fellowship!), remained seated for his own lofty solo which coalesced the extraordinary rendition of Coltrane’s eloquent composition, and brought the most-appreciative audience to its feet for a prolonged and heart-felt ovation.

sourced from a medley of composers

Lastly, the first half consisted of the Marsalis composition Back to Basics followed by the novelty of a 3-minute rendition of Fletcher Hendersons’s arrangement of Ravel’s Bolero, then LCJO trombonist Ron Westray’s arrangement of the Charles Mingus tone poem The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady, Billy Strayhorn’s arrangement of George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, and closing with Duke Ellington’s Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue.

Marsalis and the LCJO last performed here on July 25, 1999, sharing the stage with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony Orchestra for a program in celebration of the centennary of Duke Ellington‘s birth. The featured composition that night was Edvard Grieg’ “Peer Gynt Suite” and the program alternated between Marsalis leading the LCJO in Billy Strayhorn and Ellington’s arrangement with Ozawa leading the BSO in the Grieg score of the same passages. Pretty cool.
Members of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra:

  • Wess Anderson – sax
  • Seneca Black – trumpet,
  • Walter Blanding – tenor sax,
  • Vincent Gardner – trombone,
  • Victor Goines – sax,clarinet,
  • Andre Hayward – trombone,
  • Carlos Henríquez – bass,
  • Ryan Kisor – trumpet,
  • Eric Lewis – piano,
  • Ted Nash – sax, clarinet,
  • Marcus Printup – trumpet,
  • Herlin Riley – drums,
  • Joe Temperley – sax, clarinet,
  • Ron Westray – trombone.

Filed Under: Jazz at Tanglewood, Tanglewood concert reviews Tagged With: 2003 Tanglewood reviews, Jazz

Tanglewood Jazz features Jay McShann, Duke Robillard, Modern Jazz Quartet tribute by Donal Fox

August 18, 2010 by Dave Read

Tanglewood Jazz features Jay McShann, Duke Robillard, Modern Jazz Quartet tribute by Donal Fox

August 31, 2003 performances reviewed by Dave Conlin Read

Donal Fox and Stefon Harris perform at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival.
Donal Fox and Stefon Harris perform at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival. Photo: Dave Conlin Read.
The Sunday portion of the 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival had enough variety, both in quality and quantity, to make up a nice little festival by itself. It began at 1 p.m. in the Tanglewood Theatre, the very funky, rusty venue where the B.S.O. stages opera, with a program dubbed, “Remembering the Modern Jazz Quartet: Donal Fox, Inventions in Blue”. The Modern Jazz Quartet was formed in 1952, just a few hundred yards down the road from Tanglewood at the Music Inn, whose beloved co-founder, Stephanie Barber, passed away five days ago.

The Modern Jazz Quartet was originally formed as the Milt Jackson Quartet and consisted of Jackson on vibraphone, John Lewis on piano, Percy Heath on bass, and Kenny Clarke on drums. Lewis would emerge as the leader of the MJQ and also become the dean of the Lenox School of Jazz, the first academy for jazz studies, which operated only from 1957 – 60, but whose pioneering work is carried on now on campuses all around the world.

Pianist and composer Fox was accompanied by Stefon Harris on vibes, Yoron Israel on drums, and John Lockwood on bass for an elegant, energized, and engaging 90 minutes comprised of the works of just three men; himself, John Lewis, and, as Fox called him, “the original blues man, J. S. Bach.”

Now the programmer doffed his mortarboard in favor of a porkpie hat, as next on the schedule was an afternoon “Celebrating the Year of the Blues!” in Ozawa Hall.

Jay McShann and Lousiana Red at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival
Jay McShann and Lousiana Red at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival
Leading off the five-act marathon was Lousiana Red, the 67 year old true blues original from Alabama who has lived in Germany since 1981, and been touring in the U.S. since his first “comeback tour” in 1997. Winner of the 1983 W. C. Handy Award as Traditional Male Artist of the Year, his CD “A Different Shade of Red – The Woodstock Sessions” was recorded last year at the Woodstock studio of drummer Levon Helm and features both Helm, on drums and harp, and his Band-mate Garth Hudson, on organ and sax.

He kicked off his brief but rollicking set with “Red’s Dream,” wherein he’s beckoned by President Kennedy to help out during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Red’s response is, “Mr. Kennedy, you run the country, I’ll run the Senate,” and proceeds with the list of great blusemen he would replace the rascals with!

Next up was rising R&B singer Nicole Nelson with her band, winners of the 17th annual Battle of the Boston Blues Bands in 2001 by the widest margin ever. Her infectious set delighted the audience; she’s got the whole package and seems destined for a long successful career.

Jay McShann and Duke Robillard at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival

Jay McShann and Duke Robillard performing at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival
Jay McShann and Duke Robillard performing at 2003 Tanglewood Jazz Festival
Following her were a pair whose careers add up to more than a century: Duke Robillard, who’s been on top since launching Roomful of Blues in 1967, and Jay McShann (January 12, 1916 – December 7, 2006), who turned pro in 1931 and whose Kansas City-based orchestra in 1941 introduced Charlie Parker to the world.

It didn’t take long for the audience to see why Robillard has gotten 3 of the last 4 W. C. Handy Guitarist of the Year Awards; he’s master of all the tools in the axeman’s bag, sings good, and has put together a hellacious band, to boot. After about twenty minutes, Robillard was joined on stage by the legendary McShann, who played and sang the blues with an ardor and skill unbelievable for an 87 year old man.

Regrettably, we had to leave before Kendrick Oliver and the New Life Jazz Orchestra came on around 6, in order to take care of some errands before returning for the Festival’s finale at 8.

Filed Under: Jazz at Tanglewood, Tanglewood concert reviews Tagged With: 2003 Tanglewood reviews, Jazz

Review of James Taylor concert at Tanglewood June 24, 2003

November 29, 2008 by Dave Read

June 24, 2003 performance, reviewed by Dave Conlin Read

(Originally published on NewBerkshire.com)

What a difference a year makes! At 9 PM during last year’s James Taylor Tanglewood performance with the Boston Pops, some of the musicians still hadn’t gotten seated, while by that time Tuesday (June 24, 2003), Taylor and his band were already into the second set of a perfectly delightful concert that thrilled the sold-out audience of 18,000. The 2002 crowd was a traffic-snarling record of 24,470 that may stand for all time as the BSO has agreed to cap ticket sales at 18,000.

James Taylor Tanglewood concert June 24, 2003.

James Taylor Tanglewood concert June 24, 2003

Even so, the concert didn’t get underway until some 20 minutes past the 7 o’clock scheduled time and then did so in duo-mode, with drummer Steve Gadd and percussionist Luis Conte jamming for several minutes. Good thing because they had the spotlight in the opening number, “First of May,” which Taylor started off with a couple of sharp nasty whistles, as if he were leading a Mardi Gras parade. By the 3rd song, “Copperline,” Taylor had shifted to his native Appalachian roots, with vocalist/violinist Carmella Ramsey enriching the melancholy with some fine fiddling.

With the concert fully underway and the audience settled in, including the young Taylor twins (across the aisle from us for the first 5 numbers, until bedtime, we suppose), we heard the star in his familiar role as everybody’s neighbor and friend.

To a front-row enthusiast: “Oh yeah, how ya been? Me too, pretty much…” To us all: “Nice to be back. Finally decided to be summertime, even if it only lasts 15 minutes or so. We’ve got some old songs and some new ones. This is the title song from our latest studio album, ‘October Road.'” (Later on he said the it was written “not far from this spot,on the Housatonic River, as it flows by October Mountain.”)

A little later, most of the group took to the wings and Taylor put down his guitar for an outstanding rendition of his “Mean Old Man” (from October Road) done in lounge-mode accompanied by guitar, piano, and drums. “Mean Old Man” is a beautiful, insightful lyric that allowsTaylor to display not only the full range of his vocal powers but also his condition: mindful, grateful, and playful.

During last year’s Pops gig, (when Taylor was accompanied also by the redoubtable guitarist/crooner John Pizzarelli), we got the notion that Taylor may be looking ahead to a new career as a lounge singer, and there were a few times tonight, besides “Mean Old Man,” when it looked that way again.

If that ever comes to pass, they’ll have to be pretty big lounges, because Taylor seems to love making music in the midst of a big group of great musicians. He also enjoys working his introductions of them into the show, one or two at a time, throughout the night.

Other highlights of the concert were a rafters-rattling “Steamroller” as well as the new “Bittersweet” and “Mexico,” and of course, “Fire and Rain” (with regards paid to the nearby Austin Riggs Center) and the grand finale, “Sweet Baby James.”

Ain’t we in the Berkshires blessed to have everybody’s neighbor and friend really be our neighbor, and what a pal he was to get our oh-so-long-awaited summer off to such a tremendous start.

Reviews of James Taylor concerts at Tanglewood and the Colonial Theatre, Pittsfield:

  • Review of James Taylor, Sheryl Crow, Yo Yo Ma, Boston Pops, John Williams Tanglewood Aug. 26-30, 2009
  • James Taylor and his Band of Legends – July 4, 2008 – 60th birthday party
  • Review of James Taylor’s One Man Band show at Tanglewood – August 24, 2007
  • Review of James Taylor’s “One Man Band” at Pittsfield’s Colonial Theatre – July 19, 2007
  • James Taylor and Band – Tanglewood – August 21, 2006
  • James Taylor and Band – Tanglewood – July 4, 2005
  • James Taylor and Band – Tanglewood – June 24, 2003
  • James Taylor and the Boston Pops – Tanglewood – July 17, 2002
  • James Taylor and special guest Yo Yo Ma – Tanglewood – July 4, 2001

Video clips of James Taylor and Yo Yo MA on Good Morning America’s live broadcast from the Red Lion Inn, Stockbridge, Sept. 15, 2008

  • James Taylor says hello, Chris Cuomo chats with audience
  • James Taylor and Yo Yo Ma play “Sweet Baby James”
  • James Taylor sings “Shower the People”
  • James Taylor sings “Wichita Lineman”
  • James Taylor welcomes Diane Sawyer and Good Morning America crew to the Berkshires

Filed Under: James Taylor at Tanglewood, Tanglewood concert reviews Tagged With: 2003 Tanglewood reviews, James Taylor

2003 A Prairie Home Companion at Tanglewood, with Garrison Keillor

July 28, 2003 by Dave Read

July 1, 2003 Tanglewood concert review by Dave Read

For the fourth year in a row, the first Saturday of the Tanglewood season saw the Koussevitsky Music Shed become the capital of the public radio universe, as “A Prairie Home Companion, with Garrison Keillor” closed their 2002-03 live performance season far away from their Minnesota home.

And for the 3rd time in 5 days (James Taylor-Tuesday, and Wynton Marsalis-Friday) the Tanglewood headliner had a special, personal connection with the venue, and although Keillors’ mayn’t be quite so profound as the others,’ he outdid them in his praise, laying on enough encomia to make a lesser venue blush, calling it “the Mecca, the Vatican, maybe the Cooperstown” of classical music.

(And they even created “A Tanglewood Lollapalooza” about their previous visits to the Berkshires on their website, which is probably the best of its kind.)

This show was just about as good as it gets; a seamless 2 hours of aural entertainment, with just the right mix of humor, comedy, pathos, several examples of musical virtuosity, all knit together by the pretty good singer and great monologist Keillor, who even exposed his really-nice-guy-ness by devoting the show’s closing minutes to a lovely farewell to 3 departing staff members.

(Funny how these things work, but the little tune that’s been looping in my mind for days now is the Irving Berlin song “What’ll I Do (When You Are Faraway And I Am Blue)?” that Keillor personalized for his departing friends.)

Hsing Ay Hsu performs on A Prairie Home Companion at Tanglewood June 2003.
Hsing Ay Hsu performs on A Prairie Home Companion at Tanglewood June 2003.
The guest line-up was perfect, besides the Nilsson Quartet which augmented the “house band,” there was accordian wizzard Dan Newton, who created the “Norman Rockwell Polka” for the show (he did that by squeezing together 14 or 15 popular American melodies), the brilliant guitarist Leo Kottke, and Tanglewood Music Center fellow Hsing-Ay Hsu, a dazzling talent on the piano with oodles of star quality, too. (Leo Kotke – Photo by Anthony Pepitone, CC BY-SA 3.0.)

She even had a bit of a go -’round with the host, trying to get the audience to decide between Chopin and Debussy compositions, which Keillor nixed, saying “I choose the Chopin, this isn’t a democracy, we tried that, it didn’t work.”

And speaking of democracy, we found the show’s most profound moment to be the line from the Ketchup Advisory Board skit, “Ketchup has natural mellowing agents that help us to accept the fact that the big problem with democracy is that it depends so much on people like us.”

Keillor’s disdain for George W. Bush came through loud and clear in the “Hobo” skit, which featured “Waco George,” but the swipe he took at journalists during the re-working of “Where have all the flowers gone” with guitarist Pat Donohue was more telling (” Are they having too much fun/ Embedded down in Washington,/ When will they look around/ And see what’s going down? “)

A treat available only to the Tanglewood audience was to see the great affection with which Keillor addressed Hsing-Ay Hsu, already seated at the piano, adding an un-heard element to the introduction that told of the Tanglewood Music Center and Boston University Tanglewood Institute being the true heart and soul of the globally-popular Tanglewood experience.

We ain’t picking no nits here, but there were 2 errors of fact that jumped right out at us: Norman Rockwell didn’t paint all his masterpieces in the Berkshires (see current Stockbridge exhibit: “Norman Rockwell’s Vermont Years”) and, despite the the Shed’s nonpareil acoustics, during his July 4, 1991 Tanglewood concert, Bob Dylan was largely unintelligible.

Filed Under: A Prairie Home Companion, Tanglewood concert reviews Tagged With: 2003 Tanglewood reviews

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