David Adler

7
Nov

The writers’ strike

Darcy has some apt comments…

7
Nov

Goings on

Forgive the light posting — wife and I took a little road trip to Columbus, Ohio to visit some friends and we’re prepping for a week in Paris later this month. I’m busy editing copy for the winter edition of Jazz Notes, writing a story on this initiative for NewMusicBox.org and juggling assorted other duties. World events haven’t let up,

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1
Nov

Six Picks: November 2007

My monthly list of recommended CDs, as published in All About Jazz-New York, November 2007: Hubert Dupont, Spider’s Dance (Ultrabolic) Herbie Hancock, River: The Joni Letters (Verve) Steve Lehman, On Meaning (Pi)Evan Parker/John Edwards/Chris Corsano, A Glancing Blow (Clean Feed) Rufus Reid Quintet, Live at the Kennedy Center (Motema) John Surman, The Spaces In Between (ECM)

30
Oct

New in Jazz Times

My tandem review of Chris Potter’s new discs, Song for Anyone and Follow the Red Line: Live at the Village Vanguard (Sunnyside), in the November issue of Jazz Times. I also have a short feature [pdf] on drummer David King and his Minneapolis trio Happy Apple.

29
Oct

On Charles Lloyd

My review of Charles Lloyd’s Saturday show at Montgomery County Community College, in today’s Inquirer.

25
Oct

TNR’s “Scott Thomas” affair

Seemed like this had gone away, but here’s the latest. I can’t make heads or tails of it, but it doesn’t look as good for TNR. *Update: TNR sets the record straight — while stonewalling on a FOIA request from the magazine, the Army went ahead and leaked documents to the Drudge Report, wrongly insinuating that Beauchamp had recanted. Drudge

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24
Oct

The week on disc (6)

In case you missed the last one… Ryan Cohan, One Sky (Motema): Chicago pianist with expanded ensemble, long-form sensibility, lyrical mainstream jazz with an edge (Bob Sheppard on tenor, James Cammack of Ahmad Jamal fame on bass, etc.). Jason Kao Hwang & Sang Won Park, Local Lingo (Euonymous): Sparse, evocative work for violin and kayagum/ajeng (East Asian instruments). Jason will

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23
Oct

The brink

When you see the Turkish flag being marched through the streets you know that reason may have a hard time prevailing. Outrage over recent PKK attacks among the nationalist populace explains much about the Turkish government’s heated rhetoric. Now the gov’t is trying to tamp down that sentiment, in some weirdly Orwellian ways: The Turkish broadcast authority today halted all

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