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The Jazz Gallery, that small jazz club where big sounds are made by daring musicians, those iconoclasts, who keep the music interesting and stimulating. On Sept. 15, the trumpeter, cornetist and composer Graham Haynes, and Adam Rudolph, percussionist and composer will perform one night only two sets at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
Haynes is an inventive force constantly seeking new musical terrain. He discovered drum ‘n’ bass, a fusion of drum ‘n’ bass beats while working with DJ Submerged. Haynes has studied African, Arabic and South Asian Music that he incorporates into his music with traditional jazz rhythms. He was featured on pianist Vijay Iyer’s “Far From Over” (ECM 2017) and in 2021 released “Echolocation,” a collaboration with electronic musician Submerged (DJ). He has collaborated with Roy Haynes (his father), Vernon Reid, Meshell Ndegeocello, and Ed Blackwell.
Rudolph like Haynes is a creative source in both the traditional sounds of jazz and in the world of avant garde. He is best known for his many collaborative years with flutist Yusef Lateef. He has recorded with Sam Rivers, Omar Sosa, and Wadada Leo Smith. Together Haynes & Rudolph will bring out colorful rhythms, textures and melodies that will cross and combine a variety of genres.
On Sept. 16 and 17, music continues with The Jazz Gallery Fellowship Commission presenting Dezron Douglas “The Not Too Suite.” As the 2022 recipient of the Fellowship, the bassist, composer and educator Douglas will debut his commissioned work.
Douglas’ bass playing represents what was, the now and the coming future. His sound may include anything from traditional hard bop to the extended jazz shores and his favorite sounds of Philly, R&B soul. For this Commission debut Douglas will be joined by pianist Glenn Zaleski, trumpeter Akili Bradley, tenor saxophonist Chris Lewis, drummer Jonathan Blake (2022 JJA Award Drummer of the Year) and vocalist Sachal Vasandani.
Douglas is a protégé of inventive saxophonist Jackie McLean. Having performed on over 100 albums, he has worked with outstanding saxophonists such as Pharoah Sanders and David Murray and pianists George Cables Eric Reed and Mulgrew Miller. His 2020 duo album “Force Majeure” (International Anthem
For his debut appearance Sosa will introduce his new Quarteto Americanos, featuring Bay area artists drummer Josh Jones; on saxophones, flute and percussion Peter Apfelbaum; and bassist Ernesto Mazar Kindelan. lan percussionist Gustavo Ovalles, cellist Jaques Morelenbaum and flutist Dramane Dembele. “The concept of the album is peace, hope and unity. In this moment we are living when everything is falling apart little by little,” shared
Lenny White (Michael Weintrob photo)
Records), during the height of the pandemic recorded at home with harpist Brandee Younger was one of the best albums of the year. His most current album was released earlier this year “Meditations on Faith,” a collection of spirited solo improvisations.
Douglas is always expanding the boundaries of this music so we can only expect something new, fresh and exhilarating from his upcoming appearance at The Jazz Gallery.
For tickets visit the website jazzgallery.org. The Jazz Gallery is located at 1160 Broadway in New York City.
The pianist and composer
Omar Sosa has toured the world with rave reviews and while living in Spain, he has graced Gotham’s jazz stages on many occasions but this will be his premier engagement at Dizzy’s Jazz Club (60th Street Columbus Circle) Sept. 16-18. Two sets each night at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
“I am so happy to be coming into Dizzy’s. With this new band I get to play with old friends, who I haven’t played with in 20 years,” said Sosa. “This band is more free, we have room to interact with more conversation and that’s what jazz is all about. For the show we will play many of my original compositions.”
Sosa’s music has always been a source of ancestral relevance. He traces the diaspora from Africa to his native home of Cuba to Brazil and Central America to Ecuador’s African-descent communities. His music is rooted in the spiritualness of Santeria but is entrenched in groove and soul.
Sosa’s most recent album is a collaboration with Seckou Keita recorded in the midst of the pandemic entitled “SUBA” (OTA Records 2021), which means “sunrise” in Keita’s native language Mandinka. The two musicians met at the Fattoria Musica, in Germany and completed the album in 10 days with the help of VenezueSosa. “We try to give hope through our music and tell people that we can be together.”
For reservations visit the website jazz.org. or call 212-259-9595.
Drummer and composer Lenny
White, part of the younger generation of Queens natives, now carries the torch from his peers from the ole’ hood—a host of jazz legends who resided in Queens such as Roy Haynes, Louis Armstrong, Lena Horne, Dizzy Gillespie, Chick Corea and Ella Fitzgerald. White, a three-time Grammy winning drummer, composer and educator, started his music career in Queens; he wasn’t a transplant, he was born and raised in Jamaica, Queens.
White, a self-taught drummer, began his career playing in Queens and the Manhattan jazz scene. He played regularly with saxophonist Jackie McLean in the late 1960s. His reputation as a young creative drummer landed him with Miles Davis on his recording of “Bitches Brew” (Columbia 1970); he went on to become an original member of another groundbreaking jazz rock group Return to Forever led by Chick Corea (1973-76). White was a co-founding member the 1980s Queens-based funk group The Jamaica Boys with guitarist Spaceman Patterson, bassist Marcus Miller and keyboardist Bernard Wright with singer Dinky Bingham.
Tours with these pioneering jazz groups as well as with his own bands have taken him to major concert halls throughout the U.S. and the world but there was one venue he missed—Flushing Town Hall (his hometown venue).
On Sept. 23, the native son Lenny White & Friends will debut at the Smithsonian-affiliate Flushing Town Hall, at 8 p.m. The performance will feature White’s original compositions. He will be joined by Tom Guarna (guitar), Quinton Zoto (guitar), Richie Goods (bass), and Vince Evans (piano and synthesizers). “When I lived in Queens and we were playing music it had a relevance. It’s great to come back and play, I’m honored to have the opportunity,” said White. “I have known these cats for sometime playing together over the years. I am going to play my electric music. When you have made music for 50 years, that’s a lot of music from where it came from to where it is now and the future of what it can be!”
White’s electric music for the evening will no doubt jump genres from jazz to funk. “Fusion is not a respectable term, Miles wasn’t playing fusion he was playing his version of rock and roll, so it was jazz rock,” explained White during our phone interview. “From Miles and Chick I learned how to be myself and play outside of my comfort zone, they both gave me challenges.” Today, he is sharing his knowledge as part of the Music Adjunct Faculty at NYU Steinhardt.
Lenny White returns home to Queens, Flushing Town Hall—it’s going to be a real celebration. As he says, he likes all kinds of music, he is a musician not a jazz musician. With that statement one can imagine the concert will be out of the box, that’s the only way White plays.
The performance will also be live streamed online on YouTube for $10. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit: https:// www.flushingtownhall.org/lennywhite.Town Hall is located at 137-35 Northern Blvd. Flushing, N.Y.
Jazzmeia Horn and her band performed at Summerstage/Jazzmobile’s Charlie Parker Jazz Festival at Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem. Well-known trumpeter/composer jazzman Terence Blanchard also performed to a 1,000-plus audience at Marcus Garvey Park during the Charlie Parker Jazz Fest on Sunday.