5 minute read
Musicman Magazine 2021
In March of 2020, I was busy touring, performing jazz in various places. After a string of gigs in Hawaii, Seattle, and Portland, I was traveling East in March as the pandemic worsened and spread. Following my itinerary that was set months beforehand, I went to Denver CO to play a weekend at a club with a great quartet that I’ve been working with for about two years with world class trumpeter Greg Gisbert.
The COVID-19 spread was getting bad nationally, but to my surprise, the Denver shows were not canceled and went off without a hitch and with a lot of sanitizer. Dutifully following my schedule, I drove from Denver to Kansas City, MO. I arrived in KC Sunday night, ready to record over the next four days. Virus news was coming in, but the recording studio was in a private home, so we went recorded a quintet cd and a septet cd, featuring KC jazz star Bobby Watson on alto saxophonist.
We recorded some exciting, swinging music and basked in the satisfaction of a job well done.
Then, in a flash, Kansas and Missouri went into lockdown and we all went into quarantine, immediately. This was mid-March, and my bookings in Kansas City, New York, Memphis, Indiana, and Massachusetts were canceled. The gigs fell like dominos, nationally, in rapid succession, for all of us.
Shock set in and I realized two simple but unfortunate facts: I wasn’t going to be working for quite a while and I needed to stay put for an unspecified amount of time. These are unpredictable and scary times for all, to put it mildly. I experienced disappointment, sadness, anger, and anxiety like many people.
I was stuck in Kansas City, one of my favorite places and a pretty good place to be stuck. But I had to find some alternatives. Fortunately, I was staying with good friends in Kansas. I was hired to write two big band charts for guitarist John Stowell. Taking a deep breath, I told myself, “This is your job, right now.”
I promised John one arrangement by Memorial Day. Both arrangements were done by April 10th! I threw myself into the writing without knowing what would occur later. After finishing the charts and feeling proud of my work, I felt depressed. Now that these arrangements were done, what would I do?
This was a crossroads for me, as it was for many musicians. During the lockdown, I became friends with Herschel McWilliams, a local saxophonist and webmaster who had started a site, Live Jazz KC, which provided a thorough calendar of live jazz in Kansas City. We discussed interviewing Bobby Watson live on the site. Bobby is a singular alto player and one of jazz’s most memorable and prolific composers. We’ve been friends for ages and I had been wanting to interview him for a while. This seemed like a good time to bring that idea to fruition. So, we set a date to stream a live Zoom interview on Facebook through LiveJazzKC.com. I had planned to cover Bobby’s whole life and career in 90 minutes. However, at the end of the allotted time, Bobby was still in college and hadn’t even joined Art Blakey yet! The solution, was to do Par 2 at the same time, same Bat channel, the following week.
Before the live broadcast, I quickly named the show Convo Improvvo, a silly title that implies an enlightening, yet casual interview about jazz and life between friends. The shows with Bobby Watson were successful and fun. We modulated, as improvisers do, into a mode of presenting weekly shows with a panoply of jazz greats. We stuck with Convo Improvvo as the series title. I curated and conducted the interviews, while Herschel or drummer Jim Lower operated the sound and video, remotely.
Once the ball was rolling, we realized how many
fantastic living musicians we had to draw from, all with amazing career, journeys, and stories to tell. Funny, touching, sad, wild - these stories are now an archive of the Convo Improvvo episodes, posted on the website and Facebook page Live Jazz KC and viewable at any time for free.
We have booked and anticipate Future Convo with interviews with Mike Agene, Alex Nipagin, Kim Clarke, Billy Harper, John Stowell, Jamie Saft, Billy Drummond, and Bryan Carlotta from 2020, and in 2021, George Cables, Alex Norris, Jay Clayton, Kirk Lightsey and Mike Clark.
This archive will be a valuable jazz library with first-person accounts of the incredible lives of the participants. This archive contains fun history lessons for many generations. No one knows how or when the pandemic will end, or what the music scene will be like when it does. These are scary, unanswerable questions. However, I will always look back and muse that in this painful, unknowably difficult period of history, Convo Improvvo was born in the eye of that hurricane.
Rob Scheps began studying the tenor saxophone at nine. He grew up on Long Island, New York. After high school, he attended the New England Conservatory of Music for his B.A. in Jazz Studies with Honors in Performance. In Boston, Rob led groups, including his True Colors Big Band. In 1988, he moved to New York and formed the Rob Scheps Core-tet and the Bartokking Heads, establishing himself on the jazz scene. He formed new bands on both coasts.
Rob was a faculty member at the Mannes College of Music. He worked with contemporary music ensembles, while performing with noted big bands, including the Gil Evans Orchestra and Vanguard Jazz Orchestra.
Rob has been an active part of the classical, theater, and popular music communities. For 13 years, he was Principal Saxophone with the Oregon Symphony. He was part of the national tour of Porgy and Bess with the Charleston Symphony and the New York City Opera orchestra for Wonderful Town. He worked on Broadway on CATS and Miss Saigon. He appeared with Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Liza Minnelli, and Linda Ronstadt. Rob recorded over 35 albums with the Rob Scheps Core-tet, including the critically-acclaimed Comencio (Steeplechase Records, 2019) and Live at Smalls (Smalls Records).
Rob continues to perform and record internationally, working with his contemporaries and leading his own groups, Magnets! with Kim Clarke, The Rob Scheps Big Band, and the Rob Scheps Core-tet. Visit www. robschepsmusic.com
In the ensuing weeks, we tore through an amazing list of jazz musicians
Bassists
• Glen Moore • Mark Egan • Essiet Okon Essiet • Chuck Israels • Mike Richmond • Cameron Brown • Jon Burr • Matthew Garrison
Drummers
• Bill Goodwin • Victor Jones • Eliot Sigmund • Bruce Cox
Baritone Saxophonists
• Roger Rosenberg • Alex Harding
Trumpeters
• Tony Kadlec • Shinzo Ohno • Greg Gisbert • Scott Winhold
Trombonists
• Robin Eubanks • Dave Taylor • Curtis Fowlkes
Singer
• Sheila Jordan
Pianists
• George Colligan • Renee Rosnes • Francesca Tinsley
Gil Evans’s sons Miles and Noah Balta Sax, saxophonist/performance artist