Thursday, December 31, 2009

Left Us in 2009.

Here is a few of the wonderful artists that left us in 2009. I would like to thank each and every one of them for the music they left for us.
Blossom Deari,
Les Paul,
Charlie Mariano,
Chris Connor,
Jeff Clyne,
David "Fathead" Newman,
Hank Crawford,
Bud Shnk,
Ian Carr,
Gerry Niewood,
Jimmy McGriff,
Louie Bellson,
Pete King.
I know there are more but these are the ones that I recollect while making this post. R.I.P to all of them.

The Rep.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Dream Compilationm parts 1 & 2.

This podcast is in two, 1 hour parts and I have called it "A Dream Compilation" and thats what the label says and that is exactly what it is.
Here is the play list to prove it.Part 1,
Freddie Hubbard - Blues By Five, 2009/1969.
Sonny Rollins - Nice Lady, 2009.
Steve Turre - Funky T, 1995.
Mulgrew Miller - Organ Grinder, 2004.
Miles Davis - Backseat Betty, 1982.
Tubby Hayes Quintet - Sausage Scraper, 1963.
Part 2,
Phil Ranelin - This Ones For Trane, 2004.
Gene Harris/Stanley Turrentine - Genes Lament, 1986.
Lester Bowies Brass Fantasy - I Only Have Eyes For You, 1985.
Dexter Gordon - Round Midnight, 1977.
Annie Whitehead - Afro Blue, 2000.
Les McCann - A Little 3-4 For God And Co, 1996.
Link, http://thejazzrep.podomatic.com/
I put this together for your pleasure.
The Rep

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Merry Xmas


I hope you all have a peaceful xmas.A nice bit of jazz on the stereo,a glass of something you fancy and a decent meal.On that subject, please remember the reason we celebrate xmas and the millions of people worldwide that won't have a jolly time at all.

Peace Andy

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Pete King RIP.

Pete King
Pete King, who died on December 20 aged 80, was the co-founder of Ronnie Scott's jazz club and in charge of its day-to-day running from the opening night.

Published: 6:31PM GMT 21 Dec 2009

Photo: DAVID SINCLAIR
King was renowned as much for his formidable presence – newcomers to the club sometimes mistook him for the bouncer – as for his business acumen. For eight years after Scott's death he was the club's sole proprietor.
Peter Stephen George King was born in Bow, east London, on August 23 1929. He took up the clarinet and saxophone as a teenager, taught by Vera Lynn's father-in law, Harry Lewis. Though he began his working life as an apprentice coachbuilder with London Transport, he quickly decided to become a professional musician.
It was around this time that, while playing for a dance at Stoke Newington town hall, he first met Ronnie Scott. The two men instantly hit it off and kept in touch. King subsequently passed through the ranks of many leading bands of the postwar period, including those of Leslie "Jiver" Hutchinson, Teddy Foster, Ambrose, and Oscar Rabin.
In 1952 King took over Scott's chair in the successful big band led by Jack Parnell. He had been there only a few months when Parnell hired a new singer, who made it a condition of taking the job that her husband, a saxophonist, should also join the band. Parnell reluctantly agreed and handed King his cards. Outraged by this, five of Parnell's leading players resigned in sympathy.
Ronnie Scott gathered the newly unemployed musicians together and proposed that, with the addition of a few more kindred spirits, they form a band of their own. The profits, if any, would be shared equally among them, an arrangement which the baritone saxophonist Benny Green dubbed "syncopated Marxism". As the band's most level-headed member, King was nominated its manager and financial controller, a job he combined with playing second tenor saxophone.
Scott's band proved a great success with dedicated lovers of modern jazz, but this audience was too small to sustain it for long and it folded after less than three years. This was the point at which King decided to give up playing and concentrate on the business side of music. When Scott teamed up with another leading saxophonist, Tubby Hayes, to form the Jazz Couriers in 1957, King became their manager.
Scott and King had often talked about opening their own club, patterned on the small jazz venues Scott had enjoyed during visits to New York. When, in 1959, the Jazz Couriers called it a day, they decided that the moment had come.
With the help of a loan from Scott's stepfather, they took a lease on the basement of 39 Gerrard Street, Soho, furnished it with an assemblage of second-hand tables and chairs, painted the walls, hired a piano and opened for business. Annual membership was 10 shillings (50p), admission one shilling and sixpence.
To open a club in Soho in those days inevitably attracted the attention of shady characters, keen to prey on newcomers, but King and Scott never had any trouble. Shortly after opening they received a visit from Albert Dimes, a much-feared underworld figure.
Dimes was an old friend of Scott's father and had known Ronnie as a boy. He arrived bearing a bottle of champagne to wish them well and told them: "If anyone comes around making trouble, just ask them politely to come back tomorrow and discuss the matter with your fellow director, Mr Albert Dimes."
Ronnie Scott's club struggled on with modest success for two years, but the proprietors realised that the only way to ensure its survival was by presenting American jazz stars. Unfortunately, appearances by American musicians in Britain were hampered by a long-standing disagreement between the two countries' musicians' unions. The only way the matter could be arranged was through one-for-one exchanges. King flew to New York to negotiate a deal.
"I found myself in a room full of cigar smoke," he recalled. "I was introduced to a lot of men with Italian names, and they all seemed to be wearing trilby hats. They didn't say much, but I must have said the right things, because I came away with an exchange agreement for the club."
Fortunately, this deal was soon followed by the arrival of the Beatles and the British pop explosion: "Suddenly, there was a demand for British music in America. We sent them Freddie and the Dreamers and the Small Faces; they sent us Sonny Rollins, Wes Montgomery, Bill Evans and Stan Getz. I'd call that a pretty good bargain."
In December 1965 the club left the cramped Gerrard Street basement for more spacious premises in Frith Street. Its fortunes fluctuated with the popularity of jazz itself. There were financial crises throughout the 1970s, culminating in a period of receivership from which Scott and King extricated themselves with the help of friends and supporters.
During the course of these tribulations, someone remarked: "If you'd been shrewd businessmen you'd have seen this coming" – to which King replied: "If we were shrewd businessmen we wouldn't be here in the first place."
The club's fortunes improved from the mid-1980s, thanks partly to jazz's growing popularity with a younger audience and partly to an imaginative booking policy. Scott's, for instance, was the first European jazz club to feature the vigorous new wave of Cuban musicians. By the time it celebrated its 35th birthday, in 1994, Ronnie Scott's was established as one of the world's foremost jazz venues.
Ronnie Scott died in 1996. His business partnership with Pete King, never formalised, had lasted longer than most marriages. Five years later, King was heard to remark: "I keep thinking that he's away on tour and any minute now he'll walk into the back office."
In 2004 King sold the club to Sally Green, owner of the Old Vic. After a year-long handover period the premises underwent a major refurbishment, reopening in June 2006. King then retired.
He died following a long illness, and is survived by his wife and one son; another son predeceased him

Sunday, December 20, 2009

New Podcast shows Jazz, A Love Affair 7-8.

Two, 1 hour shows from my UK Jazz Radio broardcasts.
Link, http://thejazzrep.podomatic.com/
Play list show 7.
Donald Harrison - Drum Line, 2008.
Berardi Jazz Connection - Last Night A Cat Stopped Me, 2007.
Liane Carroll - I Only Have Eyes for You, 2005.
Jimmy Smith - Oh No Babe, 1965.
Elliott Caine - Fields Of Jazz, 2006.
Tom Lellis - Nobody Doe's It Better, 1993.
Ronnie Scott + The Pablo Allstars - Cote D'Azur, 1977.
Play list show 8.
Ronnie Cuber - Maiden Voyage, 1988.
Bennie Golson/Al Jarreau - Whisper Not, 2009.
Steve Turre - Volunteer Slavery, 2004.
Gene Harris Trio+Stanley Turrentine - Battle Hymn Of The Republic, 1986.
Sarah Vaughan - Sermonette, 1963.
Vincent Herring - Caravan, 2005.
Hope You Enjoy the music.
The Rep

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Happy Birthday Curtis.

Just wanted to wish Curtis Fuller happy 75th birthday of yesterday (15 th Dec) and thank you for the music.
Cheers The Rep.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Jazz in the 70s.

I have put up a new podcast called "Jazz in the 70s" two, one hour parts of jazz released in the 1970s, 18 artists so lots of variety. The link : http://thejazzrep.podomatic.com/
and the all important play list.

Play list part 1.
Mahavisnu Orchestra - Meeting Of The Spirits, 1971.
Gato Barnieri - Bahia, 1971.
Gil Scott Heron - Lady Day and John Coltrane, 1971.
Freddie Hubbard - Sky Dive, 1972.
Gil Evans - Throroughbred, 1973.
George Benson - Ode To A Kudu, 1972.
Roy Ayers - Everybody Loves The Sunshine, 1976.
Art Pepper - Las Cuevas De Mario, 1977.
Dexter Gordon - The Moontrane, 1977.
Part 2.
Weather Report - Bridled, 1977.
McCoy Tyne - Departure, 1976.
Stanley Turpentine - Pieces Of Dreams, 1974.
Charles Minus - Remember Rockerfeller, 1975.
Roland Kirk - Dorthaans Walk, 1977.
Keith Jarrett - Treasure Island, 1974.
Al Jarreau - Agua De Baber, 1976.
Stan Getz - La Fiesta, 1974.
Grover Washington Jr - Ain't No Sunshine, 1971
I hope you enjoy the music.
Cheers The Rep

Monday, December 7, 2009

Two new shows "Jazz, A Love Affair" 5 and 6.

Two shows from my UK Jazz Radio shows called Jazz, A Love Affair. Each show is about one hour long and has a variety of quality jazz. The link, http://thejazzrep.podomatic.com/
Play list for show 5,
Sonny Stitt Quartet - If I Had You, 1958.
Lambert Hendricks and Ross - Everyday I Have The Blues, 1958.
Monty Alexander Trio - Satin Doll, 1976.
Oliver Nelson - Stolen Moments, 1972.
Rachelle Ferrell - Autumn Leaves, 1995.
Peter King+Philippe Briand Trio - Hi Fly, 1984.
Play list for show 6,
Harold Little - Blue Bossa, 2009.
Lonnie Smith - Scream, 1970.
Bonerama - Gekko Love, 2007.
The Phibes - Hard On, 2009.
Antonio Hart - Sticks, 1993.
Carl Bley Band - Song Sung Long, 1982.
Jeremy Steig - Firefly, 1977.Please enjoy the music.
The Rep.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Fusion Juice


A collection of funky jazz / fusion tracks,
I hope you like.




Fusion Juice - Jeff Lorber Fusion
Japanese Umbrella - Webster Lewis
Hopscotch - Harvey Mason
Butterfly - Eddie Henderson
Shiftless Shuffle - Herbie Hancock
Sagittarius - Frank Cunimondo
Kentucky Fried Chicken - Ronnie Foster
Para Los Latinos - Roland Bautista
Goodtime Ride - Ronnie Laws

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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Time for a Crusade!


Here's a playlist from The Crusaders that I hope you like.A wide range of tracks taken from albums after they changed from The Jazz Crusaders (another playlist soon!).

Spiral
Lay it on the line
Cosmic reign
Goin' down south
Soul caravan
Free as the wind
Alekesam
Sweet 'n' sour
Gotta get it on
The longest night
Brazos River breakdown



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Sunday, November 29, 2009

32 Jazz, recordings on this label.

A new podcast is up now and all the tracks are from the "32 Jazz" label. 2 one hour parts of some pretty good jazz. Here is the link http://lnk.ms/2CCqs
part 1, play list.
Sonny Stitt - The Champ.
Les McCann - Love For Sale.
Nat Adderley - Mo's Theme.
Woody Shaw - Jean Marie.
Grant Green - Iron City.
Horace Silver - The African Queen.
Eddie Lockjaw Davis - When Your Lover Has Gone.
Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Domino.
Hank Jones - Bloomdido.
Play list for part 2.
Woody Shaw - Three Muses.
Kenny Burrell - Bags Groove.
Jack McDuff - Walking The Dog.
Roy Brooks - Will Pan's Walk.
Sonny Criss - Crisscraft.
Red Rodney - What Can We Do.
Willis Jackson - Gator Whale.
Charlie Rouse - Nutty.
Hope you enjoy the show.
The Rep.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Ain't it Funky Now

A set of Jazzy,Funky numbers that I like,I hope you do too!

Ain't it funky now - George Duke
You are the sunshine of my life - Eddie Russ
The Samba - Jeff Lorber Fusion
Veracruz - Jayme Marques
Straussmania - Salinas
Papa's got a brand new bag - Jimmy Smith
In pursuit of the 27th man - Horace Silver
Captain Bacardi - Dave Gruisin
Weldon - Timo Lassy

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"Jazz, A Love Affair" shows 3 and 4.

I have put two more of my shows For UK Jazz Radio called "Jazz, A Love Affair" on podcast and the link is : http://thejazzrep.podomatic.com/

Jazz, A Love Affair 3. play list.

John Klemmer - Round Midnight, 1979.
Jon Hendricks - Come Sunday, 1970.
James Carter/John Medeski - Blue Leo, 2009.
Cannonball Adderley/Nancy Wilson - Save Your Love For Me, 1969.
Cannonball Adderley Quintet - Sweet Emma, 1969.
D D Jackson/David Murray - Peace Song, 1995.

Jazz, A Love Affair 4. play list.

Sadao Watanabe - Manha De Carnaval, 1978.
Anita Wardell - Parkers Mood, 2008.
Akiyoshi/Mariano Quartet - Deep River, 1960.
Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Slow Blues, 1977.
Maria Muldaur - Some Cats Know, 2003.
Dizzy Gillespie/Stan Getz/Sonny Stitt - Dark Eyes, 1958

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Excellent News Indeed!

After the earlier sad news re:Jeff Clyne,here's some news to put a smile on your face.Gil Scott-Heron has recorded a new album.Click on the link to read all about it.

link

Try MFS Radio Edition

A great selection of mixes and podcasts on My Favourite Sound Radio Edition,content mixed and sourced by Pier,Rob and Celo with some contributions from myself.


Check it out!

Sad News, Jeff Clyne RIP.

Some very sad news for the the UK. Virtuoso bassist Jeff Clyne passed away monday (16 November) at the age of 72. Jeff Clyne had been a key figure in British jazz for over 40 years and played on some groundbreaking albums, Stan Tracey's Under Milk Wood, Tubby Hayes' 100% Proof and the first three seminal albums by Ian Carr's Nucleus. He also played and recorded with the likes of the Jazz Couriers with Hayes and Ronnie Scott, Keith Tippett, plus hosts of others. He was prominent for a while in nascent British jazz rock bands such as Isotope, Gilgamesh and his own band, Turning Point. Jeff Clyne also recorded a little known but superb pre-Nucleus album with Ian Carr plus Trevor Watts and John Stevens entitled Springboard , on the Polydor label, which is highly sought after by collectors. Clyne was also a teacher and co-director of the Wavendon jazz course, and taught at the Royal Academy of Music and Guildhall School of Music and Drama
The Rep

Do you like Jazz?

Silly question really if you're here, but that's the name of the first track.A collection of new and recent tracks,some re-worked tracks and some I just like.Thanks to Tony "The Good Groove" Brown for providing some gems.Enjoy.

1.Do You Like Jazz ? - The Cool Balance
2.Stolen Moments - Mark Murphy Nicola Conte Rework
3.Manteca - Cesars Salad
4.Mississippi City Strut - Stanley Turrentine
5.Day By Day - The Jazz Invaders
6.Take Off - Marco Di Marco with Nathan Haines
7.Schizophrenia - Ciruis B
8.Sguardo - Gruppo Jazz Marca
9.San Diego - Fabio Nobile
10.She Who Dares - Colman Brothers
11.Frankie - Iain Mackenzie
12.The More I Look At You - Timo Lassy
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Monday, November 16, 2009

Let's B (3) Friends

A selection of organ jazz, some old and some new but all good.I hope you like my selections.

1.Don't Get Around Much Anymore - Atsuko Hashimoto with Houston Person
2.Little Ghetto Boy - Charles Kynard
3.Hot Sauce - Charles Kynard
4.Killer Joe - Charles Earland
5.Swing The Blondes -Barbara Dennerlein
6.Sidewinder - Akiko Tsuruga
7.Walking The Dog - Jack McDuff
8.Harold's House of Jazz - Don Patterson with Richie Cole
9.This I Dig Of You - Deep Blue Organ Trio
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A Jazz Trip

Well I was determined not to watch the endless stream of dross on tv last night so played a few tunes.More straight jazz than the last batch,I hope you like them.


1.Flying Saucer - Alan Lee Jazz Quintet
2.Wrong or Right - Bobby Hutcherson
3.Steppin' Out - Chuck Mangione
4.Short Story - Deep Blue Organ Trio
5.Spirit's Samba - Dave Pike
6.Groovin' High - Kenny Burrell
7.Soho Soul - Tubby Hayes
8.Dr Jackle - The Essence All Stars
9.John Brown's Body - Don Patterson
10.Sunbath - Joyce Hurley
11.Giant Steps - Gary Bartz

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Friday, November 13, 2009

A few tracks thrown together!

Here's a little something I threw together last night.A Froggy monster mix it is not,however some enjoyable jazzy / funky tunes.

1.Jingo - Candido
2.Columbus Avenue - Dave Valentin
3.Jamaica Jamaica - Special EFX
4.K Gee - MFSB
5.New York City - George Benson
6.African Rhythms - Oneness of Juju
7.Open Sesame - Kool and the gang
8.Daisy Mae - Raul De Souza
9.It's you - Sunga T Experience
10.Suratal Ihklas - Al Rahman (Doug Carn)
11.Stepping Stones - Johnny Harris

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Monday, November 9, 2009

Good luck Ray!

Good luck Ray with your show on uk jazz radio. http://www.ukjazzradio.com/index.html
Check out another great source of jazz,Ray will of course continue to link his show from here.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

The great white (vinyl) hunter returns!

Fresh is not the term I would use but after enduring 30hrs of travel,I must confess to feeling better than I thought I would.I picked up vinyl in 3 locations and owing to weight restrictions had to post the albums home.The first batch made it home before me and will provide the material for my first show.So a plug for a very good record (and cd) store,Crazy Beat Records in Upminster,Essex.If you are in the Essex/East London area,this store is well worth a visit,only 5 mins walk from Upminster Station.I picked up a great compilation album Latin Spectrum,some wicked tunes on this one.Also a great double album on Soul Brother Records from Eddie Henderson,Retrospective.All the smokin' jazz funk/fusion numbers we love on a new pressing! The 3rd album on this little expedition is a real gem,a compilation from Solid State Records in great condition.Tracks from Johnny Lytle,Jimmy McGriff,King Pleasure and more.So a great mixed show coming up featuring jazz/funk classics,some hot latin and classic jazz.What more could a jazzhead want? Look out for the link very soon.

Cheers Andy

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Thelonious Monk

"Anybody can play a composition and use far-out chords and make it sound wrong.It's making it sound right that's not easy." - Thelonious Monk

And he certainly did make it sound right.A genius on the piano with his first recording in 1944.Check out his albums on e-music,there are 46 of them there.As well as some live recordings and various compilations.
go to e-music and check out Monk

Here's the genius at work;

download-rapidshare I surrender dear

Here's another guy that digs Monk's sound;

Check out go to e-music and check out Bobby Broom
An excellent album from Bobby Broom.

Enjoy Jazz from two totally different "Brilliant Corners"

Monday, September 7, 2009

For Those That Hear The Music.

There are two types of people according to Trevor Chaplin, a charater in a book by Alan Plater, those that hear the music and those who don't. To hear the music you have to listen. This quality is found in most jazz fans. I have been listening to the music, jazz I meen, for more than fifty years. I have found it has inhanced my life considerably. Around the age of sixteen I started going to jazz clubs in and around London where I lived. Clubs like Ronnie Scotts (the old place in Gerrard St), the Marquee and The Bulls Head at Barnes. I have seen many great jazz players that we think of as jazz legends now, I have heard them when they were work in progress. This is still happening today. Go out and listen to our jazz musicians, experience the music live, let it wrap itself around your heart and have an affair that will last a lifetime.
The Jazz Rep.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Sample Show

Here's a sample show,let me know if you like it!

http://rapidshare.com/files/225480827/show_65_complete.mp3

Here's the playlist

love on the sudan - billy harper
ambrosia / nite crawler -bob james trio
east of the sun and west of the moon - dianne krall
jazz! - bobby hutcherson
a day in the life - brian auger
the next time we love - alphonse mouzon
gonzalez - gonzalez
the preacher - eddie jefferson
crazy he calls me - etta jones

horace silver shoutin' out / summer in central park / nobody knows

on green dolphin st - grant green
red,green and black blues - charles earland
the melting pot - freddie hubbard
i want to be loved - lou rawls
cathy the cooker - jazz crusaders
soul talk - johnny hammond & bernard purdie
the black disciples - ernest ranglin
moneys too tight to mention - the valentine brothers

First Post!

Hi,As the title suggests this is a Jazz site,run by two former contributors to George Jazz.Andy and Ray.This blog will be the place to visit to obtain links to our shows.It's all new to me ,so visit frequently and enjoy.I will be adding links,jazz news,album releases,images and details of sites you might like.Feel free to leave comments (once I've worked it out!)

Cheers Andy (Head 1)