#ron-carter

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fromPitchfork
5 days ago

Thundercat: Distracted

Thundercat relinquishes his investment in a romance but won't leave it behind: 'Love is a two-way street/I'm letting go because both of us don't need to drive,' he sings in his trademark high falsetto.
Humor
NYC music
fromTime Out New York
5 days ago

This interactive map uncovers NYC's jazz history through top neighborhoods

A new interactive map by Village Preservation showcases the rich jazz history of Greenwich Village, East Village, and NoHo, highlighting venues and musicians.
Music
fromPitchfork
1 week ago

Charles Mingus: "Fables of Faubus"

Charles Mingus created politically charged music, expressing outrage against racism and oppression through his song 'Original Faubus Fables' despite censorship from Columbia.
#jazz
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago
Film

Everybody Digs Bill Evans review absorbing delve into the tumultuous world of the great jazz man

A ruminative film about a jazz pianist facing grief, addiction and the heavy personal costs of a life devoted to music.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago
LA food

Add to playlist: the dark fog of Los Angeles saxophonist Aaron Shaw and the week's best new tracks

Aaron Shaw adapts saxophone-centered artistry to bone marrow failure by using alto flute, cultivating a lower, cautious sound within West Coast jazz textures.
NYC music
fromPitchfork
1 week ago

Jeff Parker Announces ETA IVtet album Happy Today

Jeff Parker's jazz quartet ETA IVtet will release their new album 'Happy Today' on May 15, featuring two 20-minute songs.
NYC music
fromABC7 Los Angeles
2 weeks ago

In Harlem living room, jazz tradition blends heart and soul

Marjorie Elliot hosts weekly jazz concerts in her Harlem apartment to honor her late son and connect with the community through music.
NYC music
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

I'm an old bastard looking back': the bizarre renaissance of piano-jammer Bruce Hornsby

Bruce Hornsby reflects on his childhood experience of JFK's assassination and his recent musical journey, blending personal history with social commentary.
SOMA, SF
fromConsequence
3 weeks ago

How Afrofuturism Shaped Our Understanding of Space in 10 Albums

Ten albums demonstrate how Afrofuturism integrates Black history and culture with science fiction to explore freedom, creativity, and liberation through space-themed music.
fromDefector
3 weeks ago

I Can't Stop Reading Music History Books | Defector

I love reading about bands. I've read the AllMusic reviews of my favorite albums multiple times over. If my Apple Music selection has a writeup to go with, I'll read it. And I can read a good band book in a matter of hours. I'm not a professional nostalgia whore, but reading about these bands really does put me back in that time, and in that headspace. Like the music itself! I can't get enough of that particular high.
Books
fromPitchfork
1 month ago

Bob Power, Prolific Engineer Behind Hip-Hop Classics, Dies at 73

In a way, it was the Sgt. Pepper's of hip-hop. It's a record that changed the way that people thought about putting music together. I'm not a big hip-hop historian; I just know the stuff that I worked on.
Music production
NYC music
fromVariety
4 weeks ago

Blue Note Jazz Festival New York Unveils 2026 Lineup (EXCLUSIVE)

The Blue Note Jazz Festival 2026 runs June 1-July 1 in Manhattan, featuring diverse jazz and R&B artists across Greenwich Village and Times Square venues.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

The Jazz Pictures the FBI Silenced

Lisette Model's thousand hidden photographs of East Coast jazz legends from 1940-1959 are revealed in a new book, exposing how government repression forced her to bury this significant artistic legacy.
Parenting
fromOpen Culture
1 month ago

Herbie Hancock Explains the Big Lesson He Learned From Miles Davis: Every Mistake in Music, as in Life, Is an Opportunity

Mistakes should be framed as valuable, creative learning opportunities rather than binary failures, especially when guiding perfectionist children.
fromBrooklyn Paper
2 months ago

A valentine to jazz: Brooklyn Chamber Orchestra and acclaimed saxophonist Vincent Herring bring 'Charlie Parker with Strings' to Brooklyn * Brooklyn Paper

For the first time ever, Brooklyn's premier professional orchestra, the Brooklyn Chamber Orchestra, is dedicating a full program to jazz, featuring the work of the late Charlie Parker, "Charlie Parker with Strings," on Feb. 13 at St. Ann & the Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn Heights. It is also the first time in more than a decade that "Charlie Parker with Strings" will be heard live in New York.
Brooklyn
Business
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Why the best problem-solvers think like jazz musicians

Organizations that toggle between wonder (imagination) and rigor (discipline) generate novel value and shape disruption better than those relying solely on technical systems.
SF music
from48 hills
1 month ago

Noise Pop Diary: Cindy scored the reconnections, New Jazz Underground went for gold - 48 hills

Alysa Liu won the 2026 Olympic women's free skate, sparking Bay Area celebration and energizing local Noise Pop music scenes at Rickshaw Stop.
#miles-davis
Music
fromPitchfork
1 month ago

John Coltrane Live Album Tiberi Tapes Gets First-Ever Release

The Tiberi Tapes of live John Coltrane performances will be released in April, part of a year-long Coltrane 100 celebration with reissues and events.
fromSPIN
2 months ago

Ragger Take Ragtime to the Warp Zone - SPIN

"Many found the music offensive, the dancing objectionable, and the popularity of both with young people verging on a mental health crisis." So writes music historian Susan C. Cook about ragtime, the heavily syncopated ancestor of jazz that arose in the late 1800s. Like all things, ragtime's subversiveness faded over time, and, a century later, the works of Scott Joplin and other practitioners had been relegated to carnivals and fairs, their jaunty piano melodies now evoking quaint notions of old-timey fun.
Music
Music
fromFortune
2 months ago

Introducing Duke Ellington (Fortune; August 1933) | Fortune

Jazz slang encodes musical meaning: 'hot' signals spontaneous, syncopated playing, while 'sweet' and 'corny' label sentimental or old-fashioned styles.
fromPitchfork
2 months ago

Kelan Phil Cohran & Legacy: African Skies

At the turn of the 1960s, when free jazz was making its initial seismic impact, multi-instrumentalist Phil Cohran-he later added the name Kelan-was living in Chicago and playing trumpet for Sun Ra's Arkestra. He contributed to crucial recordings by the band during his tenure, including We Travel the Space Ways, but Cohran was a restless autodidact who never stuck with any one project for long.
Music
Music
fromPitchfork
1 month ago

Elori Saxl / Henry Solomon: Seeing Is Forgetting

Elori Saxl merges ambient minimalism with jazz improvisation, using analog synths and woodwinds to create warm, contemplative, and bucolic soundscapes.
fromAdvocate.com
2 months ago

The lush life of Billy Strayhorn, the gay Black man who was Duke Ellington's 'right arm'

Even if you're just a casual jazz fan, you probably recognize "Take the A Train," Duke Ellington's swinging theme song. Or you've heard the melancholy ballad "Lush Life" sung by Nat King Cole, by Linda Ronstadt during her Great American Songbook era, or by Lady Gaga on the album she recorded with Tony Bennett. Both of those - and many other tunes - were written by a gay man, musician, composer, and arranger Billy Strayhorn.
Music
Music
fromGame Informer
2 months ago

8-Bit Big Band Founder Charlie Rosen Talks Broadway, Grammy Awards, And Why The Group Is Still A "Side Project"

Charlie Rosen treats The 8-Bit Big Band as a side project despite its Grammy win; his main career is orchestrating, arranging, conducting Broadway musicals.
Music
fromPitchfork
1 month ago

Willie Colon, Pioneering Salsa Trombonist, Dies At 75

Willie Colón, pioneering trombonist, bandleader, and composer central to the creation and political energy of salsa, has died at 75.
Music
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Bassist Saul Sierra hones potent sound from mix of Latin flavors

Saul Sierra, a Berklee-trained Mexico City-born bassist, released 2024's Caminos showcasing his pan-American jazz compositions and leads a quartet blending diverse Latin American idioms.
fromBrooklynVegan
2 months ago

Stuart Bogie, Nels Cline, Yuka Honda, more reinterpreted 'Bitches Brew' at LPR (pics, video)

The 2026 edition of NYC Winter Jazzfest wrapped up on Tuesday (1/12) with a special reimagining of Miles Davis' classic 1970 album Bitches Brew at Le Poisson Rouge, to celebrate Davis' centennial year. The evening, which was also dedicated to the late Bob Weir, began with a discussion of the album between Adam O'Farrill and Lenny White, who drummed on the original recording at age 19. He mentioned how Davis liked to cook, and directed White to be the "salt."
Music
fromPitchfork
2 months ago

Otto Benson: Peanut

Peanut is the sixth-ish album by New York-based musician and engineer Otto Benson, and the first with vocals. He shed a lot of skin before arriving at this album's dusky, dusty sound, which is defined by gentle nylon-stringed guitar and shivery Rhodes piano and lands somewhere at the intersection of Frankie Cosmos, Hayden Pedigo, and -era Feist. A scan of his meticulously maintained website reveals a trove of hyperactive vaporwave under the name Memo Boy;
Music
Music
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Ralph Towner obituary

Ralph Towner was a lyrically inventive, obsessive American multi-instrumentalist and composer whose work spanned jazz, folk, classical and world music, notably founding the quartet Oregon.
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