Welcome to Boston Jazz Scene

Welcome to the Boston Jazz Scene web site--the place to find out what happened, what is happening, and what is coming in jazz and other improvised music in Boston and surrounding communities. The most recent post is listed below this information. Words listed below the Topics heading to the right refer to information you can find here about jazz and other improvised music, the arts in general, food, and travel in and near Boston.

If you click on the Scheduled Jazz Highlights topic, you will see a selection of upcoming jazz gigs that we think are particularly noteworthy.

If you click on one of the History - Jazz Journal topics, you will see a selection of journal entries covering performances and relevant events that have taken place in Boston since the 1970s.

If you click on the History - Major Contributors topic, you will see a list of Bostonian musicians who have made significant contributions to the development and evolution of jazz in Boston and elsewhere.

If you click on the Images - Musicians topic, you will see a selection of photos of current and former Boston area jazz musicians and significant visiting jazz musicians. If photos of musicians are displayed on this page and you click on Older Posts at the bottom of this page, you will see earlier image pages eventually going back to page 1.

If you click on the Images - Venues topic, you will see a selection of photos of current and former Boston area jazz venue locations.

If you click on the History - Jazz Timeline topic, you will see a brief list of significant events in the development and evolution of jazz in Boston beginning with the first groundwork in colonial America.

If you click on the Essays on Music topic, you will see essays about the development of jazz and other music since the late nineteenth century and particularly the evolving context in which the music has been and continues to be created.

If you click on one of the Travel options, you will see a variety of information that may be of interest to people visiting Boston (or even some people who live here).

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Upcoming performance highlights

Among the more attractive performances scheduled in the near future in the Boston area are the ones listed below.  With the exception of some gigs that feature Magazine Cover (MC) groups (which can range in quality from very good to terrible), the gigs listed below are ones that I wish I could attend.  And—if time and circumstances permit—I will be there.  
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For now some locations indoors are open for music performances.  Distancing and mask restrictions apply.  If people exhibit safe behaviors, such gigs may not be shut down.  Let's hope things improve soon.  
 
 

Thoughts about AI

Thought 1:

To put it mildly, I’m not a fan of AI.  I have many complaints about software (as opposed to hardware), and AI is like software on steroids.  The key problems offered by AI include: AI responses to human questions typically are erroneous or misleading.  Recently I’ve noticed that the version of AI that I use follows its “factual” responses with the message “AI can make mistakes, so double-check responses.”  Of course, AI does not tell us what “double-check” implies.  Wikipedia and other online information sources are not perfect, but they are functional, and they tell you which portions of the presented information lacks verification.   If the AI misinformation is not enough, it typically is offered as a first option, as in the case of search results or even as those godawful “suggested responses” in emails that I receive.  And on and on.  But the major threat (even beyond the prospect of it making moral and ethical life decisions in a future in which we cannot fix its lethal flaws because no human can understand how to fix the AI “object code”) of AI is its devastating environmental impact.  In recent polls (e.g. Gallup poll with 71% vs. 53%), more Americans said that they would rather live next to a nuclear power plant than an AI data center.  Also, the EU is failing in its attempt to obtain environmental impact statements from AI tech firms.  And tech-savvy observers are warning what out-of-control AI “can do in the hands of bad actors.” (Science News 5-1-26 p. 20 and 4-24-26 p. 20)  In other words, tech-savvy and average Joes are waking up.

 

Thought 2:

Sticking with the environmental problem, it is at the core of our technological failures vis-à-vis China.  China is completely committed to green energy sources.  It is leaving a Trump America in the dust with great emphasis on solar energy and (at the expense of Tibet and people downstream--after all, they are only disposable bodies) hydroelectric power.  Combine that with technological advances that are stunning, and it is easy to foresee the U.S. as a Third World disaster.  I do not overstate the case.  Because of Chinese current achievements in high-speed computing capability and post-binary program logic, we already are perhaps a decade behind them.  China’s processing capabilities are so advanced that the energy-sapping  AI data centers around the U.S. don’t exist in China because they are not needed for their super computers.  In other words, it’s a good time to sell your worthless Nvidia stock.  Nobody has to worry about China wanting to buy our worthless computer chips.

 

Thought 3:

Now, after that gloom and doom message, I admit that I do ask AI programs questions--at least partially for entertainment.  Sometimes the answers are so ludicrous that I try to reword the question to find out where the AI screwed up.  Sometimes I ask the AI an absurd question to see how the AI will handle it.  I admit that I use AI in situations in which other sources turn out to be dead ends.  Even in those rare occasions when the AI answers appear to be useful, I seek other corroboration. 

 

Thought 4:

Recently, perhaps as a result of being depressed by the absurdity of Trump’s “war” with Iran, I asked AI, “Has Trump surrendered to Iran yet?”  The image below is a copy of AI’s answer.  It is not a perfect answer.  Perhaps it is not capable of grappling with an absurd reality.  Because the image of necessity is squeezed onto this page, you may find increasing screen magnification helpful.

    

 


Was everybody impressed by Marco Rubio talking to the people of Cuba in Spanish?  It appears that he cannot avoid blatantly lying no matter what language he uses.

  

5/26 – The Bruce Gertz Quintet at 7:30 p.m. (MP) – The in-demand bassist brings along with him Rick DiMuzio (tenor sax), Sheryl Bailey (Guitar), Gilson Schachnik (piano) and Gary Fieldman (Drums).  It happens at the Lily Pad where Pandemic regulations apply ($15/students $10)…

 

Sonny Rollins died on 5/25.  He was one of those masters who was unpredictable.  Sometimes he was pretty pedestrian, still better than just about anybody else, but not miraculous.  When he was miraculous, he was unsurpassed.  I discovered at Paul’s Mall that when he had fallen to pedestrian pursuits, on the break I would request “Three Little Words.”  He was OK with requests.  In that way I was always confident that no matter what kind of evening he was having, I was sure to hear something miraculous.  When I read that he had passed, I put Sonny Rollins: The Impulse Story (Impulse B0006559-02) on my CD player.  The first track on the collection is “Three Little Words.”  Time stopped.

 

5/28 – GBH Jazz Nights featuring Tiger Okoshi celebrating the music of Miles Davis at 5:30 p.m. (MP/eclectic) – WGBH continues its coverage of jazz in Boston with its Jazz Nights series at Boston’s main public library.  Again, the effort is produced by WGBH and Ken Field, president of Jazz Boston.  The musicians perform in front of a live audience in the WGBH studio in the library.  Seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis, so arrive early! By registering, you agree to receive email communications from GBH Music.  The event takes place at the WGBH studio in the Boston Public Library, 700 Boylston Street, Boston.   Tickets are free, but registration is encouraged. Seating is limited.   There is further info at 617-300-3300 and info@wgbh.org

 

 


 

Every Monday – Monday night at the Lily Pad returns with Jerry Bergonzi, Phil Grenadier, guest bassist, and Luther Gray.  Then The Fringe Duo, John Lockwood and George continuing the fire no doubt inspired by the memory of Bob Gullotti.  It begins around 8:30 pm and continues forever ($15 per group; $10 students)…




Ongoing – Non-Event online Music – Performances at various times plus an archive of music (PA) – Non-Event is offering music via online audio files and video files plus real-time performances.  The emphasis is on new music, some of which is improvised music.  For example, Matt Samolis (who unfortunately for us moved from Boston to central Massachusetts) is presenting his bowed cymbal meditation recorded on May 1, 2020.  Keep in mind, money helps support these events.  The URL is: http://www.nonevent.org/
 


If you would like to read Science News’ fine coverage of the pandemic and its implications (including dozens of articles so far), go to the site’s page of coronavirus feature articles.  On that page also is information about how to receive that publication's coronavirus update newsletter twice each week.   Science News will try to answer your questions at feedback@sciencenews.org. …


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Key codes: The abbreviation in parentheses following the name of the event or band/musician performing indicates roughly the type of music that you can expect if you go to the gig.
MC= Magazine Covers.  These musicians/bands are popular with jazz fans and therefore often find their photos on the covers of jazz magazines.  This type of band may or may not be any good qualitatively.  However, many fans like to know “what’s hot.”
MP=Mainstream/Post-Bop.  This is the music that most people think of today when they think of jazz.  It runs the gamut from Parkeresque bebop and Websterish ballads to the post-bop work of people such as Bergonzi and Lovano.
PA=Post-Ayler.  This is Anthony Braxton’s term for all the adventure that came out of Ayler, Ornette, Cecil and others (including Mr. Braxton, of course).  In some ways it is the most diverse jazz and jazz-rooted music being performed today, including everything from near zero dB whispers (e.g., undr, John Tilbury) to eardrum demolishing walls of sound (Keith Rowe, a ton of stuff from Japan) to performances built on combinations of composed and improvised material (Liberation Orchestra, Charlie Kohlhase’s ensembles) to completely improvised offerings (Evan Parker, Laurence Cook).
S=Swing.  It don’t mean a thing…  Maybe “nothing” means “anything” if you are a fan of swing.  Sadly, fine swing music seems to be approaching extinction, at least in the Boston area clubs.  The reasons are obvious and elusive.  The great names of Swing (such as Lunceford and Barnet) have passed on and taken almost all of their band mates with them.  In addition, in spite of the fact that some of the finest music of the swing era was produced by the combos of Goodman and Basie (among others), people continue to think of swing in terms of large (and therefore economically untenable) ensembles.  You can find it happening in some dance halls, but mostly at weddings and Bar Mitzvahs.  For years such names as Whitney, Winniker, and Hershman have held the fort in the Boston area.  But you’ve got to keep your eyes peeled. 
T=Two-beat/Trad.  Some of the finest contemporary two-beat jazz anywhere has been nurtured and grown in Eastern Massachusetts since the 1970s.  Everyone knows about the New Black Eagles, and a host of other musicians are held in equally high esteem around here.  Some of the better-known are Jimmy Mazzy, Stan McDonald, Jeff Hughes, and Guy Van Duser.  Unfortunately for city dwellers, two-beat jazz (and, to a lesser extent, the blues) has moved to the suburbs.  But the best of it is worth the drive.