Page 6 of the 6/26 issue of The Week offers two upbeat factoids to brighten your day:
“Multiple bars in the Boston area, where Scotland’s national soccer team played its first World Cup Match, ran out of beer due to heavy consumption by Scotland’s ‘Tartan Army’ of traveling fans. ‘We’ve been here for over 30 years, and we’ve never seen anything like it,’ said Noelle Somers of Hennessey’s bar.”
“Paige, a 4-ton African elephant being paraded through the Texas Republican Party’s annual convention in Houston, abruptly halted and, in the words of New York Times correspondent Lauren McGaughy, ‘took a giant pee’ on the auditorium floor.”
7/11 – The Makanda Project at 1 p.m. (MP/PA) – Music director John Kordalewski brings the band that celebrates the music of Makanda Ken McIntyre. It’s one of Boston’s great reassures. In addition to two sets of music by the Makanda Project, there will be a poetry open mic at intermission, along with musical performances by young community members. Scheduled band members include Kurtis Rivers, Sean Berry, Temidayo Balogun, Brian Price, Charlie Kohlhase (saxophones); Jerry Sabatini, Woody Pierre (trumpets); Alfred Patterson, Richard Harper, Randy Pingrey (trombones); John Kordalewski (piano); Avery Sharpe (bass); Hector Falu Guzman (drums). The free performance takes place at First Church in Roxbury at 10 Putnam Street, Roxbury, MA. It takes place outdoors on the lawn; if it rains, the concert moves inside the church…
Even with the best of intentions, most arts awards are less than functionally effective. The reasons are various but typically suffer from such problems as “committee think” and good old politics. A few of the better-known examples in the world of music include the very first sentence of chapter one of the essential arnold schoenberg by Charles Rosen in which the economically stressed composer in 1945 has his application for a grant turned down by the Guggenheim foundation. One of my favorite examples is Milton Babbitt who in 1992 was awarded a doctorate degree by Princeton University 46 years after his dissertation on the 12-tone system was rejected by the music department. Better late than never. Of course, the most famous example in the history of jazz is the Pulitzer Prize governing board’s rejection of the Pulitzer music jury’s award to Duke Ellington “for the vitality and originality of his total productivity” in June 1966. At age 67, Ellington’s public response was, “Fate is being kind to me. Fate doesn’t want me to be too famous too young.” Like Princeton with Babbitt, the Pulitzer board noted its mistake by offering him a special citation to commemorate the centennial of his birth in 1999. But Ellington was no longer alive to accept the citation. The good news in light of these introductory comments is that there are too rare but notable exceptions. Such a fine exception has been announced by Catalytic Sound and other sources. To wit, Joe Morris was awarded the 2026 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Vision 30 Festival during the June 23-28 celebration. There was a lot of wonderful music, but the opening evening featured a killer lineup of five different Joe Morris groups. Talk about “too much is not enough”! Here’s the URL to find out more about the celebration: https://www.artsforart.org/vision-festival-2026-lifetime-achievement-award-joe-morris/ Back in the early 1980s Joe lived in the Boston area, and he worked with such pioneers as Lowell Davidson, Laurence Cook, Jerry Deupree, Sebastian Steinberg, and Thurman Barker and all would find a way to get booked at a few local venues--the 1369, the Boston Film/Video Foundation, and others. I was among the handful of audience members who showed up--not by accident--but to listen to the music so brilliant that most local fans were not ready for it. My ears were simply lucky. Over time--not just people in Europe--but jazz fans in such places as Boston and New York caught on. And now Manhattan’s Vision Fest has made the love official. How fine it is…
7/13 – The Jerry Bergonzi Quartet at 8:30 p.m. (MP) – The jazz giant is joined by Luther Gray on drums and two surprise guests. The music happens at the Lily Pad where Pandemic regulations apply ($15/$10 students) ...
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)…
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