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Remembering the 'Little Giant,' jazz saxophonist Johnny Griffin
Ask anyone who loves jazz to the name the top tenor saxophonist of all time, and he or she probably will answer in a flash. To many, it's Sonny Rollins, at 82 still a giant. Or Gene Ammons, the long-gone, soulful player from the South Side of Chicago....
Tags: John Coltrane, Music Industry, France, Sonny Rollins, Nat King Cole
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Great expectations for Constellation
For anyone who values innovation in music, the next few days could mark the beginning of a significant era in Chicago. On Monday, Chicago jazz drummer and music producer Mike Reed will launch Constellation, a performing arts center that will feature...
Tags: Music Industry, Arts and Culture, Arts, Festive Events, Concerts
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'Sweet Sisters of Zion' doc celebrates the Barrett Sisters
Five years ago, the greatest trio in the history of gospel music – the Barrett Sisters – told me they had one last wish: That someone would make a documentary film about their lives and careers. That film, a moving evocation of their...
Tags: Smithfield, Jesse Jackson, Aretha Franklin, Entertainment, Black Entertainment Television (tv network)
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Victor Garcia: A chameleon on trumpet
During the past year, Chicago listeners have heard trumpeter Victor Garcia in more musical contexts than any single player could be expected to master. He hit hard in drummer Dana Hall's band at the Green Mill last month; debuted his own feisty, full-...
Tags: Music Industry, Apple iPod, Melba Liston, Arts and Culture, Old Town School of Folk Music
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Monday Night Live: A tiny cabaret with big surprises
Monday nights in the Loop would be a lot less lively if it weren't for "Monday Night Live." The popular series marked its fifth anniversary in September, and judging by the most recent installment, the concept still has plenty of life in it. At around...
Tags: Music Theater, George Gershwin, Goodman Theatre, Entertainment, Chicago Cultural Center
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A grand weekend for jazz singing
This weekend could be one for the record books, with an extraordinary confluence of major vocalists converging on our stages. Though they span a wide stylistic swath – from blues to jazz to classic pop and beyond – the level of singing...
Tags: Freddy Cole, Natalie Cole, Awards and Prizes, Grammy Awards, Dr. John (music artist)
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Accompanist extraordinaire puts on a show all her own
Twenty-five years ago, a talented young musician ventured here from Fort Wayne, Ind., to try her luck in the big city. Today, Beckie Menzie stands at the center of Chicago cabaret, her work as accompanist indispensable to uncounted singers, her...
Tags: Green Mill (club), Music Industry, Old Town School of Folk Music, Entertainment, Carnegie Hall
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Van Cliburn dies at 78; pianist who gave U.S. a Cold War victory
After a tense decade of air raid sirens, duck-and-cover drills and fears of Soviet superiority, hope for America came in an unlikely form in the late 1950s: a lanky, 23-year-old Texan with a head full of curls and huge hands that ranged across a piano...
Tags: Awards and Prizes, Music Industry, The Boston Globe, Human Interest, Moscow (Russia)
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Remembering Fred Anderson: Chicago salutes a fallen jazz giant
On stage, he was a volcano, torrents of sound pouring from the bell of his tenor saxophone. In person, he couldn't be gentler, a soft-spoken jazz giant who nurtured generations of musicians and, therefore, enhanced Chicago's stature as a nexus of...
Tags: Lester Young, Music Industry, Music Theater, Charlie Parker, Old Town School of Folk Music
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Wynton Marsalis' Pulitzer-winning 'Blood on the Fields' returns
Sixteen years ago, newspapers across America riffed on an unexpected theme: For the first time, a jazz composition had won the country's highest musical honor. "Marsalis swings a Pulitzer" trumpeted USA Today, its message echoing wherever cultural...
Tags: Music Industry, Awards and Prizes, Arts and Culture, Duke Ellington, Slavery
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Joan Curto celebrates the genius of Cole Porter
Cole Porter died nearly half a century ago – in 1964 at age 73 – yet his songs remain as ubiquitous today as they were then. Which helps explain why one of Chicago's top cabaret singers, Joan Curto, this week is launching an evening-length...
Tags: Music Industry, Arts and Culture, Judaism, University of Chicago, Religion and Belief
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'It's About Time': A powerful new song takes on marriage equality
When cabaret star Karen Mason played here last December, at Davenport's, one song drew the evening's noisiest ovations by far. If Mason had sung "It's About Time" without introduction, the piece would have unfolded as a charming love song well worth...
Tags: Same-Sex Marriage, Music Industry, Elton John, Barack Obama, Human Interest
Apr 2, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 28, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 19, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 14, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 12, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 7, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Feb 28, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Feb 28, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 26, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Feb 12, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Feb 7, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Feb 5, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
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