Apr 15 2019
The Lexington scene has got two more shows for you this week: Rempis/Lopez/Packard at The Kentucky School; Keigo Hirakawa at TeeDee’s
Yet more evidence that Lexington, KY is a magnet for the modern jazz scene is displayed this week, with shows that’ll give you something to do midweek and for the weekend.
On Tuesday is the next installment of the Outside the Spotlight series, featuring the trio of saxophonist Dave Rempis, bassist Brandon Lopez, and percussionist-electronics specialist Ryan Packard performing at The Kentucky School. The trio are touring in support of their latest recording The Early Bird Gets. If they’re anything in a live setting like they are on the recorded medium, then expect the kind of focused intensity that is as likely to bleed into a catchy groove as it is to explode into a thousand fragments of melody.
[Listen to more of the album, and purchase it, on Bandcamp]
And I’m sure they’ll also have stuff available at their merch table, which, really, is the best way to support the band. Their album is released on Aerophonic Records, and if you like what you hear on this recording, you should go give some of the other music in their catalog a listen, because it’s all bird of a feather stuff.
This is the 15-year anniversary, and Event #209, of Ross Compton’s Outside the Spotlight series. Ross is one of those local music scene heroes who devotes a ton of sweat work bringing great music to his community. There have been a ridiculous wealth of talent from the experimental and jazz pool that has performed in Lexington because of Ross’s efforts. And most of those shows, like this one, is free to the public.
I’m personally excited to go see another show at The Kentucky School. I caught one there last week, and their outdoor area was an excellent spot to catch some live music and have a beer. Check out my write-up of the Friends & Neighbors gig for a rundown of what it was like. Also, if the weather looks like rain, the venue has an indoor option, too, so don’t let that dissuade you from coming on out.
If you want to read more about the artist, check out Lexington journalist Walter Tunis’s write-up for Under Main. Nobody covers the Lexington music & arts scene like Walter, so be sure to bookmark him for future reading, too.
The show details:
When: Tuesday, April 16th, 2019 at 7:00pm
Where: The Kentucky School. 607 North Limestone, Lexington, KY.
It’s a free show.
The Facebook Event page-> LINK
The Kentucky School’s site-> LINK
The artist’s site-> LINK
And a shout-out of thanks to the local student-run radio station 88.1 FM WRFL for their part in helping bring this music to town.
Here’s a video from a recent gig at the Elastic Arts Studio, back in my old neighborhood in Chicago…
And your weekend plans are covered, too. On Saturday night, the next installment of the Origins Jazz Series goes down at TeeDee’s Lounge over on 2nd & Elm, right next to The Lyric Theater. Keigo Hirakawa will be in town with his trio performing two sets, at 7pm and 9:15pm. The pianist brings a straight-ahead sound, like a fastball right over the heart of jazz. My personal tastes trend toward the more experimental stuff on the scene, but when it’s Saturday night and I just want to be out on the town and hear some sounds, give me the kind of jazz that originally got me hooked on this music, y’know? This right here is the stuff.
Here’s a video from a recent show at a cool jazz joint, the Greenwich, just up north in our neighbor city, Cincinnati. It included a performance by JD Allen, who is an Origin Jazz Series alum, as well as a musician I’ve written some glowing words about previously. Go buy all of his music.
As I mentioned previously, this show is brought to us courtesy of the Origins Jazz Series, a non-profit that has been bringing an impressive array of jazz to Lexington. That includes all-stars like Christian McBride, The Bad Plus, JD Allen, Chris Potter, Tryptych, Kneebody, and in upcoming show, Regina Carter & Xavier Davis. This is their second season, and it’s in Lexington’s best interests to support this organization so that the pipeline for all this excellent music keeps flowing. And, hell, this is an ideal way to spend your Saturday night.
Hirakawa has some CDs retailing on Amazon. I’m guessing, however, that there will be better opportunities to buy music at the show.
The show details:
When: Saturday, April 20th, 2019 at 7:00pm (1st show), 9:15 (2nd show)
Where: Tee Dee’s Lounge, 266 E. Second Street, Lexington, KY.
Tickets are $17.50 for each seating or $30 for the entire night (purchase here)
The artist’s site-> LINK
Learn more about the Origins Jazz Series-> LINK
Some other shows on the horizon:
- Tuesday, April 30 – The Chicago Plan (of Steve Swell, Gebhard Ullmann, Fred Lonberg-Holm, Michael Zerang) plus the quartet of Keefe Jackson, Christoph Erb, Jason Roebke, Tim Barnes @ UK’s Niles Gallery
- Friday, May 3 – Regina Carter & Xavier Davis @ First Presbyterian Church of Lexington
- Wednesday, May 15 – Brian Krock’s liddle @ JGumbosLex
Apr 16 2019
And now we will talk about the 2019 Big Ears Festival
At something of the last minute, I received an invitation by the Big Ears Festival to cover their 2019 event, and at a minute that would qualify as the last of the very last, I was able to rearrange my plans and make the commitment to travel to Knoxville, TN for the weekend.
It’s one of the very best decisions I’ve made in some time, and, without doubt, the finest music event I’ve had the fortune to attend.
Bird is the Worm and Big Ears Festival are in perfect symmetry. Ten years ago, I began focusing my time on bringing attention to the modern jazz and improvised music scenes, getting the spotlight on music that wasn’t receiving the recognition it deserved. My platform to achieve this goal has changed over time, but even greater changes are reflected in the scope of music I’ve featured. What began with an emphasis on old-school and new-school conventional jazz has evolved to writing about music forms, both composed and improvised, that have an increasingly tenuous connection to the jazz genre… even though it would get categorized as such. And, too, I’d write about non-jazz albums recorded by musicians who’d previously received attention through a write-up that fit more snugly with that jazz designation.
Ultimately, the way I introduce myself to artists and labels when I seek music for possible review is a succinct pronouncement of my site’s raison d’etre:
It was in the lead-up to the Best of 2017 year-end festivities when I introduced the quality of music being made by musicians of the tradition… the idea that this music’s defining characteristics is more suitably framed in the context of the musician themselves… that as the natural evolution of music, jazz and otherwise, continues unabated, the necessity to find the catch phrase that encapsulates it is no longer the imperative it once was, because it is being created by musicians who have come up through the tradition… of jazz and classical musics, and absorbing all of the other influences that particular musician has loved and learned over the course of their lives as music fans and students. The premise that here are musicians who have dedicated much of their life to learning their particular instruments, the various music theories set in orbit around the instrument, and the collaborative environment in which the language and the craft grow.
Also ten years ago, Big Ears Festival was founded, and no different than Bird is the Worm, the festival founders and organizers have focused on music that was outside the spotlight, and which represented the voices who often go unheard. Jazz and classical and spoken word and electronic innovation and ambient minimalism and avant-garde are just a few of the forms of expression scooped up in the festival’s embrace, and just as on my own site, the invited musicians are just as likely to hail from obscure locations as they are NYC or London or Paris, and they are likely to have personal experiences and backgrounds that are more representative of the diversity of the planet, measured in music and societal terms, both.
Me and Big Ears are birds of a feather.
When I initially pitched Big Ears Festival for a press pass, I began linking to write-ups of musicians appearing on the 2019 line-up. I finally had to stop at something like ten links. I could’ve gone on much longer. Throw a dart at the 2019 Festival line-up, and it’s very likely I written something about that musician on Bird is the Worm, Bandcamp, Wondering Sound, eMusic, Music is Good, AllAboutJazz, featured a track as the AllAboutJazz download of the day editor, or simply wrote about them back in the day when I was active on any number of music forums. It was as if Big Ears Festival staff went through my site exclusively to determine which musicians to invite (yes, I know that didn’t happen, but as I type this, I’m thinking pretty much all jazz etc music festivals should take that approach). Everything about this festival was in my wheelhouse, and damn it all if I wasn’t going to find a way to see every show on the bill.
The problem (a word I am stretching as far as humanly possible)… the “problem” is that Big Ears Festival has multiple events going on at all times, spread out across downtown and running anywhere from 11am through 2am. Consequently, I had to make some decisions. Painful decisions. Unless I devised a method for cloning myself while driving down I75 from Lexington, KY to Knoxville, TN, then there were going to be some shows I’d miss. Do you hear that? Carried along on the wind like the distant sound of a dying animal making its final sounds on the worldly plain? Yeah, that’s me as I think back upon the music I didn’t hear. Thank you, thank you, your sympathy is much appreciated, a gofundme account will be created shortly.
Here is all the music I saw:
Over the next week, we will be talking about all of this music and all of the excellent venues only vaguely alluded to above. Look, they could’ve performed all of this music is a basement office cubicle like something out of Joe vs. The Volcano, and it still would have been the best festival ever… but the venues that hosted these shows were wonderful, the kind of places where seeing and hearing special music is made all the more special by the surroundings where it all goes down. This, added to a very hip downtown Knoxville where these venues are located, it made everything fee momentous and come off as more than a music event… it was part of an overall experience that made it feel like the event was still occurring even when no music was actually being performed at any one time. It’s settings like this that make it an imperative to attend, time and time again.
And Big Ears Festival is more than just music. There is a holistic approach to art, where music is paired with museum works and film and poetry and the audience themselves, an interactive experience at many levels. There are workshops and panels, movies and radio and ambient sounds in a coffee shop to soothe that hangover.
And I will be writing about my Big Ears Festival experience… everything that seems remarkable or important or precious, and as much as I can.
So, today’s column is your intro to my Big Ears Festival 2019 experience. I hope I can transmit some of the electricity I felt all weekend long, and that it leads you to discover some new music and new places to visit, and, perhaps, the motivation to head to Knoxville yourself in 2020.
Now, let’s begin.
Next up: Off the road and surrounded by stained glass: Harold Budd, Mary Lattimore and Nief-Norf at Church Street United Methodist Church.
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By davesumner • Live Jazz • 2 • Tags: Big Ears Festival, Knoxville (TN), Live Jazz, Live Music