Category Archives: Music
Music: Omer Klein — ‘Fear of Heights’
Music: Omer Klein Trio — ‘Yemen’
Music: Bill Laurance — ‘The Good Things’
Music: Adam Baldych & Helge Lien Trio — ‘Polesie’
Music: Helge Lien Trio — ‘Early Bird’
Was the first song a lullaby?
Tom Jacobs writes: Why do humans play, and listen, to music? The question has long baffled evolutionary theorists. Some suggest it had its origins in courtship rituals, while others contend it had (and has) a unique ability to bond people together to work toward a common goal.
Now, a couple of Harvard University researchers have proposed a new concept: They argue that the earliest music — and perhaps the prototype for everything from Bach to rap — may just have been the songs mothers sing to their infants.
Maybe the first musical genre wasn’t the love song, but rather the lullaby.
“The evolution of music must be a complex, multi-step process, with different features developing for different reasons,” says Samuel Mehr, who co-authored the paper with psychologist Max Krasnow. “Our theory raises the possibility that infant-directed song is the starting point for all that.”
Mothers vocalize to their babies “across many, if not all, cultures,” the researches note in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior. Its ubiquity suggests this activity plays a positive role in the parent-child relationship, presumably soothing infants by proving that someone is there and paying attention to them. [Continue reading…]
Music: Papik — ‘You Must Come From Heaven’
Music: Omar Sosa & Seckou Keita — ‘Dary’
Music: Tigran Hamasyan — ‘The Cave of Rebirth’
Music: Eivind Aarset and the Sonic Codex Orchestra — ‘Still Changing ‘
Music: Eivind Aarset — ‘Dark Moisture’
Music: Eivind Aarset & Jan Bang — ‘Surrender’
Music: Eivind Aarset — ‘Porcupine Night Walk’
Music: Jeffrey Iqbal ft. Shankar Tucker — ‘Allah Hu’
Al Jarreau’s love of humanity was the root of his music
Chuck Yarborough writes: Al Jarreau is gone.
It’s fitting, in a way, that the world lost the seven-time Grammy winner – out of more than two dozen nominations — on the day of the Grammys. He’d suffered exhaustion and been hospitalized for pneumonia prior to his death.
On his website, a post by an unidentified author had this to say:
“A few days ago, I was asked to describe Al to someone who knew of his success, but did not know him as a person. I responded with this: His 2nd priority in life was music. There was no 3rd. His 1st priority, far ahead of the other, was healing or comforting anyone in need. Whether it was emotional pain, or physical discomfort, or any other cause of suffering, he needed to put our minds at ease and our hearts at rest. He needed to see a warm, affirming smile where there had not been one before. Song was just his tool for making that happen.”
I believe the writer was his publicist, Joe Gordon, but honestly, the sentiment could have come from anyone who ever talked to the 76-year-old legend.
I was fortunate to do just that as part of our preliminary coverage for the 2016 Tri-C JazzFest. He was coming to support his friend and producer, Cleveland native Tommy LiPuma, for whom the JazzFest was throwing an 80th birthday bash.
I’m not sure that I’ve ever had a chance to interview a kinder, sweeter man.
For most of the conversation, we talked about just what a great producer and great person LiPuma is. But the irony is that in talking about his friend, Jarreau gave a peek into his own character.
His talent as a singer was a given. Nobody could take a song and blend jazz and soul with soft pop and hints of gospel the way Jarreau could with his pitch-perfect, percussive voice.
But lots of people can sing soul and not have one. That number did not include Jarreau.
LiPuma’s first goal in life was to become a barber, like his father.
“He was going to be the barber of Seville,” Jarreau said in our long phone call last June. “But that’s exactly what I’m talking about – those humble beginnings.
“Humble beginnings sensitize you, and you become a sensitive reed in the wind,” he said.
“I hope I got some of that in me.”
He did. And he had an idea why.
“I grew up during a period of time in America – and the part of an America that Tommy saw, too – that . . . made you a practitioner of sensitivity,” Jarreau said.
For him, that training came from his faith. His father was a Seventh-Day Adventist minister, and his mother was a church pianist.
“If you sat there in the pews as long as I did, you began to understand the ethic of Jesus,” he said. “It ain’t different from the ethic of Buddha or the ethic of Mohammad.
“Certain teachings we discovered by people studying how we ought to behave with each other,” Jarreau said.
Jarreau used his life and his music to do that. If there is a person who ever said an unkind word about him, I haven’t been able to find him or her. And that’s because his philosophy as human being carried over to his philosophy as an artist. [Continue reading…]
Music: Jeffrey Iqbal — ‘Tere Mast Mast Do Nain’
Pete Seeger, champion of folk music and social change, dies at 94
The New York Times reports: Pete Seeger, the singer, folk-song collector and songwriter who spearheaded an American folk revival and spent a long career championing folk music as both a vital heritage and a catalyst for social change, died on Monday in Manhattan. He was 94. [Continue reading…]