OREGON S BLACK SWAN CLASSIC JAZZ BAND WITH VOCAL STAR MARILYN KELLER FEATURED IN OUR OCTOBER CONCERT

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October 2013 Volume 38, Number 08 OREGON S BLACK SWAN CLASSIC JAZZ BAND WITH VOCAL STAR MARILYN KELLER FEATURED IN OUR OCTOBER CONCERT By Rod Belcher Probably the most popular trad group performing out of Oregon for long years, the Black Swan Classic JB, comes back to entertain us again on October 20th. They ve made PSTJS appearances often over the past several seasons. One undeniable reason for their popularity is the presence of vocalist Marilyn Keller, whose versatile command of song styles and pure-toned voice quality never fail to impress. She fits nicely with the musical talents of the seven-piece band, Black Swan s lineup of veteran players is: Rick Holzgrafe (cornet); Steve Matthes (clarinet); John Bennett (piano); Ron Leach (drums); Alan Phillips (banjo/vocals); Art Horgen, (tuba); and Don Stone (trombone). The first five are Oregonians, Horgen is from Bellingham and Stone is a Montanan. They and Marilyn have been regulars at West Coast jazz festivals, cruises, and recording sessions, building a strong following wherever they re heard. Their book of both familiar and semi-obscure material shows off their high degree of professionalism and dedication to the jazz idiom. WHERE: Ballard Elks Lodge, 6411 Seaview Ave. NW, Seattle. WHEN: 1 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sunday, October 20th. ADMISSION: $12 PSTJS members; $15 non-members. Pay only at door. FURTHER INFO: Carol Rippey, 425-776-5072. Or - website: www.pstjs.org. Plenty of free parking; great view. Snacks, coffee, and other beverages available. FROM the PREZ! Bob Schulz and his Frisco Jazz Band were tremendous last month. Thanks to all of you who helped bring them here again with your Schulz Fund contribution. We can t do it without you. December is our election month. Each year four of our Directors are up for re-election. This is also the time for those of you who would be interested in joining our board to let me know. Each year the Executive members, President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer are also up for reelection. If you are interested in serving on our board, please let me know via email and we ll put your name on the ballot. jazzdancer2@msn.com. We have four board meetings each year on a quarterly basis. We meet in the morning in either Bellevue or North Seattle. We are also looking for a purely VOLUNTEER webmaster. For some time now we have been limping along without a webmaster and it s time to do it right. We have just renewed our license so we re good to go. For the time being we ll put very simple information on the existing site and work on putting up a one with a new webmaster. If you re interested in this project please let me know via email jazzdancer2@msn.com. That s it for this month. Come join us for Black Swan on the 20th and bring a friend, OKOM is too good not to share it with our friends. See you soon. Cheers, Judy

Jazz Soundings Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society 19031 Ocean Avenue Edmonds, WA 98020-2344 425-776-5072 www.pstjs.org UPCOMING EVENTS Elks Lodge, Ballard, 6411 Seaview Ave N.W., Seattle October 2013 Gigs for Local Bands BELLINGHAM TRADITIONAL JAZZ SOCIETY 1st Saturday 2-5 pm VFW Hall 625 N. State St Oct. 5 Red Beans & Rice Nov. 2 Updown Lowdown Dec. 7 Company B Page 2 Oct 20 Black Swan Nov 17 Evergreen Classic Dec 15 Ray s First Thursday Band Jan 19 Uptown Lowdown Feb 16 Ain t No Heaven Seven Mar 16 Crescent City Stompers April 27 Sidewalk Stompers May 18 holotradband June 15 New Orleans Quintet PRESIDENT Judy Levy jazzdancer2@msn.com 425-890-6605 VICE PRESIDENT George Swinford grs-pms@comcast.net 425-869-2780 SECRETARY Cilla Trush paultrush@yahoo.com 206-363-9174 TREASURER Gloria Kristovich gkristo@live.com 425-776-7816 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Joanne Hargrave shorejo1@comcast.net 206-550-4664 Leroy Johnson moldyfig@hotmail.com 206-772-4378 Jan Lemmon djlemmon@msn.com 425-776-9763 Edmund Lewin 360-297-6633 Gary Lydum glydumup@hotmail.com 206-719-3955 George Oelrich goelrich@comcast.net 360-793-0836 Carol Rippey trianglejazz@comcast.net 425-776-5072 Jack Temp 425-242-0683 MEMBERSHIP COORDINATOR Carol Rippey trianglejazz@comcast.net 425-776-5072 EDITOR Anita LaFranchi jazzeditor@q.com 206-522-7691 GRAND DOMINION JAZZ BAND Oct. 3-6, Glacier Jazz Stampede - Kalispell, MT www.glacierjazzstampede.com GLENN CRYTZER AND HIS SYNCOPATORS 1st Sunday and 3rd Wednesday of the Month 9:30 pm -12:30 am Century Ballroom 915 East Pine Seattle, WA, 206-324-7263 NEW ORLEANS QUINTET Mondays, 6:30-9:30 pm, New Orleans Restaurant, 114 1st Ave S., Seattle, WA 206-622-2563 GREATER OLYMPIA DIXIELAND JAZZ SOCIETY 2nd Sunday 1:00 4:30 PM Elks Club 1818 4th Ave, Olympia, WA PEARL DJANGO Oct. 4, 8pm, Jazzbones 2803 6th Ave, Tacoma, WA 98405; 253-396-9169 Oct. 6, 4-7pm Capitol Cider - Downstairs, 818 East Pike Street Seattle, WA 98122; 206-397-3564 Oct. 11, 7pm Mayne Island Agricultural Hall Mayne Island, B.C, Canada Email: kwarning@shaw.ca UPTOWN LOWDOWN JAZZ BAND Oct. 3-6, Glacier Jazz Stampede - Kalispell, MT Oct. 13, 1 4:30pm Olympia Elks Uptown Swing JAZZ SOUNDINGS Published monthly except July and August by the Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society. Anita LaFranchi, Editor, jazzeditor@q.com Ads must be submitted in a jpeg or PDF format Payment in advance to: Gloria Kristovich, P.O. Box 373, Edmonds, WA 98020-0373 Advertising Rates: Full page $100. 7 1/2 wide by 9 1/2 tall Half Page $60. 7 1/2 wide by 4 1/4 tall Quarter Page $40. 3 5/8 Wide by 4 1/4 tall Deadline is the 10th of the month for the next month s issue On Your Dial... Saturday 7-12 pm Swing Years and Beyond KUOW 94.9 FM Sunday 3-6 pm Art of Jazz, Ken Wiley, KPLU 88.5 FM

Jazz Soundings October 2013 Page 3 How Do You Learn to Play the Piano? By: Ray Skjelbred I am pleased that Judy has asked me to do some writing for the Puget Sound Jazz Newsletter, and since I have just finished writing liner notes for a new piano CD where I consider jazz as a tribal experience, I thought I might use that idea as a starting point for this writing. So, I include here the opening paragraph from my liner notes: How does a person end up playing jazz piano? How do you learn? It s not just keys and sheet music. How do you learn good taste or how to express passion, or a good instinct for what to do or not do at a given moment, especially in relation to other people who are playing with you? I really believe for me that it has been a kind of tribal experience. I mean it. The elders of the tribe pass on their wisdom. They tell stories. They sit a certain way. They see things and they give out tribal magic. The pianists who as elders most affected me were Johnny Wittwer (my teacher from Seattle), Art Hodes, Burt Bales, Joe Sullivan, Jess Stacy and Earl Hines. One of the first things Wittwer wrote in my notebook was Make em dance, which referred to wrists. He got me to move my hands loosely and to create a jangly feeling that would allow a natural and warm sound to come from either hand. You don t play with your arms. Your wrists move loosely up and down and from side to side. He also said Think Swinging before you play. Silently imagine the sound and let yourself slide into it. He also believed that piano duets were important as learning experiences. We had to share a piano. We had to see and hear where someone else was going. It trained me in seeing, listening and editing, especially in finding the important open spaces between notes. And playing duets with him prepared me for playing in a band. Through many years I also learned from the other piano players I listed above. This opportunity to learn musical wisdom from elders has always been there in jazz history and that doesn t mean just how to play an instrument that someone else plays, but learning how to blend with others or how to be surprising or how to be subtle or understate an idea or even how to live in a world where the life of the artist is often questioned or misunderstood. If you find the right human connecting links the life of jazz history is amazingly short. For example, I learned a lot about lyrical, beautiful playing by playing music with Darnell Howard, one of the great clarinet players of early jazz. He, in turn, had learned from his experiences and recordings with people like Jelly Roll Morton and King Oliver, his elders, and they can take you back to the earliest days. I think I can safely say that swinging with a sense of abandon mixed with subtle beauty has always been part of jazz; that is what I see as passed on by the elders. Of course as time passes, the original elders disappear and others who seem more contemporary are the survivors, but they have held the wisdom. The great Chicago drummer Wayne Jones just died and Hal Smith wrote an appreciation about him in the Michael Steinman blog Jazz Lives. Hal noted Wayne s intelligence, kindness, sensitivity and his playing as always appropriate to a musical situation. Other drummers wanted to hear Wayne and know him. He was an elder. Hal learned from him. An elder often slithers through the world like smoke. He rarely has an ambitious sense and usually avoids being a star or an all-star. He stays true to himself but takes the art of jazz seriously and he learns how to survive with talent and wit. So I have one last good story for an example. I used to play trombone in a kind of pep band for the San Francisco 49 ers. We wore white pants and shirts but still had a disheveled quality that should have been apparent to anyone who saw us. Some of the best San Francisco traditional jazz musicians played in this band that was the size of about three regular bands. One day I happened to be playing alongside Bob Helm, an artist, a swing era veteran and the clarinet mainstay of the Lu Watters and Turk Murphy bands. Bob had high principles and was also a survivor, a man who could figure out a way of making it through anything. An elder. At halftime I remember we sort of blended in with some other entertainment going on but it was pretty bizarre. Gina Lollobrigida was there in some kind of acrobatic costume and was spinning around. There were lions on the field and mostly I remember tigers jumping through flaming hoops. It was all loud, bright, fast and spectacular and at the height of it Helm turned to me and very quietly said, Do you like this kind of life? I was stunned. His timing and wit were perfect. And of course he was suddenly dealing with everything! Did I like this kind of life? I don t know. But I enjoyed watching him observe it. I had things to learn.

Jazz Soundings October 2013 Page 4 By Doug Parker A GUEST MUSICIAN S VIEW OF CAMP HEEBIE JEEBIES Could any setting for Our Kind of Music possibly be more beautiful than one by a lake in the mountains, specifically Lake Crescent in the Olympics, about 30 miles west of Port Angeles? One of the musicianinstructors said to this writer, It s like being in a picture postcard! Camp Heebie Jeebies, held annually at Camp David, Jr., was wellattended by many enthusiastic young budding musicians this year. The camp is under the very able direction of Karla West, pianist-business manager of the Hume Street Jazz Band, and director of the excellent Glacier Jazz Stampede, which is held each October in Kalispell, Montana. She is assisted by a topnotch crew of experienced traditional jazz musicians and by a hard-working staff of volunteers, many of whom are active on the administrative end of the Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society. Your correspondent accepted Karla s invitation to sit in on banjo with the faculty band, which included several members of bands who are active on the jazz festival circuit. This roster included: Dan Comins-trumpet (leader, Titanic Jazz Band); Howard Miyata-trombone and tuba (High Sierra Jazz Band); John Goodrich-clarinet and soprano sax and Tom Jacobus-tuba, string bass and trombone (Uptown Lowdown Jazz Band); Marty Eggerspiano (Yerba Buena Stompers, and also an A-1 solo ragtimer); and Marilyn Keller-vocalist (Black Swan Jazz Band). Also: trombonist Jackson Stock, who this writer believes was a member of the Abalone Stompers, from Monterey, CA, and drummer John Hall who is the leader of the recently revived Chicago Six. It was a pleasure and privilege to be included in this stellar crew! The response to our efforts was very positive, and it was good to see so many people dancing to the music. This seems to verify a statement, in a recent issue of The American Rag, by New York trumpeter Ed Polcer, who said that this music will survive because people can dance to it! At times, the faculty members (and their sit-in guest) were joined by some of the students, who did well for themselves. Your writer was particularly impressed by the young reed man (clarinet and soprano and tenor saxes) Thomas Harris, a graduate of Camp Heebie Jeebies and now leader of his own four piece band in the Bellingham area, who played alongside John Goodrich and fit in quite well; also by the bassist, who was featured on a tune he claimed he didn t know, but played a fine solo on it. A great example of learning as one goes along! (From a musician s standpoint, your correspondent can say that applies to all of us who play it!) If these young musicians stick with it, perhaps OKOM has a future after all, refuting the claims of those Jeremiahs who claim it is a dying art form. To paraphrase Mark Twain: Rumors of the demise of OKOM are greatly exaggerated! Tom Jacobus, leader of the Evergreen Classic Jazz Band, has made a GENEROUS CONTRIBUTION to our Youth Scholarship Fund by giving us CDs and tapes to sell with the money going to the fund. The CD is Evergreen's "Tribute to Fletcher Henderson". The tape is Evergreen's "Jazz That Time Forgot". They will be available at the front desk for $5 each. Remember, Christmas is coming, and these would be excellent "stocking stuffers" On the same subject, we also still have a supply of "The Best of the Best" which includes music by Uptown Lowdown JB, Phoenix Jazzers, Evergreen Classic, CANUS, and Ain't No Heaven Seven. They are also $5 each.

Jazz Soundings October 2013 Page 5 Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society 19031 Ocean Ave., Edmonds, WA 98020-2344 Please (enroll) (renew) (me) (us) as a member or members Name Address City, State Zip Code Phone E-Mail Check when renewing if your address label is correct Dues for 12 months: Single $25 Couple $40 Lifetime single $200 Lifetime Couple $350 Patron $500 (One or two lifetime membership) Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. The Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization dedicated to the performance and preservation of traditional jazz. Your membership and contributions are tax-deductible. Thank you. We re looking for new Members, tell or bring a friend or neighbor. SUBSCRIBE TODAY News You Can Use About Traditional Jazz and Ragtime U.S. One Year: $26 -:- Canadian $39 U.S. Funds* U.S. Two Years: $48 -:- Canadian $74 U.S. Funds* (*) Includes Airmail Delivery Make check payable to: The American Rag 20137 Skyline Ranch Dr., Apple Valley, CA 92308-5035 Phone/Fax: 760-247-5145 Name Address City State Phone Zip + 4 Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society

Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society 19031 Ocean Ave. Edmonds, WA 98020-2344 Address service requested Non-profit Org U..S. Postage Paid Seattle, WA Permit 1375 X on your Jazz Soundings address label means your dues are payable. XX means Good-bye You and your friends are cordially invited to hear sizzling-hot jazz as You a guest and your of Elks friends Club are Jazz cordially Society invited member to hear Colin sizzling-hot Dearing. jazz as a guest of Elks Club Jazz Society Admission is payable at the door. member Colin Dearing. Admission is payable at the door. BANDS, CONTACTS AIN T NO HEAVEN SEVEN Leader: Terry Rogers terryrrogers@comcast.net 206-465-6601 COAL CREEK JAZZ BAND Leader: Judy Logen, 425-641- 1692 Bookings: judy@coalcreekjazzband.com COMBO DE LUXE Bookings: Candace Brown www.combodeluxe.net jazzstrings@comcast.net 253-752-6525 CORNUCOPIA CONCERT BAND Leader: Allan Rustad www.comband.org 425-744-4575 DUKES OF DABOB Bookings: Mark Holman, 360-779-6357, seaclar7@embarqmail.com. DUWAMISH JAZZ BAND Bookings: Carol Johnston carolanjo@yahoo.com 206-932-7632 FIRST THURSDAY BAND Leader: Ray Skjelbred, Rayskjelbred@gmail.com 206-420-8535 FOGGY BOTTOM JAZZ BAND Leader: Bruce Cosacchi 360-638-2074 GRAND DOMINION JAZZ BAND Bookings: Bob Pelland bobpelland@gdjb.com 360-387-2500 holotradband Leader: Dave Holo email: dave@daveholo.com www.holotradband.com HOT CLUB SANDWICH Contact: James Schneider www.hotclubsandwich.com 206-561-1137 HUME STREET PRESERVATION JAZZ BAND Bookings: Karla West 406-862-3814 JAZZ UNLIMITED BAND Leader: Duane Wright duane.janw@verizon.net 866-337-2111 JAZZ STRINGS Bookings: Candace Brown jazzstrings@comcast.net 253-752-6525 LOUISIANA JOYMAKERS! Leader: Leigh Smith smithtunes@shaw.ca 604-294-9464 THE MARKET STREET DIXIELAND JASS BAND Ansgar Duemchen: 425-286-5703 Tim Sherman 206-547-1772 www.marketstreetdixielandjass.com MIGHTY APHRODITE Co-leaders: Bria Skonberg, Claire McKenna mightyaphroditejazz@hotmail.com 405-613-0568 NEW ORLEANS QUINTET Leader: Dave Holo www.neworleansquintet.com email: dave@daveholo.com RAINIER JAZZ BAND Manager: Randy Keller randykeller@msn.com 206-437-1568 RAY SKJELBRED Rayskjelbred@gmail.com 206-420-8535 RONNIE PIERCE JAZZ ENSEMBLE ronniepiercemusic@yahoo.com, 206-467-9365 UPTOWN LOWDOWN JAZZ BAND Leader: Bert Barr uljb@yahoo.com 425-898-4288 WILD CARDS JAZZ Leader: Randy Keller randykeller@msn.com 206-437-1568