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Bonus to Episode 11-Jon Irabagon: Always Moving Forward

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Release Date: 07/04/2023

Episode 21-Wayne Escoffery: Fostering Pride in Black American Music-Jazz show art Episode 21-Wayne Escoffery: Fostering Pride in Black American Music-Jazz

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Grammy-Award winning saxophonist Wayne Escoffery is my guest on the 21st episode of Strictly Jazz Sounds. What attracted me to Wayne was his prolific traveling, extensive performances and recordings with his own band (11 recordings), the Mingus Big Band (3 recordings, one a Grammy Award winner), the Black Art Jazz Collective (4 recordings), and as sideman with trumpeter Tom Harrell (7 recordings, co-producing 4) plus works with other notable jazz musicians. He is now a Harlem resident in the neighborhood where Sonny Rollins grew up, Sugar Hill, but he was born and spent his childhood years in...

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Episode 20-Roni Eytan: Jazz Harmonica Colossus show art Episode 20-Roni Eytan: Jazz Harmonica Colossus

Strictly Jazz Sounds

 Roni Eytan, a renowned Israeli-born, New York based jazz harmonica player, performs with a passion that differs from other harmonica artists. Perhaps it’s the region from which he derives-the Middle East and North Africa. His culture greatly influences his compositions and inspires his passions. Roni’s work is influenced by harmonica legend Toots Thielemans but only partially. The folk cultures that make up the regions and his spiritual influences mostly inspire his writing.  Roni Eytan stopped by my studio to talk about his harmonica work and how he got interested in this...

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Episode 19-Alexandra Ridout: Her Journey Into Jazz show art Episode 19-Alexandra Ridout: Her Journey Into Jazz

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Alexandra (Alex) Ridout is a young jazz trumpeter from the UK, now residing in New York City. In this episode of Strictly Jazz Sounds, she lays out her journey as a musician, comparing the experiences and educational backgrounds between the UK and the US. Ridout recalls her time at the Royal Academy of Music in London and Manhattan School of Music, emphasizing her family's influence, especially her jazz musician parents. Highlighting her musical achievements, the conversation includes her participation and victory in the BBC Youth Competition, winning at 17 years old. She talks about her...

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Episode 18-Jocelyn Gould: Striking a Chord show art Episode 18-Jocelyn Gould: Striking a Chord

Strictly Jazz Sounds

In this episode of Strictly Jazz Sounds, I have a conversation with Jocelyn Gould, a professional jazz guitarist who fills all the shoes it requires to drive a successful career. Jocelyn shares her journey from pretending to play a cardboard guitar at the age of four to winning a Juno Award for her first album, Elegant Traveler. She later discusses the challenges and triumphs of her career, including her education in the U.S. at Michigan State University, her experiences in New York's rough and tumble jazz scene, and her recent endeavors, including her podcast and latest album releases....

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Episode 17-Yasushi Nakamura: The Shy Bassist with the Groove show art Episode 17-Yasushi Nakamura: The Shy Bassist with the Groove

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Yasushi Nakamura loves his music. And he truly loves laying down the groove lines behind a hot band like he does for almost a dozen bands. However, being one of today’s first-call bassists means frequent and long show tours that can take him away from his family of two-children and spouse for weeks, even months at a time. It has resulted in an impressive list and number of recordings made on both electric and acoustic or double bass. Pianist and longtime friend, Emmet Cohen, says that Yasushi “…is known in the music community for playing in over a dozen bands and is hardly ever seen...

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Episode 16-Terri Lyne Carrington: Changing the Faces of Jazz show art Episode 16-Terri Lyne Carrington: Changing the Faces of Jazz

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Question: What would jazz music sound like if it had been born in a country without patriarchy; taught without bias and performed on a stage with radical inclusivity? That’s what jazz titan Terri Lyne Carrington says is the foundation behind Berklee College of Music’s Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice. Terri Lyne is the founder and artistic director of the Institute and a professor at Berklee, her alma mater. In this episode of Strictly Jazz Sounds, I spend time with Terri Lyne Carrington, getting deep into this question along with how to lift women and nonbinary individuals in this...

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Episode 15-Brandee Younger: Jazz Harp Meets Hip-Hop show art Episode 15-Brandee Younger: Jazz Harp Meets Hip-Hop

Strictly Jazz Sounds

In jazz, two legendary harp musicians come to mind. Dorothy Ashby and Alice Coltrane. Now, there is a third musician whose image immediately erupts into focus. For harp artist, educator, and Grammy nominated musician Brandee Younger, both Ashby and Coltrane made a tremendous impact on her. And with her latest recording, Brand New Life, on Impulse Records, Brandee Younger embraces Ashby and her impact on the harp. I caught up with Grammy nominated harpist Brandee Younger at the Spoleto Jazz Festival in Charleston, North Carolina. This was a major opportunity for me to learn how the harp,...

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Episode 14-Roxy Coss: Students Are the Music show art Episode 14-Roxy Coss: Students Are the Music

Strictly Jazz Sounds

For tenor saxophonist, composer, bandleader, educator and artist Roxy Coss, jazz education is everything. When we talked in July, she and her husband, saxophonist, educator and composer, Lucas Pino, just returned from their week-long session as co-directors of the Brubeck Jazz Summit, (yes, that Brubeck-Dave Brubeck) a week-long intensive emersion of jazz education and performance for talented students worldwide. To participate, young people must have exceptional capacity. To teach, your credentials must be superior.  In this episode, Roxy Coss shares her deep thoughts and intense...

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Episode 13-Miki Yamanaka: Living Her Dreams show art Episode 13-Miki Yamanaka: Living Her Dreams

Strictly Jazz Sounds

Japanese jazz pianist Miki Yamanaka, born and raised in Kyoto and Kobe Japan, now resides in New York City with her drummer husband Jimmy Macbride. Her upcoming album, Shades of Rainbow is set to drop on September 8. Excitement explodes in Miki during this hour-long interview with this jubilant pianist who is a mainstay at New York’s prime jazz clubs for emerging talent, Smalls and Mezzrow, both found in the West Village in Greenwich Village in the lower west side of Manhattan. Miki’s been a New York resident since 2012. She did her graduate work at Queens College in Jazz Performance...

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Episode 12-Julieta Eugenio: Music is Magic show art Episode 12-Julieta Eugenio: Music is Magic

Strictly Jazz Sounds

“”—  Music moves the soul in so many ways. It moves the spirit and inspires living beings to become one with the music. Argentinian Julieta Eugenio was just that person from a young age. She’s not entirely sure why. Her parents didn’t play an instrument though they played recordings around the house. As long as she can remember, music was in her life. Her personal interest wasn’t piqued until she saw a piano when she was about five years old. It was like magic, Julieta recalls. She was visually pinned to the piano. That’s love at first site. Music grabbed her and it...

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More Episodes

Welcome to the Bonus recording of Episode 11. More stories to tell by Jon Irabagon.

The recording by the group, Mostly Other People Do the Killing, Blue, the note-for-note recreation of Miles Davis' classic album is “A work of conceptual jazz art,” writes Bandcamp. The listening public’s response varied considerably but suffice it to say that Jon as well as his bandmates had to deal with substantial internet rage, including death threats. But not to let that totally color the experience, Jon says there were many positive emails about the recording and the process. The way Jon tells the story details a tale that will live on for ages.

This bonus track also includes Jon Irabagon recounting the many years it took for him to transcribe most of the recorded solos of sax giants John Coltrane and Julian “Cannonball” Adderley. We talk about his recording Dr. Quixotic’s Traveling Exotics, which we both consider as perhaps his best work largely because of with whom he records. The personnel on this album are phenomenal: Luis Perdomo, piano, Yasushi Nakamura, bass, Rudy Royston, drums, and Tom Harrell on trumpet. And, of course, Jon Irabagon is on alto sax. This is one helluva recording, we both agreed.

I did not think our conversation would have been complete without touching base about Jon’s good friend Sylvain Rifflet from Paris with whom Jon recorded two outstanding albums, Perpetual Motion and Rebellion(s). And if you wondered what is in Jon’s future, he gives a full accounting of where he’s moving forward.

So, buckle up for this ride. Jon Irabagon, a tale of tales.

Music:

The Cost of Modern Living (Behind the Sky, Irabbagast Records, 2015) 6:02

Jon Irabagon-tenor saxophone, Luis Perdomo-piano, Yasushi Nakamura-bass, Rudy Royston-drums

The Bo’ness Monster (Dr. Quixotic’s Traveling Exotics, Irabbagast Records, 2018) 6:40

Jon Irabagon- tenor saxophone, Luis Perdomo-piano, Yasushi Nakamura-bass, Rudy Royston-drums, Tim Hagans-trumpet