Saturday, February 20, 2010

Jamil Nasser R.I.P.

I got this sad news in my mailbox today :

Renowned bassist and educator JAMIL NASSER died Saturday afternoon, February 13, 2010, at Englewood Hospital, after suffering a stroke and massive cardiac arrest. He leaves behind his beloved wife of 30 years, Barbara (Baano) Nasser, their son Najee, and sons Umar, Muneer and Zaid, and daughter Aliyah, from his first marriage, to Karimah.

Janaza services were held on Monday, February 15, at the Dar-ul Islah Mosque in Teaneck, New Jersey, followed by burial at the Islamic Cemetery at the New Jersey State Memorial Park. All of Jamil's and Baano's closest relatives attended both services, including his son Umar, who flew in from Saudia Ariabia where he lives and works. His mother, Mrs Claudie Joyner, who is 102, was not able to attend. However, Jamil and Baano spent some time during the summer visiting her.

Cards and expressions of sympathy may be sent to:
Barbara (or Baano, as Jamil used to say) Nasser
2105 Windsor Park Ct
Englewood, NJ, 07631


PLEASE HOLD THIS DATE: The Committee for Jamil's "Celebration of His Life and Gifts" is looking at Sunday, March 21, 7:30 p.m., at Saint Peter's Church, 610 Lexington Ave, NYC 10022. If the Committee obtains that date, more information will be sent. Or we will be loooking for another date.

love, cob
One of Jamil's "best friends" and older "sister"

Jamil Nasser's 77th Birthday Party Bash (reprinted from AllAboutJazz)
:
The Great Bassist Jamil Nasser was recently given a party to honor his 77th Birthday. The event was [produced by his wife Barbara (Baano) Nasser and friend, Cobi Narita, and] held at Cobi's Place on June 21, 2009. In attendance was Ahmad Jamal, Monty Alexander, George Coleman, Lou Donaldson, Richard Wyands, Paul West, Harold Mabern (and many other musicians he had worked with). It was a great tribute to an important musician and educator of our time.

JAMIL NASSER - born June 21. 1932 - died February 13, 2010
Jamil Nasser (George Joyner) was born in Memphis, Tennessee, where he began his musical career in 1948 as a tuba player in the Booker T Washington High School Band. Shortly thereafter, he was encouraged by his boyhood friend and neighbor, the musical genius Phineas Newborn Jr., to play the bass violin. He began playing the bass in 1949, and was selected to play bass with the school dance band after an impromptu audition. The Director was Phineas Newborn Jr. Jamil and Phineas recorded in Memphis in 1953 for Peacock Records.

After high school, with three all-expense musical scholarships to choose from, he chose Arkansas A.M. & N. College in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, where he organized and led the college band, the State Collegians. They went on to win the Pittsburgh Courier Poll for the "Best College Dance Band of 1950-1951."

After college, Jamil was drafted into the Army and was bassist and arranger for the 3rd Army Special Service Package Shows. Other members included Wynton Kelly, Duke Pearson and Leonard Nimoy (Mr. Spock from Star Trek). During that time, he was commissioned by General Bolling (Commander-In-Chief of the 3rd Army) to orchestrate the overture for the 3rd Army extravaganza, "Southland Panorama," using the 100-man concert orchestra plus the 19-piece dance band.

Upon being released in 1955, Jamil joined BB King's band as bassist and arranger, and played the Electric Bass (a newly created instrument at that time). Phineas asked Jamil to join him in New York for his debut at the Basin Street East in 1956. They were well received by the musicians and the Jazz fans in New York. The trio was invited on the Birdland tour in 1957. Jamil was featured with the Phineas Newborn Jr. Quartet until 1958.

Thereafter, he was featured bassist with all-star jazz groups in both recording and personal appearances with such notables as Lou Donaldson, Donald Byrd, John Coltrane, Randy Weston, Red Garland, Gene Ammons, Herbie Mann, Al Haig, Lionel Hampton, Anita O'Day, Chuck Wayne and "Philly" Joe Jones, to name a few.

Forming a quartet in 1958 with the late legendary Oscar Dennard (pianist), Idrees Sulieman (trumpet) and Buster Smith (drums), they performed throughout Western and Eastern Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East for three years. After returning to America in 1962, Jamil was musical director and leader of the trio at Chuck's Composite, an East Side night club that was the phenomenon of the early sixties.

Jamil joined the Ahmad Jamal Trio in 1964, along with Frank Gant on drums, an association that lasted for eleven years. During this same period Jamil was vice president of Ahmad Jamal Productions Corporation, Hema Music Incorporated, and Jamal Publishing Corporation. He was President of The King Series, an organization that specialized in special artistic packaging of all-star groups assembled with emphasis on musical compatibillity and historical importance, such as the importent packaging of the quartet which featured Red Garland, Lou Donaldson, Jimmy Cobb and Jamil, which toured Japan to sold-out houses in each city.

As producer of the jazz portion of the first "Memphis In May Festival" in 1977, Jamil assembled expatriate Memphis jazz artists and performed with them to more than 13,000 people on the famous Beale Street. Artists included were Phineas Newborn Jr., George Coleman, Hank Crawford, the late Sonny Criss, Frank Strozier, Harold Mabern and Marvin Stamm, to name but a few.

He served as musical director and bassist for actress/jazz singer Cybill Shepherd's east coast engagements.

Jamil produced and directed the first enormously successful 3-day Westchester Jazz Festival for the Presbyterian Jazz Society in Mount Vernon, N.Y.

He was a Vice Presdent of the Jazz Foundation of American 1990-1995.

He was the CEO and founder of Global International Art, Inc.. (GIA), which had a board consisting of artists and business people whose primary interest was to preserve the classical Jazz Art that is based on the total Black experience of swing-soul and beauty.

As an educator, he was director of jazz workshops at State University of New York st Stony Brook.

For many years, he was music director of the Universal Jazz Coalition, Inc./ Jazz Center of New York. producing special concerts and different workshops for instrumentalists and vocalists. Jamil and his trio, Harold Maben on piano and Frank Gant on drums, conducted well-attended weekly free jam sessions, which were important due to the construcitve critiques offered by the trio.

Among his most notable concerts were the intensely beautiful presentation of his Bassoon Choir, the fulfillment of a long-time dream, under a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts; his concert honoring one of his best friends, Major Holley, titled Bass Ball, his tribute concert for Red Garland was one of the most musically-satisfying concerts of the year; and he, along with Max Roach and Cobi Narita, spearheaded the fundraising concert for his best friend and mentor, Papa Jo Jones, at the Village Gate, raising $15,000 in cash which he presented to Papa Jo.

Jamil's other mentor and great friend was Lester Young; Jamil used to say that Papa Jo and Prez had their own special language. They watched over Jamil and taught him "the tricks of the trade". Jamil made the arranements to get Prez out of France and back to the U.S., during his final illness.

For more than a decade, he was George Coleman's "bassist of choice", performing in hundreds of supremely successful concerts, where his steady, strong, yet sensitive, lyrical bass lifted the group to new heights with each performance. One of the finest tenors of our time, George never sounded better nor appeared to enjoy the music more than when he played with Jamil.

He was also bassist of choice with Randy Weston for many years; his first performance with Randy (as George Joyner; he legally became Jamil Nasser later in the same year) was at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival. One of the highlights of his working with Randy was performing with the Boston Pops Orchestra. With Randy, he recorded three albums in Paris over one weekend:
Tribute to Duke Ellington
Tribute to Thelonious Monk
Music of Randy Weston

Nasser's great diversity and sensitivity on the bass made him in great demand. He is on hundreds of albums. A few of them, among many others, are:

Outertimeinnerspace Ahmad Jamal-Impulse AS-9226
Freeflight Ahmad Jamal-Impulse AS-9217
Eddie Heyward Now Eddie Heyward-Lyn Records EH-1000
Fine and Dandy Lou Donaldson, Red Garland, Jimmy
Cobb, Jamil Nasser LOB LOC-1022
Expressly Ellington Al Haig-Jamil Nasser Combo Spotlite SPJ LP20
New York Panorama George Coleman Quartet Theresa Records TR120
Portraits of Thelonious Monk Randy Weston 3 Album set Polydor France 281-LCO383
Portraits of Duke Ellington Randy Weston Polydor France 281-LCO383
Self Portraits Randy Weston Randy Weston Polydor France 281-LCO383

MOVIES
The Preacher's Wife Featuring Whitney Houston, Denzel
Washington, Lionel Richie.
Also with George Coleman, tenor; Roy Haynes, drums; Ted Dunbar, guitar

Friday, February 19, 2010

Art Van Damme R.I.P.

Art Van Damme, reknown jazz accordionist passed away at the age of 89. You can read more of his passing away here and about his career in general here.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

OOP : Albert Ayler Lörrach/Paris 1966

This concert was at the time issued by HatHut but now Out Of Print. I got a copy from the local public library...

Albert Ayler 
Lörrach/Paris 1966
HAT ART CD 6039

Albert Ayler   (tenor saxophone)
Donald Ayler   (trumpet)
Michel Sampson   (violin)
Bill Folwell   (bass)
Beaver Harris   (drums)

1. Bells (13.18)
2. Jesus (6.51), 
3. Our Prayer (6.06)
4. Spirits (3.12)
5. Holy Ghost (11.01)
6. Ghost (7.38)
7. Holy Family (10:49)
8. Ghost II (4.46)

Tracks 1 to 5:
November 7, 1966
Lorrach, Germany
Tracks 6 to 8:
November 13, 1966


CD -) EAC -) FLAC
scan of cover art and booklet included

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Jake Hanna R.I.P.

On february 12th drummer Jake Hanna passed away. A very nice tribute to Mr. Hanna can be found here including different videoclips.
R.I..P. Jake Hanna

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Essay on George Orwell


George Wheatcroft wrote an essay on George Orwell for the NYT which you can read here.
Enjoy!

Friday, February 12, 2010

Metropolis



ARTE will broadcast this evening (20.50 PM Paris Time) live from the Berlin Film Festival the newly restored edition of Metropolis by Fritz Lang.For this newly restored version 27 minutes of unissued film were used coming from a collector in South America.
The film will be shown in avant premiere accompanied by live music brought by Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester Berlin.

Afterwards ARTE will broadcast a documentary on the restauration of Metropolis, the first film registered by UNESCO.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Roger Guerin RIP

I heard this evening at french television that trumpetplayer Roger Guerin (° 09th January 1926) passed away on saturday February 06th.
Apparently he fell into a small into a small river in front of his house and drowned. Guerin began playing professionally in Paris after the liberation with amongst others James Moody, André Hodeir, Hubert Fol, Fats Sadi, Don Byas, Kenny Clark, Lucky Thompson, Blossom Dearie,...
He was also part of the Double Six a group with whom he frequently played and was present at the Paris Jazz Festival in 1949 with Bird!

Later on he played with Martial Solal and Eddy Louiss.
RIP Roger.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Robin D.G. Kelley Interview

Author Robin D.G. Kelley is featured in a long interview about his recent biography on Thelonious Monk. Enjoy!