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  • Antoine Roney

    Antoine Roney: Heart Music

    by Raul da Gama

    Where does music come from? We are, indeed, speaking of the realm of the platonic, the realm of the spirit. We are talking of each note that goes to form a string of ineffably precious and beautiful pearls that, in turn, forms a proverbial necklace that adorns the melody of a song. From a black dot on a line or the spaces between the lines of a staved paper? Certainly not where Antoine Roney comes from.

    In the case of Antoine – as in the case of the spiritual ancestors of the horns from whom he has descended: Dexter Gordon, Hawk and Bean, Charlie Parker, Jackie Maclean, John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Wayne Shorter, Pharoah Sanders – it pulsates from the beat of his heart.

    The heart – more than the head – speaks through Antoine’s horns. It is something he always knew from listening to music at home with his musically noble family. “Of course, technique is important,” he says, “but what’s in the heart determines the sound of your voice.” We all breathe the same air, but what you make of it aurally is what counts.

    It is one of those unforgettable lessons you learn when your early mentors are Wayne Shorter and Jackie Maclean. “Jackie and [his son] René always said, ‘focus on telling the story… sing the blues.’ Sure, structure – the 12-bar structure of WC Handy – is important, but ‘composition is storytelling.’”

    Antoine says, “I believe I have a story to tell. That, and because music has the power to heal. It’s why I make music.” 

    To read more, visit https://heyzine.com/shelf/e31d04e81a.html.

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  • Cindy Blackman Santana

    Legendary Musician, Philanthropist, Vocalist, and Role Model: Cindy Blackman Santana is Changing the Game

    by Joyce Jones and Chrys L. Roney

    Born in Yellow Springs, Ohio, Cindy Blackman Santana epitomizes the power of passion and perseverance in the world of music. From the moment she could stand on her two feet, Cindy found herself drawn to the rhythmic allure of the drums. "I was just drawn to everything about the drums," Cindy reminisces. "When I heard music, drums were the instrument that I singled out in my ear." Encouraged by her mother, Ghita Blackman, Cindy would tap rhythms on her mother's back, finding the perfect tones. While her parents initially believed Cindy’s fascination with drums was a passing phase, this intrigue evolved into a lifelong passion and career.

    Cindy’s relentless pursuit of drumming mastery guided her trajectory. "I always searched out drums to play, people to play with, things to play music, and everything involved with playing. I was very interested in it, and I loved it, so that’s what I developed," she explains. This fervor for drumming—and a profound admiration for the legendary Tony Williams—led her to enroll at Berklee College of Music in Boston. There, she studied under Alan Dawson, the same instructor who taught Tony Williams. Berklee also introduced her to the late trumpeter and composer Wallace Roney, whose encyclopedic knowledge of music further broadened her horizons. "Wallace turned me on to a ton of incredible records, and it really opened up my head in terms of what I was thinking about," she says with evident appreciation.

    To read more, visit https://heyzine.com/shelf/e31d04e81a.html.

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  • Dr. Eddie Henderson - A Storied Life 

    Dr. Eddie Henderson - A Storied Life 

    By John Zaff 

     

     

    When he was growing up, Eddie Henderson had no idea that he was surrounded by music 

    legends. At the age of nine, his mom took him to the Apollo Theater to see Louis Armstrong. 

    Backstage, Louis gave Eddie his first trumpet lesson. “So that was the beginning,” said Eddie. “I 

    had no idea it was going to turn into the rest of my life!” 

         This anecdote is but one of many Eddie pulls out of his back pocket during a lively interview. 

    His father was in a renowned singing group whose records occasionally featured Frank Sinatra. 

    His mother was a dancer at the Cotton Club in Harlem and a one-time roommate of Billie 

    Holiday. Miles Davis and Duke Ellington were family friends and frequent house guests. But for 

    young Eddie, these were just his parents’ friends. And knowing them would exert a life-long 

    influence. 

         It takes years of dedicated practice to play an instrument at the virtuoso level. Jazz giant Dr. 

    Eddie Henderson has not only accomplished that, mastering trumpet and flugelhorn, but, 

    remarkably, has managed a double life as a practicing medical doctor—and perhaps even a triple 

    life, as he was also a competitive ice skater. A recent documentary about Eddie’s life, called 

    Uncommon Genius, chronicles his many achievements. 

         The year of Eddie’s trumpet lesson with Satchmo was life-changing for other reasons. Eddie’s 

    dad passed away and his mom remarried a doctor who moved the family from New York to San 

    Francisco. Eddie began trumpet lessons and developed an intense love of music. But his 

    stepfather didn’t approve and pushed him hard to pursue a career in medicine. “The only real 

    reason I became a doctor was because my stepfather was a doctor and he told me that if I 

    pursued music, I’d end up a bum” said Eddie “So I became a doctor.” Eddie’s forays into music 

    would soon prove his stepfather wrong. 

         In medical school, Eddie lived a double life studying psychiatry during the day and playing 

    jazz at night.  Eddie worked as hard on music as he did on medicine. He listened carefully to the 

    great trumpet players on the scene and slowly but surely picked up on the language of bebop and 

    post-bop.  “At first I tried to sound like Miles Davis, then I tried to sound like Freddie Hubbard, 

    then I wanted to sound like Lee Morgan,” said Eddie.  “So, all of those jazz heroes of mine 

    rubbed off on me…That’s how jazz language perpetuates itself from one generation to the next, 

    like passing the baton in a relay race.”  Eddie is quick to point out that all of the greats went 

    through a similar process of listening to their own heroes and then synthesizing their own 

    musical personas in response to what they take in.  “Miles would have wanted to play like Dizzy 

    Gillespie, but not many people could imitate Dizzy, because it’s just so difficult, so Miles had to 

    go the other way and develop a cool style of trumpet playing.” He says with a laugh.  

         Eddie seemed to have a knack for crossing paths with some of the greatest musicians of his 

    times. Once upon meeting John Coltrane and striking up a conversation with him, Coltrane gave 

    young Eddie some advice that always stayed with him. “Practice what you don’t know” he told 

    Eddie. “Don’t waste time practicing what you’re already good at.”   

         One evening, Herbie Hancock happened into a club where Eddie was playing. He was 

    impressed by what he heard and needed a sub trumpet player for a one-week club tour. Eddie 

    was hired. Playing with musicians of that caliber blew his mind. That one-week stint turned into 

    a multi-year stint with Herbie’s iconic fusion group, Mwandishi and brought Eddie to the point of no turn back with his music career. And yet, he continued to practice medicine when he was 

    not on the road. And even in his medical career, Eddie managed to cross paths with jazz legends; 

    both Thelonious Monk and Chet Baker came through his clinic, as patients of his.   

         After teaming up with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, the legendary group that nurtured so 

    many future jazz stars, Eddie was finally ready to play and record as a leader of his own groups 

    and ensembles. Over the years, the elite names and music legends that run through Eddie's 

    discography multiplied and serve as a testament to his ability to consistently create outstanding 

    and relevant music with the highest level of musicians. Eddie still plays with the superstar 

    ensemble, the Cookers, but also continues to play and record with his own groups.  Asked, when 

    did you finally feel like you’d made it and arrived as one of the great musicians, Eddie replied 

    “Oh, that never happened! That never crosses my mind, because it’s a lifetime growing process. 

    You never say, oh I’m at my peak, because you’re never at your peak. You can always be 

    learning something new every day! 

         Still teaching at Oberlin College, Eddie has “passed the baton” on to countless students who 

    he has taught and mentored. “Jazz, I think, is alive and well,” says Eddie. “There’s a wealth of 

    younger, talented musicians coming up who are very good.” He likes to tell his students that “it’s 

    always better to be the worst person in the band, not the best, because that’s what helps you to 

    grow.” 

         Eddie recently released his twenty-sixth leader album, very appropriately called "Witness to 

    History" on the Smoke Session Records Label.  “I’ve been very fortunate,” says Eddie, “to have 

    good genes, a good background and great life circumstances. My life was just like a fairytale 

    come true!”  

    The Eddie Henderson Quintet holds court at Smoke Jazz Club with Vincent Herring on 

    Saxophone, Peter Zak on Piano and Nat Reeves on Bass, August 1st through the 4th.  

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  • Isaiah Collier: Blackness Has No Timeframe

    Isaiah Collier: Blackness Has No Timeframe

    by Henry (Hank) Williams

    When asked about how he got into music, saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist Isaiah Collier credits his parents, the Chicago community, and a list of mentors, saying “I found music” to which he quickly adds that “[music] found me, really.”

    It’s one entry point into the world of Isaiah, whose thinking and range of influences seem as expansive as the music he creates and personal philosophy.

    But, if forced to distill Isaiah’s presence and approach down to the essence, spirituality, culture, and community might be good keywords to start with—and understanding that Isaiah sees all of them in spatially and temporally expansive ways.

    Isaiah comes from a family where music was central to the household and his father would play records for him. However, it was the participatory aspect of performing that really hooked him on the music.

    Isaiah’s foray into formal lessons began at a program run out of the Salvation Army Center on Chicago’s South Side by Julian Champion, who was also one of the instructors. Isaiah fondly remembers the first summer he was allowed to take the saxophone home to practice on the instrument. Isaiah, grasping for guidance on how to proceed, was simply told “Well, use your ears.” But Isaiah followed along, listening closely to some of what he liked then trying to replicate them on the saxophone. 

    To read more, visit https://mags.hothousejazzmagazine.com/a76282af89.html#page/17.

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  • FRED HERSCH: FINDING INSPIRATION

    FRED HERSCH: FINDING INSPIRATION

    By Ken Dryden

    Fred Hersch’s contributions as a pianist, composer, bandleader and sideman have made him one of the top musicians of his generation. The Cincinnati native was drawn to jazz in his youth and benefited from the mentoring of local musicians who challenged him. Fred needed to expand his horizons, so he drove to Boston to track down Jaki Byard at the New England Conservatory for a spontaneous audition, which Jaki granted and told him immediately afterward that he was accepted. Fred worked with many remarkable teachers there, including Joe Maneri, Jimmy Giuffre and George Russell. Fred recalls, “After graduation in June 1977, I was living in the Village. I wanted to play with the best players in the world, and felt that I had the tools and wanted to be challenged. I was mentored by bassist Sam Jones; from him, I learned about swing in a deep way. Playing with him was a lot of cred, because people respected him.

     

    Through Sam I got to Art Farmer, through Art I got to Joe Henderson, then I was with Stan Getz for a brief stint. I played gigs with Charlie Haden, Buster Williams, Al Foster, Billy Hart. The skill set for a young jazz pianist moving to New York in 1977 was to have good time, be able to swing, know the tunes, be able to comp. Sight-reading was a plus, but you weren’t expected to compose all your own original music. NEC was a jazz department then, not yet a jazz program. Even though I benefited, I don’t feel that I’m a part of the jazz education era. Back then, you could hang out at the bar with all the great musicians. It was a very open scene. Even though I was playing great gigs with those people, I was still playing parties, in the Catskills, in restaurants, paying dues and I made my first album at the age of thirty. You had to have a record label then, someone willing to back you to do it. I’ve been able to release one or two albums a year over the past 38 years.”

    To read more, visit https://mags.hothousejazzmagazine.com/a76282af89.html#page/10.

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