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A Sense of Jazz Community in
Ballard, WA
By Jason West (All About Jazz.com)
The Ballard Jazz Festival
Saturday, November 15, 2003
Seattle, WA
Boats, beer, fish—better add jazz to the list.
For generations, Ballard, WA has been famous for harboring fishing vessels,
numerous blue-collar taverns frequented by fishermen, and lutefisk—a
pickled fish recipe preferred by Scandinavians who settled here nearly
a century ago. Now, following a full day of jazz clinics, concerts and
club gigs, this salty Seattle neighborhood is poised to add America’s
classical music to its notorious local identity.
On Saturday, November 15, the first Ballard Jazz Festival was enthusiastically
received by over 1,200 locals who attended afternoon, evening and late-night
festival events.
Drummer extraordinaire Brian Blade and his seven-piece Fellowship band
delivered a 45-minute, highlight-filled set on the festival’s mainstage,
performing “Crooked Creek,” “Patron Saint of Girls”
and “Variations of a Bloodline” among other tunes. Melvin
Butler on tenor and soprano sax, and Myron Walden on alto led a two-horn
attack for this a rare appearance by the Fellowship.
The unflappable vocalist Nancy King and piano accompanist Steve Christofferson
won new admirers for their genuine, heart-felt interpretations of “Mountain
Greenery,” “Salt Lake City Blues” and “Straight
Into Your Heart.” The duo’s complex, intervallic, vocal/piano
unison on Christofferson’s “Out of Town” reaped rewards
worthy of the tune’s many musical risks.
A soft-spoken, hard-judging Vincent Herring publicly challenged the New
Stories trio to play his charts, and the hometown favorites did better
that just keep up with the veteran alto saxophonist from New York City.
Under a suspicious gaze and discerning ear, Marc Seales, Doug Miller and
John Bishop provoked a permanent grin from Herring following a round of
solos on “Timothy.” Grins turned to gapes on “Sweet
and Lovely” as Miller’s acoustic bass solo silenced the room
with listening and brought down the house with cheers.
SAUNAS AND CODAS
Three giant video screens—listing festival sponsors—served
as backdrop to a spacious mainstage inside the brand new 1,000-seat Mars
Hill Church performance hall. Jim Wilke, the venerable voice of Seattle
jazz, presided over the festival’s evening concerts as master of
ceremonies.
“On the subject of influential drummers, Blade declared his admiration
for Elvin Jones’s elliptical, shifting-circle, forward-moving time-feel.”
Earlier in the day, Blade, King, Herring, along with guitarists Kurt
Rosenwinkel and John Stowell conducted music clinics and answered questions
by any and all bold enough to ask about their art. Student musicians from
area high schoolS performed. Dozens of jazz photographs were on view and
for sale. And, later that night, the sound of jazz flooded historic Ballard
Avenue as festival-goers relaxed and refueled in half a dozen pubs and
participating Ballard Jazz Walk venues.
Origin Records’s growing catalog of 50+ recording artists supplied
Jazz Walk entertainment: Upper Left trio played Bad Albert’s Tap
and Grill; Rich Cole/Bill Anschell quartet filled the Old Town Ale House;
Matt Jorgensen+451 packed Conor Byrne Pub (setting a new record for beer
sales); Ben Thomas’s group played Bop Street Records; while Scenes
with Jeff Johnson and John Stowell held forth at the Lock and Keel Tavern.
But the most interesting Jazz Walk experience had to have been the Jay
Thomas/Tom Marriott quintet at the Olympic Athletic Club. More comfortable
with free weights and saunas then downbeats and codas, the athletic club
staff had set up a dozen or so chairs in the gym in preparation for a
never-before encountered Ballard jazz audience. They needed more chairs.
At 11pm, the second set had begun with people camped out on the gym floor,
bouncing to the beat of Thomas on tenor, Marriott on trumpet, John Hansen
at the keyboard, Russ Botton on bass, and an unknown but highly entertaining
drummer pressed up into a corner of the basketball court.
BRIAN AND BILL
In all, Ballard Jazz Festival events combined to create a glowing sense
of pride in a community aflutter with first-time festival success stories—a
sense of pride not lost on the out-of-towners. Blade, King, Herring and
Co. openly praised festival presenters John Bishop and Matt Jorgensen
of Origin Records and the Ballard Chamber of Commerce.
Perhaps the most memorable expression of community spirit occurred as
Brian Blade was wrapping-up the question-and-answer portion of his afternoon
drum clinic for the benefit of few hundred curious onlookers. On the subject
of influential drummers, Blade declared his admiration for Elvin Jones’s
elliptical, shifting-circle, forward-moving time-feel. On tuning, he likes
his drums tuned low and undampened, so that they ring. On composition,
instead of focusing on theory, he tries to let the music tell a story.
New Orleans music he described as “subterranean,” explaining:
“There’s so much weight in the groups.”
Moments later, acknowledging Blade’s request, Seattle-resident
and internationally-known guitar guru Bill Frisell joined his friend on
stage for an impromptu rendition of “All Blues.” The resulting
feast for the ears featured two of the most admired jazz musicians on
the planet. Yet, since Brian was our teacher, and Bill a student like
the rest of us that afternoon, the mood of the audience and these two
great musicians was low-key and neighborly, rather than star-struck. A
friendly little jam session was all.
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