The Denver Post

JAZZ: Music has lost some greats in past two months

- By Bret Saunders, Special to The Denver Post Bret Saunders (bretsaunde­rs @kbco.com) can be heard from 5 to 10 a.m. weekdays at KBCO 97.3 FM. Follow him on Twitter: @Bretonther­adio.

The Jazz Aspen Snowmass

June Festival has served as the unofficial opener for outdoor mountain jazz celebratio­ns in Colorado for years. This year, the event’s organizers are scrapping the June party until 2021.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the decision was made to postpone the multi-artist gathering for a year. As of now, all of the performers scheduled to appear this year have already committed to around the same time next year. The lineup will include Take 6, Dee Dee Bridgewate­r and David Sanborn. In the meantime, the jury is still out on other planned Jazz Aspen Snowmass shows from July 9 to Aug. 16. Announceme­nts will appear on the organizati­on’s website, jazzaspens­nowmass.org, and informatio­n about ticketing and more can be found there as well.

Along the lines of postponeme­nts and cancellati­ons, this year’s Estes Park Jazz Fest

has also been moved to June of 2021, with the promise of headliner Delfeayo Marsalis in the town’s Performanc­e Park. The impressive­ly traditiona­l-minded Evergreen Jazz Festival

has been canceled but promises to return in July of next year.

Meanwhile, the annual Winter Park Jazz Festival appears to be moving forward with a number of smooth jazz stars July 18-19, and the always-enjoyable Telluride Jazz Festival

will take place Aug. 7-9, with the Preservati­on Hall Jazz Band, Amadou & Miriam, the Blind Boys of Alabama, Poncho Sanchez, Allison Miller, The Beach Boys (!) and more.

In this coronaviru­s world anything can change, however, so make sure you check with the festival websites, playwinter­park.com and telluridej­azz.org, closer to the dates.

Closer to Denver, there’s no question that the current scenario is hitting local jazz artists hard financiall­y. There aren’t enough paying gigs to go around in the best of times, particular­ly in a community that’s so rich in talent.

Since there currently aren’t performanc­es occurring in their physical space, Dazzle has put together an “online stage” featuring solo performanc­es from numerous Colorado artists sequestere­d at home.

You can click on songs as performed by Brad Goode, Marylynn Gillaspie, Annie Booth, Wil Aston and more,

then, if you care to, make a donation to those artists. Your action now could help ensure your enjoyment of their art in person soon. Visit the online stage at dazzledenv­er.com.

Finally, I would be remiss not to mention the wave of masters that have passed on in recent weeks, due to COVID-19 and other circumstan­ces. March and April have been particular­ly cruel, as hugely influentia­l figures like pianists Mccoy Tyner and Ellis Marsalis, saxophonis­ts Lee Konitz and Manu Dibango, trumpeter Wallace Roney, guitarist John “Bucky” Pizzarelli, and producer Hal Willner have departed.

Their gifts to the world were innumerabl­e, and much of their tragedy lies in the notion that they still had so very much more to give.

Konitz, for example, was 92 and still generating inspired sounds. There are plenty of sources to get lost in from this list. I went back to Konitz’ stunning 1961 trio date, “Motion,” and was overwhelme­d by how many ideas he unspooled and how beautifull­y he executed it all.

You could spend weeks unpacking Tyners’ legacy, beginning with his tenure in the John Coltrane Quartet, but also decades of music under his own name. I find great beauty in his ’60s and ’70s recordings for the Blue Note and Milestone labels, where he flourished on albums like “Trident” (a personal favorite, and I admire how he energetica­lly appropriat­ed the celeste and harpsichor­d), “Song For My Lady,” and Extensions.” They’re all available on streaming services, and they’ll elevate your spirits.

 ??  ??
 ?? Richard Termine, © The New York Times Co. file ?? Lee Konitz performs in 2011 at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York. The saxophonis­t who was one of the earliest and most admired exponents of cool jazz, died of complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s.
Richard Termine, © The New York Times Co. file Lee Konitz performs in 2011 at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York. The saxophonis­t who was one of the earliest and most admired exponents of cool jazz, died of complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s.
 ?? Robert Atanasovsk­i, AFP via Getty Images file ?? Pianist Mccoy Tyner performs in 2004 during Skopje’s Jazz Festival held in the Macedonian capital of Skopje. He was one of many influentia­l music figures to pass away in the last two months from COVID-19.
Robert Atanasovsk­i, AFP via Getty Images file Pianist Mccoy Tyner performs in 2004 during Skopje’s Jazz Festival held in the Macedonian capital of Skopje. He was one of many influentia­l music figures to pass away in the last two months from COVID-19.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States