Postage stamp coverage

Jazz coverage in the newspapers amounts to little more than postage stamp size. Isn't that a shame? Jazz coverage in the UK newspapers nowadays is pretty much over. That's where blogs such as marlbank come in. We fill the jazz gap and we are there …

Published: 3 Dec 2019. Updated: 4 years.

Jazz coverage in the newspapers amounts to little more than postage stamp size.

Isn't that a shame? Jazz coverage in the UK newspapers nowadays is pretty much over. That's where blogs such as marlbank come in. We fill the jazz gap and we are there for you day in and day out where the papers should be but choose not to be because jazz does not figure much if at all in the priorities of arts editors. I sincerely hope that changes but it needs a desire from the top to allocate the space and resources, and to appoint a raft of new writers and editors drafted in to up coverage and instigate a big change of attitude to chime with specialist music fans’ tastes not only for jazz but other areas such as classical that are also poorly served rather than cater for the long observed trend of assuming that everyone is intoxicated with celebrity-driven pop culture. A new younger demographic is coming to jazz and that demographic as well as older cohorts are getting a raw deal when they look to the papers. They, like all of us, will look away: not their way if such neglect in an abstention of apportioning space continues. SG

Tags:

Max Brown Part 1 begins a new release phase for Jeff Parker

Guitarist Jeff Parker is one of the most innovative improvisers around and it's encouraging that a new high profile project is on the go it emerges. Via social media today Parker writes: ''So excited to be the first artist to launch this grand new …

Published: 2 Dec 2019. Updated: 3 years.

Next post

Guitarist Jeff Parker is one of the most innovative improvisers around and it's encouraging that a new high profile project is on the go it emerges.

Via social media today Parker writes: ''So excited to be the first artist to launch this grand new collaboration between International Anthem Recording Co. and Nonesuch Records with the release of Max Brown, Part I and Part II, the lead single from my new album Suite For Max Brown (full album coming in 2020).''

Max Brown features Paul Bryan (bass, co-producer) Josh Johnson (alto), Nate Walcott (trumpet) and Jamire Williams (drums).

Parker hasn't been on the marlbank radar much since the end of 2016 when a favourite record of that year was The New Breed a new peak from the Chicago guitarist.

Unlike a million progressive jazz guitarists Parker does not sound or try to sound like Bill Frisell although he is manipulating that space first cut into jazz via a power cable decades back by Charlie Christian that Frisell beyond bebop often ends up in to harness all sorts of slacker jazz, rock, improv and experimental ideas and flick an almighty switch for the mélange to surge and linger.

Parker manages, and listen to the old for want of a better word back catalogue stuff, modern mainstream acoustic jazz (eg soaked in Kenny Burrell or even early-Brother Jack vintage George Benson in this instance without Parker ever being literal in his stylising) to winkle out and manipulate these hidden spaces by worrying away at them as if he was doing harmonic acrostics. And he does that on the understated ‘Here Comes Ezra’ on the 2016 album, the whole thing stapled together by a regular off-the-shelf beat before the sax of Josh Johnson takes it out, the ideas unfolding one by one.

There’s lots of teased in overdubbing just enough to thicken the textures and use of keys to supplement the harmonic edge that the guitar on its own can’t always provide. Parker also plays by turn a Korg MS20, Wurlitzer electric piano, Mellotron, and uses loops, samplers MIDI and drum programming but it’s mastered down and yet not as sparse as an ECM record although, still to be fair, much more David Torn matte than Matt Pierson satin in terms of studio sonics and in the case of The New Breed locates a world away even if only a decade and a bit on from The Relatives in terms of his conceptual thinking.

Jazz fans, myself included often forget when they think of iconic players such as Parker that they actually can turn on and turn off the tap of sub-generic styles within jazz without even thinking about it beyond say an intention to do a free jazz album like Ornette, or a mainstream thing, say. Whether the starting point is the same as the ending point is anyone's guess but that doesn't matter because it is creativity, the whole point of making music, end of, and communicating via emotion however abstract. SG.