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2009 Paris Jazz Diary
By

Hank Jones
piano1918 - 2010
During my annual stay in the City of Light, I planned outings to more than a dozen pure-jazz venues, plus concerts and festivals, by perusing the every-Wednesday Pariscope and L'Official Spectacles magazines (35 centimes at newsstands) and Lylo, a free music directory found in clubs and music stores. Clubs range in size from claustrophobic to grand, and performances start later than in the U.S., at 9:30 or 10 p.m. Most have an entry charge, although not all require drink order and all are non- smoking. Audiences are attentive and respectful, showing veneration of America's musical gift to the world. Although several longtime venues have closed in recent years (Le Sept Lezards and Le Bilboquet last year, Le Petit Opportun and The Slow Club more than five years ago), the remaining ones attract substantial houses every night of the week.
My clubbing route took me most frequently to Caveau de la Huchette, Le Duc des Lombards (remodeled to two levels, adding food choices), (oldest continuous underground jazz venue since 1946, swing-dancers favorite), Sunset-Sunside (two-level location) and its neighbor Le Baiser Sale (mostly jazz-fusion), New Morning (largest, mostly touring stars), Jazz Club Lionel Hampton (posh lounge in Hotel Meridien Etoile), Le Petit Journal St. Michel and Le Petit Journal Montparnasse (longtime supper clubs), Caveau des Oubliettes (subterranean, jail-themed), Cafe Universel (Sorbonne student favorite, no cover), Jazz Cartoon, Cafe Laurent (piano acts in Hotel D'Aubusson), 9 Jazz Club (formerly Habana Cafe) and newer venues including Chez Papa, Swan Bar and Autour de Midi et Minuit. Some boat-restaurants anchored on the Seine River booked solo or duo jazz artists on weekends.The jazz clubs were full even when admission was 12 to 25 euros ($18 to $36). Many tributes to deceased and living jazz luminaries were scheduled, including frequent" jazz manouche" nightsreplications of the gypsy-jazz sound created by
Django Reinhardt
guitar1910 - 1953
Radio station TSF-fm (89.9) plays jazz 24/7, while a highlight of my visit was hearing 80-year-old Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor
1929 - 2024
Another jazz peak was the Hank Jones concert, where the 91-year-old satisfied a rapt audience with his trademark straight-ahead, in-the-pocket gentle-swing style on 14 golden standards. An hour of pure piano bliss wasn't enough for the audience, which demanded the five encores. The brilliant pianist Jacky Terrasson
piano
b.1966
A third highlight was the week-long booking of
Ted Curson
trumpet
1935 - 2012Sarah Morrow
tromboneFreddy Cole
piano
1931 - 2020
Among the recurring European favorites I heard were pianist Alain Jean-Marie with saxophonist Alexandra Grimal (duo at Cafe Universel), Huchette owner-vibraphonist Dany Doriz, sax duo of Nicolas Dary and Luigi Grasso, organist Philippe Petit, bassist Patricia LeBuegle and drummer Michel Denis. To cap my visit, the traditional Parisian "la rentree" (return from vacationing) in early September at the Swan Bar featured a sampling from six vocalists.
Photo credits
Patricia Myers
Links: www.caveaudelahuchette.fr, www.sunset-sunside.com, www.ducdeslombards.fr, www.lebaisersale.com, www.papajazzclub.com, www.cofrase-cabarets.com, www.petitjournalstmichel.com, www.petitjournal-montparnasse.com, www.newmorning.com, www.caveaudesoubliettes.fr, www.cafe-universel.com, www.jazzcartoon.com, www.cafe-laurent.com, www.swanbar.fr, www.jazzalavillette.com, www.citedelamusique.fr, www.spiritofjazz.com, www.TSFjazz.com
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