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Bob Weir and Others at the Jazz Foundation of America Gala Concert at the Apollo Theater

Courtesy Paul Reynolds
The Apollo Theater
Jazz Federation of America Gala
New York, NY
March 28, 2024
At gala concerts for worthy groups, it's understandably easy for the music to play second fiddle to the organization itselfand the desire to support it. But ,carefully curated, these events can yield memorable and unique performances and other moments.
So it was last Friday at the Apollo Theater, in Harlem for the annual celebratory fundraiser for the Jazz Federation of America, the cherished 34-year-old organization that employs and supports jazz musicians in needmore than 1,200 of them in 2023 alone. Between acts, the gala featured touching accounts of how the JFA has helpedthrough providing gigs, paying medical bills and moresuch icons as

Bertha Hope
pianob.1936

George Cables
pianob.1944
The emotional power of those videos was more than matched by the figure of Sun Ra stalwart

Marshall Allen
saxophone, altob.1924
Allen's energy and commitment was a wonder as he led the

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
Women singers drove the night to its most exuberant peaks.

Jazzmeia Horn
vocalsAn all-star 100th-birthday tribute to

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Charles Tolliver
trumpetb.1942

Dee Dee Bridgewater
vocalsb.1950

George Coleman
saxophone, tenorb.1935
The Roach tribute honored three other octagenarians, as "drum titans" who followed in Roach's wake and remain active today. Unfortunately, honoree

Al Foster
drums1944 - 2025

Louis Hayes
drumsb.1937

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

Jeff Tain Watts
drumsb.1960
The gala's Musical Director (and soon-to-be Rolling Stones tour drummer)

Steve Jordan
drumsb.1957
Jordan stood out, for example, in an otherwise rote trio rendition of "Why Can't We Live Together," with

Matthew Whitaker
organ, Hammond B3b.2001

Alexis Morrast
vocalsJordan was also in the drum seat for the unlikely closing set by

Bob Weir
guitar and vocals
Grateful Dead
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1965

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
Weir's performancewith the eclectic trio of Jordan,

Jamaaladeen Tacuma
bassb.1956

David Murray
saxophone, tenorb.1955
Grateful Dead-style, the quartet segued into a short jam that soon transitioned into a long, meandering version of the dreamy Dead staple "Bird Song." The song choice, and Murray's forceful extended solo, evoked an epic and cherished version the Dead performed 34 years ago, almost to the day, at the Nassau Coliseum, with

Branford Marsalis
saxophoneb.1960
Weir then turned to the blues, through two other Dead standards. "West LA Fadeaway," a late-career band standard, simmered soulfully before the musical temperature rose for the closer, "Turn on Your Lovelight," a frequent feature of the Dead's pre-1973 sets. The song brought to the fore a three-man horn section, comprising

Eddie Allen
trumpet
Patience Higgins
saxophone
Clifton Anderson
tromboneb.1957

Bobby Blue Bland
vocals1930 - 2013
A song so integral to both an iconic rock band and the evening's iconic venue was a fitting close to an evening that satisfyingly spanned every celebrated jazz genre, as well as venturing beyond those.
Tags
Live Review
Bob Weir
Paul Reynolds
Bobbi Marcus Public Relations
United States
New York
New York City
Apollo Theater
Bertha Hope
George Cables
Marshall Allen
Sun Ra Orchestra
Jazzmeia Horn
Dee Dee Bridgewater
Al Foster
Louis Hayes
Billy Hart
Jeff Tain Watts
Steve Jordan
Matthew Whitaker
Alexis Morrast
Chuck D
Grateful Dead
Bill Evans
Jamaaladeen Tacuma
David Murray
Branford Marsalis
Eddie Allen
Patience Higgins
Clifton Anderson
Bobby Blue Bland
Charles Tolliver
George Coleman
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