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I Hear a Rhapsody

Courtesy Ben Ragsdale
I was not only hearing great live music, I was absorbing a life lesson.
David Caudill
We put out a call to visitors to AAJ to tell us their stories about how jazz has impacted, indeed shaped their lives. David Caudill heard the call.
David has lived in Cincinnati for three decades and spent a long career writing, both in journalism and for a short while in corporate communications. He has two sons who mostly listen to hip-hop, but he's trying to persuade them to give jazz a chance. This essay is partly the reason why.
Peter Rubie
David has lived in Cincinnati for three decades and spent a long career writing, both in journalism and for a short while in corporate communications. He has two sons who mostly listen to hip-hop, but he's trying to persuade them to give jazz a chance. This essay is partly the reason why.
Peter Rubie
The communication among jazz players as they perform feels, to me at least, to be among the best experiences of what it means to be human. It's seeing friendship (often), both experienced and witnessed, a willing dependence on and trust in your fellow musical trapeze artists, and cooperation that leads to music that at its best takes us on an adventure as it inspires and entertains.
One of the owners of Cincinnati's Caffè Vivace likes to say that seeing jazz performed live, as opposed to hearing it recorded, is comparable to seeing a lion in the wild instead of in a zoo.
Set in the city's Walnut Hills neighborhood, Caffè Vivace is a cozy, almost intimate urban venue. I recently (2022) saw

Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990
I don't go to many live shows now. The truth is, I never have gone to a lot of shows, relative to hard-core jazz fans, anyway. But McBride's show inspired me to think about the shows I have seen over the last 40 years or so, and what they meant to me. I surprised myself realizing the quality of the shows I've seen, and I came to appreciate how they have enhanced my life.
One of the first live shows I saw was

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996
A couple of years later I saw a young

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
Not too long after that, I saw

Scott Hamilton
saxophone, tenorb.1954

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

Ben Webster
saxophone, tenor1909 - 1973

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952
You may have figured out I got into jazz a little later than some, because I was born and raised in Dayton, Ohio and started out as a big rock-and-roll fan. (Dayton had a fine downtown mostly jazz club, now closed, called Gilly's that I regret I didn't visit often enough.)
In 1985, I moved from Dayton to Philadelphia to work at the Philadelphia Inquirer, and this time I was ready for an expanded world of live jazz. The Inquirer's grand old building on Broad Street was just a few blocks down from a small club called Jewel's. Jewel Mann-Lassiter operated her namesake club for about ten years starting in 1979.
I worked a night shift, and occasionally went to Jewel's after I got off work. I caught what was usually the final set from some legendary musicians, like

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998

Jackie McLean
saxophone, alto1932 - 2006
Coltrane I was not. But I still noodle around on the alto now and then, and I don't annoy my family or neighbors too much. I haunted some great record stores in Philly and spent way too much on jazz and blues LPs.
The last jazz show I saw in Philly before I moved to Cincinnati in 1988, was the outstanding alto player

Frank Morgan
saxophone, alto1933 - 2007
These live-shows, including a couple by the superbly entertaining and enduring Cincinnati's
Blue Wisp Big Band
b.1980Christian McBride's show reminded me how lucky I've been to see and hear jazz of the best sort performed live as often as I have. And confirmed to me that I'll keep listening to it as long as my ears will let me.
Tags
The Jazz Life
Peter Rubie
Christian McBride
Betty Carter
Art Blakey
Count Basie
Ella Fitzgerald
pat metheny
Scott Hamilton
Coleman Hawkins
ben webster
Lester Young
Stan Getz
John Coltrane
Dexter Gordon
Joe Henderson
joe lovano
Jewel Mann-Lassiter
Jackie McLean
Frank Morgan
Cincinnati Blue Wisp Big Band
Cincinnati
Dayton
Philadelphia
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