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Jazz Cruising: A Recipe For Joy

Where else can you rub elbows in the lunch line with the likes of Benny Golson?
One mid-sized cruise ship with crew 100 or more jazz legends, go-to guys and young lions
About 2,000 diverse jazz fans
Assorted performance venues, about half a dozen
One big band
A small army of piano tuners
Ports of call (optional)
Top with musician interviews and jam sessions
Best enjoyed hot
Destinations hardly mattered on the annual Jazz Cruise hosted by Entertainment Cruise Productions this past January. In fact, no one seemed bothered when excursions to Grand Cayman Island were canceled the night before our arrival there due to choppy water. Most passengers enjoyed the extra day at sea as we sailed on to Cozumel. It was the total immersion in jazz that really mattered. From early afternoon to early morning, you could catch any number of musicians laying down their best lines in venues large and small. And where else can you rub elbows in the lunch line with the likes of

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Hubert Laws
woodwindsb.1939

Tierney Sutton
vocalsb.1963
The cruise was dedicated to jazz impresario and Newport Jazz Festival founder,

George Wein
piano1925 - 2021

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998
What makes the cruise so successful that ECP, headed by Michael Lazaroff and Anita E. Berry, can charter Holland America's MS Eurodam for a full week? A well-run and staffed ship, certainly. Plus the restaurants with appealing and varied menus, well-stocked bars and ship's officers, mostly invisible to passengers, doing the full-time management. But mostly it's the music, nearly non-stop, duets, combos and a big band, with vocalists and without, from the welcome show on Sundaya smorgasbord of talentuntil the final jam on Saturday. Then all the horns gathered on stage to blow, in unison and solo, down the chorus line of ten kicking trumpets.
Michael, my cabin mate, and I caught legend

Monty Alexander
pianob.1944

Michael Jackson
vocals1958 - 2009

Arturo Sandoval
trumpetb.1949

Joey DeFrancesco
organ, Hammond B31971 - 2022
In the quest to be everywhere at once, some passengers left mid-set, the same folks who insisted on sitting up front. Often others rushed in to take their places but musicians noticed large gaps of empty seats or people filing out mid-song, and some were unhappy about it. These were, after all, dedicated jazz fans walking out on the same people they came to hear. Given the complexity of the schedule, there were bound to be conflicts and overlaps but in the words of one passenger overheard describing what seemed like rude and disrespectful intentions, "If it's exciting I'll stay, if not I'll go."
Here are a few highlights: Hubert Laws playing flute with vocalist Tierney Sutton and guitarist

Larry Koonse
guitar, electric
Houston Person
saxophone, tenorb.1934
John J. DiMartino
drumsb.1940

Matthew Parrish
bassb.1969

Chip White
drums1946 - 2020

Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971

Christian McBride
bassb.1972
We also caught two of bassist

Marcus Miller
bassb.1959

Buster Williams
bass, acousticb.1942

John Clayton
bassb.1952

Tom Kennedy
bass, electricb.1960

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

Gary Smulyan
saxophone, baritoneb.1956

Jeff Clayton
saxophone1954 - 2020
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