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KSDS Jazz 88 Ocean Beach Music and Arts Festival

Winston's, Hodad's Stage, The Harp
Ocean Beach, CA
September 11, 2010
Perfect day for a party: the sun shone bright in a cloudless sky, it's heat mitigated by a cool ocean breeze. After a one year hiatus due to the terrible economy of 2009, the KSDS Ocean Beach Music and Arts Festival has re-emerged in 2010 with an imperative commitment to a larger, more diverse and ambitious event. This years festival included 7 venues, and 26 acts, a large row of tents with various arts and crafts, and beer gardens from local breweries. The venue furthest from the actual ocean was only two blocks away.
The free-spirited and casual beach community of "OB," (that's what the locals call it), provided a perfect locale for a festive atmosphere. There was, however an acknowledgment of the date's significancethe festival began with a moment of silence in remembrance of those who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. After that, it was full on party mode till the last strands of music wafted into the darkening skies at the edge of night.
KSDS, the area's only full-spectrum jazz radio station, partnered with the Ocean Beach Mainstreet Association in assuming the risk of this production. In these days of ever declining ticket sales and dwindling discretionary spendingthe risk was palpable. In the end, 3,000 tickets were soldwhich was precisely the number hoped fordocumenting "That San Diego will support an event like ours... so, look forward to a similar Festival in 2011 and beyond" said KSDS station manager Mark DeBoskey. So kudos to the radio station and their partners for taking the chance to fund such a musically diverse undertaking.
There was something for almost everyone at this year's festival: blues, funk, New- Orleans style, Big Band, and lots of straight up jazz. As in most multi-artist festivals, the pressing issue was making decisions on who to see.

The OB nightclub Winston's was packed solid for pianist

Geoffrey Keezer
keyboardsb.1970

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Ray Brown
bass, acoustic1926 - 2002

Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Keezer appeared with his working trio: Los Angeles based double-bass virtuoso

Hamilton Price
bass, acoustic
Duncan Moore
drums
John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Keezer set the stage for these interpretations with another long, hypnotic unaccompanied piano intro. This time, he reached inside the lid, muting the strings with one hand while he spun out long strands of rapid, swirling runsachieving a koto- like effect. Suddenly he was injecting "blue-notes" into the framework and soon after, began the trademark bass riff of "Equinox." Before he played it through even once, Price was with him note for note, and Moore had begun an Elvin-like assault on the skins of his drums. "Equinox" became an intense "swing-fest" with a groove so strong it was impossible to ignore. Like dropping the needle on a "Best Of Coltrane" record the band instantly morphed into the double-timed "Mr. P.C." where the swing intensity ratcheted up to an almost unbearable sense of ecstasy. When the Coltrane medley finally wound down, the audience erupted into a full minute of riotous applause.
The three tunes had taken up almost an hour. Keezer finished his set with the only original of the performance (indeed the only tune planned in advance) another strong waltz, "Point Alexander Moon." It fit rather nicely with the more 'Trane-centric' pieces and finally showcased Keezer the composer. Keezer is a pianist to watch. He is a man of the moment in the highest sense. He comes with a blank slate and creates masterful abstractions that are undeniably grounded "in-the-tradition." He also conveys a sense of joy in his inventions that is so obvious that even the casual listener '"gets it.'" If the festival ended on his last noteit would have been worth the price of admission. Fortunately, the festival was just getting started.
Ernie Watts Quartet at the Hodad's Stage

Ernie Watts
saxophone, tenorb.1945

Frank Zappa
guitar, electric1940 - 1993

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

On this performance, he was assisted by his extremely tight, veteran working group. On piano was the able Andy Langham, who is able to evoke the spirit of

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020
The concert began with "To The Point" an intricate, modern tune stylistically set somewhere between hard-bop and free-bop. After the knotty head, (which featured some intense trading of "fours" with Leatherbarrow), Watts took flight with a keening, swirling tenor solo, building to a climax with altisimo register squealing. At this point the piano and bass dropped out so that Watts and Leatherbarrow could engage in some feverish tenor/drum dialogue a la 'Trane and Elvin.' By the time the tune endedWatts "owned" the audience.
After such an impressive, volcanic beginning, Watts showed a completely different (yet no less profound) side of himself. He picked up an end-blown wooden flute, and after a captivating solo cadenza, launched into his original, "Spirit Song" which may have been the highlight of the festival. "Spirit Song" captured the whole gamut of human emotions, from somber to joyful. Watts' work with the wooden, reverb-drenched flute was incredible: it soared, it cried out, he caressed it gently and teased bent notes that drifted into the heavens. Next, Watts shifted gears dramatically again with an amazing arrangement of the

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942
E.S.P. at The Harp
E.S.P. is an excellent San Diego collective who gather to explore the music of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Rob Thorsen
bass
Their set at local nightclub The Harp, began with a rendition of the seldom performed, "In A Silent Way" by Weather Report founder

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
The Cannonball-Coltrane Project with Luther Hughes at The Harp
As the sky darkened the final performance of the day belonged to the Cannonball-Coltrane Project. Bassist

Luther Hughes
bass
The members of this repertory group are all based in the Los Angeles area save tenor player Glenn Cashman, who works out of New York. The rest of the members are leader/bassist:

Luther Hughes
bassThey began their set with a spirited, bluesy take on

Nat Adderley
trumpet1931 - 2000

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976
Scheduling conflicts prevented catching many of the festival's other excellent acts that day such as: former

James Brown
vocals1933 - 2006

Maceo Parker
saxophone, altob.1943

Charlie Hunter
guitarb.1967

Marcia Ball
pianob.1949

Gilbert Castellanos
trumpet
Mike Wofford
pianob.1938

Bobby Shew
trumpetb.1941
This year's festival was an exceptional collection of diverse musical talent, gathered to perform right on the beach. Hard to beat a location like that. For KSDS, the Ocean Beach Mainstreet Association and San Diego music fansit was a huge success. Certainly, there were a few issues to improve uponthey need to provide acoustic pianos for the venues that lacked themthat's a must. Judging from the enthusiasm displayed, there are thousands of attendees already dreaming of next years event.
Photo Credits
Page 1, crowd: Michael Rovatsos
All Other Photos: Michael Oletta
Tags
Jazz 88 Ocean Beach Music & Art Festival
Live Reviews
Robert Bush
United States
Geoffrey Keezer
Art Blakey
Ray Brown
Christian McBride
Max Roach
Elvin Jones
Hamilton Price
Duncan Moore
John Coltrane
ernie watts
Frank Zappa
Oliver Nelson
Charlie Haden
McCoy Tyner
Dizzy Gillespie
Jack DeJohnette
Miles Davis
Rob Thorsen
Joe Zawinul
Ron Carter
Don Cherry
Freddie Hubbard
Wayne Shorter
Luther Hughes
Nat Adderley
Dexter Gordon
Paul Chambers
Jimmy Garrison
James Brown
Maceo Parker
Charlie Hunter
marcia ball
Gilbert Castellanos
Mike Wofford
Bobby Shew
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