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Toshiko Akiyoshi: The Music Keeps Her Young
ByBilly Taylor
piano1921 - 2010

Toshiko Akiyoshi
pianob.1929

Lew Tabackin
saxophone, tenorb.1940
Betty and I drove to Santa Fe on Sunday afternoon, had supper with our friends Paul and Inee Slaughter, then headed to the Lensic for the concert. Akiyoshi's quartet, with Tabackin alternating between tenor sax and flute, bassist Boris Koslov and drummer

Mark Taylor
composer / conductorb.1961

John Lewis
piano1920 - 2001

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966
So far so good, and things were about to get even better as Toshiko called to the stage "the best lead trumpeter I ever had in my band," the incomparable

Bobby Shew
trumpetb.1941
After intermission, the AJO came onstage to perform half a dozen of Akiyoshi's rich and colorful compositions, opening with "Long Yellow Road," a mid-tempo theme she said Tabackin calls "my 'A' Train." The orchestra was alert and unruffled, reinforcing crisp solos by alto Glenn Kostur and trumpeter Kent Erickson. The ballad "Autumn Sea" served as a vehicle for Tabackin's masterful flute work, after which Kostur delivered another impressive solo on "I Know Who Loves You." Tabackin's acrobatic tenor was front and center on the next two numbers, "Farewell to Mingus," written for the late bassist in whose group Toshiko first earned widespread notice, and the rapid-fire "Chasing After Love" (a.k.a. "Lover"), on which Tabackin's unaccompanied coda was exuberant and breathtaking. Akiyoshi closed the set and concert with a number she'd at first declined to write: "Hope," the last movement of a suite designed to conserve the memory of the horrific bombing of Hiroshima which helped lead to the end of World War II. "It was written," she said, "in the hope that a tragedy like that might never happen again." It's a beautiful piece of music, and was a fitting way in which to ring down the curtain on a remarkable performance.
Now to the flip side. Backstage, after the music had ended, Betty and I, and our friend Wes Pfarner, waited in a hallway to say hello and offer Toshiko our best wishes. There we saw a tiny woman, her eyes tired, face deeply lined and shoulders bent forward, moving gingerly and looking almost nothing like the stately presence we'd seen onstage. How much smaller she looked! At that moment I was reminded of Billy Taylor's adage. The music does indeed keep Toshiko young. As long as she is involved, whether performing herself or helping to bring out the best in others, the years seem to melt away and she is in a sense "young" again, if only for a brief time. Afterward, the infirmities of age intrude, and she must deal with them until the next concert, and the one after that. It's no wonder that so many musicians are loathe to retire. Music is their lifeblood, and it is through music that they are able to impede, if only for awhile, the inevitable encroachment of time. My wish and hope is that the same holds true for those of us who can do no more than listen and appreciate.
A Further Word About the Lensic . . .
As the theatre was darkened during the Sunday evening performance, I was using, as I have on a number of other occasions, a small light attached to my key chain to enable me to scribble a few notes between each number. I was doing so during the Akiyoshi quartet's opening set when someone to my left hurled her program at me. It bounced off Betty, whizzed past my torso and landed at Wes Pfarner's feet. Needless to say, we were surprised, as it marked the first time anyone had ever objected to my using the light to take notes. While I'll admit that it could be troubling to some, I must affirm that I never use the light while the music is playing, only when those onstage are talking or otherwise preparing for the next selection. Reckoning that the offender had no more programs left to fling my way, I continued the note-taking until intermission, after which I moved from my choice dead-center seat in the mezzanine to a back-row seat where I could use the light without fear of encountering airborne missiles. Before doing so, however, I had to explain to a number of people who I was and why I was taking notes. If you've read this far you've already absorbed the results of my endeavor. As for the future, I can't say I won't visit the Lensic again, but you can bet I won't be going there any time I have to take notes.
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trumpetb.1935
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trombone1929 - 1997

Maynard Ferguson
trumpet1928 - 2006

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988

Don Ellis
trumpet1934 - 1978

Arturo Sandoval
trumpetb.1949

Rob McConnell
trombone1935 - 2010

Frank Rosolino
trombone1926 - 1978

Kai Winding
trombone1922 - 1983

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

Sal Nistico
saxophone1948 - 1991

Herb Geller
saxophone1928 - 2013

Bill Holman
composer / conductor- 2024

Frank Foster
saxophone1928 - 2011

Buddy Tate
saxophone, tenorb.1913

Bob Mintzer
saxophoneb.1953

Buddy DeFranco
clarinet1923 - 2014

Tony Scott
clarinet1921 - 2007

Barney Kessel
guitar, electric1923 - 2004

Toots Thielemans
harmonica1922 - 2016
Also Noted in Passing . . .
Dick Buckley, whose deep baritone voice was a welcome sound to jazz fans in the Chicago area for more than half a century as host of popular radio programs on WAAF, WAIT and for thirty-one years on WBEZ, died July 22 at age eighty-five. "To listen to Mr. Buckley," wrote arts critic Howard Reich, "was to receive an education in the inner workings of jazz, no matter how much you thought you knew about the subject." As one who listened often while working in the Chicago area from 1977-97, I'd second that. As a deejay in that part of the country, Buckley was second to none. He "retired" in 2008 when WBEZ slashed its jazz programming in favor of an all-talk format. That was a great loss to jazz in Chicago, as is his passing.
Wendell Logan, a composer of jazz and concert music who more than two decades ago founded the Jazz Studies department at the Oberlin (Ohio) Conservatory of Music, a part of Oberlin College, died June 15 in Cleveland. He was sixty-nine years old. Logan, who played saxophone and trumpet, joined the Oberlin faculty in 1973, but it was not until 1989 that he was able to make Jazz Studies a full-fledged major in which students can earn a bachelor of music degree. Before coming to Oberlin, Logan taught at Florida A&M, Ball State and Western Illinois universities. His honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship (1991), and his music has been recorded by Orion and other labels.
After this column had been written, news was received that the talented thirty-eight-year-old British drummer Chris Dagley had died in a motorcycle accident while returning home to Ruislip on July 28 from a gig in London with

Ronnie Scott
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1996

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Don Weller
b.1940
Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945

Liza Minnelli
vocalsb.1946

Bill Ashton
b.1936Bits 'n Pieces
The world-class Brussels Jazz Orchestra is coming to America and will be in residence October 26-31 at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola in New York City with guest soloist

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pianob.1951
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Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Hubert Laws
woodwindsb.1939

Johnny Mandel
arrangerb.1925

Orrin Keepnews
producer1923 - 2015
And that's it for now. Until next time, keep swingin' . . . !
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Chet Baker
Don Ellis
arturo sandoval
Rob McConnell
Frank Rosolino
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Herb Geller
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orrin keepnews
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