
Tornado Benefit
Hey All,
I will be playing drums with Dana Romanello and her bluegrass band this Friday night at the Murphy Center in Murfreesboro, TN as part of the Chris Young and Friends Tornado Relief Benefit Concert. We had a rehearsal last night and the band is smokin’ - acoustic and all songs are at light-speed - just like all bluegrass should be!
You may know Chris Young as the winner of the televised Nashville Star contest. He has moved on from that to form a very successful career. Among his friends that will be performing during the concert is Richie McDonald (from his bio page: “For more than a dozen years, Richie McDonald was the voice and most recognizable face for the platinum-selling country group, Lonestar.”).
Join us to support a great cause!
Please support our local jazz station!
They are currently having a membership drive and are suffering from the economy (like everyone else). This station keeps a high standard of jazz pumping through our airwaves. Please send some financial support if you can!

Five Peace Band
First, let me say that it was a GREAT show. They played from 7 to 10:35ish with an intermission inbetween the two sets.
The whole night was filled with edgy be-bop, that almost parted the audience into two categories - those who were there for a night out with their dates and true jazz fans who recognize how rare it is to see living jazz royalty like this share one stage. Throughout the night, the musical conversations between the players was independent, yet fed off each others energy. It reminded me much of the Ornette Coleman Free Jazz records I used to listen to in the music library at the Hartt School.
Christian McBride played electric for most of the night. He had a great tone and laid down a solid groove, which allowed everyone else to float freely.
One thing that really grabbed me was the connection between Brian Blade and Chick. Even when they weren’t making eye contact or paying visual attention to each other, they were just tagging each others rhythms the whole night. Brian Blade was absolutely masterful. He played with such dynamics. It was a real treat for me.
Kenny Garrett sounded amazing, though he looked a bit standoffish. He would blow a solo, then promptly move from his placeholder on the stage into the background behind the stage lights. He blew one solo that was perfectly crafted. It was breathtaking! It started out very melodic, with full mellow longtones. The band supported his dynamics with each graduation. The solo crescendoed with raging chromatic phrases. After the solo, he moved off the stage and never really exposed that kind of musicality to the audience for the remainder of the night.
John McLaughlin is obviously a great technician and composer. His compositions fit the title of his last release - Industrial Zen. They were technical, brash at times and yet organic. When he soloed, he was so chop heavy that it kind of lost my interest after a while. He would play a fury of notes, one after another, hardly taking a breath inbetween.
The audience started to fatigue during the second set and people started leaving two by two. This is actually when it got good for me. The audience really split in two at this point in the night, because the band wanted to keep playing longer than the average listener wanted to listen. I say average listener with kindness. Wives dragged by their husbands. Older yuppies who thought they were gonna hear a bunch of standards or Chick’s Elektric Band cuts. Finally, those people left when the band was done. Chick thanked the audience for coming, but I detected a slight bit of sarcasm.
Once the hall filtered out, we moved up and sat in those $175 seats and got the treat of the night. The band came back out and played one last gem. Chick’s tone when addressing the audience changed dramatically to a very sincere tone, as did their playing during the last cut. They know exactly who their audience is.



