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Tag: Detroit jazz

  • Don Was comes home

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    OK, Don Was, we get it. We understand your full-time day gig as president of Blue Note Records since 2011 keeps you fairly tied to its L.A. headquarters. But between assembling your Detroit All-Star Revue and performing with it at the Concert of Colors every summer for the past 15 years, co-hosting the Don Was Motor City Playlist with Ann Delisi on WDET-FM every Friday night, and saying nice things about Detroit at every opportunity (apologies to Emily Gail), this is still the age of remote employment. If you miss the place so much, why don’t you just move back?

    Well, in a sense, he has.

    “I just got a place in Detroit,” Was says in a Zoom conversation. “Yeah, I’ve been trying to spend more time there, but it’s hard.”

    Was is returning home for a performance by his new band, Don Was and the Pan-Detroit Ensemble. Set for Saturday, Oct. 11 at the Majestic Theatre, the concert is a hometown release show for the band’s debut album, Groove in the Face of Adversity, which drops that Friday on Detroit’s Mack Avenue record label.

    “It’s tough to get everyone together,” he explains. “But I sure love this band.”

    The nine-piece Ensemble features scintillating saxophonist Dave McMurray, Don’s trusted woodwind accomplice even before the ’80s days of Was (Not Was), and the Oscar-winning keyboard genius Luis Resto. Trumpeter John Douglas, trombonist Vincent Chandler, guitarist Wayne Gerard, drummer Jeff Canaday, percussionist Mahindi Masai, and vocalist Stefanie Christi’an round out the nonet, and they all share one thing in common.

    They’re Detroiters.

    In the press release, Don is quoted as saying, “I’ve been chasing a sound in my head for the past 30 years. It’s jazzy and improvisational, but also glued together with a sinewy R&B groove. It’s not slick or smooth — it’s a very raw, honest, Detroit kind of thing.” And after all these decades of pursuit, he believes he’s finally found the sound with the Pan-Detroit Ensemble.

    “There’s a real, tangible, audible Detroit thing we know resonates globally,” the six-time Grammy winner declares, citing hometown influences from John Lee Hooker, Motown, and Mitch Ryder (for whom he just produced a new album, due out this fall) to George Clinton, Donald Byrd, and The Electrifying Mojo. “We know this because even on Blue Note Records, Detroit has had more musicians on the roster than any other city. There isn’t even a close second.”

    While he says he’s played with each member of the band at one point in his All-Star Revues, they came together as the Pan-Detroit Ensemble organically — and out of desperation. “What happened was, my buddy Terence Blanchard is creative director for the Paradise Jazz Series at the DSO, and he asked me if I’d like to do a night. I said sure, but they book these things so far in advance I forgot about it. Then about six months out I thought, ‘Fuck! I don’t have a band! I haven’t had one in decades. What am I going to do?’

    “I thought, ‘Don’t try to be Robert Glasper or Wayne Shorter: be you.’ So I got together with some like-minded people, went into Rustbelt Studios, and I just pulled four songs I played on the radio with Ann Delisi that week. And from the first note we played together it was like, ‘This band clicks.’ It felt like we’ve been together all our lives. But we’re all people who grew up listening to The Electrifying Mojo. They’re steeped in the history and sound of the city, and they all live here. You can try and throw folks together, but there’s nothing like having that kind of history. We’re just about [to release] an album, we’ll be out playing next year, we’re going to tour Asia. I’m planning to stick with this band till I drop.”

    The Pan-Detroit Ensemble has performed a mix of new, original tracks, interpretations of songs written by artists like Yusef Lateef, Olu Dara, and Henry Threadgill, and modernized cuts from albums Don recorded with his groups Orquestra Was and Was (Not Was). The Majestic Theatre concert will feature songs from the band’s debut album alongside a full performance of the Grateful Dead’s Blues For Allah, in celebration of its 50th anniversary. 

    And hey, Don, speaking of “till I drop:” when you’re not running Blue Note you’re producing albums, composing, playing with the Ensemble or Bob Weir and the Wolf Brothers, creating documentaries, and hangin’ out on Detroit radio. Do you have more hours in a day than the rest of us?

    “I read this interview Frank Sinatra gave in the ’60s that really had an effect on me,” he reflects. “At the time he’d get up at like five, go to a movie set, and after he was done filming he’d go into a studio and try to cut just one song for the next album. Then he’d jump on a plane and fly to Las Vegas to do a midnight show with the Rat Pack. Next day, repeat. They asked him, ‘How do you do it?’ He said, ‘The most important thing is that whatever you’re doing, be 100% present for it. When I’m in the studio I’m not thinking about what I screwed up on the movie or the show coming up in two hours. I’m completely absorbed in that song.’ Which is an interesting way to restate, ‘be here now.’

    “So that’s what I try to do. Just be absorbed in whatever you’re doing. Don’t be staring at your phone or regretting what happened earlier. Just do the best you can in the moment.”

    And in the future, more of those moments may be spent in Detroit. “I actually think the quality of life is really great in Detroit,” Was says. “The traffic in Los Angeles is crippling, but I get back to Detroit and I can go 10 miles in 12 minutes.

    “Also, I think as you get older, you crave home. I get off the plane, I smell the plants. They smell different. The air smells different. It makes me feel at home. I feel relaxed.”

    Don Was and the Pan-Detroit Ensemble perform at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 11; The Majestic Theatre, 4140 Woodward Ave., Detroit; majesticdetroit.com. Tickets start at $46.86.

    An earlier version of this article was published in our Feb. 19, 2025 issue.


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    Jim McFarlin

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  • Rising stars to shine at 2025 Detroit Jazz Festival

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    Courtesy photo

    Pianist William Hill III.

    Over the Labor Day weekend downtown Detroit will be overflowing with jazz fans eager to hear their favorite local and national musicians perform at the annual Detroit Jazz Festival. This is one of the few times of the year when people can witness world-class jazz musicians for free.

    Yet, the festival is not only a place where audiences can hear national jazz musicians. Over the last decade, under the stewardship of DJF Artistic Director Chris Collins, the festival has become a launching pad for some of Detroit’s finest, homegrown, young talent, allowing them the opportunity to get national exposure. These musicians bring their best to the stages of the festival, drawing just as big a crowd as the national talent.

    “Jazz has always been a living, breathing art,” says Collins. “It’s as much about the aspiring artists as the legacy artists. And those in the heart of their career, they’re all very important elements of the evolution of the art form.”

    Swinging beyond his years

    Making their DJF debut as leaders this year are pianist William Hill III and drummer Louis Jones III. Hill and Jones are young and seriously gifted jazz musicians lighting up the Detroit jazz scene and are also celebrating the release of new music.

    At 21, Hill’s command of the ivories belies his youth. A close listen to any of his solo excursions it’s clear the late jazz pianists Ahmad Jamal and Oscar Peterson’s styles were source material during the early leg of Hill’s development.

    He’s on a full scholarship at the Manhattan School of the Arts in New York and will be a senior this fall. This is his first time leading a band at the festival. He’s previously been a sideman performing with the Detroit Public School Showcase as a member of the Detroit School of the Arts Jazz Band, and last year he performed with trumpeter Jauron Perry, winner of the Detroit Jazz Festival Collegiate competition.

    “I was very thankful, very excited when I found out that I was chosen to perform at the festival,” says Hill. “This has been a dream of mine for a very long time, so it’s taken a few years to get to where I am right now. I’m grateful that I’m able to express myself both as a person and musically in bands on the stage of the Detroit Jazz Festival.”

    As a kid, Hill learned on the family piano, which his grandmother purchased for him and his sister. He studied classical music and at age 11, switched to jazz, developing a love for big band jazz and ragtime music, which is apparent in his playing and his affinity for dressing in suits and ties on the band.

    “I liked watching videos by Cab Calloway and Louis Armstrong, and I was really encouraged and inspired by them both on trumpet and piano,” he says.

    At jazz workshops on the East Coast like Jazz House Kids, Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Jazz Academy, and Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead residency at the Kennedy Center, he honed his style. Since moving to New York, he’s performed with his trio regularly at Minton’s Playhouse and Smalls and he has toured internationally with vocalist Jazzmeia Horn.

    Drummer Louis Jones III. - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    Drummer Louis Jones III.

    Giving the young drummer some

    Jones, 26, another graduate of DSA, has also been crafting a reputation for his rhythmic prowess on the drums, performing as a sideman with established musicians. Jones, unlike some young jazz drummers, isn’t a show boater. He’s a meticulous timekeeper and respectful accompanist. It would be an exaggeration to point out his rimshots and attack is akin to the late drummer Roy Haynes. Jones’s experience with the jazz festival dates back to his childhood when he would attend the festival with his father, an avid jazz head.

    “That was our thing every year since I was a child, going to the festival,” he says. “My dad and I would go to venues like Harmony Park and hear jazz, and that’s where I remember meeting Gayelynn McKinney and her family. So I’ve always been around music.”

    Jones has developed quite a fruitful relationship with the festival, which led to his participation in the Detroit Jazz Festival All-Stars Generation Sextet, who recently traveled to Japan.

    Every year, under the direction of Collins, the festival features a collection of some of the most innovative and creative musicians representing the new generation of swingers from Detroit. The Sextet presents original compositions that fuse post-bop with contemporary musical genres. This year, the band performed in Japan for two weeks and taught jazz at Japanese universities.

    “That was my first time in Japan and it was very beautiful,” says Jones. “The people, the connections I made. They accepted me into their culture and they gave me gifts. It was a very giving trip, I must say, and I learned a lot.”

    Jones also used the trip to showcase some of the original compositions from his debut album Motions, available Sept. 1, the same day of his Detroit jazz fest debut.

    The record is inspired by his time in Detroit and consists of groove-heavy tracks combined with a vanguardist approach.

    “I was mentored by musicians like Wendell Harrison and Marion Hayden,” says Jones. “All of them have inspired me compositionally, like the way that they write. I’ve taken their ideas and their concepts and tried to make them my own as much as possible. I feel like I have something for everybody on this record.”

    Hill is also releasing new music which he will be playing during his set at the festival. His new album Keep it Movin, was released on Aug. 22.

    “The main objective of the album is really to push me forward and see what’s next in my life in terms of personal things and musical things,” he says.

    Expect to hear some serious straight ahead jazz full of swinging melodies from Hill’s powerhouse rhythm trio. Hill and Jones are just two ambitious stars from Detroit, but there are more in the city building solid reputations.

    Other rising stars performing at the festival are drummer Tariq Gardner, saxophonist Kasan Belgrave, pianist Sequoia “REDWOOD” Snyder (performing with drummer Gayelynn McKinney’s trio GSL), pianist Brendan Davis, trumpeter Trunino Lowe, and bassist Jonathan Muir Cotton, currently touring nationally and internationally with pianist Christian Sands. Cotton, Lowe, and Belgrave will be performing with Jones.

    Artist in Residence Jason Moran will feature some lesser known budding swingers from the DJF Collegiate Jazz Orchestra for his Sunday performance.

    Hill and Jones are examples of the homegrown talent that keeps Detroit’s jazz scene relevant and thriving. They have earned note for note the exposure at a globally respected music event like the Detroit Jazz Festival.

    Collins plans to keep young musicians at the forefront of the festival because he knows how important it is to their professional development.

    “I look for ways to support their professional careers as they cross important artistic thresholds in their own life and these young artists were featured at the festival this year because they’ve achieved a moment in their career where they’re being very innovative with the language,” says Collins.

    Detroit Jazz Festival

    Fri., Aug. 29, 6-10:15 p.m., Sat., Aug. 30, 12 p.m.-12 a.m., Sun., Aug. 31, 12 p.m.-12 a.m. and Mon., Sept. 1, 12-7 p.m.

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    Veronica Johnson

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  • The Best Marijuana Strains For Summer Concerts And Festivals

    The Best Marijuana Strains For Summer Concerts And Festivals

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    Outdoor concenters and music festivals are great in the summer!  Marijuana can make even more magical!

    Summer is the time for outdoor music.  Labor Day weekend will see Bumbershoot in Seattle, Caveman in Colorado, the Detroit Jazz and more. Being outside and soaking up the sun, tunes and vibes just feel right. And to enhance the experience, you can even take it to the next step.  Here are the best marijuana strains for summer concerts and festivals.

    RELATED: Science Explains How Marijuana Inspires Awe 

    Marijuana taps into our minds to positively influence how we perceive things, including music. Marijuana accesses a  neurotransmitter system, the endocannabinoid system, which regulates appetite, pain, mood and memory. The way the plant activates this system explains a lot of the unique effects it has on music listening. Some of these influences, like changes in the endocannaboid system, may be imperceptible at the time, but can change the way we feel when we experience sounds.

    Blue Dream

    When you have a full day of bouncing between stages, this strain will let you lean into the music and still give you energy. A sativa dominant hybrid it will keep you active and ready to dance.

    Pineapple Express

    This pleasantly aromatic sativa is a cross of Trainwreck and Hawaiian. Whether listening to the gentle melodies of island music or getting your face melted at a metal show, Pineapple Express compliments the artistic tastes of most music connoisseurs.

    Space Queen

    Not only will famous sativa strains help you feel comfortable in the middle of a crowded auditorium, it’ll make you want to get up and dance.

    RELATED: 10 Types Of Marijuana That Will Make You Feel More Peaceful

    Capitalizer

    This sativa dominant hybrid was bred to grow to massive sizes under the sunshine in the Sierra foothills of central California. If you want to feel like a rock star, trying consuming  this potent strain while being near the stage.

    OG Platinum

    As a highly-revered hybrid strain, OG Platinum has an award-winning nose and immediate high. Savoring it will have you playing air-guitar with the band in no time.

    Silver Haze

    As one of the most popular sativa-dominant hybrids on the market, Silver Haze balances a solid body buzz with cheerful mood. This is a perfect strain if you are going to a concert and you usually get uncomfortable in crowds.

    RELATED: 10 Types of Marijuana To Help Suppress Your Appetite

    Girl Scout Cookies

    This Durban Poison x OG Kush is celebrated by pop-culture icons. Point being, if your favorite rappers use it—Girl Scout Cookies are a sure bet for a blow-out concert experience.

    Super Lemon Haze

    This sativa-dominant hybrid has a piney smell and looks like it’s been dipped in sugar. Making it perfect for outside event. Super Lemon Haze’s energetic buzz is sure to get the party started.

    Rockstar

    Rockstar is an indica dominant cross between Rockbud and Sensi Star. However, don’t let the label intimidate you—Rockstar will have you feeling stress-free at your favorite festival without the usual debilitating indica effects.

    Jack Herer

    This prominent sativa strain is named after one of the most renowned cannabis growers/activists to date. Even more, it’s great for getting the creative juices flowing, whether on the stage or in the crowd.

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    Anthony Washington

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  • ‘Professional Love’ showcases Detroit jazz artists during a past era of creative camaraderie

    ‘Professional Love’ showcases Detroit jazz artists during a past era of creative camaraderie

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    Multifaceted artist Evan Haywood has just debuted Professional Love, and while the album’s release date is April 1, with its first track titled “April Fools,” the talent displayed on the project is no joke. The eight-track LP fuses funk, soul, and jazz, embodying a nostalgic era of creativity and camaraderie among Detroit musicians.

    Professional Love was mostly recorded in 2013 in Haywood’s first studio “The Lands,” located in the basement of a large Ann Arbor home nicknamed “Le Dog House.” The spot served as an incubator of creativity for young musicians, merging Ann Arbor’s experimental music scene with Detroit jazz and funk. Much of the talent that spent time in the space and is featured on the album has grown to be some of the city’s hottest contemporary jazz musicians including Marcus Elliot, Michael Malis, Ahya Simone, Ian Finkelstein, Josef Deas, and Ingrid Racine, among others.

    Over a decade later, these artists have continued to grow together and separately in their music careers, now taking time to reflect on a past period of growth and creative collaboration.

    “I think the real story is how a bunch of broke young musicians in Ann Arbor were able to manifest and progress so many styles of music which have historical origins in Detroit, from psychedelic soul and funk to free jazz to hip hop… all using a ramshackle DIY studio,” Haywood says. “The Le Dog House was a place of much chaos and debauchery, but also a sacred space where great art was created amongst a circle of very well-informed and music-obsessed individuals, all pursuing their own forms of greatness.”

    click to enlarge

    Courtesy photo

    Marcus Elliot.

    Detroit saxophonist Marcus Elliot met Haywood at the Le Dog house around 2010 and has since led a successful career in jazz music including, but certainly not limited to, directing the Creative Arts Orchestra at the University of Michigan, leading bands, and releasing numerous projects.

    “That house was filled with some very extremely creative people and Evan was one of them. I wasn’t sure what he was exactly. A musician, rapper, recording engineer, DJ, film enthusiast, visual artist??? Come to find out he was all of these things, but even more so, he was a good friend,” Elliot said in a statement. “It is great to hear these recordings and it is great that Evan captured such a special time in our lives.”

    Some musicians who lived in the house, including Michael Malis and Ben Rolston, describe the time and place as a “creative wonderland” for everyone involved.

    click to enlarge Ben Rolston. - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    Ben Rolston.

    “A huge gift Le Dog gave to me, and to others I’m sure, was a way to deepen and strengthen musical connections and the personal relationships framing those connections. As a student in jazz school, most of my relationships were through that specific musical lens,” Rolston says. “I felt able to actualize other musical interests and break out of the relatively narrow lane jazz education provides. My musical life after leaving Le Dog has included a wide variety of genres (hip-hop, folk, bluegrass, Balkan, New Orleans funk, etc.) and it’s interesting to reflect back on Le Dog being a large catalyst for following through on such wide-ranging interests.”

    “Within a couple weeks of arriving at University of Michigan, I found myself rehearsing at Le Dog with musicians that would become lifelong inspirations and collaborators,” another jazz musician James Cornelison adds. “I learned so much from my older peers in that basement.”

    While many musical spaces can be intimidating, The Lands served as a place for young talent to explore their artistry with an intimate, non-judgemental crowd. Ingrid Racine, who is also a U-M jazz alumnus, says that hearing the music from this period was “a joyful surprise and a dose of nostalgia.”

    “These recordings are definitely the product of a synergetic time in Ann Arbor, and the Le Dog house was a hub of music-making and community building,” she says. “A good reminder that big rental houses full of young musicians are vital to local music scenes.”

    click to enlarge Ingrid Racine. - Chuck Andersen

    Chuck Andersen

    Ingrid Racine.

    The Le Dog House was always active, a place where the creation of music was happening every single day for years, with a revolving door of unique musicians.

    Unfortunately, the good energy of the space eventually turned bad.

    “Everybody there was kind of on the same wavelength, and at the same time, the house itself was always in a state of chaos,” Haywood says. “There was always some craziness going on there. It was never the most stable environment. There were always people coming and going.”

    Nevertheless, “it was magical,” he adds.

    The home was “majestic” in style and vibe, with ornate architecture, regular jam sessions, and spiritual energy, but eventually began to crumble as dangerous people started frequently visiting, leading to dangerous situations. While the instability “allowed the creativity to flow so freely,” Haywood says, there came a time when everyone had to move out for their own safety and sanity.

    “That was the nature of the house… a deep sense of fellowship, comfort, and belonging, paired with a foreboding and unshakeable feeling of chaos, dread, danger, and unease. Beauty and ugliness, all coexisting together, trying to make a way,” Haywood says. “This album, Professional Love, is a testament to this struggle and resilience, which I believe is a character of Michigan music in all its forms.”

    Additionally, Professional Love is dedicated to Fugi, an artist who sang with the Detroit funk band Black Merda in the late ’60s and was friends with the Temptations. Haywood says he met Fugi while living in Hamtramck and the artist was supposed to be featured on this project, but unfortunately passed away before he was able to record his part. Still, “Fugi’s spirit is present on the album,” he adds.

    This is the “next piece of the puzzle” of Haywood’s string of releases of archival projects following his Canterbury Tales album that was just released less than two months ago. The artist plans to release more past recordings soon before debuting newer music.

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    Layla McMurtrie

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