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4 posts from August 2007

Mike Marshall to Lead Special Fall Choro Workshop

Choro_famoso_2 Mike Marshall, one of the world's most accomplished and versatile acoustic musicians, will lead a Brazilan choro music workshop at Centrum the week of November 8-11. Registration is available by calling Centrum at 360.385.3102, x114 or by registering on our secure online site.

“The Brazilian musical style of choro represents the coming together of European melodic and harmonic traditions with African rhythms and sensibilities,” says Marshall, who will be teaching with his band, Choro Famoso (pictured). 

“The way this came together in Brazil is particularly exciting," he says. "There was something about the Portuguese and Italian influence that gave a strong romantic feeling to the resulting melodies, giving choro a swinging groove that is so Brazilian underpinning everything.” 

Choro, which emerged in Brazil in the middle of the nineteenth century, is a cousin of jazz with sense of yearning often described as a “sweet lament,” says ethnomusicologist and clarinet player Andy Connell, adding that many ethnomusicologists believe that the name of the music comes from the Portuguese verb chorar—that is, to weep or to cry. 

Beneath the sparkling veneer of choro—the parades, floats, and the fluidly ecstatic sound of the musicChoro  itself—lies the darker history of colonized Brazil, Connell says.

“There is a wonderful bittersweet quality about it,” he says. “It often seems bright and happy on the surface. But if you dig, deeper you find a kind of sadness, a longing that the Brazilians call saudade.”

Saudade is a Portuguese word for a feeling of longing for something which is gone, but might return. It often carries the knowledge that object of longing might never return. This sense of longing, combined with the Brazilian slave trade that forced Africans into labor for the coffee and brazilwood trades, gave choro music its lament.

Choro_guitar The “bright and happy” are elements of choro as well, Connell says. By the late nineteenth century, the music was dazzling Brazilian nightlife. Rio de Janeiro burst with choro musicians. The musical arena was uniquely tolerant of the mixing of classes, he says. Choro ensembles were made up of slave musicians playing primarily guitar, flute, and the cavaquinho, a small string instrument.

Between the eighteen-seventies and the nineteen-twenties (when North American jazz greats like Louis Armstrong met and played with with choro musicians), makeshift choro bands, paid in food and drink, worked the all-night party circuits.

The composers were equally diverse. Chiquinha Gonzaga flouted convention, becoming Brazil’s first female composer. Her operettas and choros, such as “Só no Choro” “Corta-Jaca,” and “Forrobodó” are an essential part of the choro repertoire.

And choro continues to develop and change, Connell says. “Choro musicians have responded to music they heard coming from the U.S., coming from Europe, or wherever,” he says. “The music’s not the same now as it was thirty years ago, let alone one hundred years.”

“My god, this is the sound” Mike Marshall said, when he first heard choro in its element. “I knew about samba and bossa nova, but this genre is just mind-blowing.” 

Your Instrument Chooses You: An Interview with Chuck Deardorf

Chuck_deardorfCentrum: How did you begin playing jazz?

Chuck Deardorf: I was about eleven when I started playing music. I started out a trombone player, and went through the school band program and that sort of thing, and in my senior year of high school I discovered jazz. I was also playing bass guitar at that time, mostly in rock and roll and R & B. So probably sixteen, I guess, would be the age that started to happen, seventeen, as far as jazz goes.

C: How did you decide to play the bass?

CD: Well, you know I have a theory that instruments choose you, you think you choose them, but they kind of call your name. I was a trombone player, and I was playing in big bands, and you know as horn players, especially in big bands, you play a little bit and then you just sit there for a while, and then you play some more and then you sit.  And I found myself always listening to the bass player, because they get to play the whole time, and I thought, wow they sound like they’re having a lot more fun then I am. 'Cause they’re just in the music, and the bass just shapes the music so much. You have a lot of responsibility and freedom to really determine where the music goes. And so the bass just started calling my name and I responded. I became a full-time bass player when I was in college. 

C: Were there any bass players in particular that you listened to early on that got you excited about the bass?

Continue reading "Your Instrument Chooses You: An Interview with Chuck Deardorf" »

2007 Jazz Workshop Evaluation

Attention 2007 Jazz Port Townsend workshop participants: we want to know how the week went for you.

This year, we are conducting our workshop evaluations online. Your feedback is critical, as it is through your comments that the workshop is improved.

Please complete our evaluation and get ready for the Choro workshop in November!

Live at Jazz Port Townsend on KPLU this Sunday

Houston_person_trio_3

Jazz Northwest host Jim Wilke has announced the first of his rebroadcasts of the live performances from Jazz Port Townsend 2007.

From Jim:

The Houston Person Trio at Jazz Port Townsend begins a series of Jazz Northwest concert broadcasts from the 2007 festival this Sunday, August 5.  Tenor sax great Houston Person's big sound is complimented by Jeff Hamilton on drums and the amazing Japanese organist Atsuko Hashimoto. This trio recently recorded a CD which will be issued next year.

Jazz Northwest airs Sundays at 1 pm PDT on 88.5 KPLU and www.kplu.org, and is also available as a podcast during the week after the broadcast. Jazz Northwest is made possible by The Boeing Company.

JAZZ CONTACT INFO

  • Bill Kiely
    360-385-3102 x106
    bill@centrum.org

2007 JAZZ PHOTOS

  • www.flickr.com

ELSEWHERE AT CENTRUM