Night Lights Home

· This Week on Night Lights
· Current Audio File
· Description of Program
· Listen live Saturdays 11:10pm
· Host: David Brent Johnson
· Playlists
· Jazz News of Note
· Archives
· Jazz Internet Resources
· Contact Info/Bulletin
· Midwest Jazz Links
· Other WFIU Jazz Programs
· Misc. Jazz/Cultural Links
· The Book Nook

· WFIU Home Page

August 12, 2006
"'When Russell Met Baker"
Listen to Program

Java Jive:  Jazz Coffee Songs In the summer of 1959 a 27-year-old David Baker and several bandmates from Indianapolis attended the Lenox School of Music in Lenox, Massachusetts. There they met George Russell, a jazz composer and theorist in his mid-30s who had first gained renown in the late 1940s for his compositions "Cubana-Be, Cubana-Bop" and "A Bird in Igor's Yard," and who had published a book about his progressive jazz ideas and theories called The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization. Russell had recorded several highly noteworthy albums in the 1950s, including Jazz Workshop and New York, New York, and was looking to form his own small group. Java Jive:  Jazz Coffee SongsBaker and his colleagues were young, energetic, and ready to embrace new musical modes of thinking, despite their roots in bebop. In the next year and a half, after intensive rehearsals with Russell in Indianapolis, the George Russell Sextet--comprising Russell, bassist Chuck Israels, and the nucleus of David Baker's Indianapolis group--Baker on trombone, David Young on tenor sax, Al Kiger on trumpet, and Joe Hunt on drums--played a well-received three-week gig at New York's Five Spot club, toured the Midwest, and recorded three albums. The results--At the Five Spot, Stratusphunk, and the rarely-heard Kansas City--can be heard on this edition of Night Lights.

 

 

 

 




 

 

 


 

 

 


 

                                       




 

  WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael Toler
Last updated: Wednesday, August 9, 2006
Copyright 2004, The Trustees of
Indiana University