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Performances Reviews

By Any Means brings chemistry and history to the Newport jazz festival

The Boston Globe reviews the supergroup By Any Means Necessary.

The trio of alto saxophonist Charles Gayle, bassist William Parker, and drummer Rashied Ali play with a potency and urgency that can make your hairs stand on end. They also just happened to have made one of the greatest albums in free jazz, a 1993 date called “Touchin’ on Trane,’’ a collection of tunes inspired by, rather than composed by, John Coltrane. (For contractual reasons, the album was released under the artists’ individual names rather than by By Any Means.) In 2008, more than 20 years after it formed, By Any Means finally released a proper album, a superb two-CD set called “Live at Crescendo’’ that was recorded at a club in Sweden.

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Performances

Jazz Listings From The New York Times

In the Times:

DAVE BURRELL WITH BILLY MARTIN (Friday) As he did a few years ago, for an album called “Consequences” (Amulet), the venerable avant-garde pianist and composer Dave Burrell engages in expansive duologue with Mr. Martin, the drummer best known as the second surname in Medeski Martin & Wood. At 7 p.m., Whitney Museum of American Art, (212) 570-3600, whitney.org; free with pay-what-you-wish museum admission. 20090219

TAYLOR HO BYNUM TRIO (Thursday) The cornetist Taylor Ho Bynum excels with improvisational miniatures, a form he seems likely to explore in this trio with the bassist John Hebert and the drummer Gerald Cleaver. At 9 and 10:30 p.m., Tea Lounge, 837 Union Street, near Sixth Avenue, Park Slope, Brooklyn, (718) 789-2762, tealoungeny.com; suggested donation, $5. 20090219

DUAL IDENTITY (Thursday) The alto saxophonists Rudresh Mahanthappa and Steve Lehman travel roughly the same orbit in jazz’s progressive solar system. And as the name of this quintet implies, their aesthetic kinship runs deep. At 9 and 10:30 p.m., Jazz Gallery, 290 Hudson Street, at Spring Street, South Village, (212) 242-1063, jazzgallery.org; cover, $15. 20090219

ENSEMBLE HELACIOUS (Friday) This exploratory trio consists of three shrewd and committed improvisers: the multireedist J. D. Parran, the trombonist Peter Zummo and the vibraphonist and drummer Kevin Norton. At 8:30 p.m., Roulette, 20 Greene Street, at Grand Street, SoHo, (212) 219-8242, roulette.org; $15 at the door; $10 for students, 30 and under, and 65+. 20090219

FREESTYLE MUSIC SERIES (Wednesday) This avant-garde concert series has settled for the moment at Cake Shop, one night a month. Next week the lineup includes the Exposed Blues Duo, with Fay Victor on vocals and Anders Nilsson on guitar (at 8:30 p.m.); the French Exit, a trio with roots in indie rock (at 10); Radio I-Ching, a free-improvising collective that includes the series organizer, Dee Pop, on percussion (at 9:15); and a group led by the alto saxophonist Peter Robbins (at 11). 152 Ludlow Street, between Stanton and Rivington Streets, Lower East Side, (212) 253-0036, cake-shop.com; $8. 20090219

DREW GRESS’S 7 BLACK BUTTERFLIES (Friday) On his most recent album, “The Irrational Numbers” (Premonition), the bassist Drew Gress pursues a disciplined brand of abstraction with this band, featuring the trumpeter Ralph Alessi, the alto saxophonist Tim Berne, the keyboardist Craig Taborn and the drummer Tom Rainey. At 9 and 10:30 p.m., Jazz Gallery, 290 Hudson Street, at Spring Street, South Village, (212) 242-1063, jazzgallery.org; cover, $15. 20090219

KEVIN TKACZ’S LETHAL OBJECTION (Tuesday) The bassist Kevin Tkacz (pronounced tax) features his own compositions in this adventurous new ensemble, with Ingrid Laubrock on saxophones, Angelica Sanchez on piano and Michael Sarin on drums. At 7 p.m., Barbès, 376 Ninth Street, at Sixth Avenue, Park Slope, Brooklyn, (347) 422-0248, barbesbrooklyn.com; cover, $10. 20090219

VISION COLLABORATION NIGHTS (Friday and Saturday) For one of the Vision Festival’s perennial off-season satellite series, dancers and musicians combine forces in improvisation. Among the likely highlights are two performances by the multi-instrumentalist Cooper-Moore: in a duo with the trombonist Willie Applewhite (Friday) and in a quintet with the saxophonists Charles Gayle and Tony Malaby, the bassist William Parker and the drummer Nasheet Waits (Saturday). At 7:30 p.m., Living Theater, 21 Clinton Street, Lower East Side, (212) 254-5420, livingtheatre.org; $15 in advance, $20 at the door, $15 students and 65+.

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Performances

Vision Collaboration Nights in February

William Parker
Image via Wikipedia

From the Vision Festival people:

Vision Collaboration Nights 2009
at the Living Theatre
February 18-21, 2009

What:
Vision Collaboration Nights

Date and Time:
February 18-21
7:30-10pm

Place:
The Living Theatre
21 Clinton Street, between Houston and Stanton
Take the F to Delancey or JMZ to Essex

Cost:
$15 in advance, $20 at the door and $15 students/seniors

Full Info:
http://www.artsforart.org
http://www.livingtheatre.org
tel: 212.254.5420
New York, NY – Arts for Art presents avantjazz dance and music with improvisation at the Vision Collaboration Nights. This unique festival allows for collaborations between innovative dancer/choreographers collaborating with New York’s top musicians thereby shedding new light on the experience of dance. Bringing the arts together, we believe moves forward the creativity in dance through challenging common expectations.

Wednesday, February 18
7:30 DASSdance: Daniel Wilkins and Christina Cooley, dance / William Parker, bass
8:00 Ehizoje Azeke, dance / Cooper Moore, hand crafted instruments
8:30 Miriam Parker, dance / Jason Kao Hwang, violin / Todd Nicholson, bass
9:00 Tony Malaby‘s Tamarindo: Tony Malaby, tenor sax / William Parker, bass / Nasheet Waits, drums

Thursday, February 19
7:30 The Age of the Bitter Chocolate: Sonia Portugal, dance / David Moss, bass
8:00 Miriam Parker, dance / Jason Kao Hwang, violin / Todd Nicholson, bass
8:30 A Moment Before: Julian Barnett and Jocelyn Tobias, dance / Todd Nicholson, bass
9:00 Jason Kao Hwang/EDGE: Jason Kao Hwang, violin and viola; Taylor Ho Bynum, cornet and flugelhorn; Ken Filiano, bass; Harris Eisenstadt, drums

Friday, February 20
7:30 Moving Stillness: Akim Funk Buddha, dance / Saco Yasuma, alto sax and flute
8:00 DASSdance: Daniel Wilkins and Christina Cooley, dance / William Parker, bass
8:30 A Moment Before: Julian Barnett and Jocelyn Tobias, dance / Todd Nicholson, bass
9:00 Cooper Moore Duo: Cooper Moore, hand crafted instruments / Willie Applewhite, trombone

Saturday, February 21
7:30 Cooper Moore, hand crafted instruments / Tony Malaby, tenor sax / Charles Gayle, tenor sax / William Parker, bass / Nasheet Waits, drums
9:00 Patricia Nicholson’s A State of Mind: dancers: Miriam Parker, Daniel Wilkins, Jason Jordan, Julian Barnett; musicians: Cooper Moore, Charles Gayle, and William Parker

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