12/07/2008

Peter Ind reaches 80 / Peter Ind cumple 80

Jazz may or may not be in good shape (boooring...), but some elder jazzmen certainly are, like Peter Ind. Last Saturday (July 5) Ind and his partner, Sue Jones, invited a few (actually, a lot) of their friends to some drinks and music at Ronnie Scott's upstairs bar to celebrate the 80th year (on July 20th, actually) of this Gandalf-with-a-bass. Four scores of years, a fairly recent stroke and a rather severe financial situation when his Bass Clef Club shut down would make anyone at his age sit back and relax. Not him (although at least he's stopped repairing roofs).

Besides the several birthday celebrations (I also saw him at the 606 Club in May and right now he's probably getting ready for his party in Auvers-sur-Oise, north of Paris), Ind is relaunching his Wave label with five (5) new releases:


- PETER IND: Sixty Years With My Bass... Well, Almost! (Wave CD 22). Mainly solo bass recording.
- DISTRICT SIX: Leave My Name At The Door (Wave CD 29). South-African flavoured jazz combo.
- THE NEW PAUL WHITEMAN ORCHESTRA: In Concert At Queen Elizabeth Hall (Wave CD 27). What the title says.
- MATT ROSS & EDDIE THOMPSON: Beauty And The Beat (Wave CD 19). Piano duo.
- DUKE JORDAN: Live at the Bass Clef (Wave CD 20). Duke Jordan in a trio setting.

More info about the relaunch here (.pdf file). The catalogue is here (.pdf file).

Haven't had the chance to hear these, but I'm intrigued by the Whiteman and the piano duo: the Whiteman, because it's a large formation with a neglected legacy recorded by an excellent sound engineer (Ind himself) and two people I've never heard play, author Dick Sudhalter and the late sound restoration wizard John R. T. Davies; and the piano duo, because I've seen Ross play twice in the last few months and he hasn't failed to tickle my curiosity, for some quirky ideas and his chops, diminished by age as they may be. The names in the back catalogue include fellow Tristano-ites Warne Marsh, Lee Konitz, as well as Kenny Wheeler, Kenny Barron, Rufus Reid, Martin Taylor, etc.

Later in the year there'll be more CDs, books, a DVD... and a couple of dates on September 9 and 10, at the 606 Club with an old friend: Lee Konitz.
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Dejando a un lado la soporífera cuestión de la salud del jazz, lo cierto es que hay algunos músicos que están frescos como lechugas (Pachi Tapiz habla sobre algunos en su blog). Peter Ind es uno de ellos. Ochenta años el próximo día 20, un achuchón hace cinco y las penurias económicas que siguieron al cierre de su Bass Clef Club, un paraíso que en su día iluminó la zona de Hoxton (Londres)... todo eso bastaría para que un octogenario se recostara en su sofá y brindase tranquilamente, con chimenea y manta. No es el caso de Ind.

Este trasunto de Gandalf se ha embarcado en un año de actividades apabullante. El sábado pasado invitó a unos cuantos (bastantes) amigos al bar "del piso de arriba" de Ronnie Scott's a tomar unas copas y presenciar una jam session (en la foto, con Geoff Simkins). A estas horas debe de estar haciendo lo mismo en Auvers-sur-Oise, al norte de París). Además, ha relanzado su sello discográfico, Wave, un recordatorio de su pericia y veteranía como ingeniero de sonido, con cinco nuevas grabaciones (véanse los títulos arriba, en la parte en inglés), aparte de las ya publicadas con, entre otros, Warne Marsh, Lee Konitz, Kenny Wheeler, Kenny Barron, Rufus Reid y Martin Taylor.

Como explica en su website, a lo largo del año habrá más lanzamientos, libros, un DVD, y más discos, nuevas grabaciones en una serie denominada "Live Jazz: Improvisation Today" (Jazz en vivo: improvisación hoy) en la que buscará reunir a músicos de diversas generaciones, jóvenes con intérpretes "más maduros", como le gusta decir a Sue Jones, pareja de Peter.

Y en septiembre, los días 9 y 10, el bajista se reunirá en el 606 Club de Chelsea, con un viejo colega: Lee Konitz.

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