jazz lessons

After one of our first gigs, someone came up and asked what kind of band we are. I wasn’t sure where she was going with this until she offered suggestions: blues? funk? soul? I’d thought it was obvious, but as she was asking I realized that it’s not at all. In fact, even if you ask the band and wait long enough, you’ll probably get six different responses from four different people.

The “Standards” in our name is reference to us as a jazz ensemble. We base a lot of what we play on a catalog of jazz standards: Fly Me to the Moon, Love Is Here to Stay, Melancholia, etc. are all in the standard jazz songbooks, both the ones you’d imagine and the physical ones that you could find in our bags. But then we play lots of other stuff upon which we paint a spectrum of jazz sensibilities.

It’s really hard to define because jazz takes its roots in blues and ragtime, expands with New Orleans marching processions, and then infects our culture in a wide array of ways, seeping into anything. We have soul, R&B, rock, and a wide variety of stuff all spilling out in the mid 20th century that you’d find specifically in the jazz section of a record store. But even that is so varied you’d have a hard time pinning it down. Wikipedia can’t make it any more clear, and paging through other descriptions leave it so open that you’d wonder if it’s all a practical joke.

One commonality in all of jazz’s descriptions is a nod to improvisation and syncopation. There’s a freedom that developed out of 12-bar blues riffs that continued to unravel into other forms with more possibilities. Maybe more important, there’s room for call and response, an interplay between members of the ensemble. Tim’s bass can take the rhythm so that Ian’s drums can fill. Caryn sings about a duck so Adam realizes that he should try to play a quack-like chord. We listen to each other and the result is something different than what we’d have had without the ensemble. More than the simple chance to improvise, there’s an invitation to listen to each other and see how this continues to feedback on itself.

As we’ve continued to play, I’ve learned that there are jazz standards that offer surprise. Some pieces like Orange Colored Sky sound simple and even campy if you aren’t listening. But the chord progressions are rich and complicated. Sure, the lyrics might be, “Wham, bam, alacazam,” but the notes are morphing with each count, up and down at the same time, sliding across keys in improbable but coherent ways. It’s a study in tonalities that you’d never hear in pop music.

Then, when we play something like The Middle — a song that doesn’t stray too far from 4 basic chords — there’s a blued fifth that I work into a D-minor chord. Tim slides the walking bass line; and Ian definitely throws in multiple rhythms. Caryn wails something that could be as true to a traditional blues tune as it is to this pop remake. We take something simple and play it slant. And, also, loud. (It’s one of our favorites.)

Is it jazz? It’s not Orange Colored Sky, but I’m going to say, “Yes.” I’m a little hesitant and start to step this back a little, especially as I imagine that there’s some purist out there (who would have called their own band simply “Standards”) who answers with a definite “no.” To us? We don’t care so much. We’ll keep seeing how we can throw in some syncopation and improvisation (it’s never the same thing twice), and most importantly make sure we have room for each other to throw in some off-beat, dischordant extra note.

Oh, and just to back us up that this is all okay, maybe that it even “counts,” here’s our friend Ella covering Cream. I think we’re in good company.

spring gig at Cuppa

We’re back at Cuppa (552 25th St, Ogden) to welcome spring. Friday, March 22nd, 7-9 PM.

Drop in for informal atmosphere, a grand piano, good vegan fare, and some new songs. This is our first gig since a couple of recording sessions, so it’s fun to break out things that have been on the back burner as well as show off things that are really well rehearsed at this point. It’s all changing, all the time. We like to return to Cuppa because they’re so welcoming and it is like we’re playing in a really great living room that just happens to be lofted above a fantastic kitchen.

Here’s the event on Facebook, in case you need that bit of social media pressure.

science love

As we all have multiple lives and pursuits, teaching gigs and family gigs in addition to our music gigs, it’s fun when some of these overlap. The College of Science at Weber State gave us this space to describe what we do, acknowledging Tim and Adam’s not-so-secret personas in chemistry and physics. (Our interview during the recent Van Session brought this up, too.) So Adam wrote up this piece on their webpage to describe the weaving of our multiple identities.

van session

We get to play this Friday in the monthly Van Session series, a short set to go along with First Friday arts in Ogden. We’re hosted at The Monarch, and The Banyan Collective provides the podcasting and amplification. We play at 8:00, after Michelle Moonshine at 7:00. It’s a good chance to play some music and talk to the Van Sessions folks about … well, who knows what: Our music? How we work together? Our feelings? We’re excited, come what may.

Details are here, but something to anticipate is that we’ll be outside under tents while The Monarch continues to get its finishing touches as a hub for artistry. So it will be cold. Also, it will be dark. But, maybe it will snow, too. We’re looking forward to it. We’ll wear coats and play loud to help everyone keep warm.

creep

Caryn thought it would be fun to post this for Valentine’s Day. Seemed perfectly appropriate, actually.

From Jazz at the Station, January 9, 2019.