JazzTimes

All Changed, Changed Utterly

Right now I’m thinking that my last editor’s note was too optimistic.

“We are printing our annual Festival Guide in this issue as we do every May,” I wrote, “knowing that much of it may become inaccurate, but also confident that much all gather again, socially distanced no longer …”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from JazzTimes

JazzTimes1 min read
Jazz Quartet
1. Though from a big band, Maynard was a hell of a trumpet player a real 2. Harmony for them is known as 3. These 5ths are normally forbidden 4. Tootie played with them too. 5. Another kind of tet with a Another kind of tet with a trumpet and sax 6.
JazzTimes1 min read
A Serendipitous Encounter at Sandy’s Jazz Revival
It was the fall of 1974. I was attending college in the small New England town of Bridgewater, Mass. It was there that I found and developed an affection as well as an appreciation for jazz. I met a friend, Whitfield, who had an extensive collection
JazzTimes7 min read
Wallace Roney
My brother was always ahead of the game, mentally. He was always thinking about the future. As children, we would sit around and say “what if this had that, or that had this”, then we’d experiment together. If we saw something on TV, we tried to repl

Related Books & Audiobooks