The Heat Was on HIGH for Playboy Jazz Festival 2019
The Playboy Jazz Festival (PBJF) as celebrated for the 41 st time on June 8-9, 2019 was a sun-dappled smorgasbord of Soul Music, World Music (with offerings from Africa, Cuba, Europe, etc.), Roots Music (Blues and other forms of Folk), some Rock & Pop and various permutations of the Jazz that was in vogue when Playboy Magazine creator Hugh Hefner first started it in Chicago.
Now an annual summer attraction of the 17,500 Hollywood Bowl in Southern California, it provides open-minded music lovers with a one-stop sampling of ear and eye candy delights. Here are 2019’s highlights from the perspective of one who has attended PBJF for over 30 years.
The all-female septet Jazz in Pink led by musical director/keyboardist Gail Jhonson and featuring the unique frontline of violinist Karen Briggs and harpist Mariea Antoinette set the early Saturday afternoon off with contemporary jazz versions of Soul hits such as Heatwave’s “Boogie Nights” chased with a mashup arrangement of Freddie Hubbard’s “Little Sunflower” with Curtis Mayfield’s “Pu
Similar, multi-instrumentalist/record producer (Charlie Wilson, Snoop Dogg) Terrace Martin led an electric band through a soul-jazz fusion fare of sounds that included Herbie Hancock’s “Butterfly” (also recently covered by Robert Glasper whose footsteps Martin appears to be following in) and two vocal features from Alex Isley, daughter of Isley Brother Ernie Isley.
Highlight of the set were features for swiftly up and coming flautist Elena Pinderhughes, who made her PBJF debut a couple years back as a guest of trumpeter Christian Scott’s band.
At 90-years-young, dapper jazz legend Benny Golson represented strong for straight ahead jazz with a set walking down memory lane sharing classics from his songwriting pen along with the stories behind them.
There was “Whisper Not” (penned in Boston while he was on the road with Dizzy Gillespie – great piano solo here by Tamir Hendelman), “Along Came Betty” (written to immortalize one Betty Pritchett with whom he had a fling in Dayton, Ohio then made “a narrow escape”) and “Stablemates” (written for Miles Davis – tremendous drum solo here by the mercurial Roy McCurdy).
They even included a record-perfect recreation of their chill jazz classic “Summer Madness.” With a special show for PBJF that included a trio of female dancers, KATG are Vegas residency ready… and I mean that in a good way.On Sunday, PBJF got off to a strong start with the LAUSD/Beyond the Bell All-City Jazz Band showcasing promising jazz students culled from around the city.
Next was vocalist/songwriter Michael Mayo who offered up some richly harmonic soul-jazz pieces featuring himself with three other vocalists that sounded like a cross between R&B’s The Friends of Distinction and Jazz’s Singers Unlimited. Cuban Jazz pianist Harold Lopez-Nussa led his quartet through a strong set of post-bop highlighted by a duet with his brother Ruy Adrian Lopez-Nussa on cajon.
Saxophonist Donny McCaslin and his electric band Blow brought a frenetic all out Rock dynamic to the proceedings while New Orleans’ legendary Dirty Dozen Brass Band got the crowd into handkerchief waving mode with a tribute to recently departed Dr. John with the classic “It’s All Over Now” and Fats Domino’s “I’m Walkin’.”
Alto saxophone great Maceo Parker put down his horn for much of his set dedicated to “The Genius of Soul” Ray Charles, donning shades to sing in several shades of the legend’s musical styles including the rollicking “Let the Good Times Roll,” the timeless “Georgie On My Mind,” the Country & Western classic “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” and the Wurlitzer funk of “What’d I Say.”
The truest jazz set of the day went to the veteran all-star assemblage The Cookers , featuring Billy Harper on tenor, Eddie Henderson and David Weiss on trumpets, Donald Harrison on alto, George Cables on piano, Cecil McBee on bass and Billy Hart on drums.
However, the most beautifully engaging set of the day belonged to Gambia-born Sona Jobarteh , the first female of the five designated families of her homeland allowed to play the 21-string kora (taught to her by her older brother and her father).
Also singing and playing guitar (self-taught), Sona blessed the Bowl with a too-short set of melodies that flowed like rippled water across the boxes and benches. Deeply purposed in her artistry, Sona is sending all of her profits home in her quest to build a school that will educate and empower young students about the rich influence and beauty of their heritage that has been dissipated through the decades under a colonialist regime.
Pop star Boz Scaggs spun on stage singing his `70s hits “Lowdown” and “JoJo” (ode to a San Francisco pimp fond of wearing pink) followed by more recent blues numbers “Walkin’ Stick” and a Bobby Blue Bland cover. The festival came to a rousing close with The Family Stone – without leader Sly Stone or any of the original members except for saxophonist Jerry Martini. But they had Sly’s very game daughter, lead singer Phunne, in tow plus all of those classic `60s/`70s anthems on their side: “Everyday People,” “Stand,” “I Want to Take You Higher” and the closer “Thank You (Falletineme Be Mice Elf Agin).”
Far less a pure Jazz festival, the Playboy Jazz Festival is a PARTY with people lugging picnic baskets and coolers filled to the brim with libations and snacks with a smorgasbord of great music as the backdrop – whether they choose to listen intently or let it color other sundry activities.“Let it be.”A. Scott Galloway