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Get Out: Jazz Jam

 KCCK’s Jazz Under the Stars brings groove to Noelridge Park

0806_art_woodard2Jazz guitarist Fred Woodard uses one urban garden to nurture his soul and another to grow his music.
The Iowa City native, 48, lives with his wife and three children in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood, where he says he has just enough space to plant some vegetables.
While he says he doesn’t have many interests outside of family, teaching and music, in gardening he found “an escape from everything. It gave me a chance to relax and think about other things,” he says. “It’s how I got the title of my latest CD. … I have an outlet to maintain peace of mind. It’s something, like music, that’s therapeutic.”
He’ll give local audiences a taste of his “Urban Garden” tonight when the Fred Woodard Trio kicks off KCCK’s “Jazz Under the Stars” series at 7 p.m. in Noelridge Park in northeast Cedar Rapids.
Performing with him on the new CD and in the concert are Cedar Falls native Hill Greene on bass and Chicago native Yoron Israel on drums. Both have esteemed careers apart from the trio. Greene plays in the New York City scene and in major cities around the world. Israel has performed with such heavy-hitters as Sonny Rollins, Grover Washington and Tony Bennett.
They all teach, as well. Israel is a faculty member at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, where Woodard and Greene met as students in 1979. Greene teaches privately and at the Bass Collective in New York City and Woodard teaches at the Roland Hayes School of Music in Roxbury, Mass. Their fathers were teachers, too. Greene’s father, the late Mitchell Greene, taught social work at the University of Northern Iowa and Woodard’s father, also named Fred, recently retired from the English faculty at the University of Iowa.
Tonight’s concert is “like a homecoming,” Woodard says. “Iowa can see what their native sons have been able to produce in the jazz world.”
As a composer, Woodard laces his straight-ahead jazz with other styles from his eclectic career.
“When I first graduated from Berklee, I was fortunate to be hired to play in a blues band with a regular gig in downtown Boston,” he says. “That forced me to really study the blues idiom. Albert King and B.B. King were the two main influences that really led me to really try to see a connection between blues and jazz. In my opinion, blues and jazz idioms are closely related. Blues is the foundation of a lot of styles — and also the foundation of jazz music.”
His early days with R&B bands and more pop-oriented music shines through “Urban Garden.”
The disc’s second track, “Grant Like,” pays tribute to jazz guitarist Grant Green. “It explores a theme based off a lick transcribed from a solo of his, borrowed from him,” Woodard says. “‘Island Birdie’ is calypso-flavored. ‘Jingles’ is a Wes Montgomery tune where the tempo is really fast. It’s the most energetic tune on the CD. Mixed in is my composition ‘Deniece,’ dedicated to my daughter.”
The title track honors students from the inner city, who have a lot of potential. “If the garden that is the students is tended to, they can do great things,” he says.
And he traces the root of jazz through “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child.” His interpretation “shows where jazz came from on the musical continuum, from spirituals, then blues, then jazz — another derivative of blues.” He melds the more modern styles on “Mean Street, No Bridges,” over what he call “a funky foundation.”
“I’m taking my experience of performing music in general and mixing it with blues, bebop and free jazz, following the African-American continuum of music through jazz,” he says.
But don’t expect his live concert to sound exactly like his new CD.
“My way of composing is a vehicle for improvisation,” he says. “We’re really talking about material that is based on whatever concept I’m trying to work on. I consider my compositions to be outlines for improvisation. Once the theme is stated, the group improvises. The life that it takes on depends on the group playing it.
“That keeps it fresh and challenging.”
— DIANA NOLLEN, THE GAZETTE

What: KCCK presents “Jazz Under The Stars”
When: 7 p.m. Thursdays in August; rain date for all concerts, Sept. 3
Where: Noelridge Park, 4900 Council St. NE, Cedar Rapids
Artists: Fred Woodard Trio, tonight; Al Naylor Quartet, Aug. 13; Funk-Stop, Aug. 20; Lake Street Dive, Aug. 27 
Extras: Bring lawn chairs, blankets and picnics; food, refreshments available for purchase
Information: www.kcck.org or (319) 398-5446; tune to KCCK-FM 88.3 on concert days

KCCK Announces Jazz Under the Stars Lineup

The 2009 Jazz Under the Stars lineup will bring both local talent and nationally touring performers  to the stage for the free Thursday concerts at Noelridge Park.

fredwoodardThe Fred Woodard Trio is will take the stage Aug. 6 to open the series. Woodard, a jazz guitarist, was raised in Iowa City, then attended Berklee College of Music in Boston. Describing his band’s music as “straight ahead jazz spiced with sounds of other styles,” Woodard was named Best New Jazz Artist of the Year in 2002 by GBOS magazine. The Fred Woodard Trio, dubbed Best Band Jazz at the New England Urban Music Awards in 2006, has performed extensively together, performing at events such as The Discover Jazz Festival, The Kingfield Jazz and Blues Festival and the Iowa City Jass Festival.

 alnaylor

The Al Naylor Quartet is scheduled to perform Aug. 13. Born in Kansas City and raised in central Iowa, Naylor got his frist trumpet when he was 6 and never looked back. He hold degrees in Music Education and now owns and opperates MacNaylor Productions.

funkstop

Funk-Stop will kick things up Aug. 20 with their high impact show featuring soulful lyrics and backed by the hottest horn and rhythm section around. Made up of music educators and other Cedar Rapids metro area professionals, Funk-Stop takes their inspiration from Tower of Power, James Brown, Stevie Wonder and Earth, Wind and Fire.

lakestreetdive

Lake Street Dive will wrap up the series Aug. 27. Dubbed a “pop music play-date,” this ensemble derives inexhaustible engery from the joy of innovation and creation together. The four friends began playing together as students at Boston’s New England Conservatory of Music and used their shared passion for the Motown and British invasion bands of the 60s and 70s as inspiration for their music. With two CDs under their belt so far, Lake Street Dive continues to perform in venues all over the East Coast and Midwest.

All of the Jazz Under the Stars free concerts will all be held at Noelridge Park in Cedar Rapids and begin at 7 p.m.