31 articles
Randy L. Smith
A modest jazz critic and retired English teacher, Randy L. Smith is hard pressed to account for his musical tastes. As a teenager in the early 70s, while almost everyone else in the rural hinterlands of eastern Washington State listened to Johnny Cash, he became unaccountably fascinated by jazz. In high school, he bought a gleaming silver Getzen Capri trumpet from Don Lanphere of Belmont Music in Wenatchee, not knowing that Don had recorded with Fats Navarro in 1948. Jazz is truly where you find it! As a student at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, his love of jazz continued unabated and his knowledge expanded. That passion glows undimmed to this day in his adopted hometown of Kobe, Japan where live and recorded music occupy much of his time. Along the way, he has contributed articles and interviews to Jazz Journal, Cadence, and to other publications in Japan and the Pacific Northwest. In his interviews, he strives to be a good listener and to let the musicians tell their stories. He is still attempting to master that delicate craft, while the Getzen remains securely in a closet.
Local legends, little names and unsung heroes
The greats of jazz emerged not from a vacuum but a culture on which their less prominent colleagues can offer telling perspective
Harold Jones: the musician’s drummer /2
Harold’s reliable presence on the club scene brought him to the attention of local recording companies, notably Vee-Jay, where he established himself as one...
Harold Jones: the musician’s drummer /1
Count Basie's drummers presided over an engine room that fuelled the greatest swing machine ever assembled. Tall, handsome, and photogenic, Papa Jo Jones swung...
Sue Raney: legendary LA songstress /2
Opportunities for Raney to perform and record became less frequent as the 70s wore on and demand for her style of singing continued to...
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Sue Raney: legendary LA songstress /1
Pity the City of the Angels. With its reputation for smog, traffic congestion and urban blight threatening to overpower its gentler amenities, California's largest...
Obituary: Bob Hammer
Though not a household name, arranger, composer and pianist Bob Hammer worked with many jazz greats during a long and varied career. Bob learned...
Osaka organ queen: Atsuko Hashimoto
"She started off with Shiny Stockings," Jeff Hamilton told me recently, speaking of the first time he remembers jamming with Osaka Hammond B3 Queen...
Farewell, Dr. Lonnie
With the passing of Dr. Lonnie Smith on 28 September 2021 at his home in Fort Lauderdale, FL, the jazz world bade farewell to...
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Diana Panton: Canadian songbird carries on the tradition
Canada is likely not the first place that comes up when conversation turns to jazz singers. Yet since Holly Cole and Diana Krall captured...
Jazz in Japan: too many singers /2
Many of the best Japanese jazz singers, like Kansai's Masayo Arai, are known only regionally. That goes for a few "good ones" recommended by...
Jazz in Japan: too many singers /1
I don't recall what tune the woman attempted to sing. I do remember her voice emerging as a sort of strangled caterwaul, rather akin...
Heart full of rhythm: Ricky Riccardi on Satchmo’s middle years /2
Do you have a favourite Armstrong story from these middle years?
There’s almost too many to choose from but the first one that jumps out...
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