The Rise of Europe and the Future of Jazz.
The first jazz festival I ever attended outside the United States was in Melbourne, Australia, in 2005. That year, the Umbria Jazz organization of Italy helped run the Melbourne International Jazz Festival, and the concerts were full of Italian musicians. They were all new to me.
Francesco Cafiso played on the first night. He had the purest, most powerful alto saxophone sound I had ever heard. He was 15 years old, and played ferocious, intricate, mind-boggling bebop. Charlie Parker was back from the dead. I thought I was delirious from jet lag. No 15-year-old could be that good.
He was. He played “Cherokee” (no one plays “Cherokee” anymore) and laid it to waste. There were other stunning Italians in Melbourne, like Stefano Bollani and Danilo Rea. I thought Bollani might be the best living jazz pianist not named Keith Jarrett. Again I suspected jet lag, but it turned out to be true.
The following summer, in 2006, I went for the first time to the actual Umbria Jazz Festival, in Perugia, Italy. Cafiso was there. He performed twice with an Italian orchestra, using the original arrangements from the Charlie Parker with Strings albums. He played his own soaring improvisations, in that singing, celestial tone I now knew. (Check out the album Francesco Cafiso & Strings: A Tribute to Charlie Parker, Umbria Jazz, 2005.) I heard more formidable Italians in Perugia, like Enrico Rava and Giovanni Guidi.
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Michael Des Barres and the Art of Aural Obsession
Listening to music inspires us to take action. Upon hearing an I.E.-Instant Earworm-we must then determine the best way we can go about listening to it again (and again) at our convenience.
PLANET OF SOUND
BLACK FRANCIS ON HARNESSING THAT MAGIC PIXIES DUST
T+A R 2500 R STREAMING RECEIVER PHONO MODULE
In my review of the T+A R 2500 R receiver (August 2024 issue), I covered many of its features and took as deep a dive as time and column inches allowed.
Audia Flight FLS10
The dogma of separates has long reigned supreme among audiophiles: If you're serious about sound quality, you're supposed to need a dedicated preamp and power amp.
Totem Acoustic Element Fire V2
Totem Acoustic was founded in 1987, in Montreal, Canada, by a former high school math teacher named Vince Bruzzese. The company's first product, the Model 1 loudspeaker,' impressed me so much I bought a pair.
MoFi Electronics MasterDeck
Get two mouthy jazz drummers in a room and watch the sparks fly. Talented turntable designer Allen Perkins, the brain behind Spiral Groove,2 Immedia's RPM turntables,³ and various SOTA models, is first and foremost a jazz drummer.
Soulution 727
AImost 14 years have passed since a review of a Soulution product appeared in the pages of Stereophile.\"
The Spin Doctor checks out the Kuzma Safir 9, a superarm from Slovenia.
The British audio scene from the late 1970s through the mid-1980s was pretty strange. Audio as a hobby was a big deal, with widespread appeal to a much younger crowd than today. Audiophiles were guided by a flurry of what my friends called \"hi-fi pornos,\" audio magazines that filled the racks at the newsagents.
Alex goes to Japan
Arriving in Japan from the United States is like being turned upside down. This condition lasts for much of the first week. When I visited in November, the time difference between Tokyo and New York was 14 hours. \"The floating world\" is a term for the pleasure-addled urban culture of Edo-period Japan, but it's also an apt description for the twilit and not-entirely-unpleasant weirdness of first arriving in Tokyo. Everything seems slightly unreal.
Wilson Audio Specialties The WATT/Puppy
Since the original WATT/Puppy concept kicked off in the late 1980s,' there has been a 40-year evolution leading to the latest version reviewed here.