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Honolulu, Hawaii |
simunye by www.consciousgrooverecords.com djs: toki & monkey voices: seph1 jeanne p. tiare mata Monday
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Honolulu's only Jazz Club dedicated to jazz with live jazz six nights a week, closed Sunday Food, Beverage and Music 1661 Kapiolani Boulevard Just west of Atkinson 945-0800 * Check for surprise artists Private parties, catering
The best jazz in Hawaii |
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| Awesome, man!(click here) Special next week Tuesday, April 3, 9-12, direct from Tokyo... one of Japan's hottest jazz singers... Rie Furuse. Don't miss it. She'll be playing with the Satomi Jazz Band Jon Hawes on bass and Shinya Yarimizo on drums.
Restaurant workers click here!
Always, always... there is an extensive food menu. Great pupus or a late dinner.
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![]() Randy Wheeler Thursdays
Check it out. Your picture might be in Midweek. We have a little spread in their Feb. 9, 2007 issue. See it here: Spotted by Midweek!
Satomi Jazz Trio and guests, Wednesdays
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Check it out, hot hip hop Saturdays, New York urban jazz
Gilbert Batangan Tuesday
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Yes, add me to your email list!
March Schedule
Mondays, March 5,12,19,26 Conscious Grove hiphop jazz ensemble with Seph 1, 9 p.m. – 1 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Tuesdays, March 6,20 Gilbert Batangan Quartet with Aaron Hill on tenor sax and Abe Lagrimas drums, 9 p.m. – 1 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café 945-0800
Tuesdays, March 13,27 Amber Ricci with Bobbie Nishida and Dan Del Negro, 9 p.m.- 1 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Wednesdays, March 7,14,21,28 Satomi Jazz Trio with Jeremy Ward on bass and Shinya Yarimizo on drums, 9 p.m.-12 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Thursdays, March 1,8,15,22,29 Randy Wheeler Quartet, live groove underground New York jazz, 9 p.m. – 1:30 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Fridays, March 2,9,16,23,30 The Fort Union Dugout, with the Spacifics, Seph 1 and Risup, hip hop dance jazz, 9 p.m. DJ Fame then live to 1:30 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Cafe, 945-0800
Saturdays, March 3,10,17,24,31 Tempo Valley, New York urban jazz, 9:30 p.m.- 1:30 a.m.,,Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Sunday, March 25 Selecta Zacharijah featuring Ras Mikey of Isouljahs, dance hall reggae, 9 p.m. – 1:30 a.m., Jazz Minds Art & Café. 945-0800
Surprise guests, Sinbad |
Special It’s all about jamming when it comes to jazz. Dropping in at Jazz Minds this past Wednesday were Japanese favorites Yasuko Hayakawa on piano and Masahiro Tajika on drums. They joined the Dave Yamasaki Trio for a few songs. Great music. You can catch part of them at www.makiba.com
Tuesdays
Abe Lagrimas
Rich Crandall
Tommy Lohmann and Lily Leung |
Fort Union Dugout -- Fridays! January 1, 2007 What’s hot in jazz? New York urban sounds
OK, I’ll admit it. I never thought that I’d be this old – where jazz is becoming an unacceptable form. The truth is it’s too loud. And the further truth is: Young people have always liked loud music. They love a huge bass line with pulsing, rapping drum upbeats. Big band was loud. New York urban is loud. That’s the music that’s in today. The first artist to claim urban jazz was Angelamia Bachemin. She pioneered the style of Jazz Hip-Hop, blending the two most uniquely African-American developments in music into one “phat” sound at Wesleyan University in 1997.
Last Sunday blast, Mar. 25 Bachemin was a child of New Orleans and inner-city Oakland, California. She developed the synthesis while working on her Master's Degree, where her first jazz hip-hop class rocked the Crowell Concert Hall standing-room-only crowd. She called it the Renaissance Soul Revival. The tradition continued at Berklee College, where Bachemin's classes and performances were so popular that listeners were often found crowding outside the doors. Our Monday band flies in this vein. The newest jazz trend lies in electronic music. Our own DeShannon Higa is deeply into this groove on Thursday evenings. And our new Saturday band is New York urban all the way.
Electronic music takes electronically generated sounds and turns it into a work of music. The music is typically composed on a synthesizer or a computer. Higa takes it one step further with visuals and music. At his recent gigs, he has both a real live painter painting and computer generated moving graphics projected on the Jazz Minds brick wall. This takes jazz to its sharpest edge. It brings it back to the beginning when innovation and improvising reigned supreme. Jazz musicians are artists in the truest sense of the word. Straight ahead jazz is really like old time rock and roll. It’s comforting. It’s great for old folks. But it doesn’t blow you away. “Hip hop is the most current expression arising from the African American cultural continuum and utilizes many of the same African musical characteristics as jazz,” says columnist Emmett G. Price III. “Just as the Hip Hop Nation constructed the word "yo" to designate who was a part of their nation, Lester Young constructed the word "man" to designate who was a part of the jazz generation. Both hip hop "yo" and jazz "man" are anti-heroes in the American tradition.” says writer Rahim Respond. So, don’t be coming round here saying, “That’s not jazz.” You might say it’s loud, but it’s jazz.
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Young and Danny Hong
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OUR
GUESTS
Owner Young Yi and Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa |
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| Favorite Links: Night Stuff by Derek Paiva, Advertiser More fun...!! And... more! First anniversary
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JAZZ FRIENDS: Don Gordon at KIPO Public Radio Webmaster: papaalhawaii@hotmail.com |
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Hawaii Musician links:
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Best Jazz in Hawaii |
![]() Lambert Jed Borgardt, son of owner Young Yi and a soldier in Iraq 2006 |
![]() Joseph Borgardt, son of owner Young Yi and a Marine going to Iraq in January 2007
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