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Dossiers

Roy Ayers: “Everybody Loves the Sunshine”

Ayers died on March 4 in New York. The warm sound of his instrument has fallen silent, leaving an empty void. He was eighty-four years old and had been battling a long illness. His notes, once rays of sunshine in the jazz-funk and soul firmament, now float like precious dust in an endless sunset. The music world is left devastated and suspended, waiting for a final note that will never come. His vibraphone spoke directly to the heart, and every chord he played was a fragment of melancholic light—a thrill we now miss like a lost heartbeat. Roy Ayers leaves behind a bittersweet void—a silence filled with memories in which the magic of his music will forever resonate. He was not an easy character. I remember one evening backstage at the Fez in Bari, my hometown. The club was packed with people waiting for him to take the stage. At […]

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The Indestructible Eddie Condon

They called him The Indestructible, and that’s how we’ll remember him: with that trademark sneering smile, croaky voice, his ever-present guitar slung over his shoulder, a bottle of gin never far from reach, and Gershwin’s “Liza” floating in the background.

Remembering Martial Solal

The great pianist recently died at the ripe old age of 97, but he wasn't retired for long: when he said "enough" to live performances, he was 92, and he continued to write music until the end. We remember him with an extensive examination of his formative years

Monk at the Blackhawk

The story of a night of small masterpieces created unwillingly
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GleAm
Sicilia Jazz

Sergio Mendes: Pretty World

The recent death of the Brazilian pianist truly marks the end of an enchanted world: a true la-la land built in the perfect image and likeness of its ingenious creator

Steve Lacy: Phase One

Ninety years after the birth and twenty years after the death of the great soprano, we look at the first, perhaps the least known, phase of his career, between the ages of twenty and thirty

A Colossus at the Vanguard

It's a great time for Sonny Rollins fans: between the collection of his European concerts in 1959 and the definitive edition of Live at the Village Vanguard, a real celebration is breaking out

Dossier on J.J. Johnson – Second Part

This second part concludes our detailed analysis of the artistic career of the great master from Indianapolis on the occasion of the centenary of his birth
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Udin & Jazz
Sicilia Jazz

Dossier on J.J. Johnson – First Part

On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the birth of one of the most important musicians in the history of jazz, a superb trombonist but also a composer and arranger of the highest level, we retrace his very long career in two episodes

Mingus Mill

A recent news prompted us to investigate the intricate family history of Charles Mingus, a unique product of the most diverse ethnic groups. This is the result of our investigation, starting from a mill in North Carolina

Udin & Jazz
Sicilia Jazz

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