Category: Blog
Soul Rebels, Samara Joy to Headline Albany Jazz Festival Saturday
Albany’s annual Riverfront Jazz Festival will feature five ensembles at the Jennings Landing performance space at the Corning Preserve this Saturday, Sept. 10, 2022.
The acts performing include The Soul Rebels, Samara Joy, Black Tie Brass, Charged Particles, and the Teresa Broadwell Quartet.
Headliners The Soul Rebels have been touring internationally for some years. They’ve appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and on National Public Radio’s “Tiny Desk Concert” series. The Soul Rebels collaborated with, or opened for, jazz, rock, rhythm & blues and hip-hop acts ranging from Nas to Robert Glasper to Metallica.
“The Soul Rebels started with an idea—to expand upon the pop music they loved on the radio and the New Orleans brass tradition they grew up on,” the group’s website states. “They took that tradition and blended funk and soul with elements of hip hop, jazz and rock, all within a brass-band context.”
The Soul Rebels are the missing link between Public Enemy and Louis Armstrong,” according to the Village Voice, as quoted on the Rebels’ site.
Still in her early 20s, Samara Joy won the Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition in 2019. She grew up in The Bronx, in a musical family: Her parents, Elder Goldwire and Ruth McLendon, led a Philadelphia-based gospel group, and her father toured with gospel artist Andrae Crouch, according to showbizcorner.com.
Information on her newest releases and touring schedule are at samarajoy.com.
Active since 2013, Black Tie Brass are a jazz/funk band from New York City. “Drawing from many genres such as jazz, funk, pop, R&B and hip-hop, they create a fulfilling musical experience for performer and listener,” according to blacktiebrass.com.
Charged Particles released their first album in 1994. Ensemble members Murray Low (keyboards), Aaron Germain (acoustic and electric bass) and Jon Krosnick (drums) focus on a “funky Latin jazz repertoire, blending in elements of classical music, mixing complex orchestration with freewheeling improvisation. The band brings a similar approach to playing their own arrangements of jazz standards, each played with a new twist,” according to charged particles.com.
Based in the Albany, N.Y. region, the Teresa Broadwell Quartet’s leader is a vocalist and jazz violinist with degrees from the Crane School of Music and The College of Saint Rose in Albany, according to teresabroadwell.com.
Broadwell cites Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, Eddie Jefferson, King Pleasure, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and Betty Carter among her vocal influences; for jazz violin, the influencers include Stuff Smith, Joe Venuti, Matt Glaser and Stephan Grappelli.
With the Teresa Broadwell Band, Broadwell recently released “Just We: Songs Inspired by Nat King Cole.”
The Albany Riverfront Jazz Festival begins at noon this Saturday and usually ends around 8 p.m. with fireworks. There is no charge for admission.
In the event of rainy weather, the festival will move to the Corning Preserve Boat Launch at Water and Colonie streets.
Biden and Bernie
Between the two major current crises—the COVID-19 pandemic and the surge of protests against racism—and other pressing issues such environmental destruction, global warming, income inequality and uncertainty over health care, it’s likely a lot of us would vote for whomever the Democrats run against Trump in November.
Presumptive nominee Joe Biden, the former vice president, might be a bit too moderate for many, but compared to his predecessor, Biden will seem like a very big breath of fresh air. Almost any Democrat would.
Regardless, Biden will do well to heed those urging Democrats to move away from neo-liberalism and back to their New Deal roots.
This means embracing at least some of the “Bernie” agenda.
Mr. Vice President, won’t you join me in being “about 85 percent” Bernie?
Why “85 percent?”
It’s less about the issues—I mostly agree with Bernie on those—than about the positioning, public relations and, yes, marketing.
I’m hardly the first to say this, but Bernie Sanders isn’t really a socialist in the Marxist sense, but a social democrat. While someone with my background knows what Bernie and his allies mean when they use the term “democratic socialist,” a lot of people don’t. And that’s the problem.
Many critics and opponents of Bernie Sanders are using that to convince voters Bernie is a “communist” who wants to bring about a Soviet-style or Maoist regime in the United States. They’ll liken Bernie’s agenda to regimes in North Korea or Venezuela, though those really have little to do with his philosophy.
Think more Denmark, Finland or Norway. And more FDR than Lenin, Mao or Castro.
And that’s his marketing problem, and the main reason many older Democrats didn’t want him getting the nomination.
They want to win, and the chances of Bernie winning the national election, while better now than three months ago, would have remained…chancy.
It’s not just the “socialist” terminology: Let’s hear Bernie (and Biden) join inequality fighter Robert Reich in acknowledging that free markets and capitalism work, but only when properly regulated—and the wealthy and corporations properly taxed and deprived of their current stranglehold on government.
Agreed, it’s not just Sen. Sanders who has PR problems. Along with the senior moments, gaffes and sex allegations, Biden has said or done a number of things progressives and liberals wouldn’t like. Just ask Kamala Harris and some of the other Democrats who previously ran against Biden.
And, as far as anyone can tell, Biden is more a neoliberal than anything else, and it’s that philosophy that has led the Democrats too far astray from their New Deal roots. And it’s a New Deal—call it “Green” or whatever else—that is needed now.
Let’s acknowledge that those asking for more details on what the Green New Deal will include before they can support it have a point. However, this is an unprecedented and necessary time to make change.
Coronavirus and pandemics in general—this could be an ongoing problem for decades to come—will demand increased research and international cooperation and aggressive action. So will the other issues: Global warming; environmental destruction; racial justice; conflict resolution among and inside many nations; income inequality; wider availability of quality health care; and employment based on an economy retooled to reflect new realities.
The truths of these times: There is great tragedy, anger, uncertainty and risk. And also great opportunity.
