“The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell” on Friday tops off a big week for jazz in Milwaukee

The Waukesha nighclub Let it Be architecturally evokes the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the Beatles first made their name. Photos courtesy GMToday.com

A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell

Let it Be, 716 Clinton Street, Waukesha

Friday, October 24. Doors open 4pm; Event is from 7:00 to 9:00PM
$15 Online | $20 at the door.

Website: Chair in the Sky

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“Oh, I wish I had a river/ I could skate away on…I made my baby cry…I’m so hard to handle/ I’m selfish and I’m sad/ Now I’ve gone and lost the best baby I ever had.”

Yes, that’s vintage Joni Mitchell, her wistfully melancholy “River” from the classic album Blue, among the songs Herbie Hancock commemorated musically on his extraordinary 2007 album River: The Joni Letters, which won both album of the year and best jazz album Grammies.

And coincidentally Hancock was the big-ticket jazz show in Milwaukee this week, and he’s earned his high prices over the decades though they’re now too steep for me, a freelance writer even with a career-long specialty in jazz. So it goes.

Still, those in my riverboat (ice-encumbered) — or on my unsteady skates – might keep pressing on to Friday night — an alternative jazz experience that’s far less expensive, being a round-the-fire gathering of gifted Milwaukee-area musicians, with an ingeniously ambitious concert concept, titled A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell.

Three of the musicians are known for singing: Father Sky (a.k.a. Anthony Deutsch) and Faith Hatch, both who also play keyboards, and guitarist Garrett Waite. A fourth vocalist, drummer Hannah Johnson, will likely add more harmony for some potentially rich vocal interpretations of jazz-oriented music of the sui generis singer-songwriter Mitchell. I’d argue Mitchell’s music has had some jazzical kinship going back to that album Blue, drenched in the blues, of sorts, as only Joni could.

And the “Chair” is a song title from Mitchell’s much later self-consciously jazzy album Mingus, so it’s fair to surmise that the herculean jazz bassist-composer Charles Mingus resides in the celestial chair, though her song only references long-lost “beautiful lovers” (including musical, no doubt) and the iconic bebop-and-beyond jazz club Birdland. She had collaborated with Mingus before he died in 1979. That song’s lyrics tell a striking idiosyncratic tale, which suits the peculiarly shapely sense of harmonic charges which was fairly unique to her music and a challenge, even for many jazz musicians.

So, this event could be revelatory or memory-refreshing for many listeners, unless you’re recently immersed in the music of Mingus and comparable Mitchell work. They’ll also draw from Hancock’s River: The Joni Letters album to bring the week to an ice-sparked, pirouetting full circle, of sorts.

I haven’t yet mentioned much of the musicianship involved, or the fact this will be held in one of the Milwaukee area’s most notable new music venues, now featuring a goodly amount of  jazz and related musics, Let it Be, in Waukesha, not exactly a suburb known for jazz. *

Yet the place’s name defies jazz esoterica: as Let it Be is, of course, among the most celebrated of late-era Beatles albums. At the same time, the space itself harkens to the fab four’s earliest days, with physical layout somewhat mimicking the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the (pre-Ringo) “moptops” played a lunchtime gig in 1961 and earned five whole pounds.

 

Here’s some of the Beatles motif in Let It Be.

The brainchild of owner Dave Meister, Let it Be’s walls include photos documenting the Beatles’ extraordinary saga, along with a huge Union Jack flag. The club’s witty physical stylings begin with a silhouetted blackbird perched atop the outdoor overhanging sign adorned with the club’s name.

Let It Be opens tonight in Waukesha | Waukesha Co. Business News | gmtoday.com

The entrance to Let It Be, at 716 Clinton Street, Wakesha. 

Among the vocalists of the “Chair” concept group, Father Sky sings with a depth as substantial as his epic beard’s length, having developed a broodingly echoey folk-jazz vocal style most influenced by Nina Simone. He most recerntly collaborated with the hip-hop-jazz band KASE on a live album. Further he’s one of the most ingenious pianists to emerge in the region in quite some time, with a quirky, sophisticated harmonic sense, sonic adventurousness and rhythmic attack that seem perfectly suited to do Mitchell’s work justice. (And hmm —  Father Sky, did the event’s nominal concept arise from this fellow?)

Call & Response: Father Sky — Lab Notes

Father Sky (Anthony Deutsch) will sing and play keyboards for “A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell.” Courtesy bloglicense.com

In other words, he’s a soulful singer, in his way, as is Hatch in hers, so the songs’ emotional weight should carry plenty of requisite power. Guitarist-singer Waite is in the straight-ahead jazz tradition but with enough fusion overtones to capture that aspect of Mitchell’s later work.

Then there’s saxophonist Aaron van Oudenallen (a.k.a. Aaron Gardner), of the group The Erotic Adventures of the Static Chicken, who can deliver fusion jazz with a deep background in post Coltrane jazz tradition. Bassist John Christensen is among the region’s most versatile and in-demand bassists, who released a fusion album last year, Soft Rock, which received a thumbs up review from Down Beat magazine.

Music + Media — Hannah Johnson

Hannah Johnson. Courtesy Philip Engsberg.

Finally, drummer Hannah Johnson (above, best known with the group Heirloom) plays across the area jazz scene much as any drummer these days because she’s also so versatile and drives a group with such rhythmic elan and swinging verve as to virtually “lift the bandstand” as Thelonious Monk memorably put it, a dictum that his group achieve something that “levitates” the music.

So, this adds up to a boatload of talent which prompted this preview as much as the concert concept.

So, I’d hardly presume to suggest “be there or be square,” but you could richly round out your recent musical experiences by finding a chair in this sky-seeking affair.

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* Thanks to my old friend, jazz pianist-composer Frank Stemper, who played at Let It Be a while ago, and alerted me to its special qualities.

 

Jazz is back full-fledged at The Estate, Milwaukee’s oldest jazz club

 

The Milwaukee jazz quartet Heirloom performed an album release concert at The Estate recently. Photo by Kevin Lynch

For a jazz club to survive since 1977, especially in Milwaukee, you’d
have to think it just might be haunted by cats, as in a place of nine lives,
where a tail may sway or wiggle, but typically swings and sometimes
even forms an S curve, akin to Miles Davis’s famous posture while
soloing.

The Estate (a.k.a The Jazz Estate) has never been blessed with Miles
in person. But jazz, America’s indigenous art form, is now a long, strong
international language spoken by many practitioners, including such
famous Estate performers as Joe Henderson, Tom Harrell, The Bad
Plus, Harry Connick Jr., Cedar Walton, Eddie Gomez and Little Jimmy
Scott, and Milwaukee-bred stars like Brian Lynch, Lynne Arriale, and
David Hazeltine, among others.

Cat ‘tails are a serious theme here, as current owner John Dye has
transformed the joint into one the city’s most sophisticated cocktail
hangouts, befitting hip culture, jazz or no jazz.
So the music has faded into the club’s ether several times over the
years. But give this city some props for helping to revive venue’s music.
There are reasons why local jazz singer Jerry Grillo has made
Milwaukee his own in a celebrated recorded anthem titled “My
Hometown, Milwaukee” just as he’s made The Estate his artistic and
cocktailed home away from home. The song won a 2023 WAMI Award
for “Most Unique Song” and a mayoral proclamation for “Milwaukee
Day” in May of 2022. The mayor helped cement the venue’s reputation
in Milwaukee lore, at least obliquely, like the proverbial cat standing slyly
in the bandstand shadows. Grillo’s song is colorfully celebratory and
self-deprecating, again, pure Milwaukee.

Jazz singer Jerry Grillo adds drama to one of his many performances over the years at his “home” club, The Estate. The singer will perform a Christmas show at The Estate on December 5. Photo courtesy jerrygrillo.com

In other words, this town has a still-underapprecated modern legacy of
jazz performance and radio. Think of the indomitable and peripatetic dejay Ron Cuzner, WHAD’s Michael Hanson, or WMSE’s Jim
Glynn and Dr. Sushi, or Howard Austin and WYMS programming in the
1980s and ’90s. They all helped sustain jazz consciousness and
lifebood for the sake of live events, which Cuzner frequently emceed
during his many years as the city’s pied piper of airwaves jazz. The
community of jazz that has sustained the local culture over those years
has included, along with The Estate, The Wisconsin Conservatory of
Music, The Milwaukee Jazz Gallery and its offspring, the JGCA, The
Pfister Hotel’s Blu nightclub and Mason Street Grill, Caroline’s Jazz Club, Bar Centro, Transfer Pizzeria Cafe and The Milwaukee Jazz Institute, an exemplary recent education and concertizing organization.

This is all to put one uber-cozy and eccentrically-configured East Side
club in its rightful historical context. The Estate endured nearly
devastating losses during COVID. A small miracle of persistence?
The intimacy and modest size has seemingly put it beyond the
perceived employment of many regional jazz artists who might have
ostensibly outgrown such neighborhood venues, such as renowed
cutting-edge Chicago saxophonist Ken Vandermark, as Dave Cornils
expained recently in an east side coffeeshop. “He told me a lot of
venues don’t invite us,” Cornil relates.

Who’s Dave Cornils? A new cat in town? He’s a 40-ish gatekeeper of
the music, the latest Estate manager and music booker. He’s actually
been a Dye right-hand man, a barkeeper par excellence who had to
memorize the five-to-six hundred drink recipes Dye requires for
Byrant’s, his showcase cocktail lounge. There’s no menu there, so
Cornils had to ask a customer what she likes, read her response and
whirl up a wizard’s brew. Doubtless his improbable acumen at this
weighty task helped Dye decide Cornils had the chops to book good
jazz and related music.

Those duties might actually be easier than all the esoteric mixology, with
some artist website assistance. “It’s been fun, a challenge for a nerdy,
encyclopedic brain,” he says with measured self-regard. How did he get
into jazz? “My parents were not a jazz family. So this was an offshoot of
rebellion. Whatever they didn’t like must be cool. I learned from records
and listening to WMSE, which was like going down a rabbit’s hole. Jazz
there is a bottomless pit, but it also keeps you humble.” Jazz guitarist
Andrew Trim enhanced Cornil’s education when he became a fellow
bartender.

The manager’s formal education and professional background is in
graphic design. “I’ve built up the club’s calender with a rotation of local
performers, a young crop of comers with drive,” he says. Those include
the sparkling quartet Heirloom, which just played the Estate for a
release event for their excellent debut album Familiar Beginnings.

Others include The Erotic Adventures of the Static Chicken and vocalist-
pianist Faith Hatch. Maybe the essence of the place’s straight-ahead

jazz legacy is exemplified currently by virtuoso Milwaukee trumpeter
Eric Jacobson, who performed “Joyspring”: The Music of Clifford Brown”
in early October, inflaming the the historic post-bop fire for the present.

Among compelling out-of-towners on deck include Chicagoans guitarist
and Blue Note recording artist Fareed Haque who returns October 18,

and cornetist Josh Berman on October 10, then acclaimed East Coast saxophonist-
composer Caroline Davis on November 7.

“Berman is aways interesting including the way he moves his body to his music. You can be deaf and know what he’s playing,” Cornils quips.

A stylistic wild card will be Victor DeLorenzo and Friends, on October 25. Milwaukeean DeLorenzo is best known as the original drummer for the renowned jazz-influenced folk-punk band The Violent Femmes.

Even local artists are getting their financial due. A new policy has each
set being a separate show and cover charge. “It’s the only way to to
make enough money for the musicians, given that the place seats 60
maximum.”

The Estate stage and some of its distinctive seating layout.

About a dozen choice seats are ultra-intimate with the stage
— a couple feet away. The majority of audience seating extends in two long wings on each side of the stage, one including the bar. Right behind the close-up seats is a narrow walkway and wall shelf for drinks of standing listeners, and then the
restrooms. So, improbable as it seems, a seat on one of these two
enclosed thrones can provide some of the best music acoustics you’ll
find in town.

If such musical and mixological magic can happen at the Estate, may it
live on forever.

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The Estate website, including detailed information on all upcoming music performances, is here:  https://www.estatemke.com/

This article was originally published in The Shepherd Expresshttps://shepherdexpress.com/music/local-music/jazz-is-back-at-the-estate/