A Friday (Sept. 16) live performance at Joe’s Pub in Manhattan was centered round 100 years of Beat Technology author/poet Jack Kerouac, however the extra mind-boggling quantity at hand that night time was 65; it had been that a few years since one of many night time’s performers, David Amram, pioneered improvisational jazz poetry at an artwork gallery simply blocks away again in 1957 alongside the On the Highway creator. And regardless that extra years have handed within the interim than Kerouac spent on earth, the 91-year-old Amram stays agile on every part from the piano to the pan flute whereas effortlessly scatting out witty bon mots on the drop of a hat.
Alongside Latin jazz maestro Bobby Sanabria, Amram was toasting the legacy of his late pal and collaborator as a part of The Village Journey, an annual pageant celebrating the wealthy cultural and musical legacy of NYC’s Greenwich Village. (In its fourth iteration, the pageant has expanded to a two-week affair, operating Sept. 10-25.) However the ambiance at Joe’s Pub on Friday night time felt much less legacy and extra dwelling. The live performance, titled Youngsters of the American Bop (And Mambo!) Evening, was a vibrant, fluid and respiratory dose of the Charlie Parker-style bebop and mambo music (assume the Titos, Puente and Rodríguez) which fueled the pounding rhythms of the Beat Technology and its scribes, from Kerouac to Allen Ginsberg.
With band chief Sanabria on drums and Amram switching between piano, bongos and the pennywhistle, the principle band (which included Amram’s son Adam on percussion) was joined by Bronx native Jennifer Jade Ledesna, whose exhilarating vocals and lithe dancing commanded the stage in the course of the mambo numbers; Newark, N.J.-raised Antoinette Montague, an astonishingly highly effective jazz and blues singer whose pipes and presence elevated the night; plus, actress Adira Amram (David’s daughter) and the irrepressible Marcos de la Fuente, who carried out Kerouac’s phrases in English and Spanish, respectively, whereas the band performed the music that Kerouac adored.
“Shakespeare mentioned ‘brevity is the soul of wit’ / As for this night, I suppose that’s it,” Amram quipped to a groove on the shut of the present. (In an odd coincidence, Turner Traditional Motion pictures started airing 1961’s Splendor within the Grass quickly after the efficiency wrapped, which encompasses a rating from Amram – so in a way, his music performed on into the night lengthy after he left the stage.)
It’s removed from over for The Village Journey, which extends one other week and contains quite a few musical happenings. There are two live performance salutes to Phil Ochs (Sept. 18 & 21), a night of music from Charlie Parker and Stefan Wolpe (Sept. 22), a celebration of Philip Glass at 85 (Sept. 23) and many extra.