In the course of
his prolific career as a jazz journalist, writing for the Los Angeles Times,
the Newark Star-Ledger, and Down Beat magazine, among many other publications,
Zan Stewart established himself as one of the best in the business. He won a
prestigious ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award for his notes to an Eric Dolphy boxed set,
and kept up a busy pace over a span of 35 years profiling major jazz musicians
and annotating over two hundred albums.
On the side,
however, Stewart pursued his own musical muse, playing tenor saxophone in jam
session situations and as the leader of his own groups. By 2011 he had
relocated from New Jersey to the Bay Area with the intention of becoming a
full-time jazz musician. The release on March 25 of his first CD, "The
Street Is Making Music," is the culmination of that goal, and it happens
to coincide with Stewart’s 70th birthday.
“I had done my part
as a jazz advocate, and I really didn’t want to write about other people
anymore,” explains Stewart, who is now based in Richmond, near Berkeley. “So I
decided to leave journalism, which can be so demanding. You can’t really think
about anything else while you’re doing that. I enjoyed it, but after a while I
just wanted to find out who I was as a musician.”
Featuring Stewart
with his working band of pianist Keith Saunders, bassist Adam Gay, and drummer
Ron Marabuto, the album contains uncompromising performances of three popular
standards, one tune by Bud Powell, two by Charlie Parker, and five of Stewart’s
own, including two different takes of his “Gals ’Round the ’Hood.” The
whimsical CD title comes courtesy of a young former neighbor of Stewart’s in
West Orange, New Jersey, for whom Zan’s practice sessions sounded like “the
street is making music.”
Stewart’s
impressive “Daddy’s Blue Song,” “Zansky,” and “Mobes’ Symphony”—in honor of his
Boxer, namesake of his Mobo Dog label—take their place alongside “Love
Letters,” “Polka Dots and Moonbeams,” and Charlie Parker’s “Laird Baird” on the
new disc. “I feel very grateful to be able to put tunes together that I like
and other people like as well,” the saxophonist says of his compelling originals.
“It’s a gift I didn’t really know I had until the last few years.”
Born in Los Angeles
in 1944, Alexander “Zan” Stewart studied classical clarinet between the ages of
6 and 10 with Ola Ebinger, who had once been Eric Dolphy’s teacher. Stewart
took up alto saxophone after seeing Count Basie’s orchestra in 1960 and
switched to tenor six years later while hanging out with musicians like Mike
Morris, Steve Wolfe, and Tom Harrell in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury
district.
In 1975, a year
after graduating from the University of California at Santa Barbara with a B.A.
in Film Studies, he began writing about jazz for the Santa Barbara News &
Review and moved to the L.A. Weekly four years later. His work at the Weekly
attracted the attention of veteran Los Angeles Times jazz critic Leonard
Feather, who persuaded the paper to employ his talents in 1980.
After two decades
at the Times, Stewart moved East to work as the staff jazz writer at the Newark
Star-Ledger. He continued to play his horn, participating in jam sessions and
leading his own groups in New Jersey and occasionally in New York City,
including two appearances at Smalls Jazz Club. He also studied formally with
altoist Jim Snidero and informally with trumpeter Joe Magnarelli and
saxophonist Grant Stewart. In 2010, he decided to devote his energies to music
rather than writing, and planned his move back to his native California.
The saxophonist,
jazz critic Andrew Gilbert wrote on the Berkeleyside web site, “possesses a
fat, rounded tone that owes more to Don Byas and Coleman Hawkins than latter
day tenor icons like John Coltrane and Michael Brecker.” Stewart himself cites
Sonny Rollins, Charlie Parker, Hank Mobley, Clifford Jordan, Noel Jewkes, Yusef
Lateef, Harold Land, David “Fathead” Newman, and early Coltrane as primary
influences.
With "The
Street Is Making Music," Zan Stewart offers a document of his improbable
and inspiring musical journey to date. “It is indeed gratifying to have finally
fulfilled a longtime dream by recording this album, and revealing who I am as a
musician,” he says. “And I am very excited to discover where this action leads
and what comes next.”
No comments:
Post a Comment