135 offenders who were locked up in 2020
The majority of cases were heard at Nottingham Crown Court
10:44, 1 JAN 2021
Some of the offenders locked up in 2020
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Bernard Benant, Jonathan Chimene/WBGO, David Kaufman, Tom Pich
Originally published on January 21, 2021 2:37 pm
If you ve been a jazz fan for any length of time, you know farewells are an essential part of the deal. But this was a harder year than most, as the ravages of a pandemic compounded and quickened the scope of our losses, especially during a heartbreaking stretch last spring.
All told, more than 40 notable figures from the realm of jazz and improvised music died in 2020. What they took with them was an incalculable reserve of wisdom and experience. What they left behind is a monumental body of work, spanning all conceivable corners of sound and style. The state of the art would be different today without their examples.
WTJU Dec 22nd, 2020 | By Russell Perry
Keith Jarrett
Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea emerged from the 60s among the best pianists of their generation. Recording steadily over the next five decades, they are iconic masters in many musical formats, particularly notable for their small ensemble work. As time has gone on, Jarrett has focussed on solo recordings and recordings in a trio with Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette, mostly live. While Corea records in a rich variety of settings, his best work is arguably in the intimate settings of duos and trios. Recent projects from piano titans Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea in this hour of Jazz at 100 Today!
Originally published on December 18, 2020 12:10 pm
One unique aspect of jazz is that it never stops honoring the musicians who ve shaped its sound. In 2020, more than 40 of those voices were silenced, and
Jazz Night In America felt the need to acknowledge their loss with an original artistic gesture.
We chose an artist deeply attuned to the music s legacy Grammy-winning trumpeter Keyon Harrold and a symbolic meeting place the brownstone stoop. More precisely, our small video team met Harrold on a frigid December evening at Socrates Sculpture Garden in Queens, where Fontaine Capel s Proposals for a Monument evokes the communal yet often contemplative space that a stoop can be (and the specter of an iconic image, colloquially known as
Bernard Benant, Jonathan Chimene/WBGO, David Kaufman, Tom Pich
Originally published on January 21, 2021 3:37 pm
If you ve been a jazz fan for any length of time, you know farewells are an essential part of the deal. But this was a harder year than most, as the ravages of a pandemic compounded and quickened the scope of our losses, especially during a heartbreaking stretch last spring.
All told, more than 40 notable figures from the realm of jazz and improvised music died in 2020. What they took with them was an incalculable reserve of wisdom and experience. What they left behind is a monumental body of work, spanning all conceivable corners of sound and style. The state of the art would be different today without their examples.