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Aidin Vaziri July 23, 2021Updated: July 23, 2021, 2:57 pm
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band will return to the SFJazz Center. Photo: Laura Morton / Special to The Chronicle
It’s hard to imagine anyone being more excited about SFJazz announcing its first season of live programming in more than a year than the organization’s founder, Randall Kline.
“We all need it,” he said last week, calling from southern Italy where he was on a summer trip with his family. “Music is the balm of life. We couldn’t ask for a more impactful time.”
His enthusiasm doesn’t stop there. On July 22, SFJazz revealed the lineup for its 2021-2022 season, with over 300 full-capacity concerts scheduled to take place at the center’s Miner Auditorium and Joe Henderson Lab halls, as well as at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco and Paramount Theatre in Oakland, from Sept. 23 to May 29, 2022.
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Performing live on the SFJAZZ Center s Miner Auditorium stage, vocalist, guitarist Martin Luther McCoy will be premiering material from his new project in collaboration with pianist and producer Kev Choice, who joins McCoy live streamed from the SFJAZZ Center s Joe Henderson Lab.
Our first Alone Together live streaming concert of 2021 features Bay Area-based vocalist and guitarist Martin Luther McCoy, most recently seen by SFJAZZ audiences as part of the SFJAZZ Collective during their 2019 season celebrating the music of Miles Davis and Sly Stone.
Known for his work with The Roots, Cody ChesnuTT, Dave Matthews, Jill Scott, and Zion I, McCoy gained fame for his on-screen role in director Julie Taymor s Oscar-nominated 2007 film Across the Universe and his work with Dave Chappelle. He returns to the Miner stage with an evening of love songs and standards for the Valentine s Day week, and material from his new project in collaboration with pianist and producer Kev Choice, who joins Mc
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Adrian Spinelli January 14, 2021Updated: January 14, 2021, 10:55 pm
Buck Meek plays with Big Thief in Copenhagen in March. Photo: Peter Troest, PYMCA / Avalon / Universal Images Group 2020
The Chronicle’s guide to notable new music.
NEW ALBUMS
Buck Meek, “Two Saviors” (Keeled Scales)
While Adrianne Lenker is the primary creative force behind the superb Brooklyn indie band Big Thief, guitarist Buck Meek is a likewise stellar talent. Meek’s second LP arrives at a time when we could surely use the comforting salve of his splendid folk songs in an already tumultuous start to 2021.
Recorded in a Victorian house along the Mississippi River in New Orleans, Meek’s sweet vocals are tender and amiable throughout the album, and you can almost see his coy smile while listening to songs like the pedal-steel-driven “Candle” and hear the charming Southern twang in his voice on “Cannonball Pt. 2.”
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