Kind of blue?
You’ll feel miles better at the Oregon Coast Jazz Party
Katie Thiroux
With a signature mix of big-time performances and small-town vibes, the Oregon Coast Jazz Party will return to the Newport Performing Arts Center this Friday, Oct. 3, through Sunday, Oct. 5.
On the stage and behind the scenes, clarinet and saxophone player Ken Peplowski returns as music director.
“I think the secret to the success of the festival is that it continues to stay at a slightly smaller level than many other similar festivals,” he said. “And I’ve worked it out so that I have just enough musicians each year that the audience can go to all four sessions and they’ll never hear anything repeated. They are all first-time-only, one-of-a-kind, forever sets because it’s all about mixing and matching.”
With a core group of performers anchoring the festival, Peplowski plans each new year with input from audience members.
“Last year, a lot of people asked if we could have some new faces this year; so I did that,” he said. “About half the people are brand new to the festival and 25 percent haven’t been around for a long time.”
This year’s performers include Bruce Harris on trumpet, Lucy Yeghiazaryan on vocals, Scott Hamilton on sax, Mariel Bildsten on trombone, Diego Figueiredo on guitar, Mark Feinman on drums, Alejandro Arenas on bass, John O’Leary in piano, Katie Thiroux on bass, Rossano Sportiello on piano and Greg Williamson on drums.
New this year, the La Lucha Trio, composed of Mark Feinman, Alejandro Arenas and John O’Leary, will come to the festival all the way from Florida.
“I like them a lot,” Peplowski said. “They are younger guys, they’ve got a lot of great energy and not only play great versions of standards but they also play really clever reworked versions of pop songs, from artists like David Bowie and the Eagles, things like that. It's a really pretty amazing variety.”
Another newcomer to the party, heading down from Washington, will be Hot Club of Spokane, a band with a unique combination of influences ranging from jazz manouche to Western swing to American standards. Like the original quintet of the Hot Club of France, the group features a lineup made up mostly of stringed instruments that are perfect for smaller venues. The full line-up that will be at the party also includes pedal steel, saxophone and three-part harmony vocals in the full, seven-piece configuration.
“If we want the real sound we need the whole group,” said band leader Garrin Hertel. “Ken has played with us several times so he knows our sound. It was such an honor to have someone of his stature ask us to come down for the event.”
The group celebrates local musicians that helped create the sound that would later become classic jazz and swing.
“Bing Crosby grew up in Spokane and became very well-known,” Hertel said, “and we play a bit of his early music. But we also play music from lesser-known local musicians like Mildred Bailey.”
Mildred, a Coeur d'Alene woman who died in 1951, greatly contributed to the 1930s jazz and swing music scenes. She influenced the musical career of Crosby, her childhood friend, and also acted as a mentor to Billie Holiday.
“Because her career was so early and there really wasn’t much recorded of her, she was almost forgotten,” Hertel said. “But recently there has been more interest in her and her legacy. She also influenced her little brother, Al Rinker.”
Al not only went on to play with Crosby, he penned the tune “Everybody Wants to be a Cat” for the Disney movie “The Aristocats.”
“It was important for us to create a hot club group that really represents the town we are in and tell some of these stories through music,” Hertel said.
While welcoming variety, Peplowski said that most of the music at the party will fit into the classic jazz genre represented by such recognizable names as Miles Davis and John Coltrane.
“The way those songs were written they are constructed in such a way that they are accessible for all listeners,” Peplowski said. “Even for people younger than 30 or 40.”
And it wouldn’t be a party if it weren’t a gathering.
“In this internet age and after the pandemic, I think everybody has gotten used to just going to a streaming service if they want to hear a new album or see a band perform,” Peplowski said. “I feel it’s my job, and really any musician's job, to remind people of the novelty and the unique aspect of collectively listening to music, which is a whole different thing than watching a live video. We feed off the audience's energy just as much as they do ours.”
The party starts at 7 pm this Friday, Oct. 3, and runs through Sunday, Oct. 5, at the Newport Performing Arts Center, located at 777 W Olive Street. For more information and the full schedule of sessions, go to coastarts.com or call 541-265-2787.