23 February 2026

Discovery 6

A Beatles themed evening replaced our second celtic stage show.  First up a trivia session.  Twenty questions: guess the song from a few introductory bars, easy enough, but give the date of release.  Twenty questions.  We scored 28/40.  We knew all songs other than one particularly obscure recording that Paul had suggested and was only recorded in early workshopping and appears on none of the released albums.  The name was Junk.  It's on Spotify.  As for dates, they were approximate, mostly just a year or so off, but many not correct.  So be it.  We had the period basically right (1963-1970).  Then a set of Beatles tunes that had many seniors singing along, irresistibly.  Rhythm Jive are the ship's main covers band from the Philippines.  Three years on the ship with a recently new bassist.  Capable, varied, hugely repertoire of all styles.  Ivan told me of his pedal board and midi on his guitar so he can play a third keys line when required.  Always entertaining and capable of running one cover into another for 45 mins in various conceivable styles and carrying it off with panache.  Another band intrigued, just a duo with a similar name, Jiva Duo.  Relatively sedate with guitar and vocals, but harmony effects and guitar and midi accompaniment.  Lovely bar fare.  And something strange to end with: silent disco.  Dancers on the floor with their selected playlists through headphones dancing ot or with whoever.  I'm told its a thing off the ship, too.  How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world, That has such people in't. (Tempest, Act 5, Sc 1).

Rhythm Jive comprised Lizette Canaan (vocals), James Gonzales (guitar, vocals), Ivan Cabreros (guitar), Gomer Robles (bass), Jerica Ladia (keys) and Jon Roland Sandoval (drums).  Jiva Duo comprised Jimmie Yanvar (guitar) and Sarah Natasha Zico (vocals).  They performed on Discovery Princess.

22 February 2026

Discovery 5

A vocalist was taken ill, so we had two goes at a magician, Adam Murby, then later juggler, two shows of Aussie-kinked Celtic music and another show.  AM was entertaining and interesting.  I managed to identify just how one trick was achieved, but others left me dumbfounded, but then its all different to me.  I guess it's not given to reveal my solution here!  Then more Celtic music, from Celtic Gra meaning Celtic love.  This was a trio with the Resident band in support.  Irish singer with bare feet and lifted dress and Irish movements with husband pianist and offsider 22-yo fiddle player.  Lively and inviting as is Celtic music and an interesting twist of the central married team being Irish and Sydney-sourced Australian.  Some decent stories there.  As ever, the resident band without its pianist filled out the musical side and the infectious rhythms of Ireland and Scotland pleased immensely.  They were to reappear with a more modern repertoire but we were otherwise engaged.  More on that later.  And the second of the shows.  As always, a blast.  This was Spotlight Bar, a day in the life of various people and relationships in a out-West US (?) bar.  Delirious, exciting, involving and fabulous performances all round.

Celtic Gra compised Rebecca Russell (vocals), Kurt Russell (piano) and Caleb Anderson (fiddle) with support from the Resident band.  Spotlight Bar told the story of a day in the life in a US bar as a musical show comprising dancers (6 female, 5 male), singers (2 female, 2 male) and the resident band.  Adam Murby (magician) presented two shows.  

20 February 2026

Discovery 4

I love the shows!  As I said, not Shakespeare but classy, skilled, heaps of work in development.  I can feel the role of the musos, primarily the bassist.  The Resident band comprises a rhythm section and horns, all capable readers.  They back the shows and various visiting artists with their charts, historically stained and edited, but now probably neat and digital.  They also perform occasionally as the local jazz band.  They back the big shows, with dancers, singers, costumes, lights, the whole caboodle.  The first nights were comedian Wayne Deakin and singer county-cum-pop singer Chantelle Delaney.  WD offered a risque gig later in the cruise at another venue, but I missed that.  CD was strongly voiced and chatty with the backing band, introducing her boys left at home, her role as backing for Slim Dusty as a 12-yo (?), her studio contact with Adele and how Olivia Newton-John liked best her take on Jeff Buckley Hallelujah.  All interesting background to a decent belter-strong voice and pleasant presence.  Then day 3 and the first real show.  This was Viva la Musica, mostly latin and Flamenco tunes with filmic arrangements and massive lights and costumes and dance numbers.  Forty-five minutes of outgoing excitement.  Love this stuff.  I can easily conceive of the work of the musos with their charts, but the dancers (6 female, 5 male) and solo singers (2 male, 2 female) and classy PA audio and complex lighting and fast-change costumes, presumably held together with velcro, were not so obvious.  I ran into one of the dancers a day or so later and she confirmed there's no written script for the dancing: they'd learnt it in 10 days.  Brilliant stuff and the best of on-board life in my estimation, at least amongst the entertainment.

Wayne Deakin (comedian) performed solo and Chantelle Delaney (vocals) performed with the Resident band.  The first big show was Viva la Musica featuring the Resident band with 4 singers and 9 dancers.  All in the Princess Theater (sic) on Discovery Princess.

19 February 2026

Discovery 3

This can be just a solemn mark of respect.  We were in Tauranga today.  The ship was tied up in port  just a kilometre from the very pretty Mount Maunganui.  We took a minor bus tour from the entrance to the port and the tour was slightly different from usual.  The reason was just ~4 weeks before (22 Feb) a landslide had enveloped a camping area below the mountain and had killed 8 people.  As we were informed at the end of the tour.  Tremors are common in NZ and I somewhat remember a news report, but it was unexpected regardless.  No pic, but you can chase it up on the Net.

18 February 2026

Discovery 2

First up is a few bands, not in particular order.  The main musos are the resident band, but more on them later.  They are the jazz trained readers.  But there are numerous others around  Without any real order, a favourite of any is Pint of Plain, an Irish folk duo who play in O'Malley's pub.  So Guinness on tap and Slainte whiskey liberally presented.  PofP is Fionn Morrison, vocals, guitar and immense Irish wit, and Meabh Kennedy, fiddle, occasional vocals.  These were regularly performing, always overflowing attendances in a small venue, ready to take requests or perhaps take a title to perform later.  His offer to me was Celtic jazz.  How important is presence for a band!  Fionn had a digital stomp box which had me somewhat uncomfortable although it always worked perfectly well for him.  He was always ion the beat, 1-2-3-4 or 1-3 and I would feel the offbeat, 2-4.  Strange but so obvious in this context.  Both work, of course, but it was an indicator of our different trainings.  Wonderfully professional and entertaining.   These guys have it, but then the Irish just do.  More sedate but classy playing from the Russians, always superbly classically trained.  Diamond Strings was a violin duo with recorded accompaniment playing all manner of popular classics and light pop tunes.  Leysan Gimranova and Alexander Yakubov.

Pint of Plain comprised Fionn Morrison (vocals, guitar, stomp) and Meabh Kennedy (fiddle, vocals).  Diamond Strings comprised Leysan Gimranova and Alexander Yakubov (violins).

17 February 2026

Discovery 1

Another cruise with my Mum.  A cruise is an appropriate form of travel for us: meeting people is the best, but also comfy living, some trivial trivia quizzes to expose your lack of knowledges, plenty of food and coffees and performers into the night and some glitzy entertainment to impress.  Impress me it does, even if it's on the variety end of entertainment.  This is not Shakespeare but it is impressive and must be masses of work to develop.  We are here for a few weeks travelling the length of NZ.  Plenty of USA'ers (they're not the only Americans) and Canadians, perhaps travelling to the Global South in their winter.  Enough Australians and Brits and Chinese and spatterings of others.  Plenty of names to stress to remember and eternal menus to peruse and cocktails to explore.  Quintessential middle class welfare, not bad as it is if limited.  I've managed to advise a Canadian group of COMA as a worthy musical outing in Adelaide, which amused me, and he was open ears.  Helping things is Internet which now comes free with drinks/drunks packages so plenty of mobiles around and plenty of lost souls exploring the world outside the bar.  Just a few smokers in their allowed spaces which you pass when exercising and exercising you must.  This is not a health retreat!  The dress is increasingly meagre.  Few these days excel for the formal nights: some guys with bow ties; women always well dressed.  I like to wear a suit occasionally as an opportunity to return to this dress, but even that's getting rarer despite the formal nights.  There seems to be a battle for the best t-shirt amongst us older guys.  I display The Pots Indulgences and SoundOut and Genesis Owasu, all Canberra, but Stones, Nirvana and the like are common along with witty quotes.  I enjoyed one about shirking home duties, possibly a gift from the wife.  I also deserve that one.  Very casual these days.

12 February 2026

Two views around two wars

This was the first Wednesday Lunchtime concert for the year at Wesley, a series I record for the performers.  The performers were a duo of piano and clarinet, Kimberley Steele and Milan Kolundzija, both locals, but playing music themed for the relationship and connection of French and Hungarian composers.  Kimberley noted how distant they are, or at least were in times of slower transport, about 1,500km, distant in European terms.  But the pieces they played displayed the relationships and influences.  Lili Boulanger, Kodaly, Debussy, Weiner and Poulenc.  I'm not sure I could list the influences, but there were similar forms, tiny pieces from Kodaly and Debussy, some as etudes or the like, a Hungarian dance, a nocturne from Lili Boulanger and a longer sonata from Poulenc.  Whatever, the music was well played, clearly interpreted, relaxed in presentation and a worthy start to the year with its clear theme.

Kimberly Steele (piano) and Milan Kolundzija (clarinet) performed French and Hungarian music composed before and after the World Wars.

08 February 2026

Alt. at Smiths

I say Alt. because I was attending something somewhat new.  One night with a rap session earlier on then Afrobeat.  The rap wasn't the first I've attended, but one of few.  The rapping started a bit late after a DJ session with this style of music.  I liked that although perhaps less the actual rapping.  I can find it angry, although I chatted with a few practitioners and they were perfectly friendly.  But the lyrics and presence can be thus and I was due downstairs for the Afrobeat anyway.  This was music from a genuine Ghanaian leader, Afromoses Baidu, with his band.  The band was called Afro Moses with the lineup of Afromoses and two female voices, keys, bass and drums.  They had played the night before on a much larger stage for the Multicultural Festival and that would have been exciting.  Smiths was quieter, especially this night with the Festival still on and some threat of rain but the music was infectious, led closely by Afromoses himself.  He sang and played kalimba and ukelele or small guitar and often used a digital harmoniser for a different vocal tone.  Two female singers, Emma and Lulu, were offside for some lovely harmonies and all the rest of the band had mics for their occasional vocal parts.  I missed most names other than Brett Adrien on bass.  The feels were relaxed with reggae and Afro grooves and indulgent harmonies.  You can only love those voices and harmonies.  The grooves are well known but quite different at times.  I think I know reggae and Afrobeat but seeing them in real life and hearing those drum and bass lines was instructive. A very different feel, bar breakups, bass fingering and the like.  This is not the blues feel that merges into jazz.  So both welcoming and nourishing and surprisingly quite different in lyrical themes for example when Afromoses highlighted that Ghanaian women tend not to dance while Aussie men are the dance shirkers.  Difference is a wonderful thing.  Just a lovely, indulgent outing.

Afro Moses performed reggae and Afrobeat at Smiths, led by Afromoses Baidu (vocals, kalimba, ukelele or small guitar) with Emma and Lulu (vocals), Brett Adrien (bass, vocals), keys and drums (instrument, vocals).

05 February 2026

Victor made the Germo

Yes Victor Wooten made the next post and also his Wooten brothers and they played at, can you believe it, the Harmonie German Club in the Zeppelin Room with its rows of benches of German beer hall tradition and drinks and dinners available.  It was a huge pleasure to see a band of this loftiness in this casualness.  But first up was the support act, Jaron Jay, guitarist singer from Melbourne, with keys/tenor sax, bass and drums offsiders and a capable voice and decent guitar solos and good offsiders and a Prince feel.  That inviting rock of Prince was my impression, but he also did a track from Steely Dan Aja (was it Aja?), all odd counts and harmonies and musical fascination.  So a very worthy support who is touring with the Wootens.  Then, of course, the big names.  Four brothers, ten Grammies and 26 nominations, with a fascination for all musics and an infectious joy to engage us all and hugely worthy of respect.  We were a sedate audience, but they eventually got even us waving and whooping.  Regi played guitar and started several of the brothers on the musical path. Quite stunning and still playful: tapping, fingers, two fret wraps moved up and down the neck, hand slaps and more.  All manner of unconventional techniques and more and inventive and always playful. Perhaps a dance with Victor or swapping solos with keys brother Joseph.  Joseph of the busy, patterned solos and plenty of vocals and a solo section as the Human Jukebox.  Mosty behind the stack of keys, but he came out to rally the crowd towards the end and finally playing with odd timings on call, 11,10,9,8...coming to a final scalar passage on 1, or alternatively hits on calls, 1 [hit] on 2, 2 on 1, 2 3/4 !!? and the like.  They had this stuff down.  And a nice modern jazz tune and James Brown funk and a Coltrane dedication but mostly R&B-soul, I guess.  Roy was behind drums until he came out front to play a Zendrum drum controller and sing.  They all sang, powerful as that is, for harmonies and infectious involvement.  Not least but the family youngster, Victor on bass, all slaps and taps and occasional finger solos and vocals and perhaps the most obvious focus of the band, jumpy and dancy and playful as he was.  By the end it was all manic and ecstatic and laughter and involvement.  The whole place was abuzz to end and then they hung out, for pics, signatures, merch, chats.  Basically, a band with us rather than formally staged.  So the night was wonderful and huge fun and the music throughout was great to exceptional and you could only leave with a grin.  Fabulous.  Watch a live video on YT to get a feel.

The Wooten Brothers performed at Harmonie German Club, Narrabundah.  The brothers are Regi (guitar, vocals), Roy (drums, Zendrum, vocals), Joseph (keys, vocals) and Victor (bass, vocals) Wooten.  Jaron Jay and band provided support.

04 February 2026

Expectancies


I missed Jaco playing our local jazz cub after a Weather Report gig in Adelaide and, I think it was Wayne Shorter doing the same in Sydney.  Anyway it was a long shot that Victor Wooten would drop in to the jam session at Smiths but I visited at the last minute with unlikely anticipation.  It was the first gig of his tour so maybe he was in town, wondering about the locals.  He didn't turn up but I got a play.  Wayne and Gavin and Mitch were there but I missed playing with any of them but Peter was hosting and he had a fascinating e-bass I could borrow.  Ibanez (EHB1506MS?) fanned frets, 6-string, fabulous tone and deliriously confusing to play.  I haven't played 6-string for yonks, very little recent e-bass, and never fanned frets, but when you got it right, the tone was to die for through a Fender amp with tone set flat.  Thanks, Peter, local doyen of intriguing instruments.  And I heard more jazz news but more on that later.  As for Victor Wooten, he didn't make this post but he will make no. 3,101.

  • This is CJBlog post no. 3,100
  • 01 February 2026

    Gospels

    I was in New Orleans and Houston recently and the music I heard in notional jazz clubs was mainly R&B.  Perhaps I had a limited overview but I perused perhaps 20 bands in Bourbon and Frenchmen Streets and I got to 3 gigs at two jazz venues in Houston.  Plenty of groove that I loved but limited ragtime or bop or Miles.  Luke Sweeting came back to town last night with a fabulously practised, slick and groove-heavy band called Majesty rising: 12 piece soul gospel with slick horns and two keys and rhythm section and a convincing female singer, Eliza Kate, up front and a harmony section of 3 male voices (somewhat unexpected).  The grooves were infectious, the skills clear, the solos worthy, the horns nicely arranged, some funk, even a touch of rap.  All great and, as I said, infectious and musical.  I caught some lyrics  "Walking with you, walking with me / I am alive in Him", "You're going to show me / You're not done with me yet",  "Praise the Lord (rpt)".   The music was wonderful even if the theme was not my thing.  So be it. A great listen nonetheless.

    Majesty rising performed at Smiths.

    28 January 2026

    Outings

    A morning tea and musical chat led to some playing suggestions and later the jam at Smiths.  It's a relaxed session.  I got to play a few tunes, Nature boy and So what, with its defining bass line, and somewhat unexpectedly, what, Dolphin dance in Db.  Then some time with various other sitins and singers.  Interestingly a pair of female buskers with some delicious if unconventional harmonies.  And several saxes, Richard on his tenor and two female altoists, including a fluent Kristen McGee who told me she was returning to playing.  So a relaxed outing at Smiths and once again, thankfully, we avoided crashing the life drawing session.

    25 January 2026

    Good Knight

     

    Not sure how many music students are leaving Canberra given changes in the ANUSOM but here were two.  Tragic, that: Canberra will suffer mightily.  I got to one band having its last fling at Smiths the other night.  Evan and Oliver, bass and drums, setting off, to Melbourne, leaving pianist Mic behind.  MacGregor Hall, upstairs at Smiths, was teaming with listeners.  Mic, Evan and Oliver were playing a storm of intriguing, complex, often obtuse, sometimes playful, improvs.  They were also promoting their album to be released the next day entitled Blues. I listen to that and it's perhaps even more abstruse, a glorious loose improv adding Miro and John and guitarist Oscar to the mix for a very worthy listen.  I was intrigued by Evan's lovely, soft, effective tone, his flexibility and improv across the neck and into the highest reaches.  Oliver soloed less but very strong and established and explosive across the kit when he did.  I later sat behind Mic enjoying his harmonic daring, his expressive lines, his wrist and hand spreads that excited and didn't feel at all uncomfortable, dissonant and daring as it must have been.  Mic apologised at one stage for playing ballads, for All of me and later I fall in love too easily,  but it was a lesson in going out of the staid, safe walk.  Loved it!  Otherwise it was mostly originals with lengthy explorations.  The album is confirmation and a pleasure.  And this gig was recorded so perhaps a final live album is coming.  Let's hope this level of daring is not lost to Canberra, but despair comes too easily these days.

    Mic Knight (piano) led his trio with Evan Teece (bass) and Oliver Stott (drums) at Smiths.

  • Mic Knight Trio - blues
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