December 30, 2004
To: Listings/Critics/Features From: JAZZ PROMO SERVICES Press Contact: JIM EIGO, [email protected]
Cornelia Street Cafe 29 Cornelia Street Greenwich Village, NY 10014
Tel: 212-989-9319 Fax: 212-243-4207 Web: corneliastreetcafe.com
a culinary as well as a cultural landmark" Mayoral Proclamation, City of New York1987
Fri Jan 7th
RECORD RELEASE PARTY FOR ZOHO RECORDS JIM SEELEY/ARTURO O'FARRIL QUINTET (Jm Seeley, trumpet & flugelhorn; Arturo O'Farril, piano; Jed Levy, tenor saxophone; Andy Gonzalez, bass; Phoenix Rivera, drums & percussion) Sets at 9:00PM & 10:30PM; $10cover , $6 minimum.
Fields of wheat, wheat and more wheat, sometimes corn and, periodically, cows. This is what the average New Yorker thinks Kansas is and has, in total. How quaint, how provincial - the New Yorker that is. For lo and behold, the hinterlands often yield a different hometown product, one that is by all accounts a rarer commodity, and certainly, one that will produce a more satisfying, long-term nourishment for your soul. Jim Seeley is one such product. He is a 'jazz' musician with both skill and soul. That's a rare breed these days. Increasingly, we are subjected to young artists who have great facility on their instruments, as if a premium on virtuosity is a prerequisite in order for the music business to reward you with their meager attention. By those standards, Thelonius Monk would have trouble getting a record deal today
To: Listings/Critics/Features From: JAZZ PROMO SERVICES Press Contact: JIM EIGO, [email protected]
Cornelia Street Cafe 29 Cornelia Street Greenwich Village, NY 10014
Tel: 212-989-9319 Fax: 212-243-4207 Web: corneliastreetcafe.com
a culinary as well as a cultural landmark" Mayoral Proclamation, City of New York1987
Fri Jan 7th
RECORD RELEASE PARTY FOR ZOHO RECORDS JIM SEELEY/ARTURO O'FARRIL QUINTET (Jm Seeley, trumpet & flugelhorn; Arturo O'Farril, piano; Jed Levy, tenor saxophone; Andy Gonzalez, bass; Phoenix Rivera, drums & percussion) Sets at 9:00PM & 10:30PM; $10cover , $6 minimum.
Fields of wheat, wheat and more wheat, sometimes corn and, periodically, cows. This is what the average New Yorker thinks Kansas is and has, in total. How quaint, how provincial - the New Yorker that is. For lo and behold, the hinterlands often yield a different hometown product, one that is by all accounts a rarer commodity, and certainly, one that will produce a more satisfying, long-term nourishment for your soul. Jim Seeley is one such product. He is a 'jazz' musician with both skill and soul. That's a rare breed these days. Increasingly, we are subjected to young artists who have great facility on their instruments, as if a premium on virtuosity is a prerequisite in order for the music business to reward you with their meager attention. By those standards, Thelonius Monk would have trouble getting a record deal today
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