Sunday, June 21, 2026
CD Review: Matt Dwonszyk - Live at the Side Door
Friday, June 19, 2026
Stein, Smith, Shead, Frisell, A Bangle and a Cowsill - What a Week That Was
Clearing the deck of a few shows from a few weeks past, because they are still worth hearing about.
On Sunday, May 31, Jason Stein, Damon Smith & Adam Shead rolled into Cleveland to play two sets at Waterloo Arts. The fine folks with New Ghosts, who have presented shows around town at places like the Bop Stop, organized the show. The space has a bit of a DIY feel, with couches interspersed with a bar (which was closed that night) and stools, which made it a comfortable spot for the trio.
Adam Shead - who looked like Sebadoh/Dinosaur Jr. member Lou Barlow, when trying to get a good photo - had one of the most unique trap sets this side of Han Bennink. Along with "standard" snare drum and kick, he had trio of cowbells, a few mini-tymps (similar to roto-toms) and two sets of mini-cymbals, mounted three on a stand. While Shead can definitely play across his kit rapidly (which reminded my ears of Jim Black's work in Bloodcount), some of the more fascinating moments came when he focused on one element of his kit, developing a sound around it. That effort recalls the way free improvising horn players don't merely wail on altissimo notes for a whole set but take their time working towards a climax.
It would have been amazing to hear the trio together with Crispell (who played select dates with them on this tour) but they presented plenty of mind-blowing moments on their own.
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Jazz From the Past Month. Were You There?
I realize the audience for free music isn't huge but it would have been nice to see a few more faces from the Messthetics show in the crowd, checking this out. What would it take? More hustling? More info from people like, coming in a timely manner?
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Catching Up on the Other Stuff or I'm Not Just on Substack These Days
For those who didn't know, I am one of three Pittsburgh writers who launched a space on Substack last month. It all started when Scott Mervis, until recently the music critic at the Post-Gazette, was not hired on by the paper's new owners. He was talking to Manny Theiner, a Pittsburgh fixture who has been putting on shows for ages and also knows his way around a descriptive phrase. (He wrote for InPgh and Pittsburgh City Paper much like me.) The two of them started hatching ideas about starting a "super blog" and my name got pulled into the conversation. I wasn't going to say no to another chance for my writing to get out into the public. The power of three is always a good thing. Being a Libra, I'll keep things balanced too.
On May 13, Sonic Pitt made its debut. If you want to check it out, here's a good place to start. Please like some of the articles and considering subscribing, There are both free and paid subscriptions. The more we have, the better chance we have of thriving.
So that has taken up quite a bit of time lately, in the best possible way, of course. There's a show coming up? Hey, I can preview it, for the first time in a while! With Scott's pull, I might even get some new eyes looking at my articles too, hopefully checking out music.
While all that has been happening, though, I have been thinking that I want to keep this blog alive as well. Granted the traffic isn't quite as heavy - though the number of readers for my last few posts is kind of high, so thank you all for that - but I still feel like this is a valuable outlet, writing about new albums that deserve recognition, reporting on live shows and the occasional post about some record I picked up recently and why you should care about it.
That being said, it's time to do some catching up. For that, I'll begin several weeks back, before even Sonic Pit was a reality.
On the last weekend in April, the NFL Draft took place in Pittsburgh. I'm not a fan of such hoopla so it was just another weekend for me, albeit one where the city was expecting huge throngs of people to descend on our city. Apparently they did, but local businesses didn't see the spike they were anticipating.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
CD/LP Review: Harriet Tubman & Georgia Anne Muldrow - Electrical Field of Love
Friday, April 17, 2026
What Are You Doing for Record Store Day?

Resonance is also releasing another Jazz Showcase performance with Stardust and Starlight, a 1979 Mal Waldron set that features Sonny Stitt as a guest on two tracks. (There's a combination that should be heard.) Anyone who can't get enough of Bill Evans performances should be stoked to find At the BBC, which features the pianist in a trio with bassist Chuck Israels and drummer Larry Bunker. The late pianist Michel Petrucciani is also the subject of an Elemental release with Kuumbwa, a two-disc set from the 1987 festival of that name, backed by Dave Holland (bass) and Eliot Zigmund (drums).
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Rempis, Corsano & Adasiewicz Hit The Bop Stop
The evening was the group's seventh show during a nine-day tour and they immediately locked in with one another, knowing how to lift the bandstand. Rempis began the set on tenor, blowing with a fury and heavy vibrato that almost overpowered the vibes. But Adasiewicz is still a heavy hitter and he put his whole body into his playing throughout the night. "God help those mallets," was scrawled in my notes from the first part of the set.
Corsano never let his momentum waver whether he was flying over his trap kit or incorporating accessories into his playing. When the dynamics dipped down during the first set, he dexterously placed some bowls on his drum heads to get some sustained sound. He also used a paper hand fan, in a effort to bend the sound of the heads a bit, as he later explained to me.
People who look down on free music but think it lacks nuances, but there was plenty of that in the second half of the night.
Rempis switched back to tenor saxophone and his blowing evoked the throaty tone of pre-bop players, creating something rich and full-bodied. Things built to a climax when Adasiewicz placed a plastic stick across the sharps/flats on his instrument and repeatedly created a sustained cluster of notes with his left hang, while his right built some concluding statements. When that device fell between the metal bars of the vibes, he pounded them with his fists to keep the sound flowing.
Musicians who are skilled at free, open playing always astounds me with the way they know when they've reached a conclusion and know that it's time to stop. Watching this can be compared to a rollercoaster ride coming to a stop, creating another rush. Rempis, Corsano and Adasiewicz did something like that last week. As much as I wasn't looking forward to the two-plus hour drive back home, I had the energy for it after their set.




















