Kevin Whitehead

Kevin Whitehead is the jazz critic on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross.

Widely written on American and improvised musics, Whitehead's articles have appeared in publications such as the Chicago Sun-Times, Village Voice, and Down Beat. He is the author of Why Jazz: A Concise Guide (2010) and New Dutch Swing (1998), and the jazz columnist for eMusic.com. His essays have appeared in numerous anthologies including Da Capo Best Music Writing 2006, Jazz: The First Century and The Cartoon Music Book.

Whitehead taught at the University of Kansas and Goucher College. He lives outside of Austin, Texas.

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Music Reviews
8:57 am
Wed December 14, 2011

'Three Views' Of Trumpeter Dave Douglas

Credit Zoran Orlic
Dave Douglas' Three Views box set collects three very different quintet albums, featuring So Percussion, his Brass Esctasy band and a group featuring Ravi Coltrane and Vijay Iyer.

Originally published on Fri August 3, 2012 1:18 pm

There's a nice contrast among the three quintets heard on Dave Douglas' Three Views, sketching out some of his interests. There's no overlapping repertoire or personnel. The Orange Afternoons session features the elastic rhythm trio of pianist Vijay Iyer, Linda Oh on bass and drummer Marcus Gilmore.

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Music Reviews
10:09 am
Tue December 6, 2011

Thelonious Monk And More: 'Jazz Icons' In Kinescopes

Credit Erich Auerbach / Getty Images
On the sixth Jazz Icons DVD series, Thelonious Monk plays a rare solo piano gig in 1969.

Originally published on Fri August 3, 2012 1:18 pm

Jazz has long been a staple of European television programming. American musicians on tour frequently turn up on the tube, caught live or in a studio. That's partly because such shows are relatively cheap to produce, and because jazz makes for good cultural programming.

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Music Reviews
9:51 am
Thu November 17, 2011

Miles Davis' Great, Often Bizarre 1967 Quintet

Credit New York Daily News Archive / Getty Images
Miles Davis performs at the 1967 Newport Jazz Festival.

Most of the material from Live in Europe 1967 has surfaced before — the set is subtitled The Bootleg Series, Vol. 1 — but the Belgian concert that performance comes from makes its debut here. This Miles Davis quintet was consistently amazing, not least on its last big tour, when Davis' trumpet chops were in good shape.

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Music Reviews
9:02 am
Mon November 14, 2011

Two South-American Jazz Fusions (No, Not That Kind)

Jazz has always drawn on the syncopated rhythms of Cuban music, and occasionally draws on other new world strains, like Brazilian bossa nova in the 1960s. But that interaction between North and South is ongoing.

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Music Reviews
10:36 am
Fri November 4, 2011

Julius Hemphill's 'Dogon A.D.' Still A Revelation 40 Years On

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Julius Hemphill's Dogon A.D.

Julius Hemphill's "Dogon A.D." — the 15-minute piece, and the album that's named for it — was one of the startling jazz recordings of the 1970s, a rethinking of possibilities open to the avant-garde. In the 1960s, free jazz was mostly loud and bashing, until some Chicagoans began playing a more open, quieter improvised music. That inspired St. Louis players like Hemphill, who also had ties to heartland rhythm-and-blues scenes. Hemphill's genius was to combine the Chicagoans' dramatically spare sound with a heavy backbeat. His new urban music smacked of old country blues.

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