Doug Carn Jazz Tour

Jazz St Augustine, FL United States

About Doug Carn Jazz Tour

About Jazz, the Great late Rev. Dr Martin Luther King Jr declared, that Jazz was the ability to take the “hardest realities of life and put them into music, only to come out with something n ...

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Members

  • DOUG CARN - Organist, Pianist, Lyricist, Composer, Arranger
  • DUANE EUBANKS - TRUMPET
  • STACEY DILLARD - SAXOPHONE
  • DISHAN HARPER - BASS
  • BERNARD LINNETTE - DRUM
  • DEREK WHITE - TRUMBONE
  • TIFFANY AUSTIN - VOCALS
  • KATHY FARMER - VOCALS
  • WEST COAST ORGAN BAND - BASS, SAXOPHONE & DRUMS
  • NICOLAS BEARD - VOCALS

Press

Doug and Jean Carn: The First Couple of Black Jazz Willis Perry Doug and Jean Carn first performed together (again) in Atlanta in 2010. Doug & Jean Carn Quartet at Jazzy Picnic in the Park Where: Forsyth Park stage When: 4:30-11 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28 Admission: Free Also performing: Charleston Latin Jazz Collective, Savannah/CJA Hall Of Fame, Joey DeFrancisco Trio, Tom Scott with The Savannah Jazz Orchestra Remaining Savannah Jazz Festival events September 25 at Habersham Village Shops stage (61st & Habersham Street): 6 p.m. Velvet Caravan; 7:30 p.m.: Bob Masteller & The Jazz Corner Allstars September 26 on Forsyth Park stage: Blues on the Green 6-11 p.m. Savannah State University Gospel Choir, Eric Culberson Band, E.G. Kight, Watermelon Slim & The Workers September 27 on Forsyth Park stage: Jazz Under the Stars 6-11 p.m. Robin Sherman Quartet, UNF Jazz Ensemble featuring Alon Yavnai, Greg Lewis Trio, Jeremy Davis & Equinox Orchestra Late Night Jam Sessions: Sept 26, 27, 28 at 11 p.m. at Rancho Alegre Cuban Restaurant, 402 MLK Jr. Blvd On a small independent label, in the early 1970s, musician Doug Carn made history. The label was Black Jazz, and through its deep, ebony vinyl grooves the Florida-born Carn — a trained organ and piano player, composer, arranger and bandleader — almost single-handedly created a new form of fusion. The music on the Black Jazz albums Infant Eyes, Revelation, Spirit of the New Land and Adam's Apple was free jazz, rangy and atmospheric, with cosmically (and politically) charged lyrics. There was funk and R&B in its lengthy, tie-dyed threads. Immaculate stuff that represented the changing playing field for African Americans — both musically and lyrically — in the nascent Age of Aquarius. He wrote the inspirational lyrics, and the band charts, for pre-existing jazz tunes ("Infant Eyes," for example, began as a Wayne Shorter instrumental). Although Carn's recording career went on — indeed, it continues to this day — he is still highly regarded for that series of Black Jazz albums, which featured his then-wife Jean on sensual and haunting vocals. After the couple divorced, Atlanta-born Jean Carn went on to a successful solo career on the Philadelphia International label, scoring a number of R&B hits including "Free Love" and "My Love Don't Come Easy." The 2013 Savannah Jazz Festival welcomes the Doug and Jean Carn Quartet — professionally reunited, and it feels so good — during its big finale event, Jazzy Picnic in the Park, on Saturday, Sept. 28. It's free.

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Influences

Jimmy Smith, Larry Young, McCoyTyner, Cedar Walton, Mulgruw Miller, Herbie Hancock, Charlie Erland