Jazz Roy-alty Fits the Bill

Roy Haynes, at 87, is no doubt jazz Roy-alty. He’s one of the greatest drummers of all time, he’s an NEA Jazz Master with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Grammys, he’s played with practically every significant jazz artist of note going back to Louis Armstrong, he’s produced two sons and a grandson who each are great musicians, and his name even means “king.” But if you asked Roy what he’s most proud of, he’d probably say being picked by Esquire magazine in 1960 as one of the best dressed men in America. Because, you know, all these accolades and honors…. what are they to a guy who just wants to bring it? Get him behind the drums so he can shake up the world, as he’s been doing for 70 years.
That’s one thing the Healdsburg audience can count on to happen when Roy takes the stage for the final festival blowout, backed by his Fountain of Youth band of youngsters, plus an offspring or two and special guests. Fellow Jazz Master Sheila Jordan, who’s sharing the bill Sunday, is certainly royal in her own right, but she’s also close to being Roy-alty, as she’s known Roy since they were getting started in the business and was tight with Roy’s late wife Lee, mother of Craig and Graham Haynes. Vijay Iyer, the sizzling pianist who’s starting off the proceedings Sunday, also must be counted among the Roy-al clan by dint of his years playing with drummer Marcus Gilmore, who happens to be Roy’s grandson.
It’s a long reach Roy has, and it goes much much farther than the people mentioned here. It truly has to extend to anybody Roy has played with – hundreds of top-level musicians – thanks to the magic that Roy brings every time he sits behind the drum kit. Because Roy isn’t just the drummer; he’s the guy steering the wheel. As the great bassist and frequent Roy collaborator Dave Holland once said, “You have to be ready to play when you perform with Roy. You have to be ready to have a conversation.”
Roy isn’t known for a specific style or pinned to a specific era. Max Roach shifted the time-keeping functions of the drums to make room for bebop, Elvin Jones took the freedom further with his poly-rhythms, but Roy came up with a system that could work equally well with swing, bop, funk, soft ballads, Latin or free jazz. It’s a dancing full-body system, utilizing precision drum tuning, that allows him to play rhythm, melody and even harmony all at once. Call him a one-man band inside a band. And sidemen, take note! If you don’t have it going on, Roy will go there for you. As he’s said in the past, he doesn’t have any beats to waste. When musicians get with the Roy-al program, though, they are pushed to places they’ve never been before. This system of Roy’s is not just a gold standard of drumming, it’s a modus operandi applicable to any musician who values assertiveness, intense listening and the need to push and then push harder. As such, it’s been an influence on all of jazz, and even beyond music. Yes, we all can learn from Roy
In recent years Roy has been leading his own band of young post-bop warriors: Martin Bejerano on piano, David Wong on bass and Jaleel Shaw on alto sax. On Roy’s latest album, Royalty, they were augmented by Chick Corea, Roy Hargrove and son Roy’s son Craig, who will be sitting in with Dad at Healdsburg. Craig has lent his skills to Sun Ra, George Benson, Geri Allen, Marcus Miller and others.
Will there be any surprises for the grand finale? Impossible to say, but with all the jazz royalty occupying Healdsburg this year, it wouldn’t be wise to count anything out.

Second on the bill, fellow NEA Jazz Master Sheila Jordan, has been a family friend of Roy’s since the early ‘50s; she pushed newborn Craig around in a stroller along with her own daughter. Opening act Vijay Iyer, a fast-rising star in jazz, has invited Roy’s son Graham, a brilliant cornetist/electronic music artist, to sit in as a special guest.


What’s his secret? He told the Los Angeles Times that music “has to be a balance between heart and mind. The thing is to not let your technique or your analytical side overshadow your feelings.”
Burrell will play two sets at the Raven. The first will be solo guitar, where the audience is likely to hear the remarkable picking and finger-style technique he displayed on his new album of live solo guitar, Tenderly. On this casually paced, evocatively arranged tour de force – surprisingly his first recording of unaccompanied guitar – he balances original tunes with tributes to Billie Holiday, Wes Montgomery, Louis Armstrong and Ellington. At the second set he’ll front a trio.
@THE RAVEN THEATER
In the class Sheila will talk about her own life, how she learned singing and what her approach is to it. She will cover bebop and scat singing, and teach at least one song that the class can sing together. She urges anyone who wants to learn a specific song to bring in a lead sheet, although that’s not necessary. “I want to give people the jazz fever,” Sheila says. “Once they get the jazz fever, they won’t want to sing anything else.”
nd Billy Hart
In a 2007 interview with allaboutjazz.com, Michele touched on the essence of what she’s about: “One is called on to deal with so many things, and the key is balance,” she said. “Balancing limitation and expansion, form with free form, respect for and acknowledgment of tradition with a drive for creativity and evolution, aggressiveness with receptiveness, how to react and listen at the same time, incorporating the voices around you, taking the initiative.”
Well known to the Healdsburg audience, Billy Hart is a master of shading and color who can crank up the raw power when necessary. He’s worked with McCoy Tyner, Wayne Shorter, Stan Getz, Miles Davis and dozens more. Julian Priester was hired by Sun Ra and Duke Ellington both, which tells you most of what you need to know about him. From the low register of his instrument he extracts alluring narratives that have also brought him into the bands of Max Roach, Freddie Hubbard, Joe Henderson, Tyner and John Coltrane. Andy McKee is a prodigiously talented bassist who was schooled in the band’s of Philly Joe Jones and Elvin Jones and went on to play with Mal Waldron, Don Cherry, Michel Petrucciani and many others.
ACROSS FROM THE RAVEN THEATER
Simi is one of Sonoma County’s most historic wineries. As part of the weekend festivities, we invite you to stop by the “Simi Winery on Wheels,” parked across from the Raven Performing Arts Theater, and relish locally inspired bites crafted by Simi’s resident head Chef, each artfully paired with either the 2008 Simi Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon or the 2010 Simi Sonoma County Sauvignon Blanc – available on tap!
@HOTEL HEALDSBURG LOBBY
@SPOONBAR
@ RAVEN THEATER

