Interview with Harrison2 (Vetro & Argatoff)

Harry Vetro (drums) and Harrison Argatoff (tenor saxophone) join forces with Canadian Jazz legends Mike Murley on tenor saxophone and bassist Steve Wallace for a performance at BuckingJam Palace on Thursday, February 20th 2020 (8pm).

Tickets are almost sold out (!) so don't delay and reserve your tickets now! For ticket information, please visit the BuckingJam Palace website or the Eventbrite ticket page.

Learn more about this dynamic band which will surely deliver a world-class performance at www.harrison2music.com

Both Vetro and Argatoff were kind enough to take time out of their busy schedules to answer a few questions about their music and upcoming tour, featuring music from their new release (along with Mike Murley and Steve Wallace) entitled Trout in Swimwear.

1) How would you describe the style of Jazz music you are bringing to Calgary?

Harrison² is a chordless quartet, featuring two tenor saxophones, bass, and drums. We play mostly classic jazz repertoire, with our performances focused on soloistic improvisation. Harmonically, this instrumentation demands a clear observation of each song’s form, while also allowing for a high degree of freedom. With Mike Murley and Steve Wallace, two of Canada’s most renowned jazz musicians, our playing has a distinct Canadian sound while representing a combination of two different musical generations. Playing with this band feels exciting, adventurous, and demanding!

2) Who are some of your influences? (as a drummer/saxophonist, composer and overall musician)

Vetro: My favorite drummers include Elvin Jones, Tony Williams, Philly Joe Jones and Paul Motian, especially Paul’s playing with Bill Evans and Scott LaFaro. I love those CD’s. When I hear Paul play, every note counts. My favorite modern drummers are Marcus Gilmore, Tyshawn Sorey, and Dan Weiss. Those guys have such a mastery on the kit. When you see / hear them play, you can tell they’ve spent time with the instrument exploring the multitude of possibilities. Lately, I’ve been checking out their compositions, especially Tyshawn Sorey’s work. I attended his Columbia University composers’ concert in New York in 2019. His string compositions were very interesting and inspiring.  My compositional influences aren’t really in the vain of what Harrison Squared is doing. I’ve written some music in the classic jazz vain. I’ll share it someday!

My greatest influence is nature. I try to spend as much time outdoors writing down ideas for later development.

Argatoff: I suspect that most elements of my life have been influential to me as a musician, from my upbringing in rural BC, to my diet, to my favorite novels. As a saxophonist, I am an admirer of Sonny Rollins. I find the energy behind his music and his time-feel to be particularly striking. Compositionally, I admire the music of John Hollenbeck. I find his distinct sound and orchestrational expertise inspiring.

3) How might you describe your relationship with tenor saxophonist Harrison Argatoff and veteran Canadian Jazz artists Mike Murley and Steve Wallace, who are joining you for this performance?

Vetro: Harrison and I attended the University of Toronto Jazz program together from 2014 to 2018. We’ve been good friends since around second year university. We started out sessioning in the practice rooms at UofT in our spare time and developed a fun musical relationship. He played on my debut album Northern Ranger. We’ve toured across Canada. Made an underground rap album together. We’ve also toured with a dance company together performing choreographed movements as well as music. He’s an inspiring person!

I’ve always been a fan of Steve Wallace through the Mike Murley, Ed Bickert, Steve Wallace trio records. I took an in between year at York University in 2013, and caught him for the first time at a performance with the Mark Eisenman trio. It wasn’t until my third year at UofT where I had the chance to meet and play with Steve. Nick Fraser, my former drum teacher was going on tour and subbed out a lesson to Steve. We brought Harrison Argatoff in to play some jazz standards and all felt an immediate musical connection.

Mike Murley was my first ensemble coach at UofT and taught my second-year improv class. It was always a dream of mine to share the bandstand with Mike. He’s a Canadian jazz legend! I remember being in first year and asking Chase Sanborn “when can I start playing with faculty?” and he told me to wait a couple of years. I finally got to play with Mike during Harrison Squared’s first show at the Rex in my fourth year (2018). That was my first time booking the Rex Hotel. It’s a dream to be able to tour with these guys now.

4) What are some of the music and life lessons you've learned over the course of your UofT studies and from playing with Mike Murley and Steve Wallace?

Argatoff: The lessons I learned at UofT were wide reaching. The experience was like taking off progressively wider sets of blinders, as I was consistently offered new perspectives. I entered my degree with the sole expectation of becoming a proficient jazz musician, but instead exited with a mind full of questions and the fundamental tools needed to start seeking my answers.

Playing with Murley and Wallace is inspiring. I am constantly humbled by their instrumental expertise, deep knowledge of jazz music, and unique and rooted time-feels. I find it challenging, however, to pick out any specific lessons. It feels instead like parts of their musicianship are shared, little by little, when we play together.

5) What are you practicing and working on these days?

Vetro: I’m always working on the 26 American Rudiments, making sure my hands remain relaxed. Also always trying to achieve an evenness between my two hands.

Lately, I’ve been working on heel up bass drum. Using stick control to develop this. My friend hipped me to Colin Bailey’s Bass Drum Control book. There are some interesting exercises in there where you remove the spring from the bass drum pedal and play the exercises with the rebound from the bass drum head. I’m also working a lot on soloing over forms these days, and developing solo language. During my UofT years, I spent most of my time trying to achieve a good time feel with the ride. Now it’s time to get my soloing together...During my practice sessions, I’ll spend some time improvising at the kit, and when I find something I can’t do, I’ll put it on a list of “things to work on” and process the heck out of it. There are a lot of things on that list and it keeps growing!

6) What advice do you have for other young, aspiring Canadian Jazz musicians?

Vetro: Listen. Be open to all types of music and go see live shows as often as you can. Start playing the music. If you’re having trouble finding musicians to play with, then play along with records. I’ve been checking out this Roy Hargrove trio record called “Parkers Mood” with Christian McBride on Bass, no drums. Started playing along and recording myself, assessing my ride cymbal. Man, what a way to develop your time feel and imitate what it’s like to be on the bandstand.

Also, seek out people to play with. At the end of grade 12, I didn’t have any “live” jazz playing experience, but I wanted to play so badly. My Mother asked me to hire a jazz trio for her art show and I put out an ad at the University. Some students responded and I put a trio together. I recorded the audio and started submitting to bars and restaurants all across the GTA. Within a couple of months, I was opening for the Young/Promane Octet in Waterloo. That definitely assisted me in getting into U of T!

Also, find a teacher who plays on the jazz scene. Never stop being curious. There’s always something new to discover.

Harrison2 Comes to BuckingJam Palace!

The quartet Harrison2 will be appearing at BuckingJam Palace on Thursday, February 20th, 2020 and will be performing music from their latest album release Trout in Swimwear.

There are only a handful of tickets left so don't delay and get your tickets today!

Harrison2 (Harrison squared) is a Toronto-based modern jazz quartet that features two up-and-coming instrumentalists, Harrison Vetro (drums) and Harrison Argatoff (tenor saxophone), alongside two mainstays and veterans of the Canadian jazz scene, Mike Murley (tenor saxophone) and Steve Wallace (double bass).

The group hatched from a chance encounter between Vetro and Wallace in early 2016, at the University of Toronto, while Vetro’s drum teacher (Nick Fraser) was on tour.  Wallace was asked to sub in for a lesson, with the aim of offering his wealth of experience and some new perspective. As he and Vetro worked on time, tempo, and rhythmic feel, Wallace immediately recognized a natural musical connection. Wanting to end the lesson with some fun, Argatoff was invited to jump in and play some music as a trio. Wallace recognized and was inspired by both Vetro and Argatoff’s musicality, thoughtfulness, and creativity, very much in the Lennie Tristano/Warne Marsh vein.

The three resolved to get together and play again but scheduling made this a challenge. Finally the two Harrisons took the bull by the horns, landing a gig at The Rex in September of 2016 and asking Murley and Steve to join them; thus was a band born. With an agreed upon selection of standards, and some out-of-the-way jazz originals, the gig had an open and spontaneous feeling which was immensely satisfying.  Having played together on countless occasions, Murley and Wallace were inspired by the stimulus of playing with fresh musicians. And likewise, both Argatoff and Vetro were pushed to rise to the level of such musical masters.

The band expresses a distinct Canadian jazz identity, and a forward-thinking modern approach to jazz. Together they have performed shows at Toronto’s premiere jazz club “The Rex Hotel,” as well as “The Emmet Ray”.  Harrison^2 recorded a full length album in the Fall of 2019, which will be released on a cross-Canada tour February 2020.

Learn about more about this exciting band at their website.

For ticket information please visit www.buckingjampalace.com or the Eventbrite ticket page.

Interview with Sam Taylor

New York tenor saxophonist Sam Taylor appears at BuckingJam Palace on Saturday, January 25th (8pm) featuring the crack rhythm section team of Peter Van Nostrand on drums and Paul Sikivie on bass.

This concert is currently sold out (!) however please consider contacting Lisa Buck through the website and request to be put on the waitlist as last minute tickets do often come up.

Furthermore, please consider signing up for the BuckingJam Palace mailing list so you don't miss out on future opportunities to hear amazing groups such as this (tickets often sell-out quickly!)

Sam was also nice enough to take time out of his busy schedule to answer a few questions about his music and upcoming performance in Calgary:

1) How would you describe the style of Jazz music you are bringing to Calgary?

My goal is to play music that feels good, to always swing hard and “play pretty”. I do my best to embrace the spirit of my heroes and play in a way that honors them. For this tour, I will be playing trio with two incredible musicians: bassist Paul Sikivie and drummer Pete Van Nostrand. Saxophone trio really is my favorite format, and it is always such a thrill to play with Paul and Pete. I can’t wait to share that feeling with your jazz fans at BuckingJam.

2) Who are some of your influences?

The music of Sonny Rollins, especially his trio recordings have been and always will be the Rosetta Stone. My other saxophone heroes include Larry McKenna, Coleman Hawkins, Charlie Parker and Dexter Gordon. I also especially love and continue to learn the most from vocalists: Abbey Lincoln, Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, Shirley Horn, Sam Cooke, Barbara Streisand. They all have this incredible charisma, something that pulls you in from the very first notee.

3) How might you describe your relationship with tenor saxophonist Larry McKenna, who is joining you for this performance?

Larry’s music has been a part of my life almost since I first learned to put the saxophone together. My first teacher  made a cassette tape for me to learn from: one side had Charlie Parker and the other had Larry McKenna. That gives you an idea how important and special his music is for me. As a person, he is just as his music sounds: open, generous, joyful with a dash of good humor! It is an incredible honor to share the bandstand with him and call him my friend.

I am so sorry he will not be able to join us this time, (he’s under strict doctor’s orders not to travel). We are all wishing him well and a speedy recovery. I will do my best to carry his joyful spirit with me and make him proud!

4) What are some of the lessons you've learned from the many masters of this music you've performed and studied with?

Having a beat and having a sound above all else. That’s really what strikes me about the masters. Larry McKenna is a perfect example - have you ever heard such an incredible sound, such natural swing and melody?! It is not so much what they are playing, but how they deliver it, their message, the story. They “make the music fly” as my friend and teacher, Taro Okamoto puts it.

5) What advice do you have for young, aspiring Jazz musicians?

Take the music seriously, but don’t forget about the joy it brings you and your audience. Isn’t that what made you choose a life of music in the first place? This is supposed to be fun!

In terms of developing the craft: listen, listen, listen! Do as much as you can to develop your ear. Play along with recordings, transcribe solos, go to sessions and try to learn the song on the fly. Be open to situations that may be uncomfortable - you are sure to come away having learned something!

This Sunday! Adrean Farrugia & Joel Frahm

Pianist Adrean Farrugia and tenor saxophonist Joel Frahm will be performing at BuckingJam Palace this Sunday, January 19th for two shows (2pm & 8pm). These will for sure be a memorable pair of concerts and the perfect way to start the 2020 concert season at BuckingJam Palace.

Both concerts are currently sold out (!) however if you are interested attending please contact Lisa Buck asap through the BuckingJam website www.buckingjampalace.com and ask to be put on the waitlist.

Furthermore, the best way to not miss out on these amazing concerts is to sign up for the BuckingJam mailing list so you can get first crack at ticket sales as concerts are announced. Do not delay, sign up for the mailing list today!

An Important Message From BuckingJam Palace re: Sam Taylor Quartet

Happy New Year to you and yours!  We have a really incredible slate of concerts coming up in 2020, including the Sam Taylor concert on January 25th.  I have just received an email from Sam Taylor letting us know that Larry McKenna, a beloved member of the quartet, has severe bronchitis and has been advised by his doctor not to travel.  Larry is 82 *one of those jazz legends whom we treasure* and I would ask that you, according to your custom, send good thoughts or prayers or energy his way for a full and speedy recovery.

Sam is continuing the tour as a trio. Here are the comments he has asked me to pass along:

"Hello and Happy New Year! I can not wait for our performance at BuckingJam Palace in just a few weeks, and to meet all you jazz fans. As you might have heard, unfortunately Larry McKenna will not be able to make the trip due to illness. He sends his deep regrets. We are all wishing him well in his recovery.

While Larry will be missed, I promise to carry his joyful musical spirit with me. Please join me, Paul Sikivie and Pete Van Nostrand on January 25th for a wonderful night of music. Thanks very much!”

I know this will be an awesome concert but we are also very careful that we deliver what we advertise at BJP.  So if anyone would like a refund on their ticket(s) because of this change, please contact me.

I'll be sending out directions as usual the week before the concert.  Feel free to email me at buckingjampalace@gmail.com if you have any questions in the meantime.

Kind regards,

Lisa Buck