NOVI SAD OLD GOLD  JAZZ FESTIVAL
November 23 - 26 / 2001


Cultural Center of Novi Sad
PARTICIPANTS
 

STUDIO M
Main Stage

JIMMY COBB QUARTET
USA, Yugoslavia
DUSKO GOYKOVICH QUARTET   Germany,
  Slovenia, Yugoslavia
FRANÇOIS JEANNEAU TRIO    France
SUSAN WEINERT BAND
Germany
STEFANO TROTA  TRIO
Italy
The EHUD WOOD ASHERIE TRIO
USA, Yugoslavia
DIVJAK - SECEROV QUARTET
Slovenia, Yugoslavia
ELVIS STANIC GROUP
Croatia
TRIGON   Moldova
CLASSY FOUR
Hungary
LOLITA   Slovenia
YUPIKA   Yugoslavia
ALEKSANDAR DUJIN QUINTET   Yugoslavia
JAZZ SENSE
Yugoslavia
ADAM KLEM QUARTET
Yugoslavia, Austria
GROOVE MASTERS
Yugoslavia

CCNS
Big Hall

The NISHVILLE BIG-BAND   Yugoslavia

SCENA Café
Youth Theater

HAVANA JAM
Hungary
DRAGAN CALINA SEXTET   Yugoslavia
TI, FAFA I JA
Yugoslavia

TREMA Club
SNT
JAM SESSION

HOUSE BAND
Yugoslavia




                  CONTACT 

               P R E S S 




A B O U T  P A R T I C I P A N T S
  DUSKO GOYKOVICH QUARTET Germany, Slovenia, Yugoslavia

  11 / 25 / 2001

DUSKO GOYKOVICH QUARTET
 

Dusko GOYKOVICH
trumpet
Mihailo Misa BLAM
double bass
Ratko DIVJAK
drums
Ivan ALEKSIJEVIC
piano




Dusko GOYKOVICH
trumpet





















Soul Connection



Bebop City



Balkan Connection



Balkan Blue



After Hours
















Dusko Goykovich

Born in 1931 in Jajce (Bosnia), Dusko Goykovich [trumpet, flugelhorn, composer] studied at the Music Academy in Belgrade from 1948 to 1953. As a youth he played with several jazz and dixie bands, mostly for dancing audiences and eventually on parties at the embassies of the capital. When the 18-year-old joined the Radio Big Band of Belgrade, he was considered a talented young jazz man who also can read music. When he left the band five years later, he had grown into a fine big band player and featured soloist. Dusko went to Germany where he quickly became an integral part of its uprising young jazz scene. In 1956 he made his first record as a member of the Frankfurt All-Stars.
After a short stint in the big band of Munich's Max Greger, Dusko stayed for four and a half years with Kurt Edelhagen's band, then Europe's leading jazz orchestra. Francy Boland, Claus Ogermann, Jerry van Rooyen and Rob Pronk were among the arrangers who worked for Edelhagen. In addition to being the band's premier trumpet soloist, Dusko performed with such as Stan Getz and Chet Baker. It came as no surprise when in 1958 he was invited to play with the Newport International Youth Band at the Newport Jazz Festival. Other members of the Newport band included Albert Mangelsdorff, Ronnie Ross, George Gruntz, and Gábor Szábo.

Following the performance at Newport, Dusko's trumpet became very popular in Europe. In 1961 the Berklee School of Music offered the 29-year-old a grant for studying composition and arrangement in Boston where Herb Pomeroy was to become one of his teachers. Looking forward to writing his own arrangements for his great love, the big band, Dusko concentrated on his studies at Berklee so exclusively that he regrettingly turned down offers by Count Basie, Stan Kenton and Benny Goodman to join their bands. While at Berklee Dusko (now also on flugelhorn) recorded with the Berklee School Quintet and Orchestra including fellow students such as Gary Burton, Mike Gibbs, Sadao Watanabe, Steve Marcus, Mike Nock, and Dave Young.

When he had just finished his studies and prepared his return to Germany, Dusko received a call from Canadian bandleader Maynard Ferguson offering him Rolf Ericson's place (who had just left to join Ellington). Of course, Dusko accepted. Ferguson, a virtuoso trumpeter himself, featured him as a second trumpet soloist and even used some of his big band arrangements. When Ferguson's band split in 1964, Dusko joined Woody Herman and stayed with him for a year. It was his work for Herman that founded Dusko's international reputation as an outstanding big band player and soloist. "Woody Herman encouraged me a lot," Dusko recalls. "He not only accepted my big band charts (with a single exception), but also recorded all of them."

The same year Dusko (together with Sal Nistico) left Herman's band and returned to Europe, eager to record his own music. Mal Waldron and Nathan Davis played on his sextet album "Swinging Macedonia" (1966) that emphasized Dusko's personal, Balkan-influenced style. In those years, Dusko - by then a member of the leading league of international jazz artists - also worked with Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry Mulligan, Clark Terry, Lee Konitz, Sonny Rollins, Phil Woods, Duke Jordan, Thad Jones-Mel Lewis, Slide Hampton and many more. He continued his big band career as a member of the Clarke-Boland Big Band in 1966 that assembled some of the best musicians living in Europe, among them US ex-patriates Benny Bailey, Idrees Sulieman, Johnny Griffin, Sahib Shihab, Jimmy Woode and - of course - Kenny Clarke. The CBBB was probably the finest jazz orchestra of the sixties, but it seldom played for live audiences at all.

After his time at Berklee, Dusko Goykovich began writing big band charts of all of his compositions and many standard tunes. He has been asked to play his arrangements with many European big bands, among them Dutch Skymasters and NDR big band. In Munich (where he settled down in 1968) Dusko soon started his own "rehearsal" big band including such as Rolf Ericson, Palle Mikkelborg, Rudi Fuesers, Ack van Rooyen, Ferdinand Povel, and Frank St. Peter. Due to the difficulties in organizing a European free-lance orchestra, this band broke up in 1976 and was revived only for some performances in 1981/82. Yet in 1986 Dusko was able to re-found his own orchestra which has been on the scene ever since. In 1993, he also started a much-acclaimed international comeback as a recording artist with his prize-winning CD "Soul Connection" featuring Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Heath, Eddie Gomez and Mickey Roker. Soul Connection was followed by " Bebop City" which featured young alto sax wizard Abraham Burton, Kenny Barron on Piano, Ray Drummond on bass and Alvin Queen on drums. 1996 saw the fulfillment of a long standing wish for Dusko: the recording of his own big band playing his music, "Balkan Connection". 1997 saw the release of the 2-CD set "Balkan Blue", another high point in his career. Disc One features a wonderfully relaxed quintet with Italian master saxophonist Gianni Basso and Disc Two is an extended work performed by the NDR Philharmonic with a jazz rhythm section and Dusko Goykovich as soloist. His compositions arranged by Palle Mikkleborg ( who had done a similar piece of work for Miles Davis ). Balkan Blue evokes strong memories of Miles Davis work with Gil Evans - a seminal recording of our days.


The Dusko Goykovich Discography:

Belgrade Blues / Dusko Goykovich (Radio-Tele Beograd) 
The Golden Eight / Kenny Clarke-Francy Bolard And Co. (Blue Note)
What's New ? / Gil Cuppini Quintet Vol.2 (Right Tempo Classics) 
Swinging Macedonia / Dusko Goykovich (Enja) 
Live At The Domicile / Dusko Goykovich (Session) 
It's About Blues Time / Dusko Goykovich (Ensayo)
Ten To Two Blues / Dusko Goykovich (Ensayo)
After Hours / Dusko Goykovich (Enja) 
Slavic Mood / Dusko Goykovich (Vista) 
After A Long Time / Dusko Goykovich & Joe Haider Quintet (EGO)
Ashanti / Alvin Queen (Nilva)
A Day In Holland / Alvin Queen - Dusko Goykovich (Sound Hills)
Blues For Red / Larry Vuckovich (Hot House Records)
Celebration /Dusko Goykovich (DIW) 
London By Night / Nathan Davis (DIW)
Soul Connection / Dusko Goykovich (Enja)
Sunrise In St. Petersburg / Harold Ruschenbaum & "Priwjet" (Pro Jazz)
Bebop City / Dusko Goykovich (Enja)


Mihailo Misa BLAM
double bass






Mihailo Blam -musician, composer, arranger, jazz publicist, manager, free artist

Born in Belgrade, 1947. Education: "Stankovic" Musical High School, Musical Art Faculty in Belgrade.
1968 - 1971 member of Belgrade Philharmonics, 1973 - 1976 member of "Dusan Skovran" Chamber Orchestra and RTB Big National Orchestra, 1978 -1979 RTB Big Band member, 1993 -1994 Orquestra Sinfonika Nacional - Santo Domingo member.
 Founder of specialized jazz magazine in 1990. and "Jazz International" agency in 1991. Author and musical manager of "Summertime Jazz & Blues and World Music Festival" ( Sava Center 1991). Organizer and financial manager of "first Serbian Christmas Jazz Festival" containing over 150 different artistic programs (Mihajlo Blam Museum - SKC, 1993).
Discography:
Two soloist records of jazz music "Misa Blam i oni koji vole funky" and "Secanja" and about thirty records in co-operation with home and foreign musicians ("Gut&Markovic" Sextet, Clark Terry, Alvin Queen, Stjepko Gut, etc.). Festival performances in Holland, Italy, Midlheim, Prague, Istanbul, Debrecine...

Secanja / Memories
Book "Miles Davis" (biography, discography, interview). "Jazz about midnight" TV show. Exhibition " Sixty years of jazz in Belgrade, 1927 - 1987".
Rewards: Yugoslav (1983) and Serbian (1992) show business reward, Radio Belgrade "Golden Microphone" Reward (1989). In Israel (1992).


Ratko DIVJAK
drums



 
 

Ratko Divjak - drums
Born in 1947 in Vukovar, Croatia. For the last 25 years, he has been a part of European and American jazz scene (California Jazz Fest, Los Angeles, Monterey, Sacramento, Montreux, Berlin, and Bologna). He has performed with the most significant jazz artists like Bosko Petrovic, Dusko Goykovich, Stjepko Gut, Petar Ugrin, Art Farmer, Stan Getz, N.H.Oe. Pedersen, Albert Mengelsdorf, Tony Coy, Gary Burton, Sal Nistico, Ferdinand Powel, Gianni Basso, Richard Davis, Joe Pass, Dave Libman etc. He has played in the EBU Big Band three times. Since 1975 he has been a member of Big Band RTV Slovenia. Discography: more than 30 jazz CDs and LPs.


Ivan ALEKSIJEVIC
piano



 
 

Ivan Aleksijevic - piano
Born in Pancevo, in 1971. He finished "Stankovic" music high school. He has  been working in RTS Big Band since 1995. He has worked with many well-known Yugoslav and foreign jazz, pop and rock musicians. He is often engaged as a studio musician.











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