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Jesse Cook: Smooth Jazz Guitarist at Yoshi's

Yoshi's Jazz Club and Restaurant, Between Eddy and Ellis (1330 Fillmore Street San Francisco, CA 94115)
1353453-jessecook-050311
Full Price:
$16.00
Our Price:
$5.00*
4.8 by 10 members
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Canadian jazz guitarist Jesse Cook plays Yoshi's in San Francisco. A Juno Award-winning guitarist, his style blends jazz with Latin and world music. He's topped the Billboard smooth jazz and New Age charts, and headlined jazz festivals on four continents. His new album The Rumba Foundation explores the music of Colombia and Cuba.

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All offers for Jazz Guitarist Jesse Cook have expired.

The last date listed for Jazz Guitarist Jesse Cook was Wednesday May 4, 2011 / 10:00pm.

Currently at Yoshi's Jazz Club and Restaurant:

Temptationsred-052312

The Temptations Review Featuring Dennis Edwards at Yoshi's

Full Price:
$40.00
Our Price:
$20.00

See a R&B legend live in concert when Dennis Edwards brings his group, The Temptations Review, to Yoshi's Jazz Club in San Francisco. The lead singer of the Temptations from 1968 to 1977, and again from 1979 to 1983, Edwards was heard on such classic recordings as "Cloud Nine," "I Can't Get Next to You," "Ball of Confusion" and "Psychedelic Shack," as well as the singles "Papa Was a Rolling Stone" and "Masterpiece." He's won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 1989. These days, he's touring the country with his own group, singing the Temptations' classic songs. Learn More

Between Eddy and Ellis,
1330 Fillmore Street
San Francisco, CA 94115
415-655-5600
Yoshis-jazz-club

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5 Goldstar Member Reviews

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This was a wonderful concert. I love the sound of the spanish guitar and Jesse brought it home. The entire band gave themselves completely to the performance. It made me want to plan another trip back to Spain. He was very personable and involved the audience as well. I'll be collecting his music and look forward to him returning to the Bay Area.
Written on May 05 2011

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Execellent show, Jesse very personable artist that is a awesone guidtairist, and the musicians in his band are very talented.
Written on May 05 2011

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Great show - loking forward to seeing him agin!
Written on May 06 2011

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Rumba Flamingo at its best! We truly had a fantasic evening listening to Jesee Cook's performance at Yoshi's. Will be back again!
Written on May 05 2011

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All 5 Reviews

More Information About Jazz Guitarist Jesse Cook

Website

http://www.yoshis.com/sanfrancisco/jazzclub/artist/show/1811

Quotes & Highlights

  • Hear Jesse Cook's music at his website.

Description

Seven studio albums in fifteen years is, in itself, a measure of Jesse Cookʼs artistic success. And, for this latest recording he wanted to trace rumba flamenco back to its roots in Cuba. His instincts though got the better of him and he wound up spending time in Bogota, Colombia. The resulting body of work is sublime, a continuation of Cookʼs insatiable appetite for world music in all its forms.

Loyal fans will be thrilled with The Rumba Foundation, as he has entitled the album, while those who have never before experienced Cookʼs creativity will find themselves tapping their feet to these extraordinary Latin rhythms wondering why they have not experienced Cook before.

The Rumba Foundation continues the journey Jesse Cook has travelled ever since he was first exposed to rumba flamenco while visiting his father in Arles in the south of France. What other teenager can lay claim to jamming with The Gypsy Kings on his fatherʼs roof? On this album Cook is maturing and his trip to Bogota appears to be time well spent.

“Colombia just took over this project,” the Juno Award-winning guitarist admits with a laugh. “So now I describe it as ʻreturning to the Americas.' I flew down to Colombia and worked with a group called Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto. They won a Latin Grammy back in 2007. They play traditional music known as Vallenato and they make all their own instruments by hand including gaitos flutes. I learned these flutes are always played in pairs and in only one key. They are doing it ʻold school.ʼ”

The band members took a lengthy bus ride from their village in northern Colombia to meet their guest in Bogota. Then, following a dinner of home cooked Ajiaco, a traditional soup of avocado, chicken and potatoes, they performed an impromptu Vallenato concert right in the living room of their managerʼs house. The visitor was obliged to play some of the songs he wanted to record with them. Hearing Cookʼs incendiary guitar playing they might well have been bemused wondering how the two styles would mesh. There really was no structure to this first encounter. Rather, Cook who also assumed the role of record producer, saw this as an opportunity to find a musical common ground which they would build upon in the studio over the following days.

Itʼs a similar approach he took when recording the many different rhythms in Egypt, Spain and elsewhere for his two more recent studio albums Frontiers and Nomad -- both of which, it should be noted, quickly climbed to #5 on the Billboard charts. “If I go down there and teach them what I want them to do whatʼs the point in going down? I could just get somebody in Toronto to play it,” he declares. “Half the reason you go down there, in their own country, their own studio, is that you are bound to bring something out of it that you would never get in your home country.”

Since his Juno Award-nominated DVD Jesse Cook Live at the Metropolis, which was filmed at the 2007 Montreal Jazz Festival, Cook may have slipped in and out of the spotlight at home. But he certainly hasnʼt been idle. This year alone he and his band have headlined jazz festivals in Dubai, Singapore, Poland and London, England. Invitations have also arrived to play in Ireland, Italy, Japan and even Turkey as his reputation grows.

In 2008, he achieved something no one before him ever has. He dominated both the smooth jazz radio charts with his Top 3 single, Café Mocha, and the Billboard New Age chart with his #1 album Frontiers, which to date has spent over 70 weeks in the Top 10. “There is a Facebook page for Jesse Cook fans in Turkey,” he says in disbelief, “I guess I have fans there. And, years ago, I played as a guest of The Chieftains in Japan. We have since been getting more hits in Japan than anywhere outside the United States. I have this great fan base. Itʼs just that I have never gone to play there.”

Earlier this year Acoustic Guitar magazine awarded Jesse the Silver medal in its prestigious Playerʼs Choice Awards. Naturally he was delighted to be on the same flamenco podium as his hero, the legendary Paco de Lucia, who struck gold.

The Rumba Foundation enjoyed its syndicated world premiere in Los Angeles via the prominent jazz station The Wave.

Though the Colombian adventure features prominently on this disc, as is his custom, Cook covers a classic and manages to make it his own. This time its Simon and Garfunkelʼs “Cecilia”. Another noteworthy track is "La Rumba D'el Jefe," which is a fusion of rumba flamenca with Cuban son music. “I do honestly think this is my best album ever, “ Cook announces. “ I donʼt believe that Vallenato and Rumba Flamenco have ever been mixed before. There are some real magic moments.”