Jazz series sounding off
Mike Sciacca
Dan Kuramoto took a drive south along the coast from his Los
Angeles-area home Monday. Once he entered Huntington Beach, the
memories came flooding back.
“I learned to surf at the cliffs in Huntington way back when, and
we played here on quite a few occasions,” he said. “I have a lot of
fond memories of this city.”
Kuramoto, now in his 50s, will return once again to Surf City on
Saturday to perform at the Huntington Beach Cultural Center Library
Theatre.
He and his ex-wife June, his “best friend and partner-in-crime,”
founded the Asian-American jazz ensemble Hiroshima whose two
performances Saturday will cap the 2005 Huntington Beach Smooth Jazz
Series, presented by BB Jazz.
BB Jazz, formed by the wife-and-husband team of Huntington Beach
residents Betty and Corky Bennish is a nonprofit organization with
the dual purpose of bringing smooth jazz to the community of
Huntington Beach, and raising awareness and funds for children with
autism.
The Huntington Beach Smooth Jazz Series is completing its fourth
season with Saturday’s two performances.
“We wanted to do this type of series to raise awareness to this
beautiful, little theater here in Huntington Beach,” Betty Bennish
said. “It seats 300 people and each seat has an unobstructed view,
which makes the experience quaint and special.
“We are so thrilled to have landed Hiroshima and fortunate that
they were available at this time of year. They are a world-class
ensemble with a brand-new CD out, and folks who come see them play
Saturday are in for something special.”
Hiroshima first burst onto the scene in Huntington Beach when it
played the Golden Bear during the 1980s. The six-piece ensemble
hasn’t performed in Surf City since.
“We used to love to play the Golden Bear,” recalled Dan Kuramoto,
who plays the saxophone and the Shakuhachi, or traditional Japanese
bamboo flute. “It was one of those clubs where all the big names just
had to play. It was an intimate setting and a fun place to play.”
Hiroshima, which plays an “East meets West” style of music that
blends such rhythms as jazz, R&B; and salsa, is celebrating the April
26 release of its new CD, “Obon,” at Saturday’s performances.
As Kuramoto explained it, Obon are festivals held all over Japan
and reflect many things to do with ancestry, family and friends. The
Obon for Hiroshima, he said, was a celebration held in honor of the
group’s 25th year in the music industry last year.
“We didn’t think we’d last one year, let alone 25,” Kuramoto said
with a laugh about Hiroshima, whose music has topped the Billboard
contemporary jazz charts, earned Emmy and Grammy nominations, won a
Soul Train Award for Best Jazz Album and has sold more than three
million albums -- including two gold records.
“When you think of Obon, there’s a sense of being uplifted,” he
said. “You are in solemn remembrance, but you can also have a good
time. It’s a gift, and it’s uplifting.”
Since its inception, the Huntington Beach Smooth Jazz Series has
raised nearly $140,000 to benefit autism, Betty Bennish said.
Following in the footsteps of the Huntington Beach Smooth Jazz
Festival is another BB Jazz offering: the staging of the third annual
“A Romantic Evening in Central Park 2005,” on Sept. 10.
It’s a daylong event that will offer the best sounds in jazz in
Huntington Beach Central Park, and will be composed of a star-studded
lineup of some of the music industry’s top jazz artists and groups.
“It’s an all-day festival of jazz and it promises to be an
outstanding event,” said Betty Bennish, who will release the complete
list of this year’s performers July 1.
“The jazz festival here in Huntington Beach continues to grow. It
takes a while for a city to catch on to something like this, and
we’re very excited to see the jazz series begin to turn the corner
here. People are starting to come out to see these wonderful artists
perform right in their own backyard.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 966-4611 or by e-mail at michael.sciacca @latimes.com.
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