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SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News 4763 Haggerty Rd. at Pontiac Trail West Wind Village Shopping Center West Bloomfield (248) 669-2295 I Receive Ja zz not to go with any other offer with coupon Expires 12130/2000 11111 1111111 =II MEI INN NMI NM II•111 1•11111 MIMI Jr Herbie Afann. "O. nce I saw y 70th ibzdr ethcide da)d, aftpwr a oas cthim in azz legend Herbie Mann has to delve into my ro6ts,' played Michigan many says the Jazz times, but his upcoming who was born appearance at the Herbe)-t Jay Solomon.. Birmingham Jazzfest introduces a new song cycle in his career --- origi- nal compositions that reach back to his Eastern European Jewish roots. Mann, who performs with a quartet called Sona Terra (Sounds of the Earth), will advance a CD filled with these pieces, due for release in October. In the festival that runs July 20-22, he takes the stage in Shain Park 5:30-6:45 p.m. Saturday, July 22. "It's not klezmer; it's my interpre- tation of my Russian, Romanian and Hungarian roots," says the flutist, at home in New Mexico. "I just felt that it was time for me not to be an assimalado (a Portuguese word Goodman concert. Moving on to the used for black musicians in racially tenor saxophone, he played gigs in the mixed bands performing with 'hon- Catskills starting at 14 and went on to orary white status' in South Africa). the 98th Army Band after going into "Being that there's no genre yet, it's military service in 1948. called 'Gypsy ja77.' The Gypsies started When Dutch accordionist Mat their trip from India and ended up going Matthews was looking for a jazz flutist all over the world like the wandering for the first album by the then Jews. I've played Brazilian, Cuban and unknown Carmen McRae, Mann, out African American music, but once I saw of service, made another switch — to my 70th birthday approaching, I-decided the flute. In 1958, he added a conga it was time to delve into my roots." player to his group and picked up audiences around the world. He For Mann's concert, looking back also means including some of the Brazilian toured Africa for the State Department beats and Bill Evans numbers that he and went on to Brazil, where he brought to stage and recording studio, helped usher in the bossa nova craze. this time also performed with guitar, bass Ahead of his time with world music, Mann brought in the sounds of guitar and percussion, the latter at the hands of his youngest son, Geoff. the Middle East, reggae, southern "Geoff's been with the band over a blues and rock 'n' roll and turned out a series of recordings to capture his year, since I've moved into this new genre," explains Mann, who has three take on these sounds. other children steering clear of musical "I have a different definition of careers. "He's 24 and a graduate of the ja7.7.," Mann says. "It's not swing, bebop or avant garde. It's improvising, inter- New School of Music. To turn around preting a melody in your own way. You and watch him play incredible music can even improvise on Kol Nidre." redefines the word kvell." Mann, born in Brooklyn as Herbert The acclaimed flutist, married to actress-writer Susan Janeal Arison, Jay Solomon, first took up the clarinet travels to about 30 concerts a year. at age 9 after seeing a Benny "Musicians don't retire," he says. "They work until they physically can't anymore. I could play clubs and be away from home more, but I choose not to. I think the road is the basic ingredient that kills musicians, and I choose to take care of myself. I do only one club, and that's the Blue Note in New York." Mann, diagnosed with inoperable prostate cancer three years ago, has gone through radiation and chemotherapy. Now in remission from the disease, he has taken on a health and social mission to alert other men to the importance of early testing. "One of the things I've done is formed a foundation for prostate cancer awareness, the Prostate Cancer Awareness Music Foundation," Mann explains. "The purpose is to spread the word to my audience about the necessity of annual physical exams and blood tests. "I just did an event in Houston, where I brought an all-star band for a free Father's Day concert. Everyone who got the blood test got a free, autographed CD, and we had more than 400 tested for the first time. "I didn't know about the PSA test, and I think I'm pretty well informed.