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JAZZ REVIEWS : TEDESCO JAMS AND JOKES AT BLUE NOTE

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The Blue Note, yet another addition to the fast-growing list of Southland jazz clubs, is presenting small groups, most of them led by guitarists, nightly except Sunday.

The room is small, the food Italian, the location--on Ventura Boulevard just east of Laurel Canyon Boulevard--convenient, the music mostly mainstream. Tommy Tedesco, the veteran studio guitarist who books the talent, appears there himself every Wednesday.

Tedesco, as most of his peers know, is not only a versatile and compelling artist, but also a comedian whose stock in trade consists of long, generally witty raps about the life of a studio musician, the art of fooling producers and the anonymity of working session jobs (“I had an identity crisis before it was hip to have one”).

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Switching between acoustic and electric guitars, Tedesco managed, without verbal self-interruptions, to get through a wide-ranging series of selections that included a soaring samba, a gentle ballad medley, an electric blues solo on “Bags’ Groove” and a splendidly chorded acoustic treatment of “Ain’t Misbehavin’.”

Often he played unaccompanied, but at times he would be joined by the remarkably able left-handed bassist, John Leitham, and by Mat Marucci, an unpretentiously efficient drummer.

For the most part the Blue Note provides low-key music guaranteed not to upset the digestion. Tedesco will remain on hand every Wednesday in June, teamed successively with four fellow-guitarists: Joe Pass next Wednesday, followed by Pat Kelly, Herb Ellis and John Collins. Now and then owner Tom Tarpinian is apt to sit in on drums.

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