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01 - Come To Me My Melancholy Baby
02 - It Had To Be You
03 - Serenade In Blue
04 - Exactly Like You
05 - More Than You Know
06 - Amapola
07 - Thanks For The Memory
08 - Some Of These Days
09 - Stardust
10 - Manhattan
11 - You Ought To Be In Pictures
12 - When You Wish Upon A Star
13 - Anything Goes
14 - Once In A While
15 - I Got Rhythm
ST.PETRSBURG'S SAXOPHONES
inc: 10 alto saxophones, 8 tenor saxophones,
3 baritone saxophones and rhythm-section (guitar,piano,bass & drums).
Vocal: YANA RADION. All arrangements by: GENNADY GOLSHTEIN
SPECIAL TO THE  ST. PETERSBURG TIMES
 
Gennady  Golshtein, who has taught saxophone in the jazz department at the Mussorgsky  School of Music since its inception in the mid-seventies, has instructed  everyone from Russia's greatest jazz export, Igor Butman, to local ska  enthusiasts Alexei Kanev of Marsheider Kunst and Grigory Zontov of Spitfire.  
  
"All of the  best saxophone players in St. Petersburg have studied under Gennady Golshtein,"  says David Goloshchokin, the director of the Jazz Philharmonic Hall. "You only  have to look at his band, Saxophones of St. Petersburg, to find the stars of  tomorrow."
 
Golshtein's  project, "Doomed To Be Happy," starring the Saxophones of St. Petersburg,  comprised mainly of his students, is featured regularly at the Jazz Philharmonic  Hall. The program also stars Goloshchokin on vibraphone, Vladimir Lytkin on  piano, Stanislav Streltsov on drums, Yana Radion on vocals and Golshtein  himself, on clarinet.
 
"The first set  features my quintet performing melodies I have written in the American swing  tradition," says Golshtein about the project. "The second set features the  original inspiration for my songs - jazz standards from the thirties and forties  performed by my big band, Saxophones of St. Petersburg."
 
Golshtein,  dressed like a sleek big-band leader in a forties-era suit and tie, introduces  every song by reading a translation of the lyrics for the audience. He asked an  American friend, Elizabeth Davis, to write all of the lyrics for his original  songs to "ensure authentic American speech." Yana Radion, who considers herself  primarily a Latin-jazz singer, had to work hard on her pronunciation and  phrasing in order to cultivate the quintessential swing era sound she now  evokes, a style reminiscent of early Lena Horne and Helen Forest. 
 
"Before I met  Golshtein, I knew nothing about swing," Radion says. "In the five years that we  have worked together, I have grown tremendously as a musician." 
 
Golshtein, who  has played jazz for over forty years, graduated from the Mussorgsky School of  Music with a teaching degree, having never formally studied any instrument or  composition. In the sixties, he joined the seminal Weinstein Orchestra, a  well-known Leningrad dance band that is famous for having spawned other local  jazz figures, such as trombonist Alexei Kannunikov, and saxophonist Oleg  Kuvaitsev. Golshtein was then invited to play in a jazz quintet on national  radio in Moscow. 
 
"For six years  we played serious jazz music on the radio," recalls Golshtein. "It was a strange  time and many critics don't know about this period. They assume we played pop  songs." 
 
It wasn't  until the chairperson of the Radio Committee ended up in the hospital for a long  stretch, listening to the radio while recuperating, that he realized the volume  of American music that Golshtein and his band were playing. The show was  immediately cancelled because the Soviet government considered American music to  be ideologically dangerous.
 
Disillusioned  with Moscow and the jazz scene, Golshtein returned to Leningrad and begin  studying viola, flute and music from the Renaissance. He spent the next fifteen  years playing early music with a local group, with whom he toured Italy, Germany  and the United States. The group disbanded in the early nineties. During this  period, the Mussorgsky School of Music invited him to teach saxophone in their  newly-formed jazz department.
 
"Once the  'early music' ended, I had a surge of nostalgia for the music I listened to as a  child, old jazz orchestras like Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw. I started to write  beautiful melodies."
 
Saxophones of  St. Petersburg was formed in 1998, bringing together young students and the  city's most celebrated saxophonists. 
 
"I decided to  bring all of the saxophone players at Mussorgsky and some of my former students  together for a concert celebrating a friend's anniversary," explains Golshtein.  "The audience enjoyed it. The saxophonists enjoyed it. At the time, I didn't  have much hope for the project to continue, although I kept writing  arrangements."
 
As for the  future, Golshtein has no definite plans. "I have no idea what is coming next. I  never expected to write all of those melodies and I am still trying to write  them. I never envisioned that I would have this fantastic band, the Saxophones  of St. Petersburg. I have what I have and I'm trying to enjoy it."