Thursday, September 20, 2012

NEW RELEASES - DR. LONNIE SMITH, WADADA LEO SMITH / LOUIS MOHOLO, ELLIOT SHARP'S TERRAPLANE

DR. LONNIE SMITH - THE HEALER

Lonnie Smith's a musician who's really taken off in recent years – hardly content to rest on his well-earned laurels in jazz, and definitely not a player who's willing to reduce himself to familiar cliches designed to please a crowd looking for an old school sound! Instead, he's continued to grow strongly – reaching for new sounds, new modes of expression, and new ways of opening up on the Hammond – light years from his early work of the 60s and 70s! A record like this is a great document of that growth – amazing trio tracks that have some of the most righteous sounds that Smith's ever recorded – really far-reaching and free, yet still plenty soulful too – a balance we never would have expected from Lonnie back in the day. Each tune is a treasure – and the energy in the group is great, thanks to work on guitar from Jonathan Kreisberg and drums by Jamire Williams. All tracks are nice and long – and titles include "Beehive", "Dapper Dan", "Pilgrimage", "Backtrack", and "Mellow Mood".


WADADA LEO SMITH / LOUIS MOHOLO - ANCESTORS

Tremendous duets between these two seasoned players – a set that really lives up to the best energy of both musicians! Smith's trumpet is especially nice – stretched-out, soulful, and flowing – with a quality that really takes us back to his more dynamic recordings of the 70s – and Moholo, as always, is a monster on the drum kit – working the whole thing with effortless ease, and shifting his strength and timing to meet the musical modes from Leo. The set features the extended "Ancestors" suite – plus "Jackson Pollock Action", "Siholaro", "Moholo Moholo/Golden Spirit", and "No Name In The Street James Baldwin".
Sky Road Songs


ELLIOT SHARP'S TERRAPLANE - SKY ROAD SONGS

An interesting project from Elliott Sharp – a set that mixes his older downtown sounds with some surprising rootsy elements – all in a blend that really helps his music stretch out strongly! Sharp's guitar work is still incredible – whether arch and arty, or acoustic and bluesy – and the album features a mix of instrumental workouts and vocal numbers – with lyrics sung by Tracie Morris, Eric Mingus, and Joe Mardin. Hubert Sumlin plays some guest guitar, and Curtis Fowlkes adds a bit of trombone – and titles include "Fade To Noir", "This House Is For Sale", "Endless Path", "Banking Blues", "I Blame You", and "Off The Hook".

:::: SOURCE: Dusty Groove ::::

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