GRAMMY-nominated guitarist and bandleader John Scofield will
release his new album Past Present on September 25th via Impulse!/Universal
Music Classics. The album, picked by the New York Times as one of the
highlights of the fall season, is Scofield's first with an update of his
"elastic, swinging" (NY Times) early-90's quartet of Joe Lovano, Bill
Stewart and Larry Grenadier (who steps in for Marc Johnson and the late Dennis
Irwin) since the quartet released the acclaimed album's Meant To Be, Time on My
Hands and What We Do on Blue Note Records. Scofield will celebrate the album
release with a six-night run of shows at the venerable Blue Note club in New
York City from October 13-18 (bassist Ben Street will sit in for Grenadier
during this run).
Past Present
is also one of Scofield's most personal albums, with a number of songs
written during the illness and death of his son Evan in 2013 following a fast
and furious battle with cancer. Buoyed by Grenadier's ebullient, recurring bass
line and Stewart's delicate swing, Scofield describes Past Present as
"futuristic blues," on which he and Lovano craft unison melodies
before the two separate then intertwine invigorating improvisations.
Scofield's
40 year professional career has seen him work with an incredibly diverse list
of artists - Miles Davis, Chet Baker, Charles Mingus, George Duke, Herbie
Hancock, Gary Burton, Joe Henderson, Mavis Staples, John Mayer, Dr. John, Brad
Mehldau, Medeski Martin & Wood, Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead, Taj Mahal, Gov't
Mule, Charlie Haden and more. In 1998, the Montreal International Jazz Festival
gave Scofield its prestigious "Miles Davis Award," and he was also
awarded Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France.
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