Verve Jazz Ensemble
Connect the Dots Always highly polished, the Verve Jazz Ensemble's timeless
straight-ahead jazz reaches for exuberance as well on LightGroove Media's July
20 release Connect the Dots. The fifth album by the VJE, a modular New
York-based ensemble led by drummer Josh Feldstein, features upbeat performances
of band originals, standards, and lesser-known works by classic jazz composers
-- each characterized by the musicians' palpable delight in playing together.
Connect the Dots also finds the VJE expanded to seven
pieces, with alto saxophonist/flutist Alexa Tarantino and trombonist Willie
Applewhite making their VJE debuts alongside the existing quintet of
trumpeter/flugelhornist Tatum Greenblatt, tenor saxophonist Jon Blanck, pianist
Steve Einerson, bassist Elias Bailey, and Feldstein.
The exuberance is amplified by the tunes themselves: catchy melodies,
imbued with deceptively rich harmonies and finger-snapping grooves. This,
according to Feldstein, is part of the band's reason for being. "Beyond
the joy of playing the music, one of our goals is to make the music more widely
accessible," he says. "Brighter and with melodic and rhythmic
structures people can immediately connect to, whether the listener is new to
jazz or an aficionado."
To that end, Connect the Dots includes new arrangements of
some of jazz's most beloved standards -- Lee Morgan's "Ceora," Cole
Porter's "Love for Sale," Harold Arlen's "My Shining Hour"
-- alongside intoxicating originals like Feldstein and Greenblatt's lush bebop
title track and Blanck's subtly funky "Autumn Left."
However, the album also features "underserved" tunes
by jazz royalty of the likes of Benny Golson ("Little Karin"), Stan
Kenton ("Intermission Riff"), and Gerry Mulligan ("Disk Jockey
Jump"). Here too, says Feldstein, is one of VJE's missions: "To find
music that is fresh, with melodies we love, and blow the dust off it. There's
so much amazing music that people haven't heard."
The full septet appears on four of the album's 13 tracks.
The remainder feature three different quintet configurations, as well as trio
settings for Einerson, Bailey, and Feldstein. The drummer, along with
Greenblatt and Blanck, contributed the arrangements for these configurations as
well as providing the original tunes.
The Verve Jazz Ensemble is the brainchild of Josh Feldstein,
born and raised in New York City. He began studying drums at 11; a year later,
his drum teacher told him that Josh's drumming style reminded him of Gene
Krupa. Josh immediately immersed himself in the recordings of the legendary
"Sing, Sing, Sing" soloist. That was it: At a time when most of his
friends were listening to pop artists like Elton John, Stevie Wonder, and
Michael Jackson, Josh "withdrew into jazz."
Through junior high and his years in Queens at Bayside High
School, Josh continued his drumming. He attended Queens College where he got
his undergraduate degree in English. Later, while living with his wife in DC,
and after they moved to Connecticut, Josh continued sitting in at local clubs.
A turning point came in 2005 when Josh saw a recent West
Conn jazz grad named Jon Blanck perform. Impressed with Jon's playing and
musicianship, he introduced himself to the young saxophonist, and soon struck
up a great friendship and musical connection. Together with bassist Chris
DeAngelis, they formed a trio that became the core of the Verve Jazz Ensemble
-- a name Josh chose to express his love of the music and the recording legacy
put out by the storied jazz label.
Verve Jazz Ensemble The band's lineup steadily evolved from
their 2013 debut, It's About Time, a quintet outing that included the VJE
debuts of New York's Tatum Greenblatt on trumpet and Matt Oestreicher on piano.
East End Sojourn followed in 2014, with Elias Bailey taking over from DeAngelis
on bass and Oestreicher alternating with Steve Einerson. The latter became the
sole pianist on 2016's Perimeter (a breakthrough for the VJE, featuring five
original compositions along with their usual well-chosen tunes). Their fourth
album, Swing-A-Nova (2017), a trio feature with three tracks adding Greenblatt
on trumpet, reached #6 on the JazzWeek radio charts. Now, with Connect the
Dots, Alexa Tarantino's alto saxophone and flute and Willie Applewhite's
trombone fill out the VJE's exhilarating classic jazz sound.
No comments:
Post a Comment