An acoustic jazz trio and a multiple Grammy-winning mastering
engineer who has plied his deft touch to records by Alessia Cara, Jay-Z, Justin
Bieber, Khalid and others totaling over 100 million in album sales may seem
like strange bedfellows at first. But keyboardist Philippe Saisse has a history
with Colin Leonard dating back a few years and now calls upon him to master all
his recording projects. Leonard had been itching to get into a vinyl release
after having recently acquired a lathe cutting machine that presses vinyl
albums thus Saisse’s idea to revisit his trio’s 2006 release, “The Body and
Soul Sessions,” instantly intrigued Leonard. The remastered album drops June 21
for the first time on vinyl and will also be available as a CD and in digital
form on the Bandar-Log Music label.
An eclectic
collection of a dozen pop, R&B and jazz covers, “The Body and Soul
Sessions” spawned four singles, including No. 1 hits “Do It Again” and
“September.” With Saisse’s spirited and nimble piano, Fender Rhodes and
keyboards, David Finck’s bouncy and probing acoustic bass, and Scooter Warner’s
crackling drum and percussion rhythms, Saisse describes the swinging, buoyant
Goh Hotoda-produced set as “a fun, party record that was a really successful
album.” Revamping the mix of contemporary and straight-ahead jazz for release
on vinyl required editing and sacrifice.
“A vinyl
album can only contain twenty minutes of music per side and the original album
was fifty minutes long. We had to remove one song (“The Dolphin”) and edit each
track to get the album down to forty minutes. As it turned out, the limitations
of the technology actually made it a better, more concise album,” said Saisse,
who first tapped Leonard to master his trio’s 2017 album, “On The Level.”
All twelve
songs appearing on the original version will be on the CD and digital release
of “The Body and Soul Sessions Remastered.” Later this month, the disc’s
groovy, 1960s retro “Constant Rain” will be serviced to radio and online
outlets for playlist adds.
Part of what
inspired Saisse to reboot the album came from his desire to keep the good times
going after working the past couple years with Grammy-winning guitar legend
Nile Rodgers of Chic. Saisse wrote, produced and played keys on a song called
“State of Mine” with Rodgers for the debut album by The Allen Carman Project,
“Carmanology,” a project Saisse developed and produced with percussionist Gumbi
Ortiz that was released last month. Rodgers liked the song so much that he
included it on Chic’s 2018 album, “It’s About Time,” swapping out the original
rhythm tracks for Chic’s rhythm section.
The
French-born, Los Angeles-based Saisse was a Grammy nominee for his 2011’s
contemporary jazz outing, “At World’s Edge.” His first recording date was 40
years ago with jazz fusion guitar giant Al Di Meola with whom he has continued
to tour throughout the years. Saisse launched his solo recording career in 1988
with “Valerian.” The busy keyboardist-composer-producer has forged a unique and
diverse career working with superstars David Bowie and The Rolling Stones,
touring the globe in astute power trio PSP with Simon Phillips and Pino
Palladino, and crafting tracks and albums for contemporary/smooth jazz royalty
Dave Koz, Kirk Whalum, Peter White, Rick Braun, Marc Antoine, and BWB among
many more. Known for his sweeping arrangements and cinematic compositions,
Saisse pens music for film, video games, commercials and television such as
“Madam Secretary” and the Jesse Owens biopic, “Race.”
“The Body
and Soul Sessions Remastered” contains the following songs:
“Do It
Again”
“September”
“Lady
Madonna”
“Harley
Davidson”
“Lovely Day”
“Fire and
Rain”
“Constant
Rain”
“The
Dolphin”
“Comment Te
Dire Adieu”
“Body and
Soul”
“We’re All
Alone”
“If I Ever Lose This Heaven”
“If I Ever Lose This Heaven”
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