Brian Simpson / Steve Oliver – Unified
The historic meeting of two Smooth jazz icons! Between them,
Brian Simpson & Steve Oliver have scored more than 25 Top Ten Smooth Jazz
radio hits, more than 15 Top Ten Billboard Contemporary Jazz albums, toured to
packed houses worldwide and shared the stage with everyone from Larry Carlton
and George Duke to The Neville Brothers! Brian and Steve are famous for their
melodic richness, captivating grooves and delicate touch and Uni?ed is the
perfect expression of those qualities. Highlights include the romantic, dreamy
"Last Summer," the super-sophisticated "Café du Monde," the
grooving title tune "Unifed" plus “The Road Never Ends,” “What The
Wind Knows,” “Fired Up,” “Last Summer,” “Like No Other,” “The Way Home,” “Celestial
Body,” “A Distant Love,” and “And Then You Loved Me.”
Joel Ross - King Maker
An incredible debut from vibist Joel Ross – an artist who's
already given us great moments on records with Makaya McCraven, Marquis Hill,
and others – but who's completely his own man here right from the start! Ross
instantly emerges as a major creative force – leading the combo, composing the
music, and co-producing the set – with a rich vision for the future of vibes in
jazz, but one that also carries the depths of previous generations – especially
in the way that Joel approaches a tune, with a subtle sense of gravity that
makes each new selection a very powerful statement. The group features Immanuel
Wilkins on alto, Jeremy Corren on piano, Benjamin Tiberio on bass, and Jeremy
Dutton on drums – a tight quintet who work with a great sense of sympathy – and
singer Gretchen Parlato also joins the group at one point. Titles include
"Prince Lynn's Twin", "The Grand Struggle Against Fear",
"Freda's Disposition", "Yana", "With Who Do You Learn
Trust", and "Ill Relations". ~ Dusty Groove
Gruppo D'Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza - Gruppo
D'Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza (1965)
One of the most obscure chapters in the career of Ennio
Morricone – important avant garde work recorded in the mid 60s, just at a point
when he was beginning to rise in soundtrack fame! The ensemble is a key Italian
modernist group featuring Morricone, Giovanni Piazza, Mario Bertoncini, Egisto
Macchi, Gualtiero Branch, Jesus Villa Rojo, and Francesco Evangelisti – mostly
classically-trained musicians, but working here in a set of improvisations that
are extremely spare, and which are very much at the lower end of the sound
spectrum. Many of the sounds on the set are right at the frontiers of hearing –
and others, while more present, disappear as quickly as they emerge – further
enforcing the mystery and mood of the record. And while the overall style is quite
different than Morricone's soundtrack work, the group was clearly a key testing
ground for his ideas of sound and space that emerged later. Titles include
"Soup", "Scratch", "Settimino", and
"Eflot". ~ Dusty Groove
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