Tuesday, January 24, 2017

NEW RELEASES: PHILIPPE BADEN POWELL - NOTES OVER POETRY; ERIC ALEXANDER TRIO – JUST ONE OF THOSE THINGS; SKYMARK – RESISTANCE SONORE

PHILIPPE BADEN POWELL - NOTES OVER POETRY

Philippe is the son of Brazilian musical legend Baden Powell de Aquino, and is reinventing Brazilian jazz in the lineage of his father’s generation. Balancing the classical with the spiritual, the cinematic with the introspective, and sensitivity with a distinctly Brazilian groove, Notes Over Poetry calls upon the inspiration of the many musical and artistic greats Baden Powell has been surrounded by throughout his life. “The great Brazilian poet and old family friend, Vinicius de Moraes used to say that ‘life is the art of encounter’, and that is what this album is about.” A nomadic upbringing - moving between Rio, Paris and the coincidentally named German city of Baden-Baden, as well as touring internationally alongside his father and brother, provided boundless encounters with inspirational figures. Touring also gave Philippe Baden Powell his first taste of life in the spotlight: recorded when he was just thirteen, a sold out show alongside his father and brother at Sala Cecília Meireles in Rio De Janeiro, would become the 1996 album Baden Powell & Filhos. To his father, Philippe attributes key characteristics which have enriched and guided him in his professional life: “He transmitted to me the passion and commitment indispensable to any artist.” With his father he also shares an innate pull towards collaboration as key to the creative process. “I can’t remember a time making music just by myself, I’ve always felt like a kid with toys waiting for friends to come and play.” Credit is indeed due to the musicians on the album, many of whom are legendary artists in their own right: French jazz drummer André Ceccarelli, who has worked with everyone from Aretha Franklin to Michel Legrande; prolific Belgian jazz vocalist David Linx; and Afro-Brazilian percussion master Ruca Rebordão.

ERIC ALEXANDER TRIO – JUST ONE OF THOSE THINGS

A totally wonderful setting for the tenor genius of Eric Alexander – a freewheeling trio, which is a format we're not sure we've ever heard him in before – really stretching out in an amazing way, with the sense of of imagination that we've always loved in his music, but with a depth that takes him farther than most of his usual recordings too! We're not sure what happened, but there's a new sort of edge in Eric's horn – one that might well come from the sublime work of Dezron Douglas on bass and Neal Smith on drums – but which might just be Alexander deciding to take off and really blow us away – which he does throughout the set, with a sense of spirituality that we haven't heard from him before. The whole thing's amazing – and titles include "Wise One", "You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To", "You Say You Care", "Beautiful Love", "Bessie's Blues", "Russian Lullaby", and "We've Only Just Begun".  ~ Dusty Groove


SKYMARK – RESISTANCE  SONORE

A fantastic album of keyboard funk instrumentals – a set that starts somewhere in a late 70s soul fusion vibe, then makes a move through some of the more broken, cosmic territory of the European scene in recent years! On some of the straighter tracks, there's Fender Rhodes, at a level that recalls the best work of musicians like Bobby Lyle or Ramsey Lewis during their 70s jazz funk years – while other tracks get a bit more abstract, with complicated rhythms that change things up nicely, while still keeping things in soulful territory. There's a bit of muted vocals at spots – but really layered down in the rhythm section, with a more instrumental vibe to the record overall. Titles include "Warm Day", "Illusion", "Flying Fantasy", "O Alivio Das Ferias", and "Disco Song For My Son".  ~ Dusty Groove





PIANIST DAVID BERKMAN Reconvenes "Old Friends and New Friends" Band with Special Guests for Three Night Engagement @ SMOKE JAZZ & SUPPER CLUB February 3rd, 4th & 5th

Pianist, composer, and educator David Berkman has been a vitally important figure on the NYC jazz scene since the mid 1980s.  He has appeared in the bands of countless leaders, including Cecil McBee, Tom Harrell, The Vanguard Orchestra and has worked with a wide array of jazz luminaries including Sonny Stitt, Joe Lovano, Steve Wilson, Chris Potter, Ray Drummond, Lenny White, Scott Colley, Billy Hart, Bill Stewart, Brian Blade and many, many others.  In recent years he has appeared as a leader/co-leader, at the helm of the critically acclaimed New York Standards Quartet, with Tim Armacost, Ugonna Okegwo and Gene Jackson (the band just celebrated their 10-year anniversary with the release of "Power of 10" and will be marching into the next decade with the Spring 2017 release of their sixth album, "Sleight Of Hand"). He has also published three books (with Sher Music Publishing) on jazz theory and practice that have become "must-haves", "The Jazz Musician's Guide to Creative Practicing" (2007), "The Jazz Singer's Guidebook" (2009) and "The Jazz Harmony Book" (2014). 

During this time Berkman also released an album that is quickly becoming a classic, "Old Friends and New Friends", featuring Billy Drewes, Adam Kolker and Brian Blade (old friends) and Dayna Stephens and Linda Oh (new friends). This February 3rd, 4th & 5th, at Smoke Jazz & Supper Club, Berkman happily reunites members of that band with special guests Ugonna Okegwo on bass and Jochen Rueckert and Jonathan Blake, splitting the drum duties. The band will be playing material from this album (produced by Matt Balitsaris and released on Palmetto Records in 2015) released to great critical acclaim, plus new music from the mind and pen of Berkman. "For this weekend at Smoke, we're doing some music from 'Old Friends and New Friends' but I'm also looking forward to premiering some new compositions that we'll be recording on our next CD. This ensemble is a ball to write for because there are three woodwind virtuosos in it, who together will be playing seven different instruments. But the main thing is that all the members of the group are monstrous musicians and improvisors who shape these compositions in unique ways. I think the audience will enjoy hearing all of these individual voices and how much we all enjoy playing this music together" explained Berkman.


Don't miss this three night engagement at Smoke Jazz & Supper Club, February 3rd, 4th and 5th with sets @ 7, 9 & 10:30 PM

Other musicians: 
David Berkman (piano & compositions)
Dayna Stephens (saxophone & EWI)
Adam Kolker (saxophones & clarinets)
Billy Drewes (saxophones)
Ugonna Okegwo (bass)
Jochen Rueckert (drums on 2/3)
Jonathan Blake (drums on 2/4 & 2/5)


MICHAËL ATTIAS PRESENTS - NERVE DANCE FEATURING ARUÁN ORTIZ, JOHN HÉBERT & NASHEET WAITS

Nerve Dance - saxophonist, composer, bandleader, and conceptualist Michaël Attias' sixth album (available on Clean Feed Records, March 10, 2017), which deals with the aesthetics of spontaneity, the theory of elasticity and the concept of equality in music, is an expansive, spirited debut from Michaël Attias' new Quartet, featuring Aruán Ortiz (piano), John Hébert (bass) and Nasheet Waits (drums). On Nerve Dance, we are regaled with hearing four hearts, minds and bodies hooking up at an extremely high level on nine Attias compositions, and two from Hébert. Each piece exercises a different set of muscles and faculties for the band and every member of the Quartet carries within them the historical knowledge and a fluency in the multitude of dialects of this music; consequently we hear them free within the compositions, deep into the zone of this collective creation, transcending their respective instruments and completely surrendering to the music.
  
Attias has been influenced by literature, film, painting, extensive travel, life in general, and of course, a wide spectrum of music, ranging from Moroccan Gnawa rhythms to Renaissance Polyphony, Ligeti, Debussy and the 2nd Viennese School; the AACM, Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor and Steve Lacy, also Andrew Hill, Paul Motian, Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh, plus the first and lasting loves, Ellington, Coltrane, Monk, Miles and Bird. Attias' music, while dedicated to "creation" rather than "re-creation", remains firmly rooted in the avant-garde, conceptualized as the true tradition of this music from its earliest recordings onward. Attias asserts that the revolutionary, adventurous spirit of the major figures of jazz, including his aforementioned influences, made bold strokes of genius that only seem inevitable in retrospect, and have paved the way for the audacious improvisers of today who remain singular and fearless in the face of mass conformity. There exists an instinctual, visceral need in Attias and his cohorts to play music that is honest, that rejects inertness and fully embraces the meaning of creativity and evolution. This music is found on Nerve Dance.     

Attias, a quietly fierce, improvising force on the international scene, has worked with Anthony Braxton and Paul Motian, and is a frequent collaborator/sideman for Kris Davis, Ralph Alessi, Tony Malaby, Oliver Lake, Anthony Coleman (and many others), and also leads three bands, his new Quartet, Renku (featuring John Hébert and Satoshi Takeishi), and Spun Tree (featuring Ralph Alessi, Matt Mitchell, Sean Conly and Tom Rainey). He has also composed for theatre, film, big band, and orchestra. So why this new Quartet, and why Ortiz, Hébert and Waits? "There was a particular chemistry I was looking for and a kinship of approach that I can only describe as a fiery mathematics whose combustion is in the blowing itself, a group identity so strong that it becomes the overriding composition. This band is big fun to play with. Everyone has in common a deep lyricism and a very personal way of bringing design to the turbulence and turbulence to the design. We all share a fearless commitment to every moment of the music, to making it breathe and dance - balancing the yins and yangs, fire and receptivity, mystery and clarity... Hébert, Nasheet and I have played together in countless situations over the last fifteen years, and, of course, those two for years played together with Andrew Hill whose music is a big inspiration to us all. They bring a deeply singing quality and dance to everything they do. Aruán is the new agent in this chemistry; he has all the qualities I've mentioned and a kind of visionary approach to sound and time, order and chaos that I really appreciate. Music demands of us, as players and listeners, that we put our emotions, minds, bodies, and nervous systems on the line and give it some attention, but the reward is that we can all share in the dance", explained Attias.

Dark Net is the most recorded piece of Attias'. Previously on Renku (2005), Renku in Greenwich Village (2016) and on Eric Revis' Parallax (2013) with Jason Moran, Ken Vandermark, and Nasheet Waits. "Hearing Eric's version prompted me to revisit the piece both on the last Renku album and on Nerve Dance. It's in 3/4, 24 bars. The melody and bass line are two snakes coiling and uncoiling around a 6-beat phrase inspired by Elvin Jones. Intervals and durations are twinned."

Nerve & Limbo is a diptych - two radically different approaches to the same harmonic material, which are woven back into the structure of the album later as Le Pèse-Nerfs and Ombilique. "The 'active' Nerve section articulates a metric-intervallic structure of variable length and transposition, the 'passive' Limbo is a listening to the accumulation of its overtones, inspired by the piano sound of dear departed friend Masabumi Kikuchi."

Scribble Job Yin Yang - "Another in the series of tunes I've written on the NY subway. They're all definitely New York City tunes. The title echoes the underlying rhythmic chant of 6 against 8. The scribble of the melody is a type of cadence inspired by Charlie Parker."

Boca de Luna - This track features Attias, solo. "It's me playing both saxophone (left hand) and piano (right hand) - laying out the harmonic canvas to Moonmouth . . . with erasures . . ."

Moonmouth - "The melody is Ariadne's thread through the maze of a fully notated piano part in 17/8. The harmony explores a sequence of superimposed triadic inversions. It establishes the strictest grid on the album."

La Part Maudite - Written when Attias was 20. "I had forgotten about writing this until I found the chart in a box when moving Uptown in the summer of 2015. The melody is written across a 6 bar additive cycle (4/4, 2/4, 5/4, 3/4, 6/4, 4/4). The title is lifted from Georges Bataille's book of economics (translated as 'the Accursed Share') - in which he says: "The sexual act is to Time what the tiger is to Space." That line could be the epigraph to the whole album.

Le Pèse-Nerfs - Title of Antonin Artaud's 1927 collection of poems, journal fragments and essays. It can be roughly translated as "the Nerve-Scale." "Artaud's idea of the poet-artist-actor playing on his/her nervous system, breath, physiology as on an instrument to register and express thought, vision, extreme states of being, is a big influence for me . . . This revisits the material from the 'Nerve' section of Nerve and Limbo.

Rodger Lodge - "A beautiful tune by John Hébert, one of my favorite composers of today . . . shades of Mingus ballads, serpentine form and melody."

Dream in a Mirror - "I was in a recording studio the day Ornette Coleman died. I have loved and revered Ornette since I was fourteen years old. All I could do when I heard the news was to play his 'Clergyman's Dream' over and over. This 'Dream' is its reflection in minor."

Ombilique - Revisits the material from the "Limbo" section of Nerve & Limbo.

Nasheet "is a tribute in 3/4 to our great drummer by John Hébert. It explores a similar rhythmic terrain and serpentine counterpoint to 'Dark Net', which opens the album. I feel a deep kinship to John's playing and writing, and we all love Nasheet!





Petros Klampanis Blends the Colors of Emotion and Experience into a Rich Portrait of Humanity on his first Large Ensemble Album, Chroma

Bassist and composer Petros Klampanis has absorbed a vibrant palette of colors over the course of a varied musical life journey, including Mediterranean and Balkan folk music of his native Greece, classical colorings of studies in Athens, Amsterdam and New York City, and vibrant splashes of musical pigment developed on the diverse NYC jazz scene through collaborations with such innovators as Greg Osby, Jean-Michel Pilc, Shai Maestro, Oded Tzur, Antonio Sanchez and Ari Hoenig.

On Chroma, his third album as a leader and Motéma Music debut, Klampanis explores the colors of human character, inspired by world events and personal experience. Chroma, the Greek word for "color," masterfully employs a full spectrum of sonic colors to paint an introspective and emotionally daring artistic statement. His first large ensemble project melds the animated expressions of the composer's jazz quintet (piano, bass, drums, guitar and percussion) complemented by lush, classically-arranged strings to create a near symphonic work of modern jazz.

"This project arose from a question," Klampanis explains. "What are the elements that compose each one of us, our personal characters, our individuality? The first answer that came to my mind is that character is composed of all the emotions, the thoughts and ideas, the fantasies and experiences that we have in our lifetimes. If we were to assign each of these elements a single color, then every one of us could be seen as a unique composition of colors, the mix of which results in our own, very personal shade."

Klampanis' personal shade is a rich blend of colors whose expressive highlights have shined especially brightly during the making of this album. He explains that Chroma was born of a period of personal turmoil and self-examination. The end of a romantic relationship coincided with a number of other changes in the bassist's life and in the world at large, leading, he says, to "an introspective period where I was spending time and energy thinking of the reasons that lead me, and other people, to make certain decisions, to think of what we think and to be who we are."

Given his origins, Klampanis was also influenced by the turbulent events roiling the world, from economic stresses that hit particularly close to home in his native Greece, to his immigrant's natural empathy for the refugee crises in Syria and across the Middle East. Processing these global events, Klampanis' views on the human experience came into extreme clarity and were translated into Chroma as a riveting, synesthetic experience for listeners.

"We need to look inside and see what is really important for us and for the world around us," Klampanis urges. "We happen to live during a strange time for humanity. Musicians and artists in general have historically been the 'outsiders' in most societies, and our time makes no exception. But art carries qualities that are essential for our development, individually and socially. We need more 'color' in our life: more love, more compassion, respect, and imagination."

To achieve the striking tones on Chroma, Klampanis gathered a group of master musicians, each adding their own distinctive tint to the composer's panorama: guitarist Gilad Hekselman and pianist Shai Maestro (both originally from Israel), drummer John Hadfield (a native of Missouri), and Japanese-born percussionist Keita Ogawa make up the core group, which is joined by an accomplished eight-piece string ensemble.

Chroma was recorded and filmed live before an intimate audience at New York's Onassis Cultural Center. The Onassis Foundation USA, which is dedicated to exploring and promoting Greek culture from antiquity to today, provided a generous grant to support Klampanis' work, which he developed over a series of live presentations in 2014 and 2015. "I thought that it was best to record to capture the energy that this band carries in front of an audience," Klampanis explains, and indeed, the live setting is ideal for this well-honed ensemble, whose spontaneous interactions thrill, while never sacrificing the evocative sensitivity of Klampanis' writing and arranging.

"I have invested a lot of energy, love and time for the creation of Chroma. I can confidently say that I am really satisfied with the way everything came together. I am also happy about my first collaboration with Motéma, a label which I admire and respect".

About The Compositions
The slow dawning of the title track provides a moving illustration of the concept of the album as a whole.  A radiant image gradually comes into focus, beginning with the dream-like twinkling of Maestro's piano, then the shimmering strings, then a gently assertive melody.

The brooding, noir-lit "Tough Decisions (Are Always Dark Green)" offers a hint of Klampanis' particular brand of synesthesia, brought on by his recent break-up. While the bassist doesn't actually see colors from music, he does associate emotions and experience with different hues. A personal crisis and its associated olive-green tones inspired this piece, while the wonderment of growing up in a small community and dreaming of bigger things (as Klampanis did on the Greek island of Zakynthos) is spotlighted on the azure-splashed "Little Blue Sun."

A nebulous, mesmerizing intro leads into Hekselman's "Cosmic Patience," a piece that, for Klampanis, conjures not colors but an interstellar landscape. "Shadows," written by his countryman, pianist Spyros Manesis, fits more easily into the overall concept, its overcast shades of gray expressing humanity's struggle with our darker side. Klampanis reveals that interior dilemma through his tender, wordless vocals, achingly singing the melody accompanied by Hekselman's piercing guitar. The album closes on a more optimistic note with the joyous, celebratory "Shades of Magenta," its buoyant rhythms playfully countering the excited stabbing of the strings.

About Petros Klampanis
Born in Zakynthos, Greece, Petros Klampanis initially headed for a degree in mechanical engineering, dropped out of the Polytechnic School in Athens to pursue his musical passions, and in 2005 began double bass performance studies at the Amsterdam Conservatory. In 2008, he completed his formal studies at the Aaron Copland School of Music in New York, where he quickly began collaborating with some of the city's most renowned jazz musicians. In addition to his extensive list of appearances as a leader locally, including the storied venues of Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, he has performed at the internationally acclaimed North Sea Jazz Festival and the Palatia Jazz Festival in Germany.

Klampanis' collaborations with saxophonist Greg Osby led to the release of his first two acclaimed albums, Contextual and Minor Dispute, on the saxophonist's Inner Circle Music label. Fellow bassist Drew Gress has praised Klampanis' "aggressive melodicism, beautiful intonation, and uniquely personal string writing." In 2012, Klampanis was invited by the Liepaja Symphony Orchestra for a series of concerts throughout Latvia, while his arrangement of the Greek folk song "Thalassaki" was performed by the Greek Public Symphonic Orchestra in Athens. Also an in-demand educator, Klampanis has given workshops internationally and serves as a guest lecturer at Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio and the Ionian Academy of Music in Greece.

PETROS KLAMPANIS 2017 TOURING
March 11 - Loft - Koeln, Germany
March 12 - Vortex - London, UK
March 18 - Jazz Station - Brussels, Belgium
March 22 - Philly Joe's - Tallinn, Estonia
May 3 - Thessaloniki, Greece
May 4 - Athens, Greece
May 5 - XJAZZ Festival - Berlin, Germany
May 6 - Duc des Lombards - Paris, France




Guitarist Lawson Rollins has the Billboard, America’s Music Charts and Groove Jazz Music charts under the hypnotic spell of his new single, “Island Time”

Award-winning world music guitarist Lawson Rollins has the Billboard, America’s Music Charts and Groove Jazz Music charts under the hypnotic spell of his new single, “Island Time,” the first cut taken from his seventh album, “3 Minutes to Midnight,” which was released last Friday (January 20) by Infinita Records. Radio programmers at influential national outlets, including SiriusXM’s Watercolors and Broadcast Architecture, have made the seductive waltz paced by Rollins’ beguiling fingerstyle nylon guitar come-ons one of the “most added” and “most played” new singles on the first two charts published in 2017. Another composition appearing on the multicultural and multi-genre collection written by Rollins, the mystical meditation “Eternal,” began receiving airplay last month on the nationally-syndicated public radio program Echoes. “3 Minutes to Midnight” wasted no time climbing into the top 20 of the iTunes world music album sales chart.         

Adopting a “Brevity is the soul of wit” mantra while crafting the twelve tunes that form “3 Minutes to Midnight,” Rollins opted to communicate with a sense of urgency, immediacy and poignancy perhaps to contrast the clutter and clamor incessantly assaulting our senses and shrinking bandwidths. He eschewed his long-held penchant for sprawling compositions and opulently-layered audioscapes in favor of clear and concise constructs - all in the three-minute range – with a pared down sonic aesthetic. Producing the session with multi-platinum producer Dominic Camardella, Rollins’ new set evokes a full gamut of moods and emotions ranging from passion, energetic and excitement to brooding, melancholic and pensive.    

In the March issue of Guitar Player that is slated to hit magazine racks early next month, Rollins, whose virtuosic classical guitar technique has amassed over 10 million YouTube views, discusses “3 Minutes to Midnight” as well as nabbing his first film score. In a feature story that serves as the cover to the magazine’s “Frets” section, he talks about composing the music and serving as the music supervisor and executive producer of “Golden,” a movie described as a modern day psychological morality thriller currently in post-production. 

“The soundtrack is going to be all original material from me on acoustic, electric, slide and Spanish guitars, backed by two-time Grammy-winning Danish violinist Mads Tolling, Native American master flute player Guillermo Martinez (of the Tarascan tribe) and multi-instrumentalist Stephen Duros. It's going to be a haunting soundtrack of acoustic Americana guitar motifs, blues-based electric guitar playing, violin fiddling, and Native American flute and drumming fused with some contemporary synthesizer and percussive elements,” said Rollins, a San Francisco-based artist whose authentic world beat sound and earthy ethereal recordings foretold eventual work in cinema.

Along with garnering robust radio play and early chart action, “3 Minutes to Midnight” is being well received by critics. Below is a sampling of the initial reviews:

“If your ears are thirsting for swirling guitar work that will thrill your heart and bring you up out of whatever funky mood you’re in – Lawson’s new (January 20th, 2017) release is just perfect for doing that.” – Improvijazzation Nation

“Lawson Rollins once again takes the listener on a magical musical journey…A nicely balanced release of 12 tracks together with Rollins' exquisite guitar work as great as ever, means that ‘3 Minutes to Midnight’ is one of those albums that quickly becomes addictive listening.” – Exclusive Magazine

“This American artist is one of the most creative world music and fusion guitarists in the world.” – Keys & Chords

“As one of those guitarists who first captured my attention with his Latin-infused and Nuevo Flamenco guitar style quite a while ago, Lawson Rollins continues to provide awe-inspiring melodies and riffs on his latest release, ‘3 Minutes to Midnight.’…these compositions, all penned by Rollins, by the way, are simply filled with the moving vibe that defies description but always speaks to you and manages to transport you to some wondrous land of color and intrigue.” – The Smooth Jazz Ride

“Classic, acoustic guitar jazz with a hint of the exotic.” – Soul and Jazz and Funk

“Firmly staking out his territory as a world beat guitarist par excellence…A tasty treat throughout.” – Midwest Record

“’3 Minutes to Midnight’ is dazzling, pertinent and explosive.” – SmoothJazz.com

www.LawsonRollins.com. To view the “Golden” trailer, go to www.GoldenTheMovie.com.


Monday, January 23, 2017

Multi GRAMMY Winner, Albita Rodriguez to release new Big Band album, self-titled, ALBITA

Multi GRAMMY Winner, Albita Rodriguez announces her highly anticipated new Big Band album, self-titled, ALBITA, set for release worldwide February 3 via InnerCat Music Group.  The album was produced by Paris Cabezas, Albita Rodriguez, Yorgis Goiricelaya and Livan Mesa at Live House Recording Studios (Miami) under the technical direction of Paris Cabezas.

The ALBITA album experience faithfully captures the sound and essence of the Cuban Big Bands of the 1950s. The repertoire, dynamic brass and arrangements are reminiscent of the golden age of Benny More and Machito. The LP also features duets with Ana Gabriel (“Perdon”), Alexandre Pires (“Pais Tropical”), Ednita Nazario (“Loca”) and Rafael “Pollo” Brito (“La Vaca Mariposa”)

“Albita meticulously studied the old big band arrangements to gain the spirit of the 1950s, then transferred it to this project and gave it a modern feel. ALBITA is her 14th full-length album and the recording and mixing process was intentionally kept analog. Although, digital technology has simplified the studio workflow a great deal, I'm still attached to the analogue world, so this LP was recorded on a 2-inch MTR-90 tape machine, together with an array of vintage microphones and custom tube gear that was expressly built for this project. There were no overdubbing edits or artificial corrections during the recording and mixing processes. In my opinion, the synthesis of the old and the new, analogue and digital, is the secret sauce for great sounding records.”, explains Cabezas.

Special D2C packages of ALBITA will also be available to fans, which includes an exclusive vinyl boxset containing an LP, an autographed booklet and other collector items.

ALBITA Tracklisting:

1. Quién Pero Quién
2. País Tropical (duet with Alexandre Pires)
3. Medley de Benny More
4. Medley de Cumbias
5. L-O-V-E
6. Perdón (duet with Ana Gabriel)
7. Angelitos Negros
8. Loca (duet with Ednita Nazario)
9. Medley de Boleros
10. La Vaca Mariposa (duet with Rafael “Pollo” Brito)
11. No te Metas Con Mi Conga

Honored with highest award given to selected artists in Cuba, the “Orden por la Cultura Nacional de Cuba”, winner of two GRAMMYS, two EMMYS and 11 GRAMMY Nominations, Albita is the most authentic Cuban singer hailing from Havana that has been able to move the world through her music. Albita is “the reincarnation of a 1930's European chanteuse, a Berlin Cabaret singer transfused with Latin blood" says Los Angeles Times. As a young singer through her authentic roots, she made herself noticed by her dynamic contribution to the renovation of traditional Cuban music and adding a very personal style to her compositions, musical arrangements and singing.

Since arriving in Miami, FL in 1993, her electrifying and mesmerizing performance of contagious Cuban music has elevated her career to an international level, performing all throughout Europe, Latin America, Australia, Africa and Malaysia, where she has shared the stage with such great artists as the late Celia Cruz, Tito Puentes, Oscar de Leon, Gilberto Gil, Juan Luis Guerra, Tito Nieves, Daniela Mercury, Miriam Makeeba, Phil Collins, Melissa Ethredge, and Tony Bennett.

Albita has recorded 12 albums in the US, earning her 11 GRAMMY NOMINATIONS. In the year 2004, she created her own independent record label, Angels’ Dawn Records, where she recorded and released the album titled “ALBITA LLEGO” which won two GRAMMY awards in the category of "Best Contemporary Tropical Album of the Year".


Legacy Recordings Celebrates Harry Belafonte's 90th Birthday with Release of When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte

Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, is celebrating the 90th birthday of the iconic American singer, songwriter, actor, social activist and cultural ambassador Harry Belafonte (born March 1, 1927) with the release of When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte on Friday, February 24, 2017. 

Harry Belafonte broke into both mainstream success and musical immortality in 1956 when his breakout LP--Calypso--became the first album ever, by any artist of any race or gender, to sell more than a million copies while his signature "Day-O" (from "Banana Boat") became one of the most instantly recognized melodic phrases in the world. Belafonte's sound signified an international island dance party, Belafonte was an inspirational and motivating force in the American Civil Rights movement. Throughout his career, Belafonte has brought a high degree of social consciousness to everything he does, merging the activist with the artist in the flow of his music.

An essential single-disc anthology of Belafonte's biggest hits and timeless classics, When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte premieres a new recording of "When Colors Come Together (Our Island In The Sun)," performed by a children's choir. The original recording of the song (co-written by Belafonte and Irving Burgie) served as the title music for the highly successful and at-the-time controversial 1957 film, "Island In The Sun," which starred Belafonte, James Mason, Joan Fontaine, Joan Collins and Dorothy Dandridge. One of the great pop standards in the Belafonte catalog, "Island In The Sun" has been covered more than 40 times since becoming a hit in the 1950s and was referenced in the 1992 film "The Muppet Christmas Carol."

The film, "Island In The Sun" explored themes of racial tension and interracial romance in an explosive drama based on Alec Waugh's 1955 novel. "With the myriad of problems facing the world today, none embody the passion and life's work of Belafonte more than the issue of race. Coming from a background of diversity he evolved into a performing artist with a deep, lifelong commitment to social activism. In the spirit of that commitment and at the forefront of this important effort is a re-imagining of one of Harry's classic recordings that took the world by storm," wrote David Belafonte in his liner notes to the album. "We are proud to present 'When Colors Come Together (Our Island In The Sun)': re-interpreted for children; and re-recorded by children. We hasten to make the case that the concept of race is not a trait with which one is born, but instead an acquired disease that festers with age. As such, we looked to these young children as the voice of this expression through this reimagined song, dance, and art."

With each track handpicked by Harry Belafonte, When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte provides an essential overview of the artist's career, bringing together his biggest hits and most socially conscious performances alongside songs that are simply near and dear to his heart.

Belafonte has campaigned for social justice and equality throughout his career, while his transcendent timeless music continues to bring people of all races, creeds and colors together to celebrate and share the beauty of the world, the glory of our creator and the love of life and others.

In October 2016, in Chattahoochee Hills, Georgia, just outside of Atlanta, Sankofa.org, the organization founded by Belafonte in 2013, hosted the inaugural two-day Many Rivers to Cross Festival. Belafonte sang live for the first time in 12 years performing a powerful version of Pete Seeger's "Those Three on My Mind" (which he'd recorded for his 1967 album Belafonte on Campus) dedicated to slain civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. The historical musical moment was part of the grand finale musical presentation called "Stir it Up," curated by Belafonte and produced by Sankofa.org

With the causes championed by Harry Belafonte in the news every day and the healing communal power of music more necessary than ever, now is the time to celebrate the powerful and diverse musical and cultural contributions of this iconic performer.

Harry Belafonte
When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte

1) When Colors Come Together (Our Island In The Sun) (newly recorded for this album)
2) Jump In The Line (1961 - Jump Up Calypso)
3) Banana Boat (Day-O) (1956 - Calypso)
4) All My Trials (1959 - Love is a Gentle Thing)
5) Empty Chairs (1973 - Play Me)
6) Matilda (1956 - Belafonte)
7) Angelina (1961 - Jump Up Calypso)
8) Turn The World Around (1977 - Turn The World Around)
9) Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair) (1956 - Belafonte)
10) Abraham, Martin and John (1970 - Belafonte By Request)
11) On Top of Old Smokey (1962 - The Midnight Special)
12) Jamaica Farewell (1956 - Calypso)
13) Brown Skin Girl (1956 - Calypso)
14) Island In The Sun (From "Island In The Sun") (1957 - Belafonte Sings of the Caribbean)
15) Those Three Are On My Mind (1967 - Belafonte On Campus)
16) Try To Remember (1966 - In My Quiet Room)
17) Mary's Boy Child (1956 - An Evening with Belafonte)
18) Look Over Yonder/Be My Woman, Gal (Live) (1972 - Harry Belafonte...Live!)
19 ) Pastures of Plenty (Live) (1972 - Harry Belafonte...Live!)

Born Harold George Bellanfanti, Jr. in New York City's Harlem on March 1, 1927, Harry Belafonte has achieved worldwide success acclaim as a recording artist, performer, singer, songwriter, actor and activist. One of the most successful African-American pop stars in history, Belafonte brought Caribbean party music to an international audience by popularizing Caribbean party music with his breakthrough album Calypso (1956). Perhaps best-known for his signature track "The Banana Boat Song (Day-O)," Belafonte's catalog encompasses the music of many genres including pop, blues, folk, gospel, reggae, show tunes and American standards. In addition to his stand-out performance in "Island in the Sun" (1957), Belafonte has starred in several films including Otto Preminger's hit musical "Carmen Jones" (1954) and Robert Wise's "Odds Against Tomorrow" (1959).

An early supporter of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s, Belafonte was among Martin Luther King, Jr.'s close circle. Throughout his career he has advocated for political and humanitarian causes including the anti-apartheid movement and USA for Africa. Since 1987, Belafonte has been a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and currently acts as the American Civil Liberties Union celebrity ambassador for juvenile justice issues.

Belafonte has won three Grammy Awards, including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, an Emmy Award, and a Tony Award. In 1989 he received the Kennedy Center Honors. He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1994. In 2014, he received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the Academy's 6th Annual Governors Awards. In March 2014, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from Berklee College of Music in Boston.

In 2013 Belafonte founded Sankofa.org., which has been building a platform where influential artists and grassroots leaders can work collaboratively to speak out against human rights abuse and injustice. Recently Sankofa.org partnered with Blackout for Human Rights on the successful "Justice For Flint" benefit concert, and worked with Usher on his groundbreaking "Chains" music video and racial justice campaign. Proceeds for the festival will assist with partner grassroots organizations across the country.



Friday, January 20, 2017

NEW RELEASES: FOUR TOPS – NATURE PLANNED IT; ART HIRAHARA – CENTRAL LINE; ERIC LAU - EXAMPLES

FOUR TOPS – NATURE PLANNED IT

Why did Motown ever let the Four Tops get away? This album was their last for the label – and it's an excellent one, filled with soul, sweetness, and some of the best arrangements the group had in their later years! The soul component is super-high – with tight group instrumentation that reminds us of the best Philly backing combos of the same time, but leaner too – as Dennis Coffey and Wah Wah Ragin are on guitars, Jack Ashford handles percussion, and Leonard Caston adds some nice funky keyboards. The real talent, though, is the group – and Levi Stubbs is in fine fine form on cuts like "She's An Understanding Woman", "I Am Your Man", "If You Let Me", "Nature Planned It", "Walk With Me, Talk With Me Darling", and "Happy (Is A Bumpy Road)". Even includes a great version of Todd Rundgren's wonderful track "We Gotta Get You A Woman"! (Limited edition!)  ~ Dusty 
Groove

ART HIRAHARA – CENTRAL LINE

Art Hirahara is a beautifully fluid pianist – one who really won us over with his last album on Posi-tone, and who seems to soar even more here – working in a fantastic trio that includes Linda Oh on bass and Rudy Royston on drums – plus some occasional tenor from Donny McCaslin! Oh and Royston have this round presence that really resonates strongly with Art's piano – creating this wave of soulful energy from the ground up, even on the mellower moments – with a tonal depth that's sophisticated, yet never forced at all. When McCaslin comes into the mix, his sound is a bit more separate from the three – yet in a way that only underscores their cohesion and beautiful sensitivity together. Titles include "Little Giant", "Sensitive Animal", "Central Line", "Kuroda Bushi", "Astray", and a version of the Chico Buarque tune "As Minhas Meninas".  ~ Dusty Groove

ERIC LAU - EXAMPLES

A beautiful back-to-basics set from Eric Lau – spare instrumentals that focus wonderfully on the best sort of interplay between beats and keyboards – never overdone, never overly-long, but a great reminder of how wonderful the format can be in the hands of the right musician! There's a crispness to the tunes that's wonderful – and a freshness that's really surprising, especially if you think that everything's already been done in the genre – which might have been our position, until we opened our ears to the goodness on the set! Titles include "Harmonics", "Rahw", "Harps In Space", "Lift Off", "Rhythm King", "The Sun & Beyond", "Flute Time", "Myo Shuffle", and "Everything Will Work Out Fine".  ~ Dusty Groove



NEW RELEASES: VIBRATION BLACK FINGER - BLACKISM; JEREMY PELT – MAKE NOISE!; CHIP WICKHAM – LA SOMBRA

VIBRATION BLACK FINGER - BLACKISM

Incredibly hip work from drummer Lascelle Gordon – a set that really lives up to the compelling name of the group, with a sound that instantly brings together a righteous 70s generation with the current cosmic underground scene! The music is a mix of spiritual and electric jazz modes, but also is unafraid to throw in a bit more in the way of electronics, too – never programmed rhythms, as Lascelle handles all those himself, live – but sometimes with phase shifts on some of the instruments, or a bit of processing – which evokes maybe a bit of electric Miles, or some of the Chicago Underground modes. Trumpet and tenor get nice space on the set, and the album features vocals from Maggie Nichols on one track – and titles include "Emin", "Sawalha", "Goodbye NYC", "Ofilli", "Drums For Peace", and "Bhamara/The Black Bee".  ~ Dusty Groove

JEREMY PELT – MAKE NOISE!

A joyous noise from trumpeter Jeremy Pelt – a player who just seems to get deeper and deeper as the years go on, and who's in very spiritual territory here – as he stretches out with a quintet on a host of beautiful original compositions! The lineup is heavy on the darker textures of the spectrum – with Victor Gould on piano, Vincente Archer on bass, Jonathan Barber on drums, and Jacquelene Acevedo on percussion – creating these shifting, blocking passages that really let Pelt's trumpet soar and shimmer over the top – maybe resonant with even more meaning than usual, as he blows these sublime lines that link him back to a righteous lineage we might never have expected from his early recordings. The whole thing's great – rock-solid, and free from gimmick – and titles include "Digression", "Cry Freedom", "Evolution", "Chateau D'Eau", "Your First Touch", and "Prince".  ~ Dusty Groove

CHIP WICKHAM – LA SOMBRA

Sublime spiritual sounds from reedman Chip Wickham – part of the new revival of soulful 70s modes that we see in the music of Nat Birchall and Matthew Halsall! Chip lists both of these musicians as key influence in the notes, and we can definitely hear that in the music, too – which is a mix of modal groovers and more spacious numbers that blossom with Strata East-like energy – all handled by a great quartet that features Chip on both flute and tenor, plus Gabriel Casanova on piano, David Salvador on bass, and Antonio Pax on both drums and vibes. The music also has some hip European echoes – with styles that recall older work by Harold McNair on the flute numbers, or maybe the best of the Saba/MPS acoustic years. Easily the most righteous album ever issued by the Lovemonk label – with titles that include "Sling Shot", "Red Planet", "The Detour", "La Sombra", "Pushed Too Far", and "La Leyenda Del Tiempo".  ~ Dusty Groove


BRENTON WOOD "THE VERY BEST OF" COLLECTION FEATURES 16 REMASTERED SONGS FROM 1967-1971

Very few singers ever accomplish what this soul man was able to do: create a lasting and indelible impression on listeners with only a few notes of a song. But that’s exactly what Brenton Wood did on his smash hit “The Oogum Boogum Song” in 1967. The opening piano notes and then Wood’s unique vocal still sounds brand new a half-century later. On February 24, Concord Bicycle is releasing The Very Best of Brenton Wood, a newly remastered collection charting his run of worldwide pop hits. Included are “The Oogum Boogum Song,” “Gimme Little Sign,” “Baby You Got,” along with unforgettable Dedicated to You soul ballads “Me and You” and “I Like the Way You Love Me.” 

In addition to Brenton Wood’s series of 7-inch 45s releases for the Double Shot Records label, two deep soul gems from the vaults are included: a stirring and deeply personal version of Sam Cooke’s Civil Rights anthem “A Change is Gonna Come” along with “Diamonds,” a sought after song that is among Wood’s most sought-after recordings. Both are making their physical debut on the compact disc version of The Very Best Of.

This brand new collection is Brenton Wood’s first official remastered Best Of compilation since 1988. Out of print for decades, his two classic studio albums Oogum Boogum and Baby You Got It were digitally reissued for the first time ever in 2013. Oogum Boogum will also have a wide vinyl album release this May. 

Brenton Wood has had a career of both mainstream success and underground devotion. All Music Guide recently wrote: “It’s hard not to hear Brenton Wood’s biggest hit, ‘Gimme Little Sign,’ and not be convinced that it very well might be the greatest single ever cut. It relies on no one thing—the song is slinky, surprising and seductive, blessed with a perfect production (the organ break in the middle is positively, eerily beautiful) and a wonderful, understated performance by Wood, who proves with his smooth, sure-handed delivery that he is one of the finest soul singers of his generation.” 

Brenton Wood arrived on the scene in 1967 with back-to-back hits “The Oogum Boogum Song” and “Gimme Little Sign” that would carry the then-Compton resident from a regional Southern California artist to international stardom. During his high-voltage period with the short-lived Double Shot Records independent label, Wood would record eleven 45s and two studio albums, creating a unique soul and pop hybrid style crossed with moving doo wop ballads.

The Hollywood-based Double Shot Records roster would also include garage rock legends Count Five, doo wop faves the Bagdads, Kent & the Candidates (who also were Wood’s touring  and session band) and Bay Area singing legend Bobby Freeman. It reflects an era when popular music was breaking across boundaries and become the sound heard around the world.
  
Track Listing

1. The Oogum Boogum Song
2. Gimme Little Sign
3. I Like The Way You Love Me
4. Baby You Got It
5. A Change Is Gonna Come
6. I Think You’ve Got Your Fools Mixed Up
7. Great Big Bundle Of Love
8. Me And You
9. Take A Chance
10. Darlin’
11. I’m The One Who Knows
12. Catch You On The Rebound
13. Two Time Loser
14. Best Thing I Ever had
15. Where Were you
16. Diamonds




ELIANE ELIAS CELEBRATES SAMBA’S CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY WITH NEW RELEASE "DANCE OF TIME"

Recorded in Brazil, the March 24 release features Randy Brecker, Mike Mainieri, Mark Kibble, Amilton Godoy, Toquinho and João Bosco

Two years after seducing fans with her GRAMMY®-winning Made in Brazil (Best Latin Jazz Album), the internationally acclaimed pianist, singer, composer and arranger Eliane Elias returns with the ebullient Dance of Time, set for release on March 24, 2017 via Concord Jazz.

The former disc commemorated a homecoming for her; it was the first time she recorded in her native country of Brazil since moving to the United States in 1981. JazzTimes magazine praised Made in Brazil as  “a warm embrace,” while Jazziz magazine wrote, “Surrounded by Brazilian-bred luminaries, Elias brilliantly captures the complexities of human emotions in a seamless display that reconciles past and present, loss and fulfillment, melancholy and bliss, all while celebrating her homecoming.”

Dance of Time, like its predecessor, was recorded in Brazil. “Recording in Brazil was such a high,” explains Elias as to why she returned to the country. But thematically, Dance of Time is its own beautiful beast. Whereas Made in Brazil was a tantalizing toast to three generations of Brazilian composers, Dance of Time’s themes are multifold.

With the presence of extraordinary guests including pianist Amilton Godoy plus singer-songwriting guitarists João Bosco and Toquinho—from Brazil—along with trumpeter Randy Brecker, vibraphonist Mike Mainieri and singer Mark Kibble—from the United States, Dance of Time celebrates certain people who were integral in Elias’ early artistic journey in both Brazil and the U.S. “I wanted to include musicians who were very important in the start of my career,” Elias says. “Dance of Time represents the spectrum of my career from the very beginning until now.”

Dance of Time also applauds the samba, a genre originating from Bahia, via Africa. Last year marked the 100th anniversary of the first samba ever recorded and registered, “Pelo Telefone.” “Samba is the most authentic and contagious dance rhythm of Brazil, and there is no better place in the world to capture this music. I just had to be in Brazil to make Dance of Time.”

“On this record, I play and sing more sambas than I have ever recorded on an album,” Elias states. Indeed, she gets the party started in the most ingenious manner with her sublime makeover of the Brazilian classic “O Pato.” João Gilberto was the first to release the song in 1960 (on his Capitol Records LP Brazil's Brilliant João Gilberto). In Elias’ deft hands, the song’s rhythmic pulse transforms from bossa nova to samba as her percussive piano accompaniment propels the song forward alongside her rhythm section’s sauntering thrust. Elias embellishes her piano playing with pliant jazz phrases in a style that is absolutely her own. While singing and swinging the vocal melody with her sumptuous voice, her left hand pulsing a syncopating rhythm and her right hand flying over the keys, Elias tells short stories in her own inimitable way.

Next, Elias explores the 1932 classic show tune “You’re Getting to Be a Habit With Me,” a song famously rendered by Frank Sinatra in 1956. By supplying the song with a graceful bossa nova groove, Elias makes a subtle nod to Francis Albert Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim, the monumental duet LP between the two music icons, which celebrates its 50th anniversary. Elias’ rendition also features some glimmering vibraphone accompaniment from Mainieri.

Elias’ professional relationship with Mainieri dates back to 1981. When she was recording her first demo, Mainieri offered to produce it. Their partnership blossomed further when she joined the Mainieri-led jazz ensemble Steps Ahead. She recorded the group’s first album and toured internationally. Mainieri appears again on Elias’ amorous bossa nova “Little Paradise,” on which he underscores her husky voice and dreamy piano melodicism with aquatic vibraphone colors.

Mark Kibble—of the award-winning jazz-gospel vocal sextet Take 6—guests on the 1944 Brazilian classic “Copacabana.”  Her creative arranging skills are in evidence as she modernizes “Copacabana” with new harmonies, modulations and subtle backbeats, which provide an R&B sensibility that eventually morphs into a samba. Elias serenades the lyrics atop her gorgeous piano accompaniment while Kibble’s multi-tracked vocal harmonies insulate the song bracingly.

Elias reveals that she and Kibble have admired each other’s work since the mid-’80s: “I envisioned vocal harmonies on a few tunes, and I could not imagine anyone other than Mark Kibble to provide the background vocals,” Elias says. “His contributions are absolutely gorgeous. I couldn’t be happier with the results.”

Kibble’s vocal magic appears on Elias’ sensual, mid-tempo samba “By Hand (Em Mãos)” and on her enchanting reading of Kurt Weil’s 1943 gem “Speak Low,” another classic that gets an update with a hybrid groove underneath her inventive reharmonization on an abbreviated form. In addition to Kibble’s haunting background vocals, “Speak Low” also features sumptuous flugelhorn playing from the jazz-great, multi-GRAMMY® Award-winning trumpeter, Randy Brecker.  Elias and Brecker sparked a wonderful professional and personal relationship starting in the early ’80s.  Elias remarks, “Our friendship and musical relationship has remained all these years.  Randy is a virtuoso musician, and his amazing playing is modern while deep in the tradition at the same time.  He’s simply one of a kind.”

João Bosco, one of Brazil’s most eminent singer-songwriters, appears on Elias’ feisty take of his classic song “Coisa Feita.” Elias’ arrangement incorporates a deeper bottom and more forceful propulsion; it also includes some of her most aggressive piano improvisations on the entire album. “Samba can’t swing any more than what we all brought to this recording, if I may say it,” Elias boasts. “I’m so proud of this version. The intensity in João Bosco’s music was influential to me during my formative years and I wanted to include him in this album.

Toquinho is the other stellar Brazilian singer-songwriter-guitarist guesting on Dance of Time. The first time Elias encountered the iconic Toquinho, she was only 17 years old. He, along with Vinicius de Moraes and Antonio Carlos Jobim, discovered her playing when she was leading a jazz trio. “After they heard me play, they invited me to join their tours throughout Brazil and South America. It was fantastic. At age 17, I started my life on the road,” Elias remembers.

While working alongside Toquinho and Vinicius de Moraes, Elias developed a way of articulating the samba rhythm on the piano that is unique to her.  Performing together, Eliane and Toquinho enliven the melancholy “Samba de Orly,” a 1970 tune that Toquinho penned with de Moraes and Chico Buarque that addresses the sentiments of living in exile during Brazil’s notorious military dictatorship.

Toquinho later appears on the disc’s closer, “Not to Cry (Pra Não Chorar),” a poignant duet with Elias. The song was initially composed by Toquinho in 1978 and entitled “Eliane,” but it was unfinished. “When I reminded him of the tune, Toquinho was thrilled. We finished the song,” Elias says. “He wrote all the lyrics, which are nostalgic as they talk about the times we were together with Vinicius, rehearsing, touring and living a life in music and art.”

On the wondrous original “An Up Dawn,” Elias invites Amilton Godoy—one of her earliest mentors to join in a festive piano duet. While she handles the all-encompassing samba groove, Godoy presents the prancing melody of which Elias sings in unison.  Godoy is not only an important figure in Elias’ life, he fronted the popular Zimbo Trio and founded one of the most important music schools in Brazil, the Centro Livre De Aprendizagem Musical (CLAM), in 1973. Elias was only 13 years old when she enrolled at CLAM.

Under Godoy’s mentorship, Elias’ musical knowledge evolved rapidly. So impressed with not only Elias’ musicality and virtuosity at the piano but also her astonishing transcribing skills, Godoy promoted her as a teacher when she was merely a 15-year-old. “I helped create the syllabus and method books that they still use today,” Elias says. “I then was made a professor of the piano department where I taught for four more years, until age 19.”

Rounding out Dance of Time are Elias’ irresistible, virtuosic version of João Donato’s 1965 hit “Sambou Sambou,” whose lyrics revel in the joys of the samba dance while her superb piano gets you off your seat, and her tender reading of Ary Barroso’s  “Na Batucada da Vida,” an intrepid ballad written in 1934. Speaking of the latter, Elias says, “This song was harmonically advanced for its time and is quite challenging vocally due to its wide vocal range.” Elias’ profound interpretation on this track reveals a depth of emotional expression that penetrates one’s soul.

With all its multiple reference points, Elias sees Dance of Time as her way of acknowledging various people and influences who informed and continue to inspire her music. And as stated before, she uses this new album as her personal salute to samba. “If you were to slow down the samba, you could get to some very beautiful, heartfelt lyricism,” she says. “Most people dance to samba music while caught up in the intoxicating rhythm, but one can also dive deeper into the lyrical, harmonic and melodic aspects of the music as well.  Elias’ Dance of Time exudes beauty and joy as it moves in rhythm to the beat of her universe.   Says Elias, “I wish for the listener to feel the happiness I felt when making this album and hope to bring some joy and beauty into their world.”


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