Tuesday, July 03, 2012

NEW RELEASES – ROY AYERS, DON CHERRY, HERB HARDESTY & HIS BAND


ROY AYERS – IN THE DARK (WITH BONUS TRACKS)

Roy Ayers in a seductive mid 80s mode – his first for Columbia – and a record with some incredibly nice moments that blow away most of his contemporaries! The synth soul and drum machine era might seem like an odd fit for Roy's jazzy vibes, but it actually works really well here! You could argue that few players with a such profound jazz funk pedigree could pull off an 80s modern sound so succussfully – and we'd argue that Roy Ayers is indeed one of the few! If synths and programmed drums aren't your thing, this record is actually more heavily-weighted with laidback jazzy soul, with plenty of vibes and the usual warm sexy vocals from Roy. Includes the funky classic "Poo Poo La La", which has a great little monologue in it – plus "I Can't Help It", "Compadre", "Sexy, Sexy, Sexy", and "Love Is In The Feel". This 2012 FTG CD includes 3 bonus tracks: "In The Dark (7" Version)", "Poo Poo La La (Edit)" and "Love Is In The Feel (7" Version)". ~ Dusty Groove

DON CHERRY – ORGANIC MUSIC SOCIETY

Early 70s greatness from Don Cherry – a double album's worth of profoundly spiritual soundscapes paired with lots of weird effects – and a very laidback groove overall! Tracks are written by Cherry, Terry Riley, Pharoah Sanders, and Nana Vasconcelos – and include performances by Don on trumpet, voice, and harmonium. Lots of cool percussion elements by the group, with some tabla and other Indian instrumentation. Titles include "Elixir", "Relativity Suite (Parts 1 & 2)", "Terry's Tune", "Hope", "The Creator Has a Master Plan", and "Resa". In a cool, trippy gatefold, too! ~ Dusty Groove


HERB HARDESTY & HIS BAND – DOMINO EFFECT: THE WING AND FEDERAL RECORDINGS 1958 TO 1961

Sax-heavy New Orleans R&B instrumentals from Herb Hardesty – the tenor player and secret weapon in Fats Domino's band – one of those incredible players whose name isn't as well known as the sound of his instrument! His sax sounds really great out front and in the lead – tightly grooving late 50s and early 60s rhythm & blues. This first ever CD retrospective of Herb's relatively few recordings as a leader features sessions recorded in New Orleans in '58, NYC in '59 and Cincinnati in '61 – with stellar players that include Hank Jones, Jimmy Davis, Walter Nelson, Clarence Ford and Roy Montrell. 12 of the tracks from a never-released Mercury LP – and the set has 20 tracks in all! Includes "Sassy", "Goldie", "Herb's Mood", "Nat", "Adam And Eva", "Coach Train", "69's Mother's Place, "The Chicken Twist", "Perdido Street" and more – plus 2 tunes with vocals by group guitarist Walter "Papoose" Nelson – "It Must Be Wonderful" and "Why Did We Have To Part". ~ Dusty Groove

NEW RELEASES – MELBA MOORE, TAVARES, GEORGE McCRAE, KASHIF


MELBA MOORE – THIS IS IT (WITH BONUS TRACKS)

A real stormer from Melba Moore – brilliantly-arranged dancefloor soul with beautiful lead vocals by Melba – on one of her best records of the 70s! Melba is straight-up amazing here, bringing genuine soul to feverish dancefloor gems and otherwise soaring numbers. This Is It was produced and arranged by Van McCoy, who was at the peak of his disco-era popularity at the time. We'd call this work here on Melba's record a creative peak for Van – even though if it didn't break Melba out in a big way commercially at the time. It includes the McCoy-penned should-be classic "This Is It", plus "Free", "Stay A While", a sweet cover of Curtis Mayfield's "Make Me Believe In You", "Lean On Me" (one of the greater showpieces for Melba's incredible voice), "Blood Red Roses", "Brand New" and more. This 2012 CD edition includes the bonus "This Is It (12" Version)" and "Free (Extended Version)". ~ Dusty Groove

TAVARES – WORDS & MUSIC (WITH BONUS TRACKS)

Hey, now – this is much more than merely Words & Music – it's a solid further step into a sweet 80s groove for the Tavares brothers! Their status as one of the great sibling vocal groups in R&B is on full display on this final album for RCA. The production is right at home in the keyboards-heavy 80s modern mode – but it's the vocals lead the way! Butch, Tiny, Chubby, Pooch and Ralph Tavares are such pros, and such a tight unit, there's really nothing they couldn't pull off! They still sound great here with a stylistic update of their sound – without ever compromising the classic R&B-styled vocal groove! Includes "Ten To One", "Deeper In Love", "Caught Short", "You're My All In All", "Baby I Want You Back", "I Really Miss You Baby", "Don't Play So Hard To Get", "Us And Love (We Go Together)" and more. 3 bonus tracks: "Deeper In Love (12" Version)", "Words And Music (12" Spoken Intro/Pop Version)" and "Words And Music (12" Spoken Intro/R&B Version)". ~ Dusty Groove

GEORGE McCRAE – ROCK YOUR BABY (WITH BONUS TRACKS)

The record that forever put George McCrae on the map – and a crossover bit of Miami soul from the 70s with all the key elements of the TK sound firmly in place! George's vocals are nicely flanged out in that cool production mode that TK was using with its big acts of the time (an approach that was perfect for AM radio, by the way) – the backings of the tunes have the chugging electric rhythms shared by Timmy Thomas and other acts at the label, spiced up by a bit more warm guitar to give the record a deeper southern soul vibe. The record features a 6 minute version of George's super-huge hit "Rock Your Baby", plus a "Rock Your Baby Reprise" – and it's also got a great little version of "I Get Lifted", one of those Miami funk classics that sounds great no matter who does it! Other tracks include "Look at You", "Make it Right", and "I Can't Leave You Alone". Also features 2 bonus tracks – single versions of "Rock Your Baby" and "Look At You". ~ Dusty Groove

KASHIF – KASHIF (WITH BONUS TRACKS)

A monumental bit of 80s soul – the first solo album from Kashif – issued hot on the heels of a few years spent penning and producing work for a range of bigger artists! Given his experience with the pros, Kashif's emerging here as a very fully-formed talent in soul – a singer with a way of keeping things real, even when the tunes are catchy – and a producer with a great ear for the changing styles of soul at the time. The grooves are often nicely spare and stripped down, yet never without a good sense of feeling – and titles include "I Just Gotta Have You (Lover Turn Me On)", "Stone Love", "Say Somethin' Love", "All", "Help Yourself To My Love", "The Mood", "Don't Stop My Love", and "Rumors". 5 bonus tracks on this FTG CD version: "Help Yourself To My Love (12" Version)", "I Just Gotta Have You (Lover Turn Me On) (Instrumental)", (Lover Turn Me On) (Single Version)", "Stone Love (Instrumental)" and "Say Somethin' Love (Single Version)". ~ Dusty Groove

SHEMEKIA COPELAND - 33 1/3

Features a guest appearance by Buddy Guy, with songs by Bob Dylan, Sam Cooke, Lucinda Williams and more

In a span of less than two decades, Shemekia Copeland has evolved from teenage upstart to one of the most prominent voices in the blues. She's currently the most feted woman in the blues world and actually had a coronation where she was crowned and declared "Queen of the Blues" at the Chicago Blues Festival in 2011. Shemekia earned her crown with a series of high-quality recordings and an unrelenting tour schedule that has taken her to all corners of the globe. She's played all the major festivals and concert dates from Europe to Iraq to a memorable performance at the White House in front of an audience that included the President of the United States, sharing the bill with Buddy Guy, Mick Jagger, Jeff Beck, B.B. King and other greats.

Earlier this year, Shemekia participated in two tribute concerts celebrating recently departed great Hubert Sumlin and Robert Johnson's centennial, both at New York's Apollo Theater in Harlem, not far from the neighborhood where Shemekia spent her childhood. Those nights she was a featured attraction along with Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Derek Trucks, Elvis Costello and Taj Mahal. Clearly, she's risen to the top of the field and that reckoning is underscored with the forthcoming album release of 33 1/3, her second for Telarc International, a division of Concord Music Group.
For Shemekia, it's all about ushering the blues – an art form that stretches back to the early 1900s – into a fast-paced new century and keeping the music true to its roots, making it relevant to a new generation. Her latest step in this ongoing journey is 33 1/3, an 11-song CD set for release on September 25, 2012.

The album's title is a nod to Shemekia's past, but also an acknowledgment of where she is right now. "I always loved vinyl records," she says, recalling her teenage years in the twilight of the vinyl era. "I loved the whole experience – looking through them in the bins at the store, taking in the cover design on the sleeve, reading the liner notes while I listened to the music. Nobody under a certain age knows that experience anymore. So when John Hahn, my manager, who also wrote some of the songs on this record, asked me what I grew up listening to, I said, 'LPs.'" And he said, 'How many times did they go around?' and I said 33 1/3 revolutions per minute.' He said, 'How old will you be when this record is released?' I said 33 1/3. It's a meaningful number for me, especially at this time in my life and in my career."

The material on 33 1/3 is culled from a variety of high-profile sources, including Bob Dylan, Sam Cooke, pater familias Johnny Clyde Copeland and Randy Weeks. Shemekia weaves it all together with assistance from a skilled studio crew: guitarist/producer Oliver Wood (Wood Brothers), bassist Ted Pecchio (Susan Tedeschi) and drummer Gary Hansen. Various guest musicians step in along the way, including the Buddy Guy.

"Every one of these songs tells a story about where I am in my life," says Shemekia. "They all connect to something that has happened to me, both good and bad. I've experienced a lot since I started making records and touring more than 15 years ago, and I think people want to tap into the wisdom that comes with that experience. I tried to bring a little bit of that to every one of these songs."

The set opens with the swampy and primal "Lemon Pie," a confrontational track that addresses the cavernous gap that currently divides the haves and the have-nots. "This whole country was built on the idea of people being able to come here and be part of a strong middle class," says Shemekia. "Now, it's becoming a place where you have just the rich and the poor and nobody in between."

She takes Randy Weeks' "Can't Let Go," initially a country hit for Lucinda Williams, and recasts it in a gritty blue light, courtesy of Wood's dirty slide guitar. "When you're in a room with someone like Oliver, anything can happen," she says. "When all was said and done, it had become a very funky track. I think Oliver's a genius."

The dark and mysterious "Ain't Gonna Be Your Tattoo" tells a tale of violence that ends with Shemekia's character finding the courage to walk out. The song gets its ominous vibe from Buddy Guy's searing guitar lines. "I originally knew Buddy through my father, but I started touring with him back in 1997," says Shemekia. "I opened for him way back then. And he's always been very good to me and very supportive. I have a lot of 'uncles' in this business – guys who kind of took me under their wing after my dad passed away. Buddy is one of those guys. It's the perfect song for him."

The crunchy, midtempo "Mississippi Mud," including guest vocals by J.J. Grey, cautions against the human tendency toward succumbing to inertia and narrow thinking. "It's a song about people who are stuck, set in their ways," says Shemekia. "The mud is a metaphor for anything that keeps you stuck in a backward, rigid way of thinking. It's about people who only see things in black and white, and can't see anything in between – or don't want to see anything in between. The world is changing, and people need to decide to be a part of the change."

Shemekia borrows "One More Time" from her father's catalog. Set in an understated shuffle groove with tasty accents from harpist Jon Liebman, the song is a last chance warning issued to a lover with a track record of extracurricular liaisons. But the confrontational vibe immediately pivots to something much more lively and soulful with "Ain't That Good News," a Sam Cooke song that Shemekia sings as an ode to her husband. "He and I both travel quite a bit," she says, "and every time one of us calls the other to say we're coming home, we're always excited."

The set closes with a sultry and seductive innovatively rearranged version of Bob Dylan's "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight," the vocal track delivered in something just beyond a hush. "The way that Oliver had me sing it is just so incredible," she says. "It's almost like a whisper. It's very different from the way I usually sing, and I love it."

While 33 1/3 takes a number of different directions, courtesy of songwriters representing a variety of styles, it always moves at the right speed, and it positions the artist right where she wants to be in relation to her music, her fans and history itself. 33 1/3 is a real album experience, something quite rare these days. To be sure, each track stands on its own but the whole is, somehow, more than the sum of its parts.

"I've always wanted to be a blues singer," says Shemekia. "I never wanted to be anything else. There are so many people for whom the blues was not their genre of choice, but they landed here because they got rejected elsewhere. That was never the case for me. I want to see this music evolve and grow, and for that to happen, I have to evolve and grow as an artist. I have to be able to sing a folk song by Bob Dylan or a country song by Randy Weeks and reinterpret it in the context of the blues. It's at the heart of just about every other form of American music. It's a genre that tells stories. I want to tell as many of those stories as I can – at 33 1/3 and beyond."

Monday, July 02, 2012

MICHAEL PEDICIN - LIVE AT THE LOFT


Features His Working Band  - Guitarist Johnnie Valentino, Pianist Jim Ridl, Bassist Andy Lalasis, & Drummer Bob Shomo Join Pedicin

Tenor saxophonist Michael Pedicin fulfilled a longtime dream last fall by releasing an album of all ballads, a challenging form of which he is a master purveyor. In the process Pedicin, whose 40-plus-year career has included tours with Dave Brubeck and Maynard Ferguson, experienced a new ease with the recording process and quickly made plans for his next CD. The result, Live @ The Loft, is a bracing club date with his working group that his Jazz Hut label will release July 31.

I'm more comfortable now playing the saxophone, sounding the way I want, than I ever have in my life," Pedicin says. A tenor man's tenor man, he is devoted to what he described as the "raw, inside-your-body sound" of the classic players on the instrument.

On the new disc, his 11th, Pedicin leads a quintet comprised of colleagues of many years' standing -- guitarist Johnnie Valentino, bassist Andy Lalasis, and drummer Bob Shomo -- as well as pianist Jim Ridl, a more recent addition to the ensemble. The CD was produced by Joseph Donofrio, best known in the jazz world for his work on Pat Martino's Grammy-nominated Blue Note recordings.

The titular "Loft" refers to the second-floor, 60-seat space at the Sandi Pointe Bistro in southern New Jersey that Pedicin discovered when he used it to warm up for a previous performance at the venue. He liked the feel and sound of the room so much, he helped convert it to a nightclub and has since frequently performed there. It was a natural choice for recording the new album.

"I feel better playing live than in the studio," he says. "In the studio, there's so much room for anxiety and critical self-judgment. With a live audience, you just play. You're in your element and in the moment."

Live @ The Loft offers a personal survey of songs written by or associated with Pedicin's main musical inspiration, John Coltrane -- from "Impressions," taken at a slower tempo than the original, to "Like Sonny" and "Africa" ("It lets us get out of the box for a minute"), and including exquisite readings of the ballads "I Want to Talk About You" and "Say It (Over and Over Again)."
Michael Pedicin, 64, grew up in a musical family in the Philadelphia suburbs. His father, alto saxophonist and singer Mike Pedicin, was an extremely popular entertainer and bandleader in the Philadelphia area who enjoyed a No. 1 Billboard pop chart hit in 1957 with "Shake a Hand." By the time Pedicin Jr. was 13 and had heard saxophonist Willis "Gator Tail" Jackson in person and Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley on record, he knew he wanted to spend his life playing saxophone.

At 20, Pedicin began earning his living as a member of the horn section at Philadelphia's Sigma Sound Studios, where he worked for producers Kenny Gamble, Leon Huff, and Thom Bell, playing on sessions by such artists as the Spinners, the O'Jays, and Lou Rawls. He also went on the road with Maynard Ferguson, Stevie Wonder, and David Bowie.

In 1980, Pedicin made his first album, Michael Pedicin Jr. (Philadelphia International), which yielded the surprise hit "You" -- big in New York City and even bigger in the Philippines. Subsequently he toured with Brubeck, and was a mainstay in the Atlantic City casinos, hiring orchestras and playing behind such singers as Frank Sinatra.

Pedicin has since played a lot of straight-ahead jazz, formed his Brubeck Project (which released its debut CD in early 2011 on Jazz Hut), and toured with such notables as guitarist Pat Martino. He also earned a Ph.D in psychology and, in addition to his musical activities, has a private psychology practice specializing in helping creative people. He's an active educator as well, currently a Professor of Music and Coordinator of Jazz Studies at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey.

In support of Live at the Loft, Pedicin will be making his first West Coast appearances as a leader at Yoshi's San Francisco 8/21, and at Vitello's, Studio City, 8/23. Drummer Justin Faulkner (Branford Marsalis, Kurt Rosenwinkel) will be his special guest in the band, which also includes Johnnie Valentino on guitar, pianist Jim Ridl, and Chris Colangelo, bass.

East Coast dates include 9/14 at Sandi Pointe in Somers Point, NJ, where Live at the Loft was recorded, and 9/15 at Chris' Jazz Café in Philadelphia. Pedicin's band will include Valentino and Ridl, plus bassist Andy Lalasis and drummer Bob Shomo.

http://www.michaelpedicin.com/

Friday, June 29, 2012

CHAKA KAHN AND R&B DIVAS TO CONCLUDE 2012 ESSENCE MUSIC FESTIVAL...

With Special Memorial Performance On Sunday, July 8th: Dynamic Ensemble To Grace Stage After Aretha Franklin's Headlining Performance

Every year over 400,000 people from around the world descend upon New Orleans for the only music festival that offers not only scorching music performances and a party filled atmosphere, but also a full Empowerment Experience and four days of family friendly fun: the ESSENCE Music Festival. This year, in its 18th year of existence and bigger, better and with a more complete programming line up than ever, the 2012 ESSENCE Musical Festival will celebrate its 18th anniversary this July 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th in historic New Orleans, LA, with the most lauded names in entertainment and the nation's most influential speakers, artists, authors, educators and leaders.

This year the ESSENCE Music Festival will conclude their world class musical programming on Sunday, July 8th, with a special, once in a lifetime ensemble comprised of Chaka Khan and the R&B Divas. Immediately following the legendary Aretha Franklin's headlining performance, Chaka will return for a sixty-minute encore performance with the R&B Divas, comprised of Faith Evans, Nicci Gilbert, Monifah Carter, Syleenah Johnson and Keke Wyatt. Together these powerful voices will pay tribute to the R&B artists who passed away over this past year.

This closing ensemble is the final addition to talent which already includes a stellar line-up featuring the Queen of Soul Aretha Franklin, Grammy-Award winning singer D'Angelo, as well as R&B heartthrob Trey Songz, Charlie Wilson, Mary Mary, Mary J. Blige, Fantasia, The Pointer Sisters, Ledisi and more. The official host each night will be Nephew Tommy, comedian and co-host of the long running Steve Harvey Morning Show.

Kicking off on the inaugural day of Thursday, July 5th, the Festival, long known as a family friendly Festival, will celebrate a full day youth empowerment experience at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, culminating with the first ever youth empowerment concert on the New & Next stage that night at the Louisiana Superdome. Hosted by Wild Wayne and actress Rocsi Diaz, the New & Next stage will feature a roster of rising young stars including the newly added Roshon Fegan in addition to Kaitlyn Nichol, Coco Jones, recording artist and hip-hop royalty Diggy Simmons, R&B pop group The OMG Girlz and New Orleans' marching band The Roots of Music. These bright young stars are the first-ever generation of performers to represent the New & Next Stage and will be sure to dazzle on July 5th. Sponsored by Verizon, Wal-Mart and community partner Capital One, tickets for the New and Next Stage are available at essencemusicfestival.com.

Forever anchored in Empowerment and not just entertainment, the ESSENCE Empowerment Experience brings together the leaders, innovators, activists, experts, artists, performers and thinkers who are defining the social and political discussions that matter most to attendees all under one roof at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. The "Power of Our Voice" is the theme of this year's 18th annual Essence Music Festival and through this forum Essence will celebrate the power of Family, Community and Spirit within a unique gathering that is free and open to the public. Inspirational speaker and New Thought spiritual teacher, Iyanla Vanzant, has been newly added to the line up which already includes Steve Harvey, Vanessa Williams, Reverend Al Sharpton, Soledad O'Brien, Alice Randall and Tamar Braxton, amongst many others.

Sponsored by Coca-Cola, My Black Is Beautiful, McDonald's, Wal-Mart, Verizon, Capital One and the Steve & Marjorie Harvey Foundation, the Youth Empowerment Experience will invite youth groups from the New Orleans area to participate in this year's two programs: the Saving our Sons mentoring initiative spearheaded by Mayor of New Orleans Mitch Landrieu and the Girl Up NOLA initiative led by First Lady Cheryl Landrieu. Saving Our Sons is a call to action for the community to invest in the lives of young men to prevent violence and stop the murder epidemic and high crime rate in New Orleans as well as every city across the nation. The program recruits and trains mentors to help over 100 young males and their needs through partnerships with community organizations.

Now in its 18th year, the ultimate destination for entertainment and inspiration hosted over 422,000 attendees last year. What began in 1995 as a one-time event to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of Essence magazine has now grown into one of the country's "Top 10 Leading Brand Events" by Advertising Age. The Essence Music Festival is the nation's largest annual gathering of African-American music and culture. Throughout its history, the Festival has featured an array of performers including Aretha Franklin, Alicia Keys, Al Green, Beyonce, Chaka Khan, Destiny's Child, Earth, Wind & Fire, Gladys Knight, LL Cool J, Jamie Foxx, John Legend, The Isley Brothers, Lionel Richie, Luther Vandross, Maxwell, The O'Jays, Prince, Rihanna, Stevie Wonder, Toni Braxton, Patti LaBelle and Yolanda Adams, among others.

NEW RELEASES - SECOND LINE JAZZBAND, CHUCK ISRAELS, STEPHEN RILEY TRIO

SECOND LINE JAZZBAND – GET OUT OF HERE

The Second Line Jazzband from Gothenburg, Sweden have been playing together for 24 years and there are still four of the group's six original members in the band. Nevertheless, it is considered that the band belongs to a younger generation of jazz musicians when most of the members are born in the 70s. Over the years the band has had time to perform in much of Europe, at jazz festivals and clubs as well as TV and radio. With their 13th album - Get Out Of Here – they have chosen a mixed repertoire with great care of old jazz classics mixed with music associated with Bob Dylan, Harry Bellafonte, Lil' Bob and the Lollipops, and their own material. In addition, the band invited some guest musicians who add extra spice to some songs. The pianist Matti Ollikainen, who plays with artists such as Peps Person, Håkan Hellström, Daniel Lemma, Hästpojken and others. Stefan Sandberg is a blues and roots guitarist who has played with virtually "all", from Peps Person to Carl-Einar Häckner, and finally also contributing soul singer Daniel Lemma who got his big break with the movie Jalla Jalla and the radio hit "If I Used to Love You ". With this album in their back Second Line Jazzband is preparing tours in 2012 in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Germany, Holland and Switzerland

CHUCK ISRAELS – IT’S NICE TO BE WITH YOU

A great meeting between legendary bassist Chuck Israels and Danish pianist Thomas Clausen – brought together in a trio that also features some excellent guitar from Steve Brown! The mix of guitar, bass, and drums is really sparkling – and illuminates Clausen's piano in a way we don't always hear on other records – and certainly also provides a nice link to the more melodic tones of Israels' bass as well! Titles include "Ventilation", "All The Pretty Horses", "Ack Varmland", "Two Birds With One Stone", and "Sweet Pumpkin". ~ Dusty Groove


STEPHEN RILEY TRIO – HART-BEAT

Great trio sounds from tenorist Stephen Riley – working here in a loose setting that features the bass of Neal Caine and drums of Billy Hart! The title of the set is certainly apt, as Hart's spacious approach to the drums really structures the music here – often leaving some wide open spaces for Riley to step in and blow with a sweet raspy sort of tone – a style that's got a nice edge on the harder numbers, and a really compelling sort of warmth on the gentler ones! The track selection really keeps things interesting too – and titles include "Black Narcissus", "Mr Sandman", "Just You Just Me", "Isotope", "Lonnie's Lament", "When It's Sleepy Time Down South", and "Ba Lue Bolivar Ba Lues Are". ~ Dusty Groove

TOWNER GALAHER - UPTOWN!

Galaher Assembles All-Star Lineup Featuring Brian Lynch, Donald Harrison, Craig Handy, and Pat Bianchi to Support His Latest Album

As a follow up to 2009's Courageous Hearts, his ingenious melding of Afro-Cuban, Brazilian, New Orleans second line and straight ahead swing rhythms, drummer-composer-bandleader Towner Galaher follows a different muse on the aptly-named Uptown!, his paean to Hammond B-3 organ groups that played at places like Small's Paradise in Harlem during the '50s and '60s. "It runs between all the usual suspects like Jimmy Smith, Jack McDuff and Lonnie Smith, but there's also an element of Larry Young in there too," says Galaher. "With an organ record people right off the bat think guitar, but this album has a different twist because it's organ plus three horns."

Joining Galaher on his third outing as a leader is the impressive frontline of GRAMMY® winning trumpeter Brian Lynch, alto saxophonist Donald Harrison (Lynch's former band mate in both Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers and Eddie Palmieri's band) and tenor saxophonist extraordinaire Craig Handy. Handling the organ is Pat Bianchi, a B-3 burner who has played with such guitar greats as Pat Martino, Ed Cherry and Corey Christiansen and is a key member of drummer Ralph Peterson's Unity Project, his Larry Young tribute band.

Galaher drives them through a varied program that opens with Frank Foster's swinging waltz-time vehicle "Simone" and closes with the leader's modernist burner "Say What?," which includes torrid solos by each of the horn players and has Bianchi pushing the harmonic envelope into Larry Young territory. Galaher reveals some graceful brushwork and a mean shuffle groove on Wayne Shorter's "Tell It Like It Is" (from the Jazz Messengers' 1961 album The Freedom Rider), which has Harrison quoting from "It Ain't Necessarily So" during his solo, Lynch playing with a mute on his solo and Handy nearly walking the bar on his robust tenor solo. They turn in faithful interpretations of Shorter's pensive ballad "House of Jade" and McCoy Tyner's "Blues on the Corner" (from 1965's The Real McCoy) on which Galaher cleverly interpolates a segment of the melodic theme to "Resolution" from John Coltrane's iconic A Love Supreme.

Galaher and his all-star crew show some old school swagger on his post-boppish title track and on Mike Clark's earthy Texas shuffle, "Shuffleocity," which has Bianchi digging deep into his Jimmy Smith-Jack McDuff bag. The leader also showcases his compositional chops on his 6/4 Latin-tinged "Café Con Samba," his urgently swinging "East 104th Street Waltz," the dark groover "Phantom City" and the extremely syncopated funk of "Jimmy and Johnny," named for his youthful band mates from Portland, Oregon, the Sanders brothers. "Jimmy was really an A-1 organist and kind of a local legend," recalls Galaher. "My first taste of playing with a B-3 was with him."

One listen to Uptown! and it's easy to see why drum master Lenny White calls Galaher "a triple threat - great drummer, great composer, great bandleader," or why modern jazz-funk innovator Mike Clark praises Towner for his "unquenchable desire to know all there is about music...and to play the kind of jazz that is informed by the masters of the past while pointing to the future." Surrounded by such seasoned vets and stellar soloists as Lynch, Harrison, Handy and Bianchi, Galaher makes his most striking statement to date on this potent outing.

Born in Portland, Oregon in 1955, Galaher picked up drums at age nine and was dedicated at an early age. "I went to an alternative high school so I got to practice drums like five or six hours a day all through high school, which was a good thing for me," he recalls. "And I went straight from high school into the club scene and I continued playing there for the next 11 years, playing the whole gamut of gigs. I was in a nine-piece rhythm and blues band with horns that did original music along with all the old Motown stuff and more modern Earth Wind & Fire, Tower of Power stuff."

His Portland drumming mentor was Mel Brown, who played jazz in between tours with his two main gigs, The Temptations and The Supremes. Galaher's long career in education began in 1980 at Brown's Drum Shop, and has since developed into over 30 years of teaching at community centers, giving private lessons from music stores and his home studio, and more than 14 years in New York City Public Schools. Now a New York resident, Galaher has garnered much respect as an educator who is committed to mentoring and passing the baton to younger generations. It was in a local school that jazz drumming great Art Blakey helped encourage Galaher to move to New York City. "Art was at a high school in town giving a concert and lecture. And he was saying something about, 'You should get all the experience you can and then come to New York, where all the action is.' And that was kind of an affirmation of where I was headed anyhow."

Towner finally made the move to the Big Apple in the Fall of 1986 and signed up for a 10-week certified program at the Drummer's Collective, where he met and began studying with Headhunters drummer Mike Clark. "I made a really great connection with him right off the bat and that really fortified the trajectory of my musical direction in jazz." He subsequently studied Afro-Cuban drumming with Frankie Malabe, Brazilian drumming with Duduka da Foncesa and New Orleans drumming with Ricky Sebastian. Galaher organically blended all of those diverse rhythmic elements on his 2007 debut as a leader, Panorama, and followed up with an equally impressive display on 2009's Courageous Hearts. Now he makes an incremental leap to a new level with Uptown!.

"Being a composer is a big part of what I am, although it was very unintentional," says Galaher. "I worked relentlessly at honing my drumming skills but I never really made any conscious effort or decision toward developing into a composer. When I got into Queens College and started taking arranging and composition courses with Roland Hanna and Michael Mossman, that's what set everything in motion. It completely changed my life and opened up another dimension of creativity. I was writing material and doing all the arrangements myself as well. So I came up with the songs for the first album, and then I just kept going."

"I have continued to grow and develop each decade," he continues. "I'm proud that even within the last 20 years or so I've improved dramatically over where I was. Now I'm building up a catalog with this third release and I've already written material for the next one."

Meanwhile, check what Galaher and his kindred crew are putting down on Uptown!

Towner Galaher's Upcoming Performances:
July 14 / Londel's Supper Club / Manhattan, NY
July 15 / Somethin' Jazz Club / New York, NY
August 4 / Harlem's 'L' Lounge / New York, NY
August 13 / SGI-USA Buddhist Culture Center / New York, NY
August 18 / Londel's Supper Club / Manhattan, NY
August 25 / Smalls Jazz Club / Greenwich Village, NY
September 15 / Harlem's 'L' Lounge / New York, NY
September 29 / Londel's Supper Club / Manhattan, NY
http://www.townergalahermusic.com/

Thursday, June 28, 2012

CHILL OUT CAFE VOLUME 12

After more than 2 years from Volume 11 finally releases the new volume of the most important italian collection of Chill Out music : Chill Out Cafe Volume 12 selected by the Irma stuff. This too is a double CD format and Super Jewell Box Plus, collects the best of Irma's gender, including songs from albums recently released and unreleased tracks or released in digital format only. Some songs are by artists 'historical' label as Ohm Guru, DJ Rodriguez, Zeb, Master Garofalo and Don Carlos, and others are previews of new albums such as Black Mighty Wax with Sarah Jane Morris and the new song of United Peace Voice, some remixes like : Be Noir 'Give me your love' by Alex Natale or 'Aaron Tesser - I want you to stay' by Nossa Alma Canta … and many new artists like Agostino Maria Ticino, Melchior Sultana, Sugarpie And The Candymen, Fast Lane, Locomotif, The Blue Hammock, Mauro Falardo and some confirmations as From P60, Asuka Sakai, John Type, Nu Braz and others for a total of 33 tracks.
Tracklist:
CD 1
1. John Type - Sunflower Lola (Interanima Laser Soul Remix)
2. Sugarpie And The Candymen - Lemon Tree
3. Sabo & Zeb - Nosso Coracao (Chris X-Bass Lisi Remix)
4. Low Fidelity Jet Set Orchestra - Ride The Sun
5. Black Mighty Wax - Shake Your Heart (Feat. Sarah Jane Morris)
6. Fast Lane - Inevitable
7. Nu Braz - Segunda Feira
8. Agostino Maria Ticino - If I Had Said To You
9. United Peace Voices - Make A Better Day
10. Dj Rodriguez - Killer Sound
11. Be Noir - Give Me Your Love (Alex Natale & Fluid Deluxe Lux Love Remix)
12. From P60 - Every Morning
13. Elmio - I Lost It When You Spoke (Love Acoustic)
14. Kalweit And The Spokes - Around Ther Edges
15. Maestro Garofalo - Blackbird
16. Melchior Sultana - Il Bahar
17. Faze Liquide - Soft
18. Belladonna - Natural World

CD2
1. Maestro Garofalo - Sun Groove
2. Lux Departure - The Ghost Feeling
3. Locomotif - Forget
4. Karin Maria Andersson - You Will Follow
5. Sakai Asuka - Fashion
6. From P60 - Hurts
7. Aaron Tesser & The New Jazz Affair - I Want You To Stay (Nossa Alma Canta Rework)
8. The Blue Hammock - Estou Feliz
9. Mauro Falardo - Lime’s Culture
10. From P60 - Move On
11. Irwin - Peace
12. Jeannie - Hot Cold Water
13. Agostino Maria Ticino - An Easy Way To Spend A Day
14. Ohm Guru - Movie Guru
15. Don Carlos - Acid Moon

PAPIK - MUSIC INSIDE

Papik is the project created by Nerio Poggi, Rome based musician, composer, producer and arranger who’s been getting a lot of positive response from the international Nu-Jazz /Jazz Lounge scene lately. His first album from 2009, Rhythm Of Life, included the song ‘Staying For Good’, sung by Alan Scaffardi, which became and still is a hit of the genre. His collaboration with various artists, among which Mario Biondi in his albums Handful of Soul and I Love You More, brought him to produce in 2011 also the albums by Ely Bruna Remember The Time and Fred Buccini Unusual Nat. Both are themed cover projects and obtained a great market feedback.

On this new Music Inside the lead vocals are again by Parma based Alan Scaffardi, official image of the band, together with Nerio himself and Ely Bruna. Other featured vocalists are: Wendy D. Lewis, US singer very popular in Italy, due to collaborations with Jestofunk, Mario Biondi, Ivana Spagna and Irene Grandi; Dagmar Segbers, German jazz singer, Clizia Aloisi and Paco Di Maso. The firt single from the album will be Puzzle Of Life, sung by Ely Bruna, already picked by Japanese fashion brand Gallardagallante as music theme for their 2012 campaign.

Japan is in fact a territory where Papik is extremely popular and will perform on 6th May at the legendary Tokyo Blue Note. The other musicians involved in the tour and the album project are: Alfredo Bochicchio on guitar, Pierpaolo Ranieri on bass, Fabio Tullio on sax, Massimo Guerra on trumpet, Marco Rovinelli on drums. Papik is quite well known in the UK too! English singer Jason Donovan, with a Top Ten career behind him, thank to hits like ‘Too man broken hearts’ or ‘Especially for You’ in duet with Kylie Minogue, has chosen a song penned by Nerio Poggi and Ely Bruna, ‘Sign of Your Love’, as main tune on his come-back album by the same title, out on Universal worldwide in March 2012. That song is also featured on this new Papik album, sung by Alan Scaffardi. Among the rest of the tracks on the album also three covers ‘Family Affair’ (Mary J Blige), ‘Black & Gold’ (Sam Sparro) and ‘Raccontami di te’ (Bruno Martino).

Tracklist:
1. On The Move
2. Family Affair (feat. Wendy D.Lewis)
3. Sign Of Your Love
4. This Happiness
5. Somewhere (feat. Dagmar Segbers)
6. Open Eyes
7. Raccontami Di Te (feat. Paco Di Maso)
8. Rebirth (feat. Ely Bruna)
9. The Puzzle Of Life (feat. Ely Bruna)
10. Is This Love
11. Black & Gold
12. Bossa 60 (feat. Clizia Aloisi)
13. You Must Have Come From Heaven

FELA - LIVE IN DETROIT 1986

Strut team up with New York’s Knitting Factory for the exclusive worldwide release of Live In Detroit, 1986, the first new Fela Kuti material to be issued since his final studio album, Underground System, in 1992. Recorded live at the Fox Theater in Detroit in November 1986, the concert marked a triumphant return to the USA for Nigeria’s Afrobeat master, Fela Anikulapo Kuti.
 
He had tried to leave his home country to tour the States two years earlier before being arrested and imprisoned on dubious charges of “currency trafficking”. An Amnesty International campaign helped secure his release in April 1986 and, just two months’ later, he appeared on stage as part of Amnesty’s ‘Conspiracy Of Hope’ American tour. The evening's audio recorder, Bob Teagan, claimed the '86 Fox Theater show to be Fela's best performance, "It was like seeing Bob Marley, Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye, and James Brown all rolled into one.
 
Fela captured the revolution of Marley, the love of Marvin Gaye, he sung with a rare and exquisite charcoal voice like Sinatra but he would scream himself out and go hoarse by the end of the three hour marathon show. All the while he danced like Michael Jackson or a ballerina, and captivated the crowd with the showmanship of James Brown."
 
The Detroit concert was part of Fela’s debut US tour with his Egypt 80 band and the recording finds them on strident form, showcasing all-new material in free-flowing extended workouts: ‘Just Like That’ recalls Fela’s memories of the Nigerian Civil War; ‘Confusion Break Bones’ (an update of his earlier track, ‘Confusion’), compares the present African situation to a permanent traffic jam at a town centre crossroads; ‘Teacher Don’t Teach Me Nonsense’ swipes at the oyinbos (white men) forcing sham versions of democracy on Africa and allowing "democratic" rulers to line their own pockets at the expense of the people while foreign-owned multi-nationals are allowed to freely strip the continent of its natural resources; ‘Beasts Of No Nation’ reflects on Fela’s recent court case and imprisonment in Nigeria and, more widely, on the issues around Apartheid.
 
The messages here resonate as powerfully as anything from Fela’s career. The tracks featured in the concert would appear on studio albums: ‘Teacher Don’t Teach Me Nonsense’ during the same year, produced with Compass Point studios mainstay Wally Badarou, then ‘Beasts Of No Nation’ and ‘O.D.O.O. (Overtake Don Overtake Overtake)’ in 1989. Often overlooked in favour of the punchier sound of Fela’s recordings with Africa 70, these later recordings are deeply soulful affairs, at times melancholy, marked by lengthy, complex and freeform arrangements. ~ Strut Records

EBO TAYLOR - APPIA KWA BRIDGE

“I wanted to go back to a highlife feeling with this album,” explains Ebo Taylor. “The songs are very personal and it is an important part of my music to keep alive many traditional Fante songs, war chants and children’s rhymes.”

Appia Kwa Bridge, released this April, is a strident return from the Ghanaian highlife guitar legend. Featuring six new compositions, his sound is more dense and tightly locked than ever with Berlin-based musicians Afrobeat Academy, a rock solid unit since regular touring worldwide following his Love And Death album in 2010, including a string of dates for WOMAD. Jochen Stroh works his analogue magic once more from his base at Berlin’s Lovelite Studios.

The album covers a variety of themes dear to Taylor. The title track references a small bridge in Ebo’s hometown of Saltpond on the Cape Coast: “it is a tiny bridge but a place known in the town where people meet, where lovers get together.” The firing, rousing ‘Ayesama’, first demo-ed during the ‘Love And Death’ sessions, is a Fante war cry, a taunt – “what’s your mother’s name?”; ‘Nsu Na Kwan’, based on a Fante proverb, asks “Which is older – the river or the old road” with the sub-text to respect your elders and the brilliant ‘Abonsam’ carries the message that Abonsam (The Devil) is responsible for evil in the world and that we should follow the Christian message.
Elsewhere, the album features a new version of highlife anthem, ‘Yaa Amponsah’, first recorded during the ‘20s by Jacob Sam’s Sam’s Trio before becoming a popular standard in Ghana, and a cover of an original track from Taylor’s time with Apagya Show Band during the ’70s, ‘Serwa Brakatu’, re-titled here as ‘Kruman Dey’. The closer, the acoustic ‘Barrima’, is a poignant tribute to Taylor’s first wife and one true love who sadly passed away during Summer 2011. “Ebo wrote the song following her passing and recorded this in one take during our last day in the studio,” reflects bandleader Ben Abarbanel-Wolff. “He was very emotional.”

The album features a number of special guests within the credits including incomparable drummer Tony Allen, original Africa 70 guitarist Oghene Kologbo and conga maestro Addo Nettey a.k.a. Pax Nicholas. Representing the younger players, keyboard genius Kwame Yeboah, son of Ghanaian legend S.K. Yeboah, makes full use of Lovelite’s famed collection of Farfisa and Wurlitzer organs.

Ebo Taylor’s Appia Kwa Bridge is released on Strut as a 1CD, 2LP and digitally . ~ Strut Records

NEW RELEASES - RICHARD SEN, SOFRITO, SOULJAZZ ORCHESTRA

RICHARD SEN PRESENTS THIS AIN’T CHICAGO - THE UNDERGROUND SOUND OF UK HOUSE & ACID 1987-1991

Is it just us, or are we on the brink of a full-on Acid House revival? Richard Sen's This Ain't Chicago, an exploration of the early days of UK House, feels like it's hitting at just the right time. The two-disc collection comes out June 25th (July 10th in the US) and we have release parties scheduled in New York City and London. In the meantime, click on over to Soundcloud to check out a rare edit of a classic track from the collection by the one and only Tom Moulton, which we'll be releasing for the first time on vinyl on a special limited 12" on July 23rd. The single will also include May's "Love Me Baby" and a new Richard Sen edit of K.C.C.'s "Future III." ~ Strut Records

SOFRITO - INTERNATIONAL SOUNDCLASH

We couldn't be happier to have a new collection of incredible music on the way from the expert selectors in Sofrito. And with a release date in late July, International Soundclash will come at a perfect time to add some extra heat to the summer. Hugo Mendez and Frankie Francis have dug incredibly deep to bring you a one-of-a-kind selection of music from Trinidad, Colombia, Dominica, Congo, Cameroun and beyond. Exclusives include the deep Pacifico sound of Grupo Canalon’s "La Zorra y El Perol" - a new project from Nidia Góngora, singer with Quantic's Combo Barbaro - a previously unreleased track by UK/Kenyan sensations Owiny Sigoma Band, and a Tropical Treats edit of Haiti’s dynamite Les Difficiles de Petion-Ville. We also have a really special piece of packaging, courtesy of visual maestro Lewis Heriz, who interprets Sofrito's fresh perspective on the world with a specially designed cut-out globe on a pull-out poster to accompany the CD and Double LP. Sofrito International Soundclash will be available July 24th. ~ Strut Records

THE SOULJAZZ ORCHESTRA - SOLIDARITY

Canada’s hardest working super-group, The Souljazz Orchestra, are back! Since our last project together, 2010's Rising Sun, the band has been refining its sound on the road, and it shows on Solidarity which boasts a muscular, plugged-in sound that positively commands dancing. The album showcases a diverse set of influences, buoyed by the many featured vocalists, all of whom are connected to the group through the Canadian music scene, yet hail from a variety of backgrounds, from Senegal to Brazil to Jamaica and beyond. Recorded on vintage gear, the music packs a punch which is often lacking on contemporary recordings. Solidarity comes out September 18th, but we'll make sure to share some new music before that. The band will be touring internationally around the release, so look for them soon near you! ~ Strut Records

MIGHTY SPARROW - SPARROMANIA!

Strut present a brand new retrospective of one of the Caribbean’s most towering musical figures, Mighty Sparrow, covering 1962 to 1974. During a career of over 40 years, Sparrow has been an unmatchable figure in the world of calypso and a constant backdrop to Caribbean life, recording over 300 albums and winning eleven Calypso Monarch and eight Road March titles at the annual Trinidad Carnival during one of the most competitive times in its history.

Scoring his first hit, ‘Jean And Dinah’, aged 20, Sparrow’s style drew on influences from US street harmony quartets to crooners like Nat King Cole, jazz greats – Ella, Sinatra – and the early calypso generation including Lord Melody and Lord Kitchener.

By the late ‘50s and in his early 20s, he was already an influential figure, encouraging Trinidad’s people to pay taxes with Carnival hit ‘P.A.Y.E.’ and highlighting cruelty to animals on ‘Russian Satellite’. This new collection hones in on Sparrow’s most creative years as he effortlessly surfed musical styles from calypso party jams to hard-hitting boogaloo and soul.

He had become a confident political commentator, tackling subjects as varied as domestic economic hardship (‘Ah Diggin’ Horrors’), slavery (‘The Slave’) and the Cuban missile crisis (‘Kennedy And Kruschev’). Other tracks serve as a vital reference point for today’s music. On ‘Picong Duel’, we hear Sparrow and fellow calypso legend, Lord Melody, trade insults, a direct forerunner to later mic battles in hip hop culture. Elsewhere, Sparrow just plain rocks the party (‘Calypso Boogaloo’, ‘Jook For Jook’) and turns in the odd choice cover – we feature here his lilting version of Otis Redding’s ‘Try A Little Tenderness’ with Byron Lee.

The album also documents Sparrow’s fearsome live reputation with two firing tracks from a late ‘60s gig at the Barbados Hilton and excerpts from a ‘70s concert in Brooklyn featuring Sparrow’s dynamite backing band, The Troubadours, at the peak of their game. This is a long overdue retrospective placing Sparrow in his rightful position as a true Caribbean great, a cultural and social icon on a par with Fela Kuti in Nigeria or Miriam Makeba in South Africa. As journalist Ric Hernandez wrote in 1967, “It’s all there with Sparrow – wit, wisdom and an earthy irreverence for the established order. He sings life as he sees it, as one long boisterous contact sport.” ~ Strut Records

BERTIE HIGGINS - YEAR OF THE DRAGON

Album features duet with actress Sally Kellerman on "La Vie En Rose."

This week, Toucan Cove Entertainment/Universal Music released the newest collection from iconic singer-songwriter Bertie Higgins. The 21-track album, Year Of The Dragon, includes both original songs as well as Bertie’s take on old favorites. Year Of The Dragon is Bertie’s 11th CD, and the track list is very personal to him. While the cover songs are some that he admires and has performed over the years as homage to the singers and songwriters, one features an extraordinary special guest.

Actress and singer Sally Kellerman duets with Bertie on “La Vie En Rose,” the first single from Year Of The Dragon. Says Bertie, “Sally has that fantastic, sensuous quality in her voice that lends itself well to this 1940's classic and it was wonderful to have the opportunity to sing with her. “

On another unique and intimate addition, Bertie recalls, “"Casablanca" which was recorded in Beijing and is a re-make of the original song that he wrote and recorded back in the 1980's. It features a wonderful twelve year old new Chinese singing sensation, Jiang Zi Long, in a duet with Bertie and was recorded with traditional Chinese instruments.

Bertie has also been a filmmaker for several years, and a few of the songs on Year Of The Dragon soundtrack his film work. "La Vie En Rose" is from a forthcoming feature produced by Bertie and directed by his son, Julian. "A Black Forest Christmas" (working title) takes place on Christmas Eve at a World War Two POW camp in Germany and is a unique re-telling of the nativity. "Save the Bales" is from a current internationally-distributed film, "The Colombian Connection," based on a true story about smugglers in the mid-1970s. “Oh, Come to Me" is the love theme from "The Marco Polo Bridge,” a love story set against the backdrop of the Japanese invasion of Peking, China in the summer of 1937 which drew China reluctantly into the Second World War. The majority of the principal photography will be in Beijing.

Bertie Higgins is best known and loved for classic hits "Key Largo", “Casablanca” and “Just Another Day In Paradise.” He has been performing world wide for over 25 years, much to the joy of his massive fan base, the "Boneheads." Bertie has appeared on dozens of radio and TV shows both domestically and internationally, including several VH1 specials, the national MDA Telethon, the CBS Early Morning Show and in front of millions with Michael Bolton on two CCTV’s 2012 New Year’s Specials from China. He has been currently touring the Pacific Rim countries, where he is a multi-platinum artist, and is preparing for a North American tour that will begin late summer.

Track List:
California Promises
Casablanca (with Jiang Zi Long)
Green River
If You Could Read My Mind
La Vie En Rose (with Sally Kellerman, from the film “A Black Forest Christmas”)
Mexico
Money for Nothing
Moonshadow
My Heart Will Go On
Oh, Come to Me
Save the Bales (from the film “The Colombian Connection”)
Save the Last Dance for Me
Scarborough Fair
Since I Fell For You
Tanqueray
The Old Man and the Sea
Time in a Bottle
Toes
Water on the Moon
When I Fall in Love
When Will I See You Again

Streaming Track: La Vie En Rose
http://soundcloud.com/brosseaupr/la-vie-en-rose-bertie-higgins/s-TBo7F

Video: La Vie En Rose
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPVcsmHOejs

MATTHEW SILBERMAN - QUESTIONABLE CREATURES

"Groove, noise, melodies, compelling improvising, and atmosphere; Matt Silberman's music has all the elements in place for a rich listening experience." - Mark Dresser

An Indiana Jones-like explorer dashing through an Egyptian tomb. A Midwestern hip-hop phantom. An elderly Eastern European woman speaking in tongues in a synagogue. Troops marching on the battlefield of daily life. A poet and writer creating waking dreams.

These are some of the Questionable Creatures whose stories Matthew Silberman tells on his debut album as a leader, available on September 11 on DeSoto Sound Factory (his personal imprint). The Brooklyn-based saxophonist/composer spins evocative yarns about these colorful characters as well as his own experiences moving from the seemingly infinite ocean vistas of Santa Monica, California to the claustrophobic cityscapes of New York.

The album's unique, eclectic sound can be traced to Silberman's wide-ranging influences, as well as his penchant for constructing elaborate narratives through his compositions. But its most direct source is the unusual make-up of Silberman's quintet, which features two guitarists along with the leader's tenor and a bass-drum rhythm section. Dueling axemen are a common sight on arena rock stages, not so much in jazz clubs.

"The classic jazz quintet is two horns, piano bass and drums," Silberman says. "But I was thinking of using one guitarist as another horn player and the other as a keyboard player. One is dealing a more with textures, chords and comping, the other more with playing lines and melodies."

The idea was partially inspired by Silberman's love of more forward-looking rock music, bands like Blonde Redhead, Sonic Youth, and Radiohead, who wield their guitars in the service of texture and atmosphere as much as crunching power chords and fluid melodies. The concept became a band after he'd met guitarists Ryan Ferreira and Greg Ruggiero.

"Neither of them are caught up in trying to match what all our peers are doing on the guitar," he says. "They both have a really strong voice and clear vision; they know what they're going for and keep working to achieve that. Greg has a beautiful sound, really melodic and singing. Ryan has an open and expansive quality to the way he plays. He creates so much around you without overwhelming the tonal palette. They both communicate their own individuality within the context of the music, which I really appreciate and respect. Getting to play different concepts with the two of them is amazing, beyond what I could have even imagined."

Both bassist Chris Tordini and drummer Tommy Crane were classmates of Silberman at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, so they share a mutual history that shows in their empathetic interactions. "They're two of my favorite musicians to play with," Silberman says, "so combining them with the two guitar players was a dream band for me."

The quintet initially assembled in 2007, then reconvened after a long hiatus for a string of shows and rehearsals in 2011. At that point, Silberman recalls, "the music and our understanding of each other seemed to grow exponentially with every gig. The music became a living, breathing entity, and I was really excited to get into the studio."

It was important to Silberman to achieve this sort of cohesive group identity. The saxophonist had no interest in rushing out an album with his name on the cover or in tossing together an all-star band for the occasion. "I wanted a unique sound as a group, a band that really knew each other. A lot of people will get sidemen that are amazing players but haven't necessarily played together, and sometimes the results can be a little bit tepid or uninspired compared to recordings of people who have really developed some chemistry."

The chemistry between Silberman and his band mates is evident throughout Questionable Creatures. Ferreira's howling, distorted textures and Ruggiero's distant chiming combine with a bass line inspired by early Wu-Tang Clan and a Charlie Parker-esque melody to unearth the "Ghost of the Prairie"; the dancing rhythms and transcendent melodies of "Mrs. Heimoff" recreate Silberman's childhood impressions of an old woman's semi-schizophrenic aura, chanting in Hebrew, speaking to herself in Yiddish, and seeming to speak in tongues while davening at the end of the row in his childhood synagogue.

The strangely intoxicating "Dream Machine" was inspired by the iconoclastic poet, writer and artist Brion Gysin, a frequent collaborator with the legendary novelist William S. Burroughs. Gysin's "Dreamachine" was a device that projected flickering light patterns onto closed eyelids in the hopes of altering consciousness. He also pioneered the cut-up technique, wherein phrases were dissected and recombined to create new combinations and unexpected meanings. Silberman used that technique with four short melodies to create his piece.

The album's closing piece, "The Pharaoh's Tomb," is its most intense, and in Silberman's view reminiscent of an imaginary Spielberg action epic, chasing an adventurer or tomb raider through a booby trap-laden pyramid in search of ancient treasure. Action of another sort is captured in "The Battle at Dawn," where faint guitar drones fade like mist to reveal an introspective march rhythm, representing the inner battle between pursuing dreams and day-to-day drudgery.

"Breathe" looks back at Silberman's native California, pulsing with the rhythm of the ocean and seeming to depict a drive on L.A.'s Pacific Coast Highway. "Growing up so close to the beach, being right by the water, right on the edge of everything, there's almost a physical feeling that it applies to your body. It's the feeling you get looking out at the water as it spans all the way out to the horizon as opposed to buildings. I think that manifests itself in my music through a cross between the openness and infinity of Santa Monica versus the intensity and energy of New York."

Silberman was raised around music. His mother was an opera singer, while his father was a huge music fan who constantly played classic Motown around the house. Silberman began taking piano lessons at the age of six, then picked up the clarinet in the fourth grade. A few years later he switched to the saxophone and his fate was sealed. "As soon as I picked up the saxophone I just couldn't put it down. That was pretty much when I realized I wanted to play music for the rest of my life."

After graduating from the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Silberman took a year off to spend time with his family and to further hone his craft, but New York was always the goal. By the time he left L.A. he'd taken on two regular weekly gigs, frequented jam sessions regularly, and shared the stage with the great drummer Billy Higgins, as well as Nancy Wilson, the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra, and Patrice Rushen.

Since arriving in New York, Silberman has played along a host of greats, including Roy Hargrove, as well as peers like Becca Stevens, Logan Richardson, Tyshawn Sorey, Nir Felder and Alan Hampton. While studying at the New School, he played in a live hip-hop band, and later played in rock bands (including one he describes as "Irish punk mixed with '80s synth-pop"), and a country-rock outfit, absorbing as many influences as he could.

"I think it was really good exposure to be in situations where you run into totally different skillsets than you do playing jazz," he says. "Being in such a tough, unforgiving environment as New York, I needed to figure out who I wanted to be as a musician."

http://www.matthewsilberman.com/

GABRIELE POSO - ROOTS OF SOUL

Italian multi instrumentalist and composer Gabriele Poso has completed his awaited second solo full-length Roots Of Soul, released on INFRACom! The album boasts the participation of international guest artists such as Osunlade, with whom Gabriele has been collaborating and friends for 12 years now, Nailah Porter and Tanya Michelle.

Roots Of Soul is a melting pot of Gabriele’s musical influences ranging from the passionate percussions of Africa with its warmth and vitality, to animated and infectious Latin beats, and jazz melodies that turn into a rhythmic language aiming straight for your soul. From feel-good, uplifting opening track “Sunshine”, to the hypnotic Latin-tinged jazz-dance cover of “You Don’t Love Me” up to the mellow, soul-infused “A Night With You”, Gabriele takes you on a musical journey that perfectly blends melodies and rhythm, weaving them together into a varied but cohesive selection of sounds.

Roots of Soul was recorded by bringing together all these elements and textures while at the same time maintaining the energy and synergies that only a live performance can give. Horns, guitars, piano, drums and percussion become one, leaving the voice with the task of transporting the listener to an inner world, in which to explore the roots of the soul.

Roots Of Soul is entirely composed and arranged by Poso, except for the covers of the latin jazz standard “Tin Tin Deo”, “Afro Blue” and the reggae classic “You Don´t Love Me (No, No, No,)”.

Gabriele Poso was born in Sardinia, in the heart of the Mediterranean sea, on the 22nd of October 1978, but he grew up in Lecce, in Southern Italy. Ever since he was a child Gabriele established a deep relationship with music, developing a particular attraction for his father’s best jazz, soul, and afro-latin records. As time went by, Gabriele studied a great variety of musical instruments, in particular the guitar, with which he created some of his best early compositions before discovering the charming world of percussion, that definitively captured his soul, becoming his primary passion.

In 1998 he began studying afro-cuban rhythms under the guidance of the most important representative of afro-cuban culture and percussion in Italy; Roberto “Mamey” Evangelista, at “Timba” Institute in Rome. Afterwards, Gabriele took an in-depth musical immersion at the “Escuela National De Arte of Havana Cuba” and in the “Universitad Interamericana De Puerto Rico” of S.Juan, Puerto Rico.

Following these important musical studies, Gabriele began playing in Europe and in the world together with famous artist such as Osunlade (live band) (Yoruba Records) and Nicola Conte (Blue Note), just to name a few. In 2008 he released his first solo album titled From The Genuine World produced by American label Yoruba Records and distributed worldwide. Gabriele continues to play throughout Europe and the world, at events such as the Mod Club Theatre Toronto for The Canada Day Celebration, the MTV World Festival in Istanbul, the One Day Off Festival in Belgium, and nights in clubs like the Jazz Cafe, Neighbarhood, Cargo London, Paris Club Djoon.

Roots Of Soul Tracklisting:
1. Sunshine feat. Tanya Michelle (4:37)
2. You Don´t Love Me feat. Osunlade (3:08)
3. Freedom (3:59)
4. Dona Flor (5:21)
5. Into My Heart Feat. Nailah Porter (4:34)
6. Roots Of Soul (5:42)
7. With Me Come Fly feat. Dionisia Cassiano (4:29)
8. Ocean Park (3:43)
9. Tin Tin Deo (5:45)
10. A Night With You Feat Nailah Porter (3:43)
11. Spirit Conversation (3:28)
12. Afro Blue (4:17)
13. Sinphony From The Universe (4:41)

Social Media and Web:
• Website: http://www.gabrieleposo.com/
• Facebook http://www.facebook.com/GabrielePoso
• Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/gabrieleposo/sets
• Twitter: twitter.com#!/gabrieleposo

~ infracom.bandcamp.com

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

LIONEL LOUEKE - HERITAGE - CO-PRODUCED BY ROBERT GLASPER

On August 28, the acclaimed West African jazz guitarist/vocalist Lionel Loueke will release Heritage, his dynamic third Blue Note album, which was co-produced by label mate Robert Glasper. Heritage finds Loueke—who was hailed by The New York Times as “a gentle virtuoso”—exploring a more electric sound with a new trio featuring Derrick Hodge on electric bass and Mark Guiliana on drums. The album presents seven new compositions by Loueke, two by Glasper, and one co-written by the two. Glasper also contributes piano and keyboards to six tracks, while singer Gretchen Parlato provides background vocals on two tracks.

A veteran of bands led by Terence Blanchard and Herbie Hancock, Loueke is bringing jazz into vibrant contact with the sounds of West Africa, in particular his native Benin. The title Heritage is a direct reference to his personal odyssey. "I have two heritages," Loueke says. "One is from my ancestors from Africa, and that goes through my music, my body, my soul, every aspect of what I do. But also I have the heritage from the Occident, from the West, from Europe and the U.S. I speak English, I speak French, and I have that heritage too. I called this album Heritage because I've been blessed by all different parts of the world, and most of the songs reflect that."

"Robert is a true genius," says Loueke of his producer and friend, "and I knew that he'd be the right person. I like a musician who surprises me all the time. We're good friends and we're both open, and that's when the magic happens." Loueke has performed as a special guest with the Robert Glasper Trio, and was in fact an original member of the Robert Glasper Experiment when it first formed.

The track listing for Heritage is as follows:
1. Ifê (Lionel Loueke)
2. Ouidah (Loueke)
3. Tribal Dance (Robert Glasper)
4. Hope (Loueke/Glasper)
5. Freedom Dance (Loueke)
6. Chardon (Loueke)
7. Farafina (Loueke)
8. African Ship (Loueke)
9. Goree (Loueke)
10. Bayyinah (Glasper)

~ Blue Note

VAN MORRISON RETURNS TO BLUE NOTE RECORDS

New Studio Album "Born To Sing: No Plan B" Out October 2

Van Morrison returns to Blue Note Records for a new studio album Born To Sing: No Plan B to be released on October 2. Morrison previously released the Grammy-nominated What’s Wrong With This Picture? on Blue Note in 2003.

Van says: "With most record companies being so corporate I am happy to be working with Don Was and the team at Blue Note. To have such a creative music person as the head of my recording label assures me that all the effort taken to write and record this new album will be rewarded with a music-based focus and marketing approach. I look forward to many recording projects with Don and Blue Note."

Don Was adds: “Over a career that spans decades, Van Morrison has developed a body of work that is unparalleled in its consistent excellence. He is one of the greatest singer/songwriter/musicians of all time. We are incredibly honored that he has chosen to record for the Blue Note label and look forward to many fruitful years together.”

A six-time Grammy winner and member of the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame and Songwriters Hall of Fame, Morrison is one of the most influential artists of the modern age. His poetically impressionistic lyrics and unique fusion of rock n’ roll with soul, jazz and folk have deep emotional resonance and universal appeal. His transcendent masterpieces Astral Weeks and Moondance are typically ranked among the best albums of all-time, while his more recent recordings Magic Time and Keep It Simple enjoyed Top 10 debuts.

Born To Sing: No Plan B was produced by Van and recorded in his native Belfast.

BORN TO SING: NO PLAN B
1. Open The Door (To Your Heart)
2. Going Down To Monte Carlo
3. Born To Sing
4. End Of The Rainbow
5. Close Enough For Jazz
6. Mystic Of The East
7. Retreat And View
8. If In Money We Trust
9. Pagan Heart
10. Educating Archie

More information on Van Morrison’s new Blue Note album will be announced soon.

~ Blue Note

RETRO-CONTEMPORARY JAZZ STYLIST TONY DESARE JOINS YAMAHA PIANO ARTIST ROSTER

Musical sensation Tony DeSare has joined Yamaha’s exceptional piano artist roster, which includes Elton John, Jamie Cullum and Chick Corea. Dubbed the next Male Vocalist
“Rising Star” in the 2009 Downbeat Critics Poll, DeSare has won widespread popular acclaim for his concert performances throughout the United States, Europe, Australia, Japan and Hong Kong.

DeSare’s retro-contemporary sound has drawn frequent comparisons to the legendary pop-jazz stylist Frank Sinatra. In fact, renowned songwriter and Motown producer Lamont Dozier (The Supremes, The Four Tops, The Isley Brothers), recently placed DeSare in the same pantheon of retro–cool Sinatra successors that includes Harry Connick Jr. and Yamaha Artist Michael Buble. At a recent meeting with DeSare, Dozier predicted, “You’re next!”

Born to a musical family in Glens Falls, NY, DeSare began singing and performing professionally at the age of 17, opening for visiting headliners and building a large regional following. Equally at home in contemporary and standard genres, he went on to study at Ithaca College where he formed the Tony DeSare Trio, securing a first place win in the “IC Showcase,” a college-sponsored national battle of the bands.

“Ever since I was a kid, I’ve loved pianos, and some of the very first pianos I encountered were Yamahas,” recalls DeSare. Now, his instrument of choice is a Yamaha Disklavier DCFX performance-reproducing piano. “Yamaha offers the ideal blend of the acoustic piano craftsmanship and technology,” says DeSare. “It’s artistically inspirational, since these are two forces in music that don’t often coalesce. Yamaha has found a way to make them play nicely together.” Beyond the instrument’s “responsive action,” DeSare has also been impressed by the resonant CFX tone, “which helps cut through an orchestra.”

Playing over an orchestra has become a higher priority of late, as the artist has added numerous, high-profile symphony appearances to his schedule, in addition to gigs at jazz festivals and posh, legendary nightclubs. But it’s DeSare’s affection for old-school, classic standards and the golden era of the brat pack, that also led him to an ongoing touring relationship on the casino circuit with the legendary comic Don Rickles.

“I’m a fan of that era and Don is unquestionably one of the best,” notes DeSare, marveling at the 85-year-old’s stamina and undiminished ability to keep a large audience in stitches for a full, 80-minute set. “He’s still the greatest.”

For Rickles, the admiration is mutual. “Tony DeSare is, without question, one of the today's most outstanding artists and performers,” says Rickles. “His superb piano artistry is a bonus!”

DeSare will release his fourth CD later this year, a musical mélange of sophisticated, inventive originals and contemporary classic cover songs. Beyond traditional piano playing, and employing the Disklavier’s record and playback function to record the CD, DeSare is experimenting with non-traditional modes of drawing sound from the instrument via the strumming of strings, the manipulation of hammers and tapping the body of the piano.

“Tony has a refreshing and unique way of blending modern sounds with swinging classics,” says Bonnie Barrett, Yamaha Artist Services Director. “He has an exceptional ability to write fresh, original work that also blends seamlessly with the Great American Songbook. We look forward to a fruitful collaboration with him.”

DeSare caught his first break in New York City when he was cast as the star of the long running Off‐Broadway musical smash, Our Sinatra, in 1999. Three years later, he performed at the legendary Apollo Theater where he first met jazz guitar icon, Bucky Pizzarelli, who has since continued to perform with his band, touring the nation and headlining at major performance venues ranging from leading jazz rooms like Birdland and the Blue Note to posh nightclubs like the Café Carlyle and Feinstein’s at the Regency, as well as several appearances at Carnegie Hall and major concert halls like Jazz at New York’s Lincoln Center. On tap for the fall is an engagement at the new nightclub located at the site of New York’s’ legendary Studio 54 dance club, 54 Below.

DeSare’s versatility and creativity in songwriting have also earned him distinguished recognition for his original compositions. “Let’s Just Stay In,” was featured in the 20th Century Fox film The Tooth Fairy, starring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Ashley Judd, Billy Crystal and Julie Andrews. Tony also composed and performed the title theme to My Date With Drew, an independent documentary feature film starring Drew Barrymore. The song has been featured on “The Tonight Show” and “The Today Show,” among many other media outlets.

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