Monday, April 08, 2013

LASZLO GARDONY - CLARITY

Great improvisers combine probing intellect with keen emotional sensitivity. Boston pianist Laszlo Gardony displays the head and heart of a jazz master on his breathtaking new solo recital Clarity, a soul-bearing album full of rhythmic variety, melodic discovery and an abundance of grace. Slated for release on May 7, 2013 by Sunnyside, the CD arrives two decades after Gardony's acclaimed Sunnyside debut Changing Standards, the album that established him as one of jazz's foremost practitioners of the solo piano format.

More than a gifted improviser, Gardony is a cagey musical architect who understands that "shape is paramount. Without shape, regardless of what you create in your solo piano playing, it's not going to connect. On Clarity I created these 10 short stories building on each other and I naturally pause between them. The idea is to transcend the sense that here is a pianist and here is a listener. It's more of a joint journey.

A longtime professor at Berklee College of Music, Gardony has spent much of his career in the company of jazz's most formidable artists, including his long running band with John Lockwood and Yoron Israel, and entrancing trio sessions with Dave Holland, Bob Moses, and Miroslav Vitous. Always open to exploring new musical territory, he's also performed and recorded widely with the Wayfaring Strangers, violinist Matt Glaser's ingenious old-time jazz project. But Gardony is at his most unfettered alone at the piano, where he often records long sessions of spontaneous composition for his own edification.

On a brisk fall morning in 2012, feeling inspired and brimming with inchoate emotions over the recent passing of his parents, he started a digital recorder, sat at the bench and promptly lost himself in an extended session of searching improvisation. Afterwards, suspecting that he had reached some new place, he set the music aside to give himself some perspective. When he listened to the session several months later he found that he had indeed captured a powerfully coherent, deeply personal and startlingly beautiful cathartic journey. He retrospectively titled the 10 pieces to offer signposts to listeners, as in a guided meditation, but the music's wondrously balanced ebb and flow speaks for itself, singing a song of bountiful life.

"I always find a title that feels poetic or playfully alludes to the mood or meaning of the tune." Gardony says. "In this case I felt it would be more appropriate to describe what was happening in my system, going through these stages after losing my parents. None of this came to me when I was playing. It was a very joyful, expansive but introspective session. I sat down, felt really inspired, and one tune led to another.°®

The album flows with an internal emotional logic, opening with the stately, gently insistent "Settling of a Racing Mind." "Working Through" sounds like a lost treasure from the Lennon/McCartney songbook, circa Abbey Road, while the ethereally winsome "Opened Window (Hopeful Horizon)" feels laden with promise. "Resilient Joy," an expansive, ebullient dance in a green field, displays Gardony's gift for sturdy, folk-like melodies. Clarity closes with "Resolution (Perfect Place)," beatific melody suffused with a well-earned sense of peace.

Born in Hungary, Gardony showed an early aptitude on the piano (the cover photo captures him at three years old, already looking intent and rhapsodic). He wasn't much older when he started improvising, devising little tunes inspired by the blues, pop and classical music he heard around the house. Immersed in the European classical tradition while growing up, he was drawn to progressive rock as a teenager, and spent countless hours improvising blues-based music at the piano. He investigated gospel and studied jazz, a passion that soon overshadowed his classical pursuits. "We had jazz and African music classes at the Conservatory,°® Gardony recalls. "There were some very knowledgeable people and a lot of records. When it came to jazz it was a tiny community, but very inspiring.

After graduating from the Bela Bartok Conservatory and the Science University of Budapest, he became one of Europe's most sought after accompanists, and released his first albums as a leader. Possessing a powerful sense of swing, a strong feel for the blues and a firm command of post-bop vocabulary, he gained invaluable insight by sharing festival stages with acts like Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers and Abdullah Ibrahim. After several years on the road, Gardony decided he needed to deepen his knowledge of jazz.

A full scholarship to Berklee brought him to America in 1983, and a faculty position at the school upon graduation kept him stateside. He made his US recording debut with the acclaimed 1988 album The Secret (Antilles) featuring Czech bass great Miroslav Vitous and drummer Ian Froman, but it was his 1st place win the following year at the Great American Jazz Piano Competition that catapulted him into the national spotlight.

He seized the moment with 1989's brilliant release The Legend of Tsumi (Antilles), a trio session with bassist Dave Holland and drummer Bob Moses focusing on Gardony's finely wrought original compositions. The album earned rave reviews. Scott Yanow wrote in the All Music Guide, "the most impressive aspect of this performance is how the pianist totally integrates his playing with that of his sidemenŠso they speak in one unified voice.

He's collaborated with saxophone greats like David "Fathead" Newman and Dave Liebman, but his subtle and rhythmically intricate pianism has meshed particularly well with jazz's most inventive guitarists. Over the years he's performed with Mick Goodrick, John Abercrombie, John Scofield, Mike Stern and Garrison Fewell. "Being with Dave and Miroslav was such an education," Gardony says. "If you really immerse yourself in those moments, it can change you, whether it's one concert or a week-long gig. If you're really present, amazing transferences and exchanges can happen.

His primary vehicle for the past decade has been his state-of-the-art trio with bassist John Lockwood and drummer Yoron Israel, an ensemble first documented on the 2003 Sunnyside release Ever Before Ever After. One of the finest working bands in jazz, the group performs and records regularly, exploring Gardony's extensive book of original pieces as well as the occasional standard and jazz classics by the likes of Horace Silver and Billy Strayhorn. Gardony augments the trio's latest release, 2011's beautifully textured tribute to jazz's African roots Signature Time (Sunnyside), with Stan Strickland on saxophone.

"It's heaven playing with such great musicians," Gardony says. "John and Yoron hear the music around them so well. If I give them charts they immediately understand what I'm trying to do. People think it's a great career move to do projects. You do something and then you move on. But all of my heroes in rock or jazz, Coltrane or Pink Floyd, created in the context of a great band.

No band has stretched Gardony more than The Wayfaring Strangers. A long-time fan of Gardony's who credits the pianist's first solo album Changing Standards with opening his ears to modern jazz, violinist Matt Glaser initially recruited him to perform on one track of 2001's Shifting Sands of Time (Rounder), contributing a haunting solo to Ralph Stanley's elemental rendition of "Man of Constant Sorrow." By the release the project's second album, 2003's This Train (Rounder), Gardony was an essential member of the ensemble. The group continues to perform, exploring its singular synthesis of bluegrass, Appalachian roots music, and jazz. Like every other profound musical experience under his belt, some of the Wayfaring Strangers has shaped Gardony's expression in straight ahead contexts.

"Playing with Matt and people like Tony Trischka you learn so much about American folk and Appalachian music," Gardony says. "I've developed such reverence and love for it. There's an immediacy, intimacy and intensity when you hear folk musicians playing for each other. It's definitely influenced my music making.

There's no mistaking the music on Clarity for anything but 21st century jazz, but the frank immediacy of Gardony's solo playing brings to mind that Thelonious Monk once told Bob Dylan, "we all play folk music.°

www.laszlogardony.com

THE NOAH PREMINGER GROUP - HAYMAKER

The Noah Preminger Group's Haymaker - to be released by Palmetto Records on May 14, 2013 - is the tenor saxophonist's third album, following the highly praised Before the Rain (Palmetto, 2011) and Dry Bridge Road (Nowt, 2008). Jazz Review lauded Preminger's "incisive musical instincts, a distinctive personal sound and an ability to write great tunes." The New York Times said: "Mr. Preminger designs a different kind of sound for each note, an individual destiny and story." Haymaker sees Preminger lead a kindred-spirit band of top-flight players: guitarist Ben Monder, double-bassist Matt Pavolka and drummer Colin Stranahan. The album showcases a brace of fresh Preminger compositions, along with one number penned by Monder, the Annie standard "Tomorrow" and a cover of jam-band rocker Dave Matthews' "Don't Drink the Water." Blending atmosphere and energy, the Noah Preminger Group can remind a listener of the Motian/Frisell/Lovano trio in one tune and the Mark Turner/Kurt Rosenwinkel pairings in the next - even as this band has its own, individual soundprint. Haymaker is modern jazz that balances musical integrity with sensual allure.

Beyond cultivating his engaging tenor sound - a tone that's intimate and dark-hued with a streak of silver - Preminger pursues several adventurous, competitive avocations, including training as a boxer. The title of Haymaker comes from that sport, as he explains: "According to Webster, a `haymaker' is a wild knockout punch - something direct, with some force to it. That idea seemed in line with this album, because I didn't want to hold back. I aimed for the music to be attractive and have a sense of a romance, but with a drive that's undeniable - and I wanted the band to let loose, which they did."

About his road-honed quartet with Monder, Pavolka and Stranahan, Preminger says: "There is something special about having a band that stays together long enough to develop a second nature - that's what I admire about a group like Keith Jarrett's Standards Trio with Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette, the continuity and communion they have. But what I really love about my guys is their individuality, their sonic personalities. Monder has a palette of colors that suits my music like no other guitarist, and he has his own true voice, whether he's swinging his ass off or creating these amazing colors and atmospheres. Matt Pavolka has this big, beautiful sound - sound is almost always the thing that draws me to a player - and he knows my music so well. And Colin is just an incredibly intuitive musician. I don't have to say one word to him - he just gets it. I wrote all this new music with the talents of these players in mind."

Preminger named the album opener, "Morgantown," for the town in West Virginia and "the sense of purpose" he felt on a working visit to the place, "a get-it-done vibe." Stranahan's hip drum patterns - including a hypnotic solo - drive the track, like on much of Haymaker. "My Blues for You" is a smoky, after-hours number that Preminger "wrote so long ago that I can't remember who I wrote it for, though I'm sure it was a girl. But the oddly phrased rock-blues feel of it, with a bit of a churchy thing going on, seemed ideal for this band and record." His title track, "Haymaker," features elliptical, exploratory improvisations by the leader, along with the group sound - a mix of the rhythmically driving and texturally atmospheric - that Preminger aptly describes as "powerhouse."

Monder's composition "Animal Planet" originally appeared on an album the ever-distinctive guitarist made with singer Theo Bleckmann. Preminger was drawn to the "strong and beautiful" melody, and the performance includes a characteristically alluring solo by Monder. Preminger was inspired to record "Tomorrow" from teaching the Annie hit on piano to a 5-year-old bright spark of a girl. He explains: "She just loves the tune and teaching it to her made me realize that it could be cool - an uncommon Broadway song that not too many instrumentalists do, with a pretty melody. I always thought it was great the way Sonny Rollins would transform these overplayed, even hokey tunes and turn them into something hip. Ben's voicings helped us achieve something different with the song."

The title of Preminger's gripping original "15,000," one of the album's highlights, references another of his high-octane pursuits: skydiving. He says: "It's almost programmatic the way the piece illustrates my first experience skydiving, in New Zealand - from the floating to the sheer exhilaration." The track "Stir My Soul" stemmed from a challenge Preminger set himself to write an uplifting tune - "the sort of thing you play at a gig to make people feel good," he says. "There's nothing wrong with that, but it's not as easy to pull off as it might seem." He dedicated the lyrical "Rhonda's Suite" to the late wife of his first saxophone teacher, "who was like a second father to me."

As "a typical Connecticut boy," Preminger grew up "listening to the Dave Matthews Band and Phish, a lot of the jam bands," he says. "Dave Matthews has written a lot of cool tunes, but I've always really liked `Don't Drink the Water.' We do it our way, playing it faster and doing our own thing in the middle of the song. There's a breakdown section where we build and build like a rock band, stoking the tension. We nailed the song in one take, like a lot of the album." Haymaker closes with Preminger's floating ballad "Motif Attractif," a brief free duo with Monder that further illustrates the sax player's musical connection with the guitarist, a longtime friend, as well as the sense of cliché-free romance that fans and critics have come to appreciate in Preminger's previous albums. "This band can do anything - we can play a pretty ballad or take a left turn or just rock out," he says. "That means making music with these guys is free and open - and that feels good."

Noah Preminger grew up in Canton, Connecticut, studied at New England Conservatory in Boston and now lives in Brooklyn, NY. His debut album, Dry Bridge Road, released just after he graduated from NEC, is a sextet session that was named Debut of the Year in the Village Voice Critics Poll, along with making top 10 Albums of the Year lists in JazzTimes, Stereophile and The Nation, among other publications. Preminger's second album as a leader, Before the Rain, an essay in atmospheric romance that blends virtues both modern and old school, was released by Palmetto in 2011. Reviewing the album, All About Jazz said: "Sensitivity and an ear for aural sophistication are the hallmarks of tenor saxophonist Noah Preminger." Along with playing in bands led by Cecil McBee and John McNeil, Preminger recorded two albums for Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records with the Rob Garcia 4.

Preminger has performed on key stages from Boston and New York to Europe and Australia, and he has played with the likes of Billy Hart, Dave Holland, Fred Hersch, Dave Douglas, Victor Lewis, John and Bucky Pizzarelli, Billy Drummond, George Cables, Roscoe Mitchell, Dr. Eddie Henderson and Dave Liebman. The Boston Globe said about Preminger: "He plays with not just chops and composure, but already a distinct voice: His approach privileges mood and reflectiveness, favoring weaving lines that can be complex but are also concise, without a trace of over-playing or bravado." And Boston Phoenix declared: "Preminger's sound is beholden to no one. That makes him continually unpredictable and continually satisfying."

www.noahpreminger.com

GREGG KALLOR - A SINGLE NOON

Five-time Grammy nominee Fred Hersch calls Gregg Kallor’s A Single Noon “the work of an extraordinary pianist, a composer of great distinction and a true conceptualist… This ambitious and unique suite takes us somewhere that is very deeply heartfelt and dazzlingly executed. This is 21st-century music that has clearly absorbed the past and looks to a bright and borderless musical future.” Kallor is the recipient of an Aaron Copeland Award for composition, and is one of ten composers nationwide selected for this prestigious residency. Kallor’s first album, There’s a Rhythm, features his jazz trio with bassist Chris Van Voorst Van Beest and drummer Kendrick Scott.

A Single Noon is a musical tableau of life in New York City, told through a combination of composed music and improvisation. The nine movements are meant to be evocative snapshots - moments of caffeinated bliss, embarrassing subway mishaps, the buzzing energy of a city driven by dynamic, thoughtful, talented, and slightly crazy people - that coalesce into a more complete story like an album of postcards, or memories. Each movement develops an aspect of the Single Noon theme, and improvisation is incorporated throughout the suite as a commentary on and development of the themes in the music. Tracklist: A Single Noon // Broken Sentences // Night // Straphanger's Lurch //
Found // Espresso Nirvana // Giants // Things to Come // Here Now.

Friday, April 05, 2013

NEW RELEASES - LOS-PO-BOY-CITOS, THE LAYABOUTS, SIMONCINO

LOS-PO-BOY-CITOS - HASTA

Wonderful work from this New Orleans combo – a Latin act that feels like they'd be much more at home in the Spanish Harlem scene of the 60s, especially given the soulful undercurrents of this set! On previous releases, the group already showed a great talent for crafting just the right sort of classic Latin groove – tight percussion and sharp instrumentation, all honed down with the rhythms in a way that really carried a strong old school punch. But this time around, they've got all that and more – a stronger Latin soul spirit than before, which really comes through in the pacing and presentation of the songs – holding back sometimes to give the listener more, in ways that few young Latin groups seem to get! The style is wonderful – and in addition to older New York modes, these guys bring in a few other elements as well – always without any hoke or gimmick at all. Titles include "Dejame", "Mary Wants To Boogaloo", "Oye Mamacita", "Hasta", "Sad Eyes", and "Swahili Baby". ~ Dusty Groove

THE LAYABOUTS - FUTURE RETRO

Spacey club soul from The Layabouts – who lay down a nicely cosmic sound that's still rooted in soul – and with a great roster of guest vocalists including Terri Walker, Omar, Portia Monique, Tony Momrelle, Imaani and more! The record's called Future Retro, but it feels pretty comfortable in the here-and-now to us – with percolating beats and compelling groove of timeless house, but taking to deeper soul realm thanks to such an impressive roster of singers and solid songs for them to work with. Nice stuff! Includes "1 Step To Love" feat Tony Momrelle, "As Long As You Believe" with Omar, "Fearless" and "Too Late" with Imaani, "Do Better" and "Tell Me Now" with Portia Monique, "Perfectly" with Shea Soul, "Here With You" with Terri Walker and more. ~ Dusty Groove

SIMONCINO - OPEN YOUR EYES

Spacey club grooves from Simoncino – showing love for some of best Chicago and Detroit dancefloor sounds of the past quarter century, from house to techno – along with some more globally-steeped soundscapes! Compelling beats and cosmic keys are prevalent throughout – along with some Afro and Latin bits that really give it a diverse vibe overall. The 2LP vinyl version is heavy with alternate material not on the CD version – and the titles include "Open Your Eyes", "Jungle Dream (Ron Trent Remix Part One)", "In A Dream" feat Gregg Fore of Dream 2 Science (original mix and Dream 2 Science mix), "Trip To Japan", Use Me Lose Me", "Saber", "Tramonto Sulla Spiaggia", "A Shi Tai (Japanese Love)" feat Soichi Terada and more. ~ Dusty Groove

Thursday, April 04, 2013

MOSAIC RECORDS CELEBRATES THE JOHN COLTRANE QUARTET - THE COMPLETE SUN SHIP SESSION RELEASED FOR THE FIRST TIME

Mosaic Records is set to release The Complete Sun Ship Session which includes newly discovered and previously unissued alternate takes from one of the final studio sessions by the John Coltrane Quartet. The three LP set will be released May 21 and is also being made available on a two CD set through Verve Records on April 16.

Sun Ship, recorded August 26, 1965, captures one of the last sessions by the Classic John Coltrane Quartet (Coltrane, pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones). It comes at the culmination of a year in which Coltrane arguably reached his creative peak, a year rich in such masterworks. The Sun Ship album, though, was not issued until 1971, one of several Coltrane albums issued by Impulse Records after his death. And Sun Ship was, like many jazz albums, the product of editing between takes, a process overseen by John's widow Alice.

"This Complete Sun Ship Session edition is much more: sourced from newly discovered original reels, the set includes the album's five original compositions, unedited, in sequence of recording, with all of the takes as they evolved, as well as the surrounding conversations. More than just a sampling of a few alternate takes, The Complete Sun Ship Session offers a rare opportunity to eavesdrop on an iconic master at work." - David Wild, liner notes

John Coltrane's Sun Ship session was recorded at the RCA Recording studio on 24th Street by engineer Bob Simpson who also did superb work with Sonny Rollins, Charles Mingus, Albert Ayler and others. The original three-track masters with the tenor sax on one track, the piano and bass on another and the drums on the third track were recently discovered, enabling the complete session to be released for the first time. Kevin Reeves remixed the entire session from the original three-track masters with great sonic results, improving greatly on the original LP mix. Mosaic has remastered them and pressed them on 180-gram vinyl at the renowned Record Technology Inc. plant in Camarillo, California.

NEW RELEASES - SHAOLIN TEMPLE DEFENDERS, CHARLES BRADLEY, RONNIE CUBER

SHAOLIN TEMPLE DEFENDERS - FROM THE INSIDE

The amazing return of the Shaolin Temple Defenders – a group who've really deepened their sound since we last heard from them! On previous albums, the Defenders were a razor-sharp funk combo – a French ensemble who'd really studied the funky 45 underground of the late 60s and early 70s – and definitely knew how to get that sound right! This time around, they've also picked up a deep soul vibe as well – bringing vocals into the mix even more strongly than before – sung by Brother Lion with this raspy style that feels like some of the best southern soul at the start of the 70s. The funky currents of the group are still firmly in place – sometimes with a heavy 70s twist, sometimes with a more laidback vibe that lets the vocals take center stage – and titles include "Blue Shades", "Do You Remember", "Spirit Of The South", "Temple Of Soul", "Super Nacho Funk", "Let Your Love Shine On Me", "It's So Easy", "Our Love Will Live Forever", and a cover of "Kung Fu Fighting". (Includes free MP3 download.) ~ Dusty Groove

CHARLES BRADLEY - VICTIM OF LOVE

Damn amazing work from Charles Bradley – an instant soul classic for all generations, as you'll hear from the very first note! Not only are Bradley's vocals incredible – the kind of once-in-a-long-time approach he brought to his debut – but the backings and production are completely sublime too – magical music from the Menahan Street Band, who sound here like some lost combo from 60s Memphis, but without any of the hoke that reference might imply – instead that really unique approach that you'd only find on one of your few favorite vintage soul albums – maybe Bobby Taylor & The Vancouvers, or Jesse James on his 60s album for 20th Century! Yet the sound here isn't just vintage for vintage sake, either – as there's an intensity that's very present, contemporary, and urgent – a sound that doesn't die – and which just gets better and better with each new listen. Tremendous stuff – even from the Daptone universe we've been loving for years and years – with titles that include "Strictly Reserved For You", "You Put The Flame On It", "Dusty Blue", "Love Bug Blues", "Hurricane", "Through The Storm", "Confusion", and "Where Do We Go From Here". (Includes free download.)  ~ Dusty Groove

RONNIE CUBER - LIVE AT JAZZFEST BERLIN

Ronnie Cuber's an overlooked monster in jazz – a hell of a player, and has been for decades – and one of the last few cats who can really handle a baritone sax! Cuber was late in a legacy of baritonists that included Pepper Adams, Sahib Shihab, Cecil Payne, and Lars Gullin – a youngster when all those players were getting old, but more than able to swing with the lean energy that made the 50s baritone sax players as important as the giants on tenor! Here, Cuber really demonstrates that legacy strongly – picking up the giant horn and handling it with effortless ease – producing these beautifully-blown solo lines that are nice and long, and filled with imagination – in the company of a combo that features Kenny Drew Jr on piano, Ruben Rodriguez on bass, and Ben Perowsky on drums. The recent date is a great reminder that Cuber can still cook heavily – and titles include "Passion Fruit", "Coco B", "Perpetuating The Myth", "Tell Me A Bedtime Story", and "Arroz Con Pollo". ~ Dusty Groove

2013 ESSENCE MUSIC FESTIVAL LINEUP ANNOUNCED...

The 2013 ESSENCE Festival, the 19th annual gathering of music, culture, community, empowerment and inspiration, is proud to announce its heavily anticipated night-by-night line-up. The 2013 ESSENCE Festival, taking place July 4-7 in New Orleans, LA, promises to be the most exhilarating cultural celebration of the year; featuring a mix of bold names, exciting newcomers and cherished Essence Festival favorites.

Festival attendees will experience a dazzling aural event with the thrilling headlining line-up of Grammy-Award winners Jill Scott and Maxwell (Friday, July 5th); Charlie Wilson and New Edition (Saturday, July 6th); and a powerful closing performance from Grammy-Award winning icon Beyonce (Sunday, July 7th). Nephew Tommy from The Steve Harvey Morning Show will once again return as the Mainstage host, assuring laughs and a lively audience interaction.

Additional names to be added to the previously announced Mainstage line up include buzzed about songstress Solange, who will be bringing her fiery brand and fashionable stage set to the Mainstage for the first time; heartthrob Trey Songz; Essence May issue cover star and vocal powerhouse Janelle Monae , who will curate a nightly lounge performance; and Supergroup TGT (Tyrese, Ginuwine and Tank). Newly added superlounge acts include Faith Evans , Luke James , Tamia, Emeli Sande , Alice Smith , Maya Azucena and Shamarr Allen and the Underdawgs, among many others.

"We are pleased to present such a stellar and diverse line up of performers, with more than thirty acts across five stages!" says Michelle Ebanks , ESSENCE Communications President. She adds, "From icons to the most exciting rising stars, we are offering it all. This extraordinary line-up is just one of the many components of what will be an empowering and inspiring overall weekend experience!"

The 2013 ESSENCE Festival night-by-night musical line-up is as follows:
•Friday, July 5th: Mainstage: Maxwell, Jill Scott , LL Cool J and Brandy. Superlounges: Blackstreet, Anthony David, Les Nubians, Emeli Sande, Maya Azucena, Simphiwe Dana, Mali Music and Shamarr Allen and The Underdawgs.

•Saturday, July 6th: Mainstage: New Edition, Charlie Wilson , Trey Songz, Keyshia Cole and Solange. Superlounges: Faith Evans, Bridget Kelly, Big Daddy Kane, F.Stokes, PJ Morton, Jody Watley, Leela James and Avery Sunshine.

•Sunday, July 7th: Mainstage: Beyonce, Janelle Monae and TGT (Tyrese, Ginuwine and Tank). Superlounges: Rachelle Ferrell, Mia Borders, Mint Condition, Luke James, Daley, Tamia, Kourtney Heart and Alice Smith .

•More acts to be announced soon. 

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

NEW RELEASES - MILLIE JACKSON, JACKIE MOORE, FERN KINNEY

MILLIE JACKSON - THE MANY MOODS OF MILLIE JACKSON: HER BEST BALLADS

A side of Millie Jackson that we really really love – her ballads and mellow tracks – a style that Millie did unlike anyone else back in the day! Jackson's sometimes best remembered for her sassier side, but we love it when she kicks back and moves slowly into a groove – drawing on her southern deep soul roots, but giving things a warm modern twist too – that perfect balance of modes that made Millie a key force in changing the sound of soul back in the 70s! The track selection here is sublime – and pulls together some real gems from Jackson's famous Spring LPs – including some tracks that begin with these really cool monologues, and others that have kind of a midtempo groove that nicely changes up the pace. The whole thing's tremendous – the kind of Millie Jackson collection we made for ourselves decades ago on cassette – and titles include "I'm Tired Of Hiding", "There You Are", "A Love Of Your Own", "I'll Be Rolling", "From Her Arms To Mine", "Angel In Your Arms", "I Still Love You", and "Making The Best Of A Bad Situation". ~ Dusty Groove

JACKIE MOORE - SWEET CHARLY BABE

A classic set of 70s crossover deep soul – recorded in the mode of similar work by Betty Wright or Laura Lee, and done with a similar mix of raw southern vocals and tighter production! About half the work was handled by the team of Dave Crawford and Brad Shapiro – working in the Criteria Studios in Miami to give Jackie a sound that's similar to Shapiro's work with Millie Jackson. The other half was produced in Philly, by the Young Professionals team of LeBaron Taylor, Tony Bell, and Phil Hurt – who give Jackie a warm, gliding, sweet 70s Philly groove! And although you might think that this Philly/Miami split would make for a mixed bag of tunes, the album's surprisingly unified – and in a way, does plenty to link together the growing dancefloor scenes in both cities. Titles include "Willpower", "Both Ends Against The Middle", "Time", "Something In A Look", "Clean Up Your Own Yard", "If", and "Darling Baby". ~ Dusty Groove

FERN KINNEY - GROOVE ME

A standout classic from Fern Kinney – and a set that not only marked a big moment of evolution for southern soul, but also for the Mississippi scene as well! The set was recorded at the Malaco studios in Jackson, but has a vibe that's much closer to some of the TK Records material from Miami – that maturation of southern soul during the disco era – as warmer, more modern touches came into play with rootsier styles of vocals! Mike Lewis handled the string arrangements – giving the record the same disco vibe as some of his other work of the time, including Anita Ward's big debut – and Fern's vocals have this higher range than usual for a southern singer – almost more innately tuned towards clubby rhythms. Titles include a big hit remake of King Floyd's "Groove Me" – really marking the change from the original version – plus "Baby Let Me Kiss You", "Pillow Talk", "Sun Moon Rain", "Angel On The Ground", and "Under Fire". CD features bonus tracks "Let's Keep It Right There", "I Want You Back", "Movie Show", "Baby Let Me Kiss You (single)", "Sweet Life", "Tonight's The Night", and "Groove Me (single)". ~ Dusty Groove

NEW RELEASES - THE SIGN OF FOUR, KEV BEADLE PRESENTS PRIVATE COLLECTION, BONOBO

THE SIGN OF FOUR - HAMMER, ANVIL, STIRRUP

Oscillating and reverberating chaotically through sonic orbs and polyphonic sound textures, The Sign of Four is a new creative concept from the Natural Yogurt Band's Miles Newbold. Hammer, Anvil, Stirrup is the debut album from The Sign of Four on Jazzman Records and is spread exquisitely across 2x10" LPs in hand-printed sleeves, digipack CD and digital download formats. Recorded live at Chicken Shack studios in Nottingham, real musical instruments are used to create a swirling jungle of throbbing palpitations evoking the spaced-out vibes of an unsound mind. It's an infectious fermentation of debauched instrumental chaos, sometimes calming, but often unnerving, that will leave the listener bewildered, wide-eyed and gasping for more. The 11-track album also contains two tracks from Sun Suite, an alternative incarnation of The Sign of Four, that see out the release in a less chaotic fashion, a sonic antidote to the preceding pandemonium.

KEV BEADLE PRESENTS PRIVATE COLLECTION: INDEPENDENT JAZZ SOUNDS FROM THE 70S & 80S (VARIOUS ARTISTS)
A completely sublime collection of spiritual jazz numbers from the 70s – put together by the legendary Kev Beadle, one of the first cats to spin the music with Gilles Peterson on the UK scene! The package is a great mix of essentials from years back, plus some under-discovered nuggets from the American underground – all with a nice emphasis on the grooves and rhythms – in a way that you might have heard back at Dingwalls on a Sunday afternoon! The set's a great reminder that music can be progressive and groovy at the same time – and the whole thing's overflowing with righteous treasures. Vinyl version features some exclusive tracks not on the CD – "Safari" by Frank Walton, "Padali" by Chuck Flores, and "I See Chano Pozo" by Jayne Cortez & The Firespitters – plus "In Every Way" by Reverie, "Open Your Mind" by Southern Energy Ensemble, "Brotherhood" by Kamal Abdul Alim, and "Freedom Road" by The Pharoahs. ~ Dusty Groove

BONOBO - NORTH BORDERS

A deeply effective set from Bonobo! North Borders has beats that are as compelling as any in Bonobo's canon – often thumping pretty hard – paired with gorgeous electronic sound washes and really deft use of vocal samples and guest singers. The mix of compelling beats and lighter, more ethereal atmosphere is a nice touch – and the use of voices, whether sampled or sung by a guest, really brings in an uncommon emotional depth. Includes "First Fires" with Grey Reverend, "Emkay", "Don't Wait", "Cirrus", "Heaven For The Sinner" with Erykah Badu, Towers" with Sjerdene, "Jets", "Antenna", "Know You", "Ten Tigers", "Sapphire", "Transits" and "Pieces" feat Cornella. ~ Dusty Groove

NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL GALA RECORDING FEATURES DIANNE REEVES, BILL FRISELL, JASON MORAN, LIONEL LOUKE AND OTHERS...


Dianne Reeves
 Foundation, Inc.™ has announced the release of the Newport Jazz Festival® Gala Recording 2012 powered by ArtistShare®. The recording project celebrates the unique experience shared by 250 guests at the fundraising gala for the not-for-profit 501(c)(3) Newport Festivals Foundation, Inc.™, which produces the Newport Folk and Jazz Festivals.The evening featured first-time collaborations by Jason Moran, Ingrid Jensen and Anat Cohen; Edmar Castañeda with Steve Wilson; Anat Cohen and Bill Frisell; Rudresh Mahanthappa with Lionel Loueke; Ingrid Jensen, Bill Frisell, Steve Wilson, Jason Moran and Lewis Nash; as well as a performance by Dianne Reeves with Peter Martin.

"Although many world-renowned albums have been recorded at the Newport Jazz Festival® since the 1950's, this is the first release to be produced by the Festival," said George Wein, Chairman of the Newport Festivals Foundation™ and producer of the Newport Jazz and Folk Festivals since their inceptions in 1954 and 1959. "The musicians were completely free to play what they wanted, and gala guests were treated to performances unlike anything they had ever heard. We are pleased with the excellent response and participation in the recording project, which will allow us to commission original compositions from artists and feature these works at future Newport Jazz Festivals."

Bill Frisell
The 2012 Newport Festivals Foundation™ Gala raised more than $200,000, and Wein says he hopes the CD will bring in a great deal more support to the Foundation while raising awareness of the organization's mission. Individual fans who participated in the CD project contributed from $18.95 up to $7,500 to play an integral part in the future of the Newport Jazz Festival®.

The 2013 Newport Folk Festival® is set for July 27 - 28 and the Newport Jazz Festival® takes place the following weekend, August 2 - 4.

The Newport Festivals Foundation, Inc.™ was founded by George Wein in 2010 to build upon and continue the legacies of the famed Newport Jazz Festival® and Newport Folk Festival®. Under the auspices of the Foundation, the Newport Jazz Festival® presents performers who respect and honor jazz music traditions, and at the same time reflect the changes in today's musical trends. Through the establishment of partnerships with local high schools and colleges/universities, the Foundation will present programs to educate young people about jazz music as presented at the annual festivals. For more information, please visit www.newportfestivalsfoundation.org.

ArtistShare® is a platform that connects creative artists with fans in order to share the creative process and fund the creation of new artistic works. ArtistShare® created the Internet's first fan funding platform for artists launching its initial project in October, 2003. Since then, ArtistShare® has been allowing fans to show appreciation for their favorite artists by funding their projects in exchange for access to the creative process, LTD Edition recordings, VIP access to events/recording sessions and even credit listing on the final product. ArtistShare® projects have received countless awards and accolades including 5 Grammy awards and 15 Grammy nominations. For additional information, go to www.artistshare.com

CAROL DUBOC - SMILE

Since her emergence onto the adult contemporary/urban jazz scene in the early 2000s, Carol Duboc has generously shared her wisdom and insight about love and romance in song-via both compelling original material and uniquely stylized covers of pop classics, as on her most recent recordings Songs For Lovers (2008) and Burt Bacharach Songbook (2009).

On her multi-faceted new album Smile, the sultry singer and songwriter-who penned songs for top pop/R&B artists like Patti Labelle, Chante Moore, Stephanie Mills and Jade before emerging as a solo artist-goes deeper emotionally than ever before. Inspired by the steep challenges and great joys of keeping a long term relationship afloat, the 10-track collection invites fans and new listeners alike to experience compelling moments along the journey-from confusion and darkness to sparks of daylight and the assurance that no matter what, all will somehow work out for the best.

While music has always been a driving creative force in Duboc's life, she found it to be the best possible therapy during this very difficult time in her life. "While many of the songs such as 'Elephant,' 'Telepathy' and 'Nobody Knows' tell of the struggles I was going through," she says, "other songs like 'Gliding,' 'Parachute' and the title track 'Smile' chronicle the hope that kept me going through it all. As a relatively new mother, I have found great inspiration from my smiling daughter, and with other things tumbling down before me at times, I found that the songs for the album almost wrote themselves."

Duboc co-produced Smile (and co-wrote all but one of its songs) with GRAMMY® nominated keyboardist, recording artist, composer and producer Jeff Lorber, who played on her popular 2002 release Duboc and co-wrote the track "I Wanna Love Someone" with her on that album. Lorber invited several of the studio greats who worked on his most recent Jeff Lorber Fusion recording Galaxy to add their jazzy sensibilities and soulful power to the Smile sessions - including drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, electric bassist Jimmy Haslip and guitarist Michael Thompson. Select tracks of Smile feature GRAMMY® nominated bassist Brian Bromberg.

One of the beautiful constants running through Duboc's entire Gold Note Music discography is longtime friend and legendary flutist Hubert Laws, who adds his whimsical magic to three tracks on Smile: "Telepathy," "Gliding" and "Parachute." Duboc says, "Secretly, I have always wanted to scat to one of his solos, and on 'Telepathy,' a song about trying to read someone's mind in order to make the right choices in a relationship, I got the chance to do just that." Duboc wrote every song with Lorber with the exception of "Behind A Kiss," which she co-penned with keyboardist Tim Carmon.

Duboc and Lorber recorded most of the tracks live with drums and bass at The Village Recorders in Los Angeles in three days. "Recording my vocals live with the band is important because it captures the spontaneity of our interaction and I find being supported by such a great band really inspiring," she says. Once the basic tracks were recorded Lorber suggested that Thompson add his unique guitar genius to the production. "The layers and layers of sounds and his amazing attention to detail really took the production to another level," Duboc adds.

Shortly after Duboc -- who had moved from L.A. back to her hometown of Kansas City for several years after the birth of her daughter -- returned West in 2010, Lorber contacted her and said he was interested in writing new songs. The singer, recalling the great creative chemistry they had in the early 2000s, was excited to see how they had each evolved since then.

"I love writing melodies to Jeff's jazzy yet soulful changes," she says. "I have always been a fan of his innovative style, and I am thrilled to once again put our musical sounds together. When I arrived at Jeff's he had an idea started and as usual his chords inspired a melody in me right away. We continued to write songs over the next few months. Many of the lyrics were inspired by my reactions to some of the struggles I was going through in my personal relationship at home. The Latin flavored 'Parachute' is about my hope that I could trust this person with my life and fly together in a parachute. By the time I wrote 'Unpredictable,' I realized that this collection of songs was evolving into my next, very unplanned, but very personal release."

Lorber comments, "Carol is a wonderful singer and we always had great chemistry writing together in the studio. The thing that I love the most about writing with Carol is that it's an effortless process. She seems to know exactly what melodies and lyrics to write to bring out the best in my chord progressions. It was an extra treat when Carol decided to go into the studio and work with some of the best musicians in Los Angeles (and on the planet) to bring these songs to life. It was so great to record everything live, which unfortunately is becoming a rare experience these days. Jimmy, Vinnie, Brian, Luis, Eric and all the other musicians and engineers contributed so much to the music. I enjoyed working on the project very much and I hope lots of people get turned on to Carol's immense talent."

The title song "Smile" was the last one written by Duboc and Lorber. "The melody came to me the minute I heard the chords," she says, "but in this case I was struggling with the words. I had begun to think everything was falling apart - but I looked at my daughter playing next to me and her smile inspired this song. I have never before written a song through a stream of tears but I was crying as I wrote and sang this in my studio. I realized that in the end all that matters to me is that she is happy."

Smile Personnel & Track Listing:
Carol Duboc / vocals
Jeff Lorber / keyboards, moog, guitar on "Telepathy"
Tim Carmon / piano on "Behind a Kiss"
Vinnie Colaiuta / drums
Michael Thompson / guitars
Brian Bromberg / upright bass
Jimmy Haslip / electric bass
Hubert Laws / flute
Luis Conte / percussion

1. Elephant
2. Smile
3. Unpredictable
4. Telepathy
5. Atmosphere
6. Parachute
7. Behind a Kiss
8. Gliding
9. Nobody Knows
10. Mythological

Monday, April 01, 2013

MARK EGAN / KARL LATHAN / JOHN HART - UNIT 1

Wavetone Records has  released the self-titled debut release for jazz-funk power trio Unit 1, featuring Grammy Award-winning bassist Mark Egan, multi-dimensional drummer Karl Latham, and jazz guitar giant John Hart. Mark Egan has a unique fretless bass sound and style that is both distinctive and versatile, making him one of the most in-demand electric bassists in music today. Egan has recorded and toured with the likes of the Pat Metheny Group, Sting, Roger Daltry, Stan Getz, and Bill Evans, just to name a few. John Hart is a well-known artist in the world of jazz, having performed with dozens of top performers, including Brian Blade’s Fellowship, The Maria Schneider Big Band, Teramasu Hino, and dozens of other jazz legends. Featured in Drummer World Top 500 List of all time drummers, Karl Latham is a staple in the European modern jazz scene, appearing regularly with such music icons as Bernie Worrell and Johnny Winter.


Embracing jazz, rock, Brazilian, funk and world music sensibilities, Unit 1 takes the listener on a highly improvisational journey, creating modern interpretations of nine jazz Standards reminiscent of The Police, Tony Williams Lifetime, and Miles Davis’ Live Evil. Stand-out tracks include “Willow Weep for Me,” “St. Thomas,” and “Bemsha Swing.” This highly anticipated release features 70+ minutes of pure creative jamming interaction.

Unit 1 was recorded live from three performances at the club Bula in Newtown, NJ.

"Mark Egan’s über-versatile trio (with guitarist John Hart and drummer Karl Latham) reimagines bebop classics live with an East Coast edge." - Bass Player Magazine

"The record goes from a slow burn to a date with death velocity, with sounds you can hum all the way to oblivion" - John Shelton Ivany

TONY BENNETT / DAVE BRUBECK - THE WHITE HOUSE SESSIONS, LIVE 1962

RPM/Columbia Records/Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, is proud to release -- for the first time ever -- the complete Tony Bennett and Dave Brubeck performance from the White House Seminar American Jazz Concert , held on August 28, 1962. With the Washington Monument as the evening's backdrop--the show was moved from its original Rose Garden location to the larger Sylvan Theater grounds nearby to accommodate the crowd--the concert was an end-of-summer event thrown by the John F. Kennedy White House for college students who'd been working as interns in the nation's capital.


Bennett & Brubeck - The White House Sessions, Live 1962 will be available Tuesday, May 28.

One of the great lost treasures of American musical history, the Tony Bennett-Dave Brubeck White House Seminar performance came about when the artists--each already on the bill with his own ensemble--agreed to seize the moment with an impromptu set. While the Bennett-Brubeck recording of "That Old Black Magic" had surfaced on the occasional compilation (Brubeck's 1971's out-of-print LP, Summit Sessions, and 2001's Vocal Encounters), the rest of the Bennett and Brubeck performances--an hour's worth of music--were a mythical lost object in the Sony Music Entertainment vaults until finally surfacing through a fortuitous discovery last December, just weeks after Brubeck's passing on December 5, 2012 (one day shy of his 92nd birthday).

1962 was a pivotal time in American cultural and musical history and for the artists on this recording. Just seventeen days before the White House Seminar American Jazz Concert , Tony Bennett had entered the Billboard charts with his signature song, "I Left My Heart In San Francisco," and there is an ebullience in Tony's performances and a palpable excitement of the college-age audience in their recognition of Tony's on-fire success. Dave Brubeck 's "Take Five" had become emblematic of jazz itself and, in 1962, Brubeck's band was picked as the best combo in jazz by Down Beat magazine readers and DJs surveyed by Billboard.

With both Bennett and Brubeck at the top of their respective games, the masters play off and with each other to create a spontaneous collaborative music that stands with the best of each of their work.

It would be 47 years before Tony Bennett and Dave Brubeck would share a stage again to make music when they both appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival in 2009 and performed "That Old Black Magic," one of the standards they'd immortalized in Washington in August 1962.

In his liner notes to the album, noted jazz historian Ted Gioia observes, "Both had arrived at stardom, but were seemingly stars from different galaxies.

"Yet these two beloved musicians also had much in common. Both had served in World War II, and participated in the Battle of the Bulge. Both were active in the Civil Rights Movement—not long before this recording was made, Brubeck canceled 23 concerts rather than replace his African-American bassist Eugene Wright , and Bennett would soon be marching with Martin Luther King in Montgomery, Alabama. But these two artists were musically simpatico as well. They shared a devotion to the great American songbook, and knew how to straddle the worlds of jazz and popular music without compromises or crass commercialism, yet still reach millions of people, many of whom would never step inside a jazz club or read a copy of Down Beat.

"So what a blessing to have these tracks from the past, a true meeting of musical masters, come to us more than half-century after they were made, but still sounding as fresh and alive as they did to those present back in 1962. The concert that day was held to honor college students who had come to Washington D.C. to work for the summer—in fact, they had met earlier that day with President Kennedy. Historians often use the phrase 'the best and the brightest' to refer to the smart, idealistic people who gravitated to government service in those years, but I would apply those same words to the artists on stage that day. And after hiding out in a dark archive for so many decades, the music of two of the best and brightest to ever interpret the American popular song is shining for us once more."

MICHAEL FEINSTEIN - CHANGE OF HEART THE SONGS OF ANDRE PREVIN

The supremely talented singer and pianist Michael Feinstein collaborates with legendary composer-conductor-pianist André Previn for an album celebrating Previn’s repertoire from his lesser-known catalog of pop songs, including many that were written for film. The album, titled Change of Heart: The Songs of André Previn, is set for release by Telarc International on April 16, 2013 (international release dates may vary).

André Previn, whose career spans seven decades, is a music icon, establishing a stellar presence in classical, jazz, opera, film scoring and musical theater. His life’s work is brimming with achievement highlighted by four Oscars and 11 GRAMMY® Awards (including a Lifetime Achievement citation in 2010). With such a diverse imprint on the world of music, it is no wonder his list of collaborations are comprised of artists like Shelly Manne, Red Mitchell, J.J. Johnson, Joe Pass, Ray Brown, Ella Fitzgerald, Doris Day, Sylvia McNair, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pederson, Mundell Lowe and, most frequently in recent years, bassist David Finck. Michael Feinstein is now part of this incomparable list.

Feinstein’s own vast catalog of recordings features several albums on which he is accompanied by legendary songwriters, performing their own tunes, including Jule Styne, Burton Lane, Hugh Martin and Jay Livingston. However, this recording has its own unique flair with Feintstein’s vocals, Previn on piano, and Finck on bass. This is, to the best of Previn and Feinstein’s knowledge, the first time Previn has partnered with a male vocalist.

The project began last April when Feinstein telephoned Previn to wish him a happy birthday. “When I called,” says Feinstein, “I said I would like to do an album of his songs. There was silence. Finally he said, ‘Is there enough?’ He was quite serious, because he didn’t take into account the voluminous amount of work he had done through the years. I think he came to dismiss his own songs, presuming that because they weren’t necessarily hits, they weren’t worthwhile or worth revisiting.” Says Previn of that initial conversation, “I proposed to Michael that there wouldn’t be more than a dozen people who would be interested, but he argued with me, and he is very persuasive, so I said okay.”

The album opens with “(You’ve Had) A Change of Heart,” with lyrics by Previn’s most frequent collaborator, his second wife Dory Langdon. The second track, “The Easy Way,” was written for the 1968 screen adaptation of Jacqueline Susann’s Valley of the Dolls, but not included in the film. Also from Valley of the Dolls, performed in the film by Patty Duke’s character, is “Give a Little More.” “Empty Is My Room” and “Goodbye” are from an unproduced score for a musical film adaptation of Goodbye, Mr. Chips. Feinstein says, “André has a tremendous gift for melody and is able to write songs that have complexity but are very accessible.”

The album also includes “Yes” best known from the version recorded by Doris Day, with Previn, in 1962 for the album Duet, “It’s Good to Have You Near Again,” and “Just for Now,” and “Little Lost Dream,” from Johnny Mercer’s final stage show, a musical adaptation of novelist J. B. Priestley’s The Good Companions. Two of Previn’s film themes are “Two for the Seesaw (A Second Chance)” and “Why Are We Afraid?.” The final works on the album are “Quiet Music” from Previn’s 2001 album Live at Jazz Standard, with Finck and “You’re Gonna Hear from Me,” featured in the 1965 film Inside Daisy Clover, costarring Natalie Wood and Robert Redford, which remains one of Previn’s best-known songs.

In assessing Change of Heart, Previn says, “We had a good time making the album.” From Feinstein’s perspective, “It was thrilling working with André. He’s got the greatest sense of humor, is a great storyteller and he’s a link to a history that is very important to me; yet he’s still here, still contemporary and still making great music. He’s one of the most versatile musicians I have ever known because he is completely unfettered by genres. He loves all kinds of music and is conversant in a way that is staggering, yet he is very humble and self-effacing, especially when it comes to his own work. I suspect it was fun for him to look at these songs and find out that what he wrote was a hell of a lot better than he remembers it.”

11-YEAR-OLD MUSICAL PRODIGY EMILY BEAR, SET TO RELEASE CONCORD RECORDS/QWEST RECORDS DEBUT - DIVERSITY - ON MAY 7, PRODUCED BY MENTOR QUINCY JONES

11-year-old musical prodigy Emily Bear, a pianist and composer set to release Concord Records/Qwest Records debut Diversity on May 7, produced by legendary multi-Grammy Award winning producer, composer and arranger Quincy Jones. Bear, who is managed by Quincy Jones Productions, has the ability to seamlessly move from Classical to Jazz and Be-bop, while demonstrating musical prowess comparable to pianists/composers twice her age, has written 13-original songs for the new project, performed with a Jazz Trio (international release dates may vary). She first broke into the national spotlight at age 6, as a guest on the Ellen DeGeneres Show, performing Mozart, jazz and an original song she composed. She was invited back five more times within the span of two years, performing original music each visit.

Comments Quincy Jones: “I am at once astounded and inspired by the enormous talent that Emily embodies. She is the complete 360-degree package, and there are no limits to the musical heights that she can reach.”

Jones will join Bear for record release parties in NY (5/15) and LA (5/8), which also includes scheduled press dates.

"Emily is extraordinarily gifted,” says John Burk, Chief Creative Officer, Concord Music Group. “She obviously has incredibly advanced technical skills far beyond her years, but what I find most extraordinary, is her emotional and compositional depth.”

The CD title Diversity represents the diversity of Bear's style, as well as the diversity of the cultures that are her musical influences. The project was recorded at Westlake Studios. Using Bear's own jazz trio handpicked by Jones, she demonstrates both her versatility and an open-hearted melodic soul at the piano, composing, orchestrating and performing a multi-genre repertoire with full command.

Some of her reflective mood compositions include “Blue Note,” “Alika,” “Jessie’s Song” and “Tutti Cuore”; While she gets down with a Latin feeling in the rhythm section with the catchy “Hot Peppers” and self-explanatory “Salsa Americana”. “Peralada” conveys a specific Spanish flavor, as inspired by the Catalan city where she first performed this piece at a music festival, and she utilizes her classical technique to a tee in “Reflections.” “Northern Lights” is the piece for which she won an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award at the tender age of 6, and “Q” refers to the nickname of Bear's legendary producer, which after a heartfelt slow intro, turns into a jaunty jazz-trio tribute to the ever-youthful spirit of the iconic music figure.

Bear, who plays all of her music from memory, including 45-page classical concertos, started to show extraordinary musical talent practically from the cradle. As a baby, she would sing back lullabies to her mother in perfect pitch. By 18 months, she was experimenting constantly at the piano. She was composing tangible pieces at age 3. By the time Bear was 4, she was having pieces published and distributed by Hal Leonard.

She made her concert debut at the Ravinia Festival in Chicago at age 5, playing a 40-minute solo program performing classical pieces side-by-side with jazz numbers, and her own compositions. She was invited to perform at the White House at age 6, and opened for the Ramsey Lewis Trio with a 30-minute set of her own. Her orchestral debut came at age 7, playing Mozart Piano Concerto no. 23, K488 and by age 8, she was playing concerts abroad in Italy and China. At age 9, she made her Carnegie Hall debut with a 110-piece orchestra, a 220-voice choir, and R&B soloists performing one of her compositions, “Peace – We Are The Future.”

In 2011, Bear had yet another big year when she made her debut at the Hollywood Bowl, performing a medley of her own compositions with singers Gloria Estefan, Patti Austin, Siedah Garrett and Nikki Yanofsky. That summer, Jones also presented her at the 45th Montreux Jazz Festival and the Festival Castell in Peralada, Spain.

Bear has since been featured on several major news programs, including Good Morning America, ABC World News Report with Diane Sawyer, ABC Nightline, and the Katie Couric Show. Internationally, she has been featured in stories on Swiss, German, Australian, Italian and Chinese television.

“I’m a regular kid who was lucky enough to find something I really love to do at a very young age,” says Bear. “Concord has a lot of musicians I look up to so I’m really excited about the opportunity and look forward to sharing my music.”

TAJ MAHAL / COREY HARRIS / SHEMEKIA COPELAND / GUY DAVIS / PHIL WIGGINS / ALVIN YOUNGBLOOD HART - TRUE BLUES

When guitarist/singer/composer Corey Harris calls the blues “the foundation of all contemporary music,” he’s not overstating the case. “Funk music, rock and roll, jazz, hip-hop – all of that didn’t generate by itself,” says Harris, the recipient of the 2007 MacArthur Genius Grant who has committed much of his career to exploring the connections between gospel, early jazz, reggae and West African music. “It came from somewhere. The reason that the blues is important today is because it connects us to where these different musics came from – and who they came from.”

Harris is just one of a team of premier blues artists who appear on True Blues, a 13-song live CD set for release May 28, 2013 (international release dates may vary) on Telarc, a division of Concord Music Group. Recorded at various venues throughout the United States including Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York, True Blues explores and celebrates the genre and follows its rich history from the Mississippi delta of the early 1900s to the present day. The album includes stellar and authentic performances by Harris, Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland, Guy Davis, Alvin Youngblood Hart and Phil Wiggins. A companion DVD, produced by Harris and Daniel Patinkin, will be released worldwide in summer 2013.

“I think the blues is about telling your story,” says Copeland, an acclaimed GRAMMY®-nominated vocalist in her own right and the daughter of legendary Texas blues guitarist Johnny Copeland, who carried the torch for five decades until his death in the late 1990s. “It’s been part of my life for my entire life. It’s what put food on our table. My father supported our family by making this music. That’s why it’s important for me to let people know that it’s constantly growing and evolving.”

The set opens with the classic “Hoochie Coochie Man,” one of the most recognized and oft-covered songs in the vast blues canon. Recorded live at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York, this grinding version is a collaborative effort, with Guy Davis, Corey Harris and Alvin Youngblood Hart trading off verses, punctuated by Phil Wiggins’ clean and warbling harp riffs.

Harris proves that he’s a genius with a deep groove as he offers up a brilliant solo version of Sleepy John Estes’ “Everybody Got To Change Sometime.” Captured live at House of Blues, Los Angeles, CA, he sings the track in a way that connotes both passion for life and a higher purpose.

Willie Johnson’s “Motherless Children Have a Hard Time,” recorded at Howard Theatre in Washington, DC, features a hypnotic solo guitar and vocal performance superbly executed by Alvin Youngblood Hart, who evokes the old masters of the Mississippi delta in the days before electric guitar pickups and high-tech recording technology. Equally chilling is Hart’s galloping “Gallows Pole,” also recorded at Jazz at Lincoln Center, later in the set.

Taj Mahal serves up his churning “Done Changed My Way of Living” with the help of his Taj Mahal Trio. Recorded at Ram’s Head On Stage in Annapolis, MD, this elder statesman of the blues takes the recording’s bravado quotient to an entirely new level with his trademark growl that’s reminiscent (either by design or by accident) of the great Howlin’ Wolf. Deeper into the set, the trio remerges for a rendition of “Mailbox Blues” that hints at the mid-20th century swing music that would eventually evolve from the blues tradition.

Shemekia Copeland – with help from Hart, Harris and Wiggins – softens things up and turns up the heat at the same time with the sultry “Bring Your Fine Self Home,” a slow and simmering track whose urgent lyrics leave little question about what the singer is after: “What I need I can’t get on no telephone.”

Copeland, Hart, Harris and Wiggins trade vocals again on the closer, “Ramblin’ On My Mind,” but it’s Wiggins and his harp who steal the show with a seemingly limitless array of textures and riffs inserted between each verse.

True Blues – like the music and the tradition that it celebrates – runs the gamut of human emotion and worldly experience. When the voices and the songs and the stories are true, the blues offers something for every listener at every possible step on his or her journey.

“You have some sadness, or you have some trouble in your life sometimes,” says Wiggins. “And then sometimes you have joy. The blues is really about all that. It’s not just about one emotion or one part of life. It’s about all of your life.”

But performing remains a blues artist’s first love. With a string of upcoming tour dates, look for Corey Harris, Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland, Guy Davis, Alvin Youngblood Hart and Phil Wiggins to share the magic of True Blues onstage.

LORENZO FELICIATI & LORENZO ESPOSITO FORNASARI - BERSERK!

The first-ever collaboration between Italian bassist-composer Lorenzo Feliciati and Italian vocalist-multi-instrumentalist-sonic provocateur Lorenzo Esposito Fornasari (aka LEF) defies easy categorization as it awakens the senses. At times darker than the Grim Reaper and heavier than the soundtrack for the Apocalypse, it can turn on a dime and swing insistently, or wail mournfully, or float mysteriously. Is it rock? Is it jazz? Is it ambient, avant garde, opera or something else? Regardless of tags, the music that Feliciati and Fornasari make together as Berserk! on their self-titled debut stands an imposing manifesto. It is an iron fist upside the head of complacency.


Says Fornasari, "I have never been able to listen to the same style of music all the time so what I prefer is being free to play different things, going back and forth from opera to rock or jazz. That kind of insanity is probably the glue that put me and Feliciati together and actually makes Berserk! possible. And we should also thank Rare Noise Records, which has become a place where a pack of wild fellows, professionals from all over, can meet and do creative things together."

"We exchanged mutual admiration for our music through email," says Feliciati in explaining how the two formidable figures behind Berserk! finally hooked up, "and from there the next step was to get together and play. For me, it is natural to shout, 'Let's do some music together!' when you discover an artist that hits you so powerfully with his talent. And when we finally decided to collaborate, we liked the idea of giving the band a name that immediately gives a sense of power and dedication and brutal resolution."

With the two Lorenzos at the core of this formidable collective, they brought in such potent and provocative voices as guitarist Eivind Aarset, trombonist Gianluca Petrella, alto saxophonist Sandro Satta, keyboardist Jamie Saft, and drummers Cristiano Calcagnile and Pat Mastelotto (Feliciati's bandmate in Naked Truth) to enhance the proceedings. Fornasari, also a member of the bands Owls and Obake, described their unconventional method of music-making: "We defined some generic guidelines, though not necessarily in musical terms. The jumping off point for a particular track could have been a color or a landscape or even a word. The resulting product, then, sounds more like a soundtrack CD than a jazz or rock LP."

At the very first stage of recording, Feliciati made a demo of a song with bass guitar and keyboards, then sent it to Fornasari. "I recorded vocals and some orchestration," LEF explains, 'then handed it over to Pat who added drums. Then I sent Feliciati a couple of new tunes. We went on like this, producing a great amount of rough songs as a duo for the first six months of the 2012. Saft, Aarset, Puglisi, Satta and Cavina came in later. We thought something was missing though, thus we planned a 2/3 days of studio session with Petrella and Calcagnile in the fall, just a month before the mixing stage."

"Composing together for us means that we work in constant contact, sharing files and ideas and sending various versions of the song," adds Feliciati. "It must be a very well organized process but I believe it is a way of having a lot of freedom and responsibility on both sides of the creative process."

Berserk! opens with Feliciati's funky bass line fueling "Macabre Dance," which also introduces Fornasari's eerie, haunting vocals. Aarset contributes some jarring shriekback guitar work while Petrella offers some expressive electronic trombone work. Touches of funeral organ, subtle brushwork on the kit by Mastelotto and some allusions to composer Nino Rota in Fornasari's slyly whistled phrases add to the majesty of this mysterious opener. "Fetal Claustrophobia" opens with some ambient piano by Saft before settling into a spooky movie soundtrack vibe. Former King Crimson drummer Mastelotto then triggers a barrage of jungle beats matched by Petrella's elephantine blasts on trombone. Feliciati's grooving electric bass lines and Aarset's grinding fretboard flurries blend with Mastelotto's pounding Burundi beats to create a thunderous, kinetic undercurrent. And Petrella's electric trombone elevates the hybrid proceedings. This is provocative rock with a sprinkling of jazz on top.

"First" opens with a gentle piano into with little ambient ear cookies floating in and out of the mix. A sparse, melancholy, spacious ballad, it features some of Fornasari's most expressive singing juxtaposed by Aarset's thrashing power chords and wailing distortion-laced soloing. "Latent Prints" is a showcase for Sandro Satta's urgent alto sax work. This John Zorn-ish avantgarde free-for-all features some intense six-string eruptions by Aarset and an extended bass solo by Feliciati. Fornasari's fierce vocals are positively Satanic here, followed by more ironic whistling at the tag. "Dream Made of Water," fueled by Aarset's sonic six-string onslaught, is highlighted by Fornasari's intensely dramatic vocals which simultaneously border on heavy metal and opera.

A fresh-sounding reprise of "Macabre Dance" is followed by "Clairvoyance," a free jazz vehicle powered by Calcagnile's creative rubato playing on the kit. Feliciati anchors this piece with a bold ostinato on upright bass, recalling the memorizing mantra from John Coltrane's A Love Supreme. Petrella is showcased on some powerful harmonizer blowing on trombone and Calcagnile unleashes at the tag of this potent piece. "Dream Made of Wind," a peaceful meditation for trombone and electronics, recalls some of Brian Eno's ambient works. Petrella loops long tones and blows echo-laden statements on this electronic showcase. "Blow" is dark, conversational encounter between upright bass and alto sax while "Not Dead" is a slow grooving vehicle underscored by Feliciati's upright bass groove and featuring Fornasari's enigmatic vocals. The collection closes with the mysterious, ambient "Dream Made of Water," which culminates in a screaming crescendo of dark catharsis that showcases Fornasari's operatic vocals.

"I never worked with a voice like LEF's before," says Feliciati of his Berserk! partner. "I have done a lot of great pop albums with great singers, but LEF's voice is unique and we treated it more like an instrument in the creative process. So the musical territory we discovered with Berserk! Is something totally different and new." For Fornasari, the music on Berserk! is "the right soundtrack for a night trip through a psychedelic city."

While the dictionary definition of 'berserk' carries a whole string of negative connotations (listed at the top of this page) Feliciati is hoping that his band's self-titled debut will bring a new meaning to the term. "I'd like to think that Berserk! also means a very creative, powerful confusion that at the end becomes creative and powerful music without confusion." Fornasari had something else in mind. "I think the cover of this first album is pretty much self explanatory," he says. "We had that picture in mind when we named the band -- a double-headed monster in act of violently puking rage."

Berserk! will be released on May 6, 2013.

JOSHUA KWASSMAN - SONGS OF THE BROTHER SPIRIT

The journey from adolescence to adulthood can be a harrowing one. For composer and saxophonist Joshua Kwassman, that was true in a very literal sense, as a three-day bike trip, in August 2010, with an idolized childhood friend collapsed into chaos and shattered his youthful illusions.

While that trek itself found Kwassman growing up in a hurry, his musical recounting of the experience marks the debut of a remarkably mature young composer. Songs of the Brother Spirit, which will be released March 12 on Truth Revolution Records, spins the tale of that friendship into a moving, richly-hued collection of music influenced by composers from Ravel and Rachmaninoff to Maria Schneider and Vince Mendoza. The disc climaxes in the three-part suite "The Nowhere Trail," which follows Kwassman and his friend Justin through that ill-fated bike trip.

"I learned to be an adult through that experience," Kwassman says of the journey. "The essence of this album is about going through our relationship and how that has translated to my life."

Kwassman conveys this autobiographical account through lush, modernist arrangements that suggest an ensemble much larger and more varied than its six pieces. The group assembled for the project includes the composer himself on a variety of woodwinds, the ground-breaking guitarist Gilad Hekselman; guitarist Jeff Miles on "The Nowhere Trail Part I"; and the wordless vocals of Arielle Feinman, a classmate at the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.

The album is set at a time when Kwassman still looked up to his friend, when the two bonded over listening to jazz records for hours at a time. "We grew up together through music, listening to Miles Davis and Wayne Shorter and Coltrane," Kwassman recalls. "I bonded to him deeply through this music. So when I was writing the first piece on the album I was excited about sharing with him, thinking we'd be able to bond over something I had created in the same way we had with Miles."

Those early listening experiences decided Kwassman on a path to jazz composition. He studied at NYU, where he earned his Masters in the jazz program. He has since received two ASCAP Young Jazz Composer awards and performed with artists like Badal Roy, Ingrid Jensen, Mark Turner, and Geoffrey Keezer. But his main focus is on his own music, which reflects a wide range of influences from the innovative big band work of Maria Schneider and Darcy James Argue to forward-thinking composers like Pat Metheny and Brian Blade. Songs of the Brother Spirit evidences a gift for vivid communication and transporting emotional colors. As Kwassman succinctly says, "My goal is always to tell a story."

WILL DOWNING CELEBRATES 25 YEARS WITH THE RELEASE OF "SILVER"

Rewind to 1988, CDs outsold vinyl for the first time while a little known singer from Brooklyn released a self-titled debut on Island Records called Will Downing. Fast-forward to 2013, CDs have taken a backseat to MP3s but that singer from Brooklyn has withstood the test of time. Today, Will Downing, the Grammy® nominated reigning “Prince of Sophisticated Soul”, celebrates an incredible 25 years of recording excellence with his 16th album, “Silver”.

Silver is not a “Best of” or “Greatest Hits” collection. Silver is a personal invitation from Will Downing to his fans to jointly celebrate a quarter-century of giving his heart and soul through every song, concert and note. For loyalists that have been there from day one, it’s their Silver Anniversary.

Fittingly, Silver is a sweet combination of something “old”, something “new” and something “borrowed” - nothing “blue.” Starting with the “new,” this collection includes four fresh tracks, written by Downing and Chris “Big Dog” Davis with additional contributions from Tony Tolbert (Prof-T from LoKey?) and Gary Taylor (Anita Baker, The Whispers).

The lead single, “Stuff That I Like” - full of fun and flirty food metaphors and a beat that Steppers will find irresistible - has already been serviced to radio to great support and reviews. “What Would You Do?” rides a bouncy Caribbean feel to ask a pretty heavy question: “If you knew today was your last day...what would you do with it?” “You Were Meant Just For Me” is a sizzling duet of undeniably powerful musical chemistry with rising star Avery Sunshine, lamenting the mutual discovery of a perfect partner at a not so perfect time. “Never Find Another Love” has Downing singing through the footsteps of a man whose inner struggles forcehim to walk painfully yet mercifully away from an otherwise perfect relationship.

Unlike 1988, songs these days rarely come from such emotional places...

Something “borrowed” comes from Downing’s self-released trilogy of 4-song EPs Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Today’s challenge for classic artists releasing albums independently is employing a marketing and distribution strategy that keeps your message and product in front of fans. Will hand-picked seven of those songs for Silver including “The Michael Baisden Show“ - driven hit “One Step Closer” and “The Blessing” - voted Song of the Year in the Soul Tracks 2012 Readers’ Choice Awards.

Something “old” (i.e. classic) on Silver is an exclusive “live” rehearsal recording of Will and his band performing a medley of his cover classic hits “I Go Crazy” / “Wishing on a Star” / “I Try”. Capriciously offering up playful banter and hidden flubs on this one, Will still audibly derives great pleasure from his craft.

Dreams have been fulfilled...so Happy Silver Anniversary to the “Prince of Sophisticated Soul” – WILL DOWNING!

Source: Visit THE JAZZ NETWORK WORLDWIDE "A GREAT PLACE TO HANG" at: http://www.thejazznetworkworldwide.com/?xg_source=msg_mes_network

JAN SHAPIRO - PIANO BAR AFTER HOURS

Jazz vocalist and longtime Berklee College vocal professor Jan Shapiro chose to focus on the challenging -- and revealing -- duo format for Piano Bar After Hours, her fourth CD and her first since 2007's Back to Basics. Shapiro tapped six of her favorite pianists, with whom she'd worked in various settings through the years, to accompany her on the new disc, which will be released by her Singing Empress label on April 9.

Before arriving at Berklee 28 years ago, Shapiro spent more than a decade on the road singing with bands five nights a week on the hotel circuit, from St. Louis and Chicago to such points east as Atlanta, New York City, and Washington, DC. By the early Eighties, however, changes in the economy had forced many of the venues at which she worked to employ her with a full band only on weekends. On weeknights, it was just Shapiro and a pianist.

That familiar setting is revisited on Piano Bar After Hours, with Shapiro applying her glowing, pitch-perfect three-octave soprano to a thoughtfully chosen program of jazz and American Songbook standards ("If I Were a Bell," "They Say It's Wonderful," Horace Silver's "Doodlin'," "Times Lie") and pop songs of more recent vintage ("Lost Up in Loving You," Rickie Lee Jones's "Company"). Ten of the 11 tracks are voice-and-piano collaborations, as pianists Daniela Schachter, Bob Winter, Tim Ray, Russell Hoffman, John Harrison III, and Adriana Balic take turns supporting Shapiro. For the 1984 Al Jarreau song "Tell Me," she and Balic were joined by Joey Blake on vocal bass and Bob Stoloff on vocal percussion. Both men have taught at Berklee and have worked with vocal innovator Bobby McFerrin.

Born in St. Louis and raised in tiny nearby Festus, Jan Shapiro attended the St. Louis Institute of Music and later enrolled at Howard University, earning a music degree cum laude. She completed her studies there while performing five nights a week at a Hyatt Hotel in Washington, DC.

"I was trained in traditional classical technique," Shapiro says of the influence of her classical music training at Howard. "It was invaluable, but since I'd always had classical training, I sometimes wondered if too much classical training would be difficult to transfer to pop and jazz styles. As it turned out, it was! If you have a Julie Andrews-type voice, as I do, how do you sing pop or jazz? It's a different aspect of your instrument, and the timbre and delivery of singing jazz is completely different."

"I don't know what category to put me in," she says of her unique style. "I'm not like the expected jazz singer, who would have a lower timbre and hold everything straight. I don't sound just like anyone."

After moving to Boston, Shapiro earned a master's in education at Cambridge College, and received an NEA grant, which she used to research early jazz singers and the Boswell Sisters. She became acting vocal chair at Berklee College of Music in the summer of 1996, and by January 1997 she was appointed head of the department -- the first female chairperson in Berklee's Performance Division. Shapiro served as chair until 2010 and remains a full professor at Berklee, currently teaching a class in vocal history; she also has 25 private students.

"As a teacher, my philosophy has been 'not everyone will be a star,'" says Jan, "'but there are practical things you can learn about your instrument.' I want to make sure that singers become empowered by good musicianship as well as excellent vocal craft."

On Piano Bar After Hours, Shapiro practices what she preaches through her breathtaking combination of flawless technique and depth of feeling.

www.janshapiro.com

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