Monday, August 15, 2016

Quinsin Nachoff's new recording Flux combines jazz invention and classical intricacy

Saxophonist and composer Quinsin Nachoff brilliantly captures the sound of evolution on his latest release, Flux, due out September 16 from Mythology Records. Exploring the elusive terrain between modern jazz and contemporary classical, between the cerebral and the organic, Nachoff reveals a fervently original sound that evokes bold, incisive playing from a singularly innovative quartet. Nachoff's vision asserts that the state of flux can represent shape-shifting invention rather than uncertainty - though he's certainly not afraid to venture into the untested unknown.

The bass-less quartet of Flux is entirely composed of leaders in their own right, each known for their groundbreaking adventurousness. Alto saxophonist David Binney, whose Mythology label is releasing the album, is a prolific and forward-thinking player and composer as well as being an influential producer whose collaborators have included Donny McCaslin, Uri Caine and Chris Potter. Pianist/keyboardist Matt Mitchell has seized a place at the leading edge of the music through his jaw-dropping work with the likes of Dave Douglas, Tim Berne and Rudresh Mahanthappa. And drummer Kenny Wollesen is a founding member of the New Klezmer Trio and Sex Mob whose diverse resumé includes work with Bill Frisell, Norah Jones, Tom Waits and John Zorn.
These four come together to breathe vivid life into Nachoff's wide-ranging compositions, which continue to develop his longtime interest in fusing together eclectic influences from jazz and classical music. Don't mistake this for a "Third Stream" or "chamber-jazz" project, however; this is radically creative music that forges its own path.

"The kind of music that I'm interested in making isn't straightahead in either genre," says Nachoff, who has composed for string and brass ensembles as well as jazz big bands. "I like mixing and matching things. I try to find commonalities between them to put people into different landscapes to improvise in."
Flux was born out of a time when Nachoff's life was in a state of flux itself. The Toronto native was in the process of moving to New York City and finding a new niche for himself in the jazz mecca's ultra-competitive scene. "It's quite a transition going from working a lot and teaching at well-respected schools to starting again from scratch," he says.

Nachoff discovered kinships with the members of the Flux quartet in different ways: Binney on shared gigs with bassist Michael Herring, Mitchell during an Australian tour under Nachoff's leadership, Wollesen simply through hearing the drummer play with bassist Eivind Opsvik's Overseas ensemble. "I was blown away by his incredible feel," Nachoff says of his first experience hearing Wollesen live. "I was infatuated with his hi-hat the whole night - which was only playing quarter notes!"

At the core of the sound of Flux is two pairings - the twin saxophone frontline, and the alchemical, opposites-attract meeting of Mitchell and Wollesen. "The concept was to put more heady material that Matt can deal with on top of this really organic feel that Kenny does and have it work as a band sound."

The compositions that Nachoff brings to the quartet fully explore that tension between the band's virtuosity and passion, which fuel each other in thrilling ways. With the two saxophones, Mitchell playing a variety of keyboards including Fender Rhodes, organ, Wurlitzer, and Moog, and Wollesen incorporating a variety of handmade percussion instruments, the palette that Nachoff had to work with, in his often surprising orchestrations, was vast.

Several of the pieces on Flux began life as commissions for classical ensembles, reinvented for and by the quartet. Aptly-named opener "Tightrope" is Nachoff's response to the Toca Loca ensemble's request for a "pop" influenced piece - allowing for as abstract an interpretation of that proviso as desired. The piece follows a loose verse-chorus structure with an underlying rock feel to the rhythm - and Mitchell interpreting two keyboard parts into one intricate whole.

"Complementary Opposites" is derived from a suite penned for trumpeter Peter Knight's 5+2 Brass Ensemble and is built on surprising juxtapositions of style and rhythm - as when a reggae groove suddenly takes over the piece somewhere in the middle. The two-part "Mind's Ear" comes from a suite written for the Greg Runions Jazz Orchestra that featured Nachoff and trumpeter Tim Hagans (who gave the piece its name) as guest soloists. The pieces are marked by unconventional harmonic motion and jarring tonal shifts.

The evocative title of "Astral Echo Poem" is an anagram for the name of its primary influence - Brazliian composer Hermeto Pascoal. Finally, "Tilted," which erupts with nervous energy, is an apt bookend with "Tightrope," drawing once again on hard rock inspirations for its driving beat, complicated by the fleet, snarling melodies.

A graduate of the University of Toronto, Nachoff has been colliding genres since his 2006 debut, Magic Numbers, which melded a jazz trio with a string quartet. He's since composed music for a variety of ensembles in both worlds, including the Penderecki String Quartet, the Toronto Jazz Orchestra, and the Cecilia String Quartet, as well as his own Horizons Ensemble, Quiescence Quartet, and FoMo quartet. He also leads the Pyramid Project, which brings together saxophone, brass quintet and drums and features Ralph Alessi, Jonathan Finlayson, John Clark, Ryan Keberle, Marcus Rojas and Jim Black.  As a sideman he's performed and/or recorded with Kenny Werner, Howard Johnson, Tim Hagans, Kenny Wheeler and Don Thompson among others. He has coached at the Banff Centre for the Arts and taught at the University of Toronto and Humber College, as well as serving as artist-in-residence at the Queensland Conservatorium in Brisbane, Australia.


Bassist & Composer MICHAEL BLANCO Releases SPIRIT FORWARD

The story of bassist/composer Michael Blanco's third album as a leader, Spirit Forward, available on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records on October 7, 2016, is primarily the story of how Blanco assembled this particular group of musicians, and how they in turn inspired the composer to write compelling music for this very special and unique combination of musical personalities; the Michael Blanco Quartet, featuring John Ellis (tenor saxophone), Kevin Hays (piano) and Clarence Penn (drums). The album title Spirit Forward is a bartending term for a type of cocktail made with strong spirits (like the Manhattan or Martini) that seeks to highlight and enhance the flavor of the base spirit, not to mask its flavor. These cocktails are harmonious and balanced, yet bold. "When choosing Spirit Forward for the album title, I had this definition in mind and how it relates to my music. It's a good metaphor for how strong musical personalities can come together and create a dynamic unit, while still maintaining their individuality. I also had a few other meanings in mind: I like the idea that the act of releasing an album of original music is akin to putting your 'spirit forward' out into the world, as well as the way the word spirit can be used to mean motion (like 'spirit away'), so Spirit Forward also means forward motion and continuing progress," explained Blanco. 

John Ellis is a longtime friend and musical comrade whose soulful and melodic style is the perfect "voice" for Blanco's melodies. Ellis has a deeply personal and well-developed sound, and is always tasteful and musical above all else. Blanco elaborated, "there's no pretense in his playing and everything he plays sounds like a melody to me. I first met John at a jam session at Aaron Goldberg's Brooklyn apartment sometime around 2002. We hit it off musically and personally and have worked together a lot over the ensuing years. He played on my previous 2013 CD release, No Time Like the Present, and I still close most of my gigs with 'Ellis Island,' a tune I wrote for him that has become a frequently requested 'hit' among the people who come to hear my group."

It was during gigs supporting No Time Like the Present that Blanco connected with the other members of the Spirit Forward quartet. "I had admired Clarence Penn's playing for years, but it wasn't until a 2013 gig I led that we first played together. Clarence showed up to the gig and blew me away. He approached the music in a way that both challenged and supported the band, while adding a level of rhythmic and dynamic complexity that really brought the music to another level. Our musical chemistry and bassist/drummer hookup was apparent from the first tune of the night, and by the time the gig was over I knew that I had found my new favorite drummer. Clarence has been on every gig that my group has performed since that night, and even though finding dates that work with his busy schedule can be difficult, I plan to try to keep it that way!" said Blanco.
                                                                             
Blanco met Kevin Hays as sidemen on a 2014 gig (at SubCulture) with vibraphonist Anthony Smith's band. "After being a fan of Kevin's for many years, it was a thrill to finally play with him, and I could hear exciting possibilities for my music in his playing. His incredible harmonic and rhythmic flexibility, his lyricism, and sense of adventure all appealed to me - and I had a feeling that Kevin, Clarence, and John would be a really potent combination," said Blanco. And he was right of course, evidenced in the music on Spirit Forward.

After assembling his "dream team" the band played several gigs together over the course of 2015, leading up to the August 2015 recording session for this release. "I was able to experiment with my compositions during the gigs and rehearsals, and make small tweaks between gigs to make the music work better for the band. We even had a really fun 'pre-recording celebration' gig at The Cornelia Street Cafe the night before heading into the studio, which fine-tuned the music even more. I hope the listener enjoys it and digs it as much as we do," said Blanco.

More on the music on Spirit Forward from Michael Blanco:  The Mystic Chord is a six-note chord used by Russian composer Alexander Scriabin, and believed by Scriabin to have mystical properties. While practicing at home one day, I discovered that I could create a bass line with an interesting 6/4 groove by spelling out this chord one note at a time. The melody has a kind of funky, lopsided quality, and the rest of the song explores the possibilities of the "Mystic Chord" sonority, with a melodically contrasting "B" section that is in 5/4 time - juxtaposing nicely with the 6/4 groove.

Notes From Underground was originally written for a gig at The Cornelia Street Cafe. The Cafe has been a wonderful home base for my group while I was developing the music for this album and continues to be the main spot where I lead my group in town. With this tune, I tried to capture the feeling I have when I'm performing there - and also the feeling that I have when I'm in the audience of any of my favorite jazz clubs. When coming up with a title, I thought of the low register piano/bass counter-melody that offsets the tenor lead at various points of the tune, as well as the fact that so many of my favorite jazz clubs are in basement rooms - hence the double entendre.

Song Without Words is a tuneful composition that I could easily imagine being sung. I wanted to write something overtly lyrical and pretty - something that can seem like a bold move in today's jazz climate. After recording one take with all of us sticking very closely to the melody in our improvisations, we took a lunch break and then recorded the take that is heard on the album. We loosened up and stretched out a little more, but still captured the heart-on-your-sleeve lyricism that I was going for.

Spirit Forward has a swinging, open feel, and an optimistic vibe. The form has a few mixed meters, and some harmonic twists and turns that make it both challenging and fun to play. Kevin, John, and I all stretch out with solos on this one.

Acrobat gets its name from the wide, acrobatic leaps in the bass line of the "B" section of the tune. It has a driving straight-eight groove, a hummable melody, and features great solos by both Ellis and Hays.

Last Stable Orbit is a somewhat quirky blues, that doesn't ever quite resolve in the way that you expect it to. The title is an astronomy term for the last orbit possible before an object (planet, spaceship, etc) gets sucked into a black hole!

Reasons To Be Pretty is named after a play by Neil LaBute that I went to see on Broadway in 2009. The performance really moved me, so I bought the script and read it again at home. This song actually differs in mood quite a bit from LaBute's play - but I thought the title was a good fit for this piece. Hays (once again) plays a gorgeous solo.

The Boulevardier is the name of one of my favorite spirit-forward cocktails, as well as old-school French slang for a stylish "man about town." The unison tenor sax/bass melody was inspired by a lick I heard guitarist Jonathan Kreisberg play on a gig we did together. The form and harmony are loosely inspired by Thelonious Monk's Green Chimneys, and it's a straight ahead, swinging piece.

Michael Blanco is a two-time recipient of the ASCAP Foundation Young Jazz Composer Award (2005, 2006), moved to NYC in 2000, and has since worked with many artists at the forefront of the contemporary jazz scene, including saxophonists John Ellis, Rich Perry, Donny McCaslin, Jon Irabagon, and Will Vinson; guitarists Lage Lund, Jonathan Kreisberg, Gilad Hekselman, and Mary Halvorson; pianists Kevin Hays, Aaron Goldberg, Adam Birnbaum, and David Cook; and drummers Clarence Penn, Donald Edwards, Ari Hoenig, Mark Ferber, and Tomas Fujiwara. He has been a member of bands led by Alan Ferber, Bob Reynolds, Shayna Steele, Russ Nolan, Doug Wamble, Patrick Cornelius, John Chin, Richard Doron Johnson, and Frank Basile, among others. Blanco's debut album In The Morning was released in 2006. JazzTimes Magazine called the album, "a remarkable introduction that leaves one eager to hear more," and described Blanco's compositions as having a, "dusky, imploring quality, with catchy, insistent hooks and compelling harmonies," while Bass World declared that "His approach to composition is fresh and the arrangements are lush and compelling." Blanco's second album, No Time Like The Present, was released in 2013. The album made Ralph A. Miriello's "Best of Jazz 2013" list in the Huffington Post, while Marc Meyers at JazzWax described it as, "a beautiful album with compositional depth and technical maturity," and proclaimed, "Blanco understands the meaning of originality - tastefully rolling out your creative vision while keeping the customer satisfied." Blanco has been selected twice by the U.S. Department of State to be an artistic representative for the U.S. abroad. Blanco is also in high demand outside of the world of jazz: he has performed in the orchestras of over thirty Broadway shows and is currently the bassist for the 2015 Broadway revival of Fiddler on the Roof. Recent highlights from his busy freelance career include a recording with the legendary violinist, Itzhak Perlman, performing on the soundtrack to the Cohen brothers' major motion picture, Hail Caesar!, and a television appearance on USA's Royal Pains, alongside violinist Joshua Bell. Blanco has performed at major NYC venues including Carnegie Hall, Radio City Music Hall, Town Hall, Birdland, Iridium, Smoke, and Blue Note, as well as smaller important laboratories for jazz like The Cornelia Street Cafe, Smalls, ShapeShifter Lab, Barbes, Korzo, IBeam, and The Bar Next Door at La Lanterna. Although he spends most of his time in NYC, Blanco has also had the pleasure of performing around the world.



Bassist and Composer DANIEL FOOSE releases WATER AND GHOSTS

In 2015 bassist/composer Daniel Foose returned to his ancestral home of the Mississippi Delta to write an album of music at the crossroads of history, race, and the natural world. Joining Foose on this genre-defying, adventurous and beautiful album, of Water and Ghosts, is Sebastian Noelle on guitar, Keita Ogawa on percussion, Tomoko Omura and Maria Im on violin, Allyson Clare on viola and Jennifer DeVore on cello. "This ensemble, also called 'of Water and Ghosts', is a new outlet for my compositions. It consists of a traditional string quartet with percussion, guitar, and acoustic bass. The name refers to the historic forces that shaped the Mississippi Delta where this music was conceived and composed. It is an area where floods are regular, and fortunes are made and lost based on how much rain one may get in a particular season. Water has always been carving its way through the humanity of that place since it was first inhabited by people over 5000 years ago. In addition to these natural forces, the forces of war, race, slavery, and history imbue this area with ghosts of the past that affect people in conscious and unconscious ways to this day. It is a land rich with stories and I hope to reflect that sense of story telling through this ensemble," said Foose. of Water and Ghosts will be available on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records on October 7, 2016. 

On of Water and Ghosts themes of racial injustice, conflict, and economic terrorism are juxtaposed against the backdrop of a serene and truly majestic natural setting. Foose explains, "I have attempted to reflect this duality musically through textures not typically heard together, notably employing grooves based on West African patterns, New Orleans street beats and Delta-style blues against the backdrop of sometimes sweet, sometimes dissonant string textures reflective of late romantic music."
  
Like the sculptures of Henry Moore or Richard Serra, or the architecture of Renzo Piano, Daniel Foose's compositional practice is one that, at it's best, is site specific. For his suite, "Sonora" from of Water and Ghosts (tracks 1-4), Foose composed music on the site of the former Sonora Plantation (in the Mississippi Delta) where his maternal ancestors have farmed for over a century. The piece narrates the story of the acquisition of Sonora and the injustices of slavery that were carried out in that place. The artist took his upright bass into the very fields, cemeteries and forests of the area, embracing and ingesting that environment, to compose the themes of the "Sonora" suite. It is his hope that these themes will be imbued with a sense of place that enrich the stories he's attempting to tell musically. He additionally did this for the collection of pieces entitled "Pluto" (tracks 5-9), about a plantation where his paternal family lives and farms. Staying on that land for a month, he composed music about the people of the area and their stories.

"Two lands separated by a few miles along the fertile crescent of the Yazoo River, have borne witness to the rise and fall of tribes from millennia ago, war, enslavement, terrorism, resilience, survival, faith, creation . . . the light in us struggling to overcome our own shadow. On the surface this land seems so quiet and flat, but dig just beneath the surface and the quietness gives way to a cacophony of voices and the flatness becomes textured as a tapestry of bones and memories. I spent a month listening to these voices and exploring this land, composing the themes for each piece in the very places that inspired them. As I improvised with my upright bass in the muddy fields and cemeteries of the area, these melodies very much felt like they came from outside of myself, gifted to me from the land." (excerpted from the liner notes for of Water and Ghosts). 

Daniel Foose has performed all over the world with many different ensembles and is currently a member of Lady Gaga's Band. In 2013 Daniel was awarded 3rd place in the International Society for Bassists Jazz Competition performing his piece 'Circuits (2012)'.


David Bowie Blackstar Collaborator DONNY McCASLIN Releases Beyond Now

Saxophonist Donny McCaslin and his band, featured on David Bowie's Blackstar, will make their Motéma Music debut with the October 14 release of Beyond Now, a highly anticipated album dedicated to Bowie. Recorded nearly three months after Bowie's passing, the project is deeply influenced by their extraordinary experience collaborating with one of the greatest artists of all-time on his final album.

"It was like a dream except it was something I never could have dreamed of," reflects McCaslin on working hand-in-hand with Bowie on Blackstar. "David Bowie was a visionary artist whose generosity, creative spirit, and fearlessness will stay with me the rest of my days. Beyond Now is dedicated to him and to all who loved him."

Comprised of core Blackstar personnel, bassist Tim Lefebvre (Tedeschi Trucks Band, Saturday Night Live), drummer Mark Guiliana (Meshell Ndegeocello, Brad Mehldau), and Jason Lindner (Now Vs Now) along with guitarist Nate Wood and producer David Binney, Beyond Now's repertoire is expansive, comprised of two Bowie songs, covers of Deadmau5, MUTEMATH, and the Chainsmokers, as well as compelling McCaslin originals including the title composition, inspired by a track inspired by a song McCaslin recorded for Blackstar that didn't make the album.

Today, Entertainment Weekly premiered Beyond Now's first single, "A Small Plot of Land," a cover from Bowie's 1995 release Outside (featuring vocalist Jeff Taylor). The album pre-order has launched today as well on iTunes; fans will receive "A Small Plot of Land" instantly when pre-ordering a download of the album. McCaslin has also announced extensive touring in the US and Europe through the remainder of the year. See below for a list of U.S. tour dates, including upcoming appearances at the Newport Jazz Festival, BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! and The Charlie Parker Jazz Festival.

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With three GRAMMY® nominations and 11 albums to his name, McCaslin's path to Bowie and Beyond Now can be traced back to 2011 with the release of his album Perpetual Motion, taking on an electric direction for the first time in contrast to his previous acoustic projects. Two subsequent albums Casting for Gravity (2012) and Fast Future (2015) released with his working band were directly influenced by electronica artists (covering groups such as Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, and Baths), which netted McCaslin a 2013 GRAMMY® nomination for "Best Improvised Jazz Solo."

The once in a lifetime opportunity to work with David Bowie came after composer Maria Schneider, a longtime collaborator, recommended McCaslin and his group to Bowie. Schneider and Bowie were collaborating on the track "Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)," which featured McCaslin as a soloist. In June 2014, Bowie heeded Schneider's advice and made a visit to hear McCaslin and company at the 55 Bar in Greenwich Village. Soon after, Bowie began corresponding with McCaslin over email and sending music, forming a new collaboration and friendship that transpired through the recording of Blackstar until Bowie's passing. The result is Beyond Now, which documents "David Bowie's Last Band" as they were processing both their grief and Bowie's distinctive impact.

"This new album is an expression of that journey for all of us," says McCaslin. "David allowed Blackstar to be what it was going to be regardless of how people might have categorized it. More than anything, it was his fearlessness in crossing musical boundaries and genres in his music and life that inspired the approach I'm taking in Beyond Now. I am indebted to Bowie for showing me the risks and rewards of going for your uncompromising musical vision."

BEYOND NOW TRACK LISTING:
1. Shake Loose (McCaslin)
2. A Small Plot of Land (David Bowie/Brian Eno/Sterling Campbell/Reeves C. Gabrels/Michael David Garson/Erdal H. Kizilcay)
3. Beyond Now (McCaslin)
4. Coelacanth 1 (Deadmau5)
5. Bright Abyss (McCaslin)
6. FACEPLANT (McCaslin)
7. Warszawa (David Bowie & Brian Eno)
8. Glory (McCaslin)
9. Remain (Mutemath)

DONNY McCASLIN U.S. TOUR DATES:
July 29 - Newport Jazz Festival - Newport, RI
August 10 - BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! - Brooklyn, NY
August 23 - Cape Cod Jazz Festival - Harwich, MA
August 24 - Museum of Fine Arts - Boston, MA
August 25 - Blue - Portland, ME
August 28 - Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - New York, NY
September 16-17 - Blue Whale - Los Angeles, CA
September 18 - Monterey Jazz Festival - Monterey, CA
September 19 - Yoshi's Oakland - Oakland, CA
September 20-21 - Dazzle Jazz Restaurant & Lounge - Denver, CO
October 12 - The Jazz Kitchen - Indianapolis, IN
October 13 - South Milwaukee Performing Arts Center - South Milwaukee, WI
October 14-15 - The Green Mill - Chicago, IL
October 16 - Des Mounes Social Club - Des Moines, IA
October 17 - The Washington - Burlington, IA
October 18 - The Mill - Iowa City, IA
October 19-22 - Jazz St. Louis - St. Louis, MO
October 23 - We Always Swing Jazz Series - Columbia, MO
October 24 - Jefferson College Fine Arts Theatre - Hillsboro, MO
November 29-December 4 - The Village Vanguard - New York, NY


Sonzeira - Tam Tam Tam Reimagined

Tam Tam Tam Reimagined is the second album to come from Gilles Peterson’s Sonzeira project. Overseen by GP, with Will LV and Rob Gallagher as vital co-pilots, this second album picks up where the first one left off. Where Brasil Bam Bam Bam brought together the all-stars of Brazilian music, this album focuses on a key moment in the country’s history; a record made at a crucial moment serves as the jumping off point for an open-ended project of musical reimagining.

Of all those records released in Brazil, however, the search for one in particular has taken on a real significance for GP over the past couple of years: José Prates’ Tam Tam Tam. An accompaniment to a stage production financed by the Brazil Culture Ministry, it was created to promote the country’s culture to the world. Hearing the album – including its prototype of ‘Mas Que Nada’ that became a Sergio Mendes mega anthem – through Ed Motta during the making of the last Sonzeira album, it sparked a long hunt to get his hands on a copy (including a plea live on Channel 4 news).

With a mint copy successfully procured – not long after Jonny Trunk’s re-issue championed by Record Collector mag – it was taken as a starting point for creating something new. Working with production associates Will Horrocks from UK bass-meddling duo LV and Rob Gallagher from 2 Banks of 4 – along with appearances from drumming prodigy Moses Boyd and Kassin from Rio’s Orquestra Imperial – they picked out phrases and snippets to build songs and tracks around.

Released in 1958, Tam Tam Tam celebrates a distinctly Afro-Brazilian culture that was later suppressed following a coup in the early 1960s that led to a military dictatorship. From sparkling recreations of the atmospheric original to reverb-laden dub, the album takes a magpie-like approach to re-interpreting the most exciting aspects of Prates’ postcard of Brazil to the world. Tam Tam Tam Reimagined forms another part of the Sonzeira project’s aim to take apart and reassemble the pieces of what makes Brazil’s music so unique.


NEW RELEASES: JOHN BARRY – PLAYS 007 & OTHER 60s THEMES FOR FILM AND TELEVISION; SHIRLEY DAVIS & THE SILVERBACKS – BLACK ROSE; SPENCER DAVIS GROUP – TAKING OUT TIME: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS 1967-1969

JOHN BARRY – PLAYS 007 & OTHER 60s THEMES FOR FILM AND TELEVISION

An excellent collection of work from the great John Barry – one that focuses on his famous contributions for the James Bond films – but also includes other soundtrack and instrumental material as well! The set begins with the John Barry Plays 007 record – a brilliant album that not only features some instrumental soundtrack themes, but also includes some great mod Barry instrumentals from the 60s – kind of a nice link to his sophisticated film music, and some of his smaller combo work! Titles include "Kinky", "Fancy Dance", "007", "From Russia With Love", "Big Shield", "Aliki", "Monkey Feathers", and "The London Theme". Next are two tracks from Elizabeth Taylor In London – "Lovers & Browning", with a recitation by Taylor – plus the jazzy instrumental "The London Waltz". Next are two tracks from Zulu – a colonial period film that starred Michael Caine – followed by 15 more groovy instrumentals that include "Tit Willow Twist", "Hit & Miss", "Easy Beat", "Beat Girl", "The Lolly Theme", "Spinnerree", "Roman Spring Of Mrs Stone", "The Sun's Hooray", and "Saturday's Child".  ~ Dusty Groove

SHIRLEY DAVIS & THE SILVERBACKS – BLACK ROSE

There must be something funky going down in the water in Spain – because in recent years, the nation's scene has given us some mighty hard-hitting funky artists – the best of whom may well be featured on this set! Shirley Davis isn't one of those easy retro soul singers – and instead steps out strongly as a voice that we're sure that we're going to hear plenty from in years to come – thanks to a righteous way of putting over a tune, and a classic sound that really lives up to the spirit of the album's cover! Davis is backed by Madrid's Silverbacks combo – a tight funk group who really hit all the right currents to really let her soar out in the lead – with a power that's much stronger than on her previous single with Deep Street Soul, which is the first time we heard her sing. Most tunes here are originals by the group – and titles include "Black Rose", "Two Worlds", "Pay For Your Love", "My Universe", "Burial Of A Dead Star", and "Make My Day". ~ Dusty Groove 

SPENCER DAVIS GROUP – TAKING OUT TIME: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS 1967-1969

Great work from the second chapter of The Spencer Davis Group – the time immediately after Steve Winwood left to form Traffic, and the combo stepped forward into some even headier music of their own! This period of the SDG isn't nearly as well known as their early hits – and the box set is a really surprising revelation overall – music that has some of the R&B currents of the earlier group, but which is also infused with a headier, trippier style too – not just in the instrumentation, but in the way the records are put together – with cool elements that space things out slightly, but never get too indulgent! The mix is a bit like that on the earliest work of The Move – or that shift that Small Faces were taking after moving to the Immediate label – and as with previous work from the Spencer Davis Group, there's as much great Hammond on the tunes as there is guitar, thanks to the talents of new member Eddie Hardin. Some of the best cuts almost hit a freakbeat mode – with a very cool mix of mod and psych – and the 3CD set features the full albums Funky and With Their New Face On – plus material from the Round The Mulberry Bush soundtrack, lots more singles, some BBC sessions, and even some alternate and unreleased tracks too. 68 tracks in all – titles that include "Letters From Edith", "Time Seller", "Taking Out Time", "After Tea", "Sanity Inspector", "What A Way To Die", "Firefly", "Magpie", "Groove Extra", "The Girls Song", "Don't Want You No More", "Der Wassermann", and "Picture Of Heaven".  ~ Dusty Groove


Multi-Grammy® nominee David Arkenstone shares his latest take on classic lounge music - Songs from the Aqua Lounge

On August 23rd, fans of composer, musician and performer David Arkenstone’s brand of ‘chill’ music will be delighted with his latest lounge offering, Songs From The Aqua Lounge (a QDV Recordings release).

It’s a sexy album,” says Arkenstone from his home overlooking the Pacific. “It was inspired, in part, by the lounge records of the fifties and sixties, like Martin Denny and Antônio Carlos Jobim and their unique sounds. “This is equally groovy!” says Arkenstone, holding up the limited edition 3D lenticular CD cover, complete with Lava® lamps.”

Recently awarded Best Vocal Album 2015 by One World Music for Inamorata, Arkenstone says, “I don’t often have vocals, so Songs From The Aqua Lounge is unusual in that there are five songs that feature vocals.” What also distinguishes this album from Arkenstone’s previous ‘chill’ recordings (World Café, Celtic Chill, Native Chill, Christmas Lounge, Chillout Lounge) is that some tracks border on smooth jazz, particularly “5 a.m.” featuring award-winning flugelhorn player Jeff Oster.

I was thrilled that Jeff was available to bring his artistry to “5 a.m.,” says Arkenstone. “I wrote “5 a.m.” with flugelhorn in mind. And I finished writing it at 5 a.m. This is the first time I’ve written songs that so prominently feature flugelhorn and sax. “Midnight Cruise” features David Crozier on sax. I’ve been working with David for years, but this is the first opportunity I’ve had to feature him. Stylistically it was a good fit. I’m really pleased with Jeff and David’s creative and expressive solos. Also featured is guest artist Luanne Homzy on violin. It was fun collaborating with so many artists.”

Award-winning vocalist Charlee Brooks lends her stunning stylings to the album. Songs From The Aqua Lounge is her fourth collaboration with Arkenstone.

A lounge is a place where people are comfortable and congregate,” says Arkenstone. “Songs From The Aqua Lounge is music to relax to, to put you in a good mood, to play in the background, and to accompany all sorts of activities!”

Music and Media Focus reviewer Michael Diamond states, “Ever the sonic adventurer, veteran recording artist David Arkenstone embarks on another journey into the ultra contemporary world of Chill music on his latest release Songs From The Aqua Lounge. Drawing on elements of ambient, electronica, and smooth jazz, the album serves up a groove-based blend of sounds that range from dreamy to driving. A perfect example is a track called “Take My Soul,” that features atmospheric synthesizers, electronic beats, and the misty, sensuous female vocals of Nahara that evokes a vision of Tangerine Dream and Enya performing together. If this album illustrates anything, it is that with David Arkenstone one thing to expect is the unexpected.”

About the featured track “Take My Soul” Arkenstone says, “I wanted to write a sexy song, and now we’ve made a sexy video to accompany it. Nahara made it come alive with her distinctive delivery.”

The “Take My Soul” music video will premiere live at an exclusive VIP event at Mixology 101 in Los Angeles on August 16th (see details below).

DAVID ARKENSTONE’S AQUA LOUNGE RELEASE EVENT – AUGUST 16th
Live from Mixology 101 in Los Angeles, CA, chart-topping, multi-Grammy® nominated musical visionary David Arkenstone is throwing a major Hollywood shindig to celebrate the release of his latest disc, Songs From The Aqua Lounge. David and special guest artists will perform a few key tracks from this new album AND debut the super-sexy music video for the song “Take My Soul” featuring Instagram sensation Carlotta Champagne and actor/model Aaron Mann.

Guest artists include award-winning Jeff Oster on flugelhorn, David Crozier on sax, percussionist Stevie Ray Hernandez, Best Vocal Album winner (with Arkenstone) Charlee Brooks, and vocalist Nahara.

There are 2 ways that you can attend this event from anywhere in the world!

In person:
A special limited edition half-price VIP package tickets to the exclusive event are being offered by Goldstar Tickets. Attendees will enjoy the mini-concert and music video debut, receive a limited edition CD of Songs From The Aqua Lounge with 3D cover, a signature ‘Take My Soul’ drink, light hors d’oeuvres, meet & greet with David and guests, and a chance to win a Lava® lamp!

Attend ‘virtually’ on Concert Window:
Tune in free to Concert Window and enjoy the mini-concert and music video debut live. Concert Window participants who tip $10 or more will receive a download of the entire "Songs From The Aqua Lounge" AND have a chance to win a Lava® lamp! For $35, participants will receive an autographed limited edition CD with 3D lenticular cover, as well as a chance to win a Lava® lamp!

Track list for Songs From The Aqua Lounge:
1. Temporary High (featuring Nahara) 4:38
2. Midnight Cruise (featuring David Crozier) 4:30
3. La Grande Corniche 4:00
4. Take My Soul (featuring Nahara) 4:13
5. 5 a.m. (featuring Jeff Oster) 4:09
6. Boarding Pass 4:14
7. Charade (featuring Charlee Brooks) 5:01
8. I Don’t Mind The Rain (featuring David Crozier) 4:20
9. Reflections on the Highway 4:30
10. Be My Muse (featuring Nahara) 4:12
11. Water On Mars 4:08
12. Don’t Say Goodnight (featuring Charlee Brooks) 4:43
13. Sakura Ascending (featuring Luanne Homzy) 4:31


The Musical Mojo of Dr. John: A Celebration of Mac & His Music

On Saturday, May 3, 2014, a group of world-renowned musicians and friends joined together for “The Musical Mojo of Dr. John: A Celebration of Mac & His Music,” a special concert event honoring this musical icon in his hometown of New Orleans. Taking place at the historic Saenger Theatre in the French Quarter, this momentous evening was captured in stunning HD and has been produced into a full length concert film with accompanying audio recordings.

The one hour and forty-five-minute film and available audio recordings feature over 20 once-in-a-lifetime performances from a lineup of prestigious and award-winning artists including Dr. John himself, Bruce Springsteen, Jason Isbell, Cyril Neville, Anders Osborne, Bill Kreutzmann, Aaron Neville, Charles Neville, George Porter Jr., Zigaboo Modeliste, Irma Thomas, Tab Benoit, Shannon McNally, Dave Malone, Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, Widespread Panic, Warren Haynes, Ryan Bingham, John Boutté, Mavis Staples, John Fogerty, Terence Blanchard, Sarah Morrow, Chuck Leavell, and Allen Toussaint.

Dr. John, a six-time GRAMMY Award-winning musician and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee, is known throughout the world as the embodiment of New Orleans’ musical legacy and is a true American icon. His colorful musical career began in the 1950s when he wrote and played guitar on some of the greatest records to come out of the Crescent City. Some of his many career highlights include the masterful album Sun, Moon and Herbs (1971) which included cameos from Eric Clapton and Mick Jagger and 1973’s In The Right Place, which contained the chart hits “Right Place Wrong Time” and “Such A Night.” In 2013, Dr. John won his latest GRAMMY Award for Locked Down, a collaboration with Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys. As further evidence of his musical diversity, Dr. John is currently completing an album in tribute to Louis Armstrong, which will be released in June of this year. After a half century of creating music for himself and others, Dr. John continues to write, arrange, produce and interpret with a passion that has yet to wane. 


Thursday, August 11, 2016

Ben Wendel - What We Bring Featuring Gerald Clayton, Joe Sanders & Henry Cole

Saxophonist, composer, bandleader, educator and catalyst Ben Wendel's What We Bring, available September 9, 2016 on Motema Music (his 15th album as a leader or co-leader and his debut for Motema), is panegyrical, acknowledging the great legacy and lexicon that he has played and composed his way into. While composing the music for this album, it occurred to Wendel that the evolution of a musical genre, or artist, is a continuum that looks backwards and forwards at the same time. Wendel elaborated, "What We Bring refers to the experience, inspiration and shared wisdom that musicians collect and absorb throughout their lives, and how that is expressed through their art. All of the pieces on this album are dedicated to masters from the past, peers from the present and musicians of the future. In my opinion, nothing springs from a vacuum - all that we make is connected, influenced, and most importantly, indebted to what has been created before us and around us in the present day. This album expresses my continued acknowledgement and appreciation to all of those who have helped me along the path, both directly and indirectly." Wendel added, "I get the most joy when I find ways to express my love for the bravery of the people who came before me, for the people who are doing this music now, and for the people who will do this music in the future" (from the feature on Wendel by Ted Panken, DownBeat Magazine, June 2016).  

What impresses most about Wendel is that he has gleaned from past masters, and his peers, far more than technique and chops to become an artist who embodies the importance of finding your own voice, and the pluck to follow your inner compass. This is fully revealed and represented on What We Bring, which opens majestically and powerfully with "Amian", a subconscious, compositional reaction to listening to Coltrane's "Naima" hundreds of times in his formative years. Like "Naima", "Amian" possesses a melody that floats over a constant bass note, with shifting chord qualities, offering myriad moods and colors.   

"Fall" and "Spring" are two pieces repurposed from Wendel's acclaimed Seasons project of 2015, featured on NPR's All Things Considered, and in The New York Times (www.npr.org/2015/07/28/427178381/saxophonist-ben-wendel-reimagines-tchaikovskys-the-seasons, www.nytimes.com/2016/01/22/arts/music/with-the-seasons-ben-wendel-redefines-the-musical-encounter.html). "They were originally written as duo pieces for the exceptional pianists Taylor Eigsti and Aaron Parks. I felt they would be great vehicles for the quartet and decided to arrange them for this album", commented Wendel.

"Doubt" is one of two covers on the album (the other being the standard "Solar", given a highly-entertaining, brainy, odd-meter face lift by Wendel & co.), by the indie-rock band Wye Oak. "I fell in love with their music years ago and this track is hauntingly beautiful in its mood and simplicity. What We Bring also refers to what we listen to, and at this point, most jazz musicians listen to a wide spectrum of music outside of our field. I wanted to showcase something that had moved me along the way", said Wendel.

"Song Song" is dedicated to the great Ahmad Jamal, and was inspired by his famous composition, "Poinciana". "I was on tour with nothing to do one evening and watching countless performances of 'Poinciana' on YouTube. There's something incredibly meditative about the piece that I've always loved - the rhythm section's commitment to playing one beautiful groove throughout the song - not doing anything more, and most importantly, not needing to. I recall waking up the following morning with the bass line for 'Song Song' looping in my head", explained Wendel.

"Soli" rocks and swings and, like the rest of the album, displays the band's ability to conduct complex maneuvers in complete harmony with one another (the term "big ears" comes to mind). A track like this will surely send fledgling musicians scurrying to the shed, and prompt listeners to quickly hit "repeat." "Soli" is a pre-written passage played in unison by multiple instruments. You can hear this technique used in everything from classical music to big band music and Wendel has always loved the sound of it. "In fact, I've always had at least one piece on each album that highlights this approach. Though I don't know how long this streak will continue, I can say this was perhaps the most challenging one I've written to date", said Wendel.

One of the most emotive and gorgeous songs on What We Bring is "Austin", "dedicated to the incredibly talented pianist Austin Peralta, who left this world much too soon. I played with Austin on 'Endless Planets', his final album. I was deeply saddened by Austin's passing and also incredibly moved at his funeral by the outpouring of love from friends, family and musical peers. Many of his personal letters and writing were read at the ceremony. I was struck by the depth of his inner life - something he didn't show the outer world very much. I didn't get to see this side of him until it was too late. This was something I was thinking about as I wrote the piece," stated Wendel.

On What We Bring, Wendel's camaraderie with his fellow musicians, Gerald Clayton (piano), Joe Sanders (bass) and Henry Cole (drums) greatly informed his artistic choices and inspired him. He has stated (in a recent feature by Bob Weinberg, Jazziz Magazine, Spring 2016) that, "it's hard to know where the music starts and the friendship ends", and that, "all of these layers of understanding and all the coded information that's embedded in how you play together, it's so intermingled."  
  
More on Ben Wendel: GRAMMY-nominated saxophonist Ben Wendel was born in Vancouver, Canada and raised in Los Angeles. Currently living in Brooklyn, NY, he has enjoyed a varied career as a performer, composer and producer. Highlights include multiple domestic and international tours with artists such as Ignacio Berroa, Tigran Hamasyan, Antonio Sanchez, Gerald Clayton, Eric Harland, Taylor Eigsti, Snoop Dogg and the artist formerly known as Prince. Ben is a founding member of the GRAMMY-nominated group Kneebody, currently signed with Concord Records and Brainfeeder Music.

As a composer, he has received an ASCAP Jazz Composer Award, the 2008 and 2011 Chamber Music America "New Works Grant" and most recently was awarded the Victor Lynch-Staunton award by the Canada Council For The Arts. He also co-wrote the score for John Krasinski's adaptation of David Foster Wallace's "Brief Interviews With Hideous Men." 

Ben's recent work includes producing and playing in jazz and many other genres, including the GRAMMY-nominated album "Life Forum" for pianist Gerald Clayton on Concord Records, the new Kneedelus album (Kneebody + Daedelus), released on Brainfeeder and given a rave 8.0 review from Pitchfork, appearing on Julia Holter's new film score, and collaborating with her on a new non-jazz album he is co-creating with Daedelus (the album will feature artists such as Terrace Martin, Knower and Mark Guiliana), producing an album for Folk/Americana artist Darryl Holter (a BMI Woody Guthrie Fellowship Recipient), playing on Jimmy Chamberlin's (drummer from Smashing Pumpkins) new instrumental album, and producing live concerts at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica, CA from 2008-2015, with the help of Quincy Jones and his production team. He also recently worked with conductor Kent Nagano in producing a series of concerts for the Festspiel Plus in Munich, Germany.

Ben is a former Adjunct Professor of Jazz Studies at USC and a current Adjunct at the New School in NYC.  Educational outreach has been a constant in his career with over 250 masterclasses at various colleges, universities, high schools, and previous work with the LA Philharmonic Artist Program.

Ben has recorded for Sunnyside Records, Concord Records and Brainfeeder, with two solo albums under his belt, Simple Song (2009) and Frame (2012), a duo project with French-American pianist Dan Tepfer entitled Small Constructions (2013) and multiple Kneebody albums. His music video project, The Seasons, inspired by Tchaikovsky's works of the same name, was released throughout 2015 and included guests such as Joshua Redman, Jeff Ballard, Mark Turner, Julian Lage and more. Ben's third solo album What We Bring is planned for release in the Fall of 2016 on Motema Music. 

What We Bring - CD Release Tour:
Sept 14 - Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, NYC - 7:30 & 9:30 PM
Sept 15 - The Regattabar, Cambridge, MA - 7:30 PM
Sept 16 - Firehouse 12, New Haven, CT
Sept 17 - Chris' Jazz Cafe, Philadelphia, PA
Sept 19 - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Sept 20 - Oakland University, Rochester, MI
Sept 21 - Constellation, Chicago, IL, 7:30 & 9:30 PM
Sept 22 - Dazzle, Denver, CO, 7 & 9 PM
Sept 23-25 - SF Jazz Center - Joe Henderson Lab, San Francisco, CA, 7 & 8:30 PM (Fri/Sat), 5:30 & 7 PM (Sun)
Sept 26 - Western Oregon University, Monmouth, OR
Sept 27 - Cornish Playhouse-Seattle Center, Seattle, WA
Sept 28 - The Old Church, Portland, OR, 7:30 PM
Sept 29 - Kuumbwa Jazz Center, Santa Cruz, CA, 7 PM
Sept 30-Oct 1 - Blue Whale, Los Angeles, CA, 8 PM
Oct 2 - Musical Instrument Museum, Phoenix, AZ
Oct 8 - Le Crescent Jazz Club, Macon, France
Oct 10 - Theatre Astree, Villeurbane, France
Oct 12-13 - Duc des Lombards, Paris, France
Oct 14 - Bimhuis, Amsterdam, NL
Oct 15 - Lantaren Venster, Rotterdam, NL
Oct 16 - L'espace des Arts Vivants, Parc Culturel De Rentilly, Bussy Saint Martin, France

‘Michael Bublé – Tour Stop 148’ Swings into Cinemas Nationwide as the Grammy Award-Winning Singer-Songwriter Gives Fans Exclusive Backstage Access

You just haven’t met him like this yet. Michael Bublé and his tour crew come to the big screen for one night with “Michael Bublé – Tour Stop 148” on Tuesday, September 27 at 7:00 p.m. local time. This special cinema event closely follows Bublé’s dedicated team on the road and features a selection of his greatest hits on stage, including “Home,” “Crazy Love,” “Cry Me A River,” “Feeling Good” and more. In addition to the feature content, audiences will also enjoy a specially-filmed introduction and Q&A with Bublé which addresses his motivation for making the film, his music and his experience of life on the road.

Tickets for “Michael Bublé – Tour Stop 148” can be purchased online beginning Friday, August 12 by visiting www.FathomEvents.com or at participating theater box offices. Fans throughout the U.S. will be able to enjoy the event in more than 350 select movie theaters through Fathom’s Digital Broadcast Network. For a complete list of theater locations visit the Fathom Events website (theaters and participants are subject to change).

"Along with giving my fans a front row seat to the show, I really wanted to celebrate the incredible backstage team. They're the 'unsung' heroes who bring this show to a new city every night. I could not have done it without them," said Bublé.

Canadian superstar Michael Bublé has left an indelible mark on the entertainment world. His music has earned him numerous Grammy and Juno awards. He has sold more than 55 million albums worldwide and more than two million tickets for the To Be Loved Tour. “Michael Bublé – Tour Stop 148” gives his legions of fans not only a front row seat to breathtaking concert performances of his greatest hits, but also an exclusive look at what goes into a concert tour of this magnitude – where the crew becomes family and the camaraderie is unmatched.

“Michael Bublé’s reputation as the consummate performer who gives the audience all he’s got is on full display in this cinema event, along with the efforts of the incredible team that surrounds him while moving this lavish production from city to city,” commented Dion Singer, Executive Vice President, Creative at Warner Bros. Records and Executive Producer of the film.

“Michael Bublé has taken his music to a completely new level with a reach that spans audiences of all ages,” Fathom Events Vice President of Programming Kymberli Frueh said. “This event provides unique backstage access while sharing the experience of an artist at his peak. You will truly feel like you are switching between front-row-center during his performances and a fly on the wall backstage.”


SAXOPHONIST RICHARD ELLIOT CELEBRATES HIS FUNK AND R&B ROOTS ON SUMMER MADNESS

When tenor saxophonist Richard Elliot began preparing Summer Madness, his follow-up to 2014’s critically acclaimed Lip Service, he knew exactly what he wanted to do. First and foremost, it had to be funky. “When I was growing up in the ’70s and first learning to play the saxophone,” he says, “I was mostly attracted to instrumentally based R&B and to jazz that had R&B roots. This record definitely goes down that path, leaning more on the funk side.”

He also knew precisely who he wanted to accompany him on the new music. “I wanted to involve my band,” Elliot says. “A lot of artists tour with a group of musicians, and then when it’s time to make a record they hook up with a producer and go into the studio and use completely different people that maybe they’ve never even met before. I feel that if you’re lucky enough to have a regular group of musicians that you work with, and you don’t draw on their talent and their inspirations, you’re short-changing yourself.”

Summer Madness, set for release on September 9, 2016 via Heads Up, a division of Concord Music Group, is a new kind of Richard Elliot recording. For one thing, the cast includes two other horn men augmenting Elliot’s signature sax work: trumpeter/trombonist Rick Braun, who also produced the album and, on several tracks, baritone saxophonist Curt Waylee. Most importantly though, the music was created from scratch as Elliot and his handpicked musicians formulated and honed their ideas in the studio, with Braun’s ultra-capable guidance. For Elliot, recruiting the additional players and having the entire band—plus a well-respected veteran producer help him shape the music—was integral to the project’s success.

“I didn’t want to direct them,” he says. “I wanted to bring them in and let them be part of the process—the writing, the arranging—and to do it all together. I had a lot of confidence that these guys are mature enough musically. Everybody brought what they do to the table and we all put our heads together. We didn’t have rehearsals first, we didn’t have writing sessions first. We booked some days in the studio and the music just poured out.”

The result of these impromptu jams—seven new originals and three classic interpretations—is unquestionably one of the most electrifying and gratifying recordings of Richard Elliot’s three-plus-decade solo career. From the opening salvo, a super-funkified take on Spyro Gyra’s “Cachaca,” through the closing “Mr. Nate’s Wild Ride,” spotlighting bassist Nathaniel Phillips, who wrote the track along with Elliot and Braun, Summer Madness is one of those albums that simply takes hold the moment you press play and never lets go. Along the way it touches down on a variety of moods and styles, from Latin- and African-inspired funk to soul jazz, even flirting with fusion on the hard-driving, appropriately titled “Ludicrous Speed.”

A couple of sparkling ballads pay tribute to heroes of Elliot’s going back to his earliest days of musical discovery: “Europa,” on which he honors one of his saxophone inspirations, the late Gato Barbieri—who famously remade the Carlos Santana-penned track in his own image, and the title track “Summer Madness,” a mid-’70s hit for funk titans Kool & the Gang.

Among the original compositions, “Harry the Hipster,” says Elliot, “is reminiscent of songs that had cool, recurring melodies and a funky pulse—the idea was not to wrap yourself up in how much complexity you could put into the song, but how much feeling and groove can you put into the song?” Another highlight, the band-written “West Coast Jam,” is Elliot’s nod to yet another influence, the late leader of funk trailblazers Zapp, Roger Troutman, while “Breakin’ It Down,” which arrives early on Summer Madness, is designed, he says, to bridge the genres of funk and contemporary jazz, with which Elliot has long been associated. “I sort of formulated that theory later though,” he confesses. “When we were making the music we were just making it.”

It should come as no surprise to Elliot’s longtime fans that he would, at some point in his career, choose to celebrate funk in such a dedicated, decisive way. It was, after all, with the legendary Tower of Power that many first heard the saxophone virtuosity of Richard Elliot. Although he was born in Scotland and grew up in Los Angeles, where he started playing saxophone while in middle school, his five-year run with the Bay Area institution ToP during the 1980s was when Richard Elliot first came to prominence.

“I learned more about being a musician, about being a performer, about being a team player in a horn section, about how to make a statement when you step out and do a solo, from being with Tower of Power than from any other group or artist I ever worked with,” Elliot says, adding that it was “initially terrifying” to find himself among some of the most accomplished and highly respected musicians on the funk/R&B scene. In fact, he learned enough from working with them, Elliot says now, to know that he was ready to go off on his own when he did.

“Leaving Tower of Power was the hardest decision I ever made,” he says now, but great things were to follow almost immediately. By the late ’80s, Elliot had launched his solo career and was signed to Blue Note Records, where he worked with the legendary record executive Bruce Lundvall, an early champion of Elliot’s work. Since then, Elliot has released more than 20 albums as a leader, and has also polished his chops serving as a sideman for a considerable list of diverse giants, including Motown hitmakers Smokey Robinson and the Temptations. One of Elliot’s favorite projects was the collaborative 2013 release Summer Horns, which found him teaming up with fellow sax-slingers Dave Koz, Gerald Albright and Mindi Abair—the album was nominated for a Grammy in the category of Best Pop Instrumental Album.

Throughout all of his music, Richard Elliot has always strived to achieve one certain goal. “Miles Davis said, ‘The hardest thing for a musician to do is sound like himself.’ That stuck with me,” Elliot says. “If you fixate on a single influence, you tend to sound like someone who’s trying to sound like that person. I never know if I’ve achieved that goal but on occasion I’ve had someone come up to me and say, ‘I heard a song on the radio and I knew it was you.’” Summer Madness puts a bit of a new twist on the classic Richard Elliot sound, but you won’t doubt for a single second who you are hearing.


NEW RELEASES: KEVIN WHALUM - I LIVE FOR YOU; RE-WORKS (VARIOUS ARTISTS); GABY HERNANDEZ – SPIRIT REFLECTION

KEVIN WHALUM - I LIVE FOR YOU

Kevin now has three solo albums under his belt: the self-produced solo debut, Timetable (2002); the George Duke-produced, One Life To Love (2008); and the new self-produced, I Live For You (2016). Although Kevin eschews any effort to force him into a category or genre’, he freely admits to defining himself as “primarily a jazz vocalist who just happens to be a Christian”. He exhorts, “I hope I never agree to be just one thing. A true artist never wants that. I have been-and will remain-free to explore the musical universe. There’s too much out here to stay locked into one soundscape forever. Music is big, but Jesus is infinitely bigger. I want to touch his face with everything he puts in my heart to do. I hope people find my new record, I Live For You, refreshing, and dare I say it, groundbreaking.” Includes: Pretty Bird; Somebody Somewhere;Take A Stand (Introducing, CRISIS); I Live For You; Come Back Home; Somebody Said; Strong (For my sister, Charlisa); Truly Unconditional (Introducing, Daphne Delva Smith); and Take A Stand (reprise).

RE-WORKS (VARIOUS ARTISTS)

Great compositions, reworked – in a very cool project that takes older recordings from the Decca catalog of classical music, and puts them in the hands of 21st Century producers! The sound is surprisingly great – no dancefloor remixes of Beethoven's 5th, and instead these really thoughtful pieces that extrapolate the original songs in beautiful ways – often mixing their acoustic core with some slight electric elements – in ways that remind us a lot of recent material from Max Richter. The package is clearly done with an ear towards Richter's work – and is similar to projects like this that have been done with the Deutsche Grammophon catalog – and our only complaint is that the notes don't give any information about the original sources of the performances. That's only a very minor issue, though – and the music is more than enough, as you'll hear on Grieg's "Peer Gynt" remixed by Solmon Grey, Erik Satie's "Gnossienne No 1" remixed by STarkey, Faure's "Requiem" remixed by Faultline, Steve Reich's "Six Pianos" remixed by Mr Scruff, Debussy's "String Quartet" remixed by Henrik Schwarz, Holst's "The Planets (Neptune)" remixed by Thomas Gandey, and Schubert's "Schwanengesang" remixed by Kate Simko.  ~ Dusty Groove.

GABY HERNANDEZ – SPIRIT REFLECTION

A fantastic record from Gaby Hernandez – a singer we've loved for previous collaborations with Build An Ark and Life Force Trio – but who really knocks it out of the park with this double-length set! The presentation is a bit unusual – in that the entire album is presented with vocal versions of the songs, then a second instrumental take on the tracks – the latter a great showcase for the album's many collaborators – a heavy-duty lineup that features Kamasi Washington, Carlos Nino, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, Dexter Story, and the Contact Field Orchestra! Gaby's vocals really sine in all this great company – and the musicians have ways to deepen the spirit of her songs, and take things in places that still make us love the music, even after her voice has dropped out. Titles include "Spirit Reflection", "Into Yoa", "Super Nova Lovers", "Baobab Tree", "Messy Love", "Los Mas Dulce", "Stay A While", and "Entranced". (Includes download!) ~ Dusty Groove


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