Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Award-winning Journalist Turned Jazz Singer, Lyricist, Composer Rondi Charleston Summons Hope, Courage and Joy with Inspiring New Album Resilience

Rondi Charleston knows the power of a story well told and knows how to tell it like it is. This talent, which led her to winning both Emmy and Peabody Awards as a field producer for ABC's Diane Sawyer, led also to her back to her innate passion and a third act: that of a rising jazz singer and musical poet with a mission to use her talents to bring wisdom, strength and joy to a world in which so many people find themselves facing compounded challenges. "I feel that the artist's job is not only to capture what's going on in the world around her, but to reflect on what's going on; to try to make sense out of chaos," says Charleston.

"Hopefully, I can also entertain, inspire, and leave audiences with a feeling of hope for the future," she notes. "My challenge is to write music and lyrics that do all three." Charleston has been meeting the challenge since 2009 in a series of impressive releases on Motéma Music. With her latest album Resilience, she reaches new heights as a vocalist, composer, and arranger with six originals compositions, distinctive renditions of three jazz standards, and a beautiful rendition of "A Healing Song" by pianist and jazz education leader, Eli Yamin.

"There have been several chapters in my artistic life. I've gone from being an actor and opera singer at Juilliard, to the world of investigative journalism at ABC News, and now, back to my first love, which is traditional and contemporary jazz," Charleston explains. "There's a lot more uniting all this than meets the eye. In each case, you're telling a story and in it, hopefully, revealing a powerful truth, whether it's a corporate cover-up or a deep, hidden emotion. Over the last several years, I've been noticing folks talking about the notion of resilience, and how we're all struggling with the huge challenges that life presents. It turns out, resilience really is a trait we all have inside of us to some degree, and need to cultivate it in ourselves and in our society if we want to survive as a species."

"I consider myself extremely fortunate to create music with incredible musicians and human beings," Charleston says of pianist Brandon McCune, bassist Ed Howard, drummer McClenty Hunter and percussionist Mayra Casales. She reserves special praise for guitarist, co-composer and musical director Dave Stryker. "Dave is my musical alter-ego, mind-reader and partner in crime, so to speak. He brings a deep well of jazz knowledge, musical sensitivity, creative juice and endless patience to the table. I always heard a horn section for some of these songs, so Dave brought in trumpeter Alex Norris and saxophonist Tim Reis and wrote charts that completed that seductive, deceptively simple aura and invites you in and knits everything together."

The title track, which confronts the challenge of the day-to-day grind with affirmative strength, is indicative of Charleston's knack for vividly bringing scenes to life. Charleston's compositions show a rare gift for giving universal meaning to personal experience, whether the romantic setback of "Around the Corner," the warm remembrances of "Scrapbook" or the nurturing message of "Just a Heartbeat." "I read once that Leonard Cohen took more than a year to write 'Suzanne,' which gives me some solace," reflects Charleston. "'Just a Heartbeat' percolated in my head subconsciously for 18 years. I had an epiphany the moment I saw an image of my daughter for the first time on an ultrasound screen--completely vulnerable, fragile and yet mighty at the same time. I realized that inner strength would be just as important as the physical strength she would need to navigate the world. As she prepared to leave for college last summer, the song finally emerged, as a maternal reflection on letting go."

Charleston proves equally sure-footed when putting herself in others' shoes. "Refugee," a churning jazz waltz, was inspired by a The New York Times story of a girl who escaped by boat from Syria while the rest of her family perished, while "Evidence" echoes the environmental challenge proposed by Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth. The program also includes three standards that echo the Resilience theme, and closes with "A Healing Song," which is written by Eli Yamin, Director of the Jazz Power Initiative ("JPI"), a non-profit organization that Charleston has actively supported as a lead board member for the last four years.

In addition to recording and touring, Charleston has recently co-founded Resilience Music Alliance, a mission-driven record label, with her husband, political/social activist and arts patron, Steve Ruchefsky. RMA is dedicated to empowering artists who celebrate and challenge the human condition of Resilience. To further explore this universal theme, Charleston is conducting a series of webcast interviews with visionaries such as Deepak Chopra, Cory Booker and others. "It's thrilling to have the chance to talk with such deep thinkers, and I look forward to sharing their insights with our community of like-minded people."

Those close to the singer will recognize also that the emotional depth of this project is likely due in part to the fact that the singer herself had to reach deep down recently to cultivate resilience to win her own battle with a medical issue which slowed down for over a year before she rose up to record this project. Music has surrounded Charleston her entire life, though. Her father, an English professor at the University of Chicago, was a jazz fan who took the then six-year-old and her brother to hear Duke Ellington. Her mother, a singer and voice teacher specializing in contemporary classical music. Admitted to Juilliard as an acting student, Charleston also studied classical music. After graduation, early years singing opera led to frustration and a change of careers. "Being small, I was always cast as the maid, never the countess," she notes, "it was frustrating not to ever get the meaty parts, so I decided to shift gears, and learn to be a cultural reporter like my idol, the late Charles Kuralt." She was admitted to the NYU Masters program, where she won an award for an investigative report that led to a job at ABC News. Beginning as a researcher, Charleston ultimately became a field producer, winning Emmy and Peabody Awards for her work with Diane Sawyer. But Charleston had hardly abandoned music.

During lunch breaks, she took voice lessons from Peter Eldridge of New York Voices, and at night she played cabaret gigs. "I put jazz singers on the highest pedestal, and never thought of myself that way at the time," she admits, "but Peter saw that I had something special, I guess, and could swing, and he really helped make the transition organic." When her daughter, Emma, was born, Charleston realized that she didn't want her life controlled by the demands of her job. "So," she explains, "I decided to focus on motherhood, return to my first love--music, and see what would happen."

The vocalist has long been active in making the world a better place: She and Ruchefsky have contributed significantly to many causes, including JPI, which transforms the lives of underprivileged children through Jazz Arts Education, The Hole in the Wall Gang Camp--Paul Newman's visionary charity that brings joy to children with cancer, as well as many other causes focused on elevating hope to defeat despair. "Giving back is what it's all about in this world," says Charleston, "especially when you can see the immediate and profound impact you're having on the lives of so many people."

Rondi Charleston Album Release Performance:
September 21 | Birdland | New York, NY


Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge Incorporate American Folk and Roots Music to Tell a Tale of the American Heartland on Whispers On the Wind

With Whispers On the Wind, their first recording since the two-time Grammy® Award-nominated River Runs, Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge would, at first glance, appear to have returned to a more standard jazz big band outing. Having shed the orchestral trappings characterizing the prior ambitious work however, Whispers on the Wind quickly becomes anything but standard. It encompasses a wide range of styles and genre blending orchestrations with a distinctive American roots sound. The programmatic titles evoke a tale of the American heartland and convey feelings of nostalgia and wistfulness all while continuing to push the boundaries of big band composing and arranging.

Owen's influences have always been eclectic--grounded in the jazz tradition, but freely associating with other genres from classical and rock to American folk and roots music. This project expands upon that, keeping the big band omnipresent but leaning heavily on the evocative violin of Sara Caswell, the luminescent harmonica of Grégoire Maret, an array of acoustic guitars deftly played by Corey Christiansen, and even the occasional burst of color from the accordion and hammered dulcimer played by Owen himself. It's a sound that is immediately buoyant, intimate, and captivating. Randy Brecker, last appearing with the Surge on A Comet's Tail, is featured on two tracks.

As with River Runs, Whispers On the Wind was conceived by Owen as a single entity: a suite of seven pieces linked by a somewhat ethereal vision and examination of the American tradition and lifestyle, its values, landmarks, folklore, heroes, and myths. In the booklet of the album, Owen chose two quotes from authors Stephen King, Larry McMurtry, or Cormac McCarthy to accompany each piece. The music is aimed to display a clear affinity for the local color, wry sense of humor, unique personalities, strong sense of place, and the disarmingly unsentimental honesty these authors are noted for.

Whispers On the Wind opens ominously with the 14-minute epic, "Warped Cowboy," and it slowly builds into a galloping, grandiose expression filled with acoustic guitar, bombastic drums and various iterations of the motif throughout its long form. On "All Hat, No Saddle" Owen relies heavily on the guitar to carry the rhythmic center of the piece before diving into the complex yet memorable melody. The swinging "A Phares of the Heart" features the brilliant Maret opening the track and soloing throughout as it builds to a climatic ending filled with full band hits, showcasing the unshakable cohesiveness of Owen's compositions.

"Into the Blue" features Brecker with a blistering solo that duels with LaRue Nickelson's electric guitar and transitions into "Sentinel Rock," another one that features a solo by Maret throughout the entirety of the track ending ultimately with a dramatic close. The suite ends with "Can't Remember Why," which features Caswell's virtuosic violin playing, and "Gunslingers," a somewhat otherworldly, Blakey-esque minor blues that features Brecker again.

This is the sixth release for Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge and all have been critically acclaimed. The first eponymous recording was singled out by JazzTimes' David Franklin as one of his top five albums of 1996 and both The Comet's Tail (2009) and River Runs (2013) received Grammy® Award-nominations. "Bound Away" and "Side Hikes - A Ridge Away" off of River Runs were nominated for "Best Instrumental Composition" and "Best Instrumental Arrangement" respectively at the 2014 Grammy® Awards.

The recipient of a 2009 Guggenheim Fellowship, Owen has written for or had his compositions performed by the Netherlands' Metropole Orchestra, Aarhus Jazz Orchestra (Denmark), Brussels Jazz Orchestra, Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, Tonight Show Orchestra, Scottish National Jazz Orchestra, Cincinnati Symphony, US Army Ambassadors, and numerous others. A distinguished professor at the University of South Florida where he has taught for over 35 years, Owen is a noted jazz educator sought out as a guest conductor, clinician and lecturer. 

He currently serves as President of ISJAC (International Society of Jazz Arrangers & Composers), an organization he was instrumental in founding. Previously he served as President of the IAJE (International Association for Jazz Education), as a "governor" for the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, and as a panelist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Grammy® Awards, and numerous regional arts associations.


Ivo Perelman Expands on His Collaborations Venturing Into Unchartered Musical Territory with Six New Releases

In a career that now numbers more than 80 recordings under his own name, Ivo Perelman has established a variety of new benchmarks. He has developed an unsurpassed facility for integrating the tenor saxophone's extra-high altissimo octaves with the instrument's conventional range, bringing a new edge and polish to the concept of extended technique. To an extraordinary degree, he has engaged in the daredevil pursuit of utter spontaneity, in stupefying cogent recording sessions that start and end without written compositions or thematic elements, harmonic frameworks or preset tempos. He has assembled a world-class workshop of like-minded musicians on whom to draw for each new project, evincing a sorcerer's touch for mixing these "ingredients" in novel ways and he has resorted to releasing several albums simultaneously, in order to keep pace with his runaway imagination and productivity.

In this latest fusillade of simultaneously released albums, Perelman places his saxophone in familiar settings as well as new ones. The familiar include his longstanding duo with pianist Matthew Shipp and other frequent colleagues. But this group of albums also features four musicians with whom Perelman had never performed with before these recordings, which signals a turning point in his work. One of these new associations--with trumpeter Nate Wooley, acclaimed for his solo trumpet recitals and mastery of "extreme sound"--marks the first time Perelman has ever employed the tenor-and-trumpet context that has characterized so many jazz groups.

"This has never happened with me," marvels Perelman, whose artistic philosophy requires an almost telepathic communication among collaborators. "Now I'm opening up to every musician on earth. It's like a rebirth--the beginning of a new phase. It's not that I have exhausted the musical potential with my favorite gang. But it's time to expand and this will reflect a growth within my gang. If you socialize and talk with other people, it's good for your old friends too."
     
The "new friends" include the septuagenarian percussion marvel Bobby Kapp (who appeared with Perelman and Shipp just once, on the 2017 album Tarvos) and two lesser-known drummers: the Baltimore-based Jeff Cosgrove and the German-born Joe Hertenstein. In addition, Gerald Cleaver, one of Perelman's favored drummers, returns to anchor a pianoless quartet featuring two horns. "With every new batch of recordings, I always try to focus on some different methodology, so I derive more learning in each batch. And what I learned here is: What a difference a drummer makes. In this batch Matt snd I are confronted with a variety of drummers, and I can see what that does to our relationship," states Perelman. Perelman has long marched to the beat of a different drummer, but that proves especially true on these discs.

Two albums in this release feature no drummer at all however, and one of them--the Perelman-Shipp Duo's Live In Brussels--provides the key to another recent development in Perelman's music. While discerning listeners have long detected a deep and iconoclastic lyricism within the saxophonist's vortex of extended technique and non-traditional sounds, on Brussels he marks his improvised melodies with more long tones in the saxophone's conventional range. He allows the flow of line to play out with a new level of passion and grace, contrasting with his unparalleled command of the instrument's stratosphere.
    
In annotating Brussels, the Belgian vocalist Jean-Michel Van Schouwburg describes the almost mystical atmosphere at L'Archiduc, the famed performance space where the duo performed in May of 2017. "It is designed in a half-circle around the piano, the stage located approximately at the center; the hand-made cocktail bar hugs the curve, and an overlooking mezzanine runs around the small room beneath the slightly concave ceiling," he writes. Painting a picture of the audience for this concert, he describes them as "literally submerged in the flow of sound, listening with their eyes, watching the music closely in completely relaxed posture, gripped with concentration." Perelman himself believes that this intimate setting helped propel the duo to new heights in their already telepathic communication, saying, "It's like we were inside the crowd, so the nature of the music reflects that intense experience." Upon their return to the U.S., Perelman found that his heightened communication had left a lasting impact, the reflection of which can be heard in the other albums as well.
    
The Perelman-Shipp Duo expands to a trio with drums on two of these discs. Perelman says that with Cosgrove, the drummer on Live In Baltimore, "I heard things that I never did with Matt before, not in a live performance." Credit an approach to the drums that veteran journalist Neil Tesser (who has extensively chronicled Perelman's work) calls low-key--which "does not mean low-energy," Tesser writes. "But it does indicate the level of restraint that imbues his playing: an allocation of resources; the sense of power in reserve." Hertenstein epitomizes a completely different style on the album Scalene. As Perelman says, "He is such a busy drummer, but in the best way; he is not limited by what is known as 'playing drums' in a conventional group. He fills all the space with such beauty, and we had to adapt to that."
   
Of the band that appears on the album Heptagon--with Shipp, drummer Kapp, and the titanic bassist and early musical partner William Parker--Perelman says simply, "This is a quartet of very strong personalities. I feel like I'm playing with giants here." Perelman has only occasionally worked in this tried-and-true format, the "power quartet" comprising a conventionally instrumented rhythm section, and this set measures up to all such past encounters.
   
The remaining two albums--another quartet date, Octagon, and the trio album Philosopher's Stone--both star Wooley, culminating a 10-year goal of working with the trumpeter. "When I first heard him, in a duo with Shipp, I thought, 'We have to do this.' But our schedules prevented it." So did Perelman's confidence that he could thrive in the two-horn format: "Tenor and trumpet are a match made in heaven, the iconic dichotomy. But I was very hesitant to do that because the trumpet is so dominant. I was afraid I wouldn't be able to find my space within that time-tested format. But I did, thanks to Wooley's artistry--because I don't think he plays the trumpet; he plays music." 

Ivo Perelman · Live in Brussels, Live in Baltimore,
Scalene, Heptagon, Octagon, Philosopher's Stone
Leo Records ·  Release Date: October 6, 2017


Wednesday, September 06, 2017

NEW MUSIC: ANAT COHEN TENTET - HAPPY SONG; U-NAM – THE ESSENTIAL COLLECTION; MARK SOSKIN - HEARTS AND MINDS

ANAT COHEN TENTET - HAPPY SONG

On her October 6 Anzic Records release, Happy Song, Anat Cohen - with longtime collaborator Oded Lev-Ari and an eclectic band of musical omnivores - tells the story of the clarinet and writes her own original chapter. Never has this statement been more accurate than now, as the prolific clarinetist, composer and bandleader, along with musical director/arranger/composer (and partner in Anzic Records) Oded Lev-Ari, presents her third album release of 2017, Happy Song. On this inter-continental album, the peripatetic Cohen and Lev-Ari, leading the Anat Cohen Tentet, engage the listener with ten thrilling excursions. The songs not only conjure up geographical, musical hot spots for Anat (Israel, Eastern Europe, South America, New Orleans, New York City, etc), but also celebrate the life of the clarinet, it's beauty, versatility and stylistic adaptability.  The Anat Cohen Tentet is set for a tour of the U.S. starting October 7 at the Logan Center for the Arts in Chicago.

U-NAM – THE ESSENTIAL COLLECTION

A strong overview of recent sounds from U-Nam – one of the few contemporary guitarists to inherit the best 70s styles of artists like George Benson or David T Walker – and a set that also features a few new titles too! Like both of those jazz giants, U-Nam has a way of playing with a very chromatic approach – as strong in tone as he is deft on the strings – often in a nicely-blocked way that makes for a very soulful sound that almost makes you think you're hearing a vocal along with the tunes. The guitar sings out strongly – amidst new titles that include "Soul Breeze" and "Let The Music Play" – and other U-Nam favorites that include "Throwback Kid", "Keep The Faith", "Something's Up", "Street Life", "Going For Miles", "Back In Style", "Risin To The Top", "Breezin MA", and "Smoovin".  ~ Dusty Groove

MARK SOSKIN - HEARTS AND MINDS

Pianist Mark Soskin has played on dozens of records over the decades, yet has given us just a handful as a leader – which is quite a shame, as his work on an album like this is totally great! The pianist has this warmth and flow right from the start – the kind of understated accompaniment he can bring to others, but which really sparkles out in the lead here – in the company of bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Anthony Pinciotti – who both often really let Mark take off, and overwhelm the proceedings with his many charms! Soskin's work on the keys often is so effortless, it might be easy to miss the subtle shadings and personality he brings to the music – but we're guessing that, like us, you'll be grabbed by the album right away. Titles include a great version of Luiz Eca's "The Dolphin", plus the Soskin originals "Hearts & Minds" and "Slider" – plus takes on "If I Should Lose You", "Sometime Ago", "Eiderdown", and "Old Folks". ~ Dusty Groove


Dazzling group rapport sparks brilliant performance on Aspiration featuring Satoko Fujii, Wadada Leo Smith, Natsuki Tamura and Ikue Mori

The group chemistry is magical on pianist-composer Satoko Fujii's Aspiration, featuring an all-star quartet with trumpeters Wadada Leo Smith and Natsuki Tamura, and laptop player Ikue Mori. The nearly telepathic link among them takes the music into places where it grows ever deeper and more intuitive. Each track on the album is so vividly alive in the moment and with a character so distinct that it seems to become an animate thing independent of its creators. The artists are almost subservient to the music rather than the other way around. The album will be released September 8, 2017, via Fujii's Libra Records.

It's little wonder the album is so subtle and intimate, given the artists involved. Although this is the first time they have worked together as a group, there are ties among them that contribute to the music's beauty and coherence. Smith and Mori displayed an uncommonly close rapport during their duets on Smith's Luminous Axis (Tzadik). "I knew Wadada and Ikue had worked together before," Fujii says, "but that's not why I asked Ikue to join us. Natsuki and I had played with Ikue before on several occasions and we had a great time. When I started composing for the project with Wadada, I heard Ikue's sound in my ears." Of course, Fujii and Tamura share an intimate bond developed over several decades of working together and especially in their duo music, which they've recorded five times since 1997.

Once they came together in the studio, creating the music was easy, Fujii says. "I could feel a kind of calm confidence when we were together. I knew that we were going to make good music."

Fujii's intuition about the quality of the music proved correct. They venture into the mysteries and potentials - and the risks - of the quartet with fearless openness and discipline. On each track, every aspect of sound production is in spontaneous flux-rhythm, melody, dynamics, texture, density, silence. There is no telling where the music may lead. On "Intent," the unfixed quality keeps the listener on edge in anticipation of where the music will flow next. As the members of the band move in and out of the music, each sonic event blossoms with vibrant immediacy, and fades away as the music evolves. "Floating" opens with extraordinarily graceful piano from Fujii while Mori orchestrates textures and rhythms in parallel to her. About five minutes in, Smith makes a dramatic entrance and a three-way conversation ensues before Tamura brings the piece to a quiet ending. It's one of the most elusive and obliquely lyrical tracks on the disc, and there isn't a note out of place. Tamura's "Stillness" is a piece of complementary contrasts with a contemplative start that suddenly erupts into roiling energy and subsides. Again, there's a sense of inevitability that feels organic. Even the unaccompanied solos that crop up throughout the performances-for instance, Tamura's sculptural opening to "Evolution," or Fujii's solo later in that same piece-are shaped to function within the context of the composition.

Fujii, Smith, Tamura, and Mori gathered without preconceived notions about what must happen as they play. Instead they discovered together what the music could do, and nurtured it to its fullest expression. In the end, Aspiration is about more than music-it is about sharing and working together, about finding something beautiful and making it more so, and about the spiritual bonds that unite us all.
Critics and fans alike hail pianist and composer Satoko Fujii as one of the most original voices in jazz today. She's "a virtuoso piano improviser, an original composer and a bandleader who gets the best collaborators to deliver," says John Fordham in The Guardian. In concert and on more than 80 albums as a leader or co-leader, she synthesizes jazz, contemporary classical, avant-rock and Japanese folk music into an innovative music instantly recognizable as hers alone. Over the years, Fujii has led some of the most consistently creative ensembles in modern improvised music, including the ma-do quartet, the Min-Yoh Ensemble, and an electrifying avant-rock quartet featuring drummer Tatsuya Yoshida of The Ruins. She has also established herself as one of the world's leading composers for large jazz ensembles, leading Cadence magazine to call her, "the Ellington of free jazz." Her ultimate goal: "I would love to make music that no one has heard before."

Trumpeter and composer Natsuki Tamura is internationally recognized for his unique musical vocabulary blending extended techniques with jazz lyricism. This unpredictable virtuoso "has some of the stark, melancholy lyricism of Miles, the bristling rage of late '60s Freddie Hubbard and a dollop of the extended techniques of Wadada Leo Smith and Lester Bowie," observes Mark Keresman of JazzReview.com. Throughout his career, Tamura has led bands with radically different approaches. On one hand, there are avant rock jazz fusion bands like his quartet, whose album Hada Hada Peter Marsh of the BBC described this way: "Imagine Don Cherry woke up one morning, found he'd joined an avant goth-rock band and was booked to score an Italian horror movie." In contrast, Tamura has focused on the intersection of folk music and sound abstraction with Gato Libre since 2003. The band's poetic, quietly surreal performances have been praised for their "surprisingly soft and lyrical beauty that at times borders on flat-out impressionism," by Rick Anderson in CD Hotlist. In addition, Tamura has recorded five CDs in his ongoing duo with pianist (and wife) Satoko Fujii. Tamura also collaborates on many of Fujii's projects, from quartets and trios to big bands. As an unaccompanied soloist, he's released three CDs, including Dragon Nat (2014). He and Fujii are also members of Kaze, a collaborative quartet with French musicians, trumpeter Christian Pruvost and drummer Peter Orins. "As unconventional as he may be," notes Marc Chenard in Coda magazine, "Natsuki Tamura is unquestionably one of the most adventurous trumpet players on the scene today."

A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music, trumpeter, multi-instrumentalist, composer, and improviser Wadada Leo Smith is one of the most boldly original and influential artists of our time. Transcending the bounds of genre or idiom, he distinctly defines his music, tirelessly inventive in both sound and approach, as "Creative Music." For the last five decades, Smith has been a member of the legendary AACM collective, pivotal in its wide-open perspectives on music and art in general. He has carried those all-embracing concepts into his own work, expanding upon them in myriad ways. Smith received the 2016 Doris Duke Artist Award and earned an honorary doctorate from CalArts, where he was also celebrated as Faculty Emeritus. In addition, he received the Hammer Museum's 2016 Mohn Award for Career Achievement "honoring brilliance and resilience." In 2017 Smith topped three categories in DownBeat Magazine's 65th Annual Critics Poll: Jazz Artist, Trumpet and Jazz Album (for America's National Parks on Cuneiform.)  Smith was also honored by the Jazz Journalists Association as their 2017 Musician of the Year as well as the 2017 Duo of the Year for his work with Vijay Iyer.  Born December 18, 1941 in Leland, Mississippi, Smith's early musical life began at age thirteen when he became involved with the Delta blues and jazz traditions performing with his stepfather, bluesman Alex Wallace. He received his formal musical education from the U.S. Military band program (1963), the Sherwood School of Music (1967-69), and Wesleyan University (1975-76).

Smith has released more than 50 albums as a leader. His 2016 recording, America's National Parks, a six-movement suite inspired by the scenic splendor, historic legacy, and political controversies of the country's public landscapes, earned a place on numerous best of the year lists including the New York Times, NPR Music and many others. Smith's landmark 2012 civil rights opus Ten Freedom Summers was called "A staggering achievement [that] merits comparison to Coltrane's A Love Supreme in sobriety and reach."

Laptop musician, composer, and percussionist Ikue Mori first gained attention in the late '70s as the drummer in the seminal No Wave band DNA, with fellow noise pioneers Arto Lindsay and Tim Wright. In the mid '80s she started in employ drum machines in the context of improvised music. While limited to the standard technology provided by the drum machine, she nevertheless forged her own highly sensitive signature style. In 2000 she started using the laptop computer to expand on her already signature sound, thus broadening her scope of musical expression. Mori has released more than 20 albums as a leader or co-leader with innovative bands such as Mephista with pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and drummer Susie Ibarra; and Phantom Orchard with harpist Zeena Parkins. She is a frequent member of ensembles led by John Zorn, and was a featured soloist with Ensemble Modern on guitarist-composer Fred Frith's Traffic Continues (Winter & Winter). Her most recent releases are Obelisk with Courvoisier, Okkyng Lee, and Jim Black; and Highsmith, a duo with pianist Craig Taborn, both on Tzadik.


New from Accurate Records: Ghost Train Orchestra Book of Rhapsodies Vol. II

Book of Rhapsodies Vol. II is Ghost Train Orchestra's fourth album, following their highly acclaimed album Hot Town (2015). In this adventurous installment, Ghost Train Orchestra performs Brian Carpenter's surreal and modernistic re-imaginings of five unusual ensembles from the late 1930s: The Hal Herzon Septet, The Alec Wilder Octet, The John Kirby Sextet, The Raymond Scott Quintette, and Reginald Foresythe and His New Music.

Decades before composer Gunther Schuller coined the term "Third Stream" to describe a genre straddling the line between jazz and classical music, New York was the epicenter of a new movement of composers whose work seemed to exist outside the margins. In the late 1930s, a group of forward- thinking composers began creating small ensembles with unorthodox instrumentation to realize some of the strangest and most evocative music of the period.

Full of loving attention to detail, contemporary energy and attitude, plus state-of-the-art production, Book of Rhapsodies Vol. II picks up where Book of Rhapsodies left off in 2013, creating a rarely-heard genre of tone poems and chamber music for orchestra and choir. Produced by Brian Carpenter and mixed by Grammy-award winner Danny Blume, the album delivers the rich experience of transporting the listener to the past and using that past to transform the future. Acclaimed artist Noah Woods created the cover and booklet artwork inspired by the many strange and descriptive song titles. Book of Rhapsodies Vol II will be enjoyed by a young audience interested in exploring outside the mainstream of today's rock, pop, and jazz.

All three of Ghost Train Orchestra's previous albums featured on several top ten lists: NPR, New York Jazz Record, Boston Globe, Jazz Times, Burning Ambulance, and Stereophile. After leader Brian Carpenter was interviewed on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross in 2011, their debut album reached the top 10 of the Billboard Jazz charts in the weeks following.

DownBeat raved "Carpenter and his little big big band don't just recreate musical museum pieces; they breathe fire and life into this amazing music."  Burning Ambulance listed Book of Rhapsodies in their top ten of 2013, writing "Carpenter is on a mission...rooting out obscurities and tweaking the arrangements until they pop like fireworks." Of Book ofRhapsodies, Andrew Velez of New York City Jazz Record wrote, "This is an amazing ensemble, playing music like no others these days, creating their own electrifying musical gold."

The Ghost Train Orchestra was formed in 2006; since then the band has performed in New York and festivals and venues across the country, including last year's standing room only show at the Chicago Jazz Festival. Andy Taub at Brooklyn Recording Studio recorded Book of Rhapsodies after a string of monthly shows. Carpenter transcribed the originals and then completely rearranged and reassembled the pieces for orchestra and choir. The album features an outstanding roster of talent: violinist Mazz Swift, alto saxophonist Ben Kono, clarinetist Dennis Lichtman, saxophonist Petr Cancura, trombonist Curtis Hasselbring, tubist Ron Caswell, guitarist Avi Bortnick, bassist Michael Bates, drummer Rob Garcia, and accordionist Rob Reich.

Carpenter is the founder of the Boston-based band Beat Circus that recorded a "Weird American Gothic" trilogy of dark Americana albums. He also leads Brian Carpenter & the Confessions, a rock band formed in Boston with Carpenter as the lead singer and lyricist. In addition, he hosts his radio show Free Association at WZBC-FM Boston College and produces radio documentaries there, including a recent 3-hour show on sound design.



In Honor of the Buddy Rich Centennial Celebration Two Digital Albums, a Vinyl Album, and Two Digital Concert Films to be Released

Lightyear Entertainment and Lobitos Creek Ranch, in association with Scabeba Entertainment and the Buddy Rich Estate, have announced the release of two new live albums featuring Buddy Rich and his Big Band, both recorded in 1985 on two nights at the King Street Studios in San Francisco. The digital albums are being released on September 15, 2017, as part of the Buddy Rich Centennial Celebration. Buddy was born on September 30, 1917.

The albums are the soundtracks from two concert films, The Channel One Suite and The Lost Tapes, which have been available from Lightyear on DVD since 2003 and 2005, respectively. The sound recordings from these concerts have never before been available as audio albums or as digital films for rental, sale, or streaming.

Gary Reber, subsequently the founder of Widescreen Review was the Producer of the concerts. One Pass Video was the Production company. Scott Ross of One Pass was the Director. A complete jazz club was built in the soundstage for the production to a live audience. The recordings were originally made in SQ Tate Matrix Quad Surround Sound.  

The soundtracks have been re-mastered for digital release by Chad Hailey and Jeff Pinn at Broken Arrow Sound, Redwood City, CA.

The Channel One Suite has been retitled The Channel One Set, referring to the set list that Buddy and his Big Band performed the night it was recorded. The two films have been remastered for digital release by Sergio Hernandez at Bitmax Hollywood. 

The two audio albums will be released on September 15, 2017 through Caroline Distribution, the independent distribution arm of Universal Music Group, on the Lightyear/Lobitos Creek label. The digital films are scheduled for November.

A vinyl LP of The Lost Tapes will be released as well, tentatively scheduled for January.

The title The Lost Tapes refers to the fact that these recordings were lost for a decade, presumed damaged in a fire, and then digitally restored.

“These recordings are some of the best quality recordings ever made of the legendary drummer and his band,” said Arnie Holland, CEO of Lightyear. “And we are grateful to Executive Producer Steve Michelson and the inimitable Cathy Rich for 14 years of working together with us to make sure that Buddy's legacy is complete and widely available.” 

Cathy Rich, CEO of Scabeba Entertainment and Buddy’s daughter, is guest vocalist with the Buddy Rich Band featuring drummer Greg Potter. The 16-piece Big Band has been touring all year, and will perform at the Catalina Bar and Grill in Hollywood on October 2.

Buddy Rich, whom Gene Krupa defined as “the greatest drummer to ever draw breath,” was honored with a President's Special Merit award GRAMMY along with three Grammy Nominations. He was inducted into the Downbeat Magazine, Modern Drummer and Playboy Halls of Fame. Buddy received the Jazz Unlimited Immortals of Jazz Award and awards for his philanthropic efforts. He was named “Greatest Drummer of All Time” by Modern Drummer magazine. 

In honor of Buddy's Centennial, a flag will be flown over the U.S. Capitol on Buddy's birthday, September 30, when the commemoration of his Centennial will also be read into the official Congressional record where it will be a permanent part of the United States archive for all time.


Frankie Carrera Overcomes Traumatic Event, Musically Painting a Portrait of Survival on Self-Titled Debut

The music, rhymes and flow of Chicago-based rapper, singer and multi-instrumentalist Frankie Carrera represent an introspective and surreal aural journey--a hazy time-lapse portrait of survival, grit and grace, hauntingly captured on his official self-titled debut. Imagine regaining consciousness, washed up on a Cabo San Lucas shoreline, face down, sand in your teeth, beaten with your wallet and belongings gone, with severe neck and spine trauma: Injuries you don't even detect right away for all the adrenaline pumping through your system, mysteries clouding your mind, and anger steadily rising to test the gauge of your emotional content and character.

Mere hours before, you were celebrating your return to Mexico's party capital, about to share a sold-out Saturday show days later with superstar Waka Flocka Flame at the legendary El Squid Roe, a double-bill that you as a co-promoter were bringing to town. After leaving a small bar near the Marina with a Texas dream girl on your arm and three others, suddenly the last thing you remember is running. This is ground zero for the seven songs of Frankie Carrera. Pulsing at the center of this feverish and sensuous offering is the cyclical dichotomy of sweet dreams and bitter reality, propelled by the audacity to maintain hope and faith.

Frankie Carrera boasts hallucinogenic tracks produced by aural illustrators Bread Doe, Yuya Michael Ohashi, and Millz, among others--swimming in synths and sound effects yet punctuated with the live instrumentation of piano and trumpet. Short songs in which vivid verses burst out of the Andy Kravitz mastered tracks that keep the listener steadily pushing rewind, submerged into the mindset of a man piecing his puzzle back together. 

"I felt like this was what everyone would want to hear," Carrera states. "I was in a recording studio after my surgery in a neck brace on Percocet, stiffened up by a permanent screw in my spine and out of my element. Bread Doe assured me, 'No, this is it. I can hear your pain. This is your Through The Wire moment.'" This studio session resulted in the track "Medication." "Making this music takes me back to Mexico. Coming home from paradise to Chicago where these streets don't ever change with folks dying every single day, I turn my nightmares into dreams," Carrera states. "The experience gave me a bitter taste of the world. So I said I'm going to ground myself, regroup out in L.A. and come back with something real that my fans will appreciate and respect. I could have just faded away but I came back even better with a sound that is shocking."

The lead single, "Noche," waxes poetic of drowning one's sorrows in a blissful night of debauchery with a mystery woman and features a verse from guest artist Khalil. The video, directed by LOUIEKNOWS, is an arresting introduction to a heady meditation on recovery. Other highlights include "Godly," featuring Ezkiel, "More Than This" and the intensely evocative "Cold Summer," with singer Kaye Fox.

Carrera, as well as his younger sister were born in Chicago to a loving mother and father, the latter a drummer in a traveling Spanish rock band. He grew up with Sinatra and Santana simultaneously in his ears. One day around the age of eight, Carrera heard Eminem's "Stan" in his dad's car and was transfixed by the Detroit rap maverick's voice and delivery. "I thought what he was doing was so cool and wanted to rap like that." Carrera's cousin Beto continued his education keeping Carrera fed on hip-hop staples from Biggie to 2Pac, but Carrera was also obsessed with music from his mother's classical piano lessons as well as playing drums in high school. His dream became to blend musicianship with hip-hop as he started posting up in Westside and Southside Chicago recording studios, soaking up the finer points of his craft. Engineers Eric Welton and Na'el Yusef Shehade, who worked in the studio with Chance The Rapper, saw potential in Carrera and were profoundly encouraging.

Since 2009, Carrera has been building his reputation making experimental mix-tapes such as Colder Than Chicago, Rookies to Legends, and Opulence--which he dropped from his hospital bed after the incident--and No Bad Days, which was released with a GoPro shot companion video at his favorite place of Cabo during spring break two years prior to the incident. Carrera also wrote and recorded a verse on Cyhi The Prynce's "Flower in the Attic," was featured on Crooked I's "Don't Close Your Eyes," and has recorded and produced with James Thomas (a.k.a. YB, ghostwriter/voice of Kanye West's Grammy® Award-nominated song "Mercy").

Carrera has come back from his near-death experience with agitated creative energy to burn, grabbing his second chance by the horns. "My story is a kid from 'Chi' who's seen it all from the bad neighborhoods where it's treacherous to be out after 9pm, to the vibrancy of the music scene. My Mexican heritage plays a definite part in the sound of my music. There should be more people opening doors for our culture. There's lots of talent in Chicago (Gotham City) but I focus on my own sound, which is for everybody, coming from my own unique space."

Overcoming the defining moment that took place in Cabo has only helped fuel Carrera's passion and progression as an artist. The self-titled debut tells a tale of resilience and the ability to prevail even during the most troubling experiences. Although that night tested Carrera's character, he used that pain to ignite his desire to create and bring into existence a distinctive and compelling soundscape.


Friday, September 01, 2017

GREGORY PORTER ANNOUNCES OCT. 27 RELEASE OF "NAT KING COLE & ME"

On October 27, 2-time GRAMMY-winning vocalist Gregory Porter will release his 3rd Blue Note album, Nat King Cole & Me, a heartfelt tribute to his idol, the legendary singer, pianist and Capitol recording artist Nat King Cole. With the help of 6-time GRAMMY-winning arranger Vince Mendoza, the London Studio Orchestra, a core band featuring pianist Christian Sands, bassist Reuben Rogers, and drummer Ulysses Owens, and special guest trumpeter Terence Blanchard on two tracks, Porter revisits some of Cole’s most cherished classics such as “Mona Lisa,” “L-O-V-E,” “Nature Boy,” “The Christmas Song,” and the lead track “Smile” which is available today to stream, download, or receive immediately with album pre-order.

For Porter, the influence of Cole on his life and music runs deep, a through-line that reaches back into some of his earliest childhood memories. “He was one of a kind. He left such great music – such beautiful things to listen to that you can’t help but be influenced by that extraordinary timbre, style, and ultimate cool,” Porter enthuses. “It’s only natural that I go to the root of my inspiration and where I come from. And that root would be my mother and gospel music and Nat King Cole,” Porter says.

“My mother said I wrote this little song when I was 5 and put it on a tape and played it for her when she came home from work,” recalls Porter. Upon hearing it his mother, Ruth Porter, exclaimed “Boy, you sound like Nat King Cole,” a compliment that sent the curious young Gregory delving into her record collection.

“I remember thinking how strange that name was, going through her records, and first seeing his image: this elegant, handsome, strong man sitting by a fire, looking like somebody's daddy. Then I put the vinyl on the player and out of those speakers came that voice, that nurturing sound. It filled a void in me. My father wasn’t in my life; he wasn’t raising me; he wasn’t showing any interest in me. So Nat’s words, ‘pick yourself up, dust yourself off, start all over again’ – all of these life lessons and words of wisdom were like fatherly advice. They were coming out of the speakers like Nat was singing those words just to me. I would listen to his albums and imagine that Nat was my father.”

Earlier in Porter’s career – after his role in the Tony-nominated musical It Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues but before rising to international acclaim as his solo artist – Porter dramatized his deep appreciation for Cole in a semi-autobiographical musical, Nat King Cole & Me, which premiered in 2004.

“That musical was a way of me trying to find my father,” Porter explains. “I wrote it after my father [Rufus Porter] had passed. The musical was of Nat King Cole; and half of the music was of my original writing. But the story is how I came to Nat’s music in the absence of my father. So in a way, it was some self-prescribed, self-written therapy and emotional medicine for myself.”

That musical underpins Nat King Cole & Me, the follow-up to Porter’s GRAMMY-winning Blue Note albums Liquid Spirit (2013) and Take Me to the Alley (2016), which established Porter as a global superstar and his generation’s most soulful jazz singer-songwriter. The album will be available on the following formats: deluxe vinyl, deluxe/standard CD, deluxe/standard download, and on streaming services.

“I went about selecting the songs like I always do – first in a very emotional way,” Porter says. “I just gathered the songs that meant something to me over the years. There was a period in college when I had an injury to my shoulder and I needed music to soothe me at that time. So I ended up going back to Nat’s records. Then I did the same thing during the passing of my mother. In a way, there’s a familiarity and a calming effect to Nat’s music. Recording Nat’s music was very personal because I could hear and feel my mother. And I still feel myself searching for my father.”

The track listing for Nat King Cole & Me is as follows:

1. Mona Lisa (Ray Evans/Jay Livingston)
2. Smile (Charlie Chaplin/John Turner/Geoffrey Parsons)
3. Nature Boy (Eden Ahbez)
4. L-O-V-E (Milt Gabler/Bert Kaempfert)
5. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas (Farres Osvaldo)
6. Miss Otis Regrets (Cole Porter)
7. Pick Yourself Up (Jerome Kern/ Dorothy Fields)
8. When Love Was King (Gregory Porter)
9. The Lonely One (Lenny Hambro/ Roberto Heller)
10. Ballerina (Carl Sigman/ Bob Russell)
11. I Wonder Who My Daddy Is (Gladys Shelley)
12. But Beautiful** (Johnny Burke/Jimmy Van Heusen)
13. Sweet Lorraine** (Cliff Burwell/Mitchell Parish)
14. For All We Know** (J. Fred Coots/Sam M. Lewis)
15. The Christmas Song (Mel Tormé/Robert Wells)
**only available on deluxe edition


"Grammy Salute To Music Legends 2017™" Honoring Shirley Caesar, Ahmad Jamal, Charley Pride, Jimmie Rodgers, Nina Simone, Sly Stone, And The Velvet Underground To Air On PBS' "Great Performances" Friday, Oct. 13, at 9:00 P.M.

In collaboration with the Recording Academy™, Great Performances presents GRAMMY Salute To Music Legends 2017™, the second annual all-star concert offering a primetime spotlight for the Academy's 2017 Special Merit Awards recipients. The celebration and tribute concert feature rare performances by honorees and renditions by those they've inspired.
  
The celebration, led by GRAMMY®-winning industry icon Paul Shaffer as musical director, was recorded in July at New York's Beacon Theatre, and will air Friday, October 13 from 9 - 11 p.m. on PBS. (Check local listings.) Historically held during GRAMMY Week, this is the second time the Recording Academy has celebrated the Special Merit Awards with a stand-alone event and musical tribute.

This year's Lifetime Achievement Award honorees are Shirley Caesar, Ahmad Jamal, Charley Pride, Jimmie Rodgers, Nina Simone, Sly Stone, and the Velvet Underground.

Additional Special Merit Awards honorees celebrated include Trustees Awards recipients: producer, arranger, and songwriter Thom Bell; record executive Mo Ostin; and recording executive, A&R man, and music publisher Ralph S. Peer; and audio inventor Alan Dower Blumlein, who is the Technical GRAMMY Award recipient. Also honored is Keith Hancock, this year's recipient of the Recording Academy and GRAMMY Museum®'s Music Educator Award™.

Along with never-before-seen video packages celebrating each of the honorees' contributions to the music industry and our cultural heritage and heartfelt testimonials from the presenters, the star-studded event features performances by Lifetime Achievement Award honorees John Cale and Maureen "Moe" Tucker of the Velvet Underground, Lifetime Achievement Award honoree Shirley Caesar, jazz pianist Stanley Cowell, past GRAMMY nominee Andra Day, 12-time GRAMMY winner Kirk Franklin, GRAMMY winner Le'Andria Johnson, past GRAMMY nominee Neal McCoy, six-time GRAMMY winner Randy Newman, GRAMMY-winning Living Colour founder and songwriter Vernon Reid, past GRAMMY nominee Catherine Russell, Lifetime Achievement Award honoree Charley Pride, past GRAMMY nominee Valerie Simpson, past GRAMMY nominee Russell Thompkins Jr. of The Stylistics, five-time GRAMMY winner Dionne Warwick, past GRAMMY nominee Charlie Wilson, and two-time GRAMMY winner Dwight Yoakam.  There is also a special appearance by GRAMMY winner Whoopi Goldberg, who accepts for the late Nina Simone.

The full musical program follows (the honorees in bold type; performers in parentheses):

Thom Bell
•"You Make Me Feel Brand New" (Russell Thompkins Jr.)
•"Then Came You" (Dionne Warwick)

Nina Simone
•"Mississippi Goddam" (Andra Day)

The Velvet Underground
•"I'm Waiting for The Man"/"Sunday Morning" (John Cale Band with Maureen "Moe" Tucker)

Jimmie Rodgers
•"Hobo Bill's Last Ride"/"Mule Skinner Blues"/"T for Texas" (Dwight Yoakam)

Ralph S. Peer
•"Crazy Blues" (Catherine Russell)
•"The Great Pretender" (Russell Thompkins Jr.)
•"Georgia on My Mind" (Andra Day)

Shirley Caesar
•Medley: "You Name It"/"It's Alright, It's OK"/"You're Next in Line for a Miracle "/"Satan, We're Going to Tear Your Kingdom Down" (Kirk Franklin with Le'Andria Johnson)
•"Caught Up"/"Jesus, I Love Calling Your Name" (Shirley Caesar)

Ahmad Jamal
•"But Not For Me"/"Ahmad's Blues"/"Poinciana" (Stanley Cowell)

Mo Ostin
•"A Few Words in Defense of Our Country"/"I Think It's Going To Rain Today" (Randy Newman)

Charley Pride
•"Is Anybody Goin' to San Antone" (Neal McCoy)
•"Kiss an Angel Good Morning" (Charley Pride)

Sly Stone
•"I Want to Take You Higher"/"Everybody is a Star"/"Sex Machine"/"Dance to the Music" (Charlie Wilson, Valerie Simpson, Vernon Reid)

The Lifetime Achievement Award honors performers who have made contributions of outstanding artistic significance to the field of recording, while the Trustees Award recognizes such contributions in areas other than performance. Both awards are determined by a vote of the Recording Academy's National Board of Trustees. Technical GRAMMY Award recipients are determined by vote of the Academy's Producers & Engineers Wing® Advisory Council and Chapter Committees and ratified by the National Board of Trustees, and presented to individuals and companies who have made contributions of outstanding technical significance to the recording field. Visit www.grammy.org/recording-academy/awards for complete lists of previous recipients.

Great Performances is produced by THIRTEEN PRODUCTIONS LLC for WNET, one of America's most prolific and respected public media providers. Throughout its more than 40-year history on public television, Great Performances has provided viewers across the country with an unparalleled showcase of the best in all genres of the performing arts, serving as America's most prestigious and enduring broadcaster of cultural programming. 

A production of THIRTEEN Productions LLC for WNET,  GRAMMY Salute To Music Legends 2017™ is written by David Wild and directed for television by David Horn, with Mitch Owgang as producer, and Horn and Neil Portnow as executive producers. For Great Performances, Bill O'Donnell is series producer; David Horn is executive producer.

The Great Performances presentation is funded by The Joseph & Robert Cornell Memorial Foundation, the Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Arts Fund, the Irene Diamond Fund, The LuEsther T. Mertz Charitable Trust, The Agnes Varis Trust, The Starr Foundation, The Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Ellen and James S. Marcus, the Philip and Janice Levin Foundation, the Thea Petschek Iervolino Foundation, The Abra Prentice Foundation, and PBS.

About the Lifetime Achievement Award Honorees:

A deeply spiritual and affecting gospel singer, Shirley Caesar's emotive vocal talents were discovered in a church choir when she was 10 years old. She is arguably best known for her eight-year tenure with the Chicago-based gospel group the Caravans, whom she joined after appealing to Albertina Walker to sing a solo with the group. Electing to pursue a solo career in 1966 alongside her own choir, the Caesar Singers, she subsequently carved out a profile that earned her the title of First Lady of Gospel Music. Caesar's roll call of achievements includes 11 GRAMMY Awards®, 14 Stellar awards, 15 Dove awards, an NAACP Image Award, a Soul Train Music Award, and two recent 59th GRAMMY nominations.

A prodigy who began playing piano at age 3, Ahmad Jamal started performing professionally at 14 and was signed to Okeh Records by age 21. Trained in both traditional jazz and European classical piano styles, Jamal has been labeled as a jazz innovator who helped pioneer "cool jazz," which had a significant influence on Miles Davis, among others. With a catalog spanning seven decades, he is known for wonderful renditions of pieces such as "Poinciana" and "Dolphin Dance," original compositions such as "Ahmad's Blues," the fantastic compilation Complete Live At The Spotlight Club 1958, and his most well-known album, 1958's At The Pershing: But Not For Me.

Three-time GRAMMY winner Charley Pride taught himself to play guitar in his early teens, but he dreamed of becoming a professional baseball player. After playing in the Negro American League, he was signed by RCA Victor and in 1967 he became the first black singer to perform at the Grand Ole Opry. "Just Between You And Me" launched Pride to stardom, earning him his first GRAMMY nomination for 1966. In 1969 Pride scored his first No. 1 country hit with "All I Have To Offer You (Is Me)."  Pride is considered the first African-American superstar in country music.

Jimmie Rodgers* is widely regarded as the Father of Country Music. In 1961 he became one of the first three people inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. In 1970 he was a part of the inaugural class of songwriters voted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 1986, the first year of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductions, he was inducted under the early influencers category. Rodgers has three recordings in the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame® — "Blue Yodel (T For Texas)" and "In The Jailhouse Now" (both from 1928) and "Blue Yodel #9 (Standing On The Corner)" (1930).

Dr. Nina Simone*, known as the High Priestess of Soul, was a child prodigy whose dreams of becoming a classical musician were deferred by the color of her skin. Her fearlessness and deep commitment to the civil rights movement gave birth to such classics as "Mississippi Goddam," "Four Women" and "To Be Young, Gifted And Black." Her approach to music was so versatile she labeled her style black classical. From R&B and rock to jazz, gospel, blues, folk, and Broadway, Simone brought her unique style to each genre. Her interpretations of "Feeling Good" and "Sinnerman" are classics that fans around the world still enjoy. Her version of "I Loves You, Porgy," which became a Top 20 hit in 1959, was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame in 2000.

Sylvester "Sly Stone" Stewart is an iconic American musician, songwriter and producer most famous for his role as frontman of Sly & The Family Stone. Classic hits penned by Stone, including "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)," "Everyday People," "Dance To The Music," and "There's A Riot Going On," played a critical role in the development of soul, funk, rock, and psychedelia in the 1960s and 1970s. Sly & The Family Stone were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. The group has four recordings in the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame.

Despite a relatively brief lifespan and limited commercial success, the Velvet Underground are now recognized as one of the most influential rock bands of all time. Comprising Lou Reed*, John Cale, Sterling Morrison*, and Maureen "Moe" Tucker, the band was, perhaps, ahead of their time, both visually and sonically. Often dubbed the quintessential proto-punk band, they have been continually cited as the benchmark for countless modern-rock movements over the past 50 years. The Velvet Underground's seminal 1967 debut album, The Velvet Underground & Nico, was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame in 2008.

About The Trustees Award Honorees:

Producer/arranger/songwriter Thom Bell was one of the cornerstones of the Philadelphia Soul legacy. He was a prime architect in the development of a '70s soul sound that moved beyond the grit of Southern soul and the effervescence of Motown by building complex and sophisticated arrangements around smooth strings, elegant horns and a driving rhythm that anticipated the rise of disco. With the Delfonics, the Stylistics, the Spinners and others, Bell established his trademark sound with sweet strings and muted brass led by the French horn. Hits such as "I'll Be Around" and "Betcha By Golly, Wow" cemented his stature as one of the all-time great songwriter/producers, and his partnership with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff helped create the quintessential Sound of Philadelphia.

Mo Ostin is one of the greatest record executives in music history. While he started out at Verve, it was helming Frank Sinatra's Reprise Records where Ostin came into his own. With Reprise Records and ultimately Warner Bros., where he served as Chairman for 25 years, Ostin worked with the seminal artists of the generation such as Eric Clapton, Randy Newman, Paul Simon, Prince, and Neil Young, while also developing a staff that was legendary in their own right. With an artist-friendly disposition, Ostin led with the idea that great art made great business — most of the bands signed under his watch made both critically acclaimed and profitable records. Ostin was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003 and was honored with The Recording Academy's President's Merit Award at the 2006 GRAMMY Salute To Industry Icons®.

Ralph S. Peer* was a successful recording executive, archetypal A&R man and music publisher whose career spanned from 1919 to 1960. Through his work as a music executive, he continually broadened the palate of genres that music makers and audiences embraced. He was the executive producer of Mamie Smith's "Crazy Blues," the first vocal blues recording, James P. Johnson's "Carolina Shout," considered by historians to be among the first jazz piano solo recordings, and Fiddlin' John Carson's "The Little Old Log Cabin In The Lane," the first country record released. He was the producer of the 1927 Bristol Sessions, considered the "Big Bang" of country music, where he discovered Jimmie Rodgers and the original Carter Family. He broadened his focus by publishing Latin music in the United States and around the globe. Fifty-nine recordings produced or published by Ralph S. Peer have been inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame.

Twitter: @GPerfPBS

 


NEW MUSIC: JOAO DONATO & DONATINHO - SINTETIZAMOR; JASON STEIN QUARTET – LUCILLE!; MISHA PANFILOV SOUND COMBO – EN ROUTE

JOAO DONATO & DONATINHO - SINTETIZAMOR

One of the most unusual projects we've ever heard from the legendary Joao Donato – not the bossa jazz of his roots, but instead a fresh new groove created with his son Donatinho! The music is heavy on keyboards, and definitely has the 80s vibe promised by the cover – with the younger member of the duo handling keyboards from that generation, and singing with a bit of electric crackle in his voice – while the older Donato brings in all his classic charms, and creates a great sense of counterpoint in the process! The whole thing's nicely funky – sweet 80s electro overall – but Joao's presence also gives the whole thing a lot more depth, and it's clear from their duo moments that the pair really have a lot of warmth in their hearts for each other. Titles include a remake of "Quem E Quem", plus "Luz Negra", "Clima De Paquera", "De Toda Maneira", "Lei Do Amor", "Interstellar", and "Vamos Sair A Francesca".  ~ Dusty Groove

JASON STEIN QUARTET – LUCILLE!

Brilliant modernism from Chicago reedman Jason Stein – a set that draws strong energy from the work of Lennie Tristano, but also instantly grabs us with a bold statement of Stein's own genius as well! The group features Stein on bass clarinet, and Keefe Jackson on contrabass clarinet and tenor – horns that are often presented in counterpoint, tangling around each other beautifully – but always in a way that inspires further flights of sound – ala Jimmy Giuffre on the thinner reeds. There's no piano in the group – just deft drums by Tom Rainey and bass by Josh Abrams – and the intersection of Stein and Jackson is breathtaking throughout! Titles include Tristano-era gems "Marshmallow", "April", and "Wow" – plus versions of "Dexterity" and "Little Rootie Tootie" – and Stein's own "I Know You Were", "Ryder's Uncle Dragon", and "Halls & Rooms".  ~ Dusty Groove

MISHA PANFILOV SOUND COMBO – EN ROUTE

An incredible record from one of the hippest funky talents around – an artist who can always match the rest of the deep funk scene for sharp-edged instrumentation – but also serve up so many other musical elements as well! Misha Panfilov has a way of blending core funky rhythms with lots of sonic surprises – at a level that maybe hasn't been done this well since the sound library generation – especially in the work of artists like Sven Libaek or Alan Hawkshaw! Misha himself plays guitars, organ, synth, bass, and handles lots of effects – and the album also has some might cool vibes, flute, alto, and tenor as well! Yet it's probably the "effects" that make the whole thing come together – weird spacey touches at some points, creating almost an otherworldly funk feel – yet one that never loses its soulful core. Titles include "Magnetism", "Follow The Clouds", "Reflections", "Get Well", "Bufo Bufo", and "Flaming". (Limited to 500 copies.)  ~ Dusty Groove

 

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