Wednesday, February 14, 2018

New York Jazz Workshop® 10th Anniversary Celebrations

Celebrating its 10th anniversary with 16 music programs and jazz camps for young adults and older musicians in New York City this summer

The New York Jazz Workshop® is celebrating its 10th anniversary with 16 music programs and jazz camps for young adults and older musicians in New York City this summer.
 
The program will launch with Marc Mommaas, the co-founder of the school who will be conducting the Summer Intensive in Jazz Improvisation on July 19-22. Musicians will sharpen their toolboxes broadening their musical vocabulary along with drummer Tony Moreno and vibraphonist Mark Sherman. This intensive will cover topics including ear training, rhythm, composition and more.
  
If percussion is a passion, there is a one-day West African/Djembe Intensive with Michael Markus on July 23 and a one-day Bata Intensive with David Ambrosioon July 25. These programs are open to beginner, intermediate and advanced musicians.

For Brazilian music lovers and practitioners, July 23-26 brings the Brazilian Music Intensive with pianist Vitor Goncalves and percussionist Vanderlei Pereira. During this intensive, students will learn about rhythms such as the choro, bossa nova, baiao, samba, maracatu and the xote.

Pianists, mark your calendars for July 30 to Aug. 1 for the Piano and Keyboard Intensive led by the world-class combo of pianists Amina Figarova, Frank Kimbrough and Jacob Sacks. They will cover topics such as reading, ear training, technique, solo piano, duo and sound.

Singers, the beginning of August boasts some incredible programs for vocalists of all levels. Olivia Foschi leads the Beginner's Vocal Intensive from Aug. 2-5. Topics include anatomy overview, breathing exercises, singing the major scale and melodies.

Aug. 6-8 features an Intermediate Vocal Intensive with Jocelyn Medina and guest Richard Boukas. Participants will learn about techniques for basic repertoire and are given vocal exercises based on their needs - styles will range from Jazz to Bossa Nova.
https://newyorkjazzworkshop.com/workshops/august-6-8-vocal-intensive-intermediate-level/

Aug. 9-12 brings forth the Vocal Intensive for Intermediate/Advanced students with vocalist Fay Victor. Students will learn about swing/time feel, breath and functional harmony as well as scatting and free improvisation.

World-renowned drummersDarrell Green, Tim Horner and Tony Morenohead up theAug. 13-15 Drums and Percussion Intensive. These musicians each have their own day to teach their unique concepts and approaches to rhythm, ear training and metric modulations.

Guitarists Kenny Wessel and Vic Juris cover topics such as chord voicing, improvisation and modal chord positions during their Aug. 16-19 four-day Jazz Guitar Intensive.

Trombonist Alan Ferber leads the Composition Intensive on Aug. 20.  Students will listen and analyze classic examples from the jazz repertoire and use the insight gleaned from that to enrich their own compositions.

Ferber will be also teaching the Counterpoint and Arranging Intensives on Aug. 21 and 22. Counterpoint, a basic compositional aspect, is essential for deeper understanding of arranging and composition. The Aug. 22 arranging intensive will focus on big and small band writing, reharmonization, orchestration and writing.

Saxophonist Darius Jones and drummer Vito Lesczak lead the Jazz Improvisation Intensive from Aug. 23-26. The intensive covers many compositional styles plus ideas on melody, harmony and rhythm.

The Guitar Intensive on Aug. 27-29 is taught by Sebastian Noelle and Nate Radley, covering topics such as chord voicing, improvisation and modal chord positions.

To close, the Jazz Composition for Beginners Intensive will be led by Marc Mommaas and special guest trombonist Doug Beavers on Aug. 30-31. The intensive will also answer questions on how to avoid compositional ruts and cover form, melodic considerations and melodic rhythm.

About the New York Jazz Workshop
Located in the heart of Times Square, the New York Jazz Workshop is one of New York's premier educational institutions, providing courses in improvisation, harmony, rhythm, individual instruments and composition. In addition to educational programs, the New York Jazz Workshop offers team-building exercises for corporations looking for a new perspective on creativity and teamwork, resulting in renewed creativity in the workplace. Clients have included companies such as GE, SWISS RE and Thomson Reuters. 


Jazz pianist Ricardo Bacelar crafts a masterful celebration of Latin American music from a Brazilian perspective on “Sebastiana”

Last July, pianist-composer-arranger Ricardo Bacelar jetted from his home in Brazil to Miami, the place he calls “the center of Latin music in the world,” where he gathered an ensemble of Latin American musicians to honor the roots of Brazilian music while incorporating each musician’s unique culture on a jazz-centered album. An ambitious vision that he conceived with an international view with the project’s producer, Cesar Lemos (Ricky Martin, Paulina Rubio), the 15-track “Sebastiana” drops March 30 from Bacelar Productions. Preceding the sprawling set list of hallmark Brazilian reinterpretations and originals written or co-written by Bacelar is the ethereal “Nothing Will Be As It Was,” featuring two Americans - vocalist Maye Osorio and pedal steel guitarist Steve Hinson - on the multi-format crossover radio single portrayed in a striking animated video (http://bit.ly/2EUf7VL).       
              
Bacelar and Lemos had never worked together prior to “Sebastiana.” They authored a pair of tunes for the disc, “Suco Verde” and “Sernambetiba, 1992,” the latter being a swoon-inducer graced by Lemos’ celestial vocalizations on the track named for the street where the two friends first met and shared an apartment 25 years ago. The Brazilian duo’s comprehensive approach for the contemporary jazz and trippy fusion session included inviting musicians from Cuba, Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru and the U.S. to play on the date. The collective employed uniquely Latin American rhythms and instruments on the lushly-layered tracks such as vallenato (a Colombian rhythm performed using a diatonic accordion and vallenato box), sangueo (a Venezuelan rhythm constructed of cumaco and mina drums), bomba (a Puerto Rican genre originating in the West Indies and derived from the west coast of Africa using drums made from barrels), timba (an energizing Cuban rhythm), the Andean charango (a stringed instrument part of the lute family), and the bandoneon, a concertina with roots in Argentina.

“When I recorded the album, I wanted to pay homage to Brazilian music presenting the distinct performances of Latin American musicians, who put elements of their own cultures into the fusion of influences, giving a lot of personality to the work. I wanted to make a Brazilian music record for the international market, inserting other elements to add another point of view and extol the importance of this special repertoire,” said Bacelar. “Jazz is the language of improvisation and communication. The fusion of elements of cultures and influences in a recording turns the music into a transmission vehicle of knowledge.”

Along with the two new Bacelar-Lemos tunes and three stirring solo piano pieces from Bacelar – “River of Emotions,” “Parts of Me” and “The Best Years” – “Sebastiana” revisits songs from Brazilian composers Gilberto Gil, Ivan Lins, Flora Purim, Luiz Gonzaga, Lo Borges, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Milton Nascimento, Ronald Bastos, Tom Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes, Victor Martins and Jose Roberto Bertrami, and were given sparkling arrangements by Bacelar. The record includes vocal drops of the late Jackson do Pandeiro, an influential Brazilian percussionist and singer, adding character and cultural impact to the offering.      

In the 1980s and 90s, Bacelar was a member of the popular Brazilian rock band Hanoi Hanoi before dramatically changing musical directions to release his intimate solo debut, “In Natura,” in 2001. Preoccupied with his work as a lawyer focused on the staunch defense of copyrights and intellectual properties, he didn’t release another album until 2016’s “Concerto Para Moviola,” a concert DVD and CD recorded live with an eight-piece band. For more information, please visit http://ricardobacelar.com.br.
       
“Sebastiana” contains the following songs:

“A Volta da Asa Branca”
“Suco Verde”
“Nothing Will Be As It Was”
“River of Emotions”
“Menina Baiana”
“Somewhere in the Hills”
“Partido Alto”
“Parts of Me”
“Sambadouro”
“Oh Mana Deixa Eu Ir (Caico Cantiga)”
“Sebastiana”
“Depois dos Temporais”
“Vento de Maio”
“Sernambetiba, 1992”
“The Best Years”



Tuesday, February 13, 2018

NEW RELEASES: SHELDON FERGUSON – SOUL SEARCHING; JAZZTRONIK – BB1; DAVID GARFIELD - JAMMING

SHELDON FERGUSON – SOUL SEARCHING

In the six years since he released his debut album while still in high school, Atlanta-based composer and electric guitarist Sheldon Ferguson has done a lot of musical Soul Searching – the perfect name for a set list infused with crackling string intensity, bright pop-jazz melodies, nonstop grooving and cool, sensual R&B. Inspired by gospel, blues and guitar greats George Benson, Ernie Isley and Norman Brown, Ferguson’s journey of self-discovery is a revelation that will get you Souls Searching with the volume turned up! ~ smoothjazz.com


JAZZTRONIK – BB1

The first music we've heard in quite awhile from Jazztronik – and a set that has them sounding even more funk-oriented than before! We've always loved the creations of leader Ryota Nozaki – even his mellower moments – but this time around, he really steps into new territory by working with a larger group that's heavy on horns, and which has some especially strong bass and drums – all to create a vibe that's more 70s funk than you might expect! But there's also some richer, more sophisticated currents too – that strong sense of arrangement that Nozaki has really developed over the years, worked out here in live horn charts that can be extremely beautiful. Some tracks feature soul-styled vocals by singers Eliana and Aisha, and some are instrumental – and tracks include "Dolphin Smile", "Spotlight", "Caprice", "Sanctuary", "Deja Vu", and "Meguru (2017 version)". ~ Dusty Groove

DAVID GARFIELD - JAMMING

The follow up to David Garfield's #1 smash version of “Go Home,” this instrumental version of the Bob Marley classic, “Jamming,” was cut at the legendary Village Studios where many iconic artists’ classic recordings have been made such Fleetwood Mac (Tusk), Steely Dan (Aja), and many others. This track features two long-term members of Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, Mike Campbell on guitar and Steve Ferrone on drums and founding member of The Rippingtons, Brandon Fields on sax. The track was arranged and produced by David Garfield at the helm with piano and electric keyboards. Jamming is the second in a series of single tracks that Garfield is releasing from his upcoming all-star studio project “Jammin’ - Outside The Box," an expansive work that will feature numerous genre superstar collaborators: George Benson, David Sanborn, Smokey Robinson, Oleta Adams, Rick Braun, Marcus Miller, Michael McDonald and Chuck Loeb in his final performances. ~ smoothjazz.com


Bobby Previte Explores Transit in the Second Part of his Terminals Trilogy - All-Star Band Featured on Rhapsody

Highly respected drummer and prolific composer Bobby Previte continues his Terminals trilogy with Rhapsody, an acoustic song cycle on the subject of transit and migration. Subtitled Terminals Part II: In Transit, Previte's newest work is scored for acoustic sextet and features fellow composer-improvisers guitarist Nels Cline, harpist Zeena Parkins, pianist John Medeski, alto saxophonist Fabian Rucker, and vocalist/er hu player Jen Shyu. This latest major work, released on RareNoiseRecords in February 2018, comes on the heels of Previte's powerful November 2016 RareNoise release, Mass, a nine-part work scored for choir, pipe organ and heavy metal trio.   

In 2015, Previte was awarded the Greenfield Prize for Music at the Hermitage Artist Retreat to create a new work. Rhapsody is the result. Rhapsody had its world premiere on April 21, 2017 at New College in Sarasota, Florida. "The Greenfield Foundation not only commissioned the work, but gave me a residency at the Hermitage to write it, 20 paces from the Gulf of Mexico," says the composer. "It was a rapturous place to write, and to be.

Beginning from the point of view of a passenger sitting comfortably in an airplane, Rhapsody twists, turns, and migrates until the passenger arrives in the dead of night at an unfamiliar shore. As Previte proposed in his artist's statement for Rhapsody: "What is the experience of being in transit? Separated from your home but not yet at your destination, you are neither here nor there, confined with strangers in an intimate environment for a predetermined amount of time, uncomfortable, yet somehow free. To travel is to be bound with these strangers by faith-faith in the vessel which carries you, faith in the people who operate it, and ultimately, faith in the strangers waiting at your destination."

"I began thinking about the fact that I come from a family of immigrants. My mother was born in Sicily because my grandmother, pregnant with my mother, was denied entry into the United States and sent back; and how there are people today, trying to escape far worse situations, being denied asylum."

Rhapsody is perhaps Previte's most ambitious work to date in that it marks his debut as a lyricist. "The lyrics are really at the center of this piece. Having composed only instrumental music my entire life, writing words was quite terrifying. There is no hiding behind abstract sounds, no equivocating. The words are there and have an obvious meaning to everyone. They are tangible, and very real. You cannot walk back from them. You have to own them, fully."

Rhapsody is the second in a three-part series exploring the experience of travel. Terminals Part I: Departures, was a set of five concertos written for the visionary percussion group SO Percussion and five master improviser soloists. Terminals Part I: Departures premiered at Merkin Hall in New York City in 2011, and the recording was released on Cantaloupe Music in 2014.
  
Rhapsody is a compelling, thought-provoking work that places vocalist Shyu in the role of narrator and showcases brilliant solos by each member of the sextet. Says Previte, "This ensemble of found objects, of musicians thrown together and forging new relationships in this instrumentation of chance, mirrors the experience of movement, of migration, of whom you may find yourself next to, of venturing into the unknown because you cannot stay where you are."

And while three of the musicians in the ensemble have had a wealth of experience in electric settings - Nels Cline with Wilco, The Ring Nebula Project, The Nels Cline 4, and his longstanding Nels Cline Singers; John Medeski with Hudson, MadSkillet and the longstanding trio Medeski, Martin & Wood; Zeena Parkins with Gangster Band, Phantom Orchard, and Zeena and the Adorables - Previte chose to focus strictly on the acoustic side of their playing. "In a way, it's easier to write electric music when you have geniuses like that in the band," says Previte. "You can just write 'Nels Cline solo, 15 minutes' and you get a brilliant 15 minute electronic piece that you 'wrote.' But each acoustic guitar note dies away in seconds. Then what? As for John Medeski, of course he's a master organist, but he's such a beautiful piano player that I thought it would be cool to just let him play the piano for a change. Ditto for Zeena. I wanted to hear her on acoustic harp, no electronics. She's awesome on acoustic harp." 

Previte had similar accolades for the remaining members of his Rhapsody ensemble: "Fabian Rucker is my favorite young sax player and all around sound guru. He took the music and brought it into the street. And, by the way, Fabian mixed the album, too. And finally, what to say about Jen Shyu? Jen lifted the vocals, and so the entire ship, up to a higher plane. She is mesmerizing. I couldn't even have begun the piece without Jen."

Meanwhile, the ever-restless, ever-creative Previte is already making plans for his Terminals Part III: Arrivals. "It might be for baritone voice and So Percussion on four analog sythesizers and taiko drums. Then again, it might be a 6-LP set where each record is myself solo, performing live on a different instrument, one on which I have limited skills, (i.e., an instrument I am 'visiting'). Then again, it might be neither of these. Or somehow, both of them."

Stay tuned. Until then, join Previte and his intrepid crew on Rhapsody.

TRACKS
1. Casting Off
2. All The World
3. The Lost
4. When I Land
5. The Timekeeper
6. Coming About
7. All Hands
8. Last Stand / Final Approach
9. I Arrive

All music composed, arranged, and conducted by Bobby Previte
Published by RareNoisePublishing (PRS)
Produced by Bobby Previte
Executive Producer for RareNoiseRecords: Giacomo Bruzzo
Recorded April 24, 25, 2017 at Figure 8 Studios, Brooklyn, NY, by Eli Crews
Mixed by Fabian Rucker at Three Horses in a Wood, Claverack, NY
Mastered by Horst Pfaffelmayer at Gold Chamber, Austria
Cover Image: Untitled #188, 2016 © Simon Johan
Graphic Design: Graham Schreiner
Rhapsody was commissioned by the 2015 Greenfield Prize for Music at the Hermitage Artist Retreat


 

The Unknowable Featuring Dave Liebman,Tatsuya Nakatani, Adam Rudolph

The word magic comes up time and again when speaking of The Unknowable. Both Dave Liebman and Adam Rudolph use the term when describing their "beautiful alchemy" that also included Tatsuya Nakatani, all three acclaimed artists working as one for this project. Nakatani may not have been using the word "magic" when he refers to this trio's unique chemistry; but when he speaks of "living life with sound spirit world," I infer that he's pointing to the same "voodoo of spontaneous high level musical communication" Liebman so aptly describes.

That "beautiful alchemy" Rudolph talks of could only have come about in light of previous separate and shared musical experiences between all three. Essentially drummers, Rudolph and Nakatani, and Liebman the all-around reed player, have traveled their respective "spaceways" with just a few overlaps. But, to back it up even further, as Rudolph states, "In one way, your entire life as a human being and as an artist is the prep[aration]. That is, you have to come to a creative situation like this with open ears, an open heart, and free-flowing imagination. The preparation is also years and years of practice, composing and performance so that we can be free to play anything we can imagine to play."

The genesis of this threesome coming together seemed to be a quite natural one. "I invited Dave to play duo with me at the Stone [on New York's Lower East Side] during my residency there in May, 2016," says Rudolph. "He agreed, and it was magic. He has always dug drummers and he knows how to listen and dialogue with the drums." Liebman concurs, stating separately, "I love drummers!" As for Nakatani, Rudolph recalls, "Tatsuya and I had played several trio concerts together with Kaoru Watanabe [who plays in Rudolph's Go: Organic Orchestra] several years ago. We had a wonderful connection and also really complemented each other by our unique approaches. He is a fantastic musician; there is no one who sounds quite like him. As for Dave with Tatsuya," he continues, "they performed together in the summer of 2016, and Dave loved playing with him. So when we talked about recording, Dave had the idea - which I loved - for the three of us to record together."

"A totally improvised program," as Liebman refers to it, might have one wondering how it all came together, and how much conversation preceded each piece. "It was intuition," says Rudolph. "Each of us had ideas about how to approach every composition. That is, we all understood how to improvise form, which not all musicians can do, even those who improvise inside of form. I call what we did spontaneous composition," a term Rudolph prefers rather than calling it "improvisation." According to Liebman, "This was a completely spontaneous happening, with instruments chosen on the spot, with, of course, a nod to variety, with the usual suspects that make music meaningful." Similarly, there was the question of what to call each piece; all of the music, while consistently divergent from track to track, still shared magically abstract qualities. "I came up with the titles as I listened to the mixes," Rudolph remembers. "Everyone liked what I came up with, as the titles were not too literal. In a way, this music doesn't even need titles. It exists on its own terms. What's thrilling for me is that the music sounds prototypical, like itself."

The Unknowable, made up of 13 completely improvised, group-composed pieces and available in both CD and double-LP configurations, provides distinct expressions from track to track, most of the selections ranging from between three and four minutes, the longest, the heliocentric, serene "Cosmogram," clocking in at just under five. How the three of them landed in Orange Music Sound Studio in New Jersey for a day recording in December 2016 can only be (hopefully) understood by brief backward glances of each artist that preceded their "fated" music meeting. In the end, though, we must be content with that "unknowable" element that courses through life and is certainly at the heart of this music.

At home as both a solo performing artist as well as collaborator, the Osaka-born Nakatani has made a name for himself as a world-touring artist. Having been a resident of the U.S. since the mid-1990s, Nakatani has been prolific, having recorded over 80 albums, but has also distinguished himself as an educator and instrument maker. His master classes and workshops at colleges and universities point to his ease with students as he goes from being a performer to one who's desire to share and instruct others becomes obvious. In addition, and not independent of his status as a teacher, Nakatani has invented his own instruments as a means of demonstrating his own developed techniques as a player of experimental music, a music that touches on elements of free-jazz, noise as well as traditional Japanese folk music. Certain of those instruments (some heard on The Unknowable) include conventional percussion given new formations such as gongs, wooden sticks, singing bowls and cymbals, as well as various handcrafted mallets, bows and metal objects. Nakatani is also heard playing the conventional drumset on The Unknowable.
 
While he's been known to collaborate in intimate settings, saxophonist Dave Liebman is perhaps best known for his own work as a bandleader of both small groups as well as big bands. His sound on both soprano and tenor saxophones but also flute (all three present on The Unknowable) has become almost like a trademark of jazz saxophone over the past 50 years. Hiis initial claims to fame came from working with Miles Davis and Elvin Jones but more importantly by leading his own groups with, among many others, John Scofield, Richie Beirach, Billy Hart and Terumasa Hino. An award-winning artist, Liebman has, like Nakatani, also maintained a substantial career as a music educator. A tireless musician who never seems to stop, a recent recording as of this date includes yet another example of Liebman's love of collaborating on an intimate scale, this time with fellow legendary artist and friend, French pianist Martial Solal. The CD, the aptly titled Masters In Bordeaux, finds them visiting the Great American Songbook playing six standards with much tenderness and verve.

Adam Rudolph's various journeys all started with an impassioned dedication to drums, drumming and, especially, percussion. Like Liebman, Rudolph has made a name for himself leading aggregates large and small, presenting his unique brand of improvised conducting as well as forming a recognizable sound on various instruments as an instrumentalist: kongos, djembe, thumb piano, sintir, among many, many others. Add to this arsenal overtone flutes, some nifty Fender Rhodes along with some live electronic processing (all heard on The Unknowable) and you are listening to an artist who has become a master at multiple levels of instrumentation. Referring to just two of the more notable groups Rudolph has formed over the years, his 30-plus-member Go: Organic Orchestra and Moving Pictures octet, each seems to reflect important, different sides to his musical personality, the former a great illustration of his love of conducting and working with a variety of artists and instruments. Indeed, there's deep curiosity with world culture with Go, but also with his first love as a player and improviser within a small group setting, beautifully expressed through Moving Pictures. Rudolph's most noteworthy small-group collaboration was the long-term one he had with the late multi-instrumentalist Yusef Lateef, an artist/mentor whose spirit no doubt permeates the vibe heard on The Unknowable.

Coming from three different generations, the music all three players perform on The Unknowable can likened to "living with sound," as Nakatani states. Nakatani is talking about three "artists of life with sound," another apt description and summation of each brief bio given above. It is a music that, at its best, seems to exist in the natural world, alongside and in our lives as naturally as the air we breathe, the feel of our footsteps as we walk down streets or touch the earth in an open field at under a moon-lit sky. A piece such as "Late Moon" breathes, is sonically porous, mysterious, the wooden flute and percussive punctuations presenting a relaxed, pulseless feel. The music seems to meander but with some organizing principle that can only come from three musicians capable of "deep listening." We are invited in, to join as fellow listeners to some of that "magic."

There are other such openings on The Unknowable, "Skyway Dream" another similarly created piece, this time with Liebman on flute, the percussion now coursing through Liebman's fluid lines like a slow-moving stream. The rare presence of a pulse somehow comforts and is in-synch with a music that seems to be going nowhere in particular, "the going," in essence, the destination, with no sense of urgency.

By way of contrast, there are the more fervid selections, some of them playful, such as the title track, others a bit more frantic, somewhat scattershot, like "Transmutations," a piece that seems to invite listener participation, what with its back and forth ways of opening and closing, this all-percussion number essentially saying anything with hands-reach can be added to the sound already rolling out of your speakers. Technique, proficiency and style are irrelevant. Only honest, direct expression matters. Incidentally, and to keep things intimate beyond the studio, the sound quality produced by all three members (with more than able assistance from engineer/longtime Bill Laswell/Rudolph collaborator James Dellatacoma) is excellent: you feel as if, when closing your eyes, you could be there in the same room with them.

By way of yet another contrast, "Iconographic" is reminiscent of another intimate collaboration put down many years ago: 1973's Ruta and Daitya, an exceptional (and rare) recording. The music, with Keith Jarrett playing electric piano alongside Jack DeJohnette on percussion, seems to offer an historic precedent to certain musings heard on The Unknowable. The contrast within The Unknowable comes in the form of divergent sonics, and similar to "Cosmogram" (where Rudolph is heard playing Fender Rhodes), this time it's Liebman on Fender Rhodes (and playing chords) while the percussion team is busy dancing and prancing. The open-ended fun of "Iconographic" sets the stage for the remaining three selections, which also include forceful tenor work from Liebman and yet more organized percussive scrambling.

The Unknowable fittingly begins and ends with two pieces called "Benediction." They serve as sonic tapestries that welcome and bid farewell. They suggest more open sky, with complementary sounds that, in their respective serenities, allude not just to sky but to the sky beyond the sky, into the cosmos. Like the cosmos, this music has no north, south, east or west, combining as it does what Nakatami refers to as a music "beyond nationality, generation, style, personality, education."

TRACKS
1. Benediction (Opening) 4:14
2. The Simple Truth 3:47
3. Late Moon 3:41
4. The Unknowable 3:25
5. Skyway Dream 4:24
6. Transmutations 4:34
7. The Turning 3:39
8. Present Time 3:25
9. Distant Twilight 2:57
10. Iconographic 2:05
11. Cosmogram 4:44
12. Premonition 4:08
13. Benediction (Closing) 3:48

Recorded July 2016 at Orange Music Sound Studio, New Jersey
Recorded, mixed and mastered by James Dellatacoma
Published by RareNoisePublishing (PRS)
Design by Sylvain Leroux
Artwork by Adam Rudolph
Produced by Adam Rudolph, Dave Liebman, Tatsuya Nakatani
Executive Producer for RareNoiseRecords: Giacomo Bruzzo
Special thanks to Bill Laswell


A Cappella Jazz Sextet ACCENT, an Internet Phenomenon, Record in the Same Zip Code

“These guys are exceptional musicians… a signature sound that is sure to delight audiences for years to come.” - Cedric Dent, TAKE 6

In the world of a cappella singing groups, the international group Accent has carved out its own jazzy niche. Inspired by the wizardly harmonies of TAKE 6 and, before them, The Hi-Lo’s, the six men of Accent, all of them accomplished singer/arrangers in their own countries, decided to take their love of close-harmony jazz singing as far as it could go. Hailing from the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, France and Sweden, the six met and began recording together online in 2011. They have since come together to record and tour, becoming an International vocal supergroup. Their amazing blend and arrangements have been acclaimed by a cappella fans, jazz fans, and fellow musicians. With IN THIS TOGETHER, they have far surpassed the usual a cappella group fare of pop covers with an all-original program that displays their peerless blend and fearless jazz harmonies. But this is no mere display of technical acumen: their impeccable skills are in the service of accessible, memorable melodies and passionate lyrics.

In addition to three songs by members James, Simon and JB, the album includes a brilliant, previously unrecorded song written by TAKE 6’s Mervyn Warren and Mark Kibble, as well as contributions by Michael Jackson-collaborator Siedah Garrett and Denmark-based jazz vocalist/bassist Kristin Korb. It also represents a milestone in the way they work: It’s the first time they have actually recorded together in the same studio, after years of collaborating remotely On YouTube videos and their first album.

LISTEN ONLINE:


Marion Meadows Releases Soul City Featuring Peabo Bryson, Peter White, Norman Brown, Will Downing Maysa + More

"Growing up, I learned that it ain't SOUL if you don't feel it in your bones and get that tingle down your spine," declares saxophonist, composer and producer Marion Meadows.  It is this creed coupled with Meadows' consummate musicianship and quest to connect with his audience that have earned him a place as a mainstay on the Contemporary Jazz charts for several decades.  "I always hope that people will feel inspired by my recordings," shares the strikingly handsome saxophonist, who has been known to moonlight as a brilliant digital designer/photographer and semi-professional cyclist. "My purpose is to keep humanity moving forward," shares Meadows who has collaborated with such luminaries as Stevie Wonder, George Benson and The Temptations among others.  Meadows' earnest desire to offer his music as a force of positivity coalesces on his new and 14th recording as a leader, Soul City. It is a star-studded affair that unites the saxophonist with such luminous talents as vocalists Will Downing, Peabo Bryson and Maysa, guitarists Peter White and Norman Brown, among others. Imagine a city defined by soul, where the rhythms of the city keep all things moving in the right direction. Marion Meadows has created the soundtrack for such a world on Soul City.  Surrounded by an all-star line-up and co-produced by Meadows along with Chris "Big Dog" Davis, and Rahni Song, Marion Meadows takes us on a euphoric journey.  Meadows, whose mantra is "Health, Happiness and Love" says, "When we get into the studio each song is a canvas, on which we all paint and create."

  "I came up listening to Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Duke Ellington but at the same time musicians like Earth Wind & Fire, Chaka Khan, Chicago and Parliament Funkadelic," confesses Meadows who early on cut his teeth playing in Avant-Garde jazz groups alongside heavyweights Rashied Ali and James Blood Ulmer. Hailing from West Virginia and raised in Stamford, CT, Marion Meadows began his musical endeavors at age eight, studying clarinet. At age 15, after hearing iconic saxophone masters like Sidney Bechet, Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges and Stanley Turrentine, Marion Meadows' switch to saxophone was imminent. The stars aligned for Meadows one evening at New York's Grand Central Station.  While waiting for the trian, Meadows took out his sax and started playing. His saxophone was mysteriously overheard reverberating through the Big Apple's oldest railway.  Emmy-winning TV composer Jay Chattaway (Star Trek fame) was headed for his train and was so enchanted by the sound that he introduced himself  and shortly after introduced Meadows to Grammy-winning pianist, producer and label owner Bob James, who helped Meadows to launch his career as a solo artist.

Meadows initially had his sights set on medical school and a career as a veterinarian. Upon high school graduation, he attended the renowned Berklee School of Music in Boston, later transferring to SUNY Purchase School of the Arts.  While still a student, the ambitious saxophonist worked steadily as a sideman. He jokes that he "got a graduate degree playing clubs." He was also fortunate to study with the best including Joe Henderson, Dave Liebman and Eddie Daniels. While at Berklee, Meadows had another serendipitous encounter, this time with drummer producer extraordinaire Norman Connors, who was then playing with legendary saxophonist Pharaoh Sanders. Meadows says, "Norman Connors was really the guy who discovered me as an artist.  The man who gave me my first shot." Connors recorded Marion's song "Invitation" and later extended an invitation to Marion to join his band.  Connors, who collaborated with many of R&B and jazz's greatest singers, afforded Marion the opportunity to work alongside such dynamic voices as Jean Carne, Phyllis Hyman, Glenn Jones, Angela Bofill, and many others. "That was a nice graduate school, so to speak," laughs Meadows. After graduating with honors from 'Connors' University,' the well-rounded saxophonist spent time honing his chops on the avant-garde circuit in the ensemble "Aboriginal Music Society," which featured guitarist James Blood Ulmer, percussionist Juma Sutan and pianist Kasa Allah.

In 1990 Marion Meadows made his recording debut, For Lover's Only, featuring Eliot Lewis, Porter Carroll, Brian Keane and Average White Band alumnus Alan Gorrie. Two years later he joined forces with Will Downing, Bob Baldwin, Angela Bofill and Norman Connors for his sophomore recording Keep It Right There. Further solidifying his rightful place in the pantheon of great saxophonists, Meadows released Forbidden Fruit in 1994. He was joined by special guests Eric Benet, Dave Grusin and Dori Caymmi, among others. Body Rhythm followed in 1996 and Pleasure was released the following year. Around this time Marion Meadows relocated from Connecticut to the Valley of the Sun - Phoenix, AZ. He also settled at a new recording home, Heads Up International, where he released his sixth album, Another Side of Midnight in 1999, calling on a little help from some friends Bob Baldwin, Omar Hakim and Norman Brown, followed by Next To You in 2000 and In Deep in 2002. Player's Club in 2004 spawned two hit singles, "Suede" and "Sweet Grapes," which have gone on to be Marion's signature songs. Dressed To Chill (2006) included memorable renditions of hits by R Kelly and Luther Vandross and joined Meadows with Chuck Loeb and his longtime touring keyboardist and vocalist Will Brock, among others. Secrets and its title track topped the Smooth Jazz charts in 2009.  The anticipated Whisper followed in 2013 showcasing the stunning Top Ten Billboard hit "Black Pearl" and in 2015 Meadows released Soul Traveler featuring another Top ten hit, "Humanity."

Several decades into Marion Meadows' enviable career, a string of radio hits under his belt, scores of sold out international shows, a catalogue of critically heralded albums, and the saxophonist is still inspired."Each recording is a continuation of my journey," concludes Meadows. "I feel as though I have grown as a musician and a storyteller. It is all about my life and the fellowship of sharing." So get ready for the ride of your life and come on into Marion Meadows' Soul City.




Saxophonist Ivo Perelman and Pianist Matthew Shipp Reach Apotheosis of Career Collaboration (For Now) on Oneness

The depth-defying duo, tenor saxophonist Ivo Perelman and pianist Matthew Shipp, attain their zenith with the new release Oneness (March 2 on Leo Records). This three-CD set, recorded over a five-day period, marks the apotheosis of the Perelman-Shipp duo recording career -- at least for now. While they will perform in concert, and may return to the studio at some point, they have no immediate plans for follow-up albums in this most intimate of formats.

"This is it," Perelman stated shortly after completing work on this boxed set. "I can't see us making another duo recording in the near future. The process was so intense. . . for now, there's nothing more to say."

That seems unlikely in the long run, if only because these two musicians have already said so much without repeating themselves. During an artistic alliance that stretches back more than 20 years, Perelman and Shipp -- from Sao Paulo, Brazil and Wilmington, Delaware, and born only a few weeks apart -- have released eight previous discs as a pair; they have also performed together, in various formats with other musicians, on another 30-odd albums. During the last decade especially, their interactions have achieved an uncanny connection that compares with other sparkling examples of jazz telepathy, from Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines to John Coltrane and McCoy Tyner -- a "oneness" represented on the album cover by the Ouroboros, an ancient depiction of a snake eating its own tail.

Found in many cultures, the Ouroboros symbolizes infinity and the cyclical nature of life. But it also symbolizes unity, as in the meeting of two minds -- a rare occurrence that Shipp recognized the first time he and Perelman played together in 1996. "I can remember feeling a connection at that very first session, like this was something that was meant to be," the pianist recently told JAZZIZ Magazine. As further explanation of this phenomenon, Shipp describes "the third mind," a term popularized by William S. Burroughs and poet Brion Gysin to convey the idea "that whenever you have two minds working together, there's a third, superior mind, a gestalt between the two that arises." (Indeed, one suspects that if technicians were to map Perelman's and Shipp's brainwaves during any given performance, the areas of overlap would defy medical science.) "And that really does seem to happen to us a lot of the time."
   
It happens often enough that, for Oneness, they sought to distill this "third mind" into a single CD's worth of recordings, a concept that had discussed for several years, and had even attempted on one or two previous occasions. By digging ever more deeply into this "third mind" during nearly a week devoted to nothing else, they hoped to make Oneness a carefully selected culmination of their duet work up till now by. "The idea was to get just one CD, the best of the very best," Perelman explained. But they outdid themselves. As Perelman explains: "When we listened back to the recordings we said, 'We can't choose.' So, we have to release these three CDs."

The individual performances traverse the usual range of emotions that arise when these two artists explore the shared space between them, but even more so; in Perelman's words, "It's what it was, but at a higher degree." There's the heart-racing thrill of their eddying flights to the stratosphere, led by Perelman's preternatural command of the altissimo register, and the heart-rending sweetness of soft, pure passages, buoyed by liquidy ostinatos at the piano; the disruptive intoxication that results when Shipp uses neo-baroque figures to inspire equally modern/ancient flurries from the saxophone; the unexpected serenity of long lines that traverse several octaves in a wink, and the galvanizing power that erupts when guttural tenor blasts fuse with densely chorded piano pillars.

But relying on any one of these individual performances to the exclusion of others fails to validate the album's concept -- or, for that matter, the Duo's history and presence. And perhaps their wish to declare any one set of performances as the pinnacle of its work is, at best, quixotic. "Maybe one day we'll go and actually get the very best of the very best," Perelman mused. "Other than that, I think we accomplished our mission."

All good things must come to an end, and few phases conclude as convincingly as Oneness, the Perelman-Shipp Duo's valedictory statement on disc -- at least, for now.

Growing up in São Paulo, Ivo Perelman was a classical guitar prodigy who sampled a series of other instruments before finally adopting the tenor saxophone. At the Berklee College of Music, he concentrated on the mainstream masters of the tenor sax, as opposed to such pioneering avant-gardists as Albert Ayler, Peter Brötzmann, and John Coltrane (all of whom would later be cited as precedents for his music). Perelman left Berklee in 1983 and moved to Los Angeles, where he discovered his penchant for post-structure improvisation and, inspired by the freedom afforded by this approach, he started investigating the free-jazz saxophonists who had come before him; eventually, he began moving toward the goal of "complete spontaneity," improvising music with no predetermined theme, structure, or tempo. In the early 90s he moved to the more inviting artistic milieu of New York, where he maintains an apartment while spending about half his time in São Paulo; there he focuses on his separate career as a visual artist, producing a steady stream of abstract drawings and paintings that have attracted admirers worldwide. Many of these works show the same vivacious, kinetic expressionism that animate his music, which he has documented on more than 80 recordings under his own name.

Matthew Shipp, who has released close to 70 albums under his own name -- in addition to those on which he shares co-billing with Perelman (and the several dozen albums where he appears as a sideman) -- has played piano since the age of 6. After a year at University of Delaware and another at Berklee, he moved to New York in 1984, and in 1991 he joined the power free-jazz quartet led by saxophonist David S. Ware, with whom he toured widely and recorded more than 20 albums. In Ware's band, Shipp's early love of rock music -- and his ability to infuse rock's energy into a free-jazz context -- stood him in good stead; also in Ware's band, he established a lasting bond with the titanic bassist William Parker and drummer Whit Dickey, both of whom have worked with him and Perelman on subsequent albums. A furiously eclectic iconoclast, Shipp can careen from compositions rooted in his classical studies, to the Great American Songbook, to hip-hop in a matter of measures, tying these disparate idioms together with an overarching sense of the music's history and its future. His openness to electronics and new idioms led him to become curator for the Thirsty Ear label's "Blue Series" in the early 2000s.


Buddy Rich The Lost Tapes Now Available on CD and Vinyl LP

Lightyear Entertainment and Lobitos Creek Ranch, in association with Scabeba Entertainment and the Buddy Rich Estate, have released the live album The Lost Tales featuring Buddy Rich and his Big Band, recorded in 1985 at the King Street Studios in San Francisco on CD and vinyl LP. The album is part of the Buddy Rich Centennial Celebration. Buddy was born on September 30, 1917.

The album is the soundtrack from the concert film The Lost Tapes, which has been available from Lightyear on DVD since 2003 and 2005, respectively.

Gary Reber, subsequently the founder of Widescreen Review was the Producer of the concert. 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 recording was originally made in SQ Tate Matrix Quad Surround Sound. 

The soundtrack has been re-mastered for CD by Chad Hailey and Jeff Pinn at Broken Arrow Sound, Redwood City, CA. The vinyl LP has been mastered and replicated by PALLAS GmbH/Furnace MFG in Germany on 180 Gram audiophile vinyl.

The Lost Tapes was released on February 2, 2018 through Caroline Distribution, the independent distribution arm of Universal Music Group, on the Lightyear/Lobitos Creek label. The UK street date for The Lost Tapes CD is 16 March and the vinyl is 20 April. 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 will continue to tour all year.

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 was 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.

A PledgeMusic campaign has been started for the release where a fan can not only buy CDs and vinyl, but also special merch items and could even purchase an opportunity to sit in with the band in concert. https://www.pledgemusic.com/projects/buddyrich?utm_medium=email&utm_source=pledgemusic

The Lost Tapes Trailer: https://vimeo.com/230659281

Audio Mexicali Rose from The Lost Tapes:http://bit.ly/buddyrichmexrose 


BILL FRISELL Releases First Solo Album in 18 Years, Music IS

Almost every day, Bill Frisell gets up in the morning, has some coffee, and writes music. At this point, there are piles and piles and piles of single pages of staff paper filled with his graceful script. "I don't know where the melodies come from," says Frisell. "I try not to judge anything and just let them be."

Frisell's mantra, or motto so to speak, is, "Music is Good" -- a statement said to him by his dear friend and great banjo player Danny Barnes. "That is something that I can say is always true. It's so perfect. Everything I need to know is that phrase, 'Music is Good.' I almost called the album that, but then I thought that might be too literal. It's good to leave it open."

Music IS -- to be released March 16 on OKeh/Sony Music Masterworks -- marks the first solo album from the master of his craft since the release of Ghost Town, released on Nonesuch 18 years ago.

"Playing solo is always a challenge," Frisell says. "For me, music has all along been so much about playing with other people. Having a conversation. Call and response. Playing all by myself is a trip. I really have to change the way I think. In preparation for this recording I played for a week at The Stone in New York. Each night I attempted new music that I'd never played before. I was purposely trying to keep myself a little off balance. Uncomfortable. Unsure. I didn't want to fall back on things that I knew were safe. My hope was to continue this process right on into the studio. I didn't want to have things be all planned out beforehand."

He tried to keep that light and spontaneous feeling when recording. The whole process -- choosing the tunes, playing the gig, tracking in the studio -- ended up feeling like an investigation into memory. There was no planned concept, but what materialized almost felt like an overview.

The focus of Music IS is on the telling of musical stories from Frisell's original and inimitable perspective: some of the interpretations being naked, exposed and truly solo, while others are more orchestrated through overdubbed layering and the use of his unparalleled approach to looping.

Frisell has done so much. He's on well over 250 records, with over 40 of those as a leader. The pieces on Music IS range from his earliest jazz records from the mid-'80s to excerpts from recent multi-disciplinary collaborations.

Recorded in August of 2017 at Tucker Martine's Flora Recording and Playback studio in Portland, Oregon and produced by longtime collaborator Lee Townsend, all of the compositions on Music IS were written by Frisell, some of them brand new -- "Change in the Air,"  "Thankful," "What Do You Want," "Miss You" and "Go Happy Lucky" -- others being solo adaptations of now classic original compositions he had previously recorded, such as "Ron Carter," "Pretty Stars," "Monica Jane," and "The Pioneers." "In Line," and "Rambler" are from Frisell's first two ECM albums.

"Lee Townsend and Tucker Martine are two of my longtime, closest, most trusted musical brothers," explains Frisell. "We've been through thick and thin. They clear the way for me to just PLAY. When we got to the studio I brought a big pile of music and we went from there. Let one thing lead to the next. Trust the process. In the moment. We mixed as we went along. The composing, arranging, playing, recording, and mixing all became one thing."

That philosophy is evident through the pieces of music from his long discography that are explored in such an exposed way on Music IS. With radically new versions of "In Line" -- the title track from his debut album in 1982 -- and "Rambler" -- the title track from his sophomore release in 1984 and also recorded in 1994 with legendary drummer Ginger Baker and the late Charlie Haden -- Frisell embraces the unexpected and offers new insights into his exceptional career.

His exploration of "Pretty Stars" -- which opens the album and is bookended with its continuation "Made to Shine," which completes the original title of the track "Pretty Stars Were Made to Shine" -- and "Ron Carter" from 2001's Blues Dream break new ground with considerably different form. "Winslow Homer" (from 2010's Beautiful Dreams, originally commissioned by Wynton Marsalis for JALC), "Change in the Air" (written for the forthcoming movie of the same name by Dianne Dreyer),  "The Pioneers" (a collaboration between Frisell and Jim Keltner), "Monica Jane" (one of the first tracks Paul Bley and Frisell worked on together, shortly after his daughter was born) and "Kentucky Derby" (from his collaboration with Hal Wilner and Tim Robbins for a theatrical reading and recording of Hunter S. Thomson's The Kentucky Derby is Decadent and Depraved) are deep reflections on how far his musical journey has come and how much is left to be said.

Newly crafted originals help to make the reflection more than just that, allowing the past to influence the future: "What Do You Want?" (written with the sentiment of if we all could just listen to each other more, give each other what we need and figure it out, we would realize a lot of the time we want the same things), "Thankful" (a touching tribute to the musicians Frisell has played with, career accomplishments and his wife and daughter), "Think About It" (recorded by placing the guitar amplifier inside an old upright piano owned first by rock legend Keith Moon and then Richard Manuel who ended up recording hits for The Band on it before ending up in possession of Ian McLagan), "Miss You" ("Everyone knows what that feels like, because the person you are missing is dead or in a different place," says Frisell), and "Go Happy Lucky" (a blues that breathes new life with the exceptionally well-recorded music making it feel like Frisell is right next to you, talking with the instrument and bending the strings over the frets in an almost embarrassingly intimate fashion) complete the reflection on a revered career that still continues to surprise and innovate.

"I knew from the beginning that I wanted to record my own compositions," Frisell concludes. "In the past few years I've done so many projects playing other people's music (John Lennon, Guitar in the Space Age, When You Wish Upon a Star, etc.). It's wonderful...and seductive. That's how I learn. I could spend the rest of my life studying Burt Bacharach....or Charlie Parker...or Bach...or? Never ending. But, it was time to get back to my own stuff. What ended up on this album were a variety of pieces. Some brand new and some from way far back. 'In Line' and 'Rambler' are from my very first recordings on ECM. I've been plugging away playing music for more than fifty years now. I'll never figure it out. One of the amazing things about getting older is being able to revisit things that I heard or played long ago. There's always something new to discover, something to uncover. New pathways open up. If I'm really lucky I might even realize that I've learned something along the way. It's far out looking at my own music though this long lens."

Music IS. The end result is Bill Frisell at his most distilled and fully realized.


Thursday, February 08, 2018

Alliage Quintett - Lost In Temptation

On their new album “Lost In Temptation” the Alliage Quintett presents a multifaceted sound panorama for saxophone quartet and piano – with works by composers from Henry Purcell via Johannes Brahms and Camille Saint-Saëns to Kurt Weill.

The make-up of the Alliage Quintett is unique, consisting as it does of four saxophones and a piano. But it is this very combination that enables the four saxophonists and pianist Jang Eun Bae to delight one audience after another with masterpieces from all eras of music in sophisticated arrangements that respect the composer’s intentions. So successfully has the Alliage Quintett transferred its ideals to disc that it has already won the ECHO Klassik award twice. “Lost in Temptation” is the quintet’s fifth album for Sony Classical, presenting works from 300 years of music history. There are rousing instrumental movements from Henry Purcell’s semi-opera “The Fairy Queen”. The Armenian Aram Khachaturian offers music from his hit ballet “Spartacus”. An arrangement of Johannes Brahms’s popular song “Guten Abend, gut’ Nacht” joins a Fantasia on five songs from Kurt Weill’s famous “Threepenny Opera”. And as we have come to expect of the Alliage Quintett with their multifaceted approach, each and every one of the arrangements sounds as if it had been written as an original work for the really rather unusual formation of “Saxophone Quartet + Piano”.

In keeping with their album title “Lost in Temptation”, the artists celebrate the sensual, seductive effects of music. For that matter, many of the works deal with human enticements and temptations such as those of love. Henry Purcell’s semi-opera “The Fairy Queen” of 1692 is based on Shakespeare’s comedy “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, where the love of the royal fairy couple Titania and Oberon is put to the test. Nor do Purcell’s magic spells in sound fail to enchant the listener in the quintet’s suite of his operatic instrumental movements. To capture something of the performance practice of the late 17th century, Alliage Quintett has commissioned a version that features percussion instruments and more. Accordingly, Jang Eun Bae has swapped her Classical grand piano for a Baroque harpsichord.

Further highlights of “Lost in Temptation” include the famous “Bacchanal” from the opera “Samson et Dalila” by Camille Saint-Saëns and the “Seven Scottish Airs” of Englishman Gustav Holst. Other delights are a suite taken from Ottorino Respighi’s “Antiche arie e danze”, for which he arranged works for lute from the 16th and 17th century for orchestra. And love and passion are certainly what makes the world go around in one of the world’s greatest operatic hits – Kurt Weill’s & Bertolt Brecht’s “Threepenny Opera”. The Alliage Quintett approached Stefan Malzew and he agreed to arrange five songs from the opera. But for the founder of the Alliage Quintett, Daniel Gauthier, Malzew has not so much written a classic arrangement as composed a fast and furious “Threepenny Opera Fantasy”.

The Alliage Quintett are touring Australia in February / March, performing with Sabine Meyer.


Wednesday, February 07, 2018

Trumpeter Bill Warfield Pays Tribute to His Late Mentor, Colleague, & Friend Trumpeter Lew Soloff On "For Lew"

Bill Warfield Big Band For LewBill Warfield's career as a trumpeter was launched the moment he heard Lew Soloff's immortal solo on the Blood, Sweat & Tears hit "Spinning Wheel." "It just completely knocked me out," says Warfield, who was 18 at the time and gigging as a pianist, having given up hope of earning a living as a horn player due to dental problems. "I'd never heard anything like it. I decided at that point that I wanted to play the trumpet again."

Eventually, Warfield would get to know, study, and record with Soloff, who died in 2014 at age 71. Warfield's latest album, For Lew, set for release on March 9 by Planet Arts Records, is a tribute to his late mentor, colleague, friend, and inspiration. Compiled from material Warfield recorded with his big band between 1990 and 2014, the album includes ten selections that first appeared on New York City Jazz (1990), The City Never Sleeps (1994), A Faceless Place (2005), and Trumpet Story (2014). Two of the tracks are previously unreleased.

"Lew was such a warm, supportive human being," Warfield says of Soloff. "When he died, it took me a week to get over it. I patterned my playing after him. I wanted to do the gigs he did. I wanted to sound like him. I wanted to be like him. I wanted to be him. I patterned my whole career after that guy. He was a little nerdy guy who would put a horn in front of his mouth and became Superman. He was the guy who got me to take my writing seriously. On the second record I used him on, I used a few other people's charts. Then he pulled me to the side and said, 'Look, your writing is really special. You shouldn't include anybody else's stuff on your records.'" 

Five tunes on For Lew are Warfield originals; six arrangements are his. While drawn from four different sessions, each made up of different players, every track is an all-star affair. Soloff is the soloist on one track, "Salsa En Mi Alma," and is heard playing lead trumpet on that song and two others. In addition to Warfield, who solos on three tracks, other world-class instrumentalists among the disc's collective personnel are trumpeters Randy Brecker and John Eckert; trombonist Matt Havilan; saxophonists Dan Block, Andy Fusco, Bob Hanlon, Rich Perry, Chris Potter, and Walt Weiskopf; pianists Ted Rosenthal and Joel Weiskopf; guitarists Vic Juris and Dave Stryker; bassist Mike Richmond; and drummers Tim Horner and Bob Weller.

Warfield followed Soloff's advice and over the past quarter century has created a canon of music for large ensemble that showcases his distinctive composing and arranging style. He counts Hank Levy, Fred Lipsius, Dick Halligan, Mike Abene (who would produce his first two big band albums), Michel Colombier, Charles Mingus, Thad Jones, Gil Evans, and Bob Brookmeyer, along with Tchaikovsky, Debussy, Webern, Prokofiev, and other classical composers, as influences on his arranging style.

Bill WarfieldBill Warfield was born in Baltimore on March 2, 1952. He took up trumpet in the fourth grade because, he says, "it looked cool. Because it only had three buttons, I thought it would be easier to play." By the time he was 14, he played Saturday mornings with the orchestra and brass ensemble at the Peabody Conservatory Preparatory School and Saturday afternoons with the Maryland Youth Symphony, as well as with a teenage soul band called Nina and the Marcels.

After recovering from a car accident in which he lost his front teeth, he studied for four years at Towson State with Hank Levy, an arranger noted for his charts for Don Ellis and Stan Kenton who was a key early influence.

Warfield moved to New York City in 1980 and began subbing in the Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra, playing and arranging for the Bill Kirchner Nonet, and copying music for Lester Bowie, Joseph Jarman, and others, while earning a master's from the Manhattan School of Music. He toured Europe with Ornette Coleman, having been recommended by Lew Soloff.

Warfield has spent three decades as an inspiring music educator. After stints at the Dalton School in New York, Brooklyn College, Towson State University in Maryland, and the University of North Florida, he joined the faculty at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA, in 1996. He continues to teach and direct the jazz program there three days per week.

The other four days are usually spent in back in Manhattan, where he currently directs four bands: the New York Jazz Repertory Ensemble, the New York Jazz Octet (which includes tenor saxophonist Don Braden and pianist Kenny Werner), the Hell's Kitchen Funk Orchestra, and the Bill Warfield Big Band.

The Bill Warfield Big Band will be performing two sets (7:00pm/8:30pm) at the Zinc Bar in Greenwich Village to celebrate the release of For Lew.

 


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