Thursday, October 24, 2019

New Music Releases: Miles Davis; John Fluker; FIJI


Miles Davis - Early Minor: Rare Miles From The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions

During the year between the dissolution of his ‘60s quintet and the groundbreaking Bitches Brew, Miles Davis recorded a number of transitional sessions creating music of lyrical beauty, culminating in the masterful album In a Silent Way. Three superb pieces—“Splashdown,” “Early Minor” and “The Ghetto Walk”—come to vinyl for general release for the first time ever, as originally heard on The Complete In a Silent Way Sessions, released in 2001.  Side A: 1. “Splashdown” (8:02) 2. “Early Minor” (6:58). Side B: 1. “The Ghetto Walk” (26:47).


John Fluker - All About That Time

A top vocal coach for J Lo and musical director for Gladys Knight who's also backed everyone from Beyonce and Mavis Staples to John Legend and Michael Lington, pianist, vocalist, arranger and composer John Fluker's hypnotic, ambient electronica piano driven new single "All About That Time" has fascinating origins. The track is a rhythm intensive remix (by Grammy winning engineer Elliott Peters) of the new age-oriented title track that Fluker recorded on his album 11:11. The intoxicating, slightly jazzier, funkier result features unique beats created by Fluker, backed by the subtle tight basslines of Isaias Elpes, Lee Ritenour's regular touring bassist. With the release of "All About That Time" Fluker makes an inspiring transition from successful new age artist to breakthrough Smooth Jazz artist. ~ www.smoothjazz.com

FIJI - Love & Roots

(Hawaii) —Polynesian recording artist Fiji dropped his newest album ‘Love & Roots’ on Friday, September 6th with Mensch House Records. Fiji (AKA George Veikoso ) is one of the most dynamic entertainers the Pacific Rim has produced, and continues to be one of the most influential artists in contemporary Island Reggae music.  Fiji has shared the stage with many of Hawaii’s top entertainers along with national recording artists: Gladys Knight, Aaron Neville, Beres Hammond, Damian Jr. Gong Marley, Ziggy Marley, Kymani Marley, Steel Pulse, Maxi Priest and Inner Circle to name a few.  The new album ‘Love & Roots’ is 10 tracks deep of pure FIJI bliss. Newcomers to Fiji’s music will instantly embrace his smooth voice and exotic melting pot of sounds, an epic, musical journey from the center of the Pacific to the rest of the world. Standouts include “Highest High,” “Miss Lovely,” “Best Friend,” and “Tu Veiyawaki” – to name a few. 

 


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Michelle Lordi - Break Up With the Sound


Explores Influences From Rock, Jazz, and Americana Music Through Reimagined Classics and Illuminating Original Songs 

Album Features a Stellar Band with Donny McCaslin, Rudy Royston, Tim Motzer and Matthew Parrish

Fire can be a force of destruction – a lesson that vocalist Michelle Lordi learned all too well when flames consumed her Philadelphia-area home and all of her earthly possessions on the day after Christmas, 2017. But as she’s realized in the sometimes tragic, often inspiring aftermath, fire can also provide an opportunity for renewal. On her fourth album, Break Up With the Sound, Lordi seizes that opportunity, embarking on a new direction with a genre-warping repertoire, a stunning all-star band, and, for the first time, soul-baring original songs.

Lordi’s previous releases have situated her firmly within the jazz vocal tradition, largely drawing on Songbook standards played by gifted soloists. Break Up With the Sound does just as its title implies though – delineates a clean break with the past, reaching into the more daring rock and country influences that she’d long suppressed in her own music.

To join her on this adventurous path she assembled a band of stellar musicians, each of whom has explored similar terrain in their own distinctive ways: saxophonist Donny McCaslin (David Bowie’s Blackstar), drummer Rudy Royston (Bill Frisell, Rudresh Mahanthappa), guitarist and electronic musician Tim Motzer (Ursula Rucker, King Britt) and bassist/producer Matthew Parrish (Freddy Cole, Stefon Harris).

The album’s title is drawn from the lyrics to “Poor Bird,” an answer song that Lordi wrote to Hank Williams’ classic “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”–which she also essays here, in a haunting but steely rendition swathed in Motzer’s keening guitar tone. “Break up with the sound,” she sings to William’s lonesome whippoorwill, who sounds too blue to fly. “The one that brought you down has gone away.” It’s a warning to the songbird to not become too enamored with the beauty of its own sadness, to rise and soar again.

“I’ve spent precious time lost in my own sadness,” Lordi says. “But it’s time to stop clinging to these losses and move on–or I can’t fly.”

Luring the listener in with Parrish’s sultry bass solo, “Loverman” provides a bridge from the singer’s boxed-in past to her reinvigorated present. It’s the type of song she would have performed on countless stages to traditional jazz audiences, but as McCaslin’s probing tenor and Motzer’s wiry guitar enter, it’s clear that she’s completely reimagined her take on the tune. The same applies to Cole Porter’s “True Love,” which she transforms into a loping, sepia-toned dreamscape.

With “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” Lordi reaches into a different songbook, one that might feel alien to her audiences but certainly not to her. “I grew up listening to folk, rock and country. My parents weren’t playing Mingus; they were playing Peter, Paul and Mary and Elvis and Patsy Cline,” she recalls. “I spent my childhood summers in Tidewater, VA and the only music I could pick up on my grandmother’s radio was an AM country station. That’s really the world that I come from.” That fact is evident in the deep connection she forges with Williams’ lonely soul, the restless wanderer of “The Wayward Wind”—a country classic that’s been interpreted by everyone from Patsy Cline to Sam Cooke, or with the resigned optimism of The Rolling Stones’ “No Expectations,” which closes the album on a forward-looking note.

The rest of Break Up With the Sound consists of Lordi’s original songs, perhaps the album’s most daunting venture. Among the countless possessions lost in that devastating fire were lyrics that Lordi had been writing since her teenage years but had never had the courage to share. Rather than being discouraged, she felt emboldened. “I was always afraid to sing my own songs,” she says. “Then when I lost any trace of a possibility of doing it, I realized those little scraps of paper had been holding me back. So, through the hassle and the pain of losing everything, I had to decide whether I would do this or not—and I’m choosing to do this.”

Embracing possibility is at the heart of “Double-crossed,” which Lordi co-wrote with Motzer and which features an exhilarating turn from McCaslin, who has traced his own path from more conventional jazz to the blend of indie rock and electronic music that so enticed an iconoclast like David Bowie. The idyllic “Before” makes peace with change, sparking a rousing solo by Motzer. The aforementioned “Poor Bird” was penned with Parrish, a longtime collaborator who Lordi says is crucial to her music. “He helps me find the center of every song,” she says of the bassist, who also produced the session. “He’s a dream collaborator and bassist for a vocalist.”

Royston’s whisper-soft, evocative rhythms provided the key to “Red House Blues,” a wistful lullaby about a home that may only exist in the imagination. “It’s an odd time blues and nobody was getting it,” she recalls. “Then I looked at Rudy and said ‘it’s a lullaby and that extra beat is the squeak of a chair as you lean back while you’re rocking a…‘ and before I could say ‘baby’ he started playing and it was exactly right. He has this amazing ability to set a space with his playing that you can see and feel.”

There are indelible images and landscapes evoked throughout the album, conjured not only by an expert band but by Lordi, a beautiful and engaging voice with an intuitive ability to cut the core of a lyric, to tell an unadorned but deeply emotional story. She carries that gift into daring new territory on Break Up With the Sound, preserving the most important elements from the ashes of her past.


Jazz vocalists Deborah Silver and Freddy Cole charm on a tribute to a King


Billboard chart-topping jazz singer Deborah Silver and four-time Grammy nominated crooner-pianist Freddy Cole have been friends for two decades yet they had never sung a duet before they entered a Hollywood recording studio to record a loving tribute to commemorate Nat King Cole’s centennial birth year. Tapping Grammy winners Steve Tyrell and Alan Broadbent to respectively produce (with Jon Allen) and arrange the track, Silver and Freddy Cole’s enchanting “Orange Colored Sky” dropped Monday as a single.

Silver wanted to honor Freddy Cole’s late brother saying, “I think Nat King Cole was a huge influence on all music. His velvety voice and debonair delivery are iconic. Also, recognizing what an admirable role he played in the civil rights movement, he always showed grace and dignity. Nat King Cole was obviously a very special man and so is his brother, Freddy.”

Equipped with a fresh Broadbent arrangement of the tune Nat King Cole recorded at Capitol Studios in 1950, Silver and Freddy Cole recorded at the famed Sunset Sound Studios. As seen in this behind-the-scenes video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYvRJMJh69I), the chemistry spawned from their endearing friendship and sweet affection seeped onto the single.

“Our recording happened quickly. Singing the song together and being in the same room right next to each other made it really special. We just clicked. We were able to respond to each other on the spot. It was like having a conversation...so much fun and truly magical. I’ve always thought Freddy Cole had the coolest voice and is the sweetest man. He has a style like no other. We have been friends for over 20 years and thought it was about time to do a duet together. It is nice when you work with people you are comfortable with. It just seemed so easy,” said Silver, who will perform with Freddy Cole at Blues Alley in Washington, DC on December 12-15 and at Birdland in New York City on December 23-28.

“It (‘Orange Colored Sky’) was a great tune and we just thought it was appropriate to use on this occasion,” said Freddy Cole who turned 88 last week. “She’s (Deborah) a fine singer. She’s a good entertainer and she knows how to pick her material. Working with professional people, they know what they’re doing. Steve (Tyrell) brought his expertise to the table. It’s good to have another voice on the project that’s different from what yours is.”

Silver’s 2016 “The Gold Standards,” also produced by Tyrell and Allen and arranged by Broadbent, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Traditional Jazz Albums and Heatseekers Albums chart and No. 2 on Billboard’s Jazz Albums chart. It went Top 10 on Billboard’s Independent Albums chart and hit Billboard’s Top 200. Silver is putting the finishing touches on a jazz-country hybrid collection of selections from the Great American Songbook that she recorded with Asleep at the Wheel that is slated to drop in the first quarter of 2020. The prolific singer hints at issuing a second album next year - a full album of duets with Freddy Cole.     



New Music Releases: Kizzy Crawford, Binker Golding, Azymuth

Kizzy Crawford - Real Love

The impact of Kizzy Crawford's stylish pop infused soul music continues unabated. This prodigiously talented young artists' eclectic approach has won her fans of all ages and tastes. Her previous Freestyle Records singles have garnered support across BBC Radio 2, Jazz FM, Mi-Soul Radio, 6Music and 'BBC Introducing'. Her triumphant gigs this summer at The Cheltenham Jazz Festival 2019, and The Great Escape have showcased her formidable talent live to fantastically enthusiastic reception where ever she performs. Ahead of the release of her debut full length album 'The Way I Dream' on Friday October 25th sees Kizzy delves further into her breezy, soulful pop influences with the release of Real Love - a heartfelt story of young love gone awry. It has often been remarked upon that Kizzy has the prerequisite talent, style and credibility to follow a similar trajectory of Corrine Bailey Rae, Lianne La Havas and Laura Mvula, three strong, highly individual female artists who struck out and forged their own paths into the worlds musical consciousness, and Kizzy Crawford is without doubt cut from the same cloth


Binker Golding - Abstractions Of Reality Past And Incredible Feathers


A great solo set from tenorist Binker Golding – an artist we usually hear on the Gearbox label as part of the Binker & Moses combo, but who maybe sounds even bolder and stronger here in the lead on his own! The set's a quartet date, with a relatively straight group – but the sound is wonderful – overflowing with new ideas, and this sense of voice from the leader that gets fantastic support from Joe Armon-Jones on piano, Daniel Casimir on bass, and Sam Jones on drums! Nobody's pushing too hard, or trying any tricks – yet there's a freshness and individual spirit to the record right from the very first note – unusual rhythms from the trio, and more confidence in Golding's sound than we've ever heard before. Titles include "Skinned Alive Tasting Blood", "Fluorescent Black", "You That Place That Time", "And I Like Your Feathers", and "Exquisite She Green". ~ Dusty Groove


Azymuth - Jazz Carnival (Space Jazz Mix - Global Communication Remix)


Far Out Recordings presents a series of limited edition vinyl 12”s highlighting its contribution to underground dance music. Including reissues of sought-after floor fillers, previously unreleased club tools and brand-new productions from some key players in Far Out history, the series begins with Global Communication’s ‘Space Jazz’ remix of Azymuth’s ‘Jazz Carnival’. One of the label’s most requested reissues, it’s a typically timeless effort from the duo comprising Mark Pritchard and Tom Middleton and has stayed relevant within the house/techno canon for over twenty years. The A side presents the original LP version of Azymuth’s 1996 redux of their all-time classic, instrumental disco hit ‘Jazz Carnival’, which originally appeared on Azymuth’s first full-length venture on Far Out, Carnival (1996). Presented in a special 25th-anniversary house bag, the full-length 12-minute version of this all-time classic has been re-mastered from the original DAT and pressed to heavyweight vinyl ahead of it's 8th November physical release date.

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Jose Antonio Rodriguez: Adios Muchachos


"AdiĂ³s Muchachos" is the ninth studio album by dazzling Spanish guitarist/composer JosĂ© Antonio RodrĂ­guez. Largely a solo project that arouses intimacy from the first notes of Athena up to the closing song AdiĂ³s Muchachos. The most personal music production in RodrĂ­guez's career, the work is composed from the point of view of the flamenco guitar but integrates a musical freedom while maintaining the inspiration of flamenco's essence. Produced by RodrĂ­guez, the guitarist collaborates with Domi Serralbo and Jordi Cristau. And the album features the legendary Victor Monge "Serranito" on the song "El Regalo".

One of Spain's leading flamenco guitarist-composers, award-winning Jose Antonio Rodriguez has a dazzling and highly versatile career. He has performed and collaborated with Paco de Lucia, Alejandro Sanz, Chick Corea, Al Di Meola, Astor Piazzola, Joan Baez, George Benson, Arturo Sandoval, John McLaughlin, Rita Moreno, Herman Rarebell (Scorpions), Don Doken, Bobby Kimball (TOTO), and John Parr among others.

In his 20s, Jose Antonio became the youngest flamenco guitar professor at the Conservatory of Music in Cordoba, and his impressive skills got him to compose music for orchestra, ballet, TV and films. During the 90's, Rodriguez was featured in Carlos Saura's film "Flamenco", and recorded guitar on countless multi-awarded international hits including "Macarena" by Los Del Rio.  In 2003, he recorded guitar on Alejandro Sanz' mega hit "No Es Lo Mismo" and in 2004, he toured as a special guest for the international superstar.

Jose Antonio Rodriguez has released 9 albums: "Calahorra" (1988), "CallejĂ³n de las Flores" (1989), "Manhattan de la Frontera" (1998), "La Leyenda" (2004), "Cordoba… en el Tiempo" (2006), "Anartista" (2012), and "Perfect Strangers" (2015).

In 2018, he moved to Los Angeles and signed with US-based independent label Moon Moosic Records to release "El Guitarrista Azul" (2018), a magnificent collection of beautiful pieces composed by Rodriguez for guitar and orchestra and inspired by Picasso's blue period.

His most recent album is "Adios Muchachos" (2019) released on the same independent label.

Acclaimed for his powerful and evocative renditions of contemporary flamenco, La Sonanta published the remarkable guitarist-composer prolific work in a master series of books and DVDs in order to preserve flamenco music.

Naughty Professor Releases “3 Wise Men” - A Tantalizing Taste of Their Upcoming EP


Iconoclastic New Orleans based jazz-funk sextet, Naughty Professor, announced the release of their single “3 Wise Men” on Tuesday, September 24th. A preview to their upcoming EP Everyday Shredder due out November 8th, “3 Wise Men” brings Naughty Professor back to its 6-piece instrumental roots, highlighting the full-circle maturation the band has experienced over the last few years. 

Since the release of their first full length collaborative effort, Identity, Naughty Professor has naturally progressed into many different musical directions, both in the studio and on stage, showcasing their raw ability to perform in a variety of roles. Within days of its release in June 2017, Identity shot up the iTunes Jazz charts to #6. The album’s first single, ““Stray,” featuring David Shaw of The Revivalists, has received over 1 Million streams on Spotify.  The album saw further integration of musical talents like Eric “Benny” Bloom (Lettuce), Ivan Neville (Dumpstaphunk), and Mike Dillon.

The band has since served as the touring band for diverse acts such as legendary emcee Chali 2na (Jurassic 5) and New Orleans bounce queen Big Freedia, lent their horn section to prominent acts including GRiZ, The Revivalists, TAUK, and Tank and the Bangas, and have collaborated on stage with talented individuals like Marcus King, Shaun Martin (Snarky Puppy), and Paul Meany (MUTEMATH). The whirlwind two-year stretch has landed them on prominent music festivals such as Jam Cruise, Summer Camp, and most recently the Canadian jazz fest circuit, capstoning their summer touring endeavors.

Now Naughty Professor brings these new-found influences and lessons into their latest EP, 4 years removed from their last full instrumental release. The difference both as musicians and songwriters is noticeable, and the band feels their best foot is forward with this EP, which developed as a totally organic creation out of guitar player Bill Daniel’s Wild Child Studios in New Orleans. The EP serves as a reminder to core fans of Naughty Professor’s innate abilities as a forward thinking funk powerhouse, but leaves the door open for continued development and expansion into new musical spaces. The band will showcase these tunes and more over the next few months, with details on China, Europe, and local New Orleans release show dates coming very soon...


Monday, October 21, 2019

Late-Era Nina Simone Album, 'Fodder On My Wings,' Set for Re-Release


Recorded in 1982, not long after she moved to Paris, Fodder On My Wings was one of Nina Simone's favorite albums yet has remained one of her most obscure. Originally recorded for a small French label and only sporadically available since its initial release, Fodder On My Wings will be reissued in a variety of formats including CD and LP, as well as widely available digitally for the first time, in both standard and hi-res audio, on November 22 via Verve/UMe. The original album will be expanded with three bonus tracks from the recording sessions from a rare French reissue released in 1988. The effervescent opening track "I Sing Just To Know That I'm Alive," a song that Simone often performed live in her later years, is available now to stream and as an instant grat download with digital preorder.  

A lesser-known but important part of Simone's musical history, Fodder On My Wings contains deeply personal songs, including the aforementioned, "I Sing Just To Know That I'm Alive" and "I Was Just A Stupid Dog To Them," as well a searing lyrical improvisation about the death of her father on "Alone Again (Naturally)." At the time she recorded the album, Simone was living in France and extremely lonely; her mental illness was worsening and her family life was fractured. It's out of this despair that one of the many album standouts, the near title track "Fodder In Her Wings," was birthed. As Pitchfork wrote in their list of 33 of Simone's most iconic songs, the composition "captured with startling intimacy the pain of this period, and she returned to it frequently through the next decade, cutting another studio version three years later (the synth-heavy take on Nina's Back!) and including it on several live albums, including an awe-inspiring performance on 1987's Let It Be Me," continuing, "Simone's vocal makes a song of weariness and defeat carry an air of defiance, a wise word from someone who survived to tell the tale."

Over the years, the album has been reevaluated and has received its due as a significant work in Simone's prolific catalog. In a 2005 review of the album, Jazz Times hailed the record and especially her emotional performance on "Alone Again (Naturally)," writing: "At the core of the album is a rare, powerful example of Simone with all masks stripped away: Her personal pain explodes to the surface as she reworks Gilbert O'Sullivan's "Alone Again (Naturally)" into a diatribe about her dying father that bravely progresses from venomously embittered to cautiously conciliatory."

Recorded at a time when Simone was feeling rejuvenated by her surroundings and by the African musicians she met in her newly adopted France, Fodder On My Wings is an essential Simone album that is making a long-overdue reappearance and can now be heard however you prefer to listen to music.

FODDER ON MY WINGS TRACK LISTINGS
VINYL
SIDE A
1. I Sing Just To Know That I'm Alive
2. Fodder In Her Wings
3. Vous Ăªtes seuls, mais je dĂ©sire Ăªtre avec vous
4. Il y a un baume Ă  Gilhead
5. Liberian Calypso
6. Alone Again (Naturally)

SIDE B
1. I Was Just A Stupid Dog To Them
2. Color Is A Beautiful Thing
3. Le peuple en Suisse
4. Heaven Belongs To You
5. Thandewye
6. Stop
7. They Took My Hand

CD/DIGITAL
1. I Sing Just To Know That I'm Alive
2. Fodder In Her Wings
3. Vous Ăªtes seuls, mais je dĂ©sire Ăªtre avec vous
4 Il y a un baume Ă  Gilhead
5. Liberian Calypso
6. Alone Again (Naturally)
7. I Was Just A Stupid Dog To Them
8. Color Is A Beautiful Thing
9. Le Peuple en Suisse
10. Heaven Belongs To You
11. Thandewye
12. Stop
13. They Took My Hand


Maria Mendes: Close To Me Featuring Metropole Orkest & John Beasley


Music is the heart and soul of jazz singer Maria Mendes, who studied in New York, Brussels, Rotterdam, and Porto, and whose talents have been praised by musical legends such as Quincy Jones and Hermeto Pascoal. With her new album, she explores Fado: the music from her native Portugal and a completely different genre for the vocalist. The results of this unique adaptation are surprising and refreshing and thoroughly engaging on her upcoming release, Close to Me (available October 25 on Justin Time Records).

"A symphonic Jazz approach to Fado," is how the singer-songwriter describes the music on her new album. "It is not Fado," she immediately emphasizes. "I only used the music and poetry from this genre, but made a completely personal interpretation of it, with new arrangements." In addition, she wrote her own songs, all in the spirit of the genre of her motherland. Although Mendes has been living in the Netherlands for several years, her connection to Portugal remains strong: it is where Fado is anchored, in the soul of the country.

Her love for the genre began at an early age, when as a child she heard the melancholic, dramatic sounds every day on the bus that took her home from school. "The first time I was really touched by it was when I was 18, when I heard Mariza sing “Barco Negro," says Mendes. It is one of the most loved Fado songs and known especially in the voice of AmĂ¡lia Rodrigues, the greatest Fado queen. "Fado is in our identity," Mendes says. "It is our way to evoke ‘saudade’: longing for the past and hoping it becomes present once again. But it is also universal, we all have those feelings in life."

The idea for Close To Me gained shape at a festival in the Netherlands: the Dag van de Rotterdamse Jazz. There, in the context of a musical assignment commissioned to her by the festival, Mendes combined the harmonies and melodies of two folk songs: the Portuguese “Barco Negro” and the Dutch “Ketelbinkie”. The reactions from the press and the public were so enthusiastic that the singer decided to investigate whether she could also master other Fado songs through jazz arrangements. She started working on the repertoire of the Portuguese greats such as Carlos Paredes and AmĂ¡lia Rodrigues and, inspired by their work, also wrote her own songs in which she explores her love for Jazz along with her affection for Portugal. Moreover, one of her musical gurus, the Brazilian legend Hermeto Pascoal, wrote a Fado especially for her.

Mendes convened a top-notch band for this outing. Backing her every step of the way is her group of top Dutch jazz musicians: pianist Karel Boehlee, acoustic bassist Jasper Somsen, and drummer/percussionist Jasper van Hulten. In addition, she collaborated with the famous multi-GRAMMY® Award-winning Metropole Orkest – (the world’s leading jazz symphonic orchestra) – in a chamber line up of thirty musicians, led by conductor, GRAMMY® Award-nominated Jazz pianist, and composer John Beasley, who not only produced the album but also played keyboard and wrote the orchestrations.

With her new project, Mendes hopes to attract a wider audience. "This album is a gift for the avid listener. For people who have an eclectic taste,” she says. “I don't know what the Fado audience will think of it, but I hope they'll listen and appreciate the respectful and refreshing approach I have given to these beautiful songs.”

Close To Me, Mendes’ third album will be released internationally on Justin Time Records. Her first release was the 2012 debut Along The Road (Dot Time Records), and in 2015 she released the successor, Innocentia (Sony Music Portugal). In recent years, she has completed several successful tours with performances all over the world, including the prestigious concert halls Concertgebouw (Amsterdam) and Blue Note Jazz Club (New York) as well as the North Sea and Montreux Jazz Festivals.

 


Sunday, October 20, 2019

New Music Releases: Dave Stryker; Neue Grafik; Fredrik Ljungkvist


Dave Stryker - Eight Track III

Guitarist Dave Stryker has a great lineup here – a quartet with Stefon Harris on vibes, Jared Gold on Hammond, and McClenty Hunter on drums – all musicians we really love as leaders on their own, and who bring plenty to this session with Stryker! The mix of guitar, organ, and vibes is great – occasionally augmented by percussion from Mayra Casals, which opens up the groove even more – as Dave and the group work their way through a host of 70s soul and funk classics, but in ways that are a lot more jazz overall, and never slavishly retro to their roots – unlike other records of this nature. Titles include "Pretzel Logic", "Too High", "Everybody Loves The Sunshine", "After The Dance", "Joy Inside My Tears", "Move On Up", and "Papa Was A Rolling Stone".  ~ Dusty Groove

Neue Grafik - Foulden Road

A great little record that's jazz at the core, but a lot hipper too – a great statement from London keyboardist Neue Grafik, issued on the label of that city's hip Total Refreshment Centre club! Grafik plays plenty of great solos on piano, Fender Rhodes, and other keyboards – but there's almost equal focus on the rhythms and cosmic energy of the tunes – a mode that seems to almost have these London musicians bringing back the qualities to jazz that some of that city's broken beat producers were lifting back at the start of the century! That's not to say that the music is broken beat at all – just that it bristles with a cosmic vibe that's totally great – driven strongly by a core quartet with Dougal Taylor on drums, Matt Gedrych on bass, and Emma Jean Thackray on trumpet – with guest work from Nubya Garcia on tenor, Tanguy Jouanjan on trumpet, Esinam Dogbatse on flute, and both Allysha Joy and Brother Portrait on vocals. Titles include "Hotel Laplace", "Something Is Missing", "Voodoo Rain", "Dalston Junction", "Foulden Road", and "Dedicated To Marie Paule".  ~ Dusty Groove

Fredrik Ljungkvist - Atlantis

Very deft reed work from Fredrik Ljungvkist – heard here mostly in a trio, with a style that has him turning all these sharp corners along with the rhythms! Fredrik plays saxes and clarinet, always with a style that's deeply soulful and never too coldly modern – and which seems to come from tenor mostly, set up alongside the bass of Mattias Welin and drums of Jon Falt – both players who seem to absorb the inherent rhythm in the reeds of Ljungkvist, then amplify it back, and give the leader a strong direction forward! Most tracks are trio numbers – but the set features three guest appearances, each on a track – Max Agnas on piano, Sofia Jernberg on voice, and Goran Strandberg on piano. Titles include "Very Early", "Atlantis", "So Do So Do Re", "Rue Oberkampf", "Monk's Dream", and "Flykt".  ~ Dusty Groove


Adam Rudolph and Go: Organic Orchestra join forces with Brooklyn Raga Massive for new album


What would a "Future Orchestra" look - and more importantly, sound - like? Master percussionist, composer and bandleader Adam Rudolph has created an illuminating and original answer to that question with his innovative Go: Organic Orchestra. On the remarkable new album Ragmala - A Garland of Ragas, the Orchestra joins forces with the boundary pushing Indian classical musicians of Brooklyn Raga Massive, showcasing Rudolph's game-changing vision. 

The 40-piece ensemble embraces diverse cultures, genders, traditions, generations and voices to create a breathtaking album that invents a communal way forward while reverberating with echoes of the recent and ancient past. Drawing parallels with another groundbreaking and singular epic, Ragmala has already been referred to as a "Bitches Brew for the 21st century" by Ahmet Ali Arslan of AĂ§Å¾k Radyo Istanbul.

"This album feels like the culmination of everything I've been reaching for in my creative pursuits," says Rudolph, no small claim from someone who's been a pioneering voice in jazz and world music for more than 40 years. "With this music I can hear the humanity of all these different musicians shine through, and  their voices bring forth something that's never existed before."

Continually evolving over the past two decades, Go: Organic is an ensemble boundless in myriad senses; in its range of influences, its adaptability, its scale, its potentiality and most importantly its imagination. Though Rudolph's inventive approach to composing and conducting is challenging, it also opens the band up to infinite variation. That adaptability is dazzlingly illustrated by the contributions of Brooklyn Raga Massive and the way that two already awe-inspiring groups merge into a boundary-blurring sonic experience.

Brooklyn Raga Massive (BRM) with their open, inclusive spirit have been making waves in the music world by bringing Indian Classical music to new territory, collaborating with minimalist composers, Afro-Cuban maestros and jazz legends. Violinist Trina Basu, a longtime member of both Go: Organic and BRM states, "In the history of Indian Classical music collaborations, we have never heard anything recorded like Ragmala.  We feel this is a new high-water mark for all of us."

While the music of Ragmala (due out October 18, 2019 via Meta Records) draws inspiration from a wealth of traditions - the globe-spanning rhythmic influences that converge in Rudolph's music as well as the Indian classical music explored by the members of Brooklyn Raga Massive (BRM) - the resulting sound is something entirely new. The 40-piece orchestra speaks in a hybrid tongue that reflects the immigrant experience, with diverse cultures congregating and enriching one another in profound and surprising ways.

That trove of voices is channeled into a transcendent, harmonious sound through the groundbreaking improvisational conducting approach invented by Rudolph, which allows each member's distinctive identity to shine through while weaving together into a single vivid tapestry. On Ragmala, the cumulative image is stunningly inclusive, comprising men and women, a range of ages from teenagers to octogenarians, and a multi-cultural array of ethnicities that can be traced, directly or through heritage, to such far-flung locales as Japan, Dominican Republic, Korea, Morocco, China, India, Argentina, Canada, West Africa, Brazil, Iran, Jamaica, Cuba, Mexico, and Western and Eastern Europe.

Bennie Maupin, the legendary reedist known for his work on Miles Davis' Bitches Brew and in Herbie Hancock's ensembles, coined the term "future orchestra" to describe the Go: Organic Orchestra, of which he was an early member. Rudolph embraced the sobriquet for many reasons, he says, not least of which was "the idea to create a musical environment for individualism and spirit, for the voice of the musicians and a real essential feeling to come forth in a large, communal way. With our ever-widening sense of experience, of who we are and who we interact with as humans and as artists, I found myself asking: how do we create something new together?"

Rudolph has assembled and led versions of the orchestra around the globe, but the musicians on Ragmala represent some of his closest and most long-standing musical relationships. That longevity is the result of a deep commitment to the music and Rudolph's unique methodology, leading to a keen sense of exploration and discovery. "Everyone here is wholly committed to creating something together," Rudolph says. "They're here because of this sense of musical community that everybody feels. They all share the same excellence, rootedness, virtuosity and openness."

The members of the adventurous BRM collective are deeply steeped in the traditions of Indian classical music. They refuse, however, to be restricted by it; the idea behind the collective, birthed in 2012 in a Prospect Heights bar, is to open the often rigid and hierarchical culture of the music to experimentation and cross-cultural collaboration. Ragmala marks the collective's most ambitious effort to date in the musical movement that the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and New Yorker have recognized as a "Raga Renaissance."

According to BRM guitarist David Ellenbogen, who co-produced Ragmala, the possibilities offered by Rudolph's music scratched the very itch that led many of them into BRM's more exploratory fold to begin with. "I always had a theory that Indian classical, jazz, West African music and so on could have a synergistic relationship," Ellenbogen says. "But after spending decades looking through record libraries, I found very few recordings lived up to the potential of these great traditions. I've spoken to other musicians on this album and they said the same thing when they heard these tracks: This is the music we've been searching for."

Any simplistic notion of a "cross-cultural" hybrid, of some Indian-inflected jazz music, is instantly dispelled from the opening moments ofRagmala. "Mousa Azure" is built around the exultant voice of Gnawa master Hassan Hakmoun, whose collaboration with Rudolph began 30 years ago. Bringing down the spirits of Afro-Moroccan trance, Hakmoun sings a traditional Gnawa song over a surging rhythmic bed, atop which Rudolph cues in stabbing strings and soaring flutes as vocalist Samarth Nagarkar soulfully responds. The mood then switches on "Rotations," a piece previously recorded by Rudolph's smaller band Moving Pictures on its 2017 release Glare of the Tiger. Here that irresistible groove bursts forth, albeit with overlapping rhythms that intensify the whorl of sensation.

Each piece on this stellar recording transmits its own feeling, occupies its own temporal and emotional space. There's the spare, austere yearning of "Lamentations;" the sly wisdom of "Turiya;" the rapturous funk of "Africa 21;" the altered-consciousness levitation of "Sunset Lake." And so on for all of the album's 20 pieces, each with its distinctive range of emotion, so vividly communicated to the listener.

Combining cultural traditions at an indivisible genetic level is something that BRM co-founder and violinist Arun Ramamurthy says comes naturally to the collective's members. "A lot of us are Indian-Americans and have deeply studied Indian classical music, but we all have other musical influences inside of us. BRM's mission has always been to bridge cultures, to bring all of these musical traditions together and find common ground so we can all play as one community - because it's all one thing. This record is exactly that, and I believe that it really brings out the individual sounds and different backgrounds that each of the artists are coming from, and they're all melding together in this beautiful union. It was a match made in heaven."

Over the past four decades, visionary composer, improviser and percussionist Adam Rudolph has been hailed as "a pioneer in world music" by the New York Times and "a master percussionist" by DownBeat magazine. He has released more than 30 recordings under his own name featuring his groundbreaking compositions and tradition-bridging percussion work. Rudolph composes for his ensembles Moving Pictures, Hu Vibrational, and Go: Organic Orchestra, a 30-piece group for which he has developed an original music notation and conducting system, teaching and conducting hundreds of musicians worldwide in his concept. Rudolph has performed with Don Cherry, Sam Rivers, Pharaoh Sanders, Muhal Richard Abrams, Shankar, Wadada Leo Smith, Philip Glass, Jon Hassel, Omar Sosa and Fred Anderson. He toured and recorded extensively for 25-years with the legendary Yusef Lateef.  Rudolph is also known as one the early innovators of what is now called "World Music." In 1978 he co-founded Mandingo Griot Society, one of the first groups to combine African and American music, and in 1988 he recorded the first fusion of American and Moroccan Gnawa music with Sintir player Hassan Hakmoun.

Go: Organic Orchestra is a 21st century vision of a "future orchestra".  Artistic director Adam Rudolph's prototypical approach to composing and improvisational conducting embraces music forms and cosmologies from around the world.  Using a non-linear score with his unique approach to rhythm as the seed material, Rudolph improvisationally conducts the musicians in concert. This creates spontaneous orchestrations which serve as both context and inspiration for the musicians' improvisational dialogue. Over the past two decades Rudolph has taught and conducted hundreds of musicians in the Go: Organic Orchestra concept throughout North America and Europe. Over the years he has performed with Go: Organic Orchestra ensembles in New York, Los Angeles and Austin, Naples, Palermo and Istanbul. Click here to view a list of performance residencies.
Brooklyn Raga Massive

Praised by the Wall Street Journal for "expanding the notion of what raga-the immersive, epic form of Indian music-can mean" and dubbed the "leaders of the raga renaissance" by the New Yorker, the fun-loving members of the Brooklyn Raga Massive collective have made huge waves for "preserving the past while blurring genres in an inventive spirit" (New York Times). Brooklyn Raga Massive (BRM) is an artist collective dedicated to creating cross-cultural understanding through the lens of Indian classical and Raga inspired music. It is comprised of forward thinking musicians rooted in both traditional Indian and South Asian classical music, as well as cross-cultural Raga inspired music. The culturally inclusive nature of BRM has not only built a strong community, but has become an incubator of new music collaborations with sounds indigenous to Brooklyn.



Saturday, October 19, 2019

New Music Releases: Lili Añel – Better Days; Funky Destination - Come Back to Me; Funky Destination - The Inside Man (Soopasoul Remix 7" Versions)


Lili Añel – Better Days

Lili Añel (pronounced Ahn-Yell) has always considered music a calling. Lili’s music is a hybrid of jazz, folk, soul and pop combined with a powerfully unique vocal style. This six-foot tall singer-songwriter grew up in New York City, where she discovered her passion for music. Lili continues to win over audiences with her vocal style and the support of her band’s incredible musicianship. Lili’s ninth album Better Days was released on October 4, 2019. Lili Añel’s first single off of Better Days, “Take It From Me” is also available on all platforms.



Funky Destination - Come Back to Me

Funky Destination is back again with his new single that comes with a mighty remix support from remixer Soopasoul! A soulful track with great vocals and glorious funk twist from Funky Destination's unique style that holds always a vintage touch. The original song features brilliant arrangement and warm string section and soulful funk vocals. A glorious funk remix from Soopasoul follows up and takes the original to another level with his amazing skills and unique way of producing modern funk anthems. Let the groove ride you!




Funky Destination - The Inside Man (Soopasoul Remix 7" Versions)

A brand new release that include two new versions of  song that that got big attention worldwide, with millions of views on Youtube and on Spotify and been featured on documentaries and sports tv channels like ESPN, got over countless playlists around the globe, finally get's released again and this time was taken directly from the 7'' vinyl, that was released on wax by the remixer's imprint Soopastole one year ago. This track became a hit from the unbeatable funk monster and stylish groovy remix from our fellow friend and great producer Soopasoul. "The Inside Man" original and Soopasoul remix was released back in 2013 on the album "Revolution is only Solution".


Randy Brecker and Ada Rovatti Join Forces on "Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond"


Here's a saying that 'the family that plays together, stays together.' That old adage is put into effect on Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond, which not only features the husband and wife team of Grammy Award-winning trumpeter and fusion pioneer Randy Brecker and saxophonist-composer Ada Rovatti but also includes their 10-year-old daughter Stella in a vocal cameo appearance on one track. Backed by a versatile core group of pianist David Kikoski, bassist Alex Claffy and drummer Rodney Holmes, with guest appearances by keyboardist Jim Beard, guitarist Adam Rogers and Brazilian percussionist Café, the married couple forges an easy chemistry together on the 10 tracks here, all composed by Rovatti.

A stellar showcase for Rovatti's wide-ranging musical tastes, as well as Brecker's inimitable trumpet prowess, Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond shows her remarkable growth as a composer since her 2003 debut as a leader, Under the Hat. "She's very serious about it and she's reached another level in the writing department with this record," said Brecker of his wife, who also released Airbopin 2006, Green Factor in 2009 and Disguise in 2014. "Aside from the fact that I'm her husband, it's so nice to hear these tunes. It all fits together well and it's really enjoyable to listen to. And believe me, they're not easy at all to play over. Ada had to kind of show me some tricks to get through some of these tunes." 

In the liner notes, Brecker proudly states about his sax-playing wife: "I've watched her development as both a player and arranger/composer with fascination. Besides music, she's the greatest wife and mother in the world, a master Italian chef with 160 cookbooks, a master seamstress and designer, interior decorator, photographer, master crafts person, website designer, record-cover designer, record company owner and head of our household. Just ask any of our daughter Stella's friends where'd they like to be, other than their own homes, and they'll say: sitting on our living room floor doing craftwork that Ada designed for them...a true Renaissance woman."

Regarding the title of their latest collaboration (they also appear together on Brecker's 2003 album 34th & Lex, 2013's The Brecker Brothers Band Reunion and 2019's Rocks with the NDR Big Band -The Hamburg Radio Jazz Orchestra), Brecker explained that it addresses the unconditional love that exists between mother and daughter over time. "They're as tight as can be," he said of Ada and Stella. "All three of us are. And it was just nice that they're both singing in octaves on the title track, which is pretty cool." Added Rovatti, "It's a sacred bond among the three of us."

Brecker and Rovatti met in 1996 when the trumpeter was guesting with a big band in Italy in which she was playing alto saxophone. As he recalled in his liner notes to Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond: "After exchanging numbers (I slyly gave her my card, but she asked for it!) and many letters (pre-email!), we started seeing each other long distance, then she moved to NYC after spending a year in Paris, eventually working with the great French singer Anne Ducros. We started seeing each other more and more, and were married in December 2001."

While Rovatti has made a strong impression with her bold tenor sax playing in past outings, she admits to feeling somewhat overwhelmed by having to fill the shoes of the late tenor titan Michael Brecker on the frontline, alongside Randy, in The Brecker Brothers Reunion Band. "I've been in a funny spot, as you can imagine," she said. "Being married to Randy and having such an amazing brother in the family as Mike, and me playing the same instrument as Mike, I always felt like the weakest link. Because Randy and Mike...they're playing is just on a different kind of level."

Nevertheless, she acquits herself with equal parts conviction and grace on both tenor and soprano saxes on the 10 eclectic tracks that comprise Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond. And her accomplished, fully-realized compositions speak for themselves. "I'm trying to spend as much time as I can every day to put some ideas down on the keyboard," said Ada. "But there are days when I'm concentrating more on composition and others where I concentrate more on practicing my instrument. It's a good balance, I think."

The collection kicks off with the upbeat "Sacred Bond," which has mother and daughter doubling wordless vocals on the melodic head alongside trumpet and tenor sax, Kikoski's electric piano comping, Claffy's funky baselines and Holmes' insistent backbeat. Rovatti solos first, demonstrating her deeply impactful tone, easy rhythmic assuredness and remarkable facility as she builds to double-timed flurries and a magnificent crescendo. 

Brecker follows with a typically bright, bristling and eminently melodic trumpet solo - the kind he has been documenting on record for 50 years, beginning with his own debut as a leader, 1969's Score- before mother and daughter return to sing the melodious refrain together.
Rovatti's affinity for Brazilian music is represented by two tracks here. First is the undulating samba "Helping Hands," which features a lovely Brecker flugelhorn solo, a buoyant tenor solo from Rovatti and an outstanding upright bass solo from Claffy. Second is the easy-grooving "Other Side of the Coin," featuring potent solos from husband and wife along with a melodic electric bass solo from Claffy and some playful cucia accents from Café. "Being Italian (she was born in the small town of Pavia in Northern Italy, just 35 km south of Milan), my native language has the same kind of laid back feel, rolling phrases and words that kind come in a wave as Portuguese. And I think there's also a kind of similarity there between Brazilian music and Italian music. It's funny because I don't listen too so much Brazilian jazz but somehow it just kind of grows on me. And, of course, Randy's way of playing on a Brazilian beat is really awesome. He's deeply connected to that sensibility."

 Switching gears, Rovatti pays tribute to the late Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, on the aptly-titled "Reverence" (which is the ultimate form of "R-E-S-P-E-C-T"). Guitarist Adam Rogers brings some stinging six-sting work to the proceedings while Jim Beard underscores with churchy organ work as Randy and Ada negotiate the changes of this soulful, gospel-tinged number with Brecker Brothers-like tightness and swagger. Said Ada of her connection on the frontline with her husband, "Your sound and your way of phrasing just kind of blends with the person that you play with the most, and for me it's Randy. And I think that's also why when Randy decided to put together The Brecker Brothers Band Reunion that he felt comfortable asking me to do it with him. Clearly, nobody can take Mike's spot. But he was looking for somebody who had their own voice and also had the same kind of connection with him. And I hope that I bring something special to the band, that kind of deep connection that Randy had with Mike."

Adds the composer about her heartfelt tribute to Aretha: "I remember when I picked up the saxophone at the end of high school and soon after did a gig with a singer who was trying to sing Aretha's hit song, 'Think.' And then, 20-plus years later, I had the chance to play with Aretha Franklin herself at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. Just to be on that stage - one of the most prestigious stages in the United States - with the real Aretha, it was really the highlight of my life. And it made me think back to when I was in a small town in Italy, picking up an instrument and playing with this local singer and fantasizing about maybe one day playing with the real Queen of Soul. So in that moment that I was on stage with Aretha, I was kind of patting myself on the shoulder and saying to myself, "OK, you did it!"

Holmes' gentle brushwork sets a serene tone for the opening to "Baggage," an older tune of Rovatti's that she wrote for a composition competition that she won in Italy a few years ago. Trumpet and tenor wrap around each other in a warm embrace on the melodic head and as the piece picks up steam, Ada digs deep, delivering her most commanding and heightened solo of the set (even dropping in a brief quote from John Coltrane's A Love Supreme along the way). Brecker follows with an adventurous solo of his own and Kikoski channels his inner McCoy Tyner in bringing his own brand of heat to this expansive number. 

While Queen of Soul Aretha Franklin is saluted by Ada on this outing, another personage of royalty is saluted on "The Queen of Bibelot." It is none other than Rovatti herself. Acknowledging the dictionary definition of 'bibelot' as 'a small decorative ornament or trinket,' she confessed to collecting an inordinate number such baubles. "I'm definitely the Queen of that," she laughed. "I love to go to a thrift store and find an odd object. In fact, I'm looking at one right now. It's a wood zebra doing a squat, which I think it's hilarious. So I have many little teensy objects that to many people don't mean anything. But to me, I can tell you about each one - how I got it, where I got it, why I got it. And that's just like the way I am also in music. I treasure things and value stuff that maybe other people overlook, but I find the beauty in it." The lone bop flavored number of the set, "The Queen of Bibelot" is driven by Holmes' unrelenting swing factor and features killer solos from Kikoski, Rovatti and Brecker. 

The cleverly-titled "Britches Brew" hints at Miles Davis' electronic phase in the wake of his 1970 landmark recording, Bitches Brew. The two-keyboard attack of Beard and Kikoski on this quintessentially '70s number recalls the spiky interaction between Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea in Miles' touring Bitches Brewband. Kikoski and Beard turn in show-stopping solos here while Randy and Ada follow with some rapid-fire exchanges on the electric modal vamp before Rogers enters with one of his signature flowing legato guitar solos. Holmes and Café add a percussive exclamation point on the solo section before the whole band takes it out in a kind of tight-fitting group counterpoint.

Rovatti switches to soprano sax on "Brainwashed," an upbeat number that carries some heavy connotations. "That tune is regarding the political situation in this country today," said the composer. "In my youth I was never interested too much in politics but now being a U.S. citizen and a mother and seeing what this president is doing, I have become very conscious of the current political situation. You cannot notbe shocked, outraged and affected by what's going on. It really was a wake-up call for me to be more active and not just observe what's going on but try to stand up against it." Listen closely and you may hear the seeds of Harold Arlen's "If I Only Had a Brain" (from The Wizard of Oz) woven into the fabric of Rovatti's buoyant melody here.

 "Mirror," Ada's reflection on aging, is imbued with some of the most scintillating exchanges between husband and wife on the record. Rovatti doubles the engaging melodic line with wordless vocals and Holmes offers a smoking drum solo midway through. Says the composer of the inspiration behind the tune's title, "It's about looking at yourself in the mirror and just seeing the start of the aging process and thinking about the wisdom that you've gained. So it was kind of an introspective thing of 'OK, here I am - not that young anymore, not that old yet, but kind of getting there." As for her vocal contributions here, she says, "I consider myself a shower singer...not even a shower singer. But I think it brings a nice texture to the tune."

The haunting minor key closer, "Quietly Me," is an entrancing 6/8 number that features trumpet and tenor sax blending beautifully at the outset and engaging in a kind of shadow play by the tune's end. "Randy has the melody and I kind of play it back to him," says Ada, explaining their telepathic hookup here. "We kind of answer to each other with a delayed kind of phrasing, one following the other in a kind of counterpoint, talking to each other." 
That same kind of indelible chemistry can be heard throughout Brecker Plays Rovatti: Sacred Bond, a stunning showcase for both husband and wife.


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