Thursday, February 20, 2020

All-female Middle Eastern Jewish powerhouse ensemble Divahn celebrates the strength of women and musical common ground on Shalhevet


As one of the very few groups performing Mizrahi and Judeo-Arab music in the US today, NYC-based ensemble Divahn—whose name is a word common to the Hebrew, Persian, and Arabic languages, denoting a collection of songs or poetry—has been internationally recognized for its mission to highlight the common ground between diverse Middle Eastern cultures and religions through music.

That is the spirit behind Divahn’s latest album Shalhevet (to be released March 7, 2020), a collection of passionately original interpretations of traditional Sephardi/Mizrahi Jewish songs that blend lush string arrangements, eclectic Indian, Middle Eastern, and Latin percussion, and vocals spanning Hebrew, Persian, and Arabic.  The title of the album comes from the Hebrew word for ‘flame’ or ‘blaze’ with the intent that Divahn’s strong emphasis on the commonality between Middle Eastern cultures and religions should serve as a flaming bonfire for the sometimes darker world we find ourselves in today.

According to Divahn’s founder, Persian-American singer, composer, writer, and anthropology professor Galeet Dardashti, the all-female powerhouse is about welcoming audiences into the beautiful shared heritage of the intertwined Abrahamic peoples of the Middle East while also taking a vocal stance against the homogenizing forces of nativism that are increasingly prevalent in today’s political climate.

“We'd mostly been focused on doing a lot of live performances the last couple years, but then the Trump election of 2016 happened,” reflects Galeet. “Like so many, we were all so devastated and really wanted to respond as artists, so it became really clear that we were going to make another album. The world needs an all-female Middle Eastern Jewish album that celebrates what connects us, rather than what tears us apart.”

The album’s defiant spirit of hope is perhaps most exemplified by the track “Banu Choshech”. A familiar children’s Chanukah song sung throughout the Jewish world, the song’s simple and straightforward lyrics resonated powerfully with the band as they searched for an anthem of hope and strength in the dour aftermath of the 2016 US presidential election: “We’ve come to chase away the darkness.  We bear light and fire. Each glimmer is small. But together, our blaze is fierce.” In this version, Divahn gave the song their own unique spin, adding quarter tones, rooted in the band’s Middle Eastern musical vocabulary. Galeet then added Biblical texts to highlight the Jewish approach to caring for the stranger. 

This pairing of creative composition with deep cultural study has always been characteristic of Divahn’s music. Many of the songs on the album demonstrate the historic shared culture between Jews and non-Jews in the Middle East by highlighting the piyyut (sacred song) tradition. Beginning in the 16th century of this tradition, Jewish composers would write religious Hebrew texts to the secular songs that were popular across the Middle East and originally written in Arabic, Persian, Greek, and Turkish.

A prime example of this is the album’s first track, “Ya’alah Ya’alah,” which draws its lyrics from the language and themes of the Song of Songs, and sets them to the melody of a popular Arabic love song called “Ya Tira Tiri.” The piyyut’s author, the prolific bohemian 16th century Rabbi Yisrael Najara, is believed to have begun the practice of composing Hebrew lyrics to the popular secular songs of the day.

Galeet points out that this practice was widespread, and that Jews were often the perpetuators of music across the Middle East because, during some periods, Islamic law prohibited Muslims from doing such work. In fact, many of the melodies that Dardashti sings on the album in Hebrew, including “Ya'alah Ya'alah,” the 20th century Syrian piyyut “Ayni Tzofiah,” and the 20th century Moroccan “Am Ne’emanay” were all originally Arabic love songs. On the album, Galeet sings “Ya'alah Ya'alah,” in both its original Arabic and as a Hebrew piyyut as an homage to the track’s musical etymology.

For Galeet, leading Divahn is as much about highlighting Arab-Jewish and Persian-Jewish culture as it is about celebrating the strength of women—a point brought to bear by the fact that Divahn performs religious songs not traditionally sung by women in the Jewish Middle Eastern world.

As such, the all-female band’s album release is timed to coincide with Purim, a Jewish holiday with an origin story that not only takes place in ancient Persia but also celebrates two powerful women. Queen Esther is the traditional Jewish heroine of the story, who saves the Jewish people from annihilation with her wit and courage. But the other heroine for Divahn is Queen Vashti—the non-Jewish queen who stands up to the male chauvinist king when he demands that she show off her beauty to his guests.  When she refuses him, he ousts her as queen for fear that she could start a women’s revolution. “Vashti is an exemplar of standing up for your principles and fighting against patriarchy, no matter the consequences—she was ahead of her time.” says Dardashti.

Divahn got its start, years ago, when Dardashti was an anthropology graduate student at the University of Texas at Austin, studying Middle Eastern Jewish musical trends in Israel. Galeet’s musical and academic inspirations came from her own family history, as her father is an accomplished and widely renowned cantor, and her grandfather was one of the most famous singers of Persian classical music in Iran during the 1950s and 1960s. As an Iranian Jew, however, Galeet didn't grow up really connected to Middle Eastern Jewish Music. Instead, both her anthropological research and her career in music sprouted from a later desire to discover her own cultural heritage and musical traditions.

Divahn formed quite organically out of that mix as Galeet met fellow musicians in the Austin music scene. The band went through several emanations before solidifying with the current membership in New York City in 2015. The diverse musical backgrounds of the current band members contribute to a unique collaboration and sound: Eleanor Norton (cello, vocals), Elizabeth Pupo-Walker (cajon, congas, diverse percussion, vocals), Sejal Kukadia (Indian tabla, vocals), and Megan Gould (violin, kamanche, vocals). Between them, the impressively accomplished crew has performed with the likes of Natalie Merchant, Adele, Alan Cuming, John Legend, David Byrne, and the late Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, to name only a few, and also perform in many Broadway shows.

Divahn’s Shalhevet release show will take place at Joe’s Pub in NYC on March 7, 2020.






DAYNA STEPHENS - LIBERTY


Following up Gratitude (a 2017 collection of songs that served as an expression of deep-seated gratitude for the immense love and support Stephens received while climbing his way back to health after fighting FSG, a rare kidney disease), which was lovingly embraced and lauded by the press and fans alike, Dayna Stephens offers us his ninth album as a leader, Liberty (available Feb 28th). Stephens, a master musician, one of the scene’s leading artists, and most respected woodwind aces, is in full flight on Liberty; free from the grips of ill-health, liberated from the constrictions that a harmonic instrument naturally imposes, able to express himself fully due to his own virtuosity, and unbound to explore the many streets, avenues and alleyways of this music, running lockstep with his more than adept band mates, Ben Street on bass and Eric Harland on drums.

Liberty is a broad term that can refer to many situations, and for this recording it takes on a few meanings. Playing trio as a saxophonist without any chordal harmonic support can be exposing yet very liberating. Making this recording with such masterful musicians as Ben and Eric, who I’ve known and had the pleasure of playing with for close to 15 years in various situations, made exploring rhythmic and harmonic avenues a real unforgettable and fresh creative experience. Capturing it at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio, one of the best sounding and most inspiring rooms ever to create music in, just makes this project that much more special.

One important common definition of Liberty says: “The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life, behavior, or political views.” It’s tough not to be aware of current events taking or loosing shape within our species. After all is said and done, we are all in so many ways privileged to be a part of a self-aware group of beings. We possess the powerful ability through memory and written language to look back at our past with vivid detail and great emotion, while showing the present moment what worked or not, and what gave us joy and fear. Balancing our multiple unique levels of diversity and world views with the awareness that we are all a part of a global community atop a spinning delicate crumb in space has proven to be a persistent puzzle for our species, leaving me to wonder if Liberty is capable of being one of those vast fields of common ground it once seemed to be. How do we burst these various fortified bubbles of feedback loops that shield us from realizing that we are all looking into the same mirror? If not with Liberty for all then with what?

Upcoming Tour Dates:
  • Feb 26 - Dazzle, Denver, CO
  • Feb 27 - Kuumbwa Jazz, Santa Cruz, CA
  • Feb 28-29 - The Blue Whale, Los Angeles, CA
  • March 1 - EarShot Jazz Festival, Seattle, WA
  • April 29 - The Jazz Gallery, NYC
  • May 7 - Sunset Sunside, Paris, France
  • May 8 - Jazz Station, Brussels, Belgium
  • May 9 - Bumhuis, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • May 10 - Muri Jazz, Muri, CH
  • May 31-June 1 - Tamir Hendelman-Music of Miles Davis
  • Tel-Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa
  • July 3 - Saxophone Intensive, California Jazz Cons., Berkeley, CA
  • July 20-26 - Langnau Jazz Workshop w/Gretchen Parlato
  • September 22-28 - The Village Vanguard - Dayna Stephens Quartet
  • December 15-20 - The Village Vanguard - Kenny Barron Quintet




Kurt Elling & Danilo Pérez To Release Secrets Are The Best Stories


Secrets Are The Best Stories is the new album from acclaimed vocalist and GRAMMY® Award-winning artist Kurt Elling featuring renowned pianist Danilo Pérez. Edition Records is delighted to provide the support and artistic freedom for Elling to pursue his goals while placing artistry and integrity at the forefront. Secrets Are The Best Stories is set to be a career-defining album for Elling, confirming his trajectory on a new and evolving path of artistic excellence, and further exploring the passion and the messages, political, personal, that inspire him.

Here, Elling adds evocative new lyrics to compositions by greats like Pérez’s iconic collaborator Wayne Shorter, late fusion bass genius Jaco Pastorius, and visionary composer/arranger Vince Mendoza, and to pieces from Pérez’s own catalogue. Along with his own compelling narratives, Elling adapts the works of contemporary poets Franz Wright and Robert Bly, the 19th century abolitionist poet Frances E.W. Harper and Nobel-winning author Toni Morrison.

His previous album The Questions, released in 2018, explored important messages about social and political issues. The Questions was undoubtedly a learning experience from which Elling never expected to find definitive answers. And yet some things have become clearer to him. Elling’s continued search for what is hidden and what is unearthed is reflected in the title, Secrets Are The Best Stories – an insight gleaned from one of his daughter’s childhood friends, whose naïve wisdom recognized the deeper beauty in games of hide-and-seek. With Secrets Are The Best Stories, Kurt has further developed his protest voice to communicate his impassioned artistic reaction to the vital issues of our time: human rights, immigration and climate change. On this album he demonstrates the artist’s ability to respond, which he does with command and virtuosity, and integrity.

“The Questions asked, ‘How did we get in this mess? What are we going to do about it?’” Elling reflects. “Sometimes we trip over the answers or live into them over time. Sometimes we have to work very hard to see the possibility hidden right in front of us; the shining diamond must be romanced over time and drawn out from what looks like a plain block of molten frost. And then again, sometimes the answer is perfectly obvious: “be kind”. But the news cycle has continued apace, confronting us with an ever darker labyrinth. How shall we survive? Danilo and I share many of the same concerns and anxieties about where the world is today.” The album called Secrets Are The Best Stories, is our cri de coeur.

To help them amplify this musical outcry, Elling and Pérez gather together a remarkable ensemble. The core of the band is formed by the singer’s longtime bassist Clark Sommers, in-demand drummer Johnathan Blake and Brazilian percussion master Rogerio Boccato. They’re joined by a retinue of stellar special guests, including alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón, guitarist Chico Pinheiro, and Román Díaz, a revered elder statesman of Cuban percussion.

Perhaps the greatest mystery revealed by this recording is the secret of beauty itself: beauty with a purpose. With this gorgeous new album, Elling makes no secret of the empathy that he feels for - and hopes to find in - his fellow citizens of the world. “I start from the heart,” Elling says of his songwriting process. “And my heart goes to compassion.”

Ever since Kurt Elling burst on to the global scene 25 years ago, he has been developing the sound and command of his vocal instrument into one of the most recognizable in the music. A combination of - richness in intent, of soulfulness and of signature expression- define him as an artist. Secrets Are The Best Stories- the new recording from the world’s foremost jazz singer - translates an artistic vision of history, mystery, and storytelling into a musical message both singular and deep.

Upcoming Kurt Elling U.S. Tour Dates
  • April 7 / Greer Cabaret Theater / Pittsburgh, PA
  • April 10 & 11 / Blue Llama / Ann Arbor, MI *
  • April 25 / Tilles Center / Long Island, NY *
  • April 29 / The Dakota / Minneapolis, MN **
  • April 30 / The BackRoom at Colectivo / Milwaukee, WI **
  • May 1 / Symphony Center / Chicago, IL **
  • May 2 / Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center / Northridge, CA **
  • May 4 / Kuumbwa Jazz Center / Santa Cruz, CA **
  • May 6 / Freight and Salvage / Berkeley, CA **
  • May 7 / The John G. Shedd Institute For The Arts / Eugene, OR **
  • May 8-10 / The Triple Door / Seattle, WA **
  • June 16-20 / Birdland Jazz Club / New York, NY **

 * Kurt Elling / Danilo Pérez Duo
** Kurt Elling Quartet feat. Danilo Pérez

New Music Releases: Tansy, The Heliocentrics, Anthony Jefferson


Tansy - Dreaming (single)

Tansy is the brainchild of Will Feinberg and McKenna Alicia. Feinberg, a native of Detroit, and Alicia, a native of Oakland, met in New Orleans in 2017 where they began playing together in the city's music scene. After a period of contributing to each other's own original projects, they felt themselves being pulled together by their collaboration. McKenna and Will spent the next eighteen months together writing and honing their sound. Backed by a powerhouse band of some of the city's rising stars, Tansy recorded their debut album, Full Bloom  this past summer. Influenced by the music of Esperanza Spalding, Robert Glasper Experiment, Moonchild, and Norah Jones; Tansy synthesizes the warmth of a classic RnB sound with the bold  harmonic and melodic statements of today's jazz. The end result is a fresh sound that will appeal to a wide variety of listeners while leading the way forward in contemporary vocal jazz.

The Heliocentrics - Burning Wooden Ship (single)

London-based The Heliocentrics have long stirred a bewitching brew of funk, jazz, psych and library influences. Labelled by Pitchfork as “a live-band culmination of every obsessive hip-hop-era producer's drive to fall deeper into a rabbit hole of the previously unheard”, the band’s far-reaching influence meant a natural knock-on in being cited by hip-hop royalty: namely, featuring on DJ Shadow’s ‘Skullfuckery’, from 2006’s ‘The Outsider’ LP, and being sampled by Nas and Kanye West on the track ‘Everything’, featured on 2018’s ‘Nasir’ album.The Heliocentrics drop the refreshingly off kilter ‘Burning Wooden Ship,’ in anticipation of their 10th studio album, ‘Infinity of Now.’ Jump into this kaleidoscopic soundscape of rolling percussions and bewildering breakdowns, grounded by the tantalising vocals of Barbora Patkova. The Heliocentrics will release their new long player on Madlib's label, Madlib Invazion.

Anthony Jefferson – All I Am

Anthony Jefferson’s newest release is an eclectic project of songs from the Great American Songbook, pop music, R&B, and the movies, all beautifully rendered as romantic jazz tunes by Jefferson’s silky, warm baritone voice and lush orchestral arrangements by multi-instrumentalist Corey Allen. The luxuriant string and horn arrangements amplify Jefferson’s innate warmth and soulfulness. The album features some of the finest  musicians in Dominican Republic, where Jefferson has been living for the past 10 years. Jefferson is already a bona fide star in Dominican Republic. All I Am is a superb showcase for an expatriate American singer who deserves to be much better known in the United States. Although he has been performing for many years, with his pure voice, inventive and personal phrasing, and sensitive approach to lyrics, Anthony Jefferson’s star has just begun to shine.



ELDAR DJANGIROV - RHAPSODIZE


On his new recording, Rhapsodize (his 11th album and the follow up to World Tour Vol. 1), pianist/composer Eldar Djangirov can be reflective and introspective in one moment (listen to “Airport” or “Willow Weep For Me”), utterly intense and fierce the next (check out “A Night In Tunisia”, “Anthemic” or “Burn”), or embody all of these characteristics simultaneously (check out the title track, “Rhapsodize”). The constants that permeate everything Eldar does in life and music are ironclad intent, an absolute devotion to detail, and a devout adherence to excellence. Rhapsodize, available everywhere February 21 (on Twelve Tone Resonance), serves to further solidify Eldar as one the most extraordinary musicians of his generation.

Eldar and the piano are one; a human being and this orchestral instrument, fully exploring at every turn, reveling in the joy of self expression and discovery, and of creating with his nonpareil sidemen, bassist Raviv Markovitz and drummer Jimmy Macbride, in tandem and lockstep with their leader. Markovitz’s musicality and hearty tone provide solid ground for the band to operate effortlessly, while Macbride comes to table with a sophisticated understanding of the jazz tradition, demonstrating the art of providing exactly what is needed for the music, along with many delightful surprises interwoven throughout. Individually they are impressive, as a trio they are no less than stirring.

The compositions and arrangements on Rhapsodize encapsulate and accentuate Eldar’s astonishing facility and creativity, framed in the context of a 21st century piano trio. The pianist/composer describes Rhapsodize as, “music made with honest intent; the compositions and arrangements presented here are from my heart.” Throughout his career, and now with Rhapsodize, Eldar has nourished his talent, pushing himself, and in turn the piano, to heights that are a joy and an inspiration to behold.  

More on Rhapsodize with Eldar:
A Night in Tunisia — a new take on an old jazz standard. I loved hearing Dizzy do this song. This is a fresh take on this tune with some cool twists in the interlude before settling into a bebop rendition of the song.

Airport — I spent a lot of time at airports. An airport is full of commotion and different feelings. There have been several phases in my life where being in an airport felt “at home.” It’s a limbo state of being, where you can run away from yourself for a moment. This song takes a simple motif that is often heard at airports (an interval of 5ths that is sometimes used as a reminder). There is a narrative told in the song. It's also a reflection and meditation.

Anthemic — This song has a repeating “anthemic” riff that happens in the left hand coupled with a melody line.  There are many hills and valleys, both harmonic, melodic, and rhythmic.  It’s a tricky song for each instrument, yet it's fun to play. The ending is laced with tension during the coda vamp to evoke urgency.

Willow Weep For Me — a meditation on an old standard to search for inner peace.

Burn — there’s a common saying in jazz when someone plays well: “it’s burnin’.” The sub-genre for this song could be labeled as hard bop. Thus, this composition pays respects to the hard bop tradition.

Black Hole Sun — this is a cover of a Soundgarden song from 1994 that has arguably gone on to become a new standard for this generation.

Variations on a Bach Prelude — an arrangement of mine of the C# major prelude by JS Bach. It’s a little bit like splitting the brain: the left-hand highlights the harmonic foundation while the right-hand switches between the written score and improvisation. Initially, this was a solo piano exercise of independence. I then decided to perform it with the trio to add a new dimension to the arrangement.

In July — I wrote this song in July. The title is simple, but beneath the surface are bittersweet feelings, and a feeling of perseverance. Many people deal with trauma, and this is a reminder that you are still here.

Rhapsodize — this has a groove to it that is always fun to play. The structure of the song is a combination of highly arranged material as well as open sections that allow the trio to build. The composition has a rhapsodic feel.

Devotion — devotion has many meanings to different people. The desire is to associate devotion with love, independence, kindness, and generosity.

Blackjack — I originally recorded this song in 2009 on my album Virtue, and this is a fresh new take that explores so many different skillsets of the trio.

Born on January 28, 1987, Eldar Djangirov (pronounced john-‘gear-ov) came to the U.S. from the former Soviet Union when he was ten. Shortly after, he began performing in his hometown of Kansas City, as well as at The Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. He quickly moved up the ranks and was featured on NPR’s Piano Jazz with Marian McPartland at the age of twelve. He released two albums independently before attending the University of Southern California on a full scholarship. 

When Eldar signed with Sony at 17, the young pianist was already well known for his prodigious pyrotechnics and precocious knowledge of the bebop tradition. He recorded his major-label self-titled debut in 2004 featuring the great bassist John Patitucci, and Michael Brecker on tenor sax. In 2006 he followed up with the critically acclaimed, Live at the Blue Note, with guest appearances by Roy Hargrove and Chris Botti. Eldar was nominated for a Grammy in 2008 for his album Re-imagination.

Eldar released Virtue in 2010 featuring guest appearances by Joshua Redman and Nicholas Payton, and receiving high praise from Bill Meredith in Jazziz, “with the release of Virtue, Eldar may have sealed his role in future jazz history.” Around this time he also released his fifth album, and his first solo piano album, entitled Three Stories, which prompted Dan Bilawsky to report on AllAboutJazz that, “Djangirov gets to the heart of every song,” and Karl Stark to say in The Philadelphia Inquirer that, “something special goes on here . . . In Djangirov’s hands, the piano is a dramatic personage.” Ever prolific, Eldar released two projects in 2013; his album Breakthrough, a dynamic trio outing featuring longtime bandmates Armando Gola (bass) and Ludwig Afonso (drums), with special guests Joe Locke and Chris Potter, and Bach/Brahms/Prokofiev, a classical piano album that showcases his unique interpretations. Eldar released the live album World Tour Vol. 1 (a compilation of performances from around the world, including concerts in Tokyo, Philadelphia, Montreal, Atlanta, Washington D.C., San Diego, Oakland, etc. Rhapsodize, a tour-de-force trio recording featuring Raviv Markovitz on bass and Jimmy Macbride on drums. His recent solo piano album, Letter to Liz, has reached over 85K streams in less than a month (January 2020).

Throughout his career Eldar has had the good fortune to meet and work with many masters of this music including Dr. Billy Taylor, Michael Brecker, Marian McPartland, Dave Brubeck, Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, Chris Potter, Nicholas Payton, Harvey Mason, Chris Botti, Joe Locke, Ron Carter, Pat Martino, Roy Hargrove and many others. Through these opportunities and other wonderful musical experiences, Eldar continues to explore new frontiers through composing and performing, enabling him to realize his unique musical vision.



Wednesday, February 19, 2020

New Music Releases: The Brecker Brothers, Billy Ocean, Brigitte Bardot


The Brecker Brothers - Live And Unreleased

The return of a great band! The archival recording, 'Live and Unreleased', documents the Brecker Brothers at the peak of their powers during a European tour on a particularly happening night in Hamburg on July 2, 1980 at the legendary Onkel Pö's Carnegie Hall. One of the best-selling, most potent bands of the '70s, the Brecker Brothers defined the swaggering sound of New York funk-fusion during the decade. On the strength of such contemporary crossover recordings as their 1975 self-titled debut, 1976's Back to Back, 1977's Don't Stop the Music and 1978's Heavy Metal Be-Bop, brothers Randy and Michael Brecker set a new standard in jazz with their tight arrangements, catchy funk grooves, melodic grooves and scintillating solos. A showcase for the brothers' legendary chops, Live and Unreleased also shines a light on Finery's scorching guitar licks, Gray's innovative Prophet V and Mini-Moog work, Jason's slap bass prowess and Morales' thunderous drumming throughout 10 exhilarating tracks. Among the highlights are a 19-minute version of "Funky Sea, Funky Dew" (from 1977's Don't Stop The Music) that features an astounding 9-minute unaccompanied solo from Michael Brecker that has him deeply into an experimental mode with electronic effects. Personnel: Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone), Randy Brecker (trumpet & vocals), Mark Gray (keyboards), Barry Finnerty (guitar), Neil Jason (electric bass & vocals), Richie Morales (drums).

Billy Ocean - One World

'One World' is the 11th studio album from Billy Ocean, the biggest black recording star Britain has ever produced. The album features 12 brand new songs, all co-written by Billy, and sees him reunite with producer Barry Eastmond who wrote and produced a number of Billy's biggest hits including "When The Going Gets Tough" and "Love Zone." A Grammy award winner with worldwide sales of over 30 million, Billy hit the number one spot across three continents in the 70s and 80s, counting no fewer than six UK top 10 singles. With hit albums the world over, Billy has notched up an impressive three Platinum albums (including two which are certified 2x Platinum). In 2018, he was recognized for International Achievement at the 2018 Ivor Novello Awards. About the new album, Billy says: "'One World' is my first original studio album in over 10 years. It's like a landmark for my 70th birthday! I feel this album reflects my maturity, and the many genres of music I ve been exposed - coming from the Caribbean as a little boy influenced by calypso music, to growing up in the East End of London, where music was so wonderfully diverse. I truly feel 'One World' has captured all of my musical influences over the years. The album reflects my thoughts, and the way that I feel at 70 years old, but most of all I hope that it will make people stop and think about life and its meaning.

Brigitte Bardot - La Belle Et Les Blues

Screen goddess, fashion icon, pioneer of female empowerment: La Bardot's various achievements are fully recognized around the world. Her work as a singer, however, has been less familiar outside of Francophone territories. 'La Belle Et Les Blues' is the first legitimate retrospective of her recording career specifically compiled for the English-speaking market. Spanning the years 1962-1970, it is a glorious confection of smoky jazz, frenetic yé-yé and groovy late 60s pop, all stamped with Bardot's idiosyncratic vocal approach, as unique as that of her acting. Highlights abound throughout 'La Belle Et Les Blues', from effervescent early cuts like 'L'Appareil A Sous' and 'Moi Je Joue', via Bardot's trademark 'tropezian' introspection on 'Mr Sun' and 'La Madrague', to the Serge Gainsbourg-helmed late 60s apotheosis of 'Harley-Davidson', 'Bonnie & Clyde' and Brigitte's raunchy original version of 'Je T'aime Moi Non Plus', tracks that have since become global club and turntable favourites. The carefully remastered, delightfully illustrated collection comes with extensive liner notes detailing Bardot's enduring appeal across the decades and, as a special bonus, features fresh musings from B. B. herself on her times as a recording artist - in a rare interview granted especially for this release.



SEU JORGE with ROGÊ Night Dreamer Direct-to-Disc Sessions

Singer, songwriter, film actor (City of God), and Rio native Seu Jorge is the reigning king of samba-funk: a sound, born in the 1960s, that merges Brazil’s trademark dance rhythm with soul, R&B, hip-hop, and other black pop styles from the U.S. His hits, notably “Carolina,” “Amiga da Minha Mulher” (My Woman’s Friend), and “Burguesinha” (Bourgeois Girl), are as irresistibly danceable as the best of Motown. Later he branched out into bossa nova as well as the songs of David Bowie, which he sang in Portuguese in Wes Anderson’s 2004 film The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. Bowie raved about “this new level of beauty which he has imbued them with.” He now stars in the Netflix crime drama Irmandade (Brotherhood).

Since 2013, Seu Jorge (pronounced SEH-oo ZHOR-zhee) has lived in Los Angeles. In 2018, so did his friend of 25 years, Rogê, whose swinging samba-funk and onstage charisma have made him a star in the clubs of downtown Rio. Now, they have come together to record their acoustic album of originals, Seu Jorge & Rogê: Night Dreamer Direct-to-Disc Sessions.

SEU JORGE (which means Sir or Mister Jorge) came to international attention not as a singer but as an actor. In City of God (2002), the film about life in Rio’s crime- and drug-ridden slums (favelas), he played Knockout Ned, a ladies’ man who is targeted and victimized by a murderous drug lord. Seu Jorge is no stranger to that world. He was born Jorge Mário da Silva in a favela in Belford Roxo, one of the poorest towns in the state of Rio; his brother was murdered by police as a teenager. Infatuated with both samba and Stevie Wonder, he spent his youth grooving to “funk carioca,” a socially-conscious dance music that hailed from the favelas. In 1993, after years of working blue-collar survival jobs, he joined an acting company. Homeless at the time, he slept in the theater for four years. His life changed when he and a group of young musicians formed a band, Farofa Carioca. In 1998 they released an album, Moro no Brasil (I Live in Brazil), that combined samba, rap, reggae, and funk carioca to form a magazine-style portrait of their troubled city. The breakout member was Seu Jorge, who quickly went solo. A dozen albums and as many films later, he remains one of Brazil’s biggest stars and most popular musical exports. He has brought his sound to Austin, Sydney, Ottawa, and Montreux; he sang in the closing ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. 

Around twenty years ago, ROGÊ (pronounced Ho-Zheh)—born Roger José Cury in Rio—began working his way up through the city’s downtown samba-club circuit.

Handsome, young, endlessly energetic, and a born entertainer, he was hailed as an exciting new voice of samba-funk, with the power to lift up audiences and make them want to dance. Many of the samba’s great elder statesmen, such as Rio’s Arlindo Cruz, embraced him; their 2016 duo album, Na Veia (In the Vein), was nominated for a Latin Grammy. Rogê’s many other releases include Baile do Brenguelé, the soundtrack of his 2014 DVD on Warner Music. A song he wrote with Cruz and another samba star, Arlindo Neto, “Os Deuses do Olimpo Visitam o Rio de Janeiro” (The Gods of Olympus Visit Rio de Janeiro), was chosen from among stiff competition to be the theme of the 2016 Olympics, which were held in Rio. For the last several years, Rogê has been building a relationship with the U.S. In 2013 he made his New York debut at Joe’s Pub; the following year he played Summerstage. Now an expatriate, he commutes between North America and Rio. Wherever he is, he says, “I keep representing the culture of our country. I feel very proud to be Brazilian.”


"The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma" tells the story of the recording industry’s legendary producer and executive


The versatile, hit-making career of one of the American recording industry’s legendary producers and executives is lovingly told in award-winning musician, writer and broadcaster Ben Sidran’s revealing new biography The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma.

The Nardis Books volume, which will be available in print and as an e-book on May 5, 2020, is drawn from more than 80 hours of interviews with LiPuma by Sidran, who recorded three albums for LiPuma’s Blue Thumb Records in the early ’70s. It’s an inspired account of how music saved one man’s life, and how he went on to affect the lives of millions of others.

It spins the engaging story of LiPuma’s career, from his origins as a jazz-obsessed tenor saxophonist in Midwestern territory bands to fame and fortune as the Grammy Award-winning producer of such multi-platinum albums as guitarist-singer George Benson’s Breezin’ (1976) and Natalie Cole’s Unforgettable … With Love (1991). Sidran offers eye-opening behind-the scenes accounts of LiPuma’s record dates with such pop superstars as Barbra Streisand, Paul McCartney, and Willie Nelson.

The book also delves deeply into LiPuma’s deft work as a jazz producer, ranging from work on hit albums by talents like David Sanborn and Bob James to memorable sessions with Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Horace Silver, Antonio Carlos Jobim, and Jimmy Scott. It concludes with a comprehensive look at the bestselling, career-making series of albums LiPuma produced for singer-pianist Diana Krall before his death at the age of 80 in 2017.

The warmth, intimacy, and candor of The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma is the product of more than 40 years of friendship. LiPuma employed Sidran as the organist on a 1973 Blue Thumb date by guitarist Phil Upchurch, and that experience led to a close and permanent bond between the two men, and ultimately to the idea for a book.

Sidran recalls, “Maybe 10 years ago, I said to Tommy, ‘We should write down your stories. Let me interview you. Let’s get ’em on tape.’ He loved telling these stories. The last four or five years of his life, literally every time I was with him, I’d have a tape recorder with me, and I’d start asking him questions about various things. I ended up with dozens and dozens of hours of conversations with Tommy, in restaurants, studios, driving in the car, everywhere.”

Sidran was perfectly equipped to assemble LiPuma’s reminiscences into a compelling narrative, with his background as a well-traveled producer (Diana Ross, Mose Allison, Georgie Fame, et al.), the Peabody Award-winning host of National Public Radio’s Jazz Alive, and the author of the widely acclaimed Black Talk,Talking Jazz, and There Was a Fire: Jews, Music and the American Dream. He brings a full understanding of the sweep of his subject’s career to The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma.

“His experience encapsulates the modern recording industry,” Sidran says. “You can see the evolution of the way music was captured and recorded and distributed, how it evolved, and the impact of the technologies and the marketing strategies. You can read his story and get all that information just because of who he was and where he was, at exactly the right time.”

He adds, “You experience that arc from a world that was totally music-driven, which is where we were at in the ’60s. By the time Tommy died, it wasn’t a music business at all — it was a subscription business, a streaming business.”

The first-generation American son of Sicilian immigrants, LiPuma took up music after being bedridden for two years as a boy with the crippling bone disease osteomyelitis. After work as a musician around his hometown of Cleveland and in the Midwest, he cut his teeth in the music biz at record distributor MS and as a regional promotion man.

Sidran notes, “He was opening boxes of records in the basement at MS Distributing — talk about ground-level experience! And then he was involved in all the stages of promotion and music publishing. It’s just remarkable. The most successful producers today probably never opened a box or packed a box of anything.”

After moving to Los Angeles to take a promotion job in the early ’60s, LiPuma steadily climbed through the ranks of the exploding record business, meeting everybody who was anybody and producing for Liberty and A&M; during his years at Blue Thumb (which he co-founded with Bob Krasnow), Warner Brothers, Horizon, Elektra, and Verve, he helmed dozens of albums, always staying close to the music.

“Tommy really loved being with the artists,” Sidran says. “He wouldn’t sit in the control room — he was out on the floor with earphones. Through his whole life, he loved being with creative people, hip people.”

On the jacket of The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma, Paul McCartney — whose Grammy-winning 2012 collection of standards Kisses On the Bottom was produced by LiPuma — says, “Tommy was a fantastic producer. He always had a great sense of humour … He would sit in the studio with us musicians and make every session a complete joy.”

Though in later years he became less active in music, concentrating on his collections of modern art and vintage wines, LiPuma completed Turn Up the Quiet, the last of 11 albums he produced or co-produced for Krall, just months before his death.

“He went out swinging — in the studio, with his favorite singer,” Sidran says. He adds, “Music represented love and emotion and sex and history and fun, a party. If you knew Tommy, you were going to have fun. That’s how, at the beginning, he survived as a producer — he didn’t really know what he was doing, but he knew how to make it fun.”

Ben Sidran will launch The Ballad of Tommy LiPuma with an event at Rizzoli Books in New York in March.


LYNNE ARRIALE - CHIMES OF FREEDOM


Chimes of Freedom, Lynne Arriale’s 15th album as a leader, was recorded in Europe for release by Challenge Records International. Lynne is joined by renowned musicians, Dutch bassist/co-producer Jasper Somsen, drummer, E.J. Strickland, and guest vocalist, K.J. Denhert.

On Chimes, her most passionate artistic statement to date, Lynne reflects on freedom, cultural diversity, and her wish that all refugee families may reach an inclusive safe harbor among the democratic nations of the world.

This remarkable collection features seven of Lynne’s original, deeply personal works. The spiritual, Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child, together with Lynne’s evocative Journey, The Dreamers, 3 Million Steps, Hope, The Whole Truth and Lady Liberty weave a dramatic narrative, crowned by the trio’s collaboration with K.J. Denhert singing Bob Dylan’s Chimes of Freedom and Paul Simon’s American Tune.

Chimes is a worthy and timely successor to Lynne’s critically acclaimed Give Us These Days; a thematically-related suite that considers the transient nature of human existence.

Lynne is known throughout the jazz world for the honesty and lyricism of her melodic lines, her virtuoso technique, and her genius for creating a synergistic environment around the trio, whose sound is greater than the sum of its parts.

Her albums have topped the Jazzweek US Radio Charts and have been on numerous "Best Of" lists including The New Yorker, United Press International, JAZZIZ, JazzTimes and Jazz History Online. She toured with the 100 Golden Fingers tour of Japan with iconic jazz pianists, Tommy Flanagan, Hank Jones, Monty Alexander, Cedar Walton, Kenny Barron, Harold Mabern, Roger Kellaway, Junior Mance and Ray Bryant. Arriale has performed and/or recorded with jazz greats Randy Brecker, George Mraz, Benny Golson, Rufus Reid, Larry Coryell and Marian McPartland.

The world's great jazz festivals and concert stages have invited Lynne to perform, including five performances at the Kennedy Center and performances at Lincoln Center, Montreux, Burghausen, Gilmore, Spoleto Arts, Montreal, Monterey, North Sea Jazz, Stuttgart, Pori, San Francisco, Ottawa, Zagreb, Perth, Brisbane, Rouen, Cannes MIDEM, Sardinia, Rochester, Wigan, Poznan, Estoril, Palermo, Inverness, Cork and San Javier. Lynne has toured extensively throughout Europe, Australia, Japan, South America, South Africa, the US and Canada.

She has been consistently praised as having a “singular voice” as a pianist, leader, composer and arranger. With stunning clarity, purpose and emotional force, that voice now rings out with Chimes of Freedom.

Chimes Of Freedom was recorded at Motormusic in Mechelen, Belgium on October 10 & 11, 2019 (tracks 1-8), and at Samurai Hotel Studio in NYC on August 6, 2019 (tracks 9-10).



Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Boney James New Album Solid / Tour Dates

Solid is the four-time GRAMMY nominated saxophonist’s seventeenth album as a leader and will be released by Concord Records, April 17, 2020. Solid follows up his smash 2017 release Honestly which became his eleventh #1 Billboard Contemporary Jazz Album.

Sometimes, inspiration is slow in coming, evasive and stubborn. Other times, if an artist is very fortunate, it simply flows, the music practically writing itself. That’s how Solid, the latest release from Boney James came to be. “This record really flowed at an unusually quick pace,” Boney says. “There was a lot of positive energy in making this music. Solid is a very upbeat record. As I was writing them, these songs put a smile on my face.”

All of Solid’s eleven tracks were produced and written or co-written by James. Three songs—“Full Effect,” “Tonic” and the title track—were built from licks played at sound-check by touring guitarist Kendall Gilder on the road in support of Honestly. “I said, hey, what’s that riff you’re playing?” James recalls, “And Kendall said, ‘that’s just something I’m messing around with.’ I got my iPhone and recorded them, then took it home and wrote the songs!” 

Four other songs were initiated by longtime James collaborator, acclaimed writer/producer Jairus ‘J-Mo’ Mozee (Anderson Paak, Nicki Minaj, Anthony Hamilton). One of those, “Be Here,” was ultimately transformed into Solid’s Adult Urban single featuring special guest Kenny Lattimore, best known for his Top 10 R&B hit “For You.” 

Says James, “We met at the Soul Train Awards twenty years ago and he said, ‘Some day we need to work together!’ As I was working on ‘Be Here’, I started to hear his voice in my head. I reached out to him and he wrote and recorded the lyrics. It’s such a romantic song and it really reinforced the theme of the record, strong and positive relationships.”

James crafted many of the song titles (“Fresh Air”, “On The Path”, “Tonic)” to play off this theme, “Similar to my last CD Honestly, this new music is a reaction to how stressful the world feels these days. Music is a respite, it’s always ‘solid’ and it never lets me down.”

Boney James’ personal relationship with music has never been anything but solid. Picking up the sax at age 10 in his native New Rochelle, New York, “I immediately loved it, and it pretty quickly became my favorite thing to do.” By the time he entered his teens, James was gigging with bands, and he turned pro at 19. He apprenticed as a sideman for artists like Morris Day, The Isley Brothers, Teena Marie and many others, touring and doing sessions for seven years before cutting his first solo album in 1992. The independently released Trust led immediately to a major label deal and a string of increasingly successful recordings and nonstop touring.

Now a four-time GRAMMY nominee with four RIAA Gold records and career sales topping three million units, James continues to defy musical genres; A two time NAACP Award nominee, a Soul Train Award winner and named one of the Top 3 Billboard Contemporary Jazz Artists of the Decade.

James, who lives in Los Angeles with his wife of 34 years Director/Actress Lily Mariye, says he’s looking forward to heading out on the road and seeing how the Solid material evolves from night to night. “I love playing live, maybe more than I ever did. A lot of guys get tired of the traveling but it’s still a joy for me every time I go out there and play.” 

It’s still a joy to his multitude of fans too. “I try to ‘be there’ for the people who are interested in my music,” says James, “to be Solid in that relationship and to not let anybody down. I often get great compliments from the people that come to my shows, that I ‘never disappoint’ them, and that’s very gratifying to me. That’s what I was trying to express with this title, that sense of character… to stand for something principled.”


Boney James “Solid 2020” Tour Dates
  • Feb 14 / Long Beach Terrace Theater – Long Beach, CA
  • Mar 14 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 15 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 16 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 17 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 18 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 19 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 20 / Smooth Jazz Cruise – Miami, FL
  • Mar 27 / Earl Klugh’s Weekend Of Jazz At The Broadmoor – Colorado Springs, CO
  • Apr 03 / Berks Jazz Fest/Scottish Rite Cathedral PAC – Reading, PA
  • Apr 24 / Koger Center For The Arts – Columbia, SC
  • Apr 25 / Seabreeze Jazz Festival/Aaron Bessant Amph. – Panama City Beach, FL
  • Apr 26 / Southwest Florida Event Center – Bonita Springs, FL
  • May 01 / Los Cabos Jazz Festival – Cabo San Lucas, MX
  • May 06 / Sony Hall – New York, NY
  • May 07 / NJPAC – Newark, NJ
  • May 08 / Scottish Rite Auditorium – Collingswood, NJ
  • May 09 / John Lyman Center For The Performing Arts – New Haven, CT
  • May 10 / City Winery – Boston, MA
  • Jun 11 / Napa Valley Jazz Getaway/Lincoln Theater – Yountville, CA
  • Jul 11 / Mable House Barnes Amphitheatre – Mableton, GA
  • Jul 17 / Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA
  • Jul 18 / Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA
  • Jul 19 / Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA
  • Jul 23 / Motor City Casino – Detroit, MI
  • Jul 24 / Horseshoe Casino – Hammond, IN
  • Jul 25 / Fitzgerald Theatre – Minneapolis, MN
  • Aug 30 / Hollywood Bowl – Los Angeles, CA
  • Sep 05 / Gulf Coast Summerfest – Pensacola, 
  • Sep 11 / Midland Theatre – Kansas City, MO
  • Sep 13 / City Winery – Nashville, TN
  • Sep 16 / Capitol Theatre – Clearwater, FL
  • Sep 17 / The Plaza Live – Orlando, FL
  • Sep 19 / N. Charleston Performing Arts Center – N. Charleston, SC
  • Sep 20 / Meymandi Performing Arts Center – Raleigh, NC
  • Sep 25 / The Clyde Theatre – Fort Wayne, IN
  • Sep 26 / Murat Theatre – Indianapolis, IN
  • Sep 27 / Palace Theatre – Louisville, KY
  • Oct 01 / Taft Theatre – Cincinnati, OH
  • Oct 02 / Lincoln Theatre – Columbus, OH
  • Oct 03 / Ohio Theatre – Cleveland, OH
  • Oct 16 / Rams Head On-Stage – Annapolis, MD
  • Oct 17 / Rehoboth Beach Jazz Festival – Rehoboth Beach, DE
  • Oct 20 / Birchmere – Alexandria, VA
  • Oct 21 / Birchmere – Alexandria, VA
  • Oct 23 / Knight Theater – Charlotte, NC
  • Nov 14 / Fox Theatre – Tucson, AZ
  • Nov 19 / House of Blues Dallas – Dallas, TX
  • Nov 20 / One World Theatre – Austin, TX
  • Nov 21 / House of Blues Houston – Houston, TX

ESSENTIAL LATE-ERA NINA SIMONE ALBUM, FODDER ON MY WINGS


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 April 3 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 lyric video is also available now: https://verve.lnk.to/ISJTKTIA

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 êtes seuls, mais je désire être avec vous
4. Il y a un baume à 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 êtes seuls, mais je désire être avec vous
4 Il y a un baume à 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

 




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