Monday, February 24, 2020

Day Dream reunites Phil Haynes, Drew Gress, and Steve Rudolph


For the members of the Day Dream trio, finding the opportunity to come together has proved far more challenging than simply wishing it so in a moment’s whimsy. Pianist Steve Rudolph, bassist Drew Gress and drummer Phil Haynes have convened exactly three times over the course of the last decade – each time, thankfully, captured for posterity. The first became their debut, Day Dream, a gorgeous, lyrical ballad date; the second, they supplied graceful backing for vocalist and songwriter Nick Horner’s album New Standards. 

The results of their third meeting now appears as the elegant and witty, thrilling and investigative Originals, due out March 27, 2020 via Corner Store Jazz. That unadorned title refers quite simply to its contents; as opposed to its predecessor, on which the trio explored aptly chosen standards, this session flows entirely from the pens of Messrs. Rudolph, Gress, and Haynes. “The band had such great chemistry and such a beautiful sound the first time around,” Haynes says. “Drew’s dark sound, my sound and Steve’s touch go together in a distinctive way not common with piano trios. Compositionally, I wanted to see the band stretch a little bit, especially since everybody writes so beautifully.” 

But, though each of them would likely demur from such claims, it also precisely describes these three stellar musicians, each of whom has honed a singular and distinctive voice untethered from dogmatic distinctions of genre or style. How else to explain the uncanny chemistry shared by the trio? In part, it’s due to the deep relationships that underpin the group, which hinge on Haynes. He and Gress have worked together for well over three decades, dating back to their respective early days in New York City in the mid-80s. Haynesmet Rudolph shortly after the turn of the millennium, when he uprooted himself to Central Pennsylvania, taking up residence at Bucknell University. 

“We have a very sympathetic approach to music,” explains Rudolph. “Phil and Drew are two of the best listeners I know. You have to really be in the moment and be able to react, and they’re about as good as it gets. I’ve had a lot of fun playing with them.” 

The uniqueness of the Day Dream configuration is due to the triangulation of three unique personalities and visions, which come across as clearly in the compositions on this album as through the playing of them. Rudolph brings an unparalleled elegance to the proceedings, a romantic disposition deep in emotion but free of sentimentality. Gress has long been a bassist of choice for great pianists (Fred Hersch, Marc Copland, Bill Carrothers) in search of a partner able to venture into wide-ranging regions, but is also an ingenious composer, fond of crafting elaborate sonic architectures. Haynes is an eclecticist by nature, with a prismatic curiosity that finds expression in unpredictable combinations – of approaches, of genres, of collaborators. He possesses a keen sense for concocting unlikely mixtures, as evidenced by his introduction of Gress and Rudolph, as well as the ways in which his pieces for the record create bridges between their respective sounds that prove deviously thorny, but thrillingly enjoyable, to navigate. 

Together these disparate fashions complement each other perfectly. Rudolph’s refined agility doesn’t so much smooth out the rough edges of his more avant-tinged bandmates as gild them with delicate filigree. Gress’ harmonic experimentation creates windows in the music that open onto alluring, fathomless mystery. Haynes’ oblique strategies add a trenchant grit that subtly grounds the pervasive airiness. 

“It’s just so easy to make music with Phil,” Gress says. “We’ve always had a really strong time hook-up; I love the sonic choices he makes and the spirit he plays from. And Steve is a really refined and mature player with his own, very subtle language. We’re all adults just following our ears and reacting without much of an agenda.” 

Rudolph opens the album with the wistful solo treatise “Zebra,” a moving tribute to one of his mentors, Indianapolis mainstay Claude Sifferlen. That leads into the graceful “Wedding Waltz,” penned for a friend’s daughter’s nuptials but possessed of an alluring openness that allows the trio to marry their respective sounds with the fluidity of an intimate dance. The pianist’s heart-wrenching “Last Lullaby” is a twilit croon lamenting the end – of what, exactly, remains open to question, but its bittersweetness is left in far less doubt. “Bossa 21” is tied to a far happier occasion: the 21st birthday of Rudolph’s younger daughter, whose love for Latin music inspires a lively and loving Bossa Nova. 

Haynes’ ricocheting solo fanfare opens “Beloved Refracted,” a Cubist portrait of his wife, which turns the letters of her name into the notes of a cascading, roiling melody. The brusque funk groove of the drummer’s “Spell” casts a magical backdrop for Gress’ virtuosic expressiveness, which wends its way around the tune’s sharp-angled curves. The tender “Paul-Christian,” which showcases Haynes’ brisk yet sensitive touch, is based on a reharmonization of Bill Evans’ “Blue in Green”, undertaken in homage to two of the drummer’s closest friends, who passed away within weeks of one another: his mentor, trumpeter Paul Smoker, and Christian Kvech, producer of Haynes’ Free Country. 

Gress’ pieces start with the intriguing, mysterious “Afterward,” which evokes a feeling of uncertainty amid possibility. “Vesper” takes its title from recollections of evening prayer the bassist’s Roman Catholic upbringing, though its spirituality is more amorphous in nature. Finally, the fractured bop of “Let Fly” closes the album on a soaring, celebratory (if somewhat off-kilter) note.

Phil Haynes
A veteran drummer with an adventurous spirit, Phil Haynes is featured on more than 65 releases on numerous American and European record labels.  His recording credentials include many of the seminal musicians of this generation: saxophonists Anthony Braxton, Ellery Eskelin, and David Liebman; trumpeters Dave Douglas, Herb Robertson, and Paul Smoker; bassists Mark Dresser, Ken Filiano, and Drew Gress; keyboard artists David Kikoski, Denman Maroney, and Michelle Rosewoman; vocalists Theo Bleckman, Nicholas Horner, and Hank Roberts; violinist Mark Feldman, and the composers collective Joint Venture. In addition to Day Dream, Haynes’ own ensembles include his romantic “jazz-grass” string band, Free Country; and the saxophone trio No Fast Food with NEA jazz master David Liebman.   

Drew Gress
Bassist/composer Drew Gress performs extensively with artists on the cutting edge of contemporary improvised music. Along with Phil Haynes, he was a founding member of the cooperative quartet Joint Venture, producing three albums in the early 1990s for Enja. When Drew is not leading his own ensembles, he can be heard within those of Ralph Alessi, Tim Berne, Uri Caine, Gerald Cleaver, Ravi Coltrane, Marc Copland, Fred Hersch, John Hollenbeck, Tony Malaby, and Mat Maneri. In a previous musical life, he grounded the performances of Buddy Hackett, Phyllis Diller, Zoot Sims, Cab Calloway, and Pia Zadora. He has received a SESAC Composer's Award in addition to grants from Chamber Music America, the National Endowment for the Arts, and Meet the Composer. 

Steve Rudolph
Yamaha artist Steve Rudolph has had an inspiring career in his 50 years of professional music-making. Jazz Improv magazine states, “Rudolph is a savvy, swinging, glimmering heavyweight… ...simply outstanding.” The winner of the Jazziz Magazine Piano Competition at the Seven Springs Jazz Festival in 2000, he was also awarded two Jazz Composition Fellowships from the PA Council on the Arts. With eleven acclaimed CDs as a leader, he has served as producer, arranger and performer on many recordings including albums with Johnny Coles, Bill Goodwin, Ali Ryerson, Matt Wilson and Vinny Valentino. His vast experience encompasses concert performances with numerous jazz masters including Louie Bellson, Clark Terry, Terry Gibbs, Rufus Reid, Buddy Tate, Al Grey, the Mills Brothers, and Cal Collins.



Sunday, February 23, 2020

New Music Releases: Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band, Ken Vandermark & Paal Nilssen-Love, Gerardo Frisina


Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band - Express Yourself


A masterpiece of messed-up LA funk – and one of the crowning moments in the career of Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band! Charles and crew do an excellent job with all the tracks – most of which are more open ended than some of their earlier ones, and run on for longer than usual with some good trippy instrumental moments that really stretch out the groove from their funky 45 days. The album includes the stoner funk classic "High As Apple Pie", done here in two "slices", plus the classic "Express Yourself", a monster number that still sounds great every time we hear it – even though it's been used on commercials and sampled plenty of times over the years! Other tracks include "I'm Aware", "Road Without An End", and "Tell Me What You Want Me To Do". ~Dusty Groove


Ken Vandermark & Paal Nilssen-Love - AMR

Ken Vandermark and Paal Nilssen-Love are no musical strangers – having played together for most of the past three decades – so it's no surprise that they leap right out of the gate with boundless improvisational energy here – completely on fire in a live performance recorded together in Switzerland! As always, Vandermark really blows us away with the range of sounds that he gets from his reeds – elements that effortlessly shift between musical moments and more textural passages – as Paal himself moves between romping rhythm and more abstract percussion elements. There's no songs listed at all on the CD – although there appear to be five selections – but given the instant appeal of this duo from a free jazz perspective, you hardly need notes to tell you what to love! ~ Dusty Groove

Gerardo Frisina - Marombo (parts 1 & 2)

Great work from Gerardo Frisina – the kind of long, Latin-styled grooves we've always loved from this Schema Records legend – still very much at the top of his game after all these years! The track is nice and long – plenty of room for the rhythms to roll out with all the kind of changes that Frisina can bring into the mix – complicated, but never losing their groove – and with lots of room for added percussion solos from Enesto Lopez, and some nice work on baritone sax from Alfonso Deidda! ~ Dusty Groove






Pianist/keyboardist Amina Figarova's latest album, Persistence


Persistence, due out March 20, 2020 via AmFi Records, reveals Figarova’s love of soul, hip-hop, funk and rock music through her groove-heavy collaboration with Rez Abbasi, Rudy Royston, Yasushi Nakamura and Bart Platteau.

After 20 years at the helm of her acclaimed acoustic sextet, taking her across the globe and onto such renowned stages as the Newport Jazz Festival and New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, pianist Amina Figarova embarks on a bold new chapter with the release of Persistence. On the album, due out March 20, 2020 on her own AmFi Records imprint, the Azerbaijani-born pianist debuts her exploratory new ensemble Edition 113, an electric band grooving somewhere in the sweet spot between jazz fusion, classic R&B, inventive hip-hop and progressive funk.
  
Figarova couldn’t have assembled a better band to enliven this thrilling new sound: supplementing her own piano with an array of keyboards, she’s joined by guitar great Rez Abbasi (Rudresh Mahanthappa, Kiran Ahluwalia), bassist Yasushi Nakamura (Christian Sands, Toshiko Akiyoshi), drummer Rudy Royston (Bill Frisell, JD Allen) and her partner in music and life, flutist Bart Platteau, who here also wields the EWI (Electronic Wind Instrument). The album also features guest vocals by singer Paul Jost, rapper JSWISS, and poet/singer Skye’s World. 

Persistence is in one sense a single word autobiography for Figarova. She has forged a fiercely independent path in the music business, from her early aspirations growing up in the former Soviet Union, to pursuing her studies from her native Azerbaijan to Rotterdam and finally to Boston’s Berklee College of Music. Wanting the scale and palette of a big band with the flexibility of a small group, she formed her sextet in 1998 and proceeded to craft an utterly unique body of music for the ensemble, which toured extensively for two decades before celebrating its 20thanniversary in 2018 with the release of Figarova’s last album, Road to the Sun. 

“For me, music is a one-way ticket,” Figarova insists. “All I want to do is perform my music with great artists, so I don’t ever look for other solutions and I don’t get tired. It can be hard, but I can be very hard-headed when I’m inspired. That’s persistence.” 

The title could also refer to the persistence of the electric influence on Figarova’s music. It may not have shown through very often in her work with the sextet, but Motown was one of her earliest loves, even as she spent countless hours studying classical piano. Another key influence has been Herbie Hancock, in particular his electric Headhunters and Mwandishi bands – which also introduced her to the jazz flute, so it’s not far-fetched to give Hancock some credit for leading the pianist to her flutist husband. Those passions have never left her, so Persistence is the realization of a long-held dream to dive into this sound world.


The opportunity came in part through the couple’s move to Harlem in 2014, where they quickly found themselves surrounded by gifted and open-minded musicians and a living situation ideal for hosting jam sessions. The band name, Edition 113, is taken from the block where Figarova and Platteau make their home.


The songs on Persistence grew out of those jam sessions, which inspired Amina to compose all the tracks for the album in a very different approach to the one that the pianist took when composing for her sextet. “In the past, when it came time for the next record I would sit down at the piano and write,” she recalls. “Here I was just asking musicians to bring some of their own music over and try some of my mine, trying out different things without thinking about recording. It was fun every time and led to a lot of surprises.” 

Among their frequent guests was near neighbor Abbasi, with whom Figarova quickly discovered a profound musical and personal connection. Their friendship and vibrant sonic chemistry can be heard throughout Persistence, perhaps nowhere more than on the blistering “R Song,” christened with Abbasi’s first initial on the occasion of his birthday. Yasushi is a favorite bassist who shared acoustic duties with Luques Curtis on Figarova’s 2015 album Blue Whisper. He’s a frequent collaborator with Royston, so pairing the two of them seemed natural. 

The gambit pays off out of the gate, as Nakamura’s racing bassline weaves around Royston’s stuttering groove, with Platteau and Abbasi melding together on the melody line. They slow to an airy sway as Figarova soars with an interstellar Nord solo. “I’ve Got No Time” reprises the closing piece from Road to the Sun, “No Time For,” which the composer had always envisioned in more of a funk frame. A number of rappers retreated from the challenge of the intricate rhythm, until the jazz-influenced JSWISS, who has collaborated with the likes of Nicholas Payton and Chris Dave, more than rose to the occasion with his harried rhymes. 

The shimmering “Lil’ Poem” follows, with Platteau conjuring an uncanny voice-flute hybrid from his effects-altered Bb flute, while “Morning Blue” gleans its edge from Abbasi’s serrated tone. Paul Jost’s wordless vocals pair with Platteau’s flute on the gorgeous melody of “Horizons,” and “Bliss” centers on the eloquent poetry of Skye’s World, the son of vocalist Lynette Washington and godson of the legendary Art Blakey. 

The album cover features “Coordinates of Exodus,” a striking painting by artist Jorge Posada, whose work conjures feelings of motion and rhythm for Figarova. “His paintings are very dynamic,” she says. “When I walked into his studio and saw this piece I was mesmerized. I see colors when I hear music, and standing there I just thought, ‘This is Persistence.’” 

Hailing from Azerbaijan, the New York-based Amina Figarova studied to be a classical concert pianist as a child, entering Rotterdam Conservatory (where she met Bart Platteau, a fellow student from Belgium) to pursue jazz before coming to the United States in 1992 to complete her formal education at Boston’s Berklee College of Music. In 1998 she was invited to the Thelonious Monk Institute’s summer jazz colony in Aspen. She is an internationally influenced—and recognized—composer, pianist, and bandleader. Those three roles come to the forefront in Figarova’s sextets, bands with a remarkable chemistry that bring her detailed arrangements to life. The Amina Figarova Sextet has been a hit at major festivals such as the Newport Jazz Festival and New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. The Amina Figarova Sextet PLUS is a grantee of the 2019 Chamber Music America ‘s New Jazz Works.
  




Saturday, February 22, 2020

Music for Love presents the new album "Landscape" by Duo Manibe'


When jazz meets world music, experimentation and electronics, the result is pure alchemy. Maurizio Lampugnani (percussion, vocals) and Poldo Sebastiani (electric bass, loop-station) starting from their artistic experiences and passion for musical research decide to unite in an unusual duo, making the rhythmic point of origin of their suggestive journey. In a single jazz soul, the seductions of Cuba's colorful and drunken cheerfulness, the heartbeat of Africa's sun and earth merge , the sound of the eastern ego. Unusual nuances that electronics gives us, photographing almost like a digital camera the flavors of our land, the one that smells of blood and sweat of white lime, which lights up the blue of the sea, the red of the burning sunsets, the green of olive leaves, the black that is hidden.

The duo, who works on original compositions and is preparing an album, has already produced some videos that have been published on you tube and that have received numerous acclaim, including: 

Music For LOVE is an organization that creates, produces and promotes positive musical and musical events, with the sole aim of raising funds for charitable causes in support of humanitarian and educational projects around the world. In collaboration with our fundraiser we also support and promote new and emerging artists who have a passion for social justice. We are extremely grateful to collaborate with extraordinary artists like "Duo Manibe", who share the same vision and compassion as Music For LOVE. Thanks to great musicians like them and to all the generous donations we received, Music For LOVE was able to use the 100% of the proceeds for significant, life-changing projects These projects include: building schools in several impoverished African countries, rebuilding schools in North Carolina, affected by natural disasters, supporting medical research in Italy for the childhood diseases, the purchase of thousands of books for local elementary schools, as well as providing funding for food, medical equipment and school supplies for children all over the world.While our organization works to do our part to leave this world with a best place, we hope you enjoy this phenomenal album!

www.MusicforLove.org


Friday, February 21, 2020

New Music Releases: James Bowman III, Samuel Lorenzo, New York/Paris Reunion Quintet


James Bowman III - Things On My Mind 

Colorful, uplifting, steady grooving and wildly inspiring, singer and songwriter James Bowman III's latest album Things On My Mind offers a seamless merging of gospel energy, sacred reverence and urban oriented Smooth Jazz. Having played with Brian McKnight and Mervyn Warren and opened for everyone from Edwin Hawkins, Kirk Franklin and BeBe & CeCe Winans, the multi-talented artist and seductive vocalist has plenty to communicate about - the Lord, marriage, family and relationship. Led by a spiritual lyrical reworking of an Earth, Wind & Fire classic, the collection offers a positive overall message to combat the harsh discourse occurring in the world today. ~smoothjazz.com

Samuel Lorenzo – Wishing You Were Here


Samuel Lorenzo is a creative singer-songwriter, keyboardist, percussionist, and producer whose roots began in Norfolk, Virginia. A quiet, soft-spoken artist with a vibe that reaches the very depth of his soul, genres such as R&B, Funk, Gospel, and Jazz have inspired Samuel Lorenzo's international, poignant and warm musical style. Hailing from Atlantic Records' funk/R&B group Mass Production, the group's #1 R&B hit "Firecracker", sampled by 2 Live Crew on their single "Me So Horny", propelled them onto the Billboards charts. A versatile musician, Gospel artists such as Daryl Coley, Morris Chapman, Helen Baylor, and Alvin Slaughter, inspired Lorenzo. He was also fortunate to share the stage with them as well as other celebrated artists such as The Isley Brothers, The Gap Band, Sister Sledge, Rick James, Teddy Pendergrass, Stephanie Mills, Cameo, Peabo Bryson, Lakeside, Atlantic Starr, SOS Band, Skyy, Brass Construction, Con Funk Shun, Slave, The Spinners, The Dazz Band, and most recently Brick, The Fat Back Band, Instant Funk, The Ying Yang Twins, and Chingy. This new release, Wishing You Were Here, is inspired by his wife. Lorenzo masterfully captures on the piano the phrase "absence makes the heart grow fonder" with this sultry and seductive melody.
  
New York/Paris Reunion Quintet - Live At The Bird's Eye Club, Basel 

A great group of players from both the New York and Paris scenes – coming together here in a live recording that's got a wonderfully classic vibe, right from the start! The best-known player in the group, at least to our ears, is trumpeter Joe Magnarelli, who always sparkles on his solos – but the group's also got some really fantastic alto work from Dmitry Baevsky, a player we know a lot less, but who really blows us away with the depth and texture of his tone – an approach that uses the alto with a hell of a bite, at a level we maybe haven't heard this great since the early bop recordings of Jackie McLean! Pianist Jeb Patton is great, too – very romping some moments, but personally pointed at others – and the group also features rock-solid work from Fabien Marcoz on bass and Bernd Reiter on drums, a duo who are especially nice when hard-swinging. Titles include "Brooklyn", "Mr Kenyatta", "Truth Tellers", "Bittersweet", "Conception", and "Everything I Love". ~ Dusty Groove



Erroll Garner's That's My Kick Newly Restored and Expanded


The Octave Remastered Series -- from Mack Avenue Music Group and Octave Music -- continues with the release of That's My Kick, available now. Featuring newly restored and expanded editions of classic Erroll Garner releases from the 1960s and 1970s, the series is a historic year-long, 12-album project that has received critical acclaim thus far. Utilizing the Plangent Process playback system for analog tape, these new transfers were remastered and, when needed, remixed by the GRAMMY® Award-winning Garner team. The subsequent series rollout features one album per month – That’s My Kick (available now), Up in Erroll’s Room, Feeling is Believing, Gemini, Magician, and Gershwin & Kern – through June 2020.

Produced by Peter Lockhart and Steve Rosenthal, the series continues Garner’s resurgence, following his return to the top of the Billboard Jazz chart with 2015’s GRAMMY® Award-nominated The Complete Concert by the Sea, which was the first release from the Erroll Garner Jazz Project—a collective formed to curate Garner’s monumental archive. The Garner Project followed The Complete Concert by the Sea with the critically acclaimed, newly unearthed studio record Ready Take One in 2016, and the midnight concert album Nightconcert, which reached #1 on the iTunes and Amazon jazz charts upon its release in 2018.

The master tapes for all 12 albums in the series were transferred and restored using the Plangent playback system. Employing a wideband tape head, preamp and DSP package to capture and track the original recorder’s ultrasonic bias remnant, the Plangent Process removes the wow and flutter and FM/IM distortion from the recorded audio. This returns the listener to the original session experience, bringing to life Garner’s incomparable performances of his own compositions, as well as classic works from the jazz canon.

During his 40-year career, Garner published more than 200 compositions, the most famous of which, “Misty,” was ranked by ASCAP as the twelfth most popular song of the 20th century. Since 1954 no other song has been recorded by more jazz artists except Duke Ellington’s “Satin Doll.” In 1971, “Misty” was the centerpiece of jazz aficionado Clint Eastwood’s film Play Misty For Me. It has also been featured in numerous television shows (Cheers, Saturday Night Live, Magnum PI, The Muppet Show) and films (Oscar® nominated Silver Linings Playbook). A previously unreleased studio performance of “Misty” is included in the Octave Remastered Series, on the Gemini album.

The newly minted bonus tracks in the series are all Garner originals, eight of the twelve being previously unreleased compositions. “It’s truly shocking, and one of the greatest joys of this work, to find these fully realized tunes just sitting there on tape,” says Peter Lockhart, senior producer of the Octave Remastered Series.

One of the most prolific composers and performers in the history of jazz, as well as a courageous advocate for African-American empowerment and artistic freedom, Garner is a legend among jazz pianists. His unique approach melds bebop and swing influences into a unique, unrivaled mastery.

In addition to his brilliant keyboard artistry, Garner is also a notable figure in popular music history for the hard-won precedents he set for artistic freedom that still stand today. In 1959, because he had rights of approval on what was released, Garner successfully sued Columbia Records to remove an album they had released without his permission.

His victory was the first of its kind for any American artist in the music industry. Garner and his manager, Martha Glaser, subsequently founded and launched Octave Records, whose 12 releases make up the Octave Remastered Series.

Erroll Garner was a rare musician who was equally adored and respected by peers and devoted fans alike. He and his art were best summed up by the late trumpeter Clark Terry: “The man was complete. He could do it all.”

That's My Kick was Garner’s first traditional studio album in five years and perhaps his most ambitious album ever as a composer. The selections were surely inspired by the new array of musicians assembled for the sessions, including percussionist JosĂ© Mangual, who would go on to play with Garner for rest of his career. The electric atmosphere captured on tape here is at times raucous and always palpably joyful.



Oscar Peterson Tribute Deluxe Limited Edition 5-LP: Oscar, With Love


In 2015, a special 3-CD set, Oscar, With Love, was released to observe the 90th birthday of jazz piano legend Oscar Peterson (1925-2007). To honor her late husband, Kelly Peterson assembled some of the most celebrated jazz artists in the world to perform and record on the luminary's prized personal piano, then released the recordings as a deluxe collector's edition shortly before the 10-year anniversary of the celebrated pianist’s passing. Now, a deluxe limited edition 5-LP 180-gram box set, re-sequenced for vinyl, is slated to be released on February 21 in a two-piece box with a 40-page booklet.

Oscar, With Love not only features compositions previously unreleased by Peterson, but all are performed in Peterson's home studio on his Bösendorfer Imperial piano. Never has there been such a recording, various artists performing on the personal instrument of a jazz legend. "Oscar cherished his piano," said Kelly Peterson, executive producer of the new recording. "It is one of the finest and most unusual instruments in the world. Oscar handpicked it at the Bösendorfer factory in Vienna in 1981. It has never been heard publicly." Tremendous care was taken to fully capture the outstanding performances of these great artists and the magnificent sound of Peterson's Bösendorfer Imperial.

The set showcases Oscar Peterson as a composer and includes the world premiere of several pieces he wrote but never recorded; the compositions were retrieved from Peterson's library for the project. Most of the music on the recording was written by Peterson, or for him by some of his closest musical friends. It is these friends and colleagues who performed on the recording. Together, these musicians have won 30+ Grammy® Awards, Latin Grammys, Oscars, Golden Globes, British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), and several Juno awards.

The list of participating artists includes some of the greatest jazz players in the world: Chick Corea, Monty Alexander, Ramsey Lewis, Kenny Barron, Benny Green, Oliver Jones, Makoto Ozone, Renee Rosnes and Bill Charlap. In fact, Corea wrote and performed a new composition (called "One For Oscar") specifically for the project. Additionally, the remarkable late composer/arranger and dear friend of Peterson, Michel Legrand, contributed two performances to the recording.

Other notable contributors include pianist and vocalist Audrey Morris and pianist/producer and good friend Lance Anderson. Morris, a long-time close friend of Peterson's, has been a renowned member of the Chicago music community for sixty-plus years. Anderson's performance of the blues tune written for him by Peterson is among the compositions premiered on the recording.

Peterson was known for his encouragement and support of young, gifted players. Oscar, With Love has continued this tradition by showcasing some exceptional young players -- Gerald Clayton, Hiromi, Justin Kauflin, and Robi Botos.

Although primarily a solo piano recording, some performances are accompanied by Peterson's long-time associate and friend, bassist Dave Young.

Internationally respected Swiss engineer Blaise Favre recorded and mixed Oscar, With Love. The recording sessions were co-produced by Kelly Peterson and Juno Award-winning producer Lance Anderson, with Anderson taking the lead role as music producer.

"All of the artists and contributors travelled to Oscar's home studio to be part of the project," said Kelly Peterson. "I was overwhelmed by their respect for Oscar. Each of them expressed how humbled and honored they were to be present on 'hallowed ground' in Oscar's studio."

As executive producer of this unique project, Kelly Peterson explained her intent is to honor not only her late husband's legacy, but also the legacy of his dearest friend, manager, impresario, and record producer, Norman Granz. Oscar, With Love was originally released on her own label, Two Lions Records, in honor of these two jazz giants.


New Music Releases: The Emotions, Enrico Intra, Alessandro Alessandroni


The Emotions – Blessed: The Emotions Anthology 1969 to 1985


One of the greatest female soul groups of all time – served up here in a career-spanning anthology that finally gets at the full range of their talents! The tracks here start in the trio's early years on Stax Records, move through their sublime 70s hitmaking years at Columbia, with lots of help from Maurice White and Earth Wind & Fire – and also move onto include some rare Motown and Red Label recordings too! The vocals are sublime throughout – that rich style of coming together that the girls first forged in their gospel work, then unleashed to the soul world in work that was far more sophisticated and meaningful than the usual girl trio mode – which could sometimes be a throwaway approach to hide the weakness in each others vocals. 2CD set features a big 24 page booklet of notes – and includes 40 tracks in all – including "I Should Be Dancing", "Smile", "Turn It Out", "Blessed", "Are You Through With My Heart", "Now That I Know", "Changes", "You're The One", "Miss Your Love", "All Night Alright", "The Best Part Of A Love Affair", "Blind Alley", "So I Can Love You", "Flowers", "Baby I'm Through", "From Toys To Boys", "You're The Best", "Don't Ask My Neighbors", "Love Vibes", "We Go Through Changes", "Key To My Heart", "Stealing Love", "How'd I Know That Love Would Slip Away", "Walking The Line", "Special Part", and "Boogie Wonderland". ~ Dusty Groove


Enrico Intra - Soundplanets

One of the most unusual albums we've ever heard from Italian pianist Enrico Intra – and that's saying a lot, given his legacy of creative sounds from the 70s onward! This set has Intra playing piano, but also has all the spacey elements you'd guess from the cover – a very unusual mix of electronic sounds, odd effects, and acoustic piano – the latter of which is sometimes free and very avant, sometimes warmer and more grounded – but always handled with a spirit that's very much Erico's own! There are some moments of very strange percussion – which might well come from the body of the piano itself – and Alex Stangoni provides live electronics on a few of the album's tracks. Titles include "Ghost", "Interstellar", "Kick", "Through The Door", "Hanger", "Time Tai Chi", "Dorfles", and "Vertical". ~ Dusty Groove

Alessandro Alessandroni - Afro Discoteca Reworked EP

Four fantastic tracks from the Afro Discoteca record by sound library genius Alesseandro Alessandroni – all reworked in contemporary versions, yet in a way that never loses the funky charm of the originals! There's a real respect for classic styles going on here – partly because the choice of remixers is so strong, the project features just the right sort of artists to keep things right, while still also adding in their own contributions too – maybe some extra keyboards or subtle electronic elements that never get in the way of the original tribal disco inspiration! Titles include "Afro Voodoo (Bovisa rmx with Calibro 35)", "Afro Darkness (Pad rmx)", "Afro Discoteca (Jolly Mare lifting)", and "Afro Darkness (LUCA quirky version)". ~ Dusty Groove



Thursday, February 20, 2020

Donna Summer 'Encore" Box Set Features 33 CDs/329 Tracks


For the first time in history, Donna Summer's iconic studio albums are presented in one box set. This exquisitely packaged 33-CD box set (within 24 individual 'albums'), features 329 tracks and collects all of Donna Summer's 17 studio albums, from her debut 'Lady Of The Night' up to 2008's 'Crayons'. Also included are 1978's 'Live And More', 1980's 'On The Radio' and 1999's 'Live & More Encore!', along with four bonus double-cds of '7" single versions', '12" single versions', 'remixes' and 'non-studio album singles & extended mixes' that include one-off recordings, which have been considered rarities over the years.

The box set includes the debut official commercial release of 'My Life' [Junior Vasquez private collection mix]. the individual re-mastered albums are packaged in mini replica sleeves, with inner wallets. A 40-page 12"x12" hardback book, includes the album label copy Information, as well as a newly commissioned 25,000+ word essay by noted  writer, Christian John Wikane, which starts with a foreword by long-term friend, collaborator and producer Giorgio Moroder. The essay features new interviews with many of Donna's collaborators, including Giorgio Moroder’s production partner Pete Bellotte. Also included are special new personal tributes from 25 industry legends, including Nile Rodgers, Philip Bailey, George Benson, Liza Minnelli and Bootsy Collins.

Donna Summer gained prominence during the 1970s disco era, propelled by her incessant
and creative driving force behind the genre's global popularity, rightly earning the title "Queen Of disco" and becoming one of the most successful recording artists of the entire decade. Her catalogue has sold more than 130 million units worldwide and this special edition proves that she was able to accommodate new musical and production styles.

Donna was the first artist to have three consecutive double-albums, reach no. 1 on the US Billboard charts and also became the first artist to achieve four no. 1 singles in a thirteen month period. Donna worked with legendary producers Giorgio Moroder, Pete Bellotte, Harold Faltermeyer, John Barry, Quincy Jones, Richard Perry, Stock Aitken Waterman, Michael Omartian and Keith Diamond. Her records have also been remixed by many of the great club producers, including Tony Moran, Junior Vasquez, Frankie knuckles, Eric Kupper, Masters At Work and Jason Nevins, among others. It the most comprehensive collection ever.


Sammy Miller and The Congregation Debut Album Leaving Egypt


Sammy Miller, a Grammy-nominated drummer for his work with Joey Alexander, convened The Congregation in 2014 at The Juilliard School in New York City where he was getting his master's in jazz. “We all went to Juilliard and have these credentials, but we didn’t like the insular feeling of the jazz scene. We were seeking warmth and connection,” Sammy says. These misfit creatives descended on venues around NYC where the genre was not played. “I wanted to find a new audience,” Sammy says. “We played in dive bars where people were scared of jazz.”

Their live show grew to be something of a mix between a comedy troupe and a dazzling rock band that played a vigorously reimagined strain of jazz. “We let ourselves be free on the bandstand and we took the audience with us,” Sammy says. The band’s boundless energy, inclusive ideals, catchy songwriting, and revue style presentation made them a word-of-mouth buzz band. The septet expanded its reach through adopting the rock band philosophy of touring endlessly in a van to build a fanbase.

The Congregation’s 9-song debut album Leaving Egypt was cut in four 16-hour days at the legendary United Studios where the many famed Count Basie sides were tracked. The band enlisted drummer extraordinaire Jay Bellerose (Alison Krauss, Ray LaMontagne, Robert Plant, B.B. King) to supervise and produce the proceedings. The band lineup is Sammy Miller, drums and vocals; Sam Crittenden, trombone; Ben Flocks, tenor sax; Sammy’s sister Molly Miller on guitar; Alphonso Horne, trumpet; Corbin Jones, bass and tuba; and David Linard, piano.

“This is us,” Sammy says of the album. “I’m proud of it, and I’m eager to embark on our mission to bring joy to people’s lives through music.”

Tour Dates:
Feb 21 - Mill Valley, CA - Sweetwater
Feb 22 - Palo Alto, CA - Oshman Family JCC
Feb 23 - Sacramento, CA - The Sofia Tsakopoulos Center for the Arts
Feb 28 - Dubai, UAE - Dubai Jazz Festival
Mar 24 - Atlanta, GA - Vinyl
Mar 26 - Charlotte, NC - Neighborhood Theatre
Mar 25 - Asheville, NC - Isis Music Hall
Mar 27 - Richmond, VA - Tin Pan
Mar 28 - Washington, DC - Songbyrd
Mar 29 - Sellersville, PA - Sellersville Theater
Mar 31 - Boston, MA - The Red Room at Cafe 939
May 1 - Fond du Lac, WI - Thelma Sadoff Center for the Arts
May 2 - Baileys Harbor, WI - Door County Brewing Co. Music Hall
May 3 - Minneapolis, MN - Dakota
June 27-28 - Aspen, CO - Jazz Aspen Snowmass


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 PĂ©rez 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 PĂ©rez. 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 PĂ©rez’s iconic collaborator Wayne Shorter, late fusion bass genius Jaco Pastorius, and visionary composer/arranger Vince Mendoza, and to pieces from PĂ©rez’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 naĂ¯ve 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 PĂ©rez 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 ZenĂ³n, guitarist Chico Pinheiro, and RomĂ¡n DĂ­az, 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 PĂ©rez Duo
** Kurt Elling Quartet feat. Danilo PĂ©rez

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.



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