Friday, August 11, 2023

Woody Shaw's "Blackstone Legacy" features an all-star line-up, including Gary Bartz, Ron Carter and Lenny White

Craft Recordings and Jazz Dispensary proudly announce a vinyl reissue of Blackstone Legacy, the 1971 debut from influential trumpeter Woody Shaw. Showcasing the musician’s virtuosic talents as a bandleader, composer and improviser, this politically charged, postmodern classic also boasts impeccable performances by Gary Bartz, Lenny White, Ron Carter, Bernie Maupin, Clint Houston and George Cables.

The latest release in Jazz Dispensary’s acclaimed Top Shelf series, Blackstone Legacy has been meticulously remastered from the original analog tapes by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio and pressed on audiophile-quality 180-gram vinyl at RTI. The 2-LP album is housed in a gatefold tip-on jacket, featuring faithfully reproduced designs, as well as Nat Hentoff’s original liner notes, which include commentary by Shaw. Long out-of-print, Blackstone Legacy returns to vinyl on September 15 and can be pre-ordered here.

A pioneering figure in modern jazz, Woody Shaw (1944–1989) was revered for his unique harmonic approach and innovative technical abilities on the trumpet. Raised in Newark, NJ, Shaw began performing as a teenager, gaining formative experience as a sideman for the legendary saxophonist Eric Dolphy and spending over a year in Paris, where he honed his craft in clubs across Europe. In the mid-’60s, Shaw returned to the US, where he worked alongside such greats as Horace Silver, McCoy Tyner, Chick Corea, Andrew Hill, Max Roach and Art Blakey. By the turn of the decade, however, Shaw was eager to branch out on his own.

Balancing the past with the future, Shaw sought to honor his bebop roots, while embracing the avant-garde. His debut as a leader, Blackstone Legacy, embodied that stylistic bridge. Recorded in December 1970 and released the following year on Contemporary Records, the album featured some of the era’s most exciting talents, including funk-jazz icon Gary Bartz (alto and soprano saxophone), veteran bassist Ron Carter and fusion pioneer Lenny White (drums), plus such innovators as Bernie Maupin (tenor saxophone, bass clarinet) and Clint Houston (electric bass), as well as the esteemed keyboardist George Cables, whose work as a composer is also highlighted on two of the LP’s tracks (“Think On Me” and “New World”).

In the album’s liner notes, Shaw spoke to Hentoff about his intentions behind the record. “We’re trying to express what’s happening in the world today as we—a new breed of young musicians—feel it. I mean the different tensions in the world, the ridiculous war in Vietnam, the oppression of poor people in this, a country of such wealth. . . . We’re all also trying to reach a state of spiritual enlightenment in which we’re continually aware of what’s happening but react in a positive way. The music in this album, you see, expresses strength – confidence that we’ll overcome these things.”

Shaw added that the album was dedicated to the era’s youth, as well as to “the freedom of Black people all over the world.” He continued, “The ‘stone’ in the title is the image of strength. I grew up in a ghetto . . . I’ve seen all of that, and I’ve seen people overcome all of that. This music is meant to be a light of hope, a sound of strength and of coming through.”

The six tracks on Blackstone Legacy are expansive, allowing each of the musicians to embark on heady, improvisational journeys. The album opens with the dynamic, 16-minute-long title track, during which Shaw shines as a leader, as he confidently guides the septet through the energetic composition. Another highlight is the free-bop “Lost and Found,” which boasts several impressive drum solos by White, as well as the joyful “Boo-Ann’s Grand” (dedicated to Shaw’s wife, Betty Ann). The Cables-penned “New World,” meanwhile, offers phenomenally funky interplay—particularly between the electric pianist and Houston, who delivers plenty of groovy wah-wahs on the bass. The record closes on a reflective note, with a tribute to Shaw’s late mentor, “A Deed for Dolphy.”

In his liner notes for the album, Hentoff extolled, “What is so arresting about the performances . . . are the extraordinary range of colors; the fascinating dialogues and trialogues among the horns; the brilliantly fused rhythm section; the quite astonishing multiple-time-levels drumming by Lenny White; the sound of Bernie Maupin’s bass clarinet . . . and the unusually evocative textures George Cables creates on electric piano.” He adds that Blackstone Legacy would be “one of those records people are going to take care of because years hence, it is going to be a milestone, as it were, in a singularly influential career.”

Certainly, the critics agreed—and still do. Reflecting on the album decades later, AllMusic declared it to be “a landmark recording, and a pivot point in the history of post-modern music.” Blackstone Legacy launched a new era for Shaw, who would go on to release more than two dozen albums as a leader, including the GRAMMY®-nominated Rosewood (1978). Throughout the rest of his life, the prolific trumpeter, flugelhornist and cornetist continued to perform regularly as a sideman, appearing on records by Azar Lawrence, Bobby Hutcherson and Dexter Gordon, among many others. Dubbed “The Last Great Trumpet Innovator” by NPR, Shaw also dedicated much of his time to educating and mentoring others, while his work directly impacted the “Young Lion” generation of horn players, including Terence Blanchard, Wynton Marsalis and Chris Botti—the latter two of whom studied under Shaw in the ’80s.

In addition to multiple GRAMMY® nods, Shaw was a consistent favorite in the DownBeat Reader’s Poll, earning such awards as Best Trumpeter (1980) and Jazz Album of the Year (Rosewood, 1978), while in 1989, he was inducted posthumously into DownBeat’s Hall of Fame. Perhaps even more importantly, Shaw was universally respected by his peers, heroes and fans—from Dizzy Gillespie (“Woody Shaw is one of the voices of the future”) and Miles Davis (“Now there’s a great trumpet player. He can play different from all of them”) to Wynton Marsalis (“Woody added to the vocabulary of the trumpet. He was very serious, disciplined, and respectful towards jazz”). 

Thursday, August 10, 2023

"Convergence" from NICK MACLEAN QUARTET feat. BROWNMAN ALI

"Convergence" is the sophomore release from the Nick Maclean Quartet feat. Brownman Ali and continues a modern re-imagining of the spirit of Herbie Hancock's primordial 60s quartet, extending many of the ideas from their debut critically acclaimed 2017 recording "Rites of Ascension" ("...you will be hard-pressed to find another production this good..." Raul da Gama, Toronto Music Report). Evolution abounds throughout this 2nd recording, with greater cross-pollinated experimentation between genres (funk, hip hop, cuban), more sophisticated & intricate writing from Maclean's pen, and further exploration of Herbie Hancock's classic cannon. As per their 1st album, the depth of synergistic connectivity between the 4 hand-picked members of Maclean's quartet are again a cornerstone to the ensemble's sound and group dynamic. Maclean advances his examination of the modern jazz ethos here with a crew unafraid of taking risks in the pursuit of collective narrative exploration and personal expression.

Led by 10x Global Music Award winning jazz pianist Nick Maclean, the Nick Maclean Quartet feat. Brownman Ali "...delivers jazz between the two poles of thoughtful introspection and powerhouse conveyance, taking influences from Herbie Hancock's primordial 1960's Blue Note era recordings featuring Freddie Hubbard..." (Memphis Marty, Jazz Music Blog, Australia).  Maclean's quartet heavily features one of Canada's most provocative improvising trumpet players -- Brownman Ali, heralded as "Canada's preeminent jazz trumpet player" by New York City's Village Voice, and best known globally as the last trumpet player with the legendary jazz-hip-hop group GURU's JAZZMATAZZ. Ali & Maclean stand shoulder to shoulder with two of Canada's top-tier rhythm section 20-somethings: Ben Duff on bass (Toronto) and Jacob Wutzke on drums (Montreal), drummer for 2x JUNO award winner Caity Gyorgy. The collective synergy of these four is always on full display and gives "Convergence" a freshness abound with interplay and inventiveness.

"Convergence" received support from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Toronto Arts Council, and qualifies under MAPL certification as 'Canadian content'.

"Convergence" officially releases on Browntasauras Records in Canada on Fri-Oct-27, 2023, and internationally on Fri-Nov-24, 2023

Ilhan Ersahin, Dave Harrington, Kenny Wollesen, New EP 'Your Head You Know'

The new EP by Ilhan Ersahin, Dave Harrington, Kenny Wollesen is titled our Head You Know,  is the follow up to their album "Invite Your Eye" that came out last year. The record really encapsulates the feeling of late night jazz; an after hours jam session between close collaborators and friends that unfolds with almost telepathic effortlessness. And though it may appear as though this album is the result of improvisation, it is in fact a mixture of studio based compositions with raw improvisation taken apart and reconstructed with dubbing and editing. Producer and musician Dave Harrington says "It was the first project I really threw myself into when I first moved to Los Angeles and so was informed in large part by my first experiences here, my nostalgia for New York, and also the imagined Los Angeles of the mind that I try to live in: a place where the psychedelic can be both inspiring and sinister, and where possibility and reality are in constant competition and conversation."

With drummer Kenny Wollesen (Tom Waits, John Zorn, Norah Jones) and Dave Harrington (of electronic duo Darkside) guitar/bass/electronics, New York-based Swedish/Turkish saxophonist, composer, club-label owner Ilhan Ersahin captures the vibe of impromptu, cross-pollinating, and heavily grooving late-night jam sessions at Nublu, his “East Village Club where everything goes” (New York Times).

The telepathy and intuition that flows between these three musicians is one that has developed over many years of playing together in different combinations, and on a permanent regular basis at NYC's Nublu, searching and creating together in the moment. What they have come up with has evolved steadily over that time and its current form can be heard to brilliant effect on their new album "Invite Your Eye" which is due out on March 4th following three advance singles.

The exploratory instrumental space-jazz these gentlemen purvey has many antecedents and influences but perhaps it's best not to cite names and instead let the music speak for itself. This sound and approach comes as naturally to them as breathing, hence the album title which is also the title of the first single.

"Invite Your Eye" and "Even As You Smile" are the other two teasers set to follow right after the title track before the album as a whole arrives to provide a fuller picture of the magic these three sonic wizards have in store for you.

Introducing Mad Myth Science, the next generation of Chicago's powerful creative music scene

Mad Myth Science is the creative convergence of Molly Jones, Julian Otis, Wilson Tanner Smith, and Ben Zucker. All four musicians have a bevy of multi-disciplinary achievements to their names — while working together, they put these into service of a blend of shapechanging acoustic group sounds characteristic of many of Chicago’s notable experimental music scenes. The AACM’s advances in improvised music are perhaps the most obvious touchstone for the group’s dynamic of chamber-music & free improvisation hybridity: the considerate use of space and generous inclusion of all kinds of made sounds recognizable in the work of Roscoe Mitchell or Muhal Richard Abrams, but made in and for the 21st century, where genre and background gives way to performance of all kinds of modes of intensities. Correspondingly, the group’s name alludes to the expansive philosophy of creative music pioneer Sun Ra, in part—where any “mad science” is concerned, the mixtures of genres, instruments, and media at play in their performances are hardly villainous, but certainly aspire to a level of unbound. And the circumstances in which the band forged their group identity — over Skype and Zoom connections as a promising collaboration was thrown off by the onset COVID-19 — involved their own kinds of madness and science.

Though the members of Mad Myth Science all had shared background and experience performing together, attuning to each other via software brought the necessary attention and sensitivity to a new level, as well as the ability to move in and out of apparently cohesive interactions.

Before “We Instruments” melts away with precision under Otis’ final delivery, it sets forth with blazing layers of perpetual motion. Elsewhere, such as in the “Meditations”, all players reach an equal level of delicacy in their final exchanges. Small percussion and subtle live electronics give the occasional uncanny hint to the proceedings. Myth aims to explain, or at its very least (and best?) generates aspirations towards awareness, resilience, and wonder. The myths we make about improvisation, or about ourselves, are part of what still give our present existence a sense of itself. This was how Mad Myth Science sustained itself for a long time, and its approach only kaleidoscoped when the opportunity to play live became possible again. Online, offline, as “new music” or “jazz”, as sound in itself or augmented through movement and performance, the group’s shows have been potent experiences across Chicago. This album is a snapshot of that experience — select edits of hours of playing in the renowned Experimental Sound Studio. It shows part of what makes the group what it is: the invocations, surfaces, energies, and contemplations that reach us as sounds; but like any experiment, a catalyst to bring all involved into something further.

Mad Myth Science was supported by New Music USA’s Creator Development Fund in 2022-23.

Asynchrone | French jazz/electro plays Ryuichi Sakamoto

Asynchrone is a collective born in 2021, which assembles musicians from the Parisian free jazz and electro scenes, to honour the music of late Japanese legend, Ryuichi Sakamoto. Making their debut with the release of the ‘Kling Klang’ EP in summer 2022, Asynchrone today releases a new single, a few months after Sakamoto’s passing. ‘Plastic Bamboo’ is also the title track of Asynchrone's forthcoming debut album, due for release on September 29, 2023 via the Nø Førmat! label (Ballaké Sissoko, Oumou Sangaré). You can stream the new track - a reimagining of the piece which originally appeared on Sakamoto’s 1978 solo debut LP ‘Thousand Knives’ - from here.

Asynchrone’s personnel is a link-up between cellist Clément Petit (Aloe Blacc), producer and musician Frédéric Soulard (who produced Jeanne Added’s Victoire De La Musique-winning album), clarinet/saxophone player Hugues Mayot, flautist Delphine Joussein, pianist Manuel Peskine, and Vincent Taeger (A.L.B.E.R.T.) on drums. Influenced by Sakamoto’s freedom, his mysticism, and his ability to draw inspiration from Debussy as much as from Kraftwerk, Asynchrone revisits his Homeric back catalogue with a breath of rebellious freedom and a communicative pleasure of playing. More than a tribute to a frozen work, it is a tribute to creative freedom.

Speaking about their interpretation of ‘Plastic Bamboo’, Soulard says;

The original version sounds like slow Funk mixed with influences from Kraftwerk, with a very melodic theme that reminds you of François de Roubaix's music. This new refined and dynamic version gives more space to the drums, cello and rhythm boxes that give a sense of urgency to it, while the flute and the piano are playing the theme, giving it an exotica touch.

Drummer Ray Levier's "Wig Glue," featuring Will Lee, Etienne Stadwijk, and Mike Stern

Professional drummer and in demand side man, Ray Levier, just released his most poignant and personal track to date. His jazz funk fusion track "Wig Glue" is a spirited and groove-filled composition that pays homage to the resilience and determination of legendary guitarist Mike Stern, the multiple Grammy-nominated guitarist, a former member of Miles Davis’ band during the early 1980s and subsequent member of Miles Davis, Steps Ahead, Jaco Pastorius’ Word of Mouth and The Brecker Brothers.

The backstory behind the song adds a layer of depth and inspiration to the music, as it was born out of a unique solution that helped Stern regain his grip on the guitar pick after a devastating accident left him with broken arms and nerve damage. The incident occurred on July 3, 2016, when Stern stumbled upon hidden construction debris while hailing a cab in Manhattan. This unfortunate event shattered both of his humerus bones and left him struggling with tasks as simple as holding a pick. 

Determined to overcome this setback, Stern found a temporary solution in the form of wig glue. It was a conversation with Etienne Stadwijk, a fellow musician, that led Stern to seek out Ray Levier, who was already using wig glue on his drumsticks to enhance his grip after his accident.

Levier, a highly talented drummer, shared his unconventional method with Stern, and the results were remarkable. Stern found that using wig glue improved his ability to hold the pick and continue performing. Grateful for the solution, Stern mentioned Levier in interviews and expressed his deep appreciation for the fortuitous suggestion. 

They playfully refer to themselves as members of the "wig glue club," a testament to their bond and shared experience. "Wig Glue" serves as a dedication to both Ray and Mike Stern's resilience and the idea that if something is broken, one can simply glue it back together and carry on. 

"Wig Glue, it's not only a song, it's what keeps my groove strong!" quips Ray.

The track embodies the spirit of funk, infusing it with elements of jazz and fusion to create a dynamic and infectious sound. Levier's rhythmic prowess shines through, showcasing his ability to drive the groove and deliver captivating musical moments.

Both Etienne Stadwijk and Mike Stern have established themselves as highly respected musicians in the industry. Stadwijk’s impressive discography includes collaborations with renowned artists such as Richard Bona, Sadao Watanabe, Paul Simon, and Maxwell, among many others. Stern's notable contributions to jazz and fusion can be traced back to his time with Miles Davis, Steps Ahead, and The Brecker Brothers, solidifying his status as a guitar virtuoso.

In a harmonious convergence of musical prowess, the esteemed bassist Will Lee, known for his remarkable contributions on 'Late Night with David Letterman' and collaborations with acclaimed figures such as George Benson and The Brecker Brothers, joins forces with Ray LeVier and friends. Together, they embark on exploring the melodic enchantment of “Wig Glue.”

"Wig Glue" captures the essence of overcoming adversity and pushing forward in the face of challenges. With its infectious rhythms, captivating melodies, and spirited performances, the track is a testament to the power of music to inspire and uplift. Ray Levier's tribute to Mike Stern is a testament to the strong bonds and mutual support that exist within the music community.


Wednesday, August 09, 2023

New Releases: Noah Gershwin / Bob Marley & The Wailers / Emilia Sisco / DJ Harrison

Noah Gerswhin - Ode To Abraham

Noah Gershwin explores pushing the boundaries of free improvisation within the confines of the jazz idiom. He has performed at venues and festivals such as The Stone, SF Jazz, and the Iowa City Jazz Festival, and has collaborated with artists such as Okkyung Lee, Billy Hart, Immanuel Wilkins, Ben Street, Jochen Rueckert and Steve Earl. Gershwin’s freshman trio album, “Ode to Abraham” presents a culmination of the past six years in his musical life living and playing in New York City. Rather than looking back at the past six years through a lens of nostalgia, Gershwin composes with gratitude in mind, his music representative of the people and places he comes from. The album title, “Ode to Abraham” pays homage to Abraham F. Greener, Gershwin’s grandfather who was born on September 7, 1909 in New York City. Gershwin comes from Abraham, from Philadelphia’s Clef Club, from late nights at Grassroots on St. Marks Pl, and from each musician who has come over for a midday espresso and session. “Ode to Abraham” is representative of where Gershwin has been, from writing under his loft bed on Stanton St. to under his guitar loft in Prospect Heights, but also, where he is going. 

Bob Marley & The Wailers - Bob Marley – Live At The Quiet Night Club – June 10, 1975

Live material from Bob Marley & The Wailers – recorded in an obscure nightclub in our hometown of Chicago during the 70s, and quite a nice change from some of the bigger label releases of the time! The band has a loose, very spontaneous vibe – and there's a nice flow to the longer length of the tracks – served up with instrumentation from Earl Lindon on keyboards and organ, Al Anderson on guitar, Aston Family Man Barrett on bass, and Carlton Barrett on drums – with backing vocals from the I-Threes behind Bob's lead vocals! Titles include "Rebel Music", "Talkin Blues", "Concrete Jungle", "Natty Dread", "I Shot The Sherriff", "Slave Driver", and "Midnight Ravers". ~ Dusty Groove

Emilia Sisco - Trouble

After her debut Timmion Records single ‘Don't Believe You Like That’, Emilia Sisco is back in the fold with a double sider of the highest order. Emilia seems to feel right at home with the material that she cooks up with Cold Diamond & Mink, filling both songs to the brim with soul. Despite its title, ‘Trouble’ strolls along with a delicately sweet mid-tempo groove and a nicely abundant arrangement, each of Emilia's lyrical calls getting a response from the background harmonizers and the band steady tightening up while the song builds towards its conclusion. The B-side slows things down to a lush southern soul drawl, coming off like a classy forgotten Hi session. Both of these tracks present a singer who has paid her dues by studying the craft and polishing it for years in front of live audiences. Now it's time for Emilia to push her voice out there on the wings of her own original songs, a feature that we've come to expect from the Timmion stable.

DJ Harrison - Monotones

An underground soul gem from DJ Harrison – aka Devonne Harris – a set that features the man himself on all the instruments, served up in a lean take on classic soul modes of the 70s! Think of the record as a one-man effort to capture some of the charms of Curtis Mayfield or the Isleys – sometimes on short tracks that are more sketches of ideas, but woven together as a much larger whole that really bristles with color and imagination throughout! There's plenty of Fender Rhodes on the set, and Harrison's got this crackling vocal style that's instantly charming – on cuts that include "Cigarette Ember", "Chester Fields", "I Gotta Go To Work", "The Man", "Soul Food Nostalgia", "DayDreaming", and "Chinatown Bus". ~ Dusty Groove




New Music: Alexander IV / Micatone / Zack Clarke & Alex Louloudis / Izy

Alexander IV - Musica 

Musica is something of a surprise summertime special release, following on from the recent Westbound EP by accomplished multi-instrumentalist and producer Alexander IV, otherwise known as Joris Feiertag. This latest sobriquet has allowed the Dutch beatmaker to move away from his more club focused offerings, to explore his hip hop, soul and jazz roots. The track is a Brasilian flavoured bossa nova beauty that starts sweetly and easily with mellow guitars and drums joined by enchanting South American vocals reminiscent of Astrud Gilberto, Joyce or the much missed Gal Costa. Breezy keys join the soothing mix, giving Musica the feel of an Ipanema classic, before things are turned up a notch, with a heavier samba sensation in the piece’s dying moments. Alexander IV’s music fuses organic and electronic elements with ease, which isn’t surprising given the artist’s experience not only as a consummate dance music maker, but also as drummer of choice for Dutch superstars Kraak & Smaak. Add to that an extended family of gifted musicians, and you’ve got something brand new yet retro; uncomplicated yet masterful.

Micatone - Where Do You Belong

German nu jazz stalwarts Micatone return to Sonar Kollektiv after a six year hiatus with the ethereal and emotionally charged coming-of-age piece, Where Do You Belong? The core duo of the band, Boris Meinhold on guitar and synths and Lisa Bassenge on vocals, have been making music for the label for over two decades, with five studio albums and numerous singles to date. Where Do You Belong? was inspired by singer Lisa’s now nineteen year old daughter at a time when she was trying to find her place in the world. Lisa explains that the “song (is) about the in-between state humans find themselves in when they grow up. A phase where life seems full of possibilities, shiny and brand new but at the same time scary and somehow overwhelming.” The track was produced during COVID lockdown with Boris using field recordings, guitars, an old organ bass pedal and choir that give the track that celestial feel. Lisa wrote the melodies and lyrics over the top and asked vocalists Lilian Bennett-Schaar, Johanna Maisel and Josephine Pritz to sing the choral parts. Label head honcho, Oliver Glage, then had the idea of Stefan Leisering, of Jazzanova, providing the programmed drums, and the track was complete. An elegant, touching and yet somewhat intangible new offering, and the first of a little series of pieces out on the label in 2023.

Zack Clarke & Alex Louloudis - What We Are

I'm reminded of Bartok's Mikrokosmos; his series of six volumes for tackling technical piano techniques he thought were missing from educational material for teaching "modern piano works" but in this case, it would be for drums and piano. And it's not that this album I'm sharing with you sounds like etudes, but they have a cohesiveness and "point" to each piece, even though there is quite a bit of free improvisation (note: this is not a free jazz record). Sometimes I also hear Erik Satie high on a pot of coffee. You decide. 'What We Are' is the flower that came out of the years-long collaboration between Zack Clarke (from Texas, now NYC) and Alex Louloudis (originally from Greece). The two met in New York City, became friends, and started collaborating in a variety of musical situations. Countless sessions, exploring the freer side of the Jazz idiom, gigs, and Louloudis' graduation recital from the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music are some of the occasions that tighten their musical and personal connection. As may be apparent from listening to the album, both Clarke and Louloudis find their aesthetic preferences closer to the free jazz approaches. At the same time, one can understand that the two are heavily rooted into the jazz tradition as well as other important traditions that come from different places in the world. High on their list of influences, both in the composition and improvisation fronts, the two have Ornette Coleman and his innovation of the harmolodic approach. 

Izy - Close The Door

Izy are back with a new single: ‘Close The Door’, a slinky piece of minimalist analog neo-soul, their first new piece of music since 2021’s Irene album.Led by the heartfelt and sensual vocals of bassist Warrigo Tyrrell aka Waari, the song is an ode to cutting off the noise of the outside world and tuning in with yourself. Closing the door to past relationships and habits and shifting from old actions to new, opening a path to new growth, rooted in what is real and personal - home and family. Warrigo’s voice is supported by his own perfectly executed electric bass playing, sitting right in the pocket with drummer Maru Nitor-Zammataro and the sublime, understated guitar comping of Ryotaro Noshiro. The trio’s connection is near-psychic, and testament to the fact they’ve been playing together since they were teens. The entire rhythm track is a single improvisation captured on tape at the Hopestreet Recordings HQ which the band then worked back into creating vocal melodies and parts as a group. In Warrigo’s words: “We all came together in the vocal booth to find suited melodies, collectively building on each other’s ideas and eventually developing a storyline.” This song is a recommended listen for fans of anything from D’angelo to Curtis Mayfield, with a rhythmic feel and vocal performance informed by contemporary neo-soul but the analog textures speaking to older soul and jazz influences. Close The Door is the beginning of a new cycle of music from Izy with more singles due later in 2023 and an album scheduled for 2024.

Damian "Jr. Gong” Marley - Covers George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord"

4x GRAMMY AWARD® - winning reggae artist Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley is back with a new single, highlighting his interpretation of a timeless classic of George Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord”. Marley's rendition of "My Sweet Lord" is said to capture the essence of the original while blending it with his own reggae-infused style, creating a fresh and captivating musical experience. 

The song, "My Sweet Lord," is a cover of Harrison's classic hit from his 1970 album All Things Must Pass. Marley puts his own spin on the spiritual anthem, giving the track a fresh sound with his signature reggae style and soulful vocals. The single marks Marley's first solo release since 2019's "Reach Home Safe," and his first release under his own label, Ghetto Youths International, which he runs with his brothers Stephen and Julian Marley.

Marley chose to cover "My Sweet Lord" because of its timeless message and its relevance to the current state of the world. Showcasing his distinctive sound and artistry, Marley adds to his repertoire by collaborating with music legends such as Mick Jagger and forming the group 'Super Heavy.' The single will be available on all digital platforms on July 28th, coinciding with the 52nd anniversary of Harrison's Concert for Bangladesh, the first major benefit concert in history, which raised funds and awareness for the humanitarian crisis in Bangladesh. Marley hopes that his single will also inspire people to support causes that are close to their hearts and make a positive difference in the world.

The youngest son of Reggae legend Bob Marley, Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley garnered his own place in music history when he became the first ever Reggae artist to win a GRAMMY AWARD® outside of the Reggae category, taking home an award for Best Urban/Alternative performance for his title single, “Welcome To Jamrock.” The acclaimed 2005 breakthrough disc Welcome To Jamrock, also won a GRAMMY AWARD® for Best Reggae Album, whilst the New York Times named it “the best reggae song of the decade.” Marley has been shaking up stages all over the world for the past few years, first in conjunction with his Distant Relatives project where he teams up with Nas and brother Stephen Marley, and then when he went on to partner with Skrillex for their groundbreaking track “Make It Bun Dem”, which Rolling Stone called “a monster mash up of dubstep and dancehall.” Which went on to sell over 500,000 copies in the United States alone. Following the track’s success, the reggae superstar released his fourth studio album, Stony Hill, resulting in his third GRAMMY AWARD® for Best Reggae Album. Marley is also working with his brothers Stephen and Julian under their Ghetto Youths International Label, to discover, develop and sign gifted artists – applying their musical talent and vast experience to create new and different styles of music. Recently, Marley collaborated on and produced The Kalling by Kabaka Pyramid in September of 2022. The 15-track project went on to win Best Reggae Album at the 65th Annual GRAMMY AWARDS®.

TCQ - The Path | Canadian jazz group

TCQ (The Cookers Quintet) is a Canadian jazz group, with a sound firmly rooted in the ‘60s hard bop movement.

The core members each bring their own unique qualities to the band’s sound. Saxophonist Ryan Oliver’s fat, full tenor tone might bring to mind heavyweight Dexter Gordon, but it’s blended with sophistication and subtlety. Oliver shares the front line with Tim Hamel, a trumpet player that can bring a hot, uptempo number to a boil and then carry a ballad with lyricism and beauty minutes later. The rock solid foundation of all of this is bassist Alex Coleman, who’s clearly grounded in the Ray Brown/Paul Chambers school of keeping the bass steady and swinging.

During the fall of 2021, while on tour in the west coast of Canada with Bernie Senensky (Piano), and Joe Poole (Drums), the group performed a brand new set of original compositions to live audiences which subsequently became the 8-track studio album, ‘The Path’. From Oliver’s opening blues, “Undisputed”, to Hamel’s Wayne Shorter-inspired album title track, the group has produced another exciting offering of original Canadian jazz steeped in the tradition. “With our fourth record we wanted to create something that maintained the group’s original voice and sensibilities while reflecting inspiration from some of our 60s jazz heros.” says Oliver.

Canadian jazz legend, Bernie Senensky has performed with the greats including Art Blakey and the Jazz messengers, Elvin Jones, and Pharoah Sanders. His deep harmonic sense and captivating improvisational style brought an edge to the record that could only be provided by a musician of Senensky‘s stature. With a degree in Jazz Performance under the guidance of Oscar Peterson, drummer Joe Poole has gradually gained an international reputation. His tasteful playing, sense of groove, and rhythmic fluidity have led him to accompany an impressive list of top musicians including Ernestine Anderson, Curtis Fuller, and Marcus Belgrave.

Born out of a weekly residency, TCQ cut their teeth on the classic, hard swinging music of Horace Silver, and Hank Mobley; it didn’t take long before they were writing tunes of their own. “We wanted to have tunes that would be swinging, straight ahead, and essentially, fun tunes with great rhythms and memorable melodies that even non-jazz lovers would be attracted to,” says Coleman.

TCQ has previously released 3 albums, Vol. 1 (2011), Vol. 2 (2015) featuring Leron Thomas and Dawn Pemberton, and Vol. 3 (2016) featuring NYC legend Johnny O’Neal on piano and vocals. Their sound pays homage to the jazz’s golden era while remaining unique and contemporary.

Kerry Politzer | "In a Heartbeat,\"

Kerry Politzer reaffirms her high regard as both a pianist and a composer on In a Heartbeat, to be released  on Portland Jazz Composers Ensemble (PJCE) Records. In particular, it puts Portland, Oregon-based Politzer’s writing back in the spotlight. The quintet album (featuring Portland trumpeter Thomas Barber, saxophonist/flutist Joe Manis, bassist Garrett Baxter, and drummer George Colligan) is her first in eight years to exclusively feature her own compositions and arrangements.

Not to say that Politzer hasn’t kept busy in the time since 2014’s Below the Surface, her last collection of originals. The pianist is a first-call player on Portland’s increasingly rich jazz scene, as well as an educator on Portland State University’s jazz faculty. She also received grants in 2019 and 2020 to explore the work of great Brazilian pianists (one of whom was the subject of her 2019 album, Diagonal: The Music of Durval Ferreira).

Even so, writing music has remained among Politzer’s top priorities. “Composing is one of the things I enjoy the most,” she says. “I tend to be shy and I feel like I need to put myself out there, to make an emotional statement.”

In a Heartbeat certainly does that. It’s a kaleidoscope of moods, grooves, and even timbre (with Manis’s rotation between flute and tenor and soprano saxes as the wild card). “Spring Day” basks in a midtempo waltz and knowing satisfaction; the gently swinging title track is both romantic and mysterious; “3 AM” is slow and unsettling, even foreboding; and “Goodbye” is all lyrical melancholia.

The powerful emotions and equally powerful shifts are a reflection of the time of COVID-19, during which the bulk of the music was created. “A lot of this music was coming from my subconscious,” Politzer says. “Some of it came to me in a dream, and I’d wake up and write the rest of it down. This music is a product of the dreamlike headspace I was in during the pandemic.” 

If it was not a comfortable headspace in which to be, it was a remarkably inspiring one. In a Heartbeat is a glimpse at how Politzer, like any artist worthy of the name, transformed her reaction to anxious and uncertain times into bold, often haunting creative work.

Kerry Politzer was born in Washington, DC in 1971. There was music on both sides of her family, and she inherited that muse. She started playing piano at the age of four and pursued its study first at North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem, NC, where she attended high school, then at the New England Conservatory in Boston, where she studied with Geri Allen, Bevan Manson, and Charlie Banacos. 

Having caught the jazz bug as a teenager, Politzer went to the music’s mecca, New York City, after completing her degree at NEC. She worked with the DIVA Jazz Orchestra, established herself on the jam session and Brazilian jazz scenes, and began cultivating a book of original compositions, made manifest on her 2001 debut album Yearning. 

She continued documenting her music with 2002’s Watercolor, 2005’s Labyrinth, and 2010’s Blue in Blue. The latter two featured George Colligan—the acclaimed pianist and multi-instrumentalist who became her husband in 2005—on drums. The family transplanted itself across the country to Oregon in 2011, where both Colligan and Politzer took faculty positions at Portland State University. 

Her music has continued to flourish and develop on the West Coast, where Politzer has also taught at the University of Portland and played in Bossa PDX, the Chuck Israels Jazz Orchestra, and the Portland Jazz Composers Ensemble, and as a featured artist in the 25th Annual Gene Harris Jazz Festival in Boise, ID. She has also continued recording with 2014’s Below the Surface, 2019’s Diagonal: The Music of Durval Ferreira, and the new release In a Heartbeat.

Tuesday, August 08, 2023

Montreal-Based Pianist Andrés Vial Explores a Lyrical Vision on Juno-Nominated "When Is Ancient?"

Lyricism is the order of the day on When Is Ancient?, the sixth album by Montreal pianist-composer Andrés Vial, releasing in the U.S. September 30 on his own Chromatic Audio label. Recorded with a trio featuring bassist Martin Heslop and drummer Tommy Crane, the album is an expressive affair packed with rumination, sensitive interplay, and stunning melody. Initially released as a streaming-only album on December 31, 2020, When Is Ancient? has already garnered considerable acclaim, including a 2022 Juno Award (the Canadian Grammy) nomination for Jazz Album of the Year. 

As its June 2020 session date might suggest, it’s a small miracle that When Is Ancient? happened at all. Both Heslop (Kevin Dean, Devin Brahja Waldman) and Crane (Aaron Parks, Melissa Aldana) are old friends of Vial’s, but the three had never performed together before. “Martin, who I’ve played with for 15 years, was moving to Toronto to go to law school and work at a legal clinic for refugees. I wanted to cut a record with him before he left town,” the pianist recalls. “Tommy had moved to Montreal a few years before, but he was always on tour or teaching in Italy.”

 The COVID-19 pandemic kept all three of them in the city, of course, but hardly encouraged a group effort. The session was scheduled, then delayed several times over. “There was so much uncertainty about even being in a room together,” Vial says.

What they finally captured once together is well worth the effort. The somber tones of “La Nuit Est Un Soleil Voilé” and “Spring 2020” carry a powerful resonance, but it finds a complement in the understated joy of “Jabok” and “Mister Mystery.” This shadows-and-light balance is also studded with idiosyncratic gems, such as the Afro-Latin meditation “Senderos” and the surprisingly down-home “The Map Is Not the Territory.”

There are some themes running across When Is Ancient?, among them the musicians’ shared intensity after months of silence and a marking of lost time (“Spring 2020”) and people (the title track was inspired by the deaths of McCoy Tyner and Harold Mabern, along with Keith Jarrett’s loss of performing ability). The album’s true throughline, however, is its lyrical richness. Not one track is untouched by the trio’s confluence of melody, grace, and uncommon delicacy that keeps calling out to the listener well after the last notes have faded. 

Andrés Vial was born January 25, 1979 in Montreal. From his first memories, Andrés was seated at the piano of his father, an accomplished amateur musician, making up little songs. He eventually began taking classical lessons, also learning pop and Latin records that he heard around the house. But when he was 11 his mother came home with a copy of John Coltrane’s Blue Train, which altered his trajectory forever.

Andrés joined his middle school and high school jazz bands, then enrolled in the New School in New York, where his teachers included Hal Galper, Joe Chambers, Bill Charlap, and Buster Williams. After graduation, he returned to Montreal and became a full-time musician playing jazz, funk, hip-hop, and reggae (and writing commissions for films and contemporary dance). He also became a member of the city’s Kalmunity Vibe Collective, a grassroots assemblage that welcomes players and ideas from black musical forms all over the world. Vial had the opportunity as well to perform with visiting musicians including Ingrid Jensen, Michael Blake, Greg Cohen, Bassekou Kouyate, and the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble. 

Members of Kalmunity, including singer Malika Tirolien, appeared on Vial’s debut recording, 2007’s Trio/Septet. He followed it up with 2011’s The Infinite Field, a minimalist effort on which he played piano and vibraphone. While these two albums featured all original compositions, the next, conception/oblivion (2015), concentrated on a variety of American and Argentine composers, and Sphereology Volume 1 (2018) explored the music of Thelonious Monk. Vial the composer re-emerged with 2019’s Gang of Three (a trio record with bassist Dezron Douglas and Eric McPherson) and 2021’s Music for Film and Contemporary Dance Vol. 1 (a collection of Vial’s commissioned works). He continues in that vein with When Is Ancient?

Pianist George Colligan's "King's Dream"

George Colligan expresses the complexities and conflicting emotions of our confusing, sometimes chaotic times with the release of King’s Dream (PJCE Records). Though not quite a sequel, the album builds on many of the themes presented on his previous solo album, 2018’s Nation Divided.

The 11 original compositions on King’s Dream (Colligan’s 36th album as a leader) are not all new: Some of them go as far back as 2008. But like all the best improvised jazz, the tunes become about the moment in which they’re being played—in this case a very fraught moment. “It was and still is such an unusual time,” Colligan says. “Who knows what tomorrow brings? The music is a representation of that uncertainty.”

The variety of moods on the album help underscore that uncertainty. It moves from the wistful, bittersweet “Clearing the Mind” to the glorious funk of “Change”; from the hard-bitten “Blues for Dwayne Burno” to the lyrical balance of hope and trouble in “King’s Dream”; from the plaintive “Wishing for Things to Happen” to the sanguine “Finally a Rainbow.”

The title track of King’s Dream is also its centerpiece. Invoking the famous ideals of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the piece both echoes and questions that optimism, making for a statement both timely and timeless about American life while also serving as a microcosm for the album’s precarious position between glass-half-full and half-empty—with glass-half-full perhaps taking the edge.

“In this challenging era and complex world in which we live, we have to believe that good will and enlightenment will prevail over ignorance and hatred,” Colligan writes in the album’s liner notes. “I don’t know whether music can make a difference, but I dedicate my album to those who believe in, as drummer Al Foster would say, ‘Peace, Love, and Jazz.’”George Colligan

George Colligan was born December 29. 1969 in Summit, New Jersey, but considers his hometown to be Columbia, Maryland, where he grew up since about the age of 3. In the fourth grade he took up trumpet in the elementary school band, then got serious about the instrument in middle school—around the time he discovered jazz from a neighbor who gave him a stack of Clifford Brown, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis records.

Colligan went to Baltimore’s Peabody Institute, earning his degree in classical trumpet. While in Baltimore, though, he started teaching himself to play jazz licks on piano, soon getting gigs on the local scene, and suddenly found himself selling all his trumpets and becoming a professional pianist.

He shuttled back and forth between Baltimore and Washington, DC, mentoring with such musicians as Paul Carr, Gary Thomas, and Reuben Brown for several years before he made the leap to New York City in 1995. These associations meant that he already had some cachet on the New York scene when he arrived, and he was soon working with legendary figures like Eddie Henderson, Gary Bartz, and Lee Konitz, as well as recruiting the revered bassist Dwayne Burno and drummer Ralph Peterson for his own 1996 debut Activism.

His career continued to grow, collaborating fruitfully with other greats of his generation including Ingrid Jensen, Mark Turner, Nicholas Payton, and Kurt Rosenwinkel; working under Jack DeJohnette, Buster Williams, Billy Hart, and Al Foster; and recording dozens of albums under his own name. In 2005, he married fellow pianist Kerry Politzer, and a few years later they moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, where he began a career as a jazz educator.

That career continued on to a job at Oregon’s Portland State University, where Colligan moved in 2011 and remains today. In addition to his academic work, he has become a mainstay of the Portland jazz scene—as a drummer as well as a pianist. (He’s the drummer on Kerry Politzer’s latest CD, In a Heartbeat, also on PJCE Records.) Indeed, although King’s Dream is a solo album, it is also a collaboration with a longtime Portland colleague, pianist Randy Porter, who recorded, mixed, and mastered the album at his Heavywood Studio.

New Music: Dave Douglas & Elan Mehler / Dinner Party (Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, 9th Wonder, & Kamasi Washington) / Javier Nero / Greg Foat & Gigi Masin

Dave Douglas & Elan Mehler - If There Are Mountains

A collaboration between trumpeter Dave Douglas and pianist Elan Mehler – but a record that seems to draw equal input from the vocals of Dominique Eade, who's a key force on the session – delivering these darkly poetic lyrics that are matched beautifully by both of the leaders – then taken into a rich tapestry of sonic activity through further work from John Gunther on saxes and bass clarinet, Simon Willson on bass, and Dayeon Seok on drums. The original album was a vinyl-only release on the subscription-only Newvelle label, but this CD issue adds in other tracks not on the vinyl – a set of 13 titles that include "Even A Nameless Stream", "Wolf Orchard", "Here On The Plains", "Barn's Burnt Down", "Life", The Spring Current", "With Your Singing", and "If There Are Mountains". ~ Dusty Groove

Dinner Party (Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, 9th Wonder, & Kamasi Washington) - Enigmatic Society

Maybe the best work so far from this really wonderful group – a magnificent match of the keyboards of Robert Glasper, the saxophones of Terrace Martin and Kamasi Washington, and the superb production talents of 9th Wonder – all working together in a stunning blend of jazz, soul, funk, and hip hop! The tunes have a sharpness and focus that's even more powerful than previous work by the lineup – like they've really found that special space where the all-stars can come together in a united voice that really soars – working with key contributions from Phoelix on vocals, alongside Arin Ray and Ant Clemons. Titles include "Insane", "Watts Renaissance", "For Granted", "Secure", "Can't Go", "The Lower East Side", "Love Love", and "Answered Prayer". ~, Dusty Groove

Javier Nero - Kemet: The Black Land

Maybe the strongest statement so far as a leader by Javier Nero – a larger group recording that really bristles with energy – full of all sorts of fantastic twists and turns amidst a set of original compositions by Nero, all every bit as soulful as you might guess from the album's title! Nero blow trombone, but he's an equally strong leader – and the group features some key guest work from Sean Jones on trumpet and Warren Wolf on vibes – the latter of whom gets two especially nice solos on the set! Titles include "Reflections On The Dark Tranquil Water", "Discord", "One Day", "Kemet The Black Land", "Time", "Nostalgic Haiku", and "Just Let Go".  ~ Dusty Groove

Greg Foat & Gigi Masin - Dolphin

The keyboards of Greg Foat have a really great setting here in a collaboration with Gigi Masin – served up in a style that's maybe more laidback and spacious than before, yet in a way that makes us fall in love with Greg's electric piano lines all over again! Masin's got roots in more ambient sounds, but the record definitely has a jazz approach at the core – plenty of the increasingly sensitive styles that Foat has developed as the years moved on – shifting from an initial role as a guy who could handle vintage keys, to a point where he's really emerged as a more fully-fledged jazz player overall! The blend of keyboards and a larger sonic palette still has plenty of live instrumentation in the mix – different than a project of this sort by an artist like Bugge Wesseltoft – and titles include "London Nights", "Viento Calido", "Your Move", "Sabena", "Leo Theo", "Love Theme", and "Dolphin". ~ Dusty Groove

WAAN - Lost | A piece of heavy Jazz

WAAN represents the musical marriage of seasoned saxophonist Bart Wirtz and keyboard wiz Emiel van Rijthoven. As a pair of self-confessed tech nerds hailing from The Netherlands, their bromance was a slow burning one, but nevertheless their eventual collaboration fulfilled a dream that they’d both held close since first working together back in 2010. 

Lost, the third and final single to be taken from the duo’s debut album Echo Echo, is a fitting description of how they felt when writing it! Emiel in particular was struggling with a myriad of issues at the time - from their identity and how they worked as a live band to personal relationships and technical studio problems. All of these factors influenced the sound of this piece, with its low slung groove, mournful bass and piano parts which were played with mostly black keys, giving it an intense classical sound that forms the basis of the bridge. The pair worked for a long time on this track and it had many incarnations, but it was only when Bart added the harmonizer (a saxophone that you can create your own chords with) that the vision for the track became clear. Bart and Emiel found their way out of the darkness and Lost became one of the most positive songs on the album with its uplifting sax parts and frenetic and joyous drums. An important document of how a partnership can see you through even the most disorientating of times. 

With influences as disparate as Floating Points, BadBadNotGood and Eddie Harris, Echo Echo is far more complex than just being a dance music influenced jazz record. Co-producer Oscar de Jong, of Kraak & Smaak fame, encouraged the pair to play freely as part of a jazz group and then add the electronic elements. As a result the album owes as much to Duke Ellington and Lalo Schiffrin as it does NERD and The Eurythmics!

Following up on their acclaimed debut EP ‘Yagana’ in 2022, 5-piece band Pigeon return with a brand new offering: ‘Backslider’

Following up on their acclaimed debut EP ‘Yagana’ in 2022, 5-piece band Pigeon return with a brand new offering: ‘Backslider’.

Dressed as if they would be equally comfortable starring in a modern spaghetti western as they are cutting slick silhouettes on a festival stage - are Guinean singer Falle Nioke, Graham Godfrey on drums, Steve Pringle on keys, Tom Dream on guitar and Josh Ludlow on bass.

As Pigeon develop and hone their sound further, Afro-disco remains at the core while jazz and no-wave make way for new elements of electro, rock and synth pop. The introduction of sequencers and drum machines sprinkles a little more structure into the mix, however the recording process still very much embodies the DIY spirit of band members that enjoy jamming together.

With the Yagana EP gaining extensive support from radio, DJs and fans, each member has found themselves heavily in demand on top of their own individual pursuits – Falle Nioke is releasing his solo work as well as other projects, while Steve Pringle and Graham Godfrey play in various bands (Michael Kiwanuka and SAULT to name a few). Adding to the creative melting pot, Tom Dream pursues filmmaking and bespoke music composition via his own studio, and Josh Ludlow runs his own record label M.A.D. Records.

Amongst all this, they still manage to find time to come together for a UK tour in summer 2023, including Glastonbury Festival, Latitude Festival and The Great Escape.

On title track 'Backslider', a laid-back, 80s funk-rock bassline is backed by a deliberate, plodding drum kit. Kicking off with congas and synth stabs which appear optimistic at first, frontman Falle Nioke proceeds to sing in English and French - calling someone a  'backslider', for their dishonesty and bad behaviour. His cool air of contempt is mirrored by an epic guitar solo drenched in distortion pedal.

Jazz Supergroup PILC MOUTIN HOENIG Release 'YOU Are the Song' Album

No rehearsal. No overdubs. Not even a plan.

None of that is all that unusual for seasoned jazz players. But when the acclaimed trio of Jean-Michel Pilc, François Moutin and Ari Hoenig reunited for the first time in 12 years, there was no question that the magic they distilled all those years ago was just waiting to be plucked from the air the moment they reconvened.

The result, YOU Are the Song, is their first album in 12 years. It’s out May 12 on Justin Time Records. “Instead of talking about music, we let music talk through us,” says Pilc. “Rather than playing music, we let music play us. In lieu of playing a song, we become the song and invite all of YOU to do so.”

Even though Pilc and Moutin knew each other in France in the ‘80s when they attended university together, they strengthened their musical relationship in 1995 when they both moved to New York where they linked up with Hoenig. Their debut in 2000 was followed by three more records before they went their separate ways in 2011.

Jazz Times once wrote: “This remarkably intuitive trio has the ability to collectively bend the harmonic and rhythmic content of familiar jazz standards like taffy…...it’s like watching the Flying Karamazov Brothers tossing bowling pins back and forth from across the stage.”

Reuniting at the behest of Justin Time Records, it was like no time had passed at all. "What we do is pure improvisation,” says Pilc. “There is no resistance in the music when the three of us are together.” They assembled in a Brooklyn studio in June 2022 and played for three hours, gathering enough material for several albums. YOU Are the Song is the first.

The result includes spontaneous compositions as well as reharmonized takes on standards such as John Coltrane’s “Impressions” and Thelonious Monk’s “Straight No Chaser” — even the theme from the 1951 Disney version of Alice in Wonderland. It’s not free jazz as some listeners might assume from the trio’s three-decade career. It has an emotive heart, with all three musicians serving as leaders. It follows melodic forms, fuels with a unique rhythmic vitality, powers into playground antics and ventures into uncharted sonic territory.

“We’re in a state of concentration,” says Moutin. “We don’t want a rational mindset to get in the way. We are constantly on that crest between control and letting go. It’s a mystery, but we like to not solve the mystery. It’s more important to carry the emotion.”


Monday, August 07, 2023

Axon Radio pays homage to the rich jazz history of their hometown

While the video for contemporary jazz group Axon Radio’s new single looks like a modern love letter to their hometown, Indianapolis, the roots of “Naptown Hustle” run nearly one hundred years deep. The duo that makes up Axon Radio, drummer Travis Brant and bassist Cory Carleton, set out to honor Indianapolis’s jazz history by affectionately crafting an instrumental tribute. Building upon the foundation of a taut rhythmic groove, melodies came from the single’s co-writer and producer Darren Rahn, a multi-time Grammy nominee who has architected 27 Billboard No. 1 singles. Electing to go with electric jazz guitar as lead instrumental voice, two-time Grammy winner Paul Brown, a producer of more than sixty number one singles, plies his bluesy, cool jazz touch to the track. Axon Radio’s third single was released this week on the Def Left Ear imprint and became one of the most added singles on the Mediabase chart, scoring an instant add to the SiriusXM Watercolor playlist, and debuting on the iTunes top 40 UK jazz singles chart prior to release.

Back in the 1920s, Indianapolis had a vibrant jazz scene, belying the bucolic city’s sleepy reputation for which the media affectionately coined the nickname “Naptown.” Guitar legend Wes Montgomery was born during that era and carried the mantel proudly when he came of age alongside fellow Indianapolis native and trumpet great Freddie Hubbard. 

The “Naptown Hustle” video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTwEW9HK7Eo) takes viewers on a tour through the streets of Indianapolis, visiting cultural landmarks, hot spots and other historic locales. The mostly black-and-white video has a cosmopolitan look and a neighborhood feel while the track itself has a distinct retro sound.

“When writing 'Naptown Hustle,' we felt the song had a strong seventies vibe. It was written on drums and bass, which is typical of most Axon Radio songs. When producer Darren Rahn heard the track, he expanded on the idea by adding strings and other instrumentation (Rhodes, organ, synths and programming) to the mix. We all wanted a title that represents both our hometown and the seventies vibe so, we added 'Hustle' to the title as a throwback to the seventies dance, The Hustle,” said Brant.

Since Axon Radio’s approach to songwriting is somewhat unique, they often pursue collaborators to illuminate their work. Brant and Carleton reached out to Rahn, being fans of his saxophone playing and songwriting skills. Initially, they weren’t aware that Rahn was also a producer who has a stellar track record.

"We happened to be looking for a new producer so finding out Darren could fill that role made this collaboration a great fit," said Carleton. 

"From the start, we wanted guitar to be the lead instrument. Not only does it fit the song's vibe, but it would also serve to differentiate us in a genre that can be heavy with saxophone artists. When we approached Darren about guitar players, Paul Brown was at the front of my mind. Again, as luck would have it, Rahn and Brown have a long-standing work history. Shortly after, Paul was on board and ‘Naptown Hustle’ was complete," said Brant, who has been playing and writing music with Carleton for thirty years.

Before forming Axon Radio, Brant and Carleton performed as a drum and bass duo for a decade, creating an alchemic sound of jazz, funk, and fusion with live looping and interactive audience experiences. They released an experimental jazz fusion EP in 2020 titled “Shadow Logic,” which highlighted fusion guitarist Oz Noy as soloist. Then the group decided to take a deliberate turn towards making more commercial music, teaming up with contemporary jazz headliners such as nine-time Grammy nominee Gerald Albright and chart-topping saxophonist Michael Lington. 

Carleton said, “Our approach to songwriting is fairly unique as every song is written starting with drums and bass. This often makes for an eclectic mix of time signatures, key changes and rhythms. We’ve enlisted top-tier producers and arrangers to help smooth things out.”

Among those producers and arrangers are Bud Harner (Mindi Abair, David Benoit, Keiko Matsui), keyboardist Matt Rohde (Jane’s Addiction, “The Voice”), and now Rahn (Dave Koz, Najee, Blake Aaron).

Axon Radio’s first single, 2021’s “Prom Drama,” featured Albright along with A-list session players Michael Thompson (guitar) and Luis Conte (percussion). Last year, the group spotlighted Lington on “Forklift Judy.” Both singles were accompanied by imaginative videos that contained hidden messages and QR codes to download free music. The band will neither confirm nor deny that they utilized that tactic in the “Naptown Hustle” video.  

Kendra Erikareturns to her jazz roots with a Sinatra remake produced by Earth, Wind & Fire’s Ralph Johnson and Myron McKinley

It’s been four years since Kendra Erika cast her spell on the dance music world to capture the number one spot on Billboard’s Dance Club Songs chart with “Self Control.” At her core, the siren’s burning passion is singing jazz and after a prolific three years during which she dropped eleven singles, most of which reached Billboard’s top ten enroute to amassing millions of streams and YouTube views, Erika is following her muse and changing the tempo. Her sultry version of “Witchcraft,” a Grammy nominated Song of the Year and Record of the Year originally released in 1957 as a single by Frank Sinatra.

Having become a fixture in the dance music space, Erika sought a new challenge. Just as she did with her club music releases when she tapped Grammy winner Damon Sharpe (Ariana Grande, Jennifer Lopez, Pitbull) to produce her, she teamed up with seasoned producers to launch her first foray in jazz. In fact, the idea to record “Witchcraft” came over lunch in Los Angeles with Earth, Wind & Fire’s Ralph Johnson, who along with being an original member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band has collaborated with Drake, Meghan Trainor, Nathan East and Howard Hewett.

“We were talking music direction for our collaboration, and I mentioned Frank Sinatra and that instantly perked Ralph's ears and attention. Sinatra has one hell of a classic style and vibe, and that's what made us sift through the songs he did. When I posed ‘Witchcraft,’ you could feel the agreement in the air amongst us. So, the magic started brewing from there,” said Erika who was exposed to Sinatra’s music at an early age, long before she started singing standards from the Great American songbook in South Florida clubs, bars and lounges as a teenager and in her early twenties.

Johnson brought in Earth, Wind & Fire’s longtime keyboardist and musical director Myron McKinley to coproduce “Witchcraft.” The production duo surrounded Erika’s sultry voice with lush instrumentation, including McKinley’s elegant piano and keyboards, swooning strings and a classy trumpet solo by Anne King.

Just like going home, Erika instantly felt comfortable singing jazz in the company of accomplished pros despite it being a dramatic departure from her dance-pop-EDM music recordings.   

“Before I went into the studio to record with Ralph and Myron, I thought that I would have to do a barrel of takes and change the way I sing and do things. However, it turned out to be such a smooth recording process. I only had to do a few takes of the song all the way through. That signified to me, especially going back to my roots and having spiritual confirmation from Frank (Sinatra), that I have come to that level now in my career where all it takes is for me to be fluid and stay true to myself as an artist in order to flow in an advanced environment,” said Erika, who shot a sensual video to accompany the single release (https://youtu.be/3jJAxpLepOk).

In addition to maintaining a constant presence on the Billboard dance charts, Erika’s singles and videos have filled dance floors, been added into MTV rotation and climbed the charts in the UK. “Witchcraft” will definitely introduce her vocal talents to a new audience.

“And it might just lead to a jazz album,” said Erika with a bewitching smile.

Soul-Jazz saxophonist Merlon Devine teams with Grammy nominated hitmaker Darren Rahn on new album "Shimmer"

After stirring the urban-contemporary jazz scene last fall, saxophonist Merlon Devine is back this summer with the rousing single “Shimmer,” which he wrote with his multiple Grammy nominated producer Darren Rahn (Dave Koz, Najee, Blake Aaron). The newly released single constructed of a glistening melody, an R&B groove, a jazzy soprano sax lead and a mission-driven message from the Devine Music Group has begun collecting playlist adds.

From its celestial opener through to its funky soul-powered conclusion, “Shimmer” is an inspirational soul-jazz instrumental skillfully architected by Rahn, who has crafted twenty-seven number one singles to date. Both Devine and Rahn share the bond of being spiritual, devout men and that inspired and impassioned connection permeates the new recording.    

“‘Shimmer’ is about the positive force that lives in each of us to help others. That force acts like a light shining out of us. That light can bring warmth, direction, hope, calm fears and give peace. Hopefully, this song will encourage those who hear it to do and be something positive in the life of someone else,” said Devine, who issued the new single as the follow up to the single “Stirred,” which dropped last October.  

The harmonies on “Shimmer” lushly drape the glistening track constructed by Rahn, who layered keyboards, synths, synth bass and programming around Devine’s soprano and tenor saxes. Randy Jacobs adds his nimble and nuanced guitar artistry and drummer Tarell Martin sets the tempo.  

A native of Little Rock, Arkansas who grew up in a household filled with gospel music before discovering jazz, Devine now calls the Washington, DC area home. He has worked with Ben Tankard and performed with Kirk Whalum, Paul Jackson Jr., Tom Braxton and Michael Manson. Devine will launch “Shimmer” by playing a pair of shows locally at Blues Alley Jazz on Monday night before heading out on the road for a mixed itinerary of jazz and gospel concert dates booked into October. 

  • Aug. 6 - Mt. Zion Assemblies, Fresno, CA
  • Aug. 31 - Johnnie Alberta Scholarship, Washington, DC
  • Sept. 3 - Full Counsel Metro, N. Little Rock, AR
  • Sept. 15 -  New Birth Com. Church, Manassas, VA
  • Sept. 16 - Restoration Place, Charlotte, NC
  • Sept. 24 - Lighthouse Fam Church, Lafayette, LA
  • Sept. 30 - New Covenant WC, Ft. Wayne, IN
  • Oct. 1 - New Covenant WC, Ft. Wayne, IN
  • Oct. 5-7 - International Gospel Summit,London, EN
  • Oct. 11 -  Hamstead Jazz Club, London, EN

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