Thursday, August 17, 2023

The Artie Roth Quartet – Resonants

Resonants is the third release by the Artie Roth Quartet, featuring 10 new compositions by Toronto composer, bassist and bandleader Artie Roth. Formed in 2013, the group is completed by top Canadian improvisors Anthony Michelli, Mike Filice and Sam Dickinson.

A trailblazing 21st Century jazz concept album, Resonants bristles with the sound of sympathetically resonating objects recorded within the studio setting. Lyrical melodies, catchy bass lines, driving rhythms and soaring guitars weave a daring, experimental tapestry of genre crossing music, seamlessly blending elements of jazz, rock, funk, ambient and folk. 

Building on the critical acclaim of their debut and sophomore releases Currently Experiencing (2015) and Discern (2017), the quartet reunited with the Brooklyn-based Juno Award-winning, Grammy-nominated producer Roman Klun. Resonants was recorded in the fall of 2022 at Grant Avenue Studio, the erstwhile studio of legendary Canadian producer and musician Daniel Lanois.

Derived from an unorthodox combination of the two words “resonance” and “tenants”, the album’s title is a neologism alluding to our existence as individuals empathically inhabiting a complex, evolving social landscape. The compositions on this recording were penned during the pandemic, when the best and worst of the human condition seemed on full display, especially with respect to the aspirational notions of empathy, cooperation and the collective greater good. With a post pandemic reality now in sight, the music on Resonants is offered to listeners as a hopeful gesture towards a bright journey forward together.

Melissa Pipe Sextet – Of What Remains

Of What Remains is Montreal baritone saxophonist and bassoonist Melissa Pipe’s first release as a leader. It explores ideas around temporality: the shifting of time, form and being. The pieces form a whole, joining together fragmentation, symbiosis, distillation, evaporation, and transience, while looking at what is left behind, or what remains.

“The sextet’s instrumentation allows me to write in both traditional jazz ensemble configuration (trumpet and saxes with the rhythm section) and in a “chamber jazz” format,” says Pipe about choosing the unique instrumentation and writing for her sextet. “The additional colour, timbre and orchestration possibilities of the bassoon and the bass clarinet are particularly effective in infusing elements of classical and folkloric music into the pieces”. 

Her compositions here range from moody, atmospheric pieces to more traditional styles like a minor blues, but most tend to be on the darker, introspective side. “I write what I hear. Sometimes it starts with a bass line, a progression. Sometimes it’s a melody. The pieces on this album use a variety of jazz and classical compositional devices and techniques, but beyond the theoretical framework that I use to build its structures, harmonies, textures, etc. the most important thing for me is that it has to have soul. It has to be something my ear wants to hear. At times that can be something more modern, and at others something steeped in the jazz tradition: to me it goes beyond genres, it’s all about the soul of the thing.”

In addition to leading her own group, Pipe also performs regularly with jazz, hip hop, indie, and classical ensembles as a freelancer. She also had the honour of interviewing Yusef Lateef, whose playing and compositional style have greatly influenced her, for an article about his double reed playing which was published in The Double Reed, as well as on Lateef’s website. In 2014, she was invited to perform her arrangements of Charles Mingus pieces for bassoon quartet at the Jazz Standard in NYC alongside Michael Rabinowitz, Paul Hanson and Mark Ortwein, as part of the International Double Reed Society conference.

CARLOS: THE SANTANA JOURNEY GLOBAL PREMIERE

On September 23, 24 & 27, be among the first to see the new movie CARLOS, including an exclusive introduction featuring director Rudy Valdez and Carlos Santana.

At the age of 5, in his native Mexico, he learned to play the violin. At 8, he developed a lifelong love for the guitar. At 14, he honed those guitar virtuoso skills and his performance style working as a street musician, starting his own band long after, while still a teenager. And at 22 — just before his first album was released to acclaim — Carlos Santana became one of the major discoveries of Woodstock, anchoring the famous festival’s second afternoon on August 16, 1969.

A music industry legend for 50 years and a 10-time Grammy-winning global sensation, Santana continues to be one of the music world’s premiere artists, blending jazz, blues, and the Mariachi sound with a rock n’ roll spirituality and a sense of connection to music’s primal connection to our deepest emotions.

The electric documentary CARLOS utilizes new interviews with Santana and his family alongside extraordinary, never-before-seen archival footage — including home video recordings Santana himself made; concert footage; and behind- the-scenes moments — as two-time Emmy-winning director Rudy Valdez creates an intimate, rich documentary about a man whose sound casts a spell on fans who love — as one of Santana’s famous titles says— “how his rhythm goes.”

General theatrical release begins September 29.

New Music Releases From Dhaivat Jani PLUS, Daniel Villarreal Featuring Jeff Parker & Anna Butterss, Projet Seb Parent and Todd Mosby

Dhaivat Jani PLUS – Sum // Parts

Dhaivat Jani PLUS is the brainchild of Toronto based composer, drummer and tabla player Dhaivat Jani. Originally hailing from Ahmedabad, India – the city of love, fun, food and heat – Dhaivat Jani and his group serve up original contemporary jazz music with a healthy dose of Indian classical music, rock and fluid improvisation. Sum // Parts represents the tally of Jani’s life so far, starting with his life growing up in India, to his migration to Canada, and everything in between: the struggles, the hustle, the joy, the tears, the fights, the victories, the ups, the downs, the spirit, and the smiles. Drawing inspiration from a diverse range of artists including Chris Potter, Brad Mehldau, Led Zeppelin, Trilok Gurtu, Radiohead, Brian Blade, and Tigran Hamasyan, Jani and his group emphasize storytelling and narrative in their performances, taking the audience on a deep musical journey. Day 21 and Peshkaar are driven by their distinctive North Indian rhythms; Unchain and It Might Rain fill the listener’s taste for rock without losing any of their improvisational edge; Kaleidoscope offers a novel listening experience with its polyrhythmic arrangement inspired by African rhythms. Sum // Parts is a beautiful and compelling musical statement from one of the most exciting young voices on the Toronto scene.

Daniel Villarreal Featuring Jeff Parker & Anna Butterss – Lados B

On October 15th and 16th, 2020, drummer Daniel Villarreal was joined by guitarist Jeff Parker and bassist Anna Butterss for two afternoons of recording in the backyard of Chicali Outpost in Los Angeles. For all three musicians, it was the first ensemble recording session they’d done in-person since the pandemic locked the world down just seven months prior. Some choice moments from these sessions made it onto Villarreal’s critically-acclaimed 2022 album Panamá 77, but most of the music remained unreleased. Lados B is a deep dive into the high-level spontaneous music made by Villarreal, Parker, and Butterss across those two days in 2020. Villarreal is heard leading the group through various rhythmic modes and structures for improvisation – flow as informed by the Latin funk of Fania Records as it is by the otherworldly humanity trance of Brain Records – while Parker and Butterss draw on their extensive experience playing free together (as heard on Parker's recently-released Mondays at the Enfield Tennis Academy, and the LA side of Makaya McCraven's 2018 LP Universal Beings) to build harmonic buoys for their spontaneous melodicism. The result is a beautifully vivid illustration of context, creativity, and collective composition from a particularly rich moment in history.

Projet Seb Parent

Projet Seb Parent is the eponymous debut album from 24-year-old Montreal drummer Sébastien Parent. While it was written with the rich tradition of big band music in mind, this music contains an eclectic range of stylistic influences from the genres that Parent grew up listening to, including rock, classical, neo-soul, country, trap and bossa nova. Each piece on the album represents a unique period in Parent’s young life. The album was recorded entirely during the depths of the Covid pandemic, between the summer of 2021 and winter of 2022. However, this was not a conventional studio recording: each of the 18 musicians recorded their parts separately, at home in isolation. For some artists, this process would seem impossible due to the lack of realtime communication, but Parent relished the challenge. Parent never intended for the album to be a showcase for his own playing first and foremost. This record is a celebration of 18 unique creative voices assembled together during a trying time. It doesn’t matter that the musicians recorded their parts separately: in fact, that distance only serves to reinforce the power that music has to unite people.

Todd Mosby  Place In The Sun

The playfully-titled "Place In The Sun", exudes the transcendent feeling of being in such beautiful natural environs-exudes a sense of spirituality and joyous mystery. The song features many musical keepsakes from Mosby's musical journey, including dreamy Sergio Mendes-style female vocals, a funk and Motown-like grooving rhythm section, and 1970s jazz-fusion musicality with Todd's lyrical but dexterous guitar playing. Todd Mosby is a musical storyteller and a landscape artist. His latest single from the soon to be released album, Land Of Enchantment, is a gorgeous sonic look at the visual, emotive, spiritual interactions Mosby experiences within the New Mexico borders. This tune also pays melodic homage to Tom Scott's "Tom Cat" album which was an early inspiration. A-list musicians include: drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, saxophone/aerophone Tom Scott, bassist Rhonda Smith, keyboard/synth Dapo Torimiro, vocalist Laura Vall, two-time Grammy winning producer Jeff Weber, and Emmy and Grammy-winning engineer Clark Germain.

Free Love" from Irreversible Entanglements, the Free-Jazz Quintet

Irreversible Entanglements proudly announced their signing to the legendary Impulse! label, as well as the forthcoming release of their new album, Protect Your Light, out September 8th. Additionally, they share the first single off the record, “Free Love.” The band will celebrate the release of Protect Your Light with a performance at Hudson’s Basilica SoundScape Presents festival on September 9th. “We are thrilled to welcome Irreversible Entanglements to the Impulse! Family,” says Dahlia Ambach-Caplin, SVP A&R and Artist Development at Impulse!/Verve Label Group, of the signing. “Their music is not only brilliant but also courageous and contemporary. Protect Your Light embodies so much of Impulse!’s history while also looking unassailably forward as well.”

Every once in a while, the world is blessed with a band that helps define an era. Its sound, purpose and energy speaks directly to the cultural moment. Its individual members mirror the community’s identities, perspectives and aspirations; and collectively, the group forms a supernova, a sign of how we might get to the future — its music, in fact, already spelling aspects of that future out. Usually, it is history that cements the names of these bands in the books, but occasionally we’re capable of glimpsing their majesty unfurl in real time. 

In 2023, that band is Irreversible Entanglements (IE), the free-jazz quintet with an experimental punk mentality. And Protect Your Light is the kind of artistic and social statement that simultaneously plugs into and tweaks the zeitgeist. Over the course of the record’s eight tracks the poet/vocalist Camae Ayewa (often known as Moor Mother), bassist Luke Stewart, trumpeter Aquiles Navarro, saxophonist Keir Neuringer, and drummer Tcheser Holmes unite to deliver an unconditional statement of intent and rhythm. IE’s improvisations are molded in the fire of the moment, while its songs are born in experience, where music and life are one and the same. There is no one remotely like them on the planet, and no recent album like this one.

Primarily recorded over three days in January 2023 at the historic Rudy Van Gelder Studios in Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Protect Your Light is the band’s most accomplished work to date, surpassing even the three already-classic records they cut for Chicago’s International Anthem. PYL features contributions from the greater members of IE’s community — pianist Janice A. Lowe, cellist Lester St. Louis and vocalist Sovei — who help illuminate the band’s musical dexterity and expand the breadth of its beautiful consciousness. The eight pieces were composed both individually and collectively, with some themes brand-new, and others rooted in IE’s spirited, wholly improvised live performances; with Ayewa adding words that elevate what she calls the band’s “in-communion” practices. Navarro is the primary force behind the groove of first single “Free Love,” which is heavy with the Panama-raised trumpeter’s fanfares, and with declarations of what the band calls a “universal message that provokes unity through a love that lives free, the love that lives in you.” That’s why Irreversible Entanglements makes the world feel blessed again. What defines this band, the beauty of Protect Your Light, and its representation of the moment, is a love of the people, of the Black musical tradition, of each other, and of playing it like they’re saying it. Get to that love on time — don’t force history to guide you.  

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Justin-Lee Schultz's Take on the Eddie Harris Classic "Freedom Jazz Dance," w/Robert Glasper's Cameo

“My heart’s desire is to spread peace, love, positivity, and unity through my music and to be an inspiration to my generation,” declares 16-year-old multi-instrumental prodigy Justin-Lee Schultz. It is no wonder the South African born, LA based musician has prompted both Quincy Jones and Harry Connick Jr. to rave “This kid is something special” and Robert Glasper to exclaim “Justin is an older man in a boy’s body!! It’s so great to see somebody so young have such a vast love of ALL kinds of music!! He sounds amazing.” Down Beat Magazine declared Justin’s “Unique brilliance is undeniable.” Jazz has long attracted young and insanely talented musicians. Tony Williams was a mere 17 when he joined Miles Davis' ground-breaking and seminal quintet. Indonesian born pianist Joey Alexander made his auspicious recording debut at eleven, vocal sensation Samara Joy, 23, is currently riding high from multiple Grammy wins including 'Best New Artist' and the dynamic duo Domi & Beck (ages 23 and 20 respectively), continue to wow audiences following their recent NPR Tiny Desk and The Tonight Show performances. All these distinctive musicians have travelled their own paths but have searched for what Rahsaan Roland Kirk once called "your mystery note on the universal piano of life." For Justin, the pursuit for his eternal musical quest began as a toddler when he began playing with his father and bassist Julius and drum playing sister (four years his senior), Jamie-Leigh. The threesome even appeared on America’s Most Talented Family. “Music takes me to my happy place,” says Justin. “As soon as I start playing or listening to my favorite artists, any bad emotions fade away. I don’t see myself doing anything else other than music for the rest of my life.” On September 1, 2023, Justin-Lee Schultz will release his second solo album on Shanachie Entertainment, Just In The Moment. As the title suggests, the awe-inspiring multi-instrumentalist has arrived and his latest musical statement is imbued with soul, fire, and passion, asserting that he is one of the most talented young musicians to emerge in years.

“There are so many remarkable things about Justin - his virtuosity, his youth, his genius...But above all it's the depth, the joy, the beauty; and those inner qualities that make Justin so unique and wonderful,” states Shanachie Entertainment VP of Jazz A&R, Danny Weiss. Just In The Moment showcases all but one original and is produced by Grammy-winning guitarist Paul Brown. It features Grammy-winning pianist/producer Robert Glasper who is heard in the intro to the lone cover on the album, Eddie Harris’ 1960s hit, “Freedom Jazz Dance.” Grammy-winning saxophonist Dave Koz, who Justin will tour with this winter as part of his blockbuster star-studded Christmas Tour, as well as Grammy nominated saxophonist Richard Elliot, also make appearances on two album tracks. “I have a good relationship with all of them,” says Justin. “We speak often and it’s always fun playing or jamming with them!”

Just In The Moment opens to the sound of Robert Glasper’s voice leaving a message urging his ‘little bro’ to take on a version of Eddie Harris’ “Freedom Jazz Dance.” Justin takes heed and delivers a funky head-noddin’ affair featuring his flight of fancy on keys, vocals, horns, bass, lead and rhythm guitar. His sister Jamie holds it down on the drums and on most of the album. “I first heard ‘Freedom Jazz Dance’ when my piano teacher (Jeremy Siskind) gave me an assignment to learn it back in 2017, after that I never played it again until my big bro Robert Glasper suggested I do an arrangement of ‘Freedom Jazz Dance’ with the talk box.” “In the Moment” is a stunning mood-drenched number with a sweeping melody and pulsating groove that showcases Justin’s technical prowess in a joyful fashion. Dave Koz joins Justin for Justin’s composition “Fellowship.” Their sympatico relationship is evidenced on the track. “When I wrote the songs “Daybreak,” “Moonshine” and “Oasis,” explains Justin. “I was trying to express the way I was feeling. I hope it brings joy to whoever listens to these songs.” Justin takes his time with the simmering and funky “Daybreak” which shines a light on his ability to transport you with his harmonic wizardry, while “Moonshine” and “Oasis” (which features drum programming from Glasper’s son Riley), illuminates Justin’s adoration for R&B. “I have been listing to Anderson. Paak’s album Ventura. That album has been on repeat for me recently. Also, An Evening With Silk Sonic, D’Angelo’s album Voodoo and Robert Glasper’s Black Radio III and of course, Stevie Wonder and Michael Jackson’s entire discography,” muses Justin. “I’ve been listening to a lot to Talking Book and Off The Wall!

Justin and Jamie go to work and do some heavy lifting on “A Timeless Dream.” Justin says the following of his best friend and sister, “She’s the homie, Jamie’s my go to person when I first write a song or get an idea because she’s so honest and I trust her opinion on things. It’s great to be able to create with her because we’ve been playing together for over 10 years, we just get each other and can feed off each other’s energy.” Always a proponent of positivity, Justin-Lee Schultz stirs inspiration on his composition “Overcome” while the up-tempo romp “Downtime” unites him with the horns of Ron King and Greg Vail. You might be wondering what a 16-year-old who’s in the woodshed most of his waking hours and playing regularly with musicians nearly three times his age does on his downtime. “I love to play video games in my downtime, playing Spiderman or the occasional Mario Kart tournaments,” confides Justin. “But, even during my downtime, I’m always playing something (playing guitar while watching TV etc.) it’s hard to switch my brain off when there are always ideas coming in at any given moment!” They say that there’s a gift in remaining present and Just In The Moment rewards us from beginning to end. The joyous affair concludes with Justin’s smooth cruising “Switching Lanes,” featuring Richard Elliot. One thing is for sure, Justin-Lee Schutlz, has found his lane and is fast- tracking all the way into the horizon.

Justin and Jamie go to work and do some heavy lifting on “A Timeless Dream.” Justin says the following of his best friend and sister, “She’s the homie, Jamie’s my go to person when I first write a song or get an idea because she’s so honest and I trust her opinion on things. It’s great to be able to create with her because we’ve been playing together for over 10 years, we just get each other and can feed off each other’s energy.” Always a proponent of positivity, Justin-Lee Schultz stirs inspiration on his composition “Overcome” while the up-tempo romp “Downtime” unites him with the horns of Ron King and Greg Vail. You might be wondering what a 16-year-old who’s in the woodshed most of his waking hours and playing regularly with musicians nearly three times his age does on his downtime. “I love to play video games in my downtime, playing Spiderman or the occasional Mario Kart tournaments,” confides Justin. “But, even during my downtime, I’m always playing something (playing guitar while watching TV etc.) it’s hard to switch my brain off when there are always ideas coming in at any given moment!” They say that there’s a gift in remaining present and Just In The Moment rewards us from beginning to end. The joyous affair concludes with Justin’s smooth cruising “Switching Lanes,” featuring Richard Elliot. One thing is for sure, Justin-Lee Schutlz, has found his lane and is fast- tracking all the way into the horizon.

Just In The Moment is a follow up to Justin’s recording debut Gruv Kid released in 2020. The album debut at #1 in iTunes Jazz and hit Top 10 on Billboard’s Smooth Jazz Charts, making him the youngest musician to ever chart. In 2022 he collaborated with his sister Jamie and bassist Jaden Baker in the trio J3 called Opus 1. With the anticipated release of Just In The Moment, the sky is the limit for Justin-Lee Schultz. “Music has the power to bring people together. I’m always thankful when people come up to me and express their appreciation for what I do not only in Jazz but for all other genres. For me, improvisational music is freedom of expression.”

Chicago trio Hearsay announce brilliant, genre-defying "Glossolalia," forthcoming new album

Everything is in place here. Experimental / improvising trio Hearsay's new full-length, Glossolalia is unequivocally far out –– free rhythms and atonality are hallmarks of the recording. But interwoven with drums and cello are Allen Moore's profoundly physical turntablist acrobatics, Moore's contributions are the result of a radical process of casting records by hand, often incorporating found objects and materials and then "overlaying the ghostly sounds of the hand-cast records with echoes of voices from the Black Diaspora (friends, family, and prominent Black figures) and samples of Black soul, jazz and hip-hop." Here, chopped up soul singing voices blast in and interweave with Bill Harris's deeply intuitive drumming and Ishmael Ali's profound tone-texture-melody explorations. This music is out there but it is intriguing, inviting, and deeply pleasing –– perhaps even to a surprising degree. 

Expanding on the adventurous techniques that manifested their self-titled debut album, Chicago improvising trio, Hearsay returns with Glossolalia.

Comprised of visionary experimental sound artist Allen Moore, versatile cellist / guitarist / composer Ishmael Ali, and dynamic drummer Bill Harris, Hearsay cultivates a distinct and captivating aesthetic that traverses ethereal dimensions, gradually morphing rhythmic tapestries, and electrifying improvised soundscapes that bounce off of free jazz and textural noise music to land on a kind of wild and bounding avant-groove music that is as pleasing as it is avant-garde.

Their music elicits a mesmerizing blend of textures, as if conjured from another dimension, leaving listeners both spellbound and invigorated. Fractured but soulful blasts of uncanny soul emerge from Allen Moore's breathtaking, adventurous turntablist experiments to dance against –– and eventually with –– Bill Harris's propulsive drumming and Ishmael Ali's electrifying pursuits: he seems to discover melodies on his cello as much as create them. 

Glossolalia is a testament to the boundless creativity that emerged during their fruitful recording sessions. Pushing the boundaries of experimental music even further, this latest offering embraces a vast sonic palette, seamlessly interweaving timbres, grooves, and a compelling interplay that defies categorization but evokes familiarity and wonder. The results are difficult to categorize but will be well-loved by fans of contemporary sonic adventurers like Valentina Magaletti and Maria Chavez or fellow Chicagoan, the late jaimie branch's work in Anteloper, as well as those who turn regularly to the rich and wild depths of the ESP-Disk discography or that of the AACM.

Anthony Wilson | "Collodion"

Veteran jazz guitarist and composer Anthony Wilson made his 2022 opus The Plan of Paris (“Exceptional … old-fashioned in its verbal craftsmanship…” — DownBeat) with Joe Harley as coproducer. Their engineer was Pete Min, proprietor of the musical magic shop in Highland Park, Los Angeles known as Lucy’s Meat Market. During the mixing sessions for Plan, a light bulb went off and Min floated an invitation: Would Wilson like to make an album for Min’s recently formed label Colorfield?

The Colorfield mission statement promises: “Chaos and chance are a big part of the process.” That was indeed the case with Collodion, an outlier in the substantial Wilson discography: 11 tracks brimming with sonic exploration and surprise, an electroacoustic experiment on which Wilson plays all instruments (with contributions from special guests at a later stage). The idea was to show up on a given day with nothing — no song, no charts, not even any instruments. Min would supply those.

What unfolded was a curious mix of improvisation, composition and production, all more or less simultaneously. The goal for each daylong visit was to have one piece largely completed. “Anthony is so accomplished,” says Min, “and I thought he’d be a great candidate for this. It was incredibly fruitful — he understood the concept and went with it full force. He was able to take direction and his ability to execute was incredibly fast.”

Wilson speaks similarly of Min: “He’s such a no-nonsense person to work with, and he’s very fast. The studio is set up to be creative. You’re never sitting around waiting to get sounds or whatever. He’s really good at facilitating creativity. It’s all just ready to go.” Collodion was the right term: it sounds a bit like a musical instrument, but is in fact a viscous substance used in wet plate photography as well as theatrical makeup. When applied, it helps bring an image to life.

Wilson is the son of groundbreaking big band composer Gerald Wilson (1918-2014). His catalog of acclaimed work as a leader goes back to the mid ’90s, to say nothing of his extensive credits with Diana Krall, Paul McCartney, Ron Carter, Charles Lloyd’s Ocean Trio, Leon Russell, Mose Allison, Terri Lyne Carrington, Willie Nelson, Bobby Hutcherson, Al Jarreau and many more. In 2016, he ventured beyond instrumental music with Frogtown and again two years later with Songs and Photographs: he showcased himself as a singer, interpreting his own lyrics and songs, playing plenty of guitar, yet going for something unabashedly different and every bit as virtuosic and authentically expressive. The Plan of Paris is in that wheelhouse as well.

On Collodion, however, Wilson does no singing. He allows himself the childlike fun of playing with Min’s Morfbeats Gamelan strips, for instance, gathering ideas and outdoor found sounds that would become “Keeping,” track 3 of Side A. This half of the program is nearly all Wilson, until “Arrival at Kanazawa,” an evocation of rail travel in Japan, a piece that proved amenable to a horn arrangement for tenor sax, trumpet and trombone. The tenor in that choir, Daniel Rotem, is a Colorfield artist himself (Wave Nature, 2023), appearing on the opening prelude “Star Maiden” and the Side B opener “The Daughters of Night.” Trumpeter Julien Knowles is on hand for “Muse of Joy” at the end of Side B, his sound drifting alongside Wilson’s dreamlike synth harmonies and melodic gestures.

“Keyboard exploration is an essential element of my process,” Wilson says, “though I am not a keyboardist. I also like that there’s acoustic piano on this record — it exists in a beautiful relationship to the other sounds.” The title track, “Collodion,” begins with that stark piano, but right away brings in layered strings, played and orchestrated by the sought-after multi-instrumentalist Rob Moose. “I told Rob that I didn’t want something that tracks this slow elegaic theme, but rather things that kind of dance with it, and he got that right away,” Wilson says. “We both love how featured this string orchestration is, how prominent a part of the song and the album it is.”

There’s some strikingly guembri-like soloing in the latter part of “Planetary Glide” — this is Wilson playing a rubber bridge guitar, one of Reuben Cox’s creations out of the Old Style Guitar Shop in LA (a sound that has emerged in the music of Madison Cunningham, Blake Mills, Harrison Whitford and others). There is the deep and centered bass of Anna Butterss, also on the Colorfield roster (Activities, 2022), on two tracks of Side B, as well as drummer extraordinaire Mark Guiliana — also on Colorfield (Music for Doing, 2022) — laying it down with consummate soul and subtlety. “Heart Whispering,” an entity unto itself, is Wilson top to bottom, with ambient textures, enigmatic pulse and crisp, incisive guitar work that never dominates, but functions as part of the whole.

“I never brought in a guitar of my own the whole time,” Wilson says. “The thought of doing things with instruments that I knew well, I just felt that wasn’t where I wanted to go. Pete has a couple great [Gibson] 335’s, beautiful old Martins in incredible condition, he’s got a gorgeous [Fender] Jaguar, all kinds of stuff. If it was there, let’s plug it in. We just tried things. But it couldn’t be a traditional tone. We’d ask ourselves, ‘What does it need that will take it out of the realm of me just playing a guitar part?’ I tried to play in a way that wasn’t out of my hand habits, that wasn’t coming from the vocabulary I always play when I sit down to play. Automatically you go into the stuff you know. I was trying to be a little more uncoordinated, and intuit ways of playing that could add to this other sonic thing that we were doing. The whole experience brought out something very natural to me in terms of the way I hear music. But I don’t know that I ever would have come up with this way of doing it on my own. It’s opened up something else for me.”

-David Adler

Chicago's Joe Policastro Trio to release new album 'Ceremony'

There’s a lot to celebrate on Ceremony, the sixth album by Chicago-based bassist, composer, and arranger Joe Policastro, rounded out by guitarist Dave Miller and drummer Mikel Avery. Together, the trio have created Ceremony, a work of creative heraldry that showcases a band at the top of its game where unity, originality, and cohesion are paramount. Honoring Policastro’s non-hierarchical approach to music, it’s a democratic display of three distinct musical voices coming together as one.

Ceremony is defined as a formal act or series of acts prescribed by ritual, protocol, or convention. It’s a fitting title for the Joe Policastro Trio’s new record in more ways than you might expect. In the traditional sense, Ceremony celebrates union. Unified by the band’s highly personal, blended sound, the album combines delightfully unpredictable cover songs that are presented alongside their original compositions. Less predictably, Policastro also notes that “this band has its own language, its own customs.” A convention or ritual, if you will.

New Wave fans would be right to associate the album title and its first track with the New Order song of the same name from 1981. Policastro, Miller, and Avery tackle the tune, but don’t let the gimmick of a jazz band covering New Order get in the way of turning it into a thrilling composition. They blend straight ahead jazz grooves, pensive breakdowns, breakneck drum grooves, and even styles like krautrock into the performance. It builds off the original’s recognizable hook, but uses that structure as a launching point, not an anchor.

“Our take on ‘Ceremony’ began riffing on the song’s iconic bassline, but it evolved into something else very quickly,” Policastro explains. The arrangement interpolates composer Erik Satie’s “Gymnopédie,” recontextualizing the song, its mood, its meaning. This is the “ceremony” at the heart of the band’s process.

Four engaging originals—three by Policastro (“Poioumena,” “Scene Missing,” and “Possible Music”) and one by guitarist Miller (“Mojave Lifeline”)—display a breadth of range, style, and compositional prowess. Strong melodies and taut structures disguise the complexity of these compositions. “Pioumena” shows their inside/outside improvisational approach on an up-tempo swing number with changing phrase lengths. The folkish melody of “Mojave Lifeline” masks its unsettled harmony. Throughout these originals, the band seamlessly switches grooves and texture while flawlessly improvising over the eccentric compositions.

Interspersed among those are the remaining “covers.” Roy Orbison’s “Blue Bayou” sees the melody pass between players. It features an arco bass solo, a melodic drum solo, and breaks down into a collective free jazz romp before regaining its sea legs. They tackle Thelonious Monk’s notoriously difficult and rarely performed “Brilliant Corners.” Flexing its muscle on an up-tempo samba, the album closes with João Bosco’s “Bala Com Bala.”

The album is anchored by Policastro’s bass as it waxes and wanes in the texture, Miller’s wide-ranging guitar sounds, and Avery’s orchestral drumming. These dovetail into solo features and collective improvisations. “We make interesting choices in the music that we play, whether it's the originals or adapting music way outside of jazz,” Policastro explains. It all serves a purpose, and each choice the group makes is intentional. “There’s a purity of expression that I think is unique to this group, this project. It’s so cool to hear things in a totally different way, to study them through new lenses.” This, too, is part of their ceremony, their ritual.

Ceremony also celebrates sound itself.  It was recorded in triple-true stereo by legendary sound engineer Ken Christensen (Naim Label, Pro Musica) and mastered for vinyl by Bob Weston. “We have always been a live band. All of our albums have essentially been ‘live’ captures of the group, but Ceremony has added depth aurally and musically.”

This is the first truly “new” album by Policastro since 2019. In 2022 he released Sounds Unheard, a collection of unreleased tracks, outtakes, and a handful of new songs that documented the life of the trio from 2012-2022. The pandemic drastically changed the way and frequency that this band works. It ended their thrice-weekly steady gig at Pops for Champagne, the venue that gave birth to the group; their grassroots touring grinded to a halt; and drummer Avery now resides in Philadelphia. Sounds Unheard gave the band the opportunity to test the waters, tour again, and get back out on the road. Ceremony, by contrast, looks forward and pushes ahead.

“It's too unique of a group with a history that can’t be manufactured,” Policastro explains. He notes that, “This album feels like a real celebration of everything we do well and what we represent, and it really moves the ball forward. I feel like I get so much more out of the group now having been forced to take a step back, to take some time away.” With Ceremony, Policastro and his trio have achieved a remarkable thing. They’ve honored their past, are indebted to ceremony. At the same time, though, the future of this band, its next iteration, lives throughout the album.

Gard Nilssen's Supersonic Orchestra - The Healing Force Of The Trojan Horse

Norwegian drummer/composer Gard Nilssen debuts on We Jazz Records with his major new album ‘Family’ with the 17-piece Supersonic Orchestra.

A veritable who’s who of Scandinavian jazz (and beyond), the Supersonic Orchestra is one of the most exciting large groups in the current international jazz circuit. Captured at Mondriaan Jazz Festival in Den Haag, Netherlands, ‘Family’ presents the ensemble in top form across the 8 tracks, all of which are original compositions by Gard Nilssen and André Roligheten.

Supersonic Orchestra consists of 7 saxophones, 2 trombones, 2 trumpets, 3 double basses and 3 drum sets. Do the quick math and you’ll guess that the band spits fire when they need to, but that’s not nearly the whole story here. There’s a natural ebb and flow to the music, and the tunes are catchy to the bone. This is not free blowing just for the sake of it, but music that is borne out the love for the totality of the ensemble sound here, and even more so of the necessity to write and arrange music for this “family”.

Goran Kajfes, Signe Emmeluth, Maciej Obara, Mette Rasmussen, Petter Eldh, Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and Hans Hulbækmo are just a few of the names that feature here with the bandleader Nilssen and his in house arranger Roligheten. As you hear here, on stage Supersonic Orchestra is a festival of a band unto itself. Whether an all out dragon’s roar or a quiet whisper of a solo bass, this is a big band bear hug on all 17 cylinders.

From the liner notes by drummer Chad Taylor:

“To present music for a big band in today’s musical climate is no easy task. There are many logistical obstacles and financial realities to contend with. In addition one must take into consideration the great legacy of big band masters of the past. How does the music you present measure up to the music of Fletcher Henderson, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Chris McGregor, or The Globe Unity Orchestra? Does your music make people want to dance? Does your music have a full representation of musicians in today’s current scene? How is your music relevant?

What I find remarkable about Gard Nilssen’s Supersonic Orchestra is that it tackles all these questions with ease. How are they able to do this? Perhaps this has to do with its all-star cast of players, each player a distinctive voice within the ensemble. Perhaps it has to do with the outstanding collaboration between Gard and André in arranging and composing the material, and perhaps it has to do with the exceptional recording and mixing engineers Bård Ingebrigtsen, Jørgen Brennhovd and Marc Broer.

Whatever the case, this is music that needs to be heard.

The make up of Supersonic Orchestra is unique. For one there is no chordal instrument. While this might present some challenges it also presents opportunities. It opens up more options for creating different chords and harmonic directions for soloists. Another unusual feature is the rhythm section. There are three drummers and three bassists. Part of the inspiration behind this is the Kenny Clarke – Francy Boland Big Band who Gard discovered during the making of this album. It too at times featured multiple bass and drums.

Family is not defined by our genes, it is built and maintained through love and care, This music feels alive with hope, sincerity, joy and courage. The members of this ensemble all have strong personalities but they are united in their motive and intention. This music feels like family.“

'The Healing Force of the Trojan Horse' is mysterious number, which features all three drummers of the Supersonic Orchestra in the intro. A majestic chorale is played rubato over the driving percussion section. The momentum is continued by the flutes of Per "Texas" Johansson and André Roligheten.

'Family' will be released on 15 September by We Jazz Records.

Trombonist AUDREY OCHOA Presents: The Head Of A Mouse

Trombonist and composer Audrey Ochoa, a fixture on the Canadian music scene, possesses a unique magnetism and a recherché allure which has taken her to great heights and unexpected summits. Ochoa is a classically trained artist and possesses a voracious appetite for honing her craft in multiple genres. She is decidedly brash and original, with a spectacular compositional skill and talent on her instrument. These qualities and attributes have led Ochoa to sharing the stage with the likes of Hilario Duran, PJ Perry, and Tommy Banks; and with international legends Lew Tabackin, Marcus Miller, Chris Potter, the UNT One O’Clock Lab Band, Gordon Goodwin’s World Jazz Orchestra, an electrifying solo spot with The Dave Matthews Band (on their tune “Jimi Thing” at a sold-out show at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver), and featured in the touring company of Hadestown, which culminated in an appearance on The Late Late Show with James Corden.

Her fourth album as a bandleader, The Head Of A Mouse (dropping September 29, 2023 on Chronograph Records), is the latest, and the freshest, representation of Ochoa’s brilliant artistic voice, conceived of during one of the most challenging periods in recent history-the COVID-19 pandemic. As she couldn’t freely perform the music from Frankenhorn live, she dove into the creation of this recording. The result immortalizes feelings of sorrow and desperation, and also of hope, creative energy and a renewed spirit. Ochoa’s desire is that current and future generations will experience this music as a unique musical creation that reflect the experiences of an artist during an unprecedented time. With The Head Of A Mouse, Ochoa’s most exciting and diverse work yet, with sounds spanning genres, modes and moods, she exemplifies an artist who has dedicated herself to expertise while remaining relevant and light-hearted. With a magnificent and fresh-faced approach, this album defies categorization and plants Ochoa’s flag firmly as a centrepiece of the Canadian, and international, music arena. Available worldwide on Chronograph Records, September 29th, 2023. 

Ochoa’s debut album, Trombone and Other Delights (2013), was widely acclaimed and spent three consecutive weeks as the number one Jazz album on the Canadian charts. Ochoa’s sophomore release, Afterthought (2017), an extension of her consummate understanding of arrangement and dedication to her craft – reached the #1 position on the Canadian jazz charts and broke into the top 20 in the U.S. Ochoa is a decorated award nominee, having earned recognition at the Western Canadian Music Awards, the Global Music Awards and a recent recipient of the Edmonton Music Prize, noting an outstanding musical contribution to the local arts scene. With significant momentum, Ochoa’s next recorded efforts were originally intended to feature duets with pianist Chris Andrew – which would be remixed by electronica DJ, Battery Poacher. As pre-production progressed, she found herself utilizing skills from other projects and arranging strings with horns and a rhythm section. The result was Frankenhorn (2020), an ambitious project that introduced strings into her previous configuration of trombone, piano, bass and drums, a mix of chamber music with contemporary and Latin jazz. The album reached #1 on both the Canadian (Earshot) and US (NACC) Jazz charts, and reached #8 across all genres on the Earshot National Top 50 chart in Canada. This release also led to Ochoa’s selection as the “2020 Jazz Artist of the Year” at the Western Canadian Music Awards.


 


Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Neo soul gem "High" by The 7 Day Weekend (Alan Evans & Kris Yunker)

Born from and influenced by the sounds and compositions of 60s and 70s film scores, multi-instrumentalists Alan Evans & Kris Yunker combine their song writing and production aesthetic to create what they describe as ‘electrorganic music’. The journey their music takes you on is The 7 Day Weekend.

Alan Evans is a founding member of USA band Soulive and renowned as one of the best drummers in the modern funk / soul-jazz world. With Soulive he has released a string of acclaimed albums and toured the world, selling out headline shows and opening tours for The Rolling Stones, Dave Matthews Band, John Mayer. He also has enjoyed success with Ae3 aka the Alan Evans Trio, as well as being also an in-demand studio owner, producer and partner in the Vintage League Music label.

Yunker is an acclaimed keyboard player and composer – he has enjoyed success with funk outfits such as On The Spot Trio and Ae3, as well as with Jen Durkin And The Business, Wubakia and as a sideman for numerous other artists. With his unique style,  Yunker has been steadily rising the ranks in the music scene.

The 7 Day Weekend‘s debut, self-titled album came out in 2020 on Vintage League Music and is a luscious collection of 11 instrumentals drawing equally from the sonic landscapes of Galt McDermot as it does from those of J-Dilla. The outfit followed up with their first vocal track, “Show & Tell“ in 2022 that featured Nephrok! and took a more neo soul direction, with modern hiphop-style production.

For their latest release, single “High“, they have teamed up with Boston-native Sonya Rae Taylor on vocals, to lay out a buttery groove that gives a taste of their highly anticipated album Dream Fantastic to be released on High Wire Records, a division of Vintage League Music.

Ethan Cohen | Sebastian Greschuk | "Ensemble Unity"

When bassist Ethan Cohn and trumpeter Sebastián Greschuk first connected, as colleagues in the prestigious Focusyear residency program in Basel, Switzerland, they were struck by their compositional kinship. Hailing from different continents (Cohn from New York, and Greschuk from Argentina), these two exceptional musicians found common ground while abroad, and the vision for Ensemble Infinity came into focus.

The lineup they chose was fairly expansive: an octet with vocalist Tatiana Nova joining a contingent of four horns (Greschuk, fellow trumpeter Yakiv Tsvietinskyi, alto saxophonist Joshua Schofield, tenor saxophonist Gianni Gagliardi), plus pianist Lorenzo Vitolo and drummer Áron Tálas aiding Cohn in the rhythm section. “There’s an aspect of cultural exchange to this group,” Cohn maintains. “Everyone is from a different country. We come from really different backgrounds but we’ve followed our honest path and found what we love.”

The group took on a life beyond its Focusyear origins — hence Ensemble Infinity. Greschuk notes a parallel between the group’s eight players and the sideways numeral eight. “The name felt very close to our idea,” says the trumpeter, “that this thing is still going on and will keep going on. Even if it takes different forms, the band is an infinite line to we don’t know where.” Cohn refers to it as a “modular ensemble,” able to assume a range of sizes and shapes: “All of this music can be shrunk down to a smaller group, but the root of it is the two of us and the compatibility of our music.”

That compatibility stems from a host of shared influences. Though the project is rooted in jazz, there are hints of Ethan and Sebastián’s love of folk rhythms, rock, pop, and avant-garde music. There is also a strong inspiration that flows from the individuals involved: “We were writing exactly for the musicians we were playing with,” Cohn says, invoking a time-honored practice in jazz. He recalls “cheering in the booth,” for instance, while hearing Schofield’s alto solo unfold on the swaying and mysterious “Luna’s Lullaby,” an ode to a friend’s agitated unspayed cat. 

Ensemble Infinity also documents what Greschuk calls the “trumpet brotherhood” that he shares with Tsvietinskyi, who gets a generous feature on Cohn’s beautiful album opener “Saragossa.” “Yakiv is from Ukraine,” Greschuk notes, “and my grandfather was from Ukraine. We have this super-strong friendship and in the middle of the war I went to Ukraine to visit and perform with him. On my tune ‘Bosque’ we trade improvising on full choruses, with Yakiv on flugelhorn, and it felt so great to capture that.” The two trumpeters also share an affinity for the valve trombone, which they both play in various spots on the session, adding a distinct warmth and tonal variety. “I think of it almost like a bass trumpet,” says Greschuk, “with a similar range. It’s refreshing.”

Nova’s agile voice opens another dimension in the music as well. “She’s not always the main melody,” Cohn observes. “Sometimes she’s got a harmony with the horns which is rare and very challenging. She also sings lyrics, she sings main solo parts, she sings without lyrics, and she improvises a solo. Her voice can blend as part of the horn section. On my ballad ‘Bound to You,’ she shows how fantastic she is at telling a story through song, and I felt that needed to be showcased. The song has a child-like quality that I asked her to try and emphasize, and she nailed it.”

Cohn’s five pieces mesh with Greschuk´s three to create a world of intricate lyricism, labyrinthine form and engaging tension and release. Vitolo takes soaring piano solos on Greschuk’s “Słońce,” a moving waltz for the composer’s Polish girlfriend; “Nubes'' (or “Clouds”), named for the mold formations in a flatmate’s neglected fridge; and “Ladina Oswald,” by Cohn, the intensity of which draws on the experience of getting scammed by someone using that evocative alias. “Monsanto Daydream,” with Gagliardi doubling on tenor and soprano sax, is borrowed from the repertoire of another Cohn project, The Plastic Waste Band, a psychedelic jazz-rock unit focused in part on environmental issues. A brief reprise of “Bosque,” with Cohn on electric bass, closes out the album with still new textures and approaches, true to the Ensemble Infinity moniker in every sense.

Ethan Cohn, a native New Yorker, studied jazz performance at McGill University with mentors Fraser Hollins, Christine Jensen, Chris McCann, and John Hollenbeck. While in Montreal he recorded three albums of original music as leader of The Plastic Waste Band, a psychedelic jazz-rock group known for its commitment to environmental conservation and its refreshingly accessible yet rule-breaking approach. In 2020 Cohn moved to Switzerland to take part in the Focusyear band, studying privately with Larry Grenadier. He then returned to New York to pursue his master’s studies at The New School’s Performer-Composer program, where he delved into electroacoustic music as a research assistant for percussionist and electronic musician Levy Lorenzo. He has also studied privately with Reid Anderson, Dave Douglas, Buster Williams, Elliot Cole, and Drew Gress.

Sebastián Greschuk released his first album, Paisaje, in 2019 on the ears&eyes label. After attending the Focusyear program in Basel he began his master’s studies in composition at Jazzcampus Basel Musik Akademie and has since had the opportunity to study with Guillermo Klein, Ambrose Akinmusire, Larry Grenadier, Mark Turner, Alex Sipiagin, and other masters. He has arranged music for the wind ensemble at the prestigious MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), written original music for the Jazzcampus Big Band, and arranged a piece for the Jazzcampus Large Ensemble performed by special guest Seamus Blake. For many years Greschuk has also taught privately and at educational institutions such as EMC (Escuela de Música Contemporánea) and the Berklee International Network as a professor of trumpet, jazz ensemble, and music notation.

Rick Parker & Hernan Hecht | 'When It Stares You In The Face"

When It Stares You in the Face may be the first commercial release by the duo Rick Parker and Hernan Hecht, but their musical connection spans over 15 years and several genres of music. Parker, a trombonist based in New York City, who is known for his use of electronics to augment his playing, has released 9 records as a leader/co-leader and worked alongside a wide array of artists including Tim Berne, Frank Lacy, Mingus Big Band, Charli Persip, Muhal Richard-Abrams Orchestra, Ravish Momin and Michael Attias. Nate Chinen has described his music as “an expressive new-breed fusion, informed by a few generations of downtown experimentation.” (New York Times). Drummer, Hernan Hecht, recently relocated to his native Argentina after over 25 years living in Mexico City where he played on and produced over 300 records and won a Latin Grammy for his production of Ely Guerra’s “Hombre Invisible”. His drumming has brought him through a wide variety of groups including his own HH X-Pression Quartet and artists including Natalia LaFourcade, Lila Downs, Ximena Sariñana, A Love Electric, John Medeski, David Gillmore, and Mark Helias to name a few.

The two musicians first worked together when Hecht helped organize a tour for Parker in Mexico performing his jazz quartet music along with NYC bassist Ricky Rodriguez and Mexican pianist, Mark Aanderud in 2007. From that point, the two continued to collaborate and tour in both the US and Mexico forming several different groups of their own including their avant-garde quartet, 4 Limones, which included Aanderud as well as renowned saxophonist Tim Berne and an experimental groove-based trio, Ambient Assault, along with grammy award winning keyboardist/songwriter/producer Sam Barsh (Avishai Cohen Trio, Kendrick Lamar, Alo Black, Kanye West). They also toured together as sidemen with groups including an augmented version of Todd Clouser’s A Love Electric (which often included percussionist Cyro Baptista and trumpeter, Steven Bernstein) as well as Mexican pop sensation Ximena Sariñana. 

This new album was recorded in one day at Hecht’s studio in the Coyoacan neighborhood of Mexico City. Parker was visiting Mexico while touring with another band and had a day off so the two decided to make the most of it. The musicians improvised for several hours, sometimes deciding on different tempos ahead of time so Parker could sequence a synthesizer to a tempo and synchronize any loops he created. Overall, the session was spontaneous but built upon the years of past music the two musicians had made together and each song was made in one take with no overdubbing (just some post-production effects and the addition of a humorous vocal sample in the 4th track, “The Shadow Zone”). Rather than adopting a more jazz-centric style with lots of solos, the concept was to play different grooves and textures to create different scenes. Each song is a journey to a new imaginary location rather than a vehicle for flashy soloistic improvisation although the duo’s technical prowess on their instruments can not be denied. 

Parker’s use of trombone with effects evokes the style of the late trumpet visionary, Jon Hassell, by using the horn with delays and reverb to create textures and harmonies but he also delves further into sonic manipulation with distortion and looping inspired by guitarists such as David Torn and Bill Frisell. Hecht’s gigantic drum sounds and driving rhythm propel the album and his frequent use of drum breaks provides many surprising twists and turns to the music, suddenly changing the direction of the music midsong. In addition to his trombone playing Parker’s use of multiple synthesizers brings yet another layer to the music. His bass synthesizer frequently acts as a third group member, playing sequenced bass lines and blazing fast arpeggiations that often serve as a foundation for the duo’s improvisations. A second synth provides sparse chordal support and higher tones that provide a glimmer on top of this very heavy, driving album. Although these are all single-take recordings with no overdubs, Hecht’s grammy winning production chops are apparent on this recording with beautiful drum effects, creative mixing, and some subtle, and not-so-subtle, samples snuck into the occasional track.



Captain Planet - Sounds Like Home | New Funk/Brazilian Soul 2xLP

After a huge year of traveling in 2022, playing DJ sets in more than 30 cities across 10 countries, Captain Planet dove back into the studio to create his 5th and most ambitious album to date - 'Sounds Like Home'.

Taking a turn toward the more organic, retro sounds of artists who originally inspired him as a young musician, Charlie Wilder (aka Captain Planet) flexed his composer and bandleader muscles - incorporating horn sections, strings and acoustic drums more than the big club focused electronic sounds he has often come to be known for.

“The basic concept was to make a record like the ones I constantly pull off my shelves at home and play on the weekends. The records that turn into living room dance parties with my family, the soundtracks while I'm cooking, the music that fills the backyard for lazy hang outs.”

An avid vinyl record collector and musicologist since his teens, the Captain has a near encyclopedic knowledge of music from around the world, particularly artists from the 60's and 70's, which is the era that inspired much of the sonic texture on this new album. 

In classic Captain Planet style, a kaleidoscopic array of genres from around the world find their way into the mix- Brazilian disco, Latin funk, Jamaican dub, Middle Eastern psychedelia, and American soul music. While this diversity may sound more like a mixtape, the Captain's trademark uplifting vibe and impeccable knack for building a great groove, provide the special ingredients that pull it all together and makes the sauce work. The Fader wrote “the Captain is a walking 'recommended vinyl' section from the best record store you've ever been to”, because all his deep love and appreciation for classic music comes right through him in his original songs. Throughout this album you'll hear echoes of timeless artists like Cymande, Gilberto Gil, Ray Barretto, Curtis Mayfield, Mulatu Astatke, and Gabor Szabo, all funneled through the Captain's modern musical sensibility, shaped by nearly 2 decades of being a professional world-traveling DJ. 

The past year also brought some major challenges for Charlie Wilder, most central of which was losing a close friend and collaborator, the fellow LA-based DJ/producer Sumohair (½ of the band Reyna Tropical). The album starts off with a brief tropical tribute to his friend, followed by the strong message “Music Is Medicine” sung by another regular collaborator, the Zimbabwean-American (Grammy winning) singer Shungudzo. With the true value of friendship front and center on his mind, Captain Planet made a strong conscious effort to include many of his oldest friends and musical partners throughout the album, including Grammy winning pianist Sam Barsh, Chico Mann, Zuzuka Poderosa (who bartended at one of the Captain's earliest DJ residencies in Brooklyn), David Walters (whose new album “Soul Tropical” was co-written & co-produced by the Captain), Todd Simon, Leo Mintek (who has played guitar with Wilder since their teens), and Wilder's youngest brother Taj Bethel who co-wrote 2 of the songs on the album.

The warm light of friendship and family shines throughout the album, and while the influences reach far across the globe, the music clearly shows that Captain Planet has found his musical home.

World Renowned Jazz Pianist Joins Rabbi-Interfaith Scholar to Create a New Genre of Jewish Music

The prolific Hassidic rabbi/composer, Shmuel Eliyahu Taub of the Modzhitz Hassidic dynasty, was known as the Imrei Esh, literally: Words of Fire, authoring dozens of deeply lyrical compositions, year after year, for the Jewish high holidays, cast to a prayer seeking God’s compassion.

Now acclaimed jazz pianist Kenny Werner has teamed up with one of the world’s leading interfaith scholar/activists, Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein (nom du disc – Alon Michael) to create a unique fusion of Hassidic music, jazz harmonies and lieder type performance for voice and piano. Kenny and Alon break new ground in Jewish music and in world music. Fire and Praise (released August 4, 2023) offers a unique musical concept in its exclusive reliance on one particular Hassidic composer, on one sub-genre of his music, and in the presentation of this music in lieder style with Jazz orientation, thereby creating a new genre of Jewish music. If typical Hassidic music was simply the basis for singing and dancing, this rendition is for listening, contemplation, and a more refined artistic appreciation. 

Fire and Praise is based on a combination of the Psalms, and the melodies of Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu Taub. Rabbi Taub’s compositions have been adapted by Alon Michael to accompany the Hallel liturgy, a liturgy of praise, recited on major Jewish festivals, consisting of Psalms 113-118. Cast to the tunes of the Modzhitzer Rebbe, sung in its entirety and employing a variety of styles of accompaniment, drawing on Kenny Werner’s prolific creativity and improvisation, this liturgy rings with a power and beauty that is unparalleled.

Basking in Fire and Praise is a spiritual experience that will speak to seekers across faiths, even as it enhances the power of prayer of Jewish practitioners who are accustomed to the words, that have often lost their vitality.

Kenny Werner is one of the world’s most accomplished Jazz Pianists, whose 60 year career has included recordings and performances with many of the luminaries of Jazz music, from Toots Thielemans to Joe Lovano. Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein (nom du disc – Alon Michael) is one of the world’s leading interfaith scholar/activists, actively working with figures such as the three recent Popes, The Dalai Lama, The Archbishop of Canterbury and dozens of the world’s most noted faith leaders across religious diversity, through his Elijah Interfaith Institute. Alon’s gift of working across differences to create new harmonies and new realities has now found musical expression in the partnership between Kenny and Alon.

Says Kenny Werner: “This project constituted a special challenge for me. Sensing the beauty in this music, I sought to make it speak beyond the narrow confines of the Judaism within which it was born. To me, this is a symbol of a universal voice that must resound from within Judaism, speaking to new audiences with a message of universal spirituality”.

Says Alon Michael: “Fire and Praise was a process guided by inspiration from start to finish. I feel as if I have served as an instrument for something greater than my own personal vision. From the choice of tunes, to the adaptation to the words of the Hallel, to the work with Kenny on the accompaniment most suited to each Psalm, I felt guided from above. I pray this quality of inspiration is heard by listeners to our music”.

Fire and Praise is the first of a trilogy of albums produced by Alon Michael and Kenny Werner, all featuring music of the Modzhitz Hassidic dynasty, interpreted in fresh ways, with sensitive Jazz inflection. The trilogy will be released over the course of the coming 12 months. Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein will also create a series of YouTube videos of teachings around each of the songs.

Drummer Fede Isasiti w/ his band (Juan Bayon, Ernesto Jodos) | "El Hombre, el Espejo, el Niño"

Federico Isasti is a drummer, composer, improviser, and audiovisual software developer based in Buenos Aires. Having participated as a drummer and co-leader in more than 20 albums of creative music groups (Alan Plachta, Pía Hernández, Elias Stemeseder, Julián Mekler, NUDO, among others) and being internationally recognized by his musical work (Sales de Baño - Frist Price for Unreleased Jazz Music 2019 (Primer Premio a Música Inédita Jazz 2019) FNA, The Best Experimental Music on Bandcamp: May 2019), Federico doesn’t remain in one isolated discipline. In the field of movement and audiovisual arts he composed electronic music for a dance piece (Simetrías, winner of PIME grant,  UNSAM,  premiered in Barcelona, 2019), created audiovisual performances and art installations (El Retorno de una Hormiga, audio looping and live video processing, 2019; IRS - Imagen por Resonancia Sonora, April 2022) and works as a web programmer/interactive platforms developer (El Próximo Paso - WebDoc, 2021). After being awarded the Beca a la Creación scholarship in 2019 to compose an album for piano trio and digital media, Federico developed a set of electronic devices that interact with the musicians in real-time. He currently leads La Disidencias de las Máquinas, NUDO (duet with Mariano Sarra on piano) and Bruxante (drums & electronics solo set).

The group La Disidencia de las Máquinas was formed in 2018 and is a research project on the piano trio format. Starting from the jazz tradition, Federico composes pieces in which he manages to merge that language with gestures, timbres and techniques typical of contemporary music, giving rise to a unique voice. In the following years, the trio performed in the city of Buenos Aires on several occasions and in 2021 released Imago, their debut album on ears&eyes Records. In 2019, shortly before recording Imago, Federico was awarded the Beca a la Creación scholarship by the National Fund for the Arts from Argentina for his composition project for piano trio with the use of digital media. For this reason, in March 2020, three months after recording the first album, the trio started working on the second album. In December 2021, after an extensive period of research, composition and rehearsals, La Disidencia recorded El Hombre, el Espejo, el Niño (or “The Man, the Mirror, the Kid”), their second studio album and the first album for piano trio with digital media recorded in Argentina.

The distinctive characteristic of this album is the use of electronics applied to the jazz trio. Federico began to work with electronics in 2019 by pursuing a diploma in "Expanded Music" at the National University of San Martin and his previous knowledge of computer programming allowed him to quickly take advantage of the capabilities of Max/MSP (a programming language) to process instruments in real time. The overall device consists of piano, double bass, drums, a computer and seven audio channels that record in real time what the musicians play. Thus, Federico developed a series of devices that expand in real time both the timbral potential of each instrument and the interaction possibilities between musicians.

Although the album has seven tunes, it is conceived as a whole piece that is inspired by the urge to remember and by the active exercise of memory. Inside the album you can read: "Dedicated to all those people I am made of''. Based on this belief that one is, ultimately, others, that means, that one is largely fragments of what one takes from other people, Federico bases each piece on a very important person in his childhood and/or adolescence. Thus, the pieces take their inspiration from very diverse people and ideas: one's relationship with language (Ser Hablado, a Adriana), the different depths of fishing lines (Día de Pesca, a Horacio), the role of sensitivity in maturing (Sin Jamás Perder la Ternura, a Andrea), humor as a way of life (Boruro, a Rogelia), among others. On the other hand, unlike Imago, a work in which most of the pieces follow the classic form of jazz standards (exposition - improvisation - re-exposition), this album deals with more complex sections, forms and materials. In general there is no re-exposition of melodies and in some cases (as in Sin Jamás Perder la Ternura or Día de Pesca) the changes of section are cued or started by distortions generated by the electronics.


Monday, August 14, 2023

Richard X Bennett & Matt Parker | "Parker Plays X"

Friends and collaborators Richard X Bennett and Matt Parker heighten their creative relationship with the release of their album Parker Plays X on BYNK Records (Because You Never Know). The record finds pianist-composer Bennett and saxophonist Parker co-leading a session for the first time as they—along with bassist Adam Armstrong and drummer Julian Edmond—explore a dozen Bennett compositions that range from straightahead bebop to avant-garde freakouts to classic jump blues, among other styles.

Both musicians embrace this kind of wide variety, though Bennett is inclined toward music with a groove while Parker prefers free jazz’s boundless experimentation. It was at that confluence of form and freedom that the two came together. “A lot of free players can play wild without actually playing the song,” the pianist recalls of their first meeting. “It was obvious in sixty seconds that Matt had it.”

“It’s a unique experience to take on someone else’s sensibility so intensely,” adds Parker of their musical merger. “I tried internalizing Richard’s melodies and took it from there.”

It’s not just the saxophonist who takes on someone else’s sensibility. The most atonal and challenging pieces on Parker Plays X are not spontaneous free improvisations but premeditated compositions, with Bennett harnessing some of Parker’s “wild” side to his own ends. The explosive “Countertransference” is actually a three-part suite; the frenetic “No Cigarettes No Coffee No Weed No Sleep” is inspired by Parker’s impassioned speech during a late-night phone call to Bennett.

Indisputably, however, Parker also adapts himself to Bennett’s more groove-centered aesthetic. His sonic torrents add momentum to the already rollicking jump blues “Belly First”; his boozy, coarse tenor line gives “Semi Vintage” a dose of appropriately retro swagger; and his melodic soprano improvisation drives home the high-octane waltz rhythm of “Bus 61.”

The remarkable contributions of Armstrong and Edmond are not to be dismissed. The rhythm players bring crucial shape and dimension to tunes like “Style V Substance” and the cathartic ballad “Two Years Later.” Even so, it’s the piano-and-tenor duet closer, “Sagebrush,” that makes manifest the two-man chemistry at the heart of Parker Plays X.

Richard X Bennett and Matt Parker both made deep connections to jazz in their teenage years. Both made their way to Brooklyn, where they built their careers as wide-ranging improvising musicians. And both are defined by their omnivorous musical appetites and their refusal to be restrained by convention. Their paths to these similar destinations, however, were markedly different.

Arriving in New York in the 1990s, Bennett found himself working with an expansive palette, from blues and jazz to funk and rock. The palette became broader still in the 2000s, when he accompanied his girlfriend (now wife) to India and became entranced by the subcontinent’s raga traditions. He recorded several Indo-jazz albums for Indian record labels.

It wasn’t until 2017 that he released his first jazz album for a U.S. audience: Experiments With Truth, featuring Parker and Armstrong along with baritone saxophonist Lisa Parrott and drummer Alex Wyatt. Five more albums followed, marrying jazz to Indian music and electronica as well as exploring contemporary jazz in itself with his RXB3 trio.

Parker was born and raised in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he fell in love with jazz after seeing trumpeter Maynard Ferguson in concert. He was mentored by the legendary South Florida saxophonist Jimmy Cavallo and played professionally as a teenager before moving to New York and studying with Jane Ira Bloom, Barry Harris, and Junior Mance.

Parker was profoundly influenced by avant-garde players along with straightahead stalwarts, paying tribute to both on his albums Worlds Put Together (2014) and Present Time (2016). His career has been a wildly eclectic one, with highlights ranging from work with Reggie Workman, Pete Fountain, and the Mingus Big Band to performance with Ariana Grande, membership in the viral ensemble Postmodern Jukebox, and appearances (both musical and on-screen) in the hit action film John Wick.

Joshua Moshe releases new single combining slick nu-jazz with broken beat grooves & Afro-Cuban stylings

Joshua Moshe (FKA Josh Kelly/JK GROUP) releases the single 'Levels' and announces 'Inner Search', the debut album album under his own name on La Sape Records.

The lead single combines slick nu-jazz with broken beat grooves, Afro-Cuban stylings, and signature energetic saxophone features. The song acts as a bridge from the old sounds of JK GROUP to the healing movements of Joshua Moshe and his new band.

'Levels' represents Moshe’s experience of ascending through levels of personal growth as he ventures deeper into his soul uncovering a truer expression of self. It begins with a distinct groove, informed by the experience of inner city living in Melbourne, which shifts into a percussive Afro-Cuban B section in an alternate time signature. The seamless shift between these two disparate sections symbolizes transformations within Moshe. The Afro-Cuban influences are born from Moshe’s exposure to the vibrant Latino music community in Melbourne, and from ongoing collaborations with master percussionist Javier Fredes.

Throughout the song, Moshe demonstrates skillful improvisations on the alto and tenor saxophone which explore the intricate and spiritual nature of groove combined with deep self-expression; a formula we’ve come to know and love through JK GROUP, but is now taken to new heights as Joshua Moshe.

Following a challenging recovery period after chemotherapy in late 2021, Joshua Moshe embarked on a transformative musical journey, shedding his band persona and embracing a solo identity. The culmination of this artistic exploration is his debut album ‘Inner Search’, recorded six months after completing treatment. For this project, Moshe assembled a rejuvenated lineup of incredible collaborators: Felix Bloxsom, Erica Tucceri, Angus Radley, Cazeuax O.S.L.O., Phil Noy, Niran Dasika, James Bowers, Javier Fredes, and Matthew Hayes, whilst maintaining a strong partnership with long-standing producer, Lewis Moody.

'Inner Search' showcases an eclectic blend of influences drawing inspiration from Late Modal Jazz (Pharaoh Sanders, Joe Henderson, John Coltrane), Afro-Cuban Music, Jewish Music, Garage, Broken Beat, Nu-Jazz, and Modern Jazz. Such breadth of influence signifies a departure from the traditional dancey-crossover style, evolving the JK GROUP sound into something truly distinctive and extraordinary.

Moshe’s debut album ‘Inner Search’, available on the 6th of October, expands the creative parameters beyond the limitations of JK GROUP into new territory spanning the breadth of his heritage, jazz, and electronica. 

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...