Friday, September 08, 2023

Saxophonist Mindi Abair to appear at Jimmy's Jazz & Blues Club

Jimmy's Jazz & Blues Club Features 2x-GRAMMY® Award Nominated Saxophonist & Vocalist Mindi Abair and her Acclaimed Band on Friday September 15 at 7 and 9:30 P.M. You might know her as the featured saxophonist on American Idol, sitting in with Paul Shaffer on The Late Show with David Letterman or The Roots on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, or maybe from moonlighting on tour with Duran Duran or Aerosmith! In 2019, 2020, 2021 & 2022 Mindi Abair was Nominated for "Best Instrumentalist: Horn Player of the Year" at the Blues Music Awards!

Mindi Abair's solo works have sold over half a million albums, garnered numerous #1 Radio Hits and consistently topped both the Billboard Contemporary Jazz and Billboard Blues Charts. She has had a remarkable recording career, recording with some of the biggest names in music, and has built a substantial following among jazz and blues audiences with her soaring melodies and powerhouse style!

In 2006, Abair released the album Life Less Ordinary, which peaked at #1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Chart and remained in the Top 20 for 45 weeks. Her songs "True Blue" and "Bloom" both hit #1. Mindi has had 5 Albums reach the Top 5 on Billboard's Contemporary Jazz Album Chart, and 2 Albums in the Top 5 on Billboard's Blues Album Chart!

In 2008, she released her genre breaking album Stars which peaked at #4 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Chart. Her single "Stars" charted at #29 on the Adult Contemporary R&R simultaneously with her single "Smile" which reached #1 on the R&R Jazz Airplay Charts. She released the album Hi-Fi Stereo in 2010 which peaked at #5 on the Billboard Jazz Chart and the album spawned the #1 hit "Be Beautiful" written by David Ryan Harris.

In 2014, Mindi received her first GRAMMY® Award Nomination in the "Best Pop Instrumental Album" category for Summer Horns with Dave Koz, Richard Elliot and Gerald Albright. She followed this up with a 2015 GRAMMY® Award Nomination for "Best Contemporary Instrumental Album" for her solo LP Wild Heart featuring the late Gregg Allman, Joe Perry, Trombone Shorty, Booker T. Jones, Keb' Mo', and Max Weinberg.

In 2017, Mindi Abair & The Boneshakers released the album The EastWest Sessions (Joe Bonamassa and Fantastic Negrito were featured guests) and it debuted at #3 on the Billboard Blues Albums Chart. In 2018, Mindi Abair & The Boneshakers won 8 Independent Blues Awards including "Artist of the Year", and an Independent Music Award for "Best Blues Song Fan Award" for "Pretty Good For A Girl" featuring Joe Bonamassa.

In 2019, Mindi Abair & The Boneshakers released the album No Good Deed which debuted at #3 on the Billboard Blues Chart. Mindi's new album Forever was released in 2022 and debuted #1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Album Chart and features performances by Steve Perry, Rick Braun, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Eric Bazilian and Raul Malo.

Mindi Abair has toured and/or recorded with: Aerosmith, Joe Bonamassa, Smokey Robinson, Joe Perry, Trombone Shorty, Booker T. Jones, Gregg Allman, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Fantastic Negrito, Waddy Wachtel, Bobby Rush, Keb' Mo', Teena Marie, Lee Ritenour, Adam Sandler, Duran Duran, Bill Champlin, Richard Elliott, Jimmy Webb, Max Weinberg, Dave Koz, Peter White, Gerald Albright, Mandy Moore, Lalah Hathaway and the Backstreet Boys, among many others.

Located in the historic downtown disctrict of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Jimmy's Jazz & Blues Club's 2023 Schedule of Shows now includes 10 NEA Jazz Masters, 48 GRAMMY® Award-Winning Artists, 45 Blues Music Award-Winners, and a comprehensive list of talented musicians with 450+ GRAMMY® Award Nominations amongst them. 

Erin Rogers and Alec Goldfarb | "Earth's Precisions"

Earth’s Precisions by Alec Goldfarb and Erin Rogers crafts a musical surface that simulates both a larger ensemble and a single, hybrid instrument. At times, the composite of guitar and saxophone is pushed to extremes, as each of the 5 co-composed pieces explore the impossible polyphony of an expansive terrain, speaking in tongues. The duo shares an expressive vocality and an approach to construction that is both elemental and ritualistic, while at other times haunting and ethereal, permeated by a dose of horror.

Inspired by the lineage of guitar/saxophone duos –– from Fred Frith and Anthony Braxton to Tim Berne and Bill Frisell –– Earth’s Precisions expands on this tradition, at once confounding the sounds of their instruments past recognition and returning them to a seemingly nascent state. Rogers and Goldfarb achieve this with a unique setup: Rogers plays alto, tenor, and soprano throughout the album, and Goldfarb performs without effects using a range of microtonal retunings of the instrument.

Alec Goldfarb is a Brooklyn based guitarist, composer, and Hindustani classical musician. Active in the NYC jazz and new music communities, his work explores musical traits as historical vestiges of migrations, colonialism, geographies, labor, ritual. He holds a masters degree from CUNY Brooklyn College and B.A.’s from the University of Illinois in Music Composition / Theory and Philosophy.

An exponent of the Seniya-Maihar Gharana, Alec performs Hindustani classical music across the globe on the guitar using a novel synthesis of sarod and sitar technique. In Spring 2020 he co-founded the Open Improvisations: Online Edition weekly series with Marina Kifferstein and Carrie Frey, and served as the inaugural composer in residence for Jonah Bokaer Choreography in 2018. He is currently on faculty at NYC Guitar School.

Based in New York City, Erin Rogers is a Canadian-American saxophonist, composer, and improviser dedicated to new and experimental music. Her “decidedly future-oriented” music has been described as “whimsical, theatrical” (Brooklyn Vegan), “radical and refreshing” (Vital Weekly) and “a richly expressive display of stentorian brilliance” (The Wire).

Her work ranges from chamber music performance to solo experimental improvisation to individual and collaborative compositions that incorporate live electronics, theatre, and text. Rogers’ music has been performed at Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, Elbphilharmonie (Hamburg), Roulette Intermedium, Centro Nacional de las Artes (Mexico City), Celebrity Series (Boston), MATA Festival, Ecstatic Festival at Merkin Hall, Prototype Festival, Winspear Centre (Edmonton), Resonanzraum (Germany), Círculo de Bellas Artes (Madrid), and NyMusikk Bergen (Norway). Rogers is co-artistic director of NYC-based performance ensembles: thingNY, New Thread Quartet, Hypercube, Popebama, and a member of LA-based Wild Up.


Thursday, September 07, 2023

Natalie Rose LeBrecht | "'Holy Prana Open Game"

Natalie Rose LeBrecht's recordings, from the teenage 4-track tapes she made as Greenpot Bluepot to the recent albums under her own name, have been fascinating dispatches from her progressively deeper dives into her gorgeous, weird, wildly idiomatic aesthetic. Holy Prana Open Game is a jewel of intensely personal cosmic music, created through a remarkable process of openness, craftiness, addition and subtraction. It belongs to a tradition of albums that document a rich, meditative sound as it rises up to join the world outside its creators' minds: Alice Coltrane's Universal Consciousness, Harmonia's Musik von Harmonia, Philip Glass's North Star, Talk Talk's Laughing Stock.

"Meditative" is specifically the idea here: Holy Prana Open Game had its origins in the fourteen days LeBrecht spent silently meditating in her home's small music room in the summer of 2019. "I came out of that bursting with the will to create new music," she says, and she created it sound-first. LeBrecht taught herself to program an analog synthesizer's timbres from scratch, and built a new set of glacial, heady compositions out of them, eventually singing to accompany the keyboard parts she was playing.

Then she closed her eyes at her computer, "let my mind be clear and open, imagined light pouring down through me, and began auto-writing to my memory of the music playing through my mind. Most of the lyrics emerged this way, and then I used my conscious mind to refine them a bit at the end." One other song came along with LeBrecht's new pieces, a cover that seems wildly unlikely from the outside and makes total sense in its context: it's a version of Atoms for Peace's "Amok" (which had been created by improvisation and editing, too), mutated into her own idiolect.

In early March of 2020, LeBrecht recorded Holy Prana Open Game's analog synth parts with Martin Bisi at his studio in Brooklyn--and then the world shut down. As you may have gathered, LeBrecht is very much a spiritual, head-in-the-stars type. She is also extremely hardcore, and if making the art she wants to make means doing things the hard way, she cracks her knuckles and gets down to it. Within weeks, she had taught herself how to record, mix and edit with a digital audio workstation. She recorded her vocal parts (sometimes multi-tracked into a radiant choir) at home, assembled a rough mix of the album, and sent it off to her collaborators.

LeBrecht spent some years studying with and assisting La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela at their legendary sound-and-light installation, the Dream House. As with their work, her singular, precisely focused vision is shored up by its openness to artistic voices beyond her own. For Holy Prana Open Game, she worked with the Australian guitarist Mick Turner and drummer Jim White (both of Dirty Three, the Tren Brothers and innumerable other projects), as well as woodwind player David Lackner, a longtime presence on her recordings.

Turner and White have been playing together in one context or another since 1985; in the summer of 2020, they were only blocks from each other in Melbourne, Australia, whose strict lockdown meant they couldn't meet up to record together. So both of them, as well as Lackner, recorded their improvisational additions to LeBrecht's rough mixes individually, often without hearing each other's contributions. "I had asked them to play as much as they could on each track," she says, "and told them that I would edit it all down in post, so I had a lot of source material of theirs to work with."

LeBrecht arranged and edited the recordings from all four of their homes to flow together like breath across the duration of her suite. Prana, one of the album's central conceits, is in fact the Sanskrit word for breath, with the connotation of the breath of life. Like LeBrecht's music, prana flows at its own pace, and demands stillness to take in fully--but it's also subtly playful and surprising, a force that can be as light as air or as immersive as the atmosphere itself.

 

Matthew Shipp | "The Intrinsic Nature of Shipp"

Over the course of his three-and-a-half decade career, Matthew Shipp has evolved from a radical outsider on the fringes of the NYC avant-garde to a position as, in the words of DownBeat magazine, “an elder statesman on the free-jazz scene.” He’s achieved such accolades without ever deviating from a single-minded exploration of his own inimitable sonic vocabulary, maintaining his own eccentric orbit around the jazz realm while steadfastly resisting its gravitational pull.

Two new releases bookending his storied career showcase both Shipp’s unflagging vision and the progressive maturation of his inimitable pianism. With his remarkable new solo album The Intrinsic Nature of Shipp, due out September 15th via Mahakala Music, the acclaimed pianist offers his most stunningly distilled statement to date, a compelling, intensely focused set of breathtaking improvisations that fastidiously refine Shipp’s prismatic language; meanwhile, ESP-Disk kicks off a new series of reissues also on September 15 with the 1990 trio outing Circular Temple, Shipp’s first album solely under his own name.

While these two albums provide a glimpse of the impressive consistency of Shipp’s voice across the span of his estimable career, the differences in the two albums spotlight the ways in which he has matured and defined his language over the decades.

“A personal style happens when it happens,” Shipp shrugs. “I believe everybody is capable of it, but the conditions that allow it to happen have to be in place. There is a pure generating principle within anybody, but that doesn't mean that there's not input from the outside world in my music. It does mean that everything is thoroughly digested into my system and then thrown back out as my central nervous system interacts with other parts of the universal hologram, which could be a lick from Monk or a Bud Powell solo. Just like water becomes steam becomes ice, there's a central principle to the whole thing that's pure Matt Shipp.”

Shipp made his recording debut in 1988 with Sonic Explorations, sharing top billing with his duo partner, alto saxophonist Rob Brown. Circular Temple offered fans of jazz’s outer limits the first true glimpse of Shipp’s idiosyncratic concept, however, leading a trio with lifelong collaborators William Parker (bass) and Whit Dickey (drums), with whom he famously worked in the legendary David S. Ware Quartet. The album was initially self-released on Shipp’s own Quinton imprint, then reissued in 1994 on Henry Rollins’ Infinite Zero label; both have since gone out of print.

Through ESP, Circular Temple will not only return to circulation on CD and digital formats but make its long-awaited vinyl debut. Over the next year, the label will follow that with a reissue of Zo, a 1994 duo with William Parker, on all three formats; and a vinyl-only issue of Shipp’s 2018 solo album Zero. All three will be available on vinyl for the first time ever.

“At the time that Circular Temple was released, I don't think people really knew what to make of me,” Shipp says. “By the time it was released on Infinite Zero, which was just a few years after its first incarnation, it was the lead review in Rolling Stone. Listening to it now, I hear that I had a very distinct voice even in the early 90s, when the neoconservative movement in jazz was at its peak. My language is transcendental and doesn't fit into any easy niche or category, so it's interesting looking back to see an album like that arrive in an environment that would not have been able to make sense of it.”

In the intervening years Shipp’s work has achieved its fair share of study and acclaim while still existing far outside the jazz mainstream. His solo recordings have charted a sweeping arc through his prolific discography since 1995, when he recorded both live (Before the World) and in the studio (Symbol Systems). In 2002 he returned with a rare standards date on the disruptive Songs. The further clarification of his voice can be traced from 20015’s One through 2018’s Zero, his mathematical precision revealed in his most recent offerings, The Piano Equation and Codebreaker.

If those latter titles hint at an investigatory process, then The Intrinsic Nature of Shipp suggests a profound discovery, one that turns the pianist’s expansive, often cosmic vision inwards to find an equally expansive universe in his own essential being. The album’s ten stark, exacting inventions seem to have shorn away any superfluous gestures to reveal Shipp’s unadulterated inner life.

“I believe a pianist's intrinsic nature comes out in the solo idiom,” the pianist asserts. If that is the case, then the solo work of an artist as singular and visionary as Shipp must be viewed as creation in its purest form.

“When you're playing solo, it's a pure prayer to the instrument and to the vibratory field that the music comes from,” Shipp explains. “You're laid out naked in your full glory, for everybody to see. So the deeper I get into my career, I'm drilling further down to the bare essence of the facilitator that generates this music.” 

16th Annual Angel City Jazz Festival Announces Final 2023 Lineup

In its 16th year, 501 (c)(3) Angel City Arts presents the Angel City Jazz Festival October 13 – 29, 2023, at diverse and popular venues such as REDCAT (Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater), 2220 Arts & Archives, LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art), The Moss Theatre, Zebulon, Zipper Hall and The World Stage. Tickets go on sale on July 1.

This year’s fall event will host 17 concerts featuring live performances by the Mark Masters Ensemble featuring Billy Harper, the Destiny Muhammad Trio with Teodross Avery, Crump/Laubrock/Smythe, Jeong Lim Yang’s Zodiac Trio, Gloria Cheng, Linda May Han Oh & Fabian Almazan, Jon Jang & Hitomi Oba, Kirk Knuffke Trio, Todd Sickafoose’s Bear Proof, Tim Berne, Aurora Nealand and Hank Roberts, Harriet Tubman, Mat Maneri Quartet, Ennis Harris, NJL Awardees, Nicole Mitchell, Billy Mohler, Todd Cochran and Hubert Laws. 

Jazz never stands still. Like improvisation, it’s constantly evolving and reinventing itself. While some festivals focus with a nostalgic lens, Angel City unapologetically looks forward to encouraging and embracing metamorphosis of the genre. While providing a cradle to 1960s innovators Ornette Coleman, Eric Dolphy, and Charles Lloyd, Los Angeles never consistently hosted a festival dedicated to post-traditional improvisation until innovator Rocco Somazzi founded The Angel City Jazz Festival in 2008. The festival has helped establish LA as a jazz destination through 16 years of affordable and accessible live concerts throughout the city featuring artists such as Bill Frisell, Archie Shepp, Bennie Maupin, Roscoe Mitchell, Wadada Leo Smith, Vijay Iyer, Ravi Coltrane, Nels Cline, Tigran Hamasyan, Rudresh Mahanthappa and many others.

The festival kicks off Friday, October 13 at LACMA with a special 100th anniversary tribute to the musical legacy of Sam Rivers featuring a 13-piece ensemble with special guest sax legend Billy Harper led by arranger/composer Mark Masters.

The excitement continues Saturday, October 14 with Bay Area based jazz harpist Destiny Muhammad leading a trio and featuring local sax man Teodross Avery at the World Stage in Leimert Park. On Sunday, October 15, two highly original and adventurous NYC based trios will perform back-to-back sets at 2220 Arts. First up is up and coming bassist Jeong Lim Yang’s Zodiac Trio, followed by seasoned improvisers Stephan Crump, Ingrid Laubrock and Cory Smythe. The festivities continue into Monday, October 16 with a special six-hour long performance featuring 20 LA based improvisers from three generations in duo and trio formats at the Oracle Tavern. Among the participants are Vinny Golia, William Rope, Dylan Fujioka and Motoko Honda.

The following weekend, on Saturday, October 21, Gloria Cheng will premiere six compositions for solo piano by prominent jazz composers: James Newton, Arturo O’Farrill, Anthony Davis, Linda May Han Oh, Jon Jang and Gernot Wolfgang. Many of these composers will be in attendance and Linda May Han Oh and Jon Jang will also perform with their respective duos.

The weekend will conclude on October 22 with a double bill featuring acclaimed trumpeter Kirk Knuffke in a trio with Angelica Sanchez and Micheal Bisio followed by Todd Sickafoose’s all-star octet featuring Allison Miller, Jenny Scheinman, Adam Levy and Ben Goldberg among others.

The festival continues on Wednesday, October 25 with another double bill featuring two highly creative NYC based trios. Opening the night is OCEANS AND, a new trio led by saxman Tim Berne with vocalist/clarinetist Aurora Nealand and Hank Roberts on cello. Next up is Harriet Tubman, an avant-rock trio with Brandon Ross on guitar, Melvin Gibbs on bass and TJ Lewis on drums.

The festival’s closing weekend begins on Friday, October 27 with a double bill at 2220 Arts + Archives. LA-based up and coming composer Ennis Harris will premiere “Images & Silhouettes” a commissioned composition for a 17-piece band. The Mat Maneri Quartet will perform material from his latest release “DUST” to close out the night. On Saturday, October 28, Nicole Mitchell will premiere a multimedia piece dedicated to her late mother entitled JBM: Images & Beyond. Opening the night there will be a showcase coordinated by New Music USA featuring grants from The Next Jazz Legacy program, which is devoted to increase opportunities for female or gender non-conforming musicians and is a partnership between New Music USA and the Berklee Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice with support from the Mellon Foundation and Joe & Nancy Walker.

The festival will conclude on Sunday, October 29 with a very rare appearance by NEA Jazz Master Hubert Laws featured as a special guest of piano legend Todd Cochran’s TC3 trio with John Leftwich on bass and Lyndon Rochelle on drums. LA based bassist Billy Mohler will also perform with an all-star quartet featuring Mark Turner on sax, Shane Endsley on trumpet and Jonathan Pinson on drums.

Full schedule, tickets and details at www.angelcityjazz.com.

Joe Policastro Trio | "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.

Bassist Andrea Veneziani Releases "The Lighthouse," Quartet Session Set for October 6 Release

Acclaimed bassist and composer Andrea Veneziani returns to leadership with his long-awaited second album, The Lighthouse, which will be available on October 6. The album features the Italian-born artist leading an all-star quartet comprising cornetist Kirk Knuffke, guitarist Charlie Sigler, and drummer Allan Mednard performing a gorgeous set of eight Veneziani originals.

This sophomore effort from the bassist comes eleven years after his highly praised debut, 2012’s Oltreoceano. The lengthy gap is partly due to the first album’s success, which opened many doors for Veneziani to perform and record both as a leader and a sideman. However, he had initially planned to make his follow-up in 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic thwarted his efforts for three long years.

Ironically, however, that last delay gave Veneziani an unexpected gift. He had time to shape and polish the scintillating new group of tunes that make up The Lighthouse. Each is crafted to the specific sounds of the musicians in his band, yet they are also in conversation with the piano-trio pieces on Oltreoceano.

“I think these new pieces are connected with the first recording,” Veneziani says. “The tunes are kind of on the same page aesthetically, but there’s definitely been a growth in the complexity of the forms and the sophistication of the melodies, harmonies, and the rhythmic elements of the compositions.”

Which is not to say that the new songs are too hip for the room, so to speak. Indeed, The Lighthouse is dazzling right from the start—the warmly glowing title track—and remains so all the way through its lively but thoughtful samba closer, “Shunting Line.”

In between those endpieces are pockets of beauty (the gorgeous ballads “Gravity” and “Rainbows”), good cheer (“In Perpetuum”), quirky charm (the waltzing “Twelve Clowns”), hard swing (“Seasons”), and free-ish improvisation (“Bop-Be”). Yet for all their variety, the pieces show a remarkable consistency, coming together to form a clear Veneziani vision.

Despite the singularity of that vision, however, much of the credit also goes to the ace, handpicked sidemen. “I wanted their individual sounds, and I thought they’d work together beautifully,” Veneziani says. And so they do, as The Lighthouse masterfully demonstrates.

Andrea Veneziani was born April 21, 1977 in Pescia, a medieval town in the Italian region of Tuscany, and soon moved to the Marche region, where he lived until the age of 15 when his family relocated to Rome. At 20, inspired by the legendary funk-rocker Flea and other bassists, he began playing the electric bass and cycling through various cover bands. The routine-ness of the music became a bore, though, and Veneziani threw himself into the study of improvisation.

At the same time, he studied sociology at Rome’s La Sapienza University. It wasn’t until after finishing his college degree that Veneziani turned his attention to the acoustic double bass (for which both work and education were more plentiful and lucrative). He received an Advanced Academic Diploma from the Conservatory of Music Licinio Refice in Frosinone in 2007, boosting a jazz career that had already begun in earnest.

Over the next few years, Veneziani was a frequent and popular presence on the Italian jazz scene, performing at the Umbria, Teano, Novara, and Terni Jazz Festivals along with other festivals and clubs all across Italy. In 2009, he received a Fulbright scholarship to study jazz performance at NYU, where in 2011 he earned his Master of Music in Performance with a Concentration in Jazz.

In the meantime, he developed a flourishing career in New York. Veneziani’s resume includes club, studio, and touring work with the likes of Ralph Alessi, Houston Person, Brian Lynch, Tony Moreno, Tom Guarna, Mark Ferber, Ralph Lalama, George Schuller, Steve Slagle, John Betsch, Ben Monder, Kenny Werner, and Ross Pederson. The latter two served as the trio on Veneziani’s recording debut, Oltreoceano, in 2012. While he loves working as a sideman, he also cherishes the opportunity that his albums, of which The Lighthouse is the second, allow him to put his rich compositional dimension on display.

Craft Latino celebrates Tico Records’ 75th anniv. with ‘Hit the Bongo! The Latin Soul of Tico Records’

Craft Latino celebrates Tico Records’ 75th anniversary by examining one of its most prolific and diverse eras with Hit the Bongo! The Latin Soul of Tico Records. Spanning 1962–1972, this brand-new vinyl and digital collection surveys the rise of Latin soul through 26 rarities and classics by pioneering figures such as Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, Celia Cruz and Ray Barretto, as well as by the Joe Cuba Sextet, La Lupe, Willie Bobo and many more. Arriving October 27 and available to pre-order today, Hit the Bongo! features newly remastered audio by Joe Tarantino, a 2-LP set housed in a gatefold jacket with new liner notes by DJ Dean Rudland, with lacquers cut by Phillip S. Rodriguez at Elysian Masters. In addition, an exciting exclusive bundle option including a commemorative Tico Records T-shirt is available at Fania.com.

In 1948, Tico Records opened in New York City, becoming one of the first US labels to focus solely on Latin music. Home to such pioneering figures as Ray Barretto, Tito Puente, Joe Cuba, Jimmy Sabater, La Lupe, Eddie Palmieri and Celia Cruz, Tico was at the forefront of every Latin musical trend during its three-decade-long reign: from mambo and cha-cha-chá to Pachanga and boogaloo.

The story of Tico Records begins in the late 1940s when mambo swept dance clubs across the East Coast. Its epicenter was New York City’s Palladium Ballroom, where bandleaders like Tito Puente, Machito and Tito Rodríguez (aka the “Mambo Kings”) played the Cuban-influenced music all night long. Despite its popularity, however, there was little mambo on record. In 1948, New York club owner George Goldner sought to change that. While Goldner would establish a multitude of labels during his career (including Roulette, Gone and Leiber and Stoller’s Red Bird), his first endeavor, Tico Records, would hold a significant place in Latin music history.

One of his first signings was bandleader, percussionist and composer Tito Puente. A defining figure in Latin jazz, the “King of Timbales” began his prolific recording career at Tico with albums like Mamborama (1955) and Puente in Percussion (1956). It would be Puente’s second stint with the label, however, that cemented his status as an international star—most notably with 1962’s “Oye Como Va,” a popular cha-cha-chá number that Santana transformed into a Latin rock hit eight years later.

While the label signed other big players in the mambo and cha-cha-chá scenes—including Tito Rodríguez, Joe Loco and Arsenio Rodríguez—Tico could not survive Goldner’s gambling habit. By the end of the ’50s, music impresario Morris Levy had taken control of the company. Under Levy, Tico became a powerful player in the Latin music scene. The savvy record executive explained to Dean Rudland that he “employ[ed] A&R men and producers, such as Ralph Seijo, Miguel Estivill, and Joe Cain, who understood not just the fundamentals of Latin music, but also how it was changing and developing as it moved into the 1960s.” Those at the label also sought to reach a new audience—specifically second-generation Latin communities, who were coming of age in an exciting new era.

With the changing times came new musical trends, including Pachanga. Born in Cuba and developed in the Bronx, Pachanga soon replaced mambo and the cha-cha-chá as the hottest dance craze. In 1963, Tico released one of the genre’s most iconic tracks, “El Watusi,” from conguero and bandleader Ray Barretto. Straddling the line between Latin music’s old and new guards, Barretto was primarily a sideman at the time, playing with the biggest names in jazz. While his tenure at Tico was brief, the success of “El Watusi” (a Top 20 hit on Billboard’s R&B and pop charts) ignited Barretto’s prolific solo career—which included the seminal boogaloo album Acid and the role of musical director for the legendary Fania All-Stars.

That same year, Tico released Willie Bobo’s debut as a leader, Do That Thing/Guajira. A protégé of Mongo Santamaría and frequent sideman for Tito Puente and Cal Tjader, the rising Puerto Rican percussionist blended soulful jazz with a twist of Afro-Cuban rhythms, resulting in such delicious grooves as “Bobo! Do That Thing” and “He’s That Way.” While Bobo was still several years away from the height of his fame, his debut album served as a precursor to the Latin soul that exploded later in the decade.

Another foundational player in the scene was Joe Cuba, who was already a well-known bandleader when he joined Tico in 1965. The New York–born conguero frequently integrated bilingual lyrics into his songs (as performed by singers Cheo Feliciano and Jimmy Sabater). That seamless blend of English and Spanish would soon become a hallmark of the boogaloo sound. At Tico, Cuba scored a string of pop and R&B hits, beginning with 1966’s “El Pito (Never Go Back to Georgia),” “Bang Bang” and “Oh Yeah.” He continued that momentum through the next decade, maintaining his position as a Latin soul icon with tracks like 1968’s “Psychedelic Baby” and 1972’s “Do You Feel It?,” which served as an ode to his Spanish Harlem roots.

Cuba’s bandmate, Jimmy Sabater, also found success at Tico, breaking out on his own and releasing two albums, including 1969’s Solo. Featuring the single “Times Are Changing,” the LP was produced by none other than George Goldner and featured an all-star lineup of musicians, including Ray Barretto, Sonny Bravo, Johnny Colon, Bobby Rodriguez and Barry Rodgers.

When Tito Puente returned to Tico in the early ’60s, he, too, embraced the era’s groovy new sounds, even if his feelings were mixed. Rudland writes, “When the Latin soul thing got into full swing, some of the older guard were unhappy, while others embraced what was going on. By all reports, for Tito Puente it was a bit of both, although it was difficult to tell as he threw himself into the records he made in the soul style with gusto.” Puente’s highlights from this era include “Fat Mama” (1966), “TP’s Shing-A-Ling” (1967) and the supremely groovy percussion-fueled jam “Hit the Bongo!” (1970).

Puente also collaborated with two legendary Cuban artists at Tico: La Lupe and Celia Cruz. Prior to the Cuban Revolution, Cruz was a major star in her home country with the vocal group Sonora Matancera. While she would soar to new heights as the “Queen of Salsa” in the ’70s, Cruz spent several years finding her niche in the US. It was during this transitional period that she recorded with Tico. One of the highlights of this era was a 1969 collaboration with Puente, in which they delivered a swinging rendition of “Aquarius/Let The Sun Shine In” from the musical Hair.

La Lupe, meanwhile, was at the apex of her career under Tico. Known as the “Queen of Latin Soul,” the singer arrived in New York in the early ’60s, where she built a following through passionate club performances and regular gigs with Puente and Mongo Santamaría. Before long, La Lupe was one of the era’s most popular Latin vocalists. At Tico, she recorded frequently with Puente (including their 1967 boogaloo classic “Steak-O-Lean”) but also released a steady stream of solo albums, including Reina de la Cancion Latina (Queen of Latin Soul). Among other highlights, the 1968 LP featured a spirited rendition of Little Willie John’s “Fever,” which La Lupe performed and recorded throughout her career.

Another notable Cuban artist on Tico’s roster was conguero and bongosero Cándido Camero (aka the “Thousand Finger Man”). Long regarded as an Afro-Cuban jazz pioneer, Camero settled in New York in the mid-40s, joining Dizzy Gillespie’s band before going solo in the ’50s. While the innovative percussionist only recorded one album with Tico during his marathon career, 1966’s Latin McGuffa’s Dust featured several memorable tracks, including the fiery single “Madrid.”

Making an even briefer appearance on Tico was veteran bandleader Joe Panama, who released the funky “My People” as a one-off single in 1972. Another rarity came from Colombian bandleader Al Escobar, who released El Sonido Moderno de Al Escobar / The Modern Sounds of Al Escobar in 1969. The collection of covers and originals included highly danceable renditions of Archie Bell’s “Tighten Up” and Jesse James’ “The Horse.”

As Latin soul evolved over the late ’60s and early ’70s, it often mirrored broader musical trends. Examples of this at Tico include two English-language tracks: 1970’s “Yes I Will (Part 1)” from the Gilberto Sextet, which offers a soulful message of positivity, and Eddie Palmieri’s “The African Twist” (1967), which evokes the era’s girl groups, thanks to a joyful vocal performance by the song’s writer, Cynthia Ellis. Palmieri, a celebrated bandleader, pianist and composer who has long been regarded as an innovator in his field (and won the first-ever GRAMMY® in a Latin category in 1975), can also be heard here in a more traditional jazz setting, alongside vibraphonist Cal Tjader, on 1967’s “Come and Get It.”

While Tico’s Latin soul output was certainly impressive, its catalog wasn’t as vast as some of its competitors. But, as Rudland explains, this certainly wasn’t detrimental: “Tico’s involvement in Latin soul was a little tangential, the reasoning being that it was the establishment Latin label with the big established names on its roster. It didn’t need . . . scrappy young bands.” Despite the label’s status in the industry, it was sold to Latin music giant Fania Records in 1975. Under Fania, Tico remained a prized possession, with an active frontline roster until the end of the decade. Nearly half a century later, Tico Records’ legacy remains stronger than ever, while its impact continues to reverberate today.

Wednesday, September 06, 2023

New Zealand Based Jazz Saxophonist Dave Wilson Releases Ephemeral

Ephemeral is the latest release from Aotearoa New Zealand-based artist Dave Wilson, featuring Wilson on tenor saxophone and bass clarinet in an improvising ensemble including trumpet, guitar, bass, drums, and string quartet. With multi-layered grooves and intricate textures, Wilson creates musical worlds that foreground the wide-ranging musicalities of his collaborators and amplify the many dimensions of his playing. The album’s nine tracks take listeners down a path that explores ephemerality of all kinds, guided by alternatively floating and driving improvisatory melodies and rhythmic impulses of Wilson and the ensemble. In the themes that it approaches, Ephemeral is not simply about transience, it is about how we as humans are – only briefly – interconnected with one another and with other elements of the world. Along those lines, each of the album’s compositions explores relationships of some kind, and how they give meaning to and are expressed in sounds, spaces, and places. 

The album opens with “speak to me of yesterday and tomorrow (elusive as the dead),” a piece inspired by a riroriro (grey warbler) whose song has long been present in Wilson’s space in Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington), New Zealand’s capital where he lives. The piece alternates between a bouncing strut and a driving repeating cycle, first for a set of swirling melodies, and then a saxophone solo from Wilson that is boosted into the stratosphere by the improvising string quartet and the rhythm section. Trumpeter Ben Hunt continues with his own beautifully constructed solo, uplifted by the strings, before the group’s return to the melodies and a tuneful display on the drums and cymbals by Hikurangi Schaverien-Kaa. In many ways the piece establishes Wilson’s approach throughout the album – the group flexibly improvises together both collectively as a unit and in modalities that bring out the best in every soloist. 

The opening of “What shines is a thought that lost its way” brings violinist Amy Brookman of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra (NZSO) to the front, interweaving her vibrant lyricism with the gentle pulsing of the ensemble. The disjointed-but-connected flowing lines of the musicians in the middle section most strongly evoke the concept of the piece – a link between the Aurora Borealis and the breakdown of human relationships that once held great promise. The closing brings out one of the album’s most head-bobbing grooves, along with some shredding on the violin by Brookman as Wilson’s saxophone eggs her on. 

The next two tracks on the album shift the mood, first to a drone-based meditation featuring Wilson on bass clarinet and the emotive timbres of the string quartet and bass (“For Olivia”), and then to “Liv’s Theme,” where a simple repeating figure in the bass, along with the gently persistent bass clarinet, generates extended collective improvisations from both the strings and from the guitar (Callum Allardice) and trumpet (Hunt). “My niece, when she was two years old, inspired this composition through a song she was singing to herself one day,” Wilson says. “She soon forgot the tune, but I asked her parents (my sister and her husband) if I could elaborate it into a longer composition, which became the bass line in Liv’s Theme. It's become a special point of connection for us.” The bass solo by Chris Beernink at the end of the track, permeated with the nostalgic sparkle of the strings, encapsulates some of the melancholy that lies behind the innocence and fleeting nature of childhood. 

“A Hundred Glowing Clouds” finds even more avenues for Wilson on bass clarinet, with its plodding molasses groove bringing the trumpet (Hunt) and violin (Brookman) together in a tribute to the passing of Wilson’s grandmother in the form of a sunset. In “High Maintenance,” the violin, viola (Nicholas Hancox, NZSO), saxophone, and trumpet frantically surf on top of a seemingly unrelated swing feel before the ensemble converges. Schaverien-Kaa drives the group on “Lift,” pushing and pulling the string quartet (which also includes violinist Monique Lapins of the New Zealand String Quartet and cellist Bennie Sneyd-Utting) and the rest of the group. On “Dissipation,” Ben Hunt shines with the strings, who also set the course for the duo of Allardice and Wilson (on saxophone) on perhaps the happiest of the album’s grooves. The album closes with “Keep It To Yourself,” which Wilson wrote in the context of his work as a researcher and musician in North Macedonia and originally released on the album On the Face Place by CSPS Ensemble, Wilson’s group with some of North Macedonia’s leading musicians. On this new version, the strings add a new bite and brightness, and Bennie Sneyd-Utting’s cello playing takes the piece – and the ensemble – into a thrilling new universe.


John Scofield | "Uncle John's Band"

Named for the Grateful Dead song that concludes this double album, Uncle John’s Band features masterful guitarist John Scofield at his most freewheeling. Wide ranging repertoire finds his trio with Vicente Archer and Bill Stewart tackling material from Dylan’s “Mr Tambourine Man” to Neil Young’s “Old Man”, from Leonard Bernstein’s “Somewhere” to the Miles Davis Birth of the Cool classic “Budo." And jazz standards including “Stairway to the Stars” and “Ray’s Idea” rub shoulders with seven far-reaching Scofield originals that are variously swing, funk and folk-inflected. The red thread through the program is the trio’s improvisational verve.

“I feel like we can go anywhere” says John Scofield of the group’s multi-directional versatility, and they do. The opening “Tambourine Man” for instance begins almost in the spirit of raga, before the theme emerges, lilting and country-flavored, and the improvisation opens up a new space where “we don’t follow a form but play freely,” with Archer’s heartfelt solo an early highlight. From moment to moment the group embraces the structures of the pieces it plays, then stretches and liberates them. “All the compositions are vehicles for us to improvise on,” Scofield told rock magazine Relix recently. “All are equally important to me.”

If Scofield is first and foremost a great jazz guitarist – a status confirmed by a biography that has included celebrated work with masters including Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Gary Burton, Gerry Mulligan, Joe Henderson and more, as well as the many outstanding groups that he has led - he has always been an open-minded player. Rock and blues were his original starting points as a teenaged guitarist, and the quality of direct emotional expression associated with those idioms has remained an unmistakable part of his sound, however sophisticated the harmonic context. In parallel to his jazz activities, he has long been welcomed as a distinguished guest on the rock jam band scene and, as a contributor to Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh’s groups, has played “Uncle John’s Band” live on multiple occasion over the last 20 years.

Uncle John’s Band is Scofield’s third album as a leader on ECM: it follows Swallow Tales (recorded 2019), dedicated to the music of frequent partner Steve Swallow, and the solo album John Scofield, recorded in the isolation of lockdown in 2021. Other appearances on ECM include Bass Desires (1985) and Second Sight (1987), with bassist Marc Johnson’s group whose frontline paired Scofield with Bill Frisell. Saudades (2004), a celebration of the music of Tony Williams Lifetime, featured Scofield with Jack DeJohnette and Larry Goldings.

Archer is widely considered one of today's profound voices on the bass. He has been playing in a variety of Scofield led bands since 2017 as well as with Kenny Garrett, Terence Blanchard, Tom Harrell, Freddie Hubbard, Louis Hayes, Curtis Fuller, Mark Whitfield, Roy Haynes, Geri Allen, Stanley Jordan, Wycliffe Gordon, Stefon Harris, Janis Siegel, Robert Glasper, Nicholas Payton and The Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis. In 2023, after many years of creative contribution to other musicians’ concepts, Archer released his first album as a leader, Short Stories (Cellar Music) with Bill Stewart and Gerald Clayton in 2023. Uncle John’s Band marks his first appearance on ECM.

Stewart has performed and recorded with many leading musicians, including Joe Lovano, Pat Metheny, Maceo Parker, Larry Goldings, Charlie Haden, Joe Henderson, Michael Brecker, Chris Potter, Lee Konitz, Nicholas Payton and others. He co-leads the popular group Goldings/Stewart/Bernstein, and has been associated with John Scofield for more than 30 years. “What Bill does is more than ‘playing the drums,’” Scofield has said. “He’s a melodic voice in the music, playing counterpoint, and comping, while also swinging really hard.” This is evident throughout the new album, not least on Scofield’s “How Deep”, which lifts the 32-bar jazz form to new heights…

The Scofield trio takes the music on the road in the weeks and months ahead. In the US, Scofield, Archer and Stewart play a three-night run at Baltimore’s Keystone Korner (November 17-19), followed by four nights at The Blue Note in New York (November 21-25). They then head to Canada to play Toronto’s George Weston Recital Hall (November 30). 

Uncle John’s Band was recorded at Clubhouse Studio in Rhinebeck, New York, in August 2022. The album includes liner notes, with commentary on each track, by John Scofield.

Chicago improvising trio, Hearsay returns with Glossolalia

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.



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Lezlie Harrison's Upcoming Album "Let Them Talk"

Renowned vocalist Lezlie Harrison is thrilled to unveil her highly anticipated album "Let Them Talk," scheduled for release on September 15, 2023. Following her successful 2020 debut record "Soul Book Vol. 1," which showcased her prowess in soulful American sounds, Harrison returns with her second album, poised to further solidify her standing as a vocal powerhouse. Praised by The Amsterdam News for her enduring vocal potency, Harrison's musical journey continues to ascend.

"Let Them Talk" traverses an eclectic range of musical landscapes, blending soulful interpretations of timeless jazz standards like "Embraceable You" and "You Are Too Beautiful" with soul classics such as "Love Won't Let Me Wait," and rock anthems like "Fly Like an Eagle" and "Yesterday." Harrison's mesmerizing voice captivates listeners, guiding them through a collection of songs that speak to our shared human experience and the unity it brings.

Reflecting on the album's essence, Harrison shared, "The music moves us in the way a preacher moves their congregation. We get up off our feet and hold on to the words and what they stir in us. We are transported to the absolute truth of the moment where we can join in the experience together. This is what the world needs right now, and it is what I want to give."

Collaborating with top-tier musicians, "Let Them Talk" was recorded alongside Pete Zimmer, a prominent drummer in New York City's music scene, internationally acclaimed pianist Ben Paterson who contributes organ sounds, and accomplished guitarist and producer Matt Chertkoff, renowned for his global performances and collaborations with jazz legends.

The album's lead single, "Fly Like an Eagle," released on June 30th, 2023, showcases Harrison's dynamic interpretation of the classic rock anthem by Steve Miller Band. Harrison's rendition breathes new life into the song, inspiring listeners to break through obstacles and pursue their dreams. The single received praise from the jazz blog Marlbank, describing it as "powerfully delivered" and noting Harrison's mastery in creating a unique version of the 1970s anthem.

The second single and title track, "Let Them Talk," a rendition of Sonny Thompson's composition, was released on August 4th, 2023. The track quickly found its place on Amazon Music playlists, including Vocal Jazz, Feel-Good Vocal Jazz, and Fresh Jazz, as well as Apple Music's Singer's Delight playlist.

Lezlie Harrison's artistic journey is a testament to her ever-evolving persona. As a vocalist, her distinct blend of boldness and subtlety conveys vulnerability while inspiring optimism. Whether delving into Jazz, Blues, Gospel, Soul, or any other musical form, Harrison's personal touch elevates each piece. Her role as a curator and presenter on the premier Jazz radio station WBGO reflects her deep-rooted love for America's classical music.

An active presence on the global jazz stage, Harrison's multifaceted talents extend beyond music. Her engagements as an actress mirror her commitment to bringing organic elegance to every endeavor, much like her past experiences on Parisian runways and photo studios.

Hailing from a diverse background that spans New York, North Carolina, and international stages, Lezlie Harrison embodies the lessons of dignity, integrity, and grace imparted by her mentors and shaped by her own experiences. She has graced prominent festivals like the Jersey City Jazz Festival and Made in New York Jazz Festival in Montenegro, as well as sharing her talents in Austria with the Jazz Orchester Steiermark and touring across Europe, Asia, and the Caribbean.

R&B-Jazz saxophonist Shawn Raiford taps Grammy-winning producer Derek “DOA” Allen to honor “Vallejo”

Home sweet home. Using his lyrically expressive horn to pay homage to his hometown, R&B-jazz saxophonist Shawn Raiford teamed up with Grammy-winning producer Derek “DOA” Allen (Lionel Richie, Janet Jackson, Tyrese) to create a musical love letter to the Bay Area city located thirty miles north of San Francisco. Written by Raiford, Allen, Ashley Jemison and Eddie Mininfield (Prince, Sheila E., Aretha Franklin), “Vallejo” began collecting playlist adds on Monday (September 4).

“Vallejo” is the third single released from Raiford’s forthcoming sophomore album, “The Next Step,” which is slated to drop early next year with Allen manning the producer’s console. And this one is personal.

“The only place that felt like home, the only place I felt like I belonged was in Vallejo,” said Raiford, who bounced around a bit while growing up, having attended four elementary schools, three junior high schools and two high schools.

“I was raised by my grandparents in Vallejo, California and this song is a tribute to a city that I speak of everywhere I go. There’s not a place that I go that I don’t mention that I’m from Vallejo. I’m really proud of that city. There’s just something about it.”

The warm melodies and intimate harmonies evocative of Raiford’s ardor for Vallejo float atop a soulful midtempo groove. His sax deftly balances his passion and intensity with the beauty and grace of his affection for the city. The track has an edge reflective of the signature sounds known to emerge from the Bay Area music scene.

“Me and my producer, DOA, came up with a combination of The Gap Band’s ‘Oops Upside Your Head’ and Brent Jones’s ‘I’m In Your City,’ but giving it the feel that Vallejo should have. It’s one of those songs that I believe that people when they get done listening to it are going to put it on play again. You can put it on in the backyard…people just having fun. It’s one of those joints. It’s really a nice song,” said Raiford, a motivational and genuinely exuberant artist who uses music to preach and teach what is possible when you believe in yourself, take action and follow your passion while being of service to others. 

An award-winning entertainer with his band The Shawn Raiford Experience, Raiford has been opening shows this year for R&B singer, songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist Chuckii Booker. Over the years, he’s opened for or performed with Teddy Riley, Yolanda Adams, Freddie Jackson, Pete Escovedo, Eric Darius and Jeff Ryan. Tonight, Raiford will open September with a show in Pittsburg, CA and close the month with a performance at the Night of Elegance benefit concert with Jay King (Club Nouveau) in Sacramento on September 30.  

The yearlong build up to “The Next Step” began last January when Raiford released the sensual single “Forever.” Momentum continued to grow in May with the release of his version of the four-time Grammy-winning hit, “Leave The Door Open.” But at every show he’s played this year, during every interview he’s given, and over and over again on his social media, Raiford has talked about “Vallejo,” and just how special this song is to him.   

“I love going back to Vallejo just to look and see how it’s changed, but one thing never changes. It’s the city I call home and will always love. In an everchanging world, Vallejo is the city I hope will always love me the way that I love it.”   


 

Guitarist Juan Carlos Quintero Releases New Album “Desserts”

As with all good meals, the sweets are the most memorable!

It’s no wonder that guitar legend Juan Carlos Quintero’s critically acclaimed chart-topping 2022 release, “Table For Five,” segues so effortlessly to the sequel – the new album, “Desserts”…

Quintero’s new album expands the music menu producing tasty treats while skillfully blending authentic grooves – originating from South American & Caribbean regions – culminating in a thread of meaningful performances honoring the beauty and breadth of Latin-Jazz traditions! Enticing gems include “The Gift,” “All or Nothing At All,” “How Insensitive,” “Tangerine,” “A Night in Tunisia,” “Along Came Betty” & crowd favorite, Van Morrison’s “Moondance”!

Says Juan, “For me, the experience producing this music brought me closer to my parents in so many ways…It’s been 10 years since we lost dad and I think of him daily…looking back, I can remember him playing the piano and working out the hit melodies of the time…little did I know then I would be doing the same years later…the message is check out your parents, remember them and preserve their melodies…”

The album features music from the early 1960s and focuses on traditional Latin rhythms to serve as the foundation for all the arrangements performed. As with the last album, the music features Quintero’s electric jazz guitar along with the backing by his extraordinary band: Eddie Resto (upright bass), Aaron Serfaty (drums), Joey DeLeon (Percussion), Joe Rotondi (piano). The album was recorded and mixed by Talley Sherwood and mastered by Peter Doell.

This seasoned Quintet never disappoints as it navigates an array of well-crafted classics re-imagined with newly fine-tuned arrangements! Led by JCQ’s signature guitar voice, the music transcends protocols merging stylish overtures in company with traditions of romance, charm & melody.

This party is seated and sticking around for more! Now serving desserts… A seamless follow up that converts to a staggered double-album experience prompted by “Table For Five” – It’s the final course topping off a delicious five-star feast! Bon appétit!

Tuesday, September 05, 2023

Hannah Gill | "Everybody Loves A Lover"

No one really knows for sure where the expression “everything old is new again” originated, but a younger generation certainly embodies that aphorism with their embrace of a musical style that went out of vogue more than 50 years before most of them were born. In the 1990s, groups like Squirrel Nut Zippers and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy spearheaded a musical movement that came to be known as the Swing-Era Revival, a movement that is still inspiring young musicians today.

Hannah Gill is a vocalist whose debut album, Everybody Loves A Lover, comprises eleven swing-era tunes that were composed from the 1920s through the 1950s. She is joined on the album by a band of top-notch East Coast musicians who share Gill’s passion for the danceable rhythms and melodic riffs that characterize this music. Joining Gill are trumpeter Danny Jonokuchi (who leads his own 17-piece big band and co-wrote the arrangements for this album), saxophonist and clarinetist Ryan Wesiheit, trombonist Sam Chess, guitarist Greg Ruggiero, pianist Gordon Webster (a fixture in the global Lindy Hop scene), bassist Tal Ronen, and drummer Ben Zweig.

Still a young woman, Gill’s voice is warm and mature with a deep-rooted feeling for jazz. Although she cites Blossom Dearie, Anita O’Day, and especially Ella Fitzgerald (she has a tattoo of Ella on her ankle) as her main inspirations, her vocals are also inflected with blues and soul. She stays true to the original music but brings it into the 21st century.

Gill spent countless hours listening to music on YouTube and sharing ideas with friends to choose the songs for this project. She says, “I divided the album into two types of songs. For anyone listening to the album on vinyl, Side A (or the first 6 tunes on CD) is about love makers, while Side B (the remaining 5 songs) is about heart breakers.”

Gill’s natural vocal talents were apparent at an early age. She grew up on the eastern shore of Maryland but has been honing her chops on the New York City jazz and Lindy Hop scene for the last eight years. Her penchant for the stage was seen all through middle school as she participated in numerous theatrical productions and talent shows. Her initial foray to NYC came about on her 16th birthday, when her father brought her to the city to watch a show at Summerstage. It was there that they met guitarist Brad Hammonds, whose father was Hannah’s co-worker. Hammonds, who had been performing for over 20 years, invited Hannah to record vocals on his next album, and thereafter they decided to work together.

At the age of 18, having decided to defer a college degree and pursue her passion for music instead, she moved to New York by herself and partnered with Hammonds to form “Hannah Gill & The Hours.” Forming a band that ranged from a duo to an eight-piece, they released two EP’s, The Water, and Lost In Words, whilst touring nationally in support of the projects. In 2020, during the pandemic, Hannah decided to pursue her own solo career, and self-released another EP of her original music, called Songs From Quarantine.

All the while, as Hannah played with The Hours, she was featured at local gigs in NYC, where she met Glen Crytzer and Gordon Webster, both of whom are established band leaders in the Lindy Hop scene. She also became a permanent member of Scott Bradlee’s Post Modern Jukebox, a band that re-arranges pop hits as jazz tunes. With PMJ, Hannah toured the world twice over, playing sold out shows from the Sydney Opera House to L’Olympia in Paris.

Her love for and knowledge of jazz led her to record her Spooky Jazz EP, a collection of classic swing-era standards that showcase the spookier size of jazz, which was released on Halloween in 2020.

Everybody Loves A Lover is being released on Turtle Bay Records, spearheaded by Scott Asen, a devotee of swing-era music. Asen, a career businessman and a true jazz lover, began Turtle Bay Records to showcase the best contemporary jazz artists playing the best tunes of yesteryear. Asen first heard Gill sing at one of his house parties for jazz aficionados, where he invites local musicians to perform. He then went on to see her at a host of other venues in the city and decided to offer her a record deal for an album on his newly formed label.

Some of the songs are a nod to Hannah’s favorite singers. The 1931 song “Moonlight Saving Time” was sung by Blossom Dearie, while “I Fell in Love with a Dream” was written by Ella Fitzgerald for her 1939 album Betcha Nickel. Gill also culled songs from the oeuvres of Nat King Cole and Doris Day. “What Can I Say After I Say I’m Sorry” was written by Walter Donaldson and Abe Lyman in 1926 and rejuvenated by The Nat Cole Trio in 1946, while “This Will Make You Laugh” was written by Irene Higginbotham and first released by the Trio in 1941. Doris Day sang ”Put ‘Em in a Box” by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn in the 1948 movie Romance on the High Seas, and “Everybody Loves a Lover,” the title track, was a hit single for her in 1958.

Other classic songs include “You Were Only Fooling,” “You’re Getting to Be a Habit with Me,” “Lullaby of the Leaves,” and “Autumn Leaves.” Gill closes the album with a rollicking version of “It’s a Sin to Tell a Lie.”

With Gill’s weekly gigs and her performances with the XIV Burlesque Theater Company in Brooklyn several nights a week, you might say her career is in full swing these days. The refreshing arrangements, the outstanding musicianship, and, of course, Gill’s alluring vocals make Everybody Loves A Lover a compelling debut album and a refreshing addition to the movement.

Asynchrone reimagines Ryuichi Sakamoto

 

Asynchrone release a new single, ‘Behind The Mask’, lifted from their forthcoming debut album ‘Plastic Bamboo’, due for release on September 29, 2023 via the Nø Førmat! label (Ballaké Sissoko, Oumou Sangaré). The French collective (established in 2021) assembles musicians from the Parisian free jazz and electro scenes, to honour the music of late Japanese legend, Ryuichi Sakamoto. ‘Behind The Mask’ is now available on all platforms from here, with the accompanying video streaming from here.

Speaking about their propulsive reimagining of ‘Behind The Mask’ - which originally featured on Yellow Magic Orchestra’s second album, ‘Solid State Survivor’, released in 1979 - Asynchrone say; One of Sakamoto's greatest hits, covered by YMO, Michael Jackson and Eric Clapton. The synth theme is the archetypal Kraftwerk riff, epic, futuristic and instantly recognisable! We wanted to make a sunny arrangement of this song with its enigmatic lyrics, questioning our relationship with time, ageing, our fears and our perpetual search for identity. Lightness as a weapon of resistance to our existential anxieties. You were afraid, now dance!

Speaking about the animated video for the track, director Sagans notes; The video for ‘Behind The Mask’ uses innovative techniques to create a unique visual universe: surreal images, illuminated with iridescences and inspired by Japanese culture and its traditional masks. It captures the duality between tradition and modernism, highlighting the role of women in this social evolution while exploring the notion of masks as a symbol of these changes. ‘Behind The Mask’ takes place in an animated retro-futuristic world of iridescent colours, where shifting hues evoke both the magic and complexity of this social transformation. Our intention is to depict women wearing masks that symbolise tradition and the past, while the freer, more abstract elements embody the modernism and emancipation of today's society. As the music intensifies, bolder, more contemporary images gradually emerge. These abstract images symbolise social progress and individual choices, creating a symbiosis between past and present. Traditional masks dissolve, giving way to a brighter palette of colours, representing liberation and the celebration of identity.

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 (Tony Allen, Oumou Sangaré) 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. 


 

Pidgins | "Refrains Of The Day, Volume 1"

Pidgins is an experiment in percussive languages. The Mexico City duo transform the oral and rhythmic methods of traditional trance rituals by phasing metric, melodic, and rhetorical phrases. These pattern systems form the grammar Pidgins use to construct linguistic puzzles. Pidgins speak in these tongues in order to interrogate contemporary trance states — managerial class dogmas, self-help literature, and new age therapies.

The "Refrains of the Day" are oft repeated but perhaps poorly understood phrases. By repeating, shifting, and inverting these expressions, we may come to understand them better. Refrains of the Day, Volume 1, to be released fall 2023, features 8 such mantra pieces, and will be followed up in 2024 by Volume 2.

The record achieves an expansive and powerful sound for a duo, featuring a wide array of instrumentation and complex pattern strategies. Percussionist Milo Tamez impressively commands an array of traditional hand and talking drums but also integrates gongs and various small percussion — wood slit drums, guiro, flexatone, rattles, chimes, etc. A lifetime student of jazz and classical percussion as well as African drumming, Tamez employs varied extended techniques and instrumental approaches in the service of richly layered phase and polyrhythms.

Vocalist and electroacoustician Aaron With uses a massive sound vocabulary consisting of sampled rare and historical instruments, richly tuned in just and microtonal intonations. These are paired with nature sounds from foley and field recordings. A few of the select instruments featured on Refrains of the Day, Volume 1 include Cristal Baschet, pitched cicadas, Glass Armonica, filter-tuned rainforest field recordings, metal resonances, circuit-bent Speak 'N Spell, Laotian Kheng, Chinese Sheng, scraped m'biras, Hurdy-Gurdy, nightjars and owls, and torn cardboard. With performs dense, evolving patterns on these instruments using finger percussion techniques. His synthetically processed chant vocals repeat phrases prismatically—their word order slowly shifts, revealing hidden meaning—while triggering autotuned delays, synth resonators, and comb filters. The inorganic vocals clash thoughtfully with the organic instrumentation, creating a cognitive dissonance with which to appreciate the inhuman logic contained in With's chanted mantras. These mantras employ dogma-laden phrases of the technocratic elite, and are repeated to ridiculous effect—until their inner absurdities emerge.

Bill Cunliffe’s "Rainforests" is Performed by the Temple University Studio Orchestra with Terell Stafford, Dick Oatts, Tim Warfield, Bruce Barth, Mike Boone & Justin Faulkner

While jazz pianist, composer and Grammy Award-winning arranger Bill Cunliffe continued to teach and arrange music with normal efficiency during the COVID pandemic, he says he was tapped out creatively. But Cunliffe says nothing rejuvenates a composer more than an imposing deadline, he was given one by Terell Stafford, Music Director of Jazz Studies of Temple University’s Boyer College of Music, and Robert Stroker, Boyer’s Dean and Vice Provost of the Arts.

The result was Cunliffe’s three-movement composition Rainforests, which celebrates the tropical mangroves and will be available on digitally September 8 via BCM+D Records. The piece was performed by the Temple University Studio Orchestra with Stafford, Dick Oatts, Tim Warfield, Bruce Barth, Mike Boone and Justin Faulkner, and conducted by José Luis Domínguez.

Rainforest is the first of three commissioned works to be released digitally by BCM+D. The others are Grammy-award winning pianist Billy Childs’ work Labyrinth and Temple’s ensemble player Banks Sapnar’s Red Braid. Cunliffe, Childs and Sapnar’s compositions were performed at Lincoln Center on April 14 and recorded the following day. Labyrinth and Red Braid will be released Winter 2024 and the three works will be released together, including Rainforest, on CD in April.

“For years, I’ve been intrigued by trees,” Cunliffe says. “Not only the trees in my neighborhood of Studio City, California, but the trees that keep us safe and healthy such as the tropical mangrove. Its tangle of roots allows the trees to handle the daily rise and fall of tides and slow the movement of tidal waters, causing sediments to build up the muddy bottom.”

Mangrove forests stabilize the coastline, reducing erosion from storm surges, currents, waves and tides, and the intricate root system makes these forests attractive to fish and other organisms seeking food and shelter from predators.

“The mangroves in the rainforests are truly the heart of our planet and help keep us alive,” Cunliffe says. “I’ve been thinking about them a lot, and the music of the tropics has always been a focus of mine, with the recordings I’ve done of Brazilian and Cuban music, samba and salsa.”

Instead of ruminating for periods of time over the musical material, the imposed deadline forced Cunliffe to accept the material immediately offered to him, like the strange child-like melodies that often appear to him after waking up from dreams.

“Rather than cast them aside,” Cunliffe says, “this time I wrote them down and, accepting the theory of Bill Dobbins, my former teacher at Eastman, that there is ‘no such thing as a bad idea,’ and started to work on carving these stones into sculptures of music I could be proud of.”

Cunliffe says having three great horn soloists (trumpeter Stafford, and saxophonists Oatts and Warfield), a great piano soloist (Barth) and a fabulous symphony orchestra directed by Domínguez, “one of our great conductors, meant I couldn’t go wrong.”

“The first movement of Rainforests starts with a large battery of percussion playing rainforest-like sounds in the style of a samba, the national dance of Brazil seen all year long,” Cunliffe says, “but especially during Mardi Gras, in the streets and barrios. The simple four-note melody is presented and twisted and turned by Tim Warfield in a variety of ways."

Cunliffe says movement two is a cross between a Mexican bolero and a Brazilian bossa, cast as a slow romantic movement. “The great Dick Oatts presents the theme as a series of descending thirds, then improvises for a while.” he adds. “The movement ends with a cadenza featuring rainforest sounds as before, with the soloists adding bird calls and other exotic sounds.”

The energetic street dance is the final movement, with added movements into meters of 5, 6 and 7, is stated by Stafford and echoed by the orchestra. “Hints of jazz big band figures lead into complex rhythmic figures you could get lost in like the rainforest!” Cunliffe says.

“A transitional passage built on a Brazilian drum rhythm leads into the final climax, a batucada-like street dance as I saw in Rio so many years ago but overlaid with jazz soloists and dissonant harmonies,” Cunliffe says.

Bill Cunliffe is a jazz pianist, composer and Grammy Award-winning arranger. He got his start playing and arranging for drummer Buddy Rich, and touring with Frank Sinatra. In 1989 Bill won the Thelonious Monk International Piano Competition. Upon moving to Los Angeles, he performed with the Clayton Brothers and the Clayton Hamilton Jazz Orchestra for ten years, and currently plays with the Joe La Barbera quintet (former drummer with Bill Evans) and with his trio. He has also performed with James Moody, Benny Golson, Red Rodney, Art Farmer, Clifford Jordan, Freddie Hubbard, Bob Berg, Junior Cook, Sonny Fortune, Woody Shaw, Michael Brecker, George Coleman, Pharoah Sanders, Joe Henderson, Houston Person, Hubert Laws and Art Blakey. He performs in the U.S. and around the world as a leader and sideman as well as a soloist with symphony orchestras.

His latest release, currently receiving significant airplay nationwide, is “Border Widow’s Lament” (2022, Night Is Alive Records) with Martin Wind, bass, and Tim Horner, drums. Previously released was TRIO (Le Coq, 2021), which features bassist John Patitucci and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta. Other releases include Nostalgia in Corcovado (BCM+D, 2014), River Edge, New Jersey, featuring bassist Martin Wind and drummer Tim Horner (Azica, 2013), and Overture, Waltz and Rondo for jazz piano, trumpet and orchestra (BCM+D, 2012). Cunliffe performed the work with trumpeter Terell Stafford and the Temple University Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Luis Biava. The recording won Cunliffe his fifth Grammy nomination, in the Best Instrumental Composition category.

In 2012, Cunliffe also released his Concerto for Tuba and Orchestra, with tubist Jim Self and the Hollywood Ensemble, with Cunliffe conducting (Metre, 2012). That Time of Year (Metre, 2011), Cunliffe’s album of solo improvisations on Christmas carols, was described as a “tour de force” in the Los Angeles Times.

Cunliffe’s other recordings show his affinity for Latin rhythms (Bill in Brazil, Imaginación and his Grammy-nominated trumpet concerto fourth stream ... La Banda) and pay tribute to some of his musical heroes, including Bud Powell, Oliver Nelson and Paul Simon.

Cunliffe wrote the score for the film On the Shoulders of Giants, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s homage to the Harlem Rens basketball team of the 1920s and ’30s. The film received an NAACP Image Award for Best Documentary. Cunliffe’s soundtrack was nominated for Best Album.

Cunliffe’s books Jazz Keyboard Toolbox and Jazz Inventions for Keyboard (Alfred Music Publishing) have become standard reference works. Uniquely Christmas (2012) was a book of arrangements inspired by his album That Time of Year, and Uniquely Familiar: Standards for Advanced Solo Piano was published in 2010.

Cunliffe was awarded a Grammy for Best Instrumental Arrangement for “West Side Story Medley,” on the album Resonance Big Band Plays Tribute to Oscar Peterson (Resonance, 2009). In addition to receiving five Grammy nominations, he is a two-time Emmy nominee.

The Los Angeles Jazz Society honored Cunliffe in 2010 with its Composer/Arranger Award. That year he was also named a Distinguished Faculty Member of the College of the Arts at Cal State Fullerton, where he is a jazz studies professor. He also teaches at the Skidmore Jazz Institute and the Vail Jazz Workshop.

Cunliffe grew up in Andover, Mass. He studied jazz at Duke University with pianist Mary Lou Williams and received his master’s degree from the Eastman School of Music. He is a member of the Cincinnati Jazz Hall of Fame.

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