Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Cy Gorman's Carmen EP w/ Daniel Crawford remix‏

Cy Gorman’s debut EP, ‘CARMEN’ draws on subtle flavours of Latin American music, Jazz and Soul, Chip and Glitc t Music. The EP draws on subtle flavours of Latin American music, Jazz and Soul, Chip and Glitch Music, retro 8-bit sounds and Bass, and minimal yet expressive harmonic, melodic and vocal colours to create an overall refreshingly unique sound.
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Having been pronounced a 'tastemaker' by none other than über-tastemaker Gilles Peterson on his legendary BBC radio show, it was about time for Ennio Styles to get serious with his label Heard and Felt. Following the acclaimed download comps 'Stylin' 500' and 'Stylin' 600' (feat. Sampha, Amin Payne, Andras Fox, Fulgeance, Kirkis, RAah Project, etc), Ennio has turned to fellow Melbournian Cy Gorman for the first Heard and Felt physical and artist release, with LA's Daniel Crawford on the remix. Props for the record are already coming in across the continents from Jazzy Jeff, Gilles Peterson and Soil & Pimp Sessions, adding to Cy's existing supporters like Mixmag, Diesler, Beyondjazz, KCRW (LA) and JWAVE FM (Tokyo).

After laying down a highly unusual blend of latin, trap, G-funk and soul on a recent remix of London's Los Charly's Orchestra, Cy extends his palette further on Carmen. Drawing on his skills as composer, producer, pianist, saxophonist and vocalist, the sound ranges from the feelgood synth-funk of 'Cool Change' and 8-bit baroque beats of 'Carmen San Diego' to the leftfield bossa of 'The Wishing Well' and smoky jazz club vibes of 'RDJ'. This could be the soundtrack to a David Lynch film set in a mysterious Latin American location at a time which might be past, present or future.

Guests on Carmen include keyboard maestro Will Poskitt (RIP) and vocalist Gian Slater, whose credits include work with Australian jazz legends like Paul Grabowsky, Jamie Oehlers and Barney McAll. RDJ gets a remix from Daniel Crawford, whose current album features Amp Fiddler and Vikter Duplaix. Daniel adds a warm and soulful touch, recalling the days of George Duke teaming up with Milton Nascimento. The cover art offers a new take on the label's felt-themed artwork, with Cy's 8-bit image concept crossstitched onto red felt by Natasha Zissermann.


NEW RELEASES: CONYA DOSS - SEVEN; SEAN & STARR - LOOK CLOSER; TY CAUSEY - CAUSE & EFFECT

CONYA DOSS – SEVEN

Hard to believe we're hearing a seventh full album from the great Conya Doss – but we've also been loving the lady so long, it's hard to believe we could ever do without her! As before, Conya's working here at a level that's really a cut above – wonderful vocals, thoughtful songwriting, and a level of presentation that really avoids any mainstream soul cliches at all – and which also avoids some of the more overdone modes of the underground too! Conya really puts her heart into her music right from the start – and there's a depth of feeling here that we totally love, and which is also a bit subtle, too – so effortless that Doss makes it all seem so easy, even though there's few people who could come across this well. Titles include "Fragments", "Gone", "No Stronger Love", "Reach Out", "Spend My Life", "When We Love", "I Could Be The One", "You Got Me", and "For Us" – which features a guest appearance by Frank McComb!  ~ Dusty Groove

SAUN & STARR – LOOK CLOSER

The mighty debut of Saun & Starr – a female soul duo who have been best known for their backing work behind Sharon Jones – stepping out here into the spotlight with some great support from the Dap-Kings! Although funky, the duo also have more of a deep soul approach than Sharon Jones – a quality that's very old school, and which burns with the fire of some lost 70s session on Stax Records – the kind of super-heavy sound that first made us fall in love with the Daptone label so many years back! The Dap-Kings are at their best in the setting – maybe looser, and more personal than on some of their recordings with Jones – and titles include "In The Night", "Dear Mr Teddy", "Look Closer", "Hot Shot", "Sunshine", "If Only", "Your Face Before My Eyes", and "Big Wheel". ~ Dusty Groove

TY CAUSEY – CAUSE & EFFECT

Beautifully smooth soul from Ty Causey – a singer who comes across with just the sort of class you'd expect from his image on the cover! Ty's been giving us great records for years, but this set may well be his best – a wonderfully mature session that carries forward echoes of earlier generations of sensual soul singers – like Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, or Ronald Isley – but with a lean quality that's nicely indie, and very contemporary in the presentation of the material! Warm keyboards resonate strongly with the vocals on just about every number – and titles include "Just Another Love Affair", "It's Gotta Be Love", "Testify", "So Beautiful", "Don't Rush The Flow", and "Missin You". ~ Dusty Groove


Monday, May 18, 2015

Bay Area Vocalist Tiffany Austin Debuts June 2 With "Nothing But Soul"

Tiffany Austin Nothing But Soul One of the fastest rising jazz singers in Northern California, with a tradition-rooted yet thoroughly modern style, Tiffany Austin brings a wealth of experience to her debut CD Nothing But Soul, scheduled for June 2 release by her Con Alma Music label. 

The Los Angeles native, currently based in Berkeley, worked with producer Howard Wiley to adapt and expand on her November 2013 SFJAZZ "Hotplate" concert for which she reimagined compositions by the great American songwriter Hoagy Carmichael. Nothing But Soul is made up of six Carmichael tunes -- "Baltimore Oriole," "Stardust," "Skylark," "I Get Along Without You Very Well," "Georgia on My Mind," and "Sing Me a Swing Song (And Let Me Dance)" -- as well as two non-Carmichael numbers that he recorded as a vocalist: Henry Sullivan and Harry Ruskin's "I May Be Wrong (But I Think You're Wonderful)"; Johnny Cash's "I Walk the Line"; and "Tête-à-Tête," a wordless a cappella duet by Austin and Wiley based on the chord changes of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation." Tiffany was joined for the recording by bassist Ron Belcher, drummer Sly Randolph, pianist Glen Pearson, and producer Howard Wiley on tenor saxophone.

"Hoagy is a treasure trove of classics," says Austin. "When I looked at his catalog, I realized that I'd been hearing, singing, and even piano-plunking away at his tunes for a great chunk of my life -- 'Heart and Soul,' for instance! I wanted to share that wonder of finding treasures in plain view with other folks, while adding some other musical flavors to the recipe. It's also fascinating to me that Hoagy achieved his law degree," adds Austin, who earned her Juris Doctorate at the University of California Berkeley's Boalt School of Law in 2012, "and still decided to pursue a career in music. Whatever your calling is, there's something in your bones that tells you there is nothing that will make you happier in life. And it takes a lot of courage to follow it." 

Tiffany Austin Born in Los Angeles, Tiffany Austin  studied classical voice while attending Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. During her junior year at Cal State Northridge, from which she would graduate with a B.A. in creative writing in 2003, she went to England on an exchange program and began singing in London clubs. After a brief stint back in Southern California, she moved to Tokyo in early 2004 and spent the next five and a half years singing a variety of music, including some pop, jazz, and gospel music, six nights a week.

"As I worked in those styles I could hear a different quality coming out in my voice, and I wanted to explore that further," says Austin, who also received lyric writing commissions and recorded for television, film, and album projects during this period.

"I also fell in love with Japan, and when I left there it was with tears in my eyes," she adds. "I was struck by how the artisans I met would not settle for anything but the best of themselves and their craft, and would work with such patient diligence. That work ethic resonated with me, and I find myself summoning up memories of Japan when I brace myself for big challenges."

In 2009, Austin returned to the United States to attend U.C. Berkeley Law School, with an emphasis in entertainment law and copyright. After graduation, she found herself at a crossroad. "I could have gone into a law firm, which can be rewarding, particularly if you're helping an underserved community, but my calling has always been to do music," Austin says. "I don't just want to make decisions based on money. I want to feel connected to my art and my community. I want to really be in touch with my soul.

"Although cliché, it's true," she continues, "that law school teaches you how to think, how to work efficiently, how to teach yourself, and how to be tenacious. Since graduating, I've started my own music company (Con Alma Music), put together my album, deepened the study of my crafts (vocalist, lyricist, songwriter), and began independently studying harmony. I feel like every bit of my education and experience has come together, in a marvelously unlikely way, to make me an artist." 

In Northern California Tiffany has appeared at the SFJAZZ Center, Yoshi's in both Oakland and San Francisco, the Yerba Buena Gardens Festival in San Francisco, and the Healdsburg Jazz Festival, and in January 2014 traveled to New York to perform with choreographer Nicole Klaymoon's Embodiment Project at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Besides working with innovative local bandleaders Marcus Shelby and Howard Wiley, Austin has sung with the bands Orgone and MoonCandy, and has recorded with, among others, Orgone, The Monophonics, The Droptones, and on UnderCover Presents Sly and the Family Stone's Stand! tribute project. 

The CD release concert for Nothing But Soul will take place at the SFJAZZ Center's Joe Henderson Lab on Friday 6/12. Shows are at 7:00pm and 8:30pm, and tickets are $25. Other upcoming shows are scheduled for 7/17 at the Red Poppy Art House in San Francisco, and 8/29 at the Sound Room, Oakland.


Ginger Johnson and His African Messengers - African Party

Ginger Johnson's life is one of the greatest untold stories of African music in Europe. Born George Folunsho Johnson in Ijebu-Ode, Nigeria in 1916. Aged just 18 he joined the Nigerian Navy, and made his first visit to Britain. After World War II Ginger decided to make London his home, working with many artists including British saxophone legend Ronnie Scott who first really utilised Gingers amazing technique to full effect, featuring him in not only his live concerts, but also several recordings for the Esquire jazz label in the 1940's & 50's.

In the 60's Ginger was mentor & guru to a young Fela Kuti. Gingers London home became a vibrant hub of African music activity for Fela and an entire host of musicians who would gather there to exchange news, talk, eat and jam for hours on end. To Fela, and all who gravitated towards Ginger's home, he was simply known and addressed as 'Father'.

Aside from his music, Ginger was something of a social activist. Not only was he a musical educator, and instrumental in the beginnings of The Notting Hill Carnival, he also opened his own venue Club Iroko in Haverstock Hill, North London, which was a creative hub for groups like Osibisa, and also a welcoming hang out for visiting legends like Sun Ra, George Clinton and Funkadelic, and British group Cymande (3 members of Cymande cut their teeth playing in Gingers group).

Ginger and his group performed at The Royal Variety Performance, his music featured in the James Bond film 'Live & Let Die' and Ginger himself appears on screen drumming in the Hammer Films cult classic 'She'. As a session musician he played for a bewilderingly wide range of acts such as Georgie Fame, Osibisa, Madeleine Bell and Quincy Jones. Ginger & his group also collaborated with many early rock bands such as Hawkwind, Argent, Thunderclap Newman, Genesis and Little Free Rock.

Perhaps Ginger Johnson & His African Messengers most high profile live engagement was performing with The Rolling Stones in Hyde Park in 1969, as Ginger his troupe provided the percussive, high energy rhythmic bedrock to the infamous live version of Sympathy For The Devil.


Freestyle Records is releasing the music of Ginger Johnson & His African Messengers. Its bedrock of African drums, hi life, and jazz was in fact the precursor to Afrobeat - and Gingers direct and vital influence upon Afrobeat, as guide & mentor to it's undisputed champion Fela Kuti is just one part of a fascinating and underappreciated story that only now is being recognised for its significance.


Friday, May 15, 2015

CLASSIC ALBUMS FROM B.B. KING REISSUED: MY KIND OF BLUES, SINGIN' THE BLUE & B.B. KING WAILS

B.B. KING - MY KIND OF BLUES

Acrobat's British Hit Parade series has been established for over a decade as a unique range of completist original artist collections comprising every record that appeared in the UK record sales charts in every year since the charts began in 1952. In recent years Acrobat has introduced parallel collections which consist of the B sides of all the records included in the main compilations, and these have proved hugely popular with collectors, since many of the records concerned have never been available on CD and are very rarely heard. These two great value 4-CD sets are companion products to our existing 1958 British Hit Parade Parts One & Two (ACQCD7026 & 7027), and feature the B sides of the tracks on those anthologies, excluding the ones which appeared on the original collections as Double A-side hits. As ever, it's an eclectic snapshot of an ignored but fascinating aspect of the pop business, with an in-depth 10-000+ word booklet with background notes on every record. ~ Amazon

B.B. KING - SINGIN' THE BLUES

This quintessential collector's edition includes one of his finest albums: Singin' the Blues (1957), originally released by the Crown label at the beginning of King's career. The LP it's a superb collection of King's early hits, originally released on the RPM label. In five short years, B.B. King had matured from an artist looking for a style to the premier bluesman of his generation. His modern style that crosses rock & roll and R&B with the jump blues is fully developed here, and his consistency from track to track is remarkable. On Please Love Me, King combines T-Bone Walker's hard-picking, distorted guitar style with his own mournful singing. The arrangements are smooth and elegant, frequently displaying a hint of jazz, and King is backed by a well-arranged horn section in true Memphis blues fashion. This blues-meets-urban-soul style masterpiece has been packaged in this very special release, which also includes 2 bonus tracks from the same period. Contained here is the cream of the crop from B.B. King's hit-making stretch for Crown Records during his most inspired years. Without a doubt, this is the material upon which B.B.'s kingdom was built. Recorded at different locations between 1951 and 1956. ~Amazon

B.B. KING AND HIS ORCHESTRA - B.B. KING WAILS

2015 reissue of 1959 album includes the original album plus expanded with bonus tracks. The influence of big band jazz is actually fairly prominent here, with saxes and trumpet playing a big part in the arrangements. Also on hand as additional items are some other odds and ends from his Modern label days that were deemed to fit in with the album's jazzy mood. Includes: I've Got Papers On You Baby, Tomorrow Is Another Day, Come By Here,The Fool, I Love You So, The Woman I Love, We Cant Make It, Treat Me Right, Time To Say Goodbye, Youve Been An Angel, Yesterday, My Silent Prayer, I Stay In The Mood. Why I Sing The Blues, Trouble In Mind, Everyday I Have The Blues, and Yes Indeed.




NEW RELEASES: THE BAD PLUS / JOSHUA REDMAN; GARY PEACOCK TRIO - NOW THIS; MATHIAS EICK - MIDWEST

THE BAD PLUS / JOSHUA REDMAN

In 2011, The Bad Plus invited saxophonist Joshua Redman to join them for a week of enthusiastically received performances at the Blue Note in New York City. They then played a handful of dates before heading into the studio in 2014 to record their debut album, The Bad Plus Joshua Redman, which Nonesuch releases on May 26, 2015. Seven of the nine tracks on The Bad Plus Joshua Redman are new compositions by the quartet members who, in addition to Reid Anderson and Redman, include The Bad Plus pianist Ethan Iverson and drummer David King. The other two songs on the album, "Dirty Blonde" and "Silence Is the Question," are new arrangements of Bad Plus favorites. Of a recent show in Great Barrington, MA, Albany’sMetrolandsaid, "The newly christened Bad Plus Joshua Redman took the stage … and proceeded to raise the roof. In a word, the music the quartet produces is sublime. More than that, it's as though Redman is the long-lost fourth member of the group, just waiting to be snapped snugly into place." "On the live gigs, Josh plays magnificent, long tenor solos which are very much in the jazz tradition," said Iverson. "That’s obviously not the focus when we play as The Bad Plus. It’s fun to for us to enjoy that extended blowing territory, especially with someone as great as Josh. On the album, however, there is still a focus on composition." ~ Amazon

GARY PEACOCK TRIO - NOW THIS

Featuring: Marc Copland: piano; Gary Peacock: double bass; Joey Baron: drums. 
In the realm of the piano trio the bar is set high, and creative bassist Gary Peacock has helped raise it in the groups of Bill Evans, Paul Bley and Keith Jarrett. Now This is an album with the bassists current trio, recorded last summer in Oslo. Powerful new versions of some Peacock classics such as Moor, Vignette, Requiem and Gaya are interspersed with recent compositions. Marc Copland and Joey Baron each contribute tunes, and the group also tackles Scott La Faros Glorias Step. In this band, roles are very evenly shared, and this is an optimum context in which to appreciate the melodic invention of Peacocks bass playing. Marc Copland always honors the needs of the compositions and Joey Baron supplies both drive and sensitive detail. Now This is issued in celebration of Gary Peacocks 80th birthday on May 12th. Recorded July 12-14, 2014 at Rainbow Studio, Oslo. Recording and mix engineer: Jan Erik Kongshaug, produced by Manfred Eicher. ~ Amazon

MATHIAS EICK - MIDWEST

Mathias Eick reflects on distances travelled in this intensely melodic set of original compositions, which makes an imaginative journey from Hem, the tiny Norwegian village where the trumpeter grew up, to the vast plains of Dakota in the American Midwest. It was to the Midwest that hundreds of thousands of Norwegians traveled by sea in the 19th and early 20th centuries - and naturally they took their music with them. In similar spirit Eick, a Norwegian improviser-composer strongly influenced by North American jazz, here reintegrates some of the colors and textures of his native folk music in these newly-created pieces. In the front line of the line-up featured here he is partnered by the brilliant violinist Gjermund Larsen, whose roots are in the Norwegian folk tradition. Trumpet and violin exchange lines and soar together above a brilliant rhythm section with Jon Balke at his most lyrical, Helge Norbakken periodically finding pulses that can suggest tribal drumming or buffalo hooves, and the resourceful Mats Eilertsen helping to drive the music forward. The original inspiration for the album was sparked by a grueling North American tour: I d been out on the road for a long time and was feeling homesick. Then we reached the area called the Midwest and I suddenly felt as if I was home. I had a sense of why the early settlers would want to build their farms there. It reminded me very much of parts of Norway. Recorded May 11-13, 2014 at Rainbow Studio, Oslo. Recording engineer: Jan Erik Kongshaug. produced by Manfred Eicher. ~ Amazon




Eden MacAdam-Somer Releases My First Love Story, a solo album featuring MacAdam-Somer on voice, violin, viola, and percussive dance

My First Love Story introduces the solo work of one of New England Conservatory's newest faculty members and one of the most dynamic young artists performing today: composer, performer, and improviser Eden MacAdam-Somer. Recorded live in NEC's Jordan Hall, this album is an incredible blend of contemporary and traditional art, moving fluidly between Appalachian folk song and cutting edge classical performance.  The CD will be released June 23, 2015 on A-Side Records.

The seeds for this project were planted years ago, when I played my very first notes on the piano. I don't remember that day (I was four years old); in fact, I don't remember a time in my life before music. Music is the language in which I am the most comfortable, and a language that I have been fortunate to share with artists all around the world, in many dialects and in all kinds of settings. For most of my life, I have struggled in defining myself as an artist: violinist, fiddler, singer, dancer, improviser, composer, educator, performer, musicologistŠ but I have come to realize that it is the sum of all of these parts that makes me who I am. This project is a portrait of the artist that I am today and the story of my first love, kindled all of those years ago in my four-year old heart.

The album centers around MacAdam-Somer's Rumi Songs, an open-ended cycle for voice and violin that is partially composed and partially improvised. The three movements carry the listener from sweet Bach-like tones through serial systems, folk references, and free improvisation, while vocals soar in translations of ecstatic love poems by the famed Sufi poet Mevleva Rumi. This work was inspired by Ralph Vaughan Williams' Along the Field, also featured on the recording arranged for solo performer with improvised fiddle interludes and English Country Dance tunes. "Vaughan Williams is so skillful in blending folk songs with classical composition, and I always wondered what it would be like to perform this piece with a folk singerŠit is not at all uncommon for folk musicians to sing and play at the same time and eventually I thought, 'maybe I can do both parts.' I love being able to tell the whole story myself, because I can follow my imagination wherever it takes me at any timeŠ it isn't about "blending" genres or about the technical challenges in playing and singing at the same time, but simply telling the story the way I hear it, which might be a little different in each performance."

MacAdam-Somer carries the listener to many imagined worlds in this recording. "Jump for Joy" is a jubilant blending of Duke Ellington's composition with African-American spirituals and folk dance tradition. The violinist takes on the role of the big band, drumming her tapping feet which burst into celebratory percussive dance. From here, she moves into the realm of film noir with "Lullaby," a dark, early-music-inspired tribute to jazz pianist Ran Blake: "This scene is from Claude Chabrol's Le Boucher, in which an Algerian war veteran (and the local butcher) is suspected of being a brutal serial killer in a small French village. In this scene, school children are practicing a courtly Baroque dance in period costume, creating a sense of eerie serenity just before the traumatic climax of the film."

Also featured on the album are more traditionally rooted pieces. The CD opens with an original song, "Fourteen Miles," with straight up Appalachian fiddling darting suddenly through angular pizzicato passages under sweet vocals. "Barbara Allen" blends the familiar folk ballad with West African gonje tunes, traditionally used to relay village histories as a means of preserving aural history. The recording ends with "Say Darlin' Say," a sweet lullaby in which the voice and viola intertwine and become one, speaking to the way MacAdam-Somer weaves all of her musical selves into one exceptional and individual voice, each and every time.

NEC's Contemporary Improvisation Department is all about developing one's unique voice, invoking a methodology that liberates the idea of improvisation from any specific genre. CI faculty provide students with grounding in aural skills, vocal and instrumental technique, a wide range of improvisational traditions - in short, everything a student might need to become a leading artist of today. Department Chair Hankus Netsky notes that "Eden is what Gunther Schuller would call a 'compleat musician.' She's a violin virtuoso who knows many fiddling styles, a wonderful composer and a great singer."

Indeed, MacAdam-Somer's music transcends genre. She has been a featured soloist with symphony and chamber orchestras, jazz and swing bands, and Eastern European and American folk ensembles. As an educator and composer/improviser, MacAdam-Somer has been a guest artist at such institutions as the Afghanistan National Institute of Music (where she is a regular visiting faculty member) and the Dundalk Institute of Technology, as well as a featured performer at the Eastbourne and Beijing International Music Festivals.

While growing up in Houston, Texas, MacAdam-Somer studied classical music formally, spending her free time at the local folk music sessions and working as an arranger and studio musician. She attended Houston's High School for Performing and Visual Arts, winning the Music Teacher's National Association State Division and the Lennox Young Artists Competitions. Later, she earned her BM and MM in classical performance from the Moores School of Music at the University of Houston as a student of Fredell Lack, and the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University as a student of Kenneth Goldsmith.

In 2004, MacAdam-Somer moved to Boston and began touring with guitarist and banjo player Larry Unger as the core members of the ensemble NotoriousFolk. Together, they have performed across the continental United States, as well as Alaska, Hawaii, India, Iceland, the UK, and Afghanistan, teaching and playing for festivals and dances of all kinds. Their music has been featured in many of Ken Burns' documentaries, including Our National Parks, The Dustbowl, Prohibition, and The Roosevelts.

With her diverse interests and capabilities as a performer and educator, MacAdam-Somer finds NEC's Department of Contemporary Improvisation the perfect home base. "When I arrived at NEC and attended my first CI concert, I realized that I had found the artists I'd been looking for my whole life. The CI Department is much more than a degree program - it is a vibrant community of creative musicians, each coming in with a distinct voice of their own, eager to push themselves to new artistic levels and completely open to and enthusiastic about the music of their peers. It is one of the most mutually supportive and exciting musical communities that I have ever been a part of."

Outside of the classroom, MacAdam-Somer maintains an active international performance and recording career as a soloist and with such bands as Notorious Folk, the Sail Away Ladies, and the Klezmer Conservatory Band.

 

NEW RELEASES: QUASIMODE - HOT & COOL; JAZZTRONIK - VAMOS LA BRASIL; STEVE COLEMAN AND THE COUNCIL OF BALANCE - SYNOVIAL JOINTS

QUASIMODE - HOT & COOL

Stunning work from Quasimode – and a great reminder that, even in the 21st Century, a combo can still cook strongly with just acoustic instruments! These guys come across like some lost soul jazz group from the 60s – the kind of outfit that worked endlessly in clubs, and found a way to effortlessly build together jazz expression, soulful rhythms, and a tightness that still never sounds slick or forced at all. Imagine the Ramsey Lewis Trio or Quartette Tres Bien with horns, and you get part of the picture – or maybe some of Bobby Timmons' best groovers of the mid 60s – as the group's core approach with percussion, drums, piano, and bass gets augmented by just the right amount of tenor and trumpet for the set. The performance is a live one – and titles include "Overjoyed", "Jeannine", "The Man From Nagpur", "Ant Soldier", "All Is One", and "Seven Colors".  ~ Dusty Groove

JAZZTRONIK - VAMOS LA BRASIL

Jazztronik on Blue Note – and with a bold new sound as well – one that's even more Brazilian based than on previous records! Jazztronik's always had an ear for Brazilian sounds and styles – which are then integrated into their own music – but this time around, the approach is a lot more organic, and almost more respectful of the older modes of the 60s and 70s – particularly the best jazzy styles of the latter decade! Acoustic instrumentation rings out strongly on most numbers – especially percussion and guitar – and the album carries echoes of older work by artists like Joyce, Elis Regina, and Edu Lobo – and features singers who include Robert Gallagher, Nina Miranda, and Adriana Vasques! Titles include "Samba De Flora", "Aquelas Coisas Todos", "Aguas De Marco", "Jazz Carnival", "Menina Ilza", and "Upa Neguinho". (SHMCD pressing.)  ~ Dusty Groove

STEVE COLEMAN AND THE COUNCIL OF BALANCE - SYNOVIAL JOINTS

Synovial Joints is the most ambitious project of Coleman s 30+ year career, featuring 21 musicians from the jazz, Afro-Cuban, Afro-Brazilian and contemporary classical circles on horns, woodwinds, piano, vocals, percussion and strings. The music is based on the physiological processes, functions and rhythms of the human body, in particular the musculoskeletal system. Coleman also explores an orchestration technique inspired by sounds that he recorded in the Amazon Rainforest, in which instrumental colors move gradually from foreground to background, much as the variety of layered sounds reveal themselves in the rainforest. Recently hailed as 'one of the most influential figures in the last half-century of improvised music' by the New York Times. In The Wall Street Journal, pianist Vijay Iyer said 'It s hard to overstate Steve s influence... as much as anyone since John Coltrane...' ~ Amazon




Thursday, May 14, 2015

Jazz singer-songwriter Micah Barnes' New York Stories debuts in Top Five on iTunes National Jazz Chart

Renowned and award winning Canadian jazz singer-songwriter Micah Barnes has released his long-awaited CD New York Stories, which has debuted in the Top Five on iTunes National Jazz Chart due to brisk advance orders. Penned by Barnes, his third jazz recording, is a romantic collection of original songs inspired by New York City’s rich musical history, as well as Barnes’ own personal experience in the city that never sleeps. It features instrumentals by Barnes’ brother Daniel on drums, Russ Boswell on bass and Michael Shand on piano.

New York Stories was officially launched on Sunday, May 3, 2015, at Glenn Gould Studio. It was a triumphant evening of jazz, well-received by an enthusiastic audience who gave Barnes and his ensemble three standing ovations during the live performance. In this performance, Barnes and his band were joined by talented back up vocalists Miku Graham and Rique Franks, and award winning and acclaimed Canadian vocalist and actress Jackie Richardson.

Following the release of the title track and the first single in April 2014, New York Story reached Number One in Canada and Top 20 on the U.S. iTunes jazz charts, which resulted in Barnes being named the Toronto Indie Music Awards as best Jazz Act of 2014. An accompanying music video for the single was directed by Juan Palacio and Luisa Valencia. Barnes recently released a video for the second single Harlem Moon directed by Dean Vargas, available on YouTube, which gathered over 6000 views in its first week!
New York Stories was conceived while Barnes was romancing his partner who was working on Broadway at The Palace Theatre. Their apartment was on Lenox Avenue in Harlem right on the site of the legendary Savoy Ballroom, and just a few blocks from Apollo Theatre. Micah decided to make the most of the musical and romantic inspiration and rented an hourly piano studio off Times Square to sketch the songs that would become New York Stories.

Inspired by Cole Porter, Stephen Sondheim and the Brill Building writers who had composed so many of the classic Jazz, Broadway, Pop songs in those very piano studios; Barnes found it to be a magical experience and a productive time.

This summer, Micah will be on tour in support of New York Stories, as well are remounting the critically acclaimed Stand By Me: The Music of the Brill Building. Tour dates and locations will be announced at a future date.

Micah Barnes was born to a European-Canadian musically artistic family. His grandmother was a Russian pianist; his father, Milton an acclaimed classical composer, and his mother, Lilly, is an author who was the head writer for the beloved CBC TV's children’s show Mr. Dressup. His musical career began as a teen in the cabarets and jazz clubs of Queen Street West alongside The Parachute Club, Molly Johnson, Holly Cole and Jane Siberry. He joined Canada’s legendary a cappella group The Nylons in 1989, singing with them in concert around the globe as well as appearing on three recordings including their Juno-nominated hit single Don’t Look Any Further.

Micah launched his post Nylons solo career in Los Angeles, California where he collaborated with Thunderpuss on the Number One Billboard and international club hit Welcome to My Head and was described by Rolling Stone magazine as “An Indie Artist to Watch.” While in the U.S. he developed popular Singers Playground workshops designed to support the next generation of up and coming artists. In addition to coaching individual artists, he has worked with Golden Globe nominee Tatiana Maslany on the hit show Orphan Black, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s hit CBC TV show How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria, the original cast of Tomson Highway’s The Rez Sisters, and cast members of the Broadway production of Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Matilda & Pippin.

Returning to Canada Micah joined Molly Johnson's Canadian tour, opening the show and singing harmony vocals, and, for four years now Micah and Jackie Richardson have presented their annual Valentine's concert at Hugh’s Room to standing room only audiences. In 2014, Barnes launched Stand By Me: The Music of the Brill Building a show that features Micah and his musical friends, (including another former Nylon Billy Newton Davis), performing some of the most memorable pop songs of the 60s. The show has become a critical and popular smash taking audiences by storm wherever it plays! A more extensive tour of Stand By Me and upcoming tour dates by Micah Barnes and his jazz trio in support of New York Stories will be announced at a later date.

Micah Barnes - New York Stories
Track List

1. New York Story (4.28)
2. After The Romance The Rent (2.54)
3. Starting Tomorrow (4.17)
4. Harlem Moon (4.14)
5. I'm Going Back To My Used To Be (3.02)
6. La Rouge Ou Le Noir (The Roulette Wheel) (3.58)
7. Don't Take My Baby (New York, New York) (4.42)
8. Some Other Man (3.32)
9. I Came Back (4.12)
10. I've Been Awake Too Long (2.56)


Pianist DAVID BERKMAN Brings TOGETHER OLD AND NEW FRIENDS On New CD

The title of Old and New Friends, the latest release from award-winning pianist/composer David Berkman, refers specifically to the exceptional sextet that he assembled for the recording. The band joins two members of Berkman's recently-formed quartet - saxophonist Dayna Stephens and bassist Linda Oh - with three renowned musicians who can definitely be considered old friends: drummer Brian Blade, who appeared on three of Berkman's albums in the late '90s and early 2000s; and saxophonists Adam Kolker and Billy Drewes, both of whom Berkman has known for more than 30 years.

But Old and New Friends also reunites Berkman with a label, producer, and way of working that has come to seem almost old-fashioned as the music business has undergone rapid changes over the course of the last decade. The album will be released May 5, 2015 on Palmetto Records, which issued four of Berkman's CDs between 1998 and 2004. Like those discs, the new album is produced by label founder Matt Balitsaris at Maggie's Farm, his recording studio built in a beautiful 18th century stone barn in bucolic Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

"Going back to that place was very evocative and nostalgic," Berkman says. Working with Balitsaris again also helped to shape his vision for the album, adding a helpful filter too often lost in today's independent-minded digital age. "The first thing to go in the internet age was editing. I like having somebody to work with who brings an outside voice and can add their perspective. Matt's approach is dynamic and involved and he had a big hand in shaping the recording."

In the eleven years since his last Palmetto release (2004's Start Here, Finish Here), Berkman has released a solo piano record (Self-Portrait) and a pair of live small-group albums recorded at NYC clubs Smalls and Smoke. But Old and New Friends marks the first new studio album of his original music in that time, and it's a captivating showcase for Berkman's eloquent, sophisticated compositions, which deftly weave together six strong but disparate voices into an organic and exhilarating unity.

"Everybody on the record has very different personalities," Berkman says, "but they're very clear personalities to me. Dayna Stephens is very adventurous, loose and open-minded; Adam Kolker brings a really refined and sophisticated quality, with beautiful lines and great pitch; and then Billy Drewes is very lyrical, with a sensibility a little like Ornette Coleman or Dewey Redman, great free players from the 60s and 70s."

Bandleaders like to say that they write for personalities, not instruments, but Berkman's familiarity with his bandmates is evident throughout Old and New Friends. The three saxophonists all have opportunities to bring their identities to the fore, whether volleying ideas back and forth on "Past Progressive" or weaving soaring soprano lines around one another on "Strange Attractions Then Birds." On his lush arrangement of "West 180th Street," Berkman takes full advantage of the range of woodwinds and voices available to him from the three-horn frontline, while the opening "Tribute" pays homage to frequent collaborator Tom Harrell with its plain-spoken but resonant melodicism.

Brian Blade, one of modern jazz's most acclaimed drummers both as a sideman for greats like Wayne Shorter, Bill Frisell and Joshua Redman, and as leader of his own Fellowship Band, appeared on three of Berkman's four earlier Palmetto CDs (Handmade [1998], Communication Theory [2000], and Leaving Home [2002]). "The second I hear a recording I can tell that it's Brian," Berkman says. "His use of dynamics is really unique and very personal."

Those dynamics are on vivid display on tunes like "No Blues No Really No Blues," a puckish not-quite-blues rejoinder to Miles Davis' "No Blues" - which, as Berkman points out, is paradoxically very bluesy - and "Psalm," a piece of simple beauty which Blade illuminates with delicate, shimmering colors, like rays of light through stained glass. He also contributes a jaunty, precise swing to "Up Jump Ming," a sly, fiery nod to Freddie Hubbard.

Both Stephens and Oh are rapidly rising stars, and have been part of Berkman's working quartet for the last several years along with drummer Johnathan Blake. Stephens has worked with names like Kenny Barron, Ambrose Akinmusire, Eric Harland, and Brad Mehldau, while Oh has recorded and toured with the likes of Dave Douglas, Joe Lovano, and Steve Wilson. Oh's articulate playing is spotlighted in the chorale-like first half of "Past Progressive" and anchoring "Deep High Wide Sky," written on the chord changes of Irving Berlin's "How Deep is the Ocean."

Berkman himself has been an integral part of the jazz community since moving to New York in 1985. He was awarded the 2000 Doris Duke/Chamber Music America New Works Creation and Presentation Grant and his recordings have appeared on numerous year-end critic's lists, including the New York Times, Village Voice, Downbeat, Jazziz, JazzTimes and others. He's played in countless bands including those of Cecil McBee, Tom Harrell and the Vanguard Orchestra, and co-leads the New York Standards Quartet with Tim Armacost, Daiki Yasukagawa and Gene Jackson.

Berkman is also a teacher and clinician who has performed and taught at numerous jazz camps, universities and conservatories around the United States, South America, Asia and Europe. He has published three books with Sher Music Publishing: "The Jazz Musician's Guide to Creative Practicing" (2007), "The Jazz Singer's Guidebook" (2009) and "The Jazz Harmony Book" (2014).

Gregg Allman Live: Back to Macon, GA Set For Release On August 7, 2015

Gregg Allman is one of the most acclaimed and beloved icons in rock and roll history. As a founding member of the legendary Allman Brothers Band and in his own storied solo career, Allman has long been a gifted natural interpreter of the blues, his soulful and distinctive voice one of the defining sounds in the history of American music 

At the 54thAnnual Grammy Awards in 2012, the Allman Brothers Band was honored with the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award, in part a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the group’s seminal album Eat a Peach. Gregg himself, inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, was also nominated for Best Blues Album for his acclaimed first solo record in thirteen years, Low Country Blues.

Allman’s critically acclaimed tell-all memoir, My Cross To Bear, was a New York Times bestseller for many weeks and is now available in both hardcover and paperback. The book focuses on his journey as a struggling artist through the formation of the Allman Brothers Band and their ultimate explosion on the music scene, informed by the hindsight of Allman today, the survivor of unimaginable loss, alcohol and drug addictions as well as a recent liver transplant.

With the Allman Brothers wrapping up their storied forty-five year career last October, Allman is showing no signs of slowing down. In August, Rounder Records will release Gregg Allman Live: Back to Macon, GA, a stellar live DVD/CD package that captures Allman and his eight-piece solo band in a high-energy performance. This emotive show was recorded in January, 2014 at the venerable Grand Opera House in Macon, GA, the Middle Georgia town where it all began for the Allman Brothers Band.

Gregg Allman Live: Back to Macon, GA features sixteen tracks, made up of a nicely-varied selection of songs from the ABB catalog, (“Statesboro Blues,” “Melissa,” “Whipping Post”) tunes from Allman’s solo albums, (“Queen of Hearts,” “I’m No Angel”) and several dynamic cover songs. The DVD will include two bonus tracks, as well as special interview segments.    
In November, 2014, Allman received the “Living Legend” award from Classic Rock magazine, and recently was the guest of honor at the 67th annual BMI/NAB Dinner.  An active spokesman for the “Tune In to Hep-C” campaign, Allman has a full slate of shows scheduled for this summer, including a number of co-headlining dates with the Doobie Brothers. He is currently making plans for a new solo record.


NEW RELEASES: ACOUSTIC BLUES: THE ROOTS OF IT ALL - THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION! VOL 3; SOUL JAZZ RECORDS PRESENTS DOWN BEAT SPECIAL; SKA FROM THE VAULTS OF WIRL RECORDS

ACOUSTIC BLUES: THE ROOTS OF IT ALL - THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION! VOL 3 (VARIOUS ARTISTS)

A stunning selection of acoustic blues – a series of well-done, deep-detailed CDs put together by the folks at Bear Family – who always give way more than 100% when it comes to this sort of project! The package comes with 2CDs and a super-heavy booklet that's filled with notes on the music, and song-by-song details – and this final volume traces the continuing revival of acoustic blues – something nobody would have guessed back in the postwar years – with work from the 80s, 90s, and more recent years too! 40 titles in all – with tracks by Guy Davis, Paul Rishell, Etta Baker, Jo Ann Kelly, Guitar Slim, Albert Macon, James Son Thomas, Henry Townsend, Blind Jim Brewer, Ted Bogan, John Hammond, Robert Lockwood Jr, Paul Geremia, Homesick James, Jimmie Lee Robinson, and many others. ~ Dusty Groove

SOUL JAZZ RECORDS PRESENTS DOWN BEAT SPECIAL (VARIOUS ARTISTS)

Limited Edition Studio One 7inch Box (5 x 7 inch box set) (2015 Record Store Day Release).Gritty groovers from the legendary Studio One Records – a special, limited box set that brings together a host of great 45s for the label – all in a sweet little package! All tracks have a nice added punch in this 45 format – and titles include "No No No" by Dawn Penn, "Feel Like Jumping" by Marcia Griffiths, "Armagideon Time" by Willie Williams, "Hooligan Dub" by Dub Specialist, "Nice Up The Dance" by Michigan & Smiley, "Simmer Down" by The Wailers, "Ten To One" by The Mad Lads, and "Queen Of The Minstrels" by The Eternals.  ~ Dusty Groove

SKA FROM THE VAULTS OF WIRL RECORDS (VARIOUS ARTISTS)

Early ska material from a time when the genre was still really coming into its own – still unique, still soulful, and still free from so many of the cliches that would mar the style in later years! The music here is primal Jamaican ska – that first great step forward on the Kingston scene, after years of absorbing influences from American soul and R&B – as Jamaican musicians really found their own groove, and a way of mixing in some wonderfully jazzy instrumentation as well! Most cuts are instrumental – and sparkle from the contributions of Roland Alphonso and Tommy McCook on tenor, John Dizzy Moore on trumpet, Don Drummond on trombone, and Lester Sterling on alto – and the rhythms bubble up brilliantly from the bottom, with tight piano from Jackie Mittoo and guitar from Jerome Hines. Titles include "Chinatown", "The Reburial", "Live Wire", and "A Shot In The Dark" by The Skatalites – plus "VC 10" and "Determination" by Roland Alphonso, "Love In The Afternoon" by Don Drummond, and "South China Sea" by Johnny Moore. ~ Dusty Groove




NEW RELEASES: BEHN GILLECE - MINDSET; JD ALLEN - GRAFFITI; JOSHUA BREAKSTONE - 2ND AVENUE

BEHN GILLECE - MINDSET

The first solo album as a leader from vibist Behn Gillece – a player who's been making great sounds on other sessions for the Posi-Tone label in recent years! Behn's voice is very firmly upfront here – on a set of all original compositions that really showcase his unique approach to the vibes – a style that can be hard and biting one minute, but filled with flowing currents of color the next – a mode that sometimes owes a bit to Bobby Hutcherson, but which really stands out as Gillece's own unique approach – and which is one of the freshest voices on vibes we've heard in years! The group's a quintet – with frequent musical partner Ken Fowser on tenor, plus Rick Germanson on piano and Fender Rhodes, Paul Gill on bass, and Charles Ruggiero on drums. Behn wrote all the tunes – and titles include "Crashing Down", "One Mile With You", "The Great Quarterly", "Mindset", "Things Are Happening", and "The Mean Sea". ~ Dusty Groove

JD  ALLEN - GRAFFITI

JD Allen's career ascendence suggests that he's making plenty of the right choices. The native of Detroit has been on the New York scene since 1993, when his youthful precociousness earned him a spot in “Jazz Ahead”, the singer Betty Carter's acclaimed touring program for up-and-comers. TimeOut New York says he will “remind you of giants like Coltrane and Rollins but placing a special kind of premium on concision, directness and accessibility.” The Chicago Reader adds, “Allen has gravitated toward a more brooding, elliptical approach with a strong jolt of John Coltrane at his most probing.” Finally, JD is, in the words of Connecticut's WNPR, “A man for all seasons,” who “plays ballads with warmth, beauty and truth, grooves hard in a post-bop mode or wails in a free jazz setting with passion saturated with the soulful spirituality, grace and inspired abandon recalling the power and the glory of John Coltrane.” One of the telltale symbols of his upward trajectory is the fact that his trio, bassist Gregg August (lead bass chair in the Brooklyn Philharmonic) and drummer Rudy Royston (a much sought-after rhythm power since relocating to New York from Denver), has remained solid throughout his rise. ~ Amazon

JOSHUA BREAKSTONE - 2ND AVENUE

After his critically acclaimed release, With the Wind and Rain, Joshua Breakstone returns with 2nd Avenue, an appropriate title for this second excursion with his cello quartet. Mike Richmond, a great guitarist in his own right, returns on cello. Bassist Lisle Atkinson and drummer Andy Watson round out the group. Breakstone and Atkinson each contribute one original composition and the remaining 7 tunes come from the likes of Lee Konitz, Sonny Clark, Dexter Gordon and Cannonball Adderley as well as Johnny Mercer, Harry Warren, Peter DeRose and Bert Shefter. ~ Amazon




Wednesday, May 13, 2015

George Wein to Receive Honorary Doctorate from Boston University on Sunday‏

George Wein, music impresario, NEA Jazz Master and Grammy Award winner, will receive an Honorary Doctorate at Boston University's (BU) 142nd Commencement on Sunday, May 17. The founder of the Newport Jazz Festival® (1954), Newport Folk Festival® (1959), New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival™ (1970) and countless other events around the world, Wein forever changed how music is presented and, at 89, continues to build new audiences for emerging and established artists at the iconic Rhode Island events. 

Journalist and TV personality Meredith Viera will deliver Boston University's Commencement  Address and Cornell William Brooks, president of the NAACP, will deliver the Baccalaureate Address. Both will receive honorary degrees along with Wein and Allen and Kelli Questrom, entrepreneurs, philanthropists and University benefactors. The graduation ceremony, including the commencement address and awarding of honorary degrees, can be watched via live webcast at www.bu.edu or listened to on Boston radio station WBUR 90.9FM/www.wbur.org at 1:00 pm on Sunday. 

Wein enrolled in premed courses at BU to please his father, Barnet Wein, who graduated from the university with a medical degree in 1920. However, the younger Wein, whose heart was in jazz and performing, soon realized that it was "a mistake" and graduated in 1950 with a degree in history.  Shortly after graduation, he opened a jazz club, Storyville, in Boston's Copley Square Hotel. Already an accomplished pianist, Wein performed in his club, and quickly turned it into a music Mecca for some of the world's greatest musicians.

George Wein's years at BU ended up playing a major role in his life in music.

Joel Brown wrote in today's edition of BU Today (www.bu.edu/today/2015/george-wein-honorary-degree-bu):

Jazz fan Donald Born, a College of Arts & Sciences professor of English, was a Storyville regular, and although Wein hadn't taken a course with him, they became great friends. Wein's career as a music-festival organizer had its origins at the club one night in 1953, when Born brought wealthy Newport socialite Elaine Lorillard there. Lorillard, who had been auditing one of Born's classes, was looking for ways to liven up Newport's boring summers with some jazz. Born thought Wein might be able to help. The rest is music history.

Wein also told Brown:

"I had a course in the theory of aesthetics that has helped me all my life," he says. "It just caused me to think about what the standards are for beauty and for love, on a very aesthetic level, and as I've traveled around the world, looking at museums, looking at architecture, that course gave me more enjoyment of life."

In addition to his life in jazz and folk music, Wein has a long history of involvement with philanthropy and the arts, including the establishment of the Joyce and George Wein Chair of African American Studies at Boston University, the Alexander Family Endowed Scholarship Fund at Simmons College and an annual artist prize given through the Studio Museum in Harlem in honor of his late wife, Joyce Alexander Wein.

George Wein founded the Newport Festivals Foundation™ in 2010 to enhance and continue the legacies of the famed Newport Jazz Festival and Newport Folk Festival. Under the auspices of the Foundation, the Festivals present performers who respect and honor jazz and folk music traditions, and at the same time reflect the changes in today's musical trends. Through the establishment of partnerships with local high schools, colleges/universities and community organizations, the Foundation offers programs to educate young people about jazz and folk music as presented at the annual festivals.

This year's Newport Folk Festival (www.newportfolk.org) is set for July 24-26 and the Newport Jazz Festival (www.newportjazzfest.org) takes place the following weekend, July 31-August 2.  The Foundation also will present a free Family Concert at Fort Adams State Park on July 29.  


Photo credit: Ayano Hisa


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