Monday, March 07, 2016

JUSTIN MULLENS PUSHES THE BOUNDARIES OF THE FRENCH HORN & OFFERS NEW COMPOSITIONS ON THE CORNUCOPIAD

Through his innovative and intrepid approach, French hornist, composer, and bandleader Justin Mullens is pushing the boundaries of the French horn as an improvising instrument in jazz. On his new album, The Cornucopiad, due out on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records on March 11, 2016, Mullens offers new through-composed pieces alongside well-known standards (such as "Hub-Tones", "You Stepped Out of A Dream" and "Naima") that highlight his imposing flair as an improviser and composer.  Mullens celebrates the release at Smalls Jazz this Monday, March 11!

The Cornucopiad is a big departure from a typical jazz album that features the French horn, mainly due to the striking artistry of Mullens. One of the main features on The Cornucopiad are Mullens' solos on the French horn, rooted deeply in the jazz lexicon, guiding the listener through a myriad of harmonically rich passages that are accentuated by the mellifluous sound of this instrument. To say that Mullens has raised the bar considerably, in terms of what can be achieved as an improviser on the French horn, is an understatement.

The theme and structure of The Cornucopiad is almost a kind of twofold "concept" album. A trilogy of originals by Mullens based on the Greek myths of the metamorphosis of the Cornucopia are intertwined with a trilogy of standards that compliment the mood of their counterparts. The glue that binds the two trilogies takes the form of five "shorts" composed by Mullens for French horn and guitar. The album features The Justin Mullens Octet: Justin Mullens (French Horn), Chris Cheek (Alto Sax & Clarinet), Peter Hess (Bass Clarinet), Ohad Talmor (Tenor Sax), Peter Thompson (Guitar), Desmond White (Bass), Matt Ray (Piano), Marko Djordjevic (Drums). Mullens said of this incredible band, "It is the deep musical insight of the musicians on this recording that bring life to these compositions."

Through his work as an improviser Mullens has been at the forefront of the development of the French horn as a vehicle of expression in the jazz idiom. Mullens has borrowed the technique and phrasing that is more in line with what one would hear from a tenor saxophonist or trumpeter, yet retaining the unique richness and mellifluousness of the French horn.

Over the span of his vibrant career, Mullens has had the opportunity to play with many amazing artists such as, Wallace Roney, David Sanborn, Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins, Steve Turre, Dizzy Gillespie, Chris Cheek, Ohad Talmor, Robby Ameen, and Tootie Heath. As well as recording and performing with many groups as a sideman, Mullens has also led, and composed for, his own projects, including The Delphian Jazz Orchestra, The Justin Mullens Quintet, and more recently, The Justin Mullens Octet. Mullens has recorded two albums of his own with The Delphian Jazz Orchestra and his newest creation, with his Octet.

Mullens has been featured often as a composer and has had his pieces performed in a wide spectrum of settings, including commissions for film, dance, big bands, and chamber ensembles. As a composer, he is perseverant in his endeavor to break the formal confines of traditional jazz composition, bringing an arresting mix of sounds, textures, and images to his audience. The mercurial innovations of this original music are brought to life by some of NYC's most illustrious musicians on his new album, The Cornucopiad.


GREGORY PORTER - TAKE ME TO THE ALLEY, THE NEW ALBUM OUT MAY 6TH 2016

An artist whose music is at once timeless yet utterly of its time, Gregory Porter solidifies his standing as his generation’s most soulful jazz singer-songwriter with the May 6 release of Take Me to the Alley, the much-anticipated follow-up to his million-selling Grammy-winning 2013 Blue Note debut Liquid Spirit. The coolest guy in music, the album features a reworked version of ‘Holding On’, the track Gregory co-wrote with electronic act Disclosure, as well as autobiographical songs including ‘Don’t Lose Your Steam’ and title track ‘Take Me To The Alley’, both written with his family in mind.

"Holding On” finds Porter presenting his decidedly different version of the Disclosure single that he was the featured vocalist on and co-wrote for their album Caracal. “I decided to do the song the way that I would have recorded it on my record,” Porter says. “It’s a way of saying that a song is a song is a song. The lyrics and the intention of the song come through no matter what kind of bells and whistles are going on.” The rousing, bluesy stomp “Don’t Lose Your Steam” is dedicated to Porter’s three-year-old son with encouraging lyrics about staying committed one’s goals regardless of hardship. Watch Porter perform “Don’t Lose Your Steam” live at Capitol Studios.

Porter has also announced extensive tour dates throughout North America and Europe this Spring and Summer. See below for a list of U.S. tour dates including appearances at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Newport Jazz Festival.

The tracklist includes: Holding On; Don’t Lose Your Steam; Take Me To The Alley; Day Dream; Consequence Of Love; In Fashion; More Than A Woman; In Heaven; Insanity; Don’t Be A Fool; Fan The Flames; and French African Queen.



Grammy Award-Winning Multi-Instrumentalist Nicholas Payton Balances Studio Work As Bandleader

Nicholas Payton Grammy award-winning Nicholas Payton -- one of the era's definitive artists -- has been quite busy this winter blowing with the all-star Monterey Jazz Festival on a nationwide tour, putting the finishing touches on Textures, his fifth release for his very own label, Paytone Records, as well as producing and arranging Jane Monheit's latest project, The Songbook Sessions: Ella Fitzgerald.

As a multi-instrumentalist, improviser, composer, bandleader, producer, arranger, and essayist, the New Orleans-born and -bred Payton will debut his Afro-Caribbean Mixtape, a blazing new quintet featuring bassist Vicente Archer, pianist Kevin Hays, percussionist Daniel Sadownick, and rising New Orleans drummer Joe Dyson, at the 2016 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.

Set to record this spring, the rhythmically encompassing ensemble explores "how rhythms came from Africa and transmigrated throughout the Caribbean to New Orleans, and affected popular music all over the world," Payton says.

 Nicholas Payton Letters His latest album, 2015's Letters on Paytone Records, features his trio with bassist Vicente Archer (an essential Payton collaborator for more than a decade) and veteran drummer Bill Stewart. The two-disc album features 26 original Payton compositions that run from "A" to "Z," a series of distilled motifs on which he moves gracefully from trumpet to piano, Fender Rhodes, organ, and even vocals.

"It's largely uncharted territory and the landscape is wide open," Payton says, referring to the unorthodox method of playing both keyboards and trumpet simultaneously. "When I'm playing keys I'm functioning more in the rhythm section and thinking of orchestration. These pieces are springboards to get the creative energy flowing."

Payton's creative universe keeps expanding, and with each new ensemble, project, and endeavor, the visionary artist redefines the parameters of #BAM (Black American Music). A whirlwind of activity, he's in the midst of a banner year marked by extraordinary new ensembles, new music, and exquisite new collaborations.

In the process of mixing Textures, the latest in a series of conceptual albums geared towards defining a neological lexicon of #BAM, Payton has been composing using the Apple sequencing software Logic while collaborating with New Orleans visual artist Anastasia Pelias. "We both went into the studio not knowing what to expect, her with a blank canvas, and me with a MIDI keyboard controller and a laptop," Payton says. "We played off of each other and that first day I walked away from the studio with a new composition and she with a new painting."
  
 Nicholas Payton Payton is also applying his expertise and creative vision in service of other artists. He produced vocalist Jane Monheit's new album The Songbook Sessions: Ella Fitzgerald (Emerald City Records), a project that revels in her glorious sound while revealing unexpected facets of her musical personality.

"I love to hear the creative process, to bear witness to how that manifests and unfolds from artist to artist," Payton says. "For The Songbook Sessions I wanted to make a quintessential Jane Monheit album, to find the timeless DNA of these melodies and lyrics while taking free rein with rhythms and chord changes. I feel my job as producer is to make the artist comfortable, but also uncomfortable, to push them into spaces they might not go."

Payton's influence extends far beyond the studio and stage. Payton, the polymath, is the creator of the #BAM movement. The conversation he's leading extends far beyond terminology. Payton's #BAM is a statement about social justice, self-definition, and refusing to allow one's creativity to be bounded by other's rules, language, and expectations.

"I'm not the first person to talk about Black music," Payton says. "The information has been there: Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Sidney Bechet said it. So did Charlie Parker, Ahmad Jamal, and the AACM [Association for the Advancement for Creative Musicians, Inc.]. I'm just here to deliver the message at this time. I've evolved and embrace the fact that I do more than one thing. I'd expect the artistic community to be open to that, but it's not always the case."

Born September 26, 1973 in New Orleans, Nicholas Payton is the son of the late bassist and sousaphonist Walter Payton and former operatic singer and pianist Maria Payton. A professional musician before reaching his teens, he joined his first band at age 11 with the All Star Brass Band under the leadership of James Andrews (Trombone Shorty's eldest brother), and landed his first regular gig with legendary New Orleans guitarist/banjoist Danny Barker at The Famous Door on Bourbon Street. Since his debut as a leader on 1994's From This Moment (Verve), Payton has released more than a dozen albums under his own name, including the Grammy Award-winning Doc Cheatham & Nicholas Payton (Verve).

Payton has toured and collaborated with many of the greatest artists in music, including Roy Haynes, Joe Henderson, Dr. John, Elvin Jones, Hank Jones, Stanley Jordan, Daniel Lanois, Zigaboo Modeliste, Marcus Roberts, Jill Scott, Clark Terry, Allen Toussaint, Cassandra Wilson, and Dr. Michael White.

Payton continues to maintain a busy touring schedule, with the following dates booked through the summer:

March 11: College of DuPage, Glen Ellyn, IL
March 12: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
March 13: City Winery, Chicago
April 7-10: Jazz Showcase, Chicago
April 28: One Eye Jack, New Orleans
April 29: New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival
April 30: Prime Example, New Orleans
May 1: New Orleans Jazz Festival
May 6: Motorco Music Hall Art of Cool Festival, Durham, NC
June 19: Miner Auditorium, SFJAZZ, San Francisco
June 22: Clifford Brown Festival, Wilmington, DE (special guest)
June 23-24: Blues Alley, Washington, DC
June 27: Rochester (NY) International Festival




NEW RELEASES: THINGS GONNA GET BETTER: STREET FUNK AND JAZZ GROOVES 1970-1977; ANENON – PETROL; MAYA – JAZZ A GO GO

THINGS GONNA GET BETTER: STREET FUNK AND JAZZ GROOVES 1970-1977

Plenty of street funk and just a bit of jazz here – all served up in the kind of killer funky collection we've always loved from the BGP label! As with some of their other gems, this set goes way beyond the obvious – and digs deep to not just feature rare singles and album tracks, but also include some never-issued recordings from the same period – which makes the set every bit as important for collectors of vintage 45s as it is for newcomers just looking to get a funky taste! There's a hard, deep vibe to most of these tracks – definitely some of the righteous message promised by the cover and title, but also just some plain old funky elements too – served up with lots of sinister guitar lines, heavy drums, and a mix of instrumental riffing and hard soul vocals. Titles include a special instrumental DJ edit of "A Joyful Process" by Funkadelic – plus "Dose Of Soul" by Chet Ivey & His Fabulous Avengers, "Do It" by Billy Sha Rae, "Music For The Brothers" by The Solicitors, "What's The Matter With The World" by Dave Hamilton, "Chains" by Blacks & blues, "Things Gonna Get Better" by Clarence Coulter, "Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get" by Pretty Purdie & The Playboys, "One Man's Loss" by Vernon Garrett, "125th Street & 7th Ave" by Richard Groove Holmes, "Mucho Macho" by Macho, "Push On Jesse Jackson" by The Pace Setters, "Shorty The Pimp" by Don Julian, and "Payin Dues" by Ruby Delicious. ~ Dusty Groove

ANENON - PETROL

The cover's got a fuzzy picture of a tenor on the front, and the sound here has some nicely fuzzy currents to match – a compelling blend of jazz music with almost a larger sense of sonic space – a bit like a small combo trying to perform their version of Disintegration Loops! The core sound comes from Brian Allen Simon – who plays the tenor on the front, but also adds in Fender Rhodes, Polysix, and a bit of laptop work too – alongside additional violin from Yvette Holzwarth, bass clarinet from Max Kaplan, and drums from Jon Kyle Mohr – musicians who seem more of the larger soundscape of Simon's electronics than core members of the quartet. The approach is quite unique – almost jazz electronica, although without all the lameness that term might invoke – and titles include "Body", "Lumina", "CXP", "Mouth", "Hinoki", "Machines", and "Petrol". ~ Dusty Groove

MAYA – JAZZ A GO GO

Jazz a go go, and Paris a go go too – as singer Maya served up a wonderful tribute to female French pop of the late 60s – done at a level that's mostly jazz-based at the core, but which often hits all the right groovy rhythms to fit the tunes! Most of the lyrics here are in French – although there are a few English language tunes too – and the cool combo in the back uses a cool mix of piano, organ, guitar, flute, tenor, and accordion in shifting ways – all to illuminate the tunes with the right sort of rhythms and instrumental touches, as Maya steps back for modes that recall older work by singers like France Gall, Christiane Legrand, Nicole Croisille, and Francoise Hardy. Titles include "Jazz A Gogo", "Comment T Dire Adieu", "I Will Wait For You", "Paroles Paroles", "L'Amour C'Est Pour Rien", and "Les Champs Elysees". (HQ Hi Quality CD pressing.)  ~ Dusty Groove


SARAH VAUGHAN: LIVE AT ROSY'S, Previously Unreleased Deluxe 2-CD Set

Resonance Records with the cooperation of National Public Radio (NPR) is proud to announce the release of Sarah Vaughan – Live At Rosy's, New Orleans on March 25th, 2016th. The deluxe 2-CD set is comprised exclusively of newly discovered recordings by "Sassy" capturing the legendary jazz singer's live performance at Rosy's Jazz Club on May 31, 1978.

Just after the release of the album, The U.S. Postal Service will honor Sarah Vaughan's legacy, by issuing a "Commemorative Forever Stamp". The ceremony will take place at the Sarah Vaughan Concert Hall at Newark Symphony Hall, 1020 Broad Street, Newark, N.J., @ 11:00am, March 29th, 2016th. 

Confirmed participants include: Tony Bennett, Rhonda Hamilton, Host of WBGO Radio's Midday Jazz, Mayor Ras Baraka, Mayor of Newark, Dr. Gloria White, Pastor of Mount Zion Baptist Church, Ronald Stroman, Deputy Postmaster General and Melba Moore, Grammy Award winning Jazz Vocalist and Tony Award Winning Actress & Singer.

Confirmed Performances to include: Mount Zion Baptist Church Choir, Carrie Jackson (A Tribute to Sarah Vaughan, Newark's Own), NJPAC Jazz for Teen Ensemble (educational program), Jazzmeia Horn, Winner 2013 Sarah Vaughan Jazz Vocalist Competition and Melba Moore. In February 2011, Resonance producer Zev Feldman connected with Tim Owens, the former producer of NPR's weekly syndicated radio program, Jazz Alive!

Owens mentioned to Feldman that he had Sarah Vaughan tapes of her stellar live 1978 concert performances at Rosy's. Having performed together hundreds of times with Sassy around the world, her rhythm section — or as she referred to them, "my trio" — of pianist Carl Schroeder, bassist Walter Booker and legendary drummer Jimmy Cobb was an extremely cohesive unit by the time they got to Rosy's in May of 1978. As the recordings in this set demonstrate, they were hand-in-glove with each other and with the great Sarah Vaughan.

Over the course of nearly four years, Feldman took on the role of Indiana Jones in tracking down all of the appropriate parties to ensure that this release would be fully endorsed and cleared by the Sarah Vaughan estate, plus by Walter Booker's widow Bertha Hope, as well as the living band members Carl Schroeder and Jimmy Cobb and NPR Music in Washington, D.C. Reflecting on the importance of this release in his introductory essay from the liner notes, Feldman notes: "My goal was to tell the whole story of this magical engagement that fortunately has been preserved for future generations to enjoy. These recordings celebrate the genius that was Sarah Vaughan. I hope we'll all take the time to revisit the legacy of this historic and pivotal figure in the history of jazz. These recordings demonstrate for us why she was much more than just a singer; she was a true artist."

Sarah Vaughan, along with Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald, was a member of a triumvirate – one of the three greatest female jazz singers in jazz history. She first attracted attention at 18 years of age in 1942, when she appeared at the Apollo Theater's amateur night, first as a pianist accompanying another singer and then a few weeks later in her own right as a singer, when she won the contest. During her weeklong Apollo engagement, which was one of the prizes she earned for her victory, Billy Eckstine, who was then the featured singer with the Earl Hines big band, spotted her. Eckstine recommended her to Hines, who asked her to join his band. Other members of the Hines band were Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker; it was widely regarded as one of the early breeding grounds for bebop. The musical ferment of that grouping of musical geniuses had an enormous influence on Vaughan.

Vaughan had an exceptionally broad vocal range; it extended from a coloratura soprano down to a low alto — some might even say she sometimes made her way into the baritone range. Her tone was rich and lush. Vocalist Helen Merrill told Zev Feldman in his interview with her conducted for this release: "When Sarah sang, she might just as well have been a trumpet player playing. Her musical ability, her jazz phrasing . . . it was perfect." She was a musicians' singer, yet despite her extraordinary gifts, she was down to earth; she was always accepted by the musicians whom she worked with as one of them — "she was like one of the fellas," says Jimmy Cobb.

When these live recordings at Rosy's Jazz Club were made in May of 1978, Sarah Vaughan was at her artistic peak (at age 54). That year, a kind of renaissance year for her, set her on a meteoric course during which she would win an Emmy and a Grammy and tour the world several times. Each time she released an album, Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin showcased her proudly on TV. For all the grand orchestras that backed her, Sarah Vaughan seemed happiest with her trio; they gave her the space to spread her wings and explore. I get ideas from all three of them while I'm singing," she said. "We have a ball together, all of us, and wherever I go to work, they're going with me." In 1978, Vaughan and her band — pianist Carl Schroeder, bassist Walter Booker, and drummer Jimmy Cobb — performed at Rosy's Jazz Club in New Orleans.

The founder/owner of Rosy's, Rosalie Wilson, describes her impetus for opening a jazz club in New Orleans in the 1970s: "I was puzzled as to why one seldom experienced these musicians in club settings. Roland Kirk explained this phenomenon during an interview…citing the continued reticence of many black artists to play clubs or smaller venues in the South for reasons of safety, treatment by club owners and the general negative conditions. I knew he was being truthful and I found this to be perverse, given the fact that New Orleans had long been anointed the birthplace of jazz. This angered me and provided the cause this rebel had long been seeking: to create a music club or venue in which the safety, respect and needs of the musicians were the first priority. One in which a "zero tolerance" policy would exist regarding any form of prejudice."

James Gavin writes in his essay "Romance, Family & Heartbreak: The Divine One" within the liner notes of the package: "By the time of Vaughan's performances at Rosy's captured in this set, her dark-chocolate voice had more than survived 36 years of professional singing; her art had only grown in splendor. She took dusky plunges and glided up to fluty soprano highs; she colored the three octaves in between with a wealth of textures, from gravel to velvet. Vaughan controlled her famous vibrato like a concert violinist; she could make it swagger, pulse, or vanish entirely."

Behind the vocal riches was a boundless musical mind. "As soon as I hear an arrangement I get ideas," she said, "kind of like blowing a horn." So many came to her that Vaughan was like a child let loose in a candy store. "She had tremendous harmonic conception," says Carl Schroeder. "Most singers have none." Her breath control enabled her to skitter tirelessly over daredevil bebop changes and to sing ballads at a luxurious crawl. All this came naturally to her. "I don't know what I'm doin'!" she said. "I just get onstage and sing. I don't think about how I'm going to do it—it's too complicated."

Journalist and critic Will Friedwald takes us through Live at Rosy's track-by-track: Gershwin, as always, is a major staple of Vaughan's repertoire, from her classic Gershwin double songbook in 1957 to her epic symphonic jazz concerts (and album) of 25 years later. "The Man I Love" was the Divine One's signature ballad. As with Fitzgerald, there were some songs and some lyrics that meant to more to her than others, and this song always occupied an extra special place in her heart. You'll often hear Vaughan take a serious ballad and completely jazz it up (as she does with "April" here), but when she does this particular song, you can tell she's only thinking about the man she loves.

In 1978, "Send in the Clowns" was gradually evolving into her climactic, show-stopping number. The Sondheim song kept getting longer and longer, growing bigger and bigger as well as slower and slower, and being pushed farther and farther back in the program. Still, it would be hard to say that Vaughan ever sang it better than she did in New Orleans: She absolutely nails it, and makes it clear why, of all the songs and shows that Sondheim has written over almost 60 years, this is easily his most beloved piece of music.

When the request comes through for "A-Tisket, A-Tasket" which was, famously, her colleague Ella Fitzgerald's first and biggest hit, Vaughan says, with mock exasperation, "Well, I'll be damned!" Clearly, it was one thing for Vaughan to make a joke about being mistaken for another singer (earlier she had joked that she was Carmen McRae), and quite another for someone in the crowd to confuse her with Ella Fitzgerald. Yet not to be outdone, she takes it a step further, "[he] thinks I'm Lena Horne, huh?"— thereby compounding the joke by dropping the name of yet a third iconic African-American vocal headliner. "Then I'll tell you who I am when I finish," she declares, "We got to do this," and then flies into a whole chorus of the 1938 song.

Resonance Records – a multi-GRAMMY® Award winning label (most recently for John Coltrane's Offering: Live at Temple University for "Best Album Notes") – prides itself in creating beautifully designed, informative packaging to accompany previously unreleased recordings by the jazz icons who grace Resonance's catalog. Such is the case with Sarah Vaughan – Live At Rosy's. Released as a deluxe 2-CD set on March 25, 2016, this release includes nearly 90 minutes of music from National Public Radio's series then dedicated to showcasing live jazz performances by elite jazz stars, Jazz Alive!, some of which has never been previously broadcast, along with a 36-page book, and is presented in a 6-panel digi-pak beautifully designed by Burton Yount.

Elaborate album books replete with rare photos, and newly commissioned essays and interviews have become a trademark of Resonance Records' historic releases. 2015's Wes Montgomery – In the Beginning included a 56-page book, and 2016's Larry Young – In Paris: The ORTF Recordings and Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra – All My Yesterdays: The Debut 1966 Recordings at The Village Vanguard come in at 68 and 92 pages respectively.

The Live at Rosy's book will also serve as new reference material for Sarah Vaughan fans providing historic essays, interviews and memoirs by producer Zev Feldman, author and journalist James Gavin (author of iconic biographies of Peggy Lee, Chet Baker and Lena Horne, among others), journalist, author, critic and expert on jazz and popular singers Will Friedwald (Jazz Singing: America's Great Voices from Bessie Smith to Bebop and Beyond; Sinatra! and many others; jazz critic regularly featured in The Wall Street Journal), Sarah Vaughan's music director and pianist, Carl Schroeder, Rosy's Jazz Club impresario, Rosalie Wilson and interviewees, the legendary drummer Jimmy Cobb (Miles Davis Kind of Blue) and Sarah Vaughan's esteemed colleague and early Emarcy Records stablemate, Helen Merrill. The album book also features a collection of rare photos by Herman Leonard, Ray Avery, Chuck Stewart, Riccardo Schwamenthal and Tom Copi, as well as ephemera from Rosy's Jazz Club at the time these recordings were made. 

Disc One:

I'll Remember April (3:45)
I Fall In Love Too Easily (3:43)
Band Intro (1:30)
East of The Sun (3:09)
I've Got A Lot of Living To Do (2:14)
Time After Time (3:46)
Somebody Loves Me (2:06)
Poor Butterfly (4:58)
A Tisket, A Tasket (1:47)
Send In The Clowns (6:00)
Sarah's Blues (7:47)
Disc Two:

The Man I Love (4:45)
I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good) (5:07)
Watch What Happens (2:44)
If You Went Away (5:40)
I Could Write A Book (3:01)
I Remember You (5:02)
Fascinating Rhythm (4:01)
Everything Must Change (6:47)
Like Someone In Love (2:41)
My Funny Valentine (5:17)
Ending Theme (1:08)


Yellowjackets Celebrate 35 Years with Cohearence - Album Serves as Debut for Virtuoso Australian Bassist Dane Alderson

An outgrowth of L.A. Express guitarist Robben Ford's band founded in 1977, the Yellowjackets came to full buzzing flight four years later with its debut eponymous jazz-funk album, a salient introduction to a new-styled electric fusion of jazz and R&B--a modern take on Weather Report, if you will--for the post Return to Forever/Headhunters decade. The band was an immediate and controversial hit at the time when the jazz pendulum was beginning to swing back in the acoustic direction.

Some skeptics didn't give the Yellowjackets a chance to survive, but here it is 35 years later--hardly trailing the segmented 40-year longevity of MJQ--and the group stretches its impressive longevity by continuing to evolve artistically with its third Mack Avenue Records recording, Cohearence. With two founding members--pianist/keyboardist Russell Ferrante and drummer Will Kennedy--and its longtime reeds player Bob Mintzer (a Jacket since 1990) and a brand-new virtuoso electric bassist, Australia-born Dane Alderson, the Yellowjackets cover a range of jazz flavors, including a rousing Weather Report jazz fusion vibe, a swinging switch-up on John Coltrane's "Giant Steps," a moving rendition of a folk song classic, a funky soul-jazz excursion and a chamber jazz-like grace in the album end-song, "Cohearence."

With its pockets of halcyon, buoyance, mystery, tumult and whimsy, Cohearence plays out as a multifaceted documentation of how far the once fusion band has come.

"There's a lot of gratitude," Ferrante says of the band's 35th birthday. "It's never been a given to us that we'd continue to be able to have the opportunity to write and record for that length of time. But you couldn't have that in place unless you had a band of generous, giving musicians, none of whom have ever been ego'ed out."

Based on the music of Cohearence, there's a wealth of variety. There's no sameness in hearing range. "We write music that reflects what fascinates us; music that's worth exploring," says Ferrante, who contributes five of the album's ten songs. "I compose to work though ideas and workshop a piece, bring it into the laboratory to work on the compositional elements and make the piece a vehicle for improvisation."

Mintzer composed three of the tunes and Kennedy one. Once an initial set list was conceived, the Jackets road-tested the music for five months, including dates in London in the late spring/early summer of 2015. "We spent a lot more time with the music than we usually do before we record," Ferrante says. "We rehearsed the songs by playing them live, so that when we went into the studio we weren't just playing our first impressions of the music. Then, we recorded totally live in less than two days."

Opening the album is one of Ferrante's songs, the catchy and upbeat "Golden State" about the Interstate 5 north-south freeway that runs though California, that has a bustling harmonic connect of piano and sax, and a relentless left-hand piano triplet rhythm. "I wanted to capture the energy and activity of the I-5," he says. This is followed by Mintzer's charged "Guarded Optimism" that is not only vibrant but also has a touch of dark mystery to it. "It's a fast piece with a syncopated melody that reminds me of Weather Report," Ferrante says. "For my piano solo, I used it as a challenge to see if I could keep my bass motif going with my left hand while independently playing with my right."

Ferrante's gentle "Anticipation" with folk-like influences starts slowly then builds in anticipation thanks to Alderson's bass solo and Kennedy's drum roll. It's followed by Mintzer's 6/8-grooved, synth-flavored "Inevitable Outcome," featuring the composer's EWI's tonal colors. "'Trane Changing' is a re-harmonization of 'Giant Steps' that Felix Pastorius had started during his time in the group," Ferrante says. "I was intrigued with the tune and helped to solidify the arrangement and the countermelody, which gave Bob a great opportunity to play bass clarinet counterpoint."

The playful part of the album starts with Ferrante's funky "Eddie's In The House," his tip-of-the-hat to the late saxophonist Eddie Harris who first turned him on to jazz through his collaboration with pianist Les McCann on their Swiss Movement album. That's followed by Kennedy's "Fran's Scene," a play on his wife's name (Francyne) that he masterminded, including the synth orchestration; while Mintzer's skipping, carefree "Child's Play" is a simple melody that has a depth to it with the band members' support.

A highlight is the Yellowjackets' lyrical, tenor sax-led cover of the traditional American folk song "Shenandoah." "That was Bob's idea," says Ferrante. "He heard it in the last episode of that TV series The Newsroom and wanted to write a rearrangement for us to play."

Ferrante's "Coherence" ends the album with a chamber jazz feel of intertwining parts and the piano playing counterpoint to the melody. "It does have a classical music feeling with the fixed rhythm underneath," says Ferrante. "Again this piece also connects to folk music. It's a challenging piece to play and was one of the more difficult pieces to record. But we pulled it off."

Speaking of "Cohearence" the song, why is the album title Cohearence? Ferrante laughs and says it's pun, with the word "hear" emphasized. But, if there is a theme at work on the recording, it is that sense of coherence.

When the Jackets were playing in London, Ferrante and Mintzer went to the Tate Modern where they were struck by the six-frame cycle of abstract paintings by Gerhard Richter, Cage-Six Paintings. "I decided to read further about it," says Ferrante. "I was impressed by the fact that they were inspired by the music of John Cage and then I read that the paintings were described as a coherent group. So I started looking into that word."

What Ferrante found was that the synonyms for coherent included balance, harmony, symmetry and unity. Given the music they were playing for the new album and the camaraderie of the band members, he had a profound realization that the triumph of Cohearence reveals the true nature of the group. "It means we're all connected to what we're doing as a band," he says. "We're making harmonious statements."


Friday, March 04, 2016

Original Santana Band at the House of Blues Las Vegas for One Night Only

On stage together for the first time since 1973, the Original Santana Band featuring: Carlos Santana (guitar, vocals), Gregg Rolie (keyboards, lead vocals), Neal Schon (guitar, vocals), Michael Carabello (percussion), and Michael Shrieve (drums), will reunite on March 21 in Las Vegas at the House of Blues inside Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino for a very special live performance that will be filmed for television and DVD release.

Fans are invited to come be a part of television history as the super group takes them on a musical journey, touching upon the first three Santana albums, and introducing fans to songs from the forthcoming release of their new studio album, Santana IV.

Tickets for this special event go on sale tomorrow, Saturday, March 5 at 10 a.m. All tickets are $29.50 plus tax and fees and are general admission, standing room only tickets. Doors are at 6:30 p.m., filming begins at 8 p.m. Fans won’t want to miss this historic filming and live concert event. All guests must be 18 years of age or older with a valid photo ID to enter the venue.

With the same heralded lineup that exploded onto the scene at Woodstock, with Neal Schon added soon afterward, Santana IV radiates the same unparalleled energy and superlative musicianship that made Santana a pioneering force in world music and a household name across the globe. In April of 2016, they will release their first studio album together since 1971’s Santana III. Appropriately named Santana IV, the album picks up where they left off with 16 all-new tracks written and produced by the band, explosive guitar work, incredible percussion, and a collection of songs that easily stands side-by-side with the group’s treasured early work. Joining the core Santana IV band in the studio are current Santana members Karl Perazzo (percussion) and Benny Rietveld (bass), with the legendary vocalist Ronald Isley guesting on two cuts.

“There are very few bands from the ’60s and ’70s that can come back with this kind of energy,” Carlos Santana raves, “So I think we achieved something very rare. This music was screaming to come out of us. It wasn’t about nostalgia. It was about passion.”

To date, this is the only full show scheduled that will feature this incredible lineup which will highlight the amazing guitar interplay of Carlos Santana and Journey’s Neal Schon, mixed with Gregg Rolie’s distinctive soulful voice and Hammond B3, complimented by the percussive ferocity of Michael Shrieve and Michael Carabello.

“Carlos and I feel more connected than ever,” adds Schon. “We get super-aggressive when we play, but also melodic and poetic. We have a dialog with each other on our guitars, and that allows us to do one-take solos and just blow each other away.”


Award-Winning San Diego Pianist Danny Green Spins Gorgeous New Tales With His Longtime Trio on Matt Pierson-Produced Altered Narratives

Danny Green knows that music should tell a story. A rising creative force on the Southern California jazz scene, the San Diego pianist/composer has distinguished himself with his beautifully articulated touch and deep affinity for Brazilian music. On his fourth album Altered Narratives, which is slated for a March 18, 2016 release on OA2 Records, Green's stellar trio explores a panoply of moods and grooves, sublimating Brazilian influences in favor of blues, swing and European classical influences. It's the work of a manifestly gifted composer who has honed a bespoke group sound ideally suited for his melodically charged sensibility.

Featuring bassist Justin Grinnell and drummer Julien Cantelm, Green's ensemble is one of the most lyrical trios working on the West Coast, and the pianist's program of original tunes provides an ideal forum for their exquisite interplay. The album opens with the bouncy blues "Chatter From All Sides," a piece composed amidst the tumult of Green's kids playing around him. It's an affectionately buoyant 16-bar theme that never wears out its welcome. "The Merge" is an episodic broken-field sprint that flowed out of a bit of spontaneous interplay on a gig with Cantelm. Listen to the way Cantelm's finely textured cymbal work shapes the piece. The brooding "October Ballad" embodies Green's gift for crafting emotionally evocative motifs, while "6 A.M." dawns with a dreamy passage before accelerating into a joyful baião feel, one of Northeastern Brazil's most infectious grooves.

Inspiration can come from just about any direction, and it's not surprising that Green has found fertile creative ground amidst the brothers Sprague, guitarist Peter and saxophonist Tripp, essential members of the Southern California jazz scene for some four decades. Several Altered Narrative pieces, including "6 A.M.", came from a concert with the Spragues where everyone agreed to bring in tunes pertaining to the theme "Things I Love That I Used to Hate." Not surprisingly, the late-night gin joint reverie "I Used to Hate the Blues" also came out of that concert. Clearly, the blues and Green now keep close company.
While not composed as a suite, the three tunes at the center of the album feature the trio with a string quartet led by violinist Antoine Silverman, a widely admired New York jazz and studio player. Green wrote "Second Chance" as part of the concert with the Spragues, and its gracefully flowing lines evidence his deep love of 19th century European classical music. The album's most intricate and beautifully unsettling tune, "Katabasis," takes its name from a Greek literary term that can refer to visiting the underworld. Keying on sumptuous cello work by Anja Wood, it's a sojourn deep into murky realms that moves from a plaintive minor blues to translucent chords offering a glimpse of light.

"I've loved classical music since college, and I listen to it as much as jazz and Brazilian music," Green says. "Some of my favorite classical composers who have had a profound influence on me are Wagner, Mahler, and Ravel. Writing for string quartet was a new undertaking for me, and one that I was extremely excited about. The string parts were going through my head for weeks before the session, and it was quite an emotional experience hearing it performed for the first time in the studio." 

The album closes with "Serious Fun," a rambunctious blues that embodies everything that's appealing about Green's trio. Working with a familiar form, they make it their own without affectation or pretension. More than the sum of its considerable players, the band has honed a book of tunes unlike any other trio on the scene.

Justin Grinnell is one of the most sought after bassists in San Diego. In addition to anchoring Green's trio he leads his own quartet featuring the brilliant LA pianist Josh Nelson (the band released a widely hailed 2013 debut album Without You). Julien Cantelm is a highly versatile accompanist who's performed extensively with San Diego heavyweights such as pianist Geoffrey Keezer, guitarist Peter Sprague, vocalist Allison Adams Tucker, and pianist Joshua White. He and nylon-string guitarist Dusty Brough also perform in the duo Vimana. Green introduced his trio with Grinnell on 2009's With You In Mind, which won the San Diego Music Award for Best Jazz Album. Cantelm joined the fold on Green's second release, 2012's A Thousand Ways Home, a quartet session with Tripp Sprague featuring Brazilian stars Claudia Villela (vocals) and Chico Pinheiro (guitar) as special guests. His third release, 2014's After The Calm earned him another San Diego Music Award for Best Jazz Album.

Born in San Diego in 1981, Green grew up in an academic family. Now retired, his mother was a longtime ESL teacher and his father was a professor of biology at the University of California, San Diego. He started piano lessons as a child and kept at it until 12, when he came under the sway of grunge rock. After two years teaching himself Nirvana tunes, he got interested in ska and joined a band with some fellow students. "Ska was the first style of music that I got into that featured improvisation, and I remember being so excited listening to the solos," Green recalls. "My first experience improvising was in my ska band. I had no clue what I was doing, but I just followed my intuitions and went for it."

Green experienced something of an epiphany around the turn of the century when he caught The Buena Vista Social Club documentary, which sparked a passion for Cuban son. He delved into Latin music working in local salsa bands, while writing in the Latin jazz idiom. Green earned a B.A. in Piano Performance from UCSD, where he studied jazz piano with Grammy-winning producer Kamau Kenyatta. A class on Brazilian music at UCSD turned his passion southwards. Looking for direct experience with Brazilian masters, he started attending California Brazil Camp in the redwoods of Cazadero in western Sonoma County. He credits legendary guitarist/composer Guinga, pianist Marcos Silva, guitarist/composer Chico Pinheiro, and drummers Edu Ribeiro and Marcio Bahia as particularly important influences. Green later went on to earn a Master's Degree in Jazz Studies at San Diego State University, where he studied under Rick Helzer. He was awarded "Outstanding Graduate," and several years later, "Alumni to Watch."

"I have always been the type to immerse myself in one genre of music, artist, or composer or months to years at a time. From Nirvana, ska, and Latin jazz, to Brazilian music, straight ahead jazz and Wagner operas, all these different musical phases that I went through helped shape who I am as a pianist and composer."

Green's singular journey has led to a strikingly beautiful body of music. Altered Narratives is the latest dispatch from a trio that still delights in the process of discovery.



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THE DEBUT ALBUM FROM ZMEI3 - ROUGH ROMANIAN SOUL

Zmei3 (pronounced zmay-tray) is made up of Romanian immigrants whose beautiful and heartfelt music rises from the harsh realities and struggles of a post-Communist rule.  Their debut album Rough Romanian Soul (out April 22 on Six Degrees Records) is produced by GRAMMY® award-winner, Ian Brennan, best known for his work with Tinariwen, Zomba Prison Project, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, and the Malawi Mouse Boys.  Zmei3 being huge fans of Brennan’s work, successfully raised funds via Kickstarter to cover recording costs, travel, and more.  They flew Brennan to Romania and began recording the album in August 2015 live without overdubs in the Transylvanian mountains, just a stone’s throw away from Dracula’s Castle.

The band is led by powerhouse vocalist, Paula Turcas, a trained, mezzo-soprano opera singer who gave up classical music in the pursuit of a more truthful artistry grounded in the struggles of everyday life.  When she was three years old – the daughter of the village priest – began to sing the traditional Romanian folk songs. She would sing with such despair that when people passed by, her father would lift her up on the table and people would stop and listen with tears in their eyes.  Her voice remains so visceral that Berlin’s Der Tagesspiegel newspaper stated, “When Zmei3 are playing, it’s not rare that tears are falling in the audience.” Their sound is made all the more unique by featuring vibraphone virtuoso, Oli Bott, for their lead instrument.  Rounding out the talented group is Mihai Victor Ilieschu on guitars and lyrics, as well as Arnulf Ballhorn on double bass.  The band’s name is inspired by an ancient Romanian anti-hero, misfit dragon – a rebellious figure, who rarely prevails, but remains committed to his ideals.

The name of the album, Rough Romanian Soul is an ode to Romanian music entrenched with a deep history of regional blues and soul, as well as the inherent spirituality of their work.  Turcas adds, “The land is rough and the people strong, and our legacy is one of survival.”  Music from Transylvania is not commonly associated with aggressive styles mashing up blues and soul with influences of jazz, avant-garde, and folk with such introspective topics and emotive soundscapes.  But that is exactly what Zmei3 succeeds in doing on their fifteen-track debut.  Bott explains, “We had more than three albums worth of material and many of our most famous songs live were left off the album, in exchange for newer and more challenging material.”

Across the fifteen songs, Zmei3 cover topics of resistance, immigration, oppression, love, death, pride, loneliness, and strength.  “2 Mail” / 2nd of May is story of 2 Mai, a village at the Black Sea, close to the border with Bulgaria, which was a haven for hippies who wanted to escape the constraints of the communist regime.  “Poveste Din Èšara Mea / Story From My Country is about the feelings of an immigrant who left behind everything that he loved. A father is telling his little girl that she should never forget that theres a country, a lost paradise, and that one day they will seek revenge on those who destroyed it.  “Shhh!!! (Tot ce nu se spunea atunci)” / Shhh!!! (All the speech that was forbidden then) is an improvised song, created around all the things, ideas and thoughts that were forbidden during the 45-year repressive regime in Romania.  “Mărie, Mărie” / Mary, Mary is an essential love ballad from southern Romania. A kind of southern blues.  “Până când nu te iubeam” / Since I’ve been loving you according to the band says, “It’s a strange coincidence that there is a Led Zeppelin song with the same title – but maybe it’s no coincidence since it’s exactly about the same feelings. ‘I’m about to lose…my worried mind’ – only that this song is urban folklore from Bucharest, dating from around 1850.”  “ÃŽntr-o zi” / One day is the band’s slow blues song which was inspired by Bob Dylan’s “Girl From The North Country Fair.”  Other standouts include “Imn” / Hymn composed without lyrics and dedicated to the human experience, while “Vis” / Dream is dedicated to the memory of the Resistance fighters from the 50’s – and to those very few who always choose to fight and resist, even when it’s clear they have no chance.

Much of the songwriting was done via “instant composition,” where the producer Ian Brennan pushed the band to create songs and record simultaneously.  All while being inspired by the environment of the Transylvania mountains that were in view.  Brennan expresses, “music should breath, music should live, and come from inside a person. Equipment is secondary. Simply a means to an end.  The ability to be high amidst the mountains, to see them, and be there together, lends a sacredness to this project.”  Brennan is known for capturing the environment in which he records.  For example Brennan’s latest release on Six Degrees Records, Zomba Prison Project was recorded in Malawi, and documented the music of prisoners at the maximum security prison in Zomba.  The album was nominated for a “World Music” GRAMMY® which garnered critical praise on the cover of the New York Times, as well as features in CNN, Newsweek, Al Jazeera, NPR, Associated Press, Rolling Stone, The Guardian, and more.

Brennan concludes, “Eastern Europe in general has been neglected by the rest of the world in terms of interest and exploration of music and culture. It has literally and deliberately been treated as a bloc. There is a great ignorance amongst many as to what Eastern Europe even is after World War II, so to have vibrant and modern music from Romania is a very valuable thing.”

Track Listing:

Stai Lângă Mine (Stay Near Me)
Imn (Hymn)
2 Mai (2nd Of May)
Poveste Din Tara Mea (Story From My Country)
Shhh!!!…Tot Ce Nu Se Spunea Atunci (Shhh!!!…All The Forbidden Speech)
Mărie, Mărie (Mary, Mary)
Aș Munci La Plug Și Coasă (To Have You)
Până Când Nu Te Iubeam (Since I’ve Been Loving You)
Ah! (Ay!)
ÃŽntr-o Zi (One Day)
Vreau Un Bărbat (I Want A Man)
Somn De Frumusețe (Beauty Sleep)
Voi Găsi (I Will Find)
Vis (Dream)
She’s Gone Wild


Thursday, March 03, 2016

THE 38TH ANNUAL PLAYBOY JAZZ FESTIVAL AT THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL, PERFORMERS INCLUDES UNPRECEDENTED ARRAY OF CELEBRATED ICONS AND EMERGING ARTISTS

The Los Angeles Philharmonic announced today the line-up for the 38th annual Playboy Jazz Festival, to be held Saturday, June 11, and Sunday, June 12, 2016, at the Hollywood Bowl at 3:00pm. An internationally acclaimed event, the Playboy Jazz Festival is one of the premier jazz festivals in the United States and attracts audiences from across the globe.

Featuring an unparalleled mix of illustrious jazz greats, next generation leaders and Festival perennials, this year’s headliners include Festival alums Fourplay (celebrating their 25th Anniversary), Jon Batiste, Robert Cray, Pete Escovedo and Los Van Van, who will be joined by an extraordinary roster of Festival newcomers including Seth MacFarlane, Janelle Monáe, Cécile McLorin Salvant, The Bad Plus Joshua Redman, Joey Alexander Trio, John Beasley’s MONK’estra, Liv Warfield, South Africa’s Freshlyground,  London’s Anthony Strong,  and Sonny Landreth, who will be playing with Robert Cray.

Joining them will be Festival faves Naturally 7 and New Orleans’ Big Chief Donald Harrison Jr. (in a new configuration with the Congo Nation-New Orleans Cultural Group), along with Javon Jackson and Sax Appeal featuring special guests Jimmy Heath, George Cables, Peter Washington, and Willie Jones III; Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah Presents Stretch Music; The LAUSD/Beyond the Bell All-City Jazz Big Band Under the Direction of Tony White and J.B. Dyas, and the CSUN Jazz A Band directed by Matt Harris.

A very special celebratory tribute to the late Blues giant B.B. King will feature The Robert Cray Band with special guests Sonny Landreth and Roy Gaines.

A legend in the pantheon of music festivals, the Playboy Jazz Festival has featured artists ranging from legends such as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie™ and Count Basie to today’s hottest stars and contemporary artists, including Herbie Hancock, Wynton Marsalis, The Roots, Esperanza Spalding and Trombone Shorty. Now in its 38th year, the Playboy Jazz Festival will once again feature two days of extraordinary musical performances, with multi-talented entertainer George Lopez as the Master of Ceremonies for the fourth year in a row.

The complete line-up is as follows:
PLAYBOY JAZZ FESTIVAL 2016
ARTIST LINE-UP

Saturday, June 11:  3pm
  • Jon Batiste & Stay Human
  • Seth MacFarlane with conductor Joel McNeely
  • Cécile McLorin Salvant
  • Los Van Van
  • Naturally 7
  • The Bad Plus Joshua Redman
  • Joey Alexander Trio
  • John Beasley’s MONK’estra
  • Freshlyground
  • The LAUSD/Beyond the Bell All-City Jazz Big Band Under the Direction of Tony White and J.B. Dyas


Sunday, June 12:  3pm
  • Fourplay Silver Anniversary with Bob James, Nathan East, Chuck Loeb and Harvey Mason
  • Janelle Monáe
  • The Robert Cray Band Celebrating B.B. King with special guests Sonny Landreth and Roy Gaines Pete Escovedo Orchestra featuring Sheila E., Juan and Peter       Michael
  • Javon Jackson and Sax Appeal featuring special guests Jimmy Heath, George Cables, Peter Washington, Willie Jones III
  • Big Chief Donald Harrison Jr. and the Congo Nation-New Orleans Cultural Group
  • Liv Warfield
  • Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah Present Stretch Music
  • Anthony Strong
  • CSUN Jazz A Band directed by Matt Harris 

Master of Ceremonies: George Lopez


Arturo O’Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra Cuba: The Conversation Continues, With Special Guest Cuban Composers & Performers: Bobby Carcassés, Alexis Bosch, Cotó, Yasek Manzano, Michel Herrera, Jesus Ricardo Anduz, Antonio Martinez Campos

When Arturo O’Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra travelled to Havana, Cuba in December 2014 to record Cuba: The Conversation Continues, something nearly miraculous happened: President Obama unexpectedly announced the restoration of full diplomatic relations with Cuba, and plans for the opening of an embassy in Havana for the first time in more than a half-century. It was time, the President proclaimed, to reignite the conversation between the two long-estranged nations.

Just as Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong trumpeted liberty abroad during the Cold War, Arturo O’Farrill’s efforts are a symbol of the new political current. O’Farrill is a modern day “jazz ambassador,” who fought for political normalization between the United States and Cuba through cultural diplomacy long before Obama’s announcement. As the founder and artistic director of the non-profit The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance, O’Farrill has been on the ground in Cuba repairing the rupture by promoting a cultural conversation despite political disengagement. O’Farrill and members of the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra (the resident ensemble of the Alliance) have been traveling between New York City and Cuba for over a decade.

Though he is a frequent Cuba traveler, the announcement was still a surprise: “It was an emotional experience for me, a day that I had hoped would come for years,” says Arturo O’Farrill. He was in Cuba performing with his 18-piece Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra at the Havana International Jazz Festival at the time of Obama’s announcement. In fact, the night before the historic news (Dec. 16), Arturo and his orchestra, alongside several Cuban musicians featured on Cuba: The Conversation Continues, performed at the residency of the U.S. Chief of Mission in Havana.

An auspicious moment in the celebrated pianist’s 30-year career, the recording Cuba: The Conversation Continues is a profound statement that’s a touchstone of diplomatic engagement and cultural healing. For this full-length studio album, O’Farrill enlisted four of today’s premier Cuban composers and six world-class American composers/arrangers, including Bobby Carcassés, Alexis Bosch, Cotó, Michel Herrera, Dafnis Prieto, Michele Rosewoman, Earl McIntyre, Gregg August, Arturo himself and his son, Zack O’Farrill.

Executing such an ambitious project was no easy task. O’Farrill and Executive Producer Kabir Sehgal led a delegation of 58 people to make the recording: 24 musicians, 21 producers, 6 staff, 5 videographers, and 2 photographers traveled to Cuba, permitted by the U.S. Treasury Department. All told, 75 people contributed to making this studio album a reality, including the efforts of co-producers Julian Weller and Eric Oberstein. Recorded at Abdala Studios in Havana, Cuba: The Conversation Continues offers a compelling, forward-looking aesthetic – one based on dialogue and cross-cultural collaboration. With the news of political normalization, the musicians grasped the potential significance of the album – to create a cultural compass to guide future dialogue between the two countries. “There was a sizzle in the studio, and the resulting emotional rush made it onto the album,” says Sehgal.

For O’Farrill, Obama’s announcement had deep, personal significance. His father, the late Latin music legend Chico O’Farrill, was born in Cuba, but was unable to return to the island after the Revolution and he subsequently settled in the U.S. He died in New York in 2001, never seeing his homeland again due to Cold War travel restrictions. Arturo O’Farrill’s longstanding devotion to bringing Cuba and the U.S. closer together through the power of music has garnered utmost praise from The Recording Academy. Twice, in 2009 with Song for Chico and again earlier this year for The Offense of the Drum, his efforts have resulted in winning GRAMMY® Awards in the “Best Latin Jazz Album” category.

Musically, the roots of Cuba: The Conversation Continues stretch back to the collaborations between the American jazz icon Dizzy Gillespie and the Cuban conga virtuoso and composer Chano Pozo. Many jazz historians cite their momentous 1947 meeting and later collaborations as the birth of modern Latin jazz. Now, nearly seven decades later, O’Farrill and a cast of celebrated composers are resuming the conversation between Gillespie and Pozo, bringing it into the present at a pivotal time in U.S. and Cuban history.

“The Chano Pozo-Dizzy Gillespie conversation led to a realization that they had much in common. Both their music originates from Africa.”

Unfortunately, that conversation was interrupted by the diplomatic falling out. “But now we can resume and update their conversation,” notes O’Farrill. “This conversation is at the heart of our album.”

Cuba: The Conversation Continues gives new meaning to the ancient truth about music being a universal language. Gillespie himself spoke of a time when there would be neither “jazz” nor “Afro Cuban” but “universal music.” Arturo fulfills Dizzy’s prophecy of creating such a music, breaking down cultural walls. It turns out that musical borders are man-made, just like geographic and political ones.

Featured Compositions – Cuba: The Conversation Continues

On Cuba: The Conversation Continues, O’Farrill ultimately answers the question, “What would the music have sounded like if Pozo and Gillespie (and we) kept talking with each other?” Judging from the resulting compositions, it would have sounded very diverse, very adventurous, and yet reverent to tradition. The double disc set boasts several standout compositions, including O’Farrill’s masterful four-movement “The Afro Latin Jazz Suite,” a bold reimagining of Chico O’Farrill’s 65 year-old gem, “The Afro Cuban Jazz Suite.” Commissioned by Harlem’s famed Apollo Theater for its own 80th anniversary celebration in May 2014, “The Afro Latin Jazz Suite” is propelled by the extraordinarily soulful virtuosity of alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa.

O’Farrill notes of the track, “Rudresh is a voice that’s changing jazz, and it’s a voice that many jazz students in Cuba aren’t familiar with. He’s broadening the scope of this music. The jaws of these young musicians drop when they see him play. ‘The Afro Latin Jazz Suite’ is rooted firmly in the work and the vision that my father created.”

Envisioning the future, O’Farrill’s “Vaca Frita” features turntablist DJ Logic, the brilliant saxophonist David DeJesus, and Adam and Zack O’Farrill. For Arturo, the opportunity to work with the next generation of O’Farrills on such a momentous occasion was particularly rewarding.

“Watching my sons interact with their Cuban counterparts was one of the motivations for this album,” Arturo says. “There was such a tremendous respect and love for each other. When I saw them reach across borders, I said, ‘There’s a lesson here for every human, especially for the politicians who have divided our two nations.’”

“El Bombón” is another standout, written by Cotó (Juan de la Cruz Antomarchi). The work is a changüí that deals with a very specific feel and rhythm from Guantánamo. “Second Line Soca (Brudda Singh),” by Earl McIntyre features vocals from Reneé Manning and draws a direct line from Cuba to New Orleans. The cultural exchange between one of America’s most unique cities and the Caribbean island nation 90 miles south of our border goes back centuries.

“The roots of jazz are intertwined between Havana and New Orleans. For 50 years we have been denied an essential nutrient in the development of jazz.”

Finally, Cuba: The Conversation Continues leaves off with “There’s a Statue of José Martí in Central Park,” an epic 13-minute piece written and conducted by Zack O’Farrill in honor of the great Cuban national hero, and again featuring Rudresh Mahanthappa, along with Arturo on piano and Ivan Renta on soprano sax. With shades of free jazz, this song hints at what the future of Dizzy’s “universal music” might sound like.

Even though there’s been significant political progress in the seven months since the announcement, Arturo urges Americans to act:

“Call your congressman,” says Arturo. “Tell them to lift the embargo. It hasn’t worked during the last 50 years. We need a different approach. This album shows what normalization sounds like: there may be tension and discordance at times, but we still find harmony and resolution. It’s time for the politicians to catch up with the musicians.”


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