Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Featured This Week On The Jazz Network Worldwide: Jazz Vocalist, Rosie Carlino with her latest CD, “The Letting Go”

Rosie Carlino celebrates her fourth release where she shares her heart from soul lessons to letting go and beginning again in her new CD “ The Letting Go”.

Rosie Carlino is a very unique talent, one who lifts the shroud of a heart and melodically brings across the song in her heart for all to experience.  “The Letting Go” is a compilation of tunes that express her deepest joy to her most sorrowful moments.  Tunes like “What Do I Do With Me?”, “All Dressed Up”, “My Favorite Year” and “On My Way To You” to name a few.  It’s an epitome of revelations that causes the listener to relate on so many levels of their deepest hearts understanding.  Rosie's raw vocal delivery grabs and holds the listener in this collection of songs that are a mix of the Great American Songbook, Country and Contemporary Pop.

Carlino is no stranger to her passionate artistic expressions.  Not only does she share her musical gifts with her fans, she inspires them as well with her original paintings.  “I have had the privilege of learning and discovering so many other creative and inspiring things that have given me much more awareness of who I am and all of which I am capable. I can’t be more grateful for the twists and turns of my journey”, says Rosie.  This project was not only meant for Rosie’s heart but for those that have loved and lost and on the road to recapturing their true essence and passion for life.  Always seeking to go higher is a priority in her life as she is always on the look-out for ways to expand her horizons on every side.

“Rosie Carlino opens her heart in a way we all wish we could do, guttural glimpses of a life well lived, artistically, emotionally and spiritually, a musical offering that can change a heart” says Jaijai Jackson of The Jazz Network Worldwide.

"Rosie Carlino sings from her heart on this intimate recording, choosing beautiful standards from the American Songbook that musically express her personal journey through some of life’s most poignant transitions." ~ Kathy Ridl, Classical and jazz violist/  bassist and graphic designer

"Rosie Carlino is a jazz singer who performs from her heart. Impeccable phrasings, not hurried, unwavering vocals, a gorgeous voice and a beautiful spirit.” ~ Glenn Barratt, 2x Grammy Award-winning engineer-producer

It’s Rosie’s ambitious nature that causes her to define the type of stages she feels the most comfortable sharing her musical gifts.  Currently Carlino is seeking to join forces with jazz societies around the globe that not only keep jazz alive but reinforce the ambiance of the variables of jazz settings, from concerts to intimate gatherings. 


The Songbird of New Orleans ROBIN BARNES releases SONGBIRD SESSIONS

The Songbird of New Orleans’ Robin Barnes flight to spread her soulful traditional jazz meditations across the nation is in full flight after the No. 5 Billboard Current Traditional Jazz Albums chart debut of her just-released “Songbird Sessions” EP. Along with landing a national piece in the coming issue of Food & Wine magazine, her charm continues to allure back home where Gambit Weekly’s Best of Poll selected the radiant twenty-something chanteuse the No. 2 Best Local Music Artist behind Trombone Shorty. In conjunction with the record release and a jam-packed hometown album release concert date, Barnes was featured on the iheartNOLA website and performed a pair of acoustic jazz tunes from the disc on the locally televised “News With A Twist.” 

Over the past few years where she maintains a busy concert schedule in the Big Easy, Barnes has become the voice and face of the music of New Orleans, which is how she earned the trademarked moniker “The Songbird of New Orleans.” Performing on “NCIS: New Orleans” plus a bevy of appearances in the pages of national magazines while maintaining a constant presence in local media – newspapers, magazines and television – has enabled Barnes’ robust, exposed and lusty-voiced “Songbird Sessions” to waft near and far, connecting with and delighting listeners fond of her intimate versions of jazz standards and gems made famous by two of her iconic New Orleans role models, Allen Toussaint and Irma Thomas.                

Winner of Offbeat magazine’s Outstanding Millennial in Music Award, Barnes has received accolades from Forbes, Ebony, Southern Living, Travel + Leisure, ESPN and Southwest Magazine. Thriving on the national scene with the new collection is her top priority, which is why she was in New York City last week to meet with managers, agents and venues excited to showcase the siren that brings freshness, authenticity, passion and enthusiasm to her vintage jazz repertoire. 

On top of her weekend residencies at the Hotel Monteleone and Windsor Court Hotel Polo Club Lounge in the Crescent City, Barnes will launch a four-week Wednesday night residency at the Maple Leaf Bar next month and will tackle the National Anthem at the Superdome prior to the New Orleans Saints vs. Carolina Panthers contest on October 16. 



Marini's on 57 Launches Its Third Chill Out Album: Sunset Hours Vol.3

Launch of Sunset Hours Vol.3 with Modesto Marini, Founder of The Marini's Group, and producer Simon Mills.
Marini's on 57 hits another milestone with the launch of Sunset Hours Vol.3 at Savannah Ibiza, on the famous Sunset Strip in San Antonio. Sunset Hours Vol.3 is curated and produced by Simon Mills (one half of electronic duo Bent), featuring an original track "Interstellar Joyride" produced specifically for Marini's on 57. This track showcases Mills' signature up-tempo tunes with morphological downtempo electronica beats.

Interbreeding much of the ethereal vibe that typically transcends through his music, Sunset Hours Vol.3 envelops listeners and transports them on a fantastical journey through Marini's on 57 with eclectic chill-out vibes throughout the entire album. 

"Listening to the albums should transport you into the realm of pure chill and melodic intoxication whether it's over a glass of champagne with friends or just lounging on a breezy afternoon. Those who have experienced the palpable night energy of Marini's on 57 will already appreciate the role that music plays in the creation of the perfect atmosphere. My hope is that these albums will allow others to come on this musical journey with us," said Modesto Marini, Founder of The Marini's Group.

Joining the realm of world-class global chill-out albums, Sunset Hours Vol.3 made its debut in Ibiza with DJ Simon Mills and Marini's on 57 resident DJ and music director Jeff Jefferson. Joined by music legend Jose Padilla, new greats Chris Coco, Rob Roar, Phil Dockerty, Pete Gooding, and the Mambo Brothers, it was an event full of non-stop hits.

Speaking about his inspiration for the album, DJ Simon Mills said, "For 'Interstellar Joyride' I thought about the incredible views from Marini's on 57; the first thing that hit me was the city lights twinkling away against the blackness, and the dramatic view of the Petronas Towers. I wanted it to sound tropical and sunny, with the listener imagining themselves with a nice cold drink in their hand as they watched the sun go down over Kuala Lumpur City."

A must have album for music revellers, Sunset Hours Vol.3 boasts feel good energy, rhythm and ecstatic drops to turn-up the heat for any chill-out occasion. Sunset Hours Vol.3 is available from 9 September 2016 at Marini's on 57 and selected stores in Ibiza.

Multi-award winning Marini's on 57 is Malaysia's most iconic rooftop destination, and sits 876ft above sea level in the heart of Kuala Lumpur City. A beacon for international celebrities, tourists, and socialites since its opening in June 2012, Marini's on 57 never fails to impress visitors with her unparalleled views of Kuala Lumpur, level of service, and exceptional contemporary Italian cuisine.

Housing the most extensive cigar and whisky collection in Malaysia, the venue comprises of three distinct spaces [the restaurant, the lounge, the bar], each designed to encapsulate and project different moods and energy to enthral all five senses.

Marini's on 57 is also the only luxury F&B venue in Malaysia to have release their own Sunset Hours compilation albums with music greats Jose Padilla, Chris Coco, Afterlife, and Simon Mills.



Free Nelson MandoomJazz Ups the Ante on The Organ Grinder as new release slams with more authority and an expanded vision for the group

With the release of 2013's double EP/The Shape of Doomjazz To Come/Saxophone Giganticus, the renegade Scottish trio Free Nelson MandoomJazz laid out its musical manifesto in bone-crunching terms and followed up in 2014 with the equally potent Awakening of a Capital. Both recordings showcased the Edinburgh-based musicians Colin Stewart (bass), Paul Archibald (drums) and Rebecca Sneddon (alto sax) in a provocative blend of doom metal and free jazz, influenced principally by such artists as Black Sabbath, Electric Wizard, Sun Ra, Sonny Rollins, Albert Ayler and Wayne Shorter.

The band's sound has progressed with each new recording, and now with The Organ Grinder they take it up a couple of notches. While retaining the same intensely throbbing core that is at the heart of Free MandoomJazz music, the addition of trumpeter Luc Klein and trombonist Patrick Darley on a few tracks brings new colors and textures to the proceedings. This is a bigger, bolder vision for the group without forsaking its punk-jazz essence.

"One major difference with this album is the space we recorded in," says drummer Archibald. "Before any writing took place, the first thing we decided on was the space-a 218-seat Victorian venue built in 1859. The Reid Hall is a huge space with tons of natural reverb, and our starting point for each song was 'what would sound good in this room? We worked closely with the sound engineer, Seamus Connacher."

Regarding the more focused intensity and aggressive attack heard on the core trio tracks throughout The Organ Grinder, Archibald says it's a natural development that came with time and bandstand experience. "Gigging has helped, listening to each other and seeing the reaction to certain songs. I think it comes individually, living apart, playing in different projects, and coming back together to see what we've all experienced. It keeps things fresh and gives us time away to think about direction. I know bands that tour all the time, get super polished but often struggle to find time to not play, but to compose and consider where they would like to go musically. We're the opposite of that, though there must be a happy balance somewhere!"

Bassist Stewart expounds on the notion of how the trio has grown since its incarnation. "The initial concept of the band was quite straightforward: doomjazz. 'Let's see if we can combine these two seemingly disparate genres'. But I think since then we've developed a lot in terms of what we can each bring to the group." Saxophonist Sneddon agrees that the band's approach to composition has definitely evolved since the first EP and Awakening of a Capital. "Each of us has taken a more collaborative role in writing for all instruments, not just our own. I think we all have a strong desire to push the boundaries of our own instruments, which creates limitless possibilities in composition. So our overall approach has matured, and with this album we all felt like we needed to break out of some of the structures of the previous releases."

The idea of adding trumpet and trombone for some track on The Organ Grinder also came about organically. "All three of us have worked with Luc Klein before in various jazz/blues projects," says Archibald. "We first met in 2010-2011. For some years now he's been living in Amsterdam as part of the jazz scene there. One of my earliest ideas for the album was that I wanted to do a take on 'Calcutta Cutie' by Horace Silver. We needed a trumpet for the head so I asked Luc to join us for that track. Luc came over for the whole period we were recording and ended up hanging out during rehearsals, our time in the Reid Hall, and the time in-between. We noticed quite early on that his personality was rubbing off on us as a group so we invited him to jam on some of the tracks we were rehearsing. He even wrote a song for us, which we liked and kept ('LORA')." He explains, "As for trombone, I had always wanted Patrick Darley on the album but was determined to wait until the right spot on the album came up. I love the sound of a trombone, and Paddy loves exploring what sounds and noises the instrument can make. When Luc wrote his song he incorporated trombone because he knew Paddy was playing (he knows him too!). The band met Paddy around the same time as we met Luc. We both have the same taste in jazz music and recently took a trip to New Orleans together. Paddy plays in many bands around Edinburgh; he makes a personal study of early trad jazz players."

Adds Stewart, "Luc was there while the songs were being written for the most part and it became obvious that his knowledge of us, as people and players as well as the sound of the band and what we wanted to achieve, was going to be invaluable. I hadn't initially included parts for him on any of the tracks I started but Luc is an 'ideas-man' and he certainly helped to shape the album, including his playing on this album, which I think is incredible."

Sneddon has equally high praise for the special guests on The Organ Grinder. "Having Luc's second opinion and creative input really helped with the clarity of tracks, and introducing trumpet into our sound was a fun and interesting step. When I conceived 'The Woods' and workshopped it with Colin and Paul, it was lacking something -- a hole which Paddy filled nicely. It was excellent timing, with Paddy only having recently arrived back in Edinburgh. His subtlety and inventiveness in playing really added to that track."

The introduction of piano on the Horace Silver tune "Calcutta Cutie" and organ on "Om" (both played by Archibald) was another new touch to the recording. "One advantage to using the Reid Hall was that it is an active classical concert venue with lots of instruments," explains Archibald. "I was excited to get access to these instruments and incorporate them when was appropriate. We obviously needed a piano for 'Calcutta Cutie' and there was a beautiful concert grand already there. The 'ting' sound you hear almost immediately at the start of that song was actually an old celesta in the corner. As for the organ, it dominated the space the moment we walked in. A 21-stop 2-manual German organ built by Jürgen Ahrend in 1978, it's considered to be one of the finest of its kind in the UK. It fills the room and is high above you as you record. It was just 'there' the whole time, and it just needed to be heard!"

Archibald adds that the idea of including Horace Silver cover, "Calcutta Cutie," was an easy choice. "Horace Silver is a very important artist to me. He's what got me listening to jazz in the first place. Of my five favourite albums in the world, two are his."

And Stewart says, "I'm definitely the least jazz literate of the group but Horace Silver really helped me to get into the genre as a whole and I think it's just because a lot of those riffs as you could call them are really memorable and get stuck in your head. I guess in that sense there is a parallel with the rock and metal stuff we like so much as well. I'm a sucker for a good riff in any genre."

"I've known about Paul's love for Horace Silver for a while, so I guess it was inevitable that he suggests this track," says Sneddon. "Luckily, I'm also a fan, and as a horn player it's always fun to play these tunes, especially with Luc on board. I was initially unsure as to how it would fit in on the album, but Paul convinced me that the tune was 'doomy' enough, and in context alongside our jazzier tracks I think it works well."

Sneddon also contributes the compelling, atmospheric piece "The Woods." Says Archibald, "We each have one on this album (a first for us, where usually everything is equally-composed). Mine is 'You Are Old, Father William' and Colin's is 'Shapeshifter' (Luc's is 'LORA'). Becca had given me instructions as to what she wanted, mostly in metaphors, but very helpful."

Currently, the three core members of Free Nelson MandoomJazz, who formed in Edinburgh, Scotland, are scattered to three different spots on the globe -- Rebecca in Bristol, Colin in Abu Dhabi and Paul in Edinburgh. "It's very easy to collaborate nowadays even when we're far away," says "Archibald. "We come together on average for two/three sessions per year, one European Tour and then for another shorter thing, a festival, or a one-off big performance somewhere. And perhaps a recording. This has been the format for the past two years. We will be doing our third European Tour this September, doubling as an album launch, and we are booked for a festival in Gdansk (Festiwal Jazz Jantar) in November. And maybe something further afield after that."

Stay tuned for the further adventures of this mighty triumvirate. They may be coming to a jazz festival near you. Meanwhile, dig The Organ Grinder.

TRACKS
1. Open The Gate
2. You Are Old, Father William
3. Funambule
4. The Woods 
5. Calcutta Cutie
6. LORA
7. Bicycle Day 
8. Inferno Pt. 1 
9. Shapeshifter


TONY MORENO'S SHORT STORIES - Hurricane 'Sandy' Victim Reclaims His Artistic Life with Group Collaboration Recording. A Story of Loss and Recovery

Born in Manhattan, Tony Moreno, was raised by his mother, Nina Dunkel Moreno, who was considered one of the great American harpists of her day, as well as an accomplished pianist, musicologist and teacher. His early upbringing proved a perfect backdrop to pursue a career in music. By the age of three, Moreno began playing the piano. By the age of ten, he received his first drum set from Elvin Jones.

Jones became Moreno's early mentor and teacher. In later years, other teachers included Art Blakey, Al "Tootie" Heath, James Priess, Freddie Waits and Bob Moses.

When Hurricane Sandy hit the East Coast shore in 2012, Moreno lost his entire musical life - his instruments, possessions, the library of his compositions and treasured, archival possessions bequeathed from his mother.

"After Hurricane Sandy destroyed my studio, I was offered a monthly residency at The 55 Bar for the Quintet," says Moreno. "This record is a way of expressing my gratitude for the outstanding support and love I received within the music community - from colleagues, organizations and fans alike."

"The band is made up of artistic companions who have performed together over four years," the drummer explains. "Since I lost my drum set, I purchased a small keyboard and began composing again. It was, of course, cathartic. It was time to document the group. We had enough music for two CDs. I had to clean the slate and move on."

This record, featuring Marc Mommaas, Ron Horton, Jean-Michel Pilc and Ugonna Okegwo, represents the rebuilding process of Tony Moreno's shattered life. Re-assembling the pieces seemed impossible but soon it began taking shape.

On October 8th the Quintet will celebrate the record release of Short Stories at the 55 Bar in New York City with two sets at 9.30 pm and 11.30 pm. With admission, every guest will receive a double-disc album for free.

Moreno teaches at New York University's Jazz Performance Program and Columbia University's Louis Armstrong Jazz Studies Program as well as at City College of New York. He has performed and toured extensively. The drummer lived and worked in Europe for six years, and appeared on over 100 recordings, as well as television, DVDs and radio broadcasts.

Moreno has recorded with the likes of Jaki Byard, Dave Liebman, Ravi Coltrane, Art Lande, Richie Beirach, Chris Potter, and has performed with Eddie Gomez, Arthur Blythe, Sonny Fortune, Eddie Henderson, Mal Waldron, Barry Harris, Richard Bona, Paul Bley and Elvin Jones, to name just a few.

Tony Moreno endorses Paiste Cymbals and plays Sonor Hi Lites, Pro Lites and Q2 drums.

TRACKS
Disc 1
1.    Foxy Trot / Kenny Wheeler
2.    Little One / Marc Mommaas
3.    The West's Best / Tony Moreno
4.    Erroll Garner / Tony Moreno
5.    55 Scotch / Tony Moreno / arranged by Ron Horton (For Cueva Lutz)
6.    Susan's Dream / Tony Moreno / arranged by Marc Mommaas (For My Wife Susan)
7.    No Blues To You / Tony Moreno
8.    C Jam Blues / Duke Ellington / arranged by Arte Lande and his students at C.U. Boulder

Disc 2
1.    Three For D'reen / Kenny Wheeler
2.    Oh Henry / Tony Moreno / arranged by Marc Mommaas
3.    Grovelling / Ron Horton
4.    El Rey / Tony Moreno / arranged by Marc Mommaas (For Elvin Raymond Jones and Keiko Jones)
5.    M.O. / Tony Moreno (For Miles Okazaki)
6.    Pueblo De Lagrimas / Tony Moreno (For Ketil Bjørnstad)
7.    El Rey Take #2 / Tony Moreno (Duos/Trios)


The New Recording From Frank Carlberg's Word Circus - No Money In Art Featuring Frank Carlberg with Christine Correa, John O'Gallagher, Pascal Niggenkemper & Michael Sarin

Brooklyn-based Red Piano Records has announces the release of No Money In Art by Frank Carlberg's Word Circus. This album features a stellar quintet of jazz and improvised music heavy-hitters such as Christine Correa, voice; John O'Gallagher, alto sax; Pascal Niggenkemper, bass; Michael Sarin, drums and Carlberg on piano. Word Circus is a collection of musical settings of poems by contemporary American writers such as Ron Padgett, Jim Gustafson, Ken Mikolowski and Anselm Hollo. Carlberg gives some insight in to the background of Word Circus: "This project, my 11th CD devoted to settings of poetry, is a follow-up release to the 2015 Word Circus recording. Poems on No Money In Art are thought provoking and range from light and humorous to existential musings, and to meditative ruminations on the state of our world. No Money In Art is the culmination in my work with American poets, which has continued uninterrupted for the past twenty-plus years, beginning with the release of The Crazy Woman on Accurate Records in 1995." 

The songs on No Money In Art were written for this Quintet, which has, with a few modifications, been around since Carlberg's earliest works with poetry in the mid-1990s. About the vocalist Christine Correa Carlberg explains: "Christine is the main reason for the existence of this group and this repertoire; my muse as it were. I have by now written over 150 songs with poems by writers such as Robert Creeley, Anselm Hollo, Anna Akhmatova, Rabindranath Tagore, Kenneth Rexroth, Allen Ginsberg, Alejandra Pizarnik, etc, as well as various other texts such as excerpts from Bill Clinton's Grand Jury testimony, fragments from medical journals, pieces from legal documents, cut-up versions of the Bill Of Rights, etc. All this work would never have happened had I not had a voice to compose for. Christine provided me with that voice. She was able to execute whatever lines I would dream up and she was able to infuse the words with such powerful expression and emotion. The rest of the group has remained remarkably stable as well with drummer Michael Sarin working with us since the In The Land Of Art project (on Fresh Sound New Talent) in the late 90's. John O'Gallagher has worked with us since the Uncivilized Rumination CD about 6 years ago. Pascal Niggenkemper is a relative newcomer who stepped in to this project after longtime collaborator John Hébert was unable to participate because of scheduling conflicts. This group is really a dream come true for me as these musicians are all completely committed to the music, while bringing such strong personalities and remarkable musicianship to the plate. A real composer's paradise."

The compositions for Word Circus/No Money In Art were commissioned by Chamber Music America through their New Jazz Works program. 

The songs on No Money In Art cover a broad range of moods and emotions. The opening title track features Gustafson's hilarious yet insightful ruminations that in this time of Spotify and YouTube seems more relevant than ever. Art is now just to be consumed freely with no societal concern how artists are to make a living. The poem by Ken Mikolowski is from a series of poems that he wrote titled "Ecology." After a brief introduction Correa and Carlberg deliver the beginning of the setting of the poem in rubato. Soon the rest of the band joins in with a few tempo switches including fast swing and a hint at a 12/8 groove. The text finally reaches the title of the text with Correa in full voice. O'Gallagher takes over with an intense and soulful solo statement ably supported by the rhythm section before Correa re-enters for a final recap. For The Nail the pace slows down to an almost country-western cowboy feel (reminiscent of some grooves that Shelly Manne and his groups used to incorporate in their music), with a wistful, yet playful, poem by Ron Padgett. A delicate piece delivered to perfection by Correa, it features Carlberg's piano before the voice and sax return in perfect unison to provide support to Carlberg's solo. After the return of the melody O'Gallagher has a few more fleeting thoughts before the piece evaporates in to the ether. On Banner Spangled Star, with a poem by Ken Mikolowski, we are treated to a reconstruction of the text to the "Star Spangled Banner." The setting has a loping cyclical feel with neither a beginning nor an end. O'Gallagher takes the improvisational spotlight with his characteristic energy and invention. Headline Haiku starts with a rhythmic unison figure before piano and Rhodes depart on whimsical excursions. Correa and Carlberg eventually settle in to the aphoristic text by Anselm Hollo, which is sung in a new tempo, creating a moment of Ivesian flavor with multiple strata. After joyful solo statements by Niggenkemper and Carlberg the whole band convenes on a lively almost circus-like jaunt that leads us back to the final melody statement. The mood slows down on Clarification, a duo piece with Correa and Carlberg. The acerbic wit of Hollo's text; "Not buying you/just buying you a drink," is performed with great restraint, creating a sense of melancholy. Carlberg solos on Rhodes with a fitting delicacy. Verbal Scenario is a funky romp that centers on a repeated D in the melody. The obliquely coherent text (by Mikolowski) is briefly interrupted by Correa's howling vocalizations. The solos over a cantankerous off-kilter form build throughout the piano solo in to the climax of the sax solo. A short repeat phrase in unison closes the piece. The last song, Nothing with its haunting text, "Nothing/can replace/poetry/in my life/and one day/surely/it will," places Correa remarkable vocals front and center. After an alap-like improvisational voice introduction the chant-like melody is stated with stately grace. Carlberg provides solo piano commentary before the final melody statement delivered with a hint of resignation and sadness, but no melodramatic emoting, just a powerful end to the program.

With No Money In Art, his 11th recording of settings of poetry and text, Carlberg continues his explorations of the connecting points between poetry and music. Not since the remarkable oeuvre of the late great Steve Lacy has there been such a sustained and satisfying effort in creating connections between these two spectacular art forms. May No Money In Art receive wide attention, as the music is accessible yet intelligently constructed and brilliantly performed by a long-standing ensemble that is intimately familiar with the music as well as each other.

www.frankcarlberg.com


Friday, September 02, 2016

NEW RELEASES: JOSE MAURO - OBNOXIOUS; JACK TEMPCHIN – ONE MORE SONG; NINA SIMONE – WHAT HAPPENED, MS. SIMONE? (DVD+CD)

JOSE MAURO - OBNOXIOUS

Today, very little is known about Jose Mauro and as a result those searching for some kind of insight on the man behind the music must attempt to glean what they can from the music itself. One rumour claims he died in a car accident shortly before the album’s release, a fact that could have lent his brief musical career a touch of mythology were it not for how scant the details concerning any other aspects of his life are. The political turmoil from which the album emerged is significant also; recorded during an era of oppressive state censorship, the album, like all the Quartin catalogue, is the result of steadfast defiance in the face of a crushing military dictatorship. While many musicians of the era fled the country, preferring their prospects in the affluent, liberated USA, rebellious, young musicians like Mauro chose to stay and reflect their anger at the authorities through thinly veiled protest songs such as the stirring ‘Apocalipse’. Herein lies the basis for a more dramatic theory; that Mauro was in fact abducted by the military! Whatever the truth, the mystery remains unsolved, and all that remains is his bewitching music. 

Today, Obnoxious retains its strange, otherworldly appeal – A firm favourite amongst a small circle of deep diggers including Madlib, Gilles Peterson and Floating Points. Jose Mauro’s mournful and melancholic vocals create a dark, brooding atmosphere that stands in contrast to the usual joyfulness and high-spirited rhythm of the more prominent Brazilian music of the era. Despite this air of foreboding, Mauro’s confident baritones, chord patterns and sumptuous arrangements have the ability to induce in the listener an almost trance-like state of ecstasy. Mauro’s long hidden masterpiece, a complex and uniquely stunning work is being offered the chance to be heard by the wider audience it has always deserved. A second Jose Mauro release, A Viagem Des Horas, compiling more incredible tracks unreleased in Mauro’s lifetime, will follow, alongside other unreleased jewels from the Quartin catalogue, from the likes of Piri and Victor Assis Brasil.

JACK TEMPCHIN – ONE MORE SONG

Jack Tempchin is known for penning some of the most durable tunes in American music, including hits with such artists as the Eagles (“Peaceful Easy Feeling” and “Almost Gone”), George Jones, Glenn Frey, Glen Campbell, and many others. “The threads that weave through Tempchin’s earlier work and his newer material are the quality office narrative storytelling and the crystalline musical sound of every one of the songs.” - No Depression – Includes: Slow Dancing; Singing In The Streets; Old River; Around Midnight; Circle Ties That Bind; So Long My Friend; Still Looking For A Way To Say Goodbye; Streets Of Midnight; I Got Her Right Where She Wants Me; Song For You; and Tumbleweed.


NINA SIMONE – WHAT HAPPENED, MS. SIMONE? (DVD+CD)

Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary at the 2016 Oscars, Best Music Film at the 2016 Grammy Awards, and winning Best Documentary at the American Film Institute Awards in 2016, documentary film What Happened, Miss Simone? connected with critics and fans alike with its deep examination of the legendary Nina Simone. Available as a DVD+CD, Blu-ray+CD, and on Digital Formats, with additional bonus interviews not included in the main film. CD includes: I Loves You Porgy; Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood; I Put A Spell On You; Strange Fruit; Sinnerman; Mississippi Goddam; Little Girl Blue; Don't Smoke In Bed; My Baby Just Cares For Me; Lilac Wine; Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair; Night Song; Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out; Feeling Good; and Ne Me Quitte Pas.     

      

Vocalist Sara Serpa and Guitarist André Matos Release All the Dreams, an Album Rich in Melody and Luminous Atmosphere

The reception for Primavera - the first album by the duo of vocalist Sara Serpa and guitarist André Matos - was rapturous, with reviews for the 2014 release using such apt descriptors as "enchanting" (The New Yorker), "breathtaking" (JazzTimes) and "spellbinding" (All About Jazz). The New York Times praised Primavera at length, calling the album "calmly stunning" while adding that the pair's music "capitalizes on their many affinities: as limber improvisers, as thoughtful composers, as selfless ensemble players, and as internationalists hailing originally from Portugal (by way of Boston and New York)Š Primavera is gemlike in its beauty and precision." Now, Serpa & Matos present their second duo album, the gorgeous All the Dreams, to be released September 16, 2016, via Sunnyside Records.

As with Primavera - which All About Jazz lauded for being "sonically lustrous," with an "intricate melodic sense" - the new All the Dreams glimmers with luminous melodicism and magical atmosphere, the music again casting a spell. The sound of All the Dreams mixes the organic and the electronic seamlessly, with Serpa and Matos playing multiple acoustic and electric instruments along with using the studio as an instrument; several tracks also feature Billy Mintz on drums and Pete Rende on ambient, Eno/Budd-like synthesizers. Along with Serpa's signature wordless vocalese and the duo's own lyrics, there are songs that draw on words of great poets, both Portuguese and English. Atmosphere and image, poetry and melody - this is the stuff of which All the Dreams is made.

The title of the album comes from its lovely song "Nada," which features universalist lines by the Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa (via his heteronym Álvaro de Campos): "I am nothing, I shall never be anything / I cannot even wish to be anything. / Despite all that, I have within me all the dreams of the world." The title phrase also appears in the poetry of Walt Whitman, a key influence on Pessoa: "I dream in my dream all the dreams of the other dreamers / And I become the other dreamers." These words mirror the feelings of creative reverie Serpa and Matos had while composing the music for the album. The singer says: "We felt that this music was making us dream and disconnect somehow from the reality of the outside world - and that seemed to be a positive feeling. For us, to be able to work in this dreamlike state of mind is fundamental to staying creative and happy." 

About the leap from Primavera to the even more accomplished All the Dreams, Matos says: "Primavera planted a seed for us. Our duo identity developed throughout the making of that first album, and with the new one, we knew more about how to use the studio to our advantage. We wanted to pay even more attention to detail - sound, texture, words. We didn't hesitate to depart from a 'duo sound' and do whatever it took to get the right feel for each song, whether through sonically multiplying ourselves or developing the sounds we produced. The mixing and post-production process was more intensive this time, and we did things like reverse the vocals on 'amlaC.' Pete Rende played such an important role in this, not only adding synthesizers to a few tracks but mixing the album, too. It's hard to imagine the album without his contribution."

As for the contribution of veteran drummer Billy Mintz, Matos adds: "We met Billy a few years ago, and he has become an important musician for me. He was super-meticulous in the studio, and the results are amazing, like pure gold. His dedication to music is inspiring, and his playing gives the record a nice contour. With Billy, there's a search for a primal beat, playing almost like a child in the sense of being free. But at the same, he has all this knowledge and experience to apply. He is a master."

Serpa and Matos make for a kindred-spirit duo, even beyond being husband and wife. Her fresh, subtly virtuosic singing blends beautifully with his gleaming, flowing guitar playing. "We do complement each other as performers easily, with most of the songs being reducible to just voice and guitar," Matos says. "In the studio, we're able to guide each other to the best performances possible, with sometimes even the best arrangements coming after the first take. Our tunes tend to have slightly different vibes, with Sara's a bit more intricate and mine less dense, simpler. It creates a nice balance, we hope."

In addition to those of Pessoa/Campos, the songs of All the Dreams include words by his fellow Portuguese writer Luis Amaro, Brazilian poet Clarice Lispector and the great Englishman William Blake, as well as lyrics by Serpa and Matos. There are songs about night, dreams and the imagination, about accepting sadness and offering forgiveness, about identity and empathy, about love and memory. Even the songs without words impart a sense of mystery and romance, with Serpa singing vocalese on such gems as the opening "Calma." One of the album's other, lyrical highlights is "Lisboa," Serpa's tune-rich paean to the ancient capital of Portugal. "The words stem from something a taxi driver once told me about Lisbon having 14,000 streets, alleys and staircases - and all those reflecting so many memories, for me, for everyone who has lived there," Serpa says. "Because I live in America now, the city is distant from me, but somehow it remains so close to my heart. Every time I return to Lisbon, the memories come flooding back, the sense of place and time so strong. And music can evoke feelings of time and place - of memory - like little else in art."

JazzTimes has called Serpa "a rising star," while All About Jazz has said: "Her unique style of vocalese allows her to utilize the full range of her exquisite and clear voice with the agility of an instrumentalist, standing out of the crowd as a sublime interpreter and a bold improviser." The New York Times has described Matos as a guitarist who "advances a pointedly contemporary air." Both born and bred in Portugal but based in New York City for nearly a decade, Serpa and Matos met through music in Boston, where they both studied at the Berklee College of Music and New England Conservatory. 

Serpa and Matos each have long associations with some of the most important musicians in jazz. Serpa studied with iconic pianist Ran Blake, with whom she has recorded two albums, Camera Obscura (2010) and Kitano Noir (2015). Serpa joined saxophonist Greg Osby's band right out of school in 2008, performing with the group at such hallowed venues as the Village Vanguard and contributing to his album 9 Levels. Osby's Inner Circle Music label also released Serpa's debut album as a leader, Praia (2008), and her quintet album Mobile (2011), along with Camera Obscura. Inner Circle released Matos's third album, Quare (2010), and Osby also contributed sax to their duo debut, Primavera. Individually and together, Serpa and Matos have performed with such prominent musicians as John Zorn, Danilo Perez, Guillermo Klein, Tyshawn Sorey, Dan Weiss, Leo Genovese and Thomas Morgan, among others. Beyond their duo together, Serpa leads such projects as her vocal group City Fragments, while Matos leads a trio featuring saxophonist Tony Malaby and drummer Billy Mintz.

Sara Serpa & André Matos: All the Dreams

1. "Calma" (Matos)
2. "A La Montagne" (Serpa)
3. "Estado De Graça" (Matos)
4. "Story Of A Horse" (Matos)
5. "Programa" (Serpa/Amaro)
6. "Água" (Matos)
7. "Nada" (Matos/Campos)
8. "Night" (Matos/Blake)
9. "Hino" (Matos)
10. "Lisboa" (Serpa)
11. "Espelho" (Matos)
12. "Os Outros" (Serpa/Lispector)
13. "Postlude" (Matos)
14. "amlaC" (Matos/Rende)

Sara Serpa: voice, piano (5, 9, 10), Fender Rhodes (4, 7)
André Matos: guitar, electric bass (1, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 11), percussion (11)
Pete Rende: synthesizer (1, 4, 14)
Billy Mintz: drums and percussion (1, 3, 6, 10)

Produced by Sara Serpa & André Matos
Recorded at The Bunker Studio (Todd and Andy), Estúdios Valentim de Carvalho (by Nélson Carvalho) and Eastside Sound (Marc Urselli); mixed by Pete Rende; mastered by Nate Wood


MILI BERMEJO AND DAN GREENSPAN CONFIRM THEIR MASTERY IN ARTE DEL DUO

Since first joining forces over a quarter-century ago, vocalist Mili Bermejo and bassist Dan Greenspan have created a recorded library of timeless music with a number of cherished partners.  For those fortunate enough to experience them in live performance, however, the lingering memory of this brilliantly skilled and totally compatible couple is likely to be the moments when they stand alone.  "We have always wanted to make pure music," Greenspan explains, "and have always included duo tunes in our sets."  On October 7, 2016 the pair releases their first all-duo program in two decades, Arte de Duo, on Ediciones Pentagrama.

Bermejo, born in Buenos Aires, raised in Mexico City and a professor at Berklee College of Music since 1984, and Greenspan, a New Haven native and classically trained cellist who became one of the Boston area's leading freelance bassists, have created a unique body of music that applies jazz improvisation to original songs and music from throughout the Americas.  Themes of political liberation, environmental responsibility and interpersonal commitment have defined both their music and their career and led them to a major life decison.  "The business changed so much post-9/11 that we had to decide whether we should reinvent ourselves," Bermejo notes.  This led to what Greenspan describes as "an entire creative undertaking of another kind" - a move to New Hampshire, where the couple built their own house.

"We decided to live the right way," Bermejo says of their relocation to a nature reserve.  "It has brought us closer and closer to `do it yourself,' including growing as much of our own food and making as many of our own clothes as possible.  It has purified us, and removed many of our frustrations."  But, Greenspan adds, "For a while, the move replaced music.  Finding opportunities to rehearse in Boston when everyone we worked with had so many other gigs became hell."  The bassist also turned his attention to baking and has built a growing reputation with his Dan's Brick Oven Bread, while a construction accident also left him unable to play for several months.  The future of their performing partnership became unclear.

"But Mili insisted that we couldn't let the music go," Greenspan stresses, and the result is a new focus on the intimate artistry that had previously only been showcased on their 1997 album Duo which was released on Gunther Schuller's GM Records.  "It got us back to the essence of art," he says, "and provides the best opportunity to use all of the classical information that we have."  Yet the new music, developed over a series of monthly gigs at the Lilypad in Cambridge, Massachusetts, takes the pair beyond their previous achievements.  "We didn't want to repeat ourselves," Bermejo adds.  "Now we reduce.  I think of the music like my garden, as being all about beauty after years of work.  And nobody told me how to do it."

The influence of life in New Hampshire is clear in the Bermejo originals "La Casa del Arbol" ("The Tree House"), about "a secret refugeŠamong trees and stars" and "Cosecha" ("Harvest"); but she also contributes two new titles in her string of beautiful love songs, "Los que se Aman" ("Those Who Love") and "No Dejo de Quererte" ("I Don't Stop Loving You").  The duo also links Bermejo's "Décima Muerte I" from their first duo disc and "Décima Muerte II" by the Mexican poet and playwright Xavier Villarrutiga in a medley linked by a powerful Greenspan solo.

Greenspan's bass also launches "Las Orillas del Mar" ("At the Edge of the Sea"), a 13th Century feminist poem with music by Hafez Modirzadeh, the composer-saxophonist who featured Bermejo extensively on his acclaimed 2011 album In Convergence Liberation (Pi Recordings).  "Working with Hafez is the most challenging thing I've done," she notes, "and it has opened both of our minds.  Now I'm improvising more, though not `taking a chorus' in the traditional sense."  This new improvisational freedom is joyously displayed on "Tres Veces Heroica" ("Three Times Heroic"), written by Mexican composer Charlie Dríguez and previously heard on the 2006 live recording De Tierra (Of Earth) (Ediciones Pentagrama), and "End of the Beginning," written for the duo by the Armenian-born pianist and composer Vardan Ovsepian.  "Windmills of Your Mind," by French composer Michel Legrand with Spanish lyrics by Manuel Gurria, was also arranged by Ovsepian.  "Vardan's arrangement got Dan back in shape after his injury," Bermejo notes, adding with a laugh, "it also made me get back in shape."

Two works from Argentina are included, "Equipaje" ("Luggage") by Juan Quintero and "Cambalache" ("Pawn Shop") by E. Santos Discépolo.  The latter, a classic tango, gives Greenspan the opportunity to display his skill with the bow. "Candombe para Gardel" ("Candombe for Gardel"), a tribute to Argentinian tango master Carlos Gardel from the Afro-Uruguayan perspective of Rubén Rada, completes the program.

Arte del Duo is Bermejo's fifth release on Mexico's Ediciones Pentagrama label, which recently received the Independence Award from the Fundación Mediterránea Mar y Tierra in Tarragona, Spain.  "We've stayed faithful to the vision of [label founder] Modesto López: Independence and 35 years of support to Latin American artists dedicated to progressive social change," she notes.

The album will be released at the Lilypad on Sunday afternoon, October 23, where a new audio system created especially for the duo by sound engineer Art Steele will enhance the performance.  "I asked Art for a minimal system, with just two small speakers, Greenspan explains.  "Now my hands are free, just like my mother's were when she sang," Bermejo adds.

Creativity, and the magic that ensues, remain at the heart of Mili Bermejo's and Dan Greenspan's music; and Arte del Duo is their most creative and magical statement to date.



New album from RESOLUTION 88 - AFTERGLOW

You can hear it right from the first notes of the opening track. It’s instantly clear that Resolution 88 have really made these last two years count, since making waves with their début album. There’s the same energy, freshness and warm, analog soundscape of the first album but now there’s even more power and maturity to their music.

Afterglow will have existing Resolution 88 fans grinning from ear to ear, whilst it will appeal to many new music lovers too. There’s the same gritty jazz funk sound, elements of broken beat and hip hop and the whole record is drenched in the unmistakable sound of Tom O’Grady’s suitcase Rhodes. Comparisons have been made with Herbie Hancock’s Headhunters, Weather Report, Jeff Lorber Fusion and many other bands. It’s easy to hear why, and there’s more - Resolution 88’s music has a fresh quality that hails their new perspective as well as paying their dues. There’s definitely a crossover with groundbreaking modern bands such as Haitus Kaiyote.

Each band member gets their moments to shine in this album, which features the band leader and composer Tom O’Grady on keys, Tiago Coimbra on bass, Alex Hitchcock on reeds (saxophones and bass clarinet) and Ric Elsworth on drums and percussion. That’s not all; the music was captured, mixed and mastered by exactly the same team as usual. Chris Taylor and Andy Ramsay engineered the recording sessions, Dan ‘JD73’ Goldman (ex-Morcheeba) mixed the music and Bob Power (The Roots, D’Angelo, Erykah Badu etc) mastered the music. Their inimitable skills and characteristic sounds imprints a cinematic quality on the whole record - this album is a beautiful experience to savor, from start to finish.

“An album that is beautifully crafted and captivating listening throughout!” - Bluey (Incognito).


Guitar Legend And Singer Robert Randolph Signs To Sony Music Masterworks

Sony Music Masterworks signs Robert Randolph & The Family Band, led by pedal steel guitar legend, Robert Randolph. One of the biggest funk, rock and soul bands of the past decade will return with a powerful new record in early 2017. The album will feature guest artists Darius Rucker, Anthony Hamilton and Cory Henry. This is their first album in three years and will be supported by a national tour.

Robert Randolph & The Family Band first gained national attention with the release of their debut album, Live at the Wetlands in 2002. The band followed with three studio recordings over the next eight years; Unclassified, Colorblind, and We Walk This Road; which, together with tireless touring and unforgettable performances at such festivals as Bonnaroo, Austin City Limits, and the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, won them a very passionate fan base. Randolph's unprecedented prowess on his instrument garnered him a spot on Rolling Stone's "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" list, and also gained the attention of artists like Eric Clapton, Dave Matthews, The Roots, and Jack White, who have since collaborated with Randolph on stage and in the studio.


Monterey Jazz Festival 2016 Brings the Late Thomas Chapin Full Circle Through Documentary Film from 'Olena Media, Chapin Finally "Plays" 20 Years after Canceling Due to Illness

The significance of performing at the Monterey Jazz Festival can not be understated. The longest-running jazz festival in the world features the best of jazz through performance and education. It hosts unparalleled world talent and legends and stands as a legacy to this musical genre, and  impacts future generations of jazz musicians and afficionados alike.
Thomas Chapin Film at the Monterey Jazz Festival

It would have been a momentous milestone for the career of saxophonist-flutist and composer Thomas Chapin and an unforgettable, exhilarating ride for the audience if he had been able to play with his Trio back in 1997. At the peak of his form, he was booked to play for the festival's 40th anniversary.

After standout appearances on other big world jazz stages in New York, Newport, Europe, Japan, and Canada, the Thomas Chapin Trio was ready to play Monterey in the fall of 1997. Regrettably Chapin was forced to cancel after he was diagnosed with leukemia. Thomas Chapin died months later on February 13, 1998 after he cancelled the booking. He was about to turn 41. His star was gaining altitude, rising to the pinnacle of the Monterey Jazz Festival, which would have skyrocketed him into a household name in jazz. Now, 20 years later and through the award-winning film, THOMAS CHAPIN, NIGHT BIRD SONG, this unknown jazz virtuoso will finally come full circle and "play" Monterey.

For his two decades of performing, Chapin was a force, a player with "massive chops," whose sound was sui generis. He had an uncanny gift of melding all forms of jazz into a single body of music. His pathway of moving sound was so multi-directional, yet singular, so original, yet steeped in tradition, that the jazz community struggled to categorize him.   
Peter Watrous of the New York Times captured his extraordinary power and versatility when he described Chapin's performance in 1995: "Chapin … is a virtuoso … also one of the more schooled musicians in jazz, both technically and historically, and for his set he dug into the styles of everyone from Benny Carter to the 60's avant-gardists, screeching and howling and huffing as if this were 1964 and he was breaking the rules of jazz into pieces." 

Aidan Levy, who knew of Chapin and reviewed the film this year for JazzTimes Magazine, wrote that Chapin was "considered by some to have fundamentally expanded the boundaries of the jazz discourse."

Dan Melnick, a concert producer in the 90's with George Wein's Festival Productions and its Newport Jazz Festival spinoffs that the Thomas Chapin Trio performed for, said, "For me and many others, Thomas stood at the center of numerous disparate worlds of jazz at that time. He was a master of all forms of jazz and maybe proved that these 'schools' or 'styles' weren't so different at all."

MONTEREY FILM SCREENING
THOMAS CAPIN, NIGHT BIRD SONG, a 150-minute epic tale of this brilliant and extraordinary jazz master, will be screened at the Monterey Jazz Festival on September 18, 2016, at 4:30 pm in the Jazz Theater.

Emmy-winning filmmaker Stephanie J. Castillo's documentary tells Chapin's story using the intimate details and captivating storytelling of 45 featured musicians, promoters, music critics, friends and family. The film, which has received high acclaim from reviewers and viewers, reveals Chapin's music formation, including his six-year stint as Lionel Hampton's music director and lead alto sax. It goes on to detail Chapin's emergence as a musical force in the late 1980s in the New York downtown jazz scene. Using archival performance film and video footage, the film shows how Chapin's distinct and inimitable style helped move the music forward in the 1990s. 

The film also clearly establishes Chapin as one of the few artists of his generation to exist in both the New York City's downtown experimentalist scene and in the uptown world of traditional jazz. Fearless in his pursuit of creating an edgy, engaging, cutting-edge sound that pushed jazz forward, he was also tireless and passionate in showing his classical and mainstream influences.

Thomas Chapin was an artist who "was his own man," a "free musician," but whose music resonated loudly with the work of reed giants from an earlier age. He met his life's end way too soon, while his dreams still burned bright and his audiences yearned for more. Today, new listeners and young players seeking inspiration are discovering and playing his music. Thanks to the film, Chapin will no longer be a footnote in jazz. His indelible mark will be known for all time. 

In May 2016 in Nice, France, NIGHT BIRD SONG received the Nice International Filmmakers Festival award for Best Story. It was also nominated for Best Director of a Feature Documentary and Best Documentary at the New York City International Film Festival.


Guitarist & Composer Marcus Corbett To Release New Album “Every Little Spirit” October 2016

Much to the anticipation of music aficionados worldwide, music artist Marcus Corbett will be releasing his new album “Every Little Spirit” in October 2016! Marcus is an acoustic guitarist, singer and composer based between Marlborough, UK and Pune, Maharashtra, India. Gradually, during repeated expeditions in India over the last decade or more, having immersed himself in the fundaments of North Indian classical music Marcus has begun to reap the rewards of his involvement in the musical life of Pune, Maharashtra and Gadag in North Karnataka.

The result is a generous spirited cultural collaboration that allows his music to come to life while paying homage to the tradition he loves. Here there is ambition as two violins are at work, and as he says, “One violin may be a line drawing but two become cinema – and with the risk associated with such potential drama no one performance is the same as the last. The beautiful challenge in this search is to keep the individual cultural charm, to make the bell ring true. And to maintain the power and integrity of the music.”

“With his deep affinity with Indian classical music and his expertise in soulfully conveying its essence on the humble acoustic guitar. …where other guitar maestros have dipped their toes…. he's taken the integration a stage further and his collaboration with tabla virtuosos Nitin Gaikwad and Sharanappa Guttaragi on this disc is both fiery and rewarding.” - Fatea
On the subject of his musical influences, aside from his times in India, Marcus states, “I've been affected by John Martyn, Nick Drake, Roy Harper - anybody that makes the guitar sing or speak. John McLaughlin with the early Mahavishnu Orchestra and Shakti was a revelation as has been Jerry Garcia's soulful musicality. Recently Frank Yamma has got under my skin”.

Acclaimed producer and composer Sam Williams (Supergrass/The Go Team!) has co-produced the first track on the album, “Strung Deep” – a remix of Castanets from Marcus' previous EP release of the same name. Marcus explains how this unlikely-seeming collaboration came about:

“While mixing 'Castanets' for the last record (Strung Deep) I discovered a heartbeat in the rhythmic cycle that expressed something quintessential and more about the track. It has a breezy optimism that continues from where the album 'Strung Deep' left off. I needed a different approach, someone outside of the Indian classical world who could the sense the potential and produce it. A chance meeting with Sam Williams during which I heard some of his recent work was the catalyst to our working together. Sam has created a great rhythm led track to fit the varying time signatures and give the looping swirl a kick. He also found some words to go with the emerging vibe while keeping some essential ingredients of the original. It is a remix which contemporizes the song in a way which keeps the flavour of the original and casts new light on what I do”.

Recorded with Abhijit Saraf at Musical Stars Studio in Pune, Maharashtra; and in Gadag, Karnataka and in Oxford (UK), Corbett is accompanied for “Every Little Spirit” by tabla players Nitin Gaikwad and Sharanappa Guttaragi. The seductive vocal of renowned classical singer Saylee Talwalkar takes us into his world. The storyline unfolds amidst the masterful weave of bansuri flute player Milind Date, and is carried further by the cinematic violins of Anjali Singde-Rao, Sanjay Upadhye and Sachin Ingale with a cameo appearance by celebrated Oxford-based virtuoso Bruno Guastalla on cello.

Comprised of eight tracks spread across 59 minutes, “Every Little Spirit” is lyrically themed and is a reflection upon how our roots entwine with all life; how our joy and sorrow is shared; that while life is a gift, for which acknowledgment and thanks are due, no one said the living of it was easy and how we instinctively seek release, to “get set free” from the emotional and physical turmoil of existence. “This could be you, this could be me….”.

“Perfect Sunday morning music... I really enjoyed listening through it - it is a very well paced and interesting listen” - Nigel House at Rough Trade

Having toured successfully in Germany and Holland, played around the UK, and gained press attention from all over the world for his previous releases, Marcus' reputation for his skillful combining of the worlds of Indian Classical and British folk music, while being ambitious and yet aware of the limitations, will inevitably continue to grow and grow, and his status as one of the great explorers of these musical borderlands will continue to be celebrated.


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