The accomplished flutist, Ali Ryerson has released her seventeenth recording simply titled The Ali Ryerson Quartet on her self-produced ACR music label. If you love good music this will certainly put a smile on your face.
New York born Ryerson has been playing the flute she first took it up at age of eight. Ryerson comes from a musical family that boasts a maternal grandmother Allison-her namesake- who once played professional piano on the vaudeville circuit. Her father, Art ,was an accomplished guitarist who played in the Paul Whiteman Band before becoming a respected studio musician in NYC. His guitar work could be heard on recordings including albums from Louis Armstrong, Sarah Vaughan and Frank Sinatra to name a few. He was also an early adopter of the seven string electric guitar along with the inventor George Van Eps and Bucky Pizzarelli.
Ryerson attended the Hartt School of Music in Hartford CT in the late 1970’s and graduated with a degree in Music. She studied mostly classical music having taken lessons with the foremost orchestral flutist Julius Baker as being the most influential to her. She credits her playing jazz with her horn playing brothers on gigs as giving her the jazz bug. Her playing of jazz is self-taught and claims her influences are trumpet players like Chet Baker and Clifford Brown. “In essence, I am a trumpet player who plays flute.”
Ryerson has been know for her sophisticated, intimate sound and inherent ability to swing. She was the driving force between the Jazz Flute Big Band Project and its recording Game Changer from 2013, where she enlisted nineteen flutist and a rhythm section to reimagine some of the music of Oliver Nelson, Clifford Brown, Wayne Shorter and others for an all flute band. She had an enduring work relationship with the guitarist Joe Beck for almost ten years and recorded two albums with him. Ryerson is also a sort after educator giving on line lessons to aspiring flutists on Lessonface.
Ali Ryerson(photo credit unknown)
Ryerson’s sound has a light, enjoyable, bebop sensibility that assures the
music always swings. She also has absorbed the love of Brazilian music in her playing
and that can be an important aspect of her playing. Ryerson's mature tone and astute delivery can only be achieved with years of dedication and by playing with talented top notch musicians over the years.
Ryerson is joined by pianist Larry Hain, bassist Lou Pappas and drummer Tom Melito, a seasoned group, on this album. The Ali Ryerson album captures your attention with its mastery, tonal warmth and sophisticated swing. It brings a smile to your face and delivers an enjotyable listening experience.
The opener “Chuck’s
Time/Solar” is a mashup of Ryerson’s opening changes titled “Chuck’s Time” and
the main theme, a song credited to Miles Davis but contended to have been actually written by the guitarist Chuck Wayne, and titled “Solar.” Ryerson
opens this swinging blues with a circuitous line on her C flute in step with
her bandmates matching her lines. There is a buoyancy to Ryerson’s flute solo
work here that is pure joy. Hain
takes a elegant solo about halfway through, and Pappas adds a plucky bass
solo before Melito’s drum work offers his own response.These guys
are having fun and it shows.
Ryerson’s “Cold Snap” is a soulful song that utilizes
ascending and descending lines that capture your attention as the band carries
the graceful pulse. Hain steps up with a creative, uncluttered solo. Ryerson
comes back in with another solo that brims with creative explorations. Pappas offers another interpretation of where he wants to take the music on his
bass solo. As the title implies, this one has a snap.
Thad Jones’ iconic “Three and One” is deftly navigated by
the bass and flute on the opening and shows the simpatico these two have.
Pappas’ bass plucks with a resonation that hums on his top-notch solo. Ryerson’s
flute is liquid and loose. Her notes melt in the air. Hain’s piano solo
work is clear, unadorned and succinct. It is a tribute to Jones that his composition can be reinterpreted so rewardingly by an astute artist like Ryerson.
The flutist takes her reimagination of bassist Steve Swallow’s “Falling
Grace” and titles it “Flying in Spain/Falling Grace.” The band creates a breezy sway over which Ryerson’s flute dances with her own graceful lines. Pappas nicely counters Ali's flute
with bouncy lines in time with Melito’s subdued snare. Hain offers his
own melodic solo and Pappas adds a brief bass feature, before the group returns
to the melody together, ending with a delicate coda.
I have always loved Jerome Kern’s” Yesterdays” ever since I
listened to Hampton Hawes, Red Mitchell and Chuck Thompson version recorded back in 1955. That trio could just really swing. There was unhampered freedom in the way they played and Ryerson's take “Before Today/Yesterdays" play it with the same kind of vim
and vigor as the Hawes trio did! The group is locked in so well and they create individual ideas that both complimentary as well as inventive and lively. Pappas bass maintains the unfailing walk and Melito’s
drum work is tasty. Hain offers subtle accompaniment and a nicely played solo,
but it is Ryerson’s astute energizing of the melody with her own fertile ideas that
makes this one so much fun.
“The Island” is a famous Brazilian ballad written by Ivan
Lins with lyrics by Alan Bergman. It is a lush love song that has been sung by
some of the most famous chanteuses, including Sarah Vaughan, Barbara Streisand
and Patti Austin. This version loses nothing by not having a singer. Ryerson’s richly
toned alto flute is the lead voice on this and she makes it all her own. The
music throbs with emotion and pathos. Authentic, beautiful and moving.
The album continues with Cole Porter’s reimagined “What is
This Thing Called Love.” Ryerson’s
playing always carries the music with authority and style. Her playing is clear and
not breathy, but always adds to the music.
“Ali Cat Blues” is a blues-based, bebop inspired Ryerson
composition. There is some Charlie
Parker in the woman’s flute. Ryerson sails and soars like a bird riding the
thermals navigating the self-imposed labyrinth she creates with her music. The
music is delightfully challenging and yet they all make the execution seem so
simple. You can’t help not tap your feet.
“Nada Como Ter Amor” is a Brazilian nova bossa composition from Carlos Lyra where Ryerson and company getting into the Rio vibe. “Boppin’ Low” is another Ryerson composition that returns to the straight ahead/ bebop style that she and her band seem to seem to thrive so well on. The final cut on the album is titled Fé, another Brazilian bossa inspired composition, that has Ryerson’s light and airy flute hovering over the rhythmic groove that the band creates and maintains. There is a freedom, a gossamer-like lightness to this music and Ryerson captures this weightless feel to perfection.
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