Here are a few holiday favorites by some all time great artists. Please enjoy and
Happy Holidays to all my friends and family!
Michael Franks: Let it Snow
Bill Evans : Santa's Coming to Town
Lou Rawls and Diane Reeves : Baby Its Cold Outside
Bob Dorough and Miles Davis Sextet : Blue Xmas
John McLaughlin : Oh Come Oh Come Emmanuel:
John Coltrane Quartet : Greensleeves
Thelonious Monk : A Merrier Christmas: & Dianne Reeves
Dexter Gordon : The Christmas Song
Oscar Peterson : A Child is Born
Joe Pass : White Christmas
Dave Brubeck : Silent Night
Billy Eckstine : Christmas Eve
Jimmy Smith : The Christmas Song
Modern Jazz Quartet with Orchestra : England's Carol
Dave Brubeck and Gerry Muligan : Santa Claus is Coming To Town
Shirley Horn : Winter Wonderland
Ray Charles : rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer
Chick Corea : What Child is This
Christian McBride : Deck the Halls
Vince Guaraldi Trio : Linus and Lucy
A forum for jazz reviews, discussion of new jazz, blues music, the musicians, reviews of recent and historical releases, reviews of live performances, concerts, interviews and almost anything I find of interest. by Ralph A. Miriello
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
My Picks of the Best New Jazz for 2013
This year was a particularly fertile year for new, contemporary music by young composers. If the music has to be categorized at all it probably falls into that all encompassing genre we call " jazz.," a label that many consider too limiting. It was also a year when some of the more seasoned players brought their "A" game to the studio with predictably satisfying results.
I personally have an affinity for a good melody, good rhythm and lyricism and yet sometimes good music may lack an identifiable melody or contain rhythmic diversity that is so complex that it can only be savored by a mathematically attuned brain. Music can be so arrhythmic as to cause the internal rhythms of our bodies to react as if we are mainlining adrenaline. Some music is so atonal and dissonant that it can strain credibility with the listener, mimicking purposeful cacophony, but yet bringing with it a sense of expression, creativity and occasionally a sense of majesty. Acknowledging that it is all part of artistic expression, not everyone will find all the choices to be to their liking, but one thing is for sure they are all worthy of consideration. To paraphrase Duke Ellington's famous tome there are just two kinds of music, good music and the other kind. I believe these selections all fall into the good category. So go out and listen and support these talented artists.
With that in mind I offer my picks for the best of Jazz's New Music in 2013. My apologies to those fine offerings that I didn't have a chance to listen to this year and are necessarily excluded from my list.
• Brian Landrus' Kaliedescope: Mirage, Blueland Records
• Charles Lloyd and Jason Moran: Hagar's Song, ECM
• John Hollenbeck's Claudia Quintet: September, Cunneiform Records
• Jan Ira Bloom: Sixteen Sunsets, Outline Records
• John Wirtz: Tourist, John Wirtz Music
• The Jamie Baum Septet: In This Life, Sunnyside Records
• John Escreet: Sabotage and Celebration
• Rudresh Mahanthappa's : Gamak, ACT Records
• Cecile McLoren Savant: Woman Child, Mack Avenue Records
• Steve Gadd Band: Gadditude, BFM
• Geri Allen: Grand River Crossings, Motema
• Steve Turre: The Bones of Art, High Note Records
• Dave Douglas Quintet: Be Still, Greenleaf Music
• Christian McBride+ Inside Straight: People Music, Mack Avenue
• Chuck Owen & The Jazz Surge: River Runs, MAMA Records
• Ethan Iverson/Lee Konitz: Costumes Are Mandatory, High Note
• Tomasz Stanko New York Quartet: Wistawa, ECM
• Antonio Sanchez: New Life, CamJazz
• Michael Blanco: No Time Like the Present, Cognitive Dissonance
• Jonathan Kreisberg: One, NFN
• Antonio Adolfo: Finas Misturas, AAM
• David Weiss & Point of Departure: Venture Inward, Positone
• Aaron Diehl, The Bespoke Man's Narrative, Mack Avenue
• Joe Lovano Us Five: Cross Culture, Blue Note
• Eddie Daniels & Roger Kellaway; Live in Santa Fe, Duke at the Roadhouse, IPO
• Will Calhoun: Life in This World, Motema
• John Hollenbeck: Songs I Like A Lot, Sunnyside
Honorable Mentions:
• Amir El Saffar: Alchemy, Pi Recordings
• Jonathan Finlayson: Moment & The Message, Pi Recordings
• Eric Hoffbauer: American Grace, Creative Nation Music
• Adam Rudolph's Go Organic Orchestra: Sonic Mandela
• Frank Wess: Magic 101, IPO Recordings
• Dave Holland Quartet: Prism, Dare2 Records
• Bill Frisell, Big Sur, Okeh
• Giacomo Gates: Miles Tones: Savant Records
• Nicole Mitchell & Ice Crystals: Aquarius, Delmark
• Tim Berne: Snakeoil, ECM
• Jameo Brown: Transcendence, Motema
• Christian McBride Trio: Out There, Mack Avenue
Best Historical Releases:
• Volker Kreigel, Lost Tapes Mainz 1963-69, Jazz Haus
• Modern Jazz Quartet: Lost Tapes, Gremany 1956-58, Jazz Haus
• George Shearing: At Home, Jazzknight Records
• Oscar Pettiford, The Lost Tapes Germany 1958-59, JazzHaus
Friday, November 29, 2013
John Escreet Challenges the Senses with"Sabotage and Celebration"
John Escreet is a twenty-nine year old pianist originally
hailing from Doncaster, England who has resided stateside since 2006. He studied at
the Manhattan School of Music with the pianists Kenny Baron and Jason Moran.
His album Consequences from 2008 was
hailed by the New York Times’ Nate Chinen as
“a highly accomplished debut.” Mr. Escreet, now living in Brooklyn, has become an
increasingly omnipresent part of the progressive music scene in New York. Besides
leading his own groups, he can be heard in the piano chair on Jamie Baum’s fine
new release In This Life and on Alchemy with the
progressive Iraqi-American trumpeter
Amir El Saffar. I have been intrigued by the pianist's rapid development.
Mr. Escreet’s Sabotage and Celebration is a complex
and intriguing album that showcases the young pianist's increasing maturation as
a composer. Like his playing, the album challenges the senses. It has moments of majestic, lyrical beauty,
like the expansive “He Who Dares” and the melodic “Laura Angela,” as well as stretches
of difficult, discordant free improvisations, like the aptly titled songs “Sabotage
and Consequences,” “The Decapitator” or the jagged “Animal Style.” Oftentimes these elements are woven into the same composition creating jarring juxtapositions. Mr. Escreet's musical vocabulary is effective, creating aural images that relay ideas that he is trying to express. Harsh jabs at the piano, squealing honks of the saxophone or piercing squeals of a trumpet have all been used by Mr. Escreet to make his point. On this album he also deftly orchestrates both string and brass sections that create dramatic backdrops for his more
expansive compositions, like “Beyond Your Wildest Dreams” and the
aforementioned “He Who Dares.” The music swells organically creating a atmospheric surround that allows for the eruptive solos and taut ensemble playing to soar.
Throughout it all, Escreet’s formidable technique as a pianist is allowed
to blossom. He agilely creates passages that range from single note
ruminations to explosive bursts. His effective use of the synchronous
and dueling voices of saxophonists of David Binney and Chris Potter on “He Who
Dares” create a magical interlude. Escreet can play with extraordinary beauty, resplendent with
crescendos of sound that belie a classical background. Make no mistake
about it, Mr. Escreet wishes to challenge the boundaries of the music he creates with an
approach that seems to have one foot in the lyrical and one foot in the
abstract. While I struggle with some of the ear assaulting dissonance of the abstract parts of his music at times,
as he continues in his maturation process, I find myself being able to appreciate his efforts more and more. On Sabotage and Celebration Mr. Escreet creates moments of magic that are all too rarely found in a great deal of modern jazz and for this he is an artist to be watched closely.
Personnel: John Escreet, piano, Fender Rhodes, Harpsichord; David Binney, alto saxophone, soprano saxophone track 7; Chris Potter, tenor saxophone; Matt Brewer, bass, Jim Black, drums. Adam Rodgers, guitar track7; String Section : Fung Chern Hwei, violin; Annette Homann, violin; Hannah Levinson, Viola; Mariel Roberts, cello; Garth Stevenson, double bass; Brass Section: Shane Endsley, trumpet; Josh Rosemena, trombone. Vocals Louis Cole , Genevieve Artadi, Nina Greiger track 7.
as he continues in his maturation process, I find myself being able to appreciate his efforts more and more. On Sabotage and Celebration Mr. Escreet creates moments of magic that are all too rarely found in a great deal of modern jazz and for this he is an artist to be watched closely.
Personnel: John Escreet, piano, Fender Rhodes, Harpsichord; David Binney, alto saxophone, soprano saxophone track 7; Chris Potter, tenor saxophone; Matt Brewer, bass, Jim Black, drums. Adam Rodgers, guitar track7; String Section : Fung Chern Hwei, violin; Annette Homann, violin; Hannah Levinson, Viola; Mariel Roberts, cello; Garth Stevenson, double bass; Brass Section: Shane Endsley, trumpet; Josh Rosemena, trombone. Vocals Louis Cole , Genevieve Artadi, Nina Greiger track 7.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Freddy Cole and Hilary Kole perform "Perfect Pairs" Series in Stamford' Palace Theatre
PERFECT PAIRS : Freddy Cole and Hilary Kole
PLAY THE STAMFORD PALACE THEATRE NOVEMBER 13, 2013
Freddy Cole photo Clay Walker 2007 |
Hilary Kole photo Bill Westmoreland |
In a continuing effort to establish Stamford's beautiful Palace Theatre, as a serious venue competing for New York caliber entertainment, Darien resident and Stamford Center of the Arts board member, Lynn DiMenna had a revelation. If one entertainer could thrill an audience, why not try to pair artists in a synergistic way, doubling the chance for an interesting evening of music and entertainment. The Perfect Pairs series attempts to do just that and has been running at the Palace Theatre this fall season.
DiMenna, herself a cabaret singer. was able to lure name talent to participate in this venture and fashion her vision into a reality. The series, started on September 7, 2013 bringing together the accomplished stride pianist/vocalist Judy Carmichael with the cabaret performer Steve Ross who the NY Times called "the suavest of all male cabaret performers." The second of four planned pairings occurred on October 18, 2013 when the Palace showcased vocalist/comedienne Christine Pedi and pianist/singer Johnny Rodgers. The two premiered their new show "Hearthrobs and Bombshells of the Movies," a time capsule spanning from 1920's through the present day, that celebrates the sophisticated men and ladies of the movies and the music they sang.
The program continues on Wednesday evening, November 13th, when the series will feature two entertainers that offer exciting possibilities, the singers Freddy Cole and Hilary Kole.
Lynn DiMenna and Freddy Cole photo courtesy of Lynn. DiMenna |
The veteran crooner/pianist Freddy Cole is a true master of the art of storytelling, and despite his personal distaste for labels, he is a standard bearer for the tradition of the great male jazz singers that have come before him. The lineage includes his brother Nat, Bing Crosby, Billy Eckstine, Frank Sinatra and Johnny Hartman to name a few.
Having grown up in a musical family and in the shadows of his famous older brother Nat "King" Cole, Freddy would not be deterred from a musical career of his own. He studied music at Julliard, receiving a master's degree from the New England Conservatory of Music. Now in his eighty-first year, his resonant baritone is still silken. He has a burnished warm tone with a refined delivery that has been honed over his years as a journeyman musician. His sensuous voice conjures up images of scotch, cigarettes, impeccably tailored threads and late nights with beautiful ladies clinging to your arms. When one hears Mr. Cole sing there is no mistaking the lineage, but he has taken great pains to create his own authentic style. A style more in keeping with the phrasing and savior faire of Billy Eckstine, his self-professed greatest influence.
After years of leading the life of a working musician with moderate commercial success and over twenty albums as a leader, Mr. Cole's career had a rebirth starting in the late eighties. As he related to me in a recent interview, he was attending church in NY with his niece when a sermon struck him as particularly pertinent to his own situation. "It kind of touched me. I started going to try to right myself. You know going down the path..." "I was doing okay, I was playing around town, but I was on the same road. I was just going round and round in circles... "You know there is an old saying 'If you don't know where your going you can take any road.' "Until you can get to where your peers respect what you do, that is when you are making progress." One day "When I was playing at Bradley's this one night, who came in but Carmen McRae, Betty Carter, George Coleman, you name it. You know, I said to myself they're all coming to see me! Never knowing that they respected what I did." That was about 1989.
Since then Freddy has made some great recordings, culminating in his 2011 Grammy nominated album Freddy Cole Sings Mr. B in the category of "Best Jazz Vocal Album." Other fine and recent offerings include Talk to Me from 2011 and his latest This and That from this year.
As Howard Reich of the Chicago Tribune so aptly wrote about a recent performance of the Cole quartet in the Second City " You simply don't encounter phrasing as seemingly nonchalant yet polished as this very often anymore." It is Mr. Cole's ability to make the storytelling so natural and to combine it with a superb sense of musicality and rhythm that makes him a treasure not to be missed.
The chanteuse Hillary Kole brings her own special appeal. The young and beautiful Ms. Kole is a mysterious mix. Having been one of the youngest artists to have played the Rainbow Room-she was twenty-one when she got a one and one half year gig at this elegantly fabled venue singing in front of the Steven Scott Orchestra. Kole went on to perform a cabaret show based on the music of Frank Sinatra titled Our Sinatra at the famed Algonquin hotel. Later she and her group added an extended run at The Blue Angel. She was just about done with this project when the show landed a gig at the iconic jazz club Birdland. Her extended stay at the club led to an unlikely romance with the owner Gianni Valenti. Valenti introduced her to Oscar Peterson, who was playing what proved to be his last run at the club. It was here that she had the rare opportunity to play with Peterson's group on at least one occasion. Her debut album Haunted Heart was produced by guitarist John Pizzarelli and released in 2009 with esteemed radio host Jonathan Schwartz commenting in the liner notes "Her future is solid. Trust me on this."
She followed this up with her Cd You Are There, a series of duets that Valenti produced, pairing her with some of the best pianists in jazz. Hilary's clear vocals were heard on a series of standards with accompaniment by the likes of Dave Brubeck, Hank Jones, Michel Le Grand and Cedar Walton to name a few. It was on this album that she first worked with Freddy Cole. The two recorded the Jimmy Van Heusen song "It's Always You" in September of 2006. Ms. Kole has since left Birdland and Mr. Valenti behind, but she continues to perform with one foot in cabaret and one foot in jazz.
It should prove to be an interesting evening when the two meet once again on the Palace's Harman Stage for this "Perfect Pairs" performance. Mr. Cole's band of Randy Napoleon on guitar, Elias Bailey on bass and Curtis Boyd on drums should make for solid accompaniment for the two singers.
Mr. Cole, the consummate professional, will undoubtedly be able to reach into his war chest of over five thousand songs to find ones most suitable for the occasion. Ms. Kole will likely have to adapt on the fly, using her jazz chops as there will be no prearranged set list. Freddy prefers to "read" his audience before choosing the songs he will play on the bandstand on any given night. As he said when we spoke "Fortunately it is jazz music so it gives us a chance to do several things." Ms Kole has a wonderful voice and an equally elegant stage presence. Her years of experience on the bandstands will undoubtedly help her navigate Mr. Cole's penchant for unpredictability.
It is music in the making that makes the "Perfect Pairs" series such an exciting concept. Two seemingly disparate entertainers coming together using the universal language of music and the extemporaneous nature of jazz as their common thread. It should make for an interesting evening of great entertainment. For more information on the show click here.
For a link to my full interview with Mr. Cole click here.
Friday, November 8, 2013
An Interview with Singer/Pianist Freddy Cole
AN INTERVIEW WITH THE SINGER/PIANIST FREDDY COLE
NOVEMBER 7, 2013
Freddy Cole photo by Clay Walker |
- The singer/pianist Freddy Cole is a national treasure and at eighty-one years young he is still a masterful entertainer. He will be playing in a duet series with the singer Hilary Kole titled "Perfect Pairs" at the Palace Theatre in Stamford, CT on November 13, 2013. I was fortunate to be able to do an interview with Mr. Cole in preparation for an article on the show. Here is a transcript of that phone interview which was taken on November 7, 2013 :
NOJ: When did you first realize you wanted to make a career in music?
FC: You know, I never really thought about it. I never really distinguished between doing it or not because I have played the piano since I was five years old. So, I have always been involved with music. I was just fortunate enough for it to happen to me.
NOJ: You were in a musical family and were exposed to some of the most iconic figures in jazz history at an early age.
FC: That's true. Yeah, that's true.
NOJ: Who left the greatest impression on you and what instance can you recall had the greatest impact?
FC: I don't know. To pick out one would be kind of difficult, I have had wonderful experiences with Billy Eckstine, He was such a wonderful man. I played golf with him and went out for drinks with him, you know after I got old enough. I guess "B" would be the person I would have to choose.
NOJ: You had a great song you wrote "I'm Not My Brother I'm Me" which pretty much addresses the difficulty of living in the shadow of an iconic figure like your brother Nat ("King" Cole) and finding your own way. When do you feel the public was willing to accept you as an artist on your own terms?
FC: One time, I guess in '88 or '89, I was playing in NY and my niece and I went to church the next day- you know Natalie's younger sister- and I heard a sermon that kind of touched me. I started off going to try to right myself, you know going down the path of... in fact, there is an old saying that Papa used to say " If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there." You know? (Laughing)
NOJ: Yeah, I get it.
FC: Exactly. I was doing okay. I was playing around town, but I was on the same road. I was just going round and round in circles. Until you can get to where your peers respect what you do, that is when you are making progress. When I was playing at Bradley's this one night, who comes in but Carmen McRae, Betty Carter, George Coleman you name it. You know I said to myself, 'They're all coming to see me.' Never knowing that they respected me, what I did.
NOJ: When was this, about 1989?
FC: Yeah.
NOJ: according to John di Martino, who has worked with you and arranged and played on several of your albums, you have one of the most extensive repertoires in the industry to draw from, but you never make a setlist before a show. Is this true?
FC: Yes, that's right. ..(John) has worked with me and is a great, great, player.
NOJ: How do you spontaneously choose what your going to play for any particular show?
FC: I don't know. It's hard to explain, 'cause I just zero in on it as I do the first song and then from there it's like boom, boom, boom ...you know.
NOJ: So it's a visceral thing? You feel the audience and feel what they are looking for and then...
FC: Yeah, it's like all in the presentation, You have to present (properly) what you do.
NOJ: How do you look at lyrics when you sing a song?
FC: They tell a certain story. They tell a story about what you are talking about in the song. Some songs you like because of the chord changes or the melody, some songs you like because of the lyrics. You know when it's a great song you get them both together.
NOJ: One of your contemporaries, Tony Bennett, likes to pick songs ( with lyrics) that mean something to him.
FC: Exactly. I don't do anything that I don't like. Anything you hear me do, you know I like it.
I like some (songs) better than others, but I don't do any songs that I feel I have to butter up or doctor it up. No, I don't do that.
NOJ: You mentioned Billy Eckstine. You did a great album dedicated to him titled
Freddy Cole sings Mr. B from 2010, which was nominated for a Grammy award in 2011 in the
category of "Best Jazz Vocal Album." Congratulations. What was it about Mr."B" and his music that still endures?
FC: He was so musical and he was a classy person. It is so hard to talk about him, he did so many things right. His selection of songs was impeccable. You know during that era nobody recorded more than "B" my brother Nat, Ella ( Fitzgerald), and Frank Sinatra. Those four people recorded more than anyone. Their music still stands.
NOJ: In reading about Billy Eckstine, he apparently credited Russ Columbo and Bing Crosby as two of his influences.
FC: Bing Crosby was a fantastic musician. People don't realize how great he was. His choice of songs, he did everything. There wasn't anything he couldn't do that was the same way "B" was.
NOJ: Were Crosby or Columbo too early to be an influence on you?
FC: I liked some of their songs. I listened to everything. I liked some of the songs that they did.
Some great tunes came out of there.
NOJ: You have developed a vocal style that is so naturally conversational and yet so intrinsically musical that it mesmerizes your audiences. Is this a result of playing gigs where the audience was not always attentive and you needed to grab them or did it just come naturally?
FC: (Laughing) well it's a little bit of both. I learned how to do this from watching and listening to Brazilian singers. I used to go to Brazil, I had a couple of hit records down in Brazil and I had a chance to meet and play with a lot of great musicians. They have a lot of great musicians down there who sadly will never be known up here. One thing always got me was the way they could really grab an audience. Elise Regina was a master at that. She was beautiful and she could sing, oh man! Maria Bethania was another.
NOJ: You have over twenty albums as a leader, starting with The Joke's On Me from 1952 all the way to your most recent album This and That. Do you have any favorites?
FC: Well, I like This and That.
NOJ: You will be playing a duet with the vocalist Hilary Kole at the Stamford Center for the Arts Palace Theatre on November 13, 2013. What do you have planned for this gig?
FC: I have no idea. I recorded with Hilary once before " It's Always You" (from Hilary's You Are There album of 2010), so I am sure we will do that one and what else I don't know.
NOJ: One of the interesting parts of the "Perfect Pairs" series at the Palace is that it brings together two artists from different backgrounds, usually jazz and cabaret. Ms. Kole has worked in cabaret and she also worked at Birdland and the Rainbow Room and you have a repertoire that includes a generous helping of Broadway tunes. Is this a common ground that you might explore?
FC: I don't know, not until I talk to her. I have to speak with her and see what direction she would like to go with and what we could do together. Fortunately, it's jazz music so it gives us a chance to do several things.
NOJ: What are the commonalities between jazz and cabaret?
FC: I am a firm believer in (not labeling)...people always have to have a title for something. Why can't they just let it be music? Or good music. Why does it have to be "Urban Contemporary Adult Music?" What is that? The "Nearness of You" or "Body And Soul" are the same I don't care what you playing at.
It's like Stevie Wonder's "Sunshine of My Life," that's music.I'm not putting any kind of music down, but why does it have to have a title? You have to say, oh this is a singer, he's this or she's that...I totally disagree with that.
NOJ: I guess when we writers try to describe and differentiate the many styles we hear we tend to use words to compare and to label, seemingly for clarity.
FC: Well they (writers) messed up a lot of careers with that. Some people try to fit into whatever
(category) it is they say and if you keep bouncing around, not doing what your capable of doing or of what you can do best, well that is what you should do. Try to worry about your presentation, about doing that properly) instead of worrying about...oh, I 'm in Texas so I'd better do a Country & Western song. Or, oh I'm in California so I got to do a cool jazz song. That's crazy!
NOJ: But even guys like Sonny Rollins did a Western album (Sonny Rollins Way Out West from 1959) that was successful.
FC: You know why he did it? It was because it made sense musically.
NOJ: Ray Charles was another artist that would crossover into different areas to widen his audiences.
FC: Well Ray wasn't doing anything different than what he was doing all his life. You go all the way back to his first thing and hey he wasn't doing anything different.
NOJ: Will you be playing with your regular quartet at the Palace show?
FC: Yes. Randy Napoleon on guitar, Elias Bailey on bass and Curtis Boyd on drums.
NOJ: Does Randy do some arranging for you?
FC: He has been arranging some of my material on the last two Cd's and he is doing a nice job.
NOJ: I understand your son Lionel is a talented musician and musical director in his own right?
FC: Yeah, he is a very fine musician. He is living in Australia now. He got married and he is living over there and is as busy as a one-armed paperhanger.
NOJ: It must be tough having him so far away?
FC: Yeah, I don't get a chance to see him and my two grandkids much. That's tough but you got to do what you got to do.
NOJ: Thanks so much Freddy for graciously spending this time to answer our questions. I look forward to seeing at you the Palace Theatre show on November 13, 2013.
Sunday, October 20, 2013
John di Martino's Trio "Turnaround": A Master Accompanist Shines in the Spotlight
John di Martino photo by Ralph A. Miriello 2013 |
The composer/pianist John di Martino has a reputation
among vocalists in the know. The word is if you have a project and want to do
something special, get this guy to arrange and play on your record. His well-deserved reputation for being the consummate
accompanist/arranger comes from a deep and abiding love and respect for the
lyric of a good song. A superb
technician, John’s training with two pianists Jimmie Amadie and Lennie Tristano, and later briefly with the
saxophonists Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh, gave him a deep rooted sense of time, space and the judicious use of notes.
But it was listening to vocalists that his mother would play for him as a youngster
in Philadelphia that made him deeply sensitive to the lyrics and the emotional
impact they could have on a song. Tristanto would make di Martino sing the solo
parts of great horn players to learn phrasing, the key to emotional content. It was a lesson that stuck .
John took his talent and his love of lyric and found work in the then thriving Atlantic City casino scene of the nineteen eighties, where his trio became the house band for the now defunct Golden Nugget. He found himself playing behind a myriad of performers from Billy Eckstine to Keely Smith, sometimes backing the vaudevillian shtick of a comedian like Milton Berle or comping for R & B singer Chico DeBarge. Through it all he cultured a journeyman’s attitude, learning by necessity to play various kinds of music as the situation demanded. Instead of coping an attitude, judging the music for its lack of complexity or creativity, he made it his practice to extract different values from each musical experience no matter how mundane. His love of Latin and Afro-Cuban music and his ability to absorb its rhythmic nuances landed him extended gigs in the bands of percussionist Ray Barretto and later the drummer Bobby Sanabria. As the word spread about this unassuming pianist who could deftly make any singer sound better, di Martino became a sought after partner by vocalists, especially jazz vocalists. He has worked with Billy Eckstine, Jon Hendricks, Janice Segal, Giacomo Gates, Freddy Cole, Gloria Lynne and Grady Tate to name a few. So it was with great curiosity that I decided to listen and review one of John’s recent works, this time as a leader on Turnaround his recent cd from 2012.
Turnaround is a piano trio album
consisting of thirteen songs, mostly under-recorded gems that John believes are fertile material for further exploration. The trio is as tight and interactive as there is in jazz, with bassist Boris Kozlov and drummer Alvin Atkinson providing superbly
intuitive accompaniment and support. For
a musician who is often found on the sidelines of somebody else's project, John’s out front playing on Turnaround is a revelation.
On the title tune, Ornette Coleman’s “Turnaround,” di Martino plays the staccato theme with a touch of
McCoy Tyner percussiveness and a fluidity that is impressive . Despite the Blues
roots of this song, John creates an
outpouring of ideas that never cease to surprise and often stirs in the listener an emotional response. Atkinson’s gentle stick and
rim work is sublime and Kozlov’s plump bass lines suspend in the air like
billowy cumulus clouds hanging on a blue horizon creating a cohesive sound.
On the neglected , depression- era Jay Gorney composition,
“Brother Can You Spare A Dime” John and his trio set off on a loosey- goosey jaunt
reminiscent of the brilliant Hampton Hawes trio of the mid-nineteen fifties.
The trio of Hampton Hawes on piano, Red Mitchell on bass and Chuck Thompson on
drums, could make the music flow with an unvarnished honesty and supple buoyancy that was unmatched creating magic. The carefree, inhibition to swing that Kozolv, Atkinson and di Martino demonstrate
here is not easily achieved. The interactivity of this group is impressive, they create their own kind of magic.
Boris Koslov’s walking bass lines echo some of Red Mitchell’s work and
Atkinson’s brushes subtly maintain that steady, unerring swing with deceptive
ease .Like Hawes, Di Martino’s playing emits an air of joyfulness that is genuine.
Mr. di Martino has a library of unheralded songs that he
likes to draw from and one such piece is the soulful “The Sun Died” from the Ray Charles repertoire.
This bittersweet shuffle is made all the more poignant by Koslov’s mournful
bass lines and John’s piquant keyboard work. The album features two Billy Strayhorn tunes. On “A Flower
is a Lovesome Thing ” Mr. di Martino transforms Strayhorn’s lament to a more
uplifting tale with his use of Brazilian rhythms. John’s washboard-liker ostinato
piano lines in the lower register are perfectly counterpointed by Atkinson’s
regimentally cadenced snare and cymbal work.
The song sways its way in a genteel dance of sorts, as Mr. di Martino’s rhythmic
piano lines pitter-patter across the melody line. Eventually Mr. Atkinson is given a
chance to stir things up with a brief but potent string of poly rhythms ending in a abrupt climax.
Another unearthed lost gem is “Moon and Sand.” John ‘s sensitive playing exemplifies
the beauty of this tender ballad.
Di Martino and Kozlov have a special chemistry playing off each
other’s ideas, made possible by John’s knack for inspired
arrangements. You can hear snippets of different vaguely familiar songs in John’s
playing, the man is steeped in the history. He meanders through lines of a song each time like he is rediscovering anew.
On Eddie Harris’s “Cold Duck Time” John captures the flavor
of Harris’ funky style, with touches of the Ramsey Lewis sound surfacing in his playing.
This is just plain get-down fun and has you nodding your head to the beat. What becomes apparent is the versatility of
John’s playing. He is a chameleon of sorts who has the ability to adapt to a
variety of styles while retaining his own voice, but at its
core his music possess an underlying sense of enjoyment, the man revels in playing music.
John taps into the Richard Rodgers songbook with “If I Loved You” and “Falling in Love With
You” giving both song's tender treatments. He also does a stirringly l inventive turn on the movie theme to “Black Orpheus.”
The more contemporary Stevie Wonder composition titled “I
Can’t Help It,” is turned sideways by arranging the song
using a Latin rumba rhythm. The composition features a fleet bass solo by Kozlov and the soft touch of Atkinson on toms and
snare.
John di Martino and Bassist Ed Howard photo by Ralph A. Miriello 2013 |
The album ends with other Strayhorn tune “Passion Flower” played as a
somber dirge with Atkinson’s muffled toms recreating an Ellington-era sound. Di Martino’s piano is particularly
romantic in its approach and. Kozlov’s arco bass solo is achingly evocative. “Sweet
Pea” would approve.
With Turnaround, The
John di Martino Trio establishes itself as a force to be reckoned with and John’s
stature as a superb pianist and arranger
is further cemented adding to his already
confirmed credentials as one of the business’ best accompanist.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Mr. Hollenbeck's Claudia Quintet Play the Music of "September" at Firehouse 12
The Claudia Qunitet |
As a student of the great Bob Brookmeyer, who he credits as one of the most important influences in his life, he carries on a thirst for composition for and arrangement of multiple instrumentation and the sounds it can produce.
As is his custom, Hollenbeck often uses the month of September as a time to take up an artist residency in remote places. There he uses the quiet time to write and compose new work. His latest album is titled September and it is a compilation of music that John created during his latest residency last September. Each song is titled with a date in September related to their conception and a more informative subtitle.
Drummers have often reached beyond the traditional drum kit to supplement their sound and Hollenbeck is no exception, developing an array of techniques that allow him to produce sounds that expand his aural palette. With the Claudia Quintet he has found like-minded band mates that can take it a step further, adding complimentary timbres, colors, and tones to his own array of percussive techiques and poly-rhythmic beats. Of his latest work September Hollenbeck says " I am especially interested in how, through the simple non-violent act of composition, one can help oneself become a better person, deppen one's connection to humanity, and create work that can soothe and heal." As a composer, the sounds of Matt Moran's vibraphone, Red Wierenger's accordion, Chris Speeds reeds and ChrisTordini's bass add pliable voices that serve Hollenbeck's compositional purpose. Despite Mr. Hollenbeck's serious demeanor there is a bit of a tongue in cheek feeling to some of the things he uses to convey his musical message. A humanity that shines through the purposefulness.
Chris Speed and John Hollenbeck photo by Ralph A. Miriello c 2103 |
John explains that whenever he reflects on September he almost always harkens back to tragedy of September 11, 2001 and so he wanted to create a album of songs that somehow represented the more uplifting remembrances
he has of September. A restorative work.
John took to the microphone explaining the next composition, a dedication to his friend and the pianist Jason Moran, whose email tagline is lemons. The tune is appropriately titled "September 18th- Lemons." John starts out with a driving rhythm that serves as the background for a repeating, serpentine line combining the sounds of Speed on tenor, Weirenga's accordion and Moran's vibes. Hollenbeck eventually changes the beat, slowing it down to a marching-like cadence that has his fellow instrumentalists lending sporadic accents. The sound decays like a dormant space craft losing orbit and descending into the open abyss. The time shifts in this song are quite dramatic, yet Hollenbeck navigates them with consummate skill. He utilizes chains and paper on his drums to create a cacophony of disruptive and unusual sounds. Speed's tenor solos over a eerie dirge that Hollenbeck, Moran, Tordini and Weirenga build to a intense conclusion.
Hollenbeck starts the next composition titled "September 29, 1936- Me Warn You" with pounding mallets over taught toms. Looped segments of FDR's voice from the his Democratic National Convention speech of that year are deftly added to the mix creating a surreal awareness of a message. This piece is more akin to performance art than traditional melody based music. The musicians key off of the repeated spoken lines and the cadence of FDR's words define the melody and the rhythm of the piece. Matt Moran, using violin bows against the sides of his vibraphone's bars, creates his own unique droning sound. With his wild mane of light hair, Moran looks like Christopher Lloyd's mad scientist from the movie "Back to the Future," and vibraphonist can play frenetically at times in a whirling dervish kind of way.
Matt Moran photo by Ralph A. Miriello c 2013 |
Hollenbeck decided to go back to his earlier repertoire for a song titled "Flock," composed at a time he was doing a residency in Scotland. John took to the piano, pounding out singular notes in a rhythmic pattern that is then picked up by his fellow musicians. Much like the lead goose leads a flock, calling out to his fellow travelers, giving them direction, the band is guided musically by Mr. Hollenbeck's lead sounds. If you closed your eyes you could see the formation of downy birds flying over the horizon.
Red Weirenger, Chris Tordini and Chris Speed photo by Ralph A. Miriello c 2103 |
A high-light of the album, which was disappointingly not played during the first set, is the haunting "September 12th- The Coping Song" written the day after the attacks on the Trade Center Towers when Mr. Hollenbeck was in residency in upstate NY. This chamber music-like piece utilizes the beautiful sustained tones of the accordion, the resonant sound of the clarinet and the lingering, hollow sound of the vibes to great effect. The ostinato that Mr. Hollenbeck creates is at once somber and up-lifting,developing a sense of promise and expectation out of a cloud of disbelief and shock.
Mr. Hollenbeck's vision of September is one of hope and creativity.
He has a unique mind that can envision sounds from various real life situations and compose them into accurate statements of the human condition. At times the beauty of his music offers us a glimpse into the magnificent possibilities.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Cassandra Wilson Kicks Off the New Season at The Performing Arts Center at SUNY Purchase, N.Y. September 28, 2013
Cassandra Wilson has been touted as one of the finest jazz
vocalists of her generation. At the heart of it all she is a Mississippi girl
who was raised in Jackson and absorbed some of the area’s Delta blues tradition
into her soul. Coincidentally, Ms. Wilson was also affected by the contemporary
sounds of the folk and rock music of her generation. Like any inspired innovator,
she found a way to introduce songs she grew up with into her repertoire. Songs by artists like Van
Morrison, Joni Mitchell and even the Monkees, reworking
them into minor masterpieces of a hybrid sound that is pure Cassandra Wilson.
She possesses a voluptuous contralto voice that she has honed into a
marvelously supple instrument. She can alter timbre and tone with precision and
purpose. Her relaxed, conversational delivery is more folk/blues than jazz-like, but yet
she is an improviser at heart retaining a jazz sensibility in her music. She is a stylist more than a
traditional singer, bringing her own unique interpretation to songs that we
thought we knew. Sometimes, after hearing her versions, we realize that we really didn't have
a clue. For all intents and purposes she defies categorization.
On this the opening evening of the Performing Arts Center at
Purchase College’s 2013-2014 season, Ms.
Wilson was joined by her latest band members. Her musical director, the Swiss chromatic
harmonica player Gregoire Maret, the pianist Jon Cowherd, the bassist Lonnie Plaxico, the
guitarist Brandon Ross and the French percussionist Mino Cinelu opened the show
with a soulful but sweet instrumental .
After the opening warm-up from the band Ms.
Wilson walked on the stage to enthusiastic applause. She started the set with a Delta blues
inspired song featuring the sparse but effective solo guitar work of Brandon Ross. Ross has the patience and skill to slowly
build ever increasingly interesting fragments of a song from what seems, at
first, like randomly selected notes. His twangy lines emerge revealing the
barest hint of an identifiable rhythm allowing long spaces for bent, scratchy notes
to simmer in the air like the smell of cooked greens on a hot stove. You can feel of the blues emanate from the body
of his steel guitar as he introduces Charlie Patton’s “Saddle up my Pony.” Chromatic
harmonica player and musical director Gregoire Marmet took up a bass line on
a large mouth organ that emanated low register sounds like a reedy old pump
organ. Ms Wilson’s deliberately paced contralto reading of the lines added the
final touches to this blues classic.
The second selection was the title
song from her latest CD Another Country. The song has a swaying rhythm that is provided
by finger picking by Ross, a walking bass line by Plaxico, some hand percussion
by Cinelu and some harmonica accents by Marmet.
Mr. Marmet is an accomplished chromatic player who has a sweet sound
that lacks the growl of a real blues player-more Toots than Stevie. Ms. Wilson’s
husky voice easily modulates in a cadence that mimics the song’s rhythmic sway.
Twenty years ago Ms. Wilson
released her first Blue Note album titled Blue
Light Till Dawn, so appropriately she played Van Morrison’s “Tupelo Honey” from that CD. In many ways Ms. Wilson’s languid
delivery takes all the yearning sentiment out of the Irishman’s originally
touching version. The re-working, while certainly her own interpretation, is just a bit too listless, devoid of the earnest soulful energy that Mr. Morrison so deftly gave to the
original. Mr. Marmet’s sickeningly sweet
harmonica only accentuates the divide relegating the song into schmaltz, Mr. Plaxico’s buzzing arco
bass at the coda a bit gimmicky.
Ms. Wilson’s willingness to cross artificially
created musical boundaries is part of her appeal. It may not always be a successful
endeavor but she certainly has the fortitude to try to expand her musical
palette. Mr. Cowherd and Mr. Plaxico started the next song “Angola” with an
ostinato piano/bass line with a distinctive samba-like rhythm that seemed to
energize Mr. Cinelu on hand drums. Ms. Wilson clapped her hands and slithered around the stage to the beat as she sang in Portuguese.
When Mr. Cinelu harmonized with her voice it was quite pleasing. Ms. Wilson took a cabasa out of
Cinelu’s hands and the two had the audience clapping in time. Mr. Cinelu exhibited an animated exuberance
that grew in intensity as the rhythm section of Plaxico, Ross and Cowherd pushed the pace. Mr. Cinelu exhibited a poly rhythmic
finale that had the audience cheering.
In a demonstration of
where Ms. Wilson’s re-workings of a song are most effective, the most poignant
part of the evening was when Ms. Wilson and Mr. Ross played the Jimmy Webb
classic “Witchita Lineman” from her album Belly
of the Sun. Here Ms. Wilson’s
purposefully slow and deliberate take accentuated the poignancy of Webb’s simple
lyrics to perfection. The hushed audience was mesmerized and Mr. Marret’s saccharine
sound was able to punctuate the mood to perfection.
In speaking about her
musical upbringing in a recent NPR interview Ms. Wilson said “I still love the
piano, but the guitar is my heart.” On “Red
Guitar,” from her latest CD Another Country, Ms.Wilson picked up a
red telecaster-like electric guitar and sang. There is little need for her to
play with such an able guitarist as Mr. Ross doing all the heavy lifting here,
but it is a homecoming of sorts for Ms. Wilson. It was her early folk/rock/blues
playing in coffee houses and such, often self-accompanied on guitar, where she
learned to nuances of her voice and formed the essence of her style, so it was
nice to here her return to this less produced format. The audience agreed.
Mr. Cowherd’s sensitive side
was heard on an unnamed instrumental
duet between him and Mr. Maret. Mr. Cowherd can play beautifully and his
unassuming demeanor belies his talent. Mr. Maret seemed to thrive in the
pairing, not over playing, simply adding sparse contrapuntal accents that matched
Mr. Cowherd’s chords perfectly.
Ms. Wilson’s successful integration
of pop songs into her vernacular is probably best demonstrated by her re imagining
of the Monkee’s hit “ The Last Train to Clarksville,” which she first covered
on her Grammy award winning album New Moon Daughter from 1996. On this
version she proved that she can continue to make otherwise generic songs into
her own minor masterpieces. Mr. Cowherd
was particularly soulful on this one and Mr. Plaxico was rock steady
throughout. She left the stage as Mr.
Maret and the band took the song out.
After a standing ovation Ms.
Wilson returned to the stage and appropriately ended the set with a blues. Mr.
Ross , who never left the stage-tuning his guitar throughout the applause, led off with his pungent guitar lines that slowly but surely develop
into a four bar blues line. The band builds this slow-cooker in stages as each
instrument enters adding more fuel to this simmering fire. Ms. Wilson’s smoky
alto is center stage as she walks us through the Son House lyrics of “Death
House.” Ms. Wilson first did this song
on her New Moon Daughter Album and it
is the authentic pathos of her singing on this song that firmly establishes her
as a true blues artist of major import. On this evening however, after a few
verses of Ms. Wilson’s heart wrenching
vocals, (which we could have used more of), the band took the song as a vehicle for
extended improvisation by Mr. Maret. Despite
the crowd’s applause during Mr. Maret’s endless solo, as a harmonica player myself,
I am particularly sensitive to the effectiveness of a harp in music and
especially within the blues idiom. For me, Mr. Maret’s indulgence detracted from
the performance. I would have preferred fewer choruses with a bending diatonic
harp for this song in keeping with the blues tradition, but that is just a
personal preference. More importantly, as musical director, Mr. Maret, no
matter how talented a player, must realize and that using the harmonica sparingly
is the most prudent course. On this point perhaps Mr. Ross, whose judicious use
of space on his guitar is exemplary, could be his guide. Ms. Wilson’s voice is
the feature here and she did not disappoint, although it would have been nice to hear more of her and a little less of her band. Despite a generally pleasing performance,
it was a bit disconcerting that to me that at times it seemed as if the band was featured more than the headliner.
The Performing Arts Center
at Purchase College has a fabulously eclectic season planned for this year. Its
schedule can be found at here.
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Trombone Heaven on Steve Turre's The Bones of Art:
Steve Turre The Bones of Art High Note HCD 7251 |
For over thirty years Art Blakey was as influential a
band leader as there was in jazz. From 1947 until his death in 1991, his group
the Jazz Messengers was a university of jazz for young and talented
musicians. Many of these young lions would later become some of the period’s
most influential players of the genre.
Steve Turre was one of the few musicians who played trombone with Blakey
and can be heard on Blakey’s 1973 album Anthenaga
along with then members Cedar Walton
and Woody Shaw. His experience with
Blakey left a lasting impression on the young trombonist and his latest album, The Bones of Art, is
as much a dedication to the late band leader as it is a celebration of the
diversity of expression available on his instrument, the trombone. Steve used the Blakey connection to realize
his dream of fronting a band with three trombone voices leading the
way. He assembled fellow Blakey trombone alumni Steve Davis, Frank
Lacy and Robin Eubanks to contribute their individual signature sounds along
with pianist Xavier Davis, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Willie Jones
III .
The Bones of Art may
well be the best trombone featured album since the seminal collaborations made by Kai
Winding and JJ Johnson on albums like their 1960 The Great Kai and JJ. The album starts off with a dedication to trombone
legend Slide Hampton, “Slide’s Ride” is a driving, hard bop smoker that
features the three synchronous trombones of Davis, Lacy and Turre demonstrating
the true meaning of simpatico. Pianist Xavier Davis sounds like a young McCoy
Tyner before the solos start. Listening to the three voices with their nuanced
interpretations is most interesting. Turre leads off with a boisterous medium register
solo that has a growly gusto, Davis’ solo is more billowy, blissfully floating
with a light airiness. Lacy’s sound is the most raucous of the three with his
slurring streams clustered with a quick-cadenced ease. The rhythm section provides
the torrid pace with Peter Washington and Willie Jones III keeping the
exquisite time. Slide would be proud.
Steve Turre’s ballad “Blue and Brown” is homage to
Lawrence Brown who was Duke Ellington’s first trombonist. A sweet Basie-like piano
solo by Davis and a wonderfully buoyant bass solo by Washington are two features
of this slow waltz. The three trombone voices meld together like three pats of butter in a
hot pan in a display of magical harmony that leads to a nostalgic sounding
pixie-plunger solo by Turre; a subtle
piece to be savored like the sip of a fine brandy.
Trombonist Frank Lacy’s “Settegast Strut” is a piece of
music that lends itself perfectly to the powerful
sound of the three ‘bones in synchronous harmony. Lacy’s
big, gutsy growl is on majestic display for three choruses, as he demonstrates
his amazing control of this expressive instrument. He slides through a range of
ascending notes that sends shivers down your spine and then bellows out some
low notes that seem almost bottomless. Turre adds a couple choruses of
his own that squeeze out some of his own ideas on the music. All the while
Willie Jones III punctuates with his crashing cymbals at just the right times
and Davis’s flowing piano crescendos smooth out the lines in between and at the
coda.
Part of the fun of this album is listening to all the
devices and styles these guys can produce from their bag of tricks. “Bird’s
Bones” is Steve Davis’ composition dedicated to Charlie Parker. This bop inspired song starts out with Davis
on open horn, Lacy on a cup mute with its distinctively “tinny” sound and Turre
on metal straight mute. Davis solos first with an open horn,Turre is up next
with a distinctive handmade wooden mute that has a bit of a muffled sound.
After a brief piano solo by Davis, Lacy plays with a squeaky sounding Harmon
mute followed by a short bass solo by Washington and then a few choruses of Willie
Jones soloing between breaks as the song ends.
Peter Washington’s galloping bass opens the scene on
Turre’s “Sunset” as the three trombones-
one open, one with a plunger and one with a mute- play the opening line in a lazy,
almost dreamy way. But the song has a
sauntering swing that inspires the playful spirit of these players. Lacy takes
the first solo with an open horn that seems to awaken to the rhythm in an
uplifting way. Turre uses his plunger to create a more playful swing with his screeches
and slurs paving the way for a piano solo by Davis. Davis tickles the
ivories with a spirited playful touch. Steve Davis plays a warm,
bellowing solo with an open horn, letting some of his notes linger in the air like
ripe figs on a tree, delicious. The trio use bucket mutes for the finale as
they close languidly to the ostinato bass line.
On Turre’s “4 & 9”, a reference to the alternating
time signatures 4/4 and 9/4 used in this song, we are treated to another
trombone master and Blakey alumnus, Robin Eubanks. Eubanks is a master of odd
meters and Turre’s tune is tailor made for this man’s specialty. Pianist Xavier
Davis puts some funk into the tune using the Fender Rhodes and guest bassist
Kenny Davis adds his own brand electric bad ass.
Turre navigates through the meter changes with
accomplished aplomb on his open horn, then Eubanks takes it to another level.
He bursts unto the scene with a solo that is both spirited and soulful as he traverses the changes with a smoothness
that belies their complexity.
“Fuller Beauty” is a modal ballad that is dedicated to
trombonist Curtis Fuller who played with Turre in the Blakey band. This one is gorgeously
expressive. Turre plays a heartfelt open solo that finds him at his most
sensitive. The pianist Davis also finds a warm, sensitive side to his playing here, with Steve Davis and Frank Lacy playing harmonically rich supporting parts.
Jones and Washington anchor this ballad with subtle surety.
Kevin Eubanks “Shorter Blu” is a dually dedicated to the
saxophonist Wayne Shorter, another Blakey alumnus, and to Blakey himself, whose Muslim nickname was Blu. Here all four trombones act in concert on this
unusual piece of music. After a rising piano solo by Davis, Eubanks opens with
a, shifting, zigzag-like solo. Turre takes a turn with a Harmon muted solo and then Lacy takes
his own gruff solo before the ensemble all enter in a free-spirited jam that
colors the song to the coda.
The gutsiest song on the album is Turre’s “Julian’s Blues”.
This low-down dirty blues is dedicated to trombonist Julian Priester, whose
approach to harmony in such bands as Sun Ra’s Arkestra impressed Turre. The ensemble
plays this blues with solidarity of soul. Solos start with Lacy laying down his
raspiest solo, setting the tone for the down and dirty mood. Steve Davis plays a gentler,
rounder solo that contrasts nicely with how Lacy left him. Pianist Davis plays
with economy and still manages to make his point felt. Turre comes in with a stone lined cup on his
horn, creating a distant sound, that he trades off with bassist Peter
Washington before the ensemble ends with Lacy having the last grimy word.
The finale is a Latin flavored Steve Davis song titled “Daylight”
and like daylight it is a fitting uplifting ending to this wonderfully
expressive album. On this one the three
bones and superb rhythm section are
joined by percussionist Pedro Martinez who adds to the sway with his congas and some
conch shell playing by Turre.
For those who love trombone, a great vibe and good music Steve
Turre’s The Bones of Art offers a
feast of sounds and expressiveness that is second to none.
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