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LARS DANIELSSON, DAVID LIEBMAN, JON CHRISTENSEN, BOBO STENSON - Far North (1994)

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Tracks
01. Far North (Lars Danielsson)
02. Eden (Lars Danielsson)
03. Fuschia (David Liebman)
04. Climbing (David Liebman)
05. Einstein (Lars Danielsson)
06. Ormen (Lars Danielsson)
07. Twelve Tones Old (Bobo Stenson)
08. Pacem (Lars Danielsson)

LARS DANIELSSON  double bass
JON CHRISTENSEN  drums
BOBO STENSON  piano
DAVID LIEBMAN  soprano saxophone

Recorded February 1994 at Raimbow Studio, Oslo
Curling Legs – C.L.P. CD 13


GARY BURTON, STEVE SWALLOW - Hotel Hello (1975)

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With HOTEL HELLO, longtime collaborators vibraphonist Gary Burton and bassist Steve Swallow deliver a stylistically mixed bag of tunes that showcases both of the musicians' thoughtful, measured approaches to improvisation. Swallow's talents as a composer and pianist are also on display, and his work in these areas mirrors the feel of his cerebral, always just-so bass lines. Fans of the spacious "ECM sound" will find a lot to like here, but the duo also throws a few curve balls: the wah-wah-infused "Inside In" finds Swallow atypically bringing the funk, while the typewriter-like rhythms of "Hotel Overture" make the tune sound a bit like Weather Report jamming on an evening news theme.

Vibraphonist Gary Burton and bassist Steve Swallow had played together on a regular basis since 1967. This duet outling finds Burton switching between vibes, organ and marimba while Swallow doubles on occasional piano. As expected, the music is introverted, quiet, and accasionally swinging, but mostly floating. Burton and Swallow perform group originals (generally by Swallow), plus Carla Bley's "Vashkar" and Mile Gibbs "Inside In". Thoughtful background music with no real surprises or excitement. Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

Tracks
1. Chelsea Bells/for Hern (Steve Swallow)
2. Hotel Overture + Vamp (Steve swallow)
3. Hotel Hello (Steve Swallow)
4. Inside In (Mike Gibbs)
5. Domino Biscuit (Steve Swallow)
6. Vaskkar (Carla Bley)
7. Sweet Henry (Steve Swallow)
8. Impromptu (Gary Burton/Steve Swallow)
9. Sweeping up (Steve Swallow)

GARY BURTON vibraharp, organ, marimba
STEVE SWALLOW bass, piano

Recorded May 13, 14, 1974 at Aengus Studio, Fayville, Mass
ECM 1055

MARIA SCHNEIDER - Evanescence (1994)

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Strong, sensitive, colorful, possessed of great depth of feeling, funny, worried, secure, insecure, highly skilled, naturally gifted, dedicated to growth ... listening to a tape I have heard many times and thinking about a person I know very well, these are some initial thoughts that become words ... words that hopefully can convey a little of what is inside me.

Real leaders, especially of large ensembles, are so rare these past years as to be a novelty. The so-called "big band" has been fading since the 1970's. Reason: no composers who can also organize, rehearse, conduct and perform convincingly in public. To know a woman who can do all of these things so well is a double pleasure - not being overly impressed, during the last 10,000 years or so, with a male-dominated socio-political structure and also having ears subjected to dreary hours of attempts to "find a market" for the music, as so much of band music does. Thad and Mel, George Russell, Gil Evans, Don Ellis, Toshiko ... it really isn't a very long list that comes to mind. I am consequently every grateful to Maria for being such a good composer, such a good bandleader and such a pleasure to watch - and hear - as a conductor. Too bad I'm not young enough to be in the band.

I was fortunate enough to have her as a "student", terrible word that it is, in the early and mid 1980's. From me she went to Gil Evans, as arranger, assistant and general support mechanism. I think that Gil and I were very lucky - certainly Gil's sense of color has had a profound effect on Maria, and she and I talked a lot about development and structure. We still do. You can also judge, quite accurately I think, where she's at by the musicians she selects. Kenny Werner called me after the recording, raving about the music and Maria's command of the situation. Maria and I did a lot of talking, in our early stages, about being female in a male preserve, and my support was constant, simply stated as - after many years of sitting in rows on bandstands, that the appearance of a lovely face would be as fresh air, after all those ugly men I had to look at. Also, contrary to accepted wisdom, musicians welcome goodness, skill, musicality and talent, wherever it comes from. They are also quick to spot fraud, so Maria's tenure as a successful bandleader in New York and Europe is adequate testimony.

You may get the impression that I like this person, and you would be correct. I recently had a quick, large vocal project to do in Cologne, and - needing help - the first person I called was Maria Schneider. I am very hard to please in music, so that must be my highest praise. It is a thorough pleasure to welcome Maria to the world, and to your ears, and to invite her to a long, productive and successful life as a composer, conductor and teacher, which she now is. Hmm ... maybe I'll call for a lesson. - Bob Brookmeyer


People often ask, "How does a girl from a small prairie town like Windom, Minnesota, come to study and work with many of her jazz heroes and lead her own jazz orchestra in New York?"

It all began for me at age five, when Evelyn Butler, a dynamic, redheaded classical and stride jazz pianist, blew into my hometown from Chicago. Smitten from the first moment I heard her lay into a keyboard, I had to study with her. Over the next thirteen years, she whetted my curiosity for how music works by teaching me classical and jazz theory from lesson one. For me, she was Windom's most treasured resource.

I received a Bachelor of Music degree in theory and composition from the University of Minnesota. The emphasis was European music, but my simultaneous admiration for American composers such as Duke Ellington, George Russell, Gil Evans, Thad Jones and Bob Brookmeyer turned my direction to jazz. This new focus brought me to the University of Miami, then to the Eastman School of Music where I earned a Master of Music degree in jazz writing and contemporary media under Rayburn Wright, a phenomenal teacher.

Striving for more in my writing, I moved to New York City in 1985 and searched out Bob Brookmeyer. Bob's ingenuity, his ideas about minimizing materials and developing a sense for form, and the wonderful spirit and drama of his music opened a new world. He expressed appreciation for my feminine side, something he inspired me to value rather than hide. What a gift, to have a mentor believe in you - at times more than you believe in yourself. He told Mel Lewis about me, and soon I had the thrill of hearing Mel and his band play some of my music.

On day composer and bandleader Tom Pierson and I were sharing thoughts, and I expressed my admiration for Gil Evans' music. Unaware of Tom and Gil's close friendship, I was astonished when Tom called to say that Gil, in need of an assistant, asked to meet me. Over the next three years, the last years of Gil's life, we worked on challenging projects together, including the film The Color of Money and arrangements for Sting’s European concert with the Gil Evans Orchestra. Gil's spirit and music are part of me, and our relationship is one I will always cherish. In June of 1993, Anita Evans asked me to conduct Gil's band at the Spoleto Festival in a performance of selections from Miles Ahead, Porgy & Bess, Sketches of Spain and Quiet Nights. I will never forget the experience of conducting that music amidst the collective love we all felt for Gil.

Eventually I needed to write for a group with no preordained style, a group to test my own ideas and develop my own sound. Mel Lewis urged me to start a band. In 1989 I did this with trombonist and writer John Fedchock who had moved to New York after seven years with Woody Herman. Our band performed in New York for three years. My current group is an offshoot of that band. The players have impressive lists of credits, but beyond that, each is wonderfully unique as a musician and as a person. They give soul and nuance to my music. I am proud to have them bring my work to life for you.

Maria Schneider


Tracks
01 - Wyrgly
       Soloist – Ben Monder, John Fedchock, Rick Margitza
02 - Evanescence
       Soloist – Rich Perry, Tim Hagans
03 - Gumba Blue
       Soloist – Greg Gisbert, Kenny Werner
04 - Some Circles
       Soloist – Rich Perry
05 - Green Piece
       Soloist – Kenny Werner, Rick Margitza
06 - Gush
       Soloist – Tim Ries
07 - My Lament
       Soloist – Rick Margitza
08 - Dance You Monster To My Soft Song
       Soloist – Ben Monder, Tim Hagans
09 - Last Season
       Soloist – Tim Hagans, Tim Ries

Personel
Mark Vinci - alto, flute, alto flute, clarinet and piccolo
Tim Ries - alto, soprano, flute and clarinet
Rich Perry - tenor and flute
Rick Margitza - tenor
Scott Robinson - baritone, bass sax, bass clarinet and clarinet
Tony Kadleck - trumpet
Greg Gisbert - trumpet
Laurie Frink- trumpet
Tim Hagans - trumpet
John Fedchock - trombone
Keith O'Quinn - trombone
Larry Farrell - trombone
George Flynn - bass trombone and tuba
Ben Monder - guitar
Kenny Werner- piano
Jay Anderson - bass
Dennis Mackrel - drums
Emidin Rivera - percussion on 'Gush'
Bil Hayes - flexatone on 'Gush'

Music composed by Maria Schneider
Recorded September 1992 and mixed at Skyline Studios, NYC
Artistshare 0006     (Originally Released 1994)

MIGUEL ZENON - Looking Forward (2001)

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Alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón has made a name for himself as a distinguished sideman and a member of David Sánchez's band. His fiery debut as a leader, Looking Forward, revolves around a quartet comprised of pianist Luis Perdomo, bassist Hans Glawischnig, and drummer Antonio Sánchez. Guest percussionists William Cepeda and Pernell Saturnino appear on a handful of cuts; David Sánchez, guitarist Ben Monder, and trumpeter Diego Urcola each make cameos along the way. While Zenón's music certainly owes much to Sánchez (the two even employ much of the same personnel), his capacity for nuance and surprise sets him apart. Listen to some of his monster endings and you'll likely agree. His hard-edged, high-velocity alto suggests just a trace of Greg Osby; his compositions, like Sánchez's, blend indigenous Latin forms with highly advanced jazz harmonies, lines, and rhythms. In addition to the dense interplay of "El Bloque" and "El Cruze," and the blistering swing of "Yochabel," Zenón offers a revelatory take on Bach, titled "J.S.B.," a Spanish chant/avant-garde freakout called "Anxiety," and gripping renditions of songs by Silvio Rodriguez, Rafael Hernandez, and Juanito Marques. He sets it all up with a rubato "Prayer #1 (Blessing)" and closes with "Prayer #2 (Thanksgiving)," multi-tracking hypnotic flutes under a dancing alto sax improvisation. Zenón comes across as focused, imaginative, and highly articulate, tempering chops with tremendous sensitivity.  -  David R. Adler 


Tracks
01. Prayer # 1 (blessing)
02. Looking Forward
03. Yochabel
04. Pequeña Serenata Diurna
05. Campanitas de Cristal (Rafael Hernandez)
06. Anxiety
07. El Bloque
08. J.S.B.
09. Alma Con Alma (juanito Marques)
10. El Cruze
11. Prayer # 2 (thanksgiving)

MIGUEL ZENON  alto sax, percussion, flute, vocals
ANTONIO SÁNCHEZ  drums, vocals
LUIS PERDOMO  piano, vocals
HANS GLAWISCHNIG  bass, vocals
PERNELL SATURNINO  bomba drums, vocals, cajon, percussion
DAVID SÁNCHEZ  tenor sax
WILLIAM CEPEDA  bomba drums, vocals, percussion
DIEGO URCOLA  trumpet
BEN MONDER  electric guitar

All compositions written by Miguel Zenon unless otherwise noted. All compositions arrangued by Miguel Zenon. “J.S.B.” is based on the Prelude and Fugue # 3 in C-sharp Major, BWV 848 from “The Well Tempered Clavier” Book 1, by Johann Sebastian Bach.
Recorded  August 24 & 25 2001 at Peter Karl Studio, Brooklyn NY.
Fresh Sound New Talent  FSNT  119CD

TETE MONTOLIU - Catalonian Nights Vol. 3 (1980)

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This recordings capture the art of Tete Montoliu at the peak of his powers, in inspirational company and among a warmy sympathetic audience.  He was a keyboard master who never stopped swinging during more than half the century in which he lived.  Thanks to tracks like these we can continue to celebrate his diamond bright lines of compelling logic and vivid beauty

Tracks
01. Easy Living (Rubin / Rainger)
02. No Greater Love (Symes / Jones)
03. Jo Vull Que M´Acariciis (Tete Montoliu)
04. Scrapple From The Apple (Charlie Parker)
05. When Lights Are Low (Benny Carter)
06. We´ll Be Together Again (Fischer / Lane)
07. Joy Spring (Clifford Brown)
08. Bag’s Groove (Milt Jackson)

TETE MONTOLIU  piano
JOHN HEARD  bass
ALBERT “TOOTIE” HEATH  drums

Recorded “live” at Zeleste Club, May 1980 Barcelona, Spain
SteepleChase  SCCD  31433   Denmark
http://www.steeplechase.dk/

KEITH JARRETT TRIO - The Mourning Of A Star (1971)

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This album gives one an interesting look at the early Keith Jarrett, who was already performing on an album of the Charles Lloyd Quartet and Miles Davis' early fusion band. He had not yet fully developed his style, but he was clearly on his way.  -  Scott Yanow

Tracks
01. Follow The Crooked Path (Though It Be Longer)
02. Interlude No. 3
03. Standing Outside
04. Everything That Lives Laments
05. Interlude No. 1
06. Trust
07. All I Want
08. Traces Of You
09. The Mourning Of A Star
10. Interlude No. 2
11. Sympathy

KEITH JARRETT  piano, recorder (tenor), soprano saxophone, steel drums, congas (3)
CHARLIE HADEN  bass, steel drums
PAUL MOTIAN  drums, steel drums, congas (7)

Music composed by Keith Jarrett except “All I Want” by Joni Mitchell
Recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York, N.Y.
Atlantic– SD 1596

HILTON RUIZ - Live At Birdland (1993)

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This pianist/composer/arranger has amassed jazz and Latin music credentials that are of Guinness Gook proportions. From his solo work to the now legendary duets with the late Major Holley, to Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Tito Puente, symphony orchestras and the various aggregations of his own, Hilton is a master of many styles but a slave to none.
He is just as comfortable in an acoustic trio setting playing straight-ahead jazz standards. When it comes to caressing the ivories, Ruiz has got the class of Erroll Garner and Noro Morales with the sophistication of Duke Ellington and Ernesto Lecuona all wrapped up in to one. You're hear these elements and more upon listening to Hilton Ruiz Live At Birdland.
For this live date at Birdland, Hilton assembled some of the top musicians in New York, all of whom share his mastery of both the jazz and Latin idioms; David Sanchez (tenor sax), Peter Brainin (tenor sax), Andy Gonzales (bass), Steve Berrios (drums) Giovani Hidalgo (percussion). 

Tracks
01. Something Grand (Hilton Ruiz)
02. New Arrival (Hilton Ruiz)
03. Blues For Two Tenors (Hilton Ruiz)
04. Mr. Kenyatta (Lee Morgan)
05. Liza (Andy McCloud III)
06. A Night in Tunisia (Dizzy Gillespie / Frank Paparelli)
07. I’ll Call You Later (Hilton Ruiz)
08. On Green Dolphin Street (Bronislaw Kaper / Ned Washington)
09. Footsprints (Wayne Shorter)

HILTON RUIZ  piano
DAVID SANCHEZ  tenor saxophone
PETER BRAININ  tenor saxophone
ANDY GONZALEZ  bass
STEVE BERRIOS  drums
GIOVANNI HIDALGO  percussion

Recorded live at Birdland, New York City 24 & 25 June 1992
CANDID Records  CCD  79532

PAT LaBARBERA - Virgo Dance (1993)

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This Justin Time set is one of Pat La Barbera's better showcases on the Justin Time label splitting his time between tenor and soprano, La Barbera teams up with three fellow Canadians (pianist George McFetridge, bassist Neil Swainson, and drummer Greg Pilo) to perform advanced standards, including "Footprints,""Miles Ahead," and Steve Swallow's "Eiderdown," plus three group originals. Virgo Dance songs The often-intense interpretations are modal oriented, with La Barbera often closely emulating late-'50s/early-'60s John Coltrane, particularly on tenor.  -  Scott Yanow

Tracks
01. Footprints (Wayne Shorter)
02. Miles Ahead (Miles Davis / Gil Evans)
03. I Fall In Love Too Easily  (Sammy Cahn / Jules Styne)
04. Eiderdown (Steve Swallow)
05. Alhambra (Pat LaBarbera)
06. Once Around The Sun (George McFetridge)
07. Virgo Dance (Pat LaBarbera)
08. Riddles (Richard Beirach )
09. Monk’s Dream (Thelonious Monk)

PAT LaBARBERA  tenor & soprano saxophones
GEORGE McFETRIDGE  piano
NEIL SWAINSON  bass
GREG PILO  drums

Recorded at Studio Victor, Montreal April 1987
Justin Time Records  Just 24-2

WALT DICKERSON & SUN RA - Visions (1979)

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Dickerson made a fairly 'big splash' when his first recordings appeared in the early 60s (Down Beat Critics Poll “New Star”, 1962), but he's remained an enigmatic figure ever since. His early sides demonstrated a sure grasp of the Hampton/Jackson continuum in blazing through standards, but his original compositions on those dates reflected a spiritual, even mystical flavor that was expanded on in recordings into the early 80s.
Dickerson's distinctive melodic and rhythmic approach is complemented by his unique timbre on what is often a cold-sounding and unwieldly
instrument - his use of rubber mallets specially-treated to produce a plush and very warm yet crisp sound, immediately recognizable. Of all his recordings, most are in the trio format, none larger than a quintet (with two drummers!), and no horn players appear. There is an underlying current of turbulence yet an overall air of serenity to his work.
Also curious (and frustrating to his small but devoted group of devotees) are Dickerson's long periods of inactivity; no recordings exist between 1966 and 1975, and his last released LP was in 1982. Word has it that he still performs sporadically around his native Philadelphia, even more rarely in New York and the west coast. (Anyone with more information is implored to contact the author!)
Among his more noted collaborators are Sun Ra (both in the 60s and 70s) and Andrew Cyrille, who performed on the great majority of Dickerson's recordings from 1961 (possibly Cyrille's first major recording?) through 1982.  -  All About Jazz

Tracks
01. Astro
02. Utopia
03. Visions
04. Constructive Neutrons
05. Space Dance
06. Light Years
07. Prophesy

WALT DICKERSON  vibraphone
SUN RA  piano

Music composed by Walt Dickerson
Recorded July 11, 1978
SteepleChase – SCCD - 31126

MICHEL PETRUCCIANI - Estate (1982)

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Michel Petrucciani was not quite 20 years old at the time of this trio session with drummer Aldo Romano and bassist Furio Di Castri, but he was already displaying incredible potential as a pianist. Petrucciani's risk-taking interpretation of Bill Evans' turbulent "Very Early" is the highlight of this release, closely followed by his own bittersweet ballad, "I Just Say Hello." Romano's rapid fire "Samba Des Prophetes" is superior to his rather bland and predictable "Pasolini." Michel Petrucciani made a number of dates for Owl and The George Wein Collection around the same time period as these recordings which are superior to this CD, yet none of them have remained in print. Even though this can't be considered an essential release for Michel Petrucciani fans (especially with its brief playing time of under 35 minutes), it is an enjoyable session.  -  Ken Dryden 


Tracks
01. Pasolini (Aldo Romano)
02. Very Early (Bill Evans)
03. Estate (B. Martino)
04. Maybe Yes (Michel Petrucciani)
05. I Justy Say Hello (Michel Petrucciani)
06. Tone Poem (Charles Lloyd)
07. Samba Des Prophetes (A. Romano / C. Nougaro

MICHEL PETRUCCIANI  piano
FURIO DICASTRI  bass
ALDO ROMANO  drums

Recorded at Forum Rec. Studio Rome on march 29, 30, april 16, may 5, 1982
IRD Records TDM  001-2

TETE MONTOLIU - Tete A Tete (1976)

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Tracks
01. What’s New (Haggart-Burke)
02. We´ll Be Together Again (Fisher-Lane)
03. Scadia Skies (K. Dorham)
04. Lush Life (B. Strayhorn)
05. Catalan Suite (T. Montoliu)

TETE MONTOLIU  piano
NIELS HENNING ORSTED PEDERSEN  bass
ALBERT ‘TOOTIE’ HEATH  drums

Recorded February 15 & 16, 1976
SteepleChase  SCCD  31054

SCOTT COLLEY - Architect Of The Silent Moment (2007)

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If an artist is the sum total of his experiences, then Scott Colley's reach is nearly limitless. In twenty years the bassist has appeared on nearly 150 albums, ranging from mainstream work with Jim Hall and Carmen McRae to more left-of-center projects with Andrew Hill and Greg Osby. His own releases have been migrating towards a more expansive viewpoint. On Architect of the Silent Moment Colley brings together a collection of players who share his appreciation for what's come before, but are just as concerned with what's to come.
His core quartet features two artists who, despite considerable critical acclaim, have yet to achieve the greater recognition they deserve. Trumpeter Ralph Alessi is a consistently adventurous player who, with a rounded tone, lyrical disposition and unforced technique, rivals the better-known Dave Douglas. The increasingly ubiquitous Craig Taborn is an equally instinctive keyboardist whose roots in the tradition are often obscured by his bold and unrestrained mind-set.
Antonio Sanchez, best-known for his work with guitarist Pat Metheny, is a malleable and increasingly in-demand drummer. He's established himself with a broad and stylistically expanding discography in the last decade.
All three are as capable of tackling complex compositional constructs as freer flights of improvisation, and Colley challenges them on both fronts and more. Colley is a fine bassist, with a Dave Holland-like ability to make even the most challenging of shifting meters groove viscerally. But it's his writing (all but two pieces here are his) that makes Architect of the Silent Moment stand out.
"Window of Time is a good example. It starts out in an open-ended modal fashion, with Alessi and saxophonist David Binney (a co-producer who leaves his own unmistakable signature) delivering Colley's knotty theme. Alessi's solo builds over an increasingly tumultuous rhythm section before the tune shifts to a rhythmically displaced backbeat. Adam Rogers' layered guitars, Taborn's B-3 and Alessi's long, rich tones take the tune out, suggesting a different kind of folksy Americana.
Colley makes the complex accessible on the spacious "Masoosong, featuring Gregoire Maret, the most important harmonica player since Toots Thielmans. "Feign Tonal opens with a start-stop post bop theme before dissolving into more angular freedom, only to magically blend the two at its conclusion. Andrew Hill's "Smokestack, on the other hand, starts with an impressionistic duet between Taborn and pianist Jason Moran, before settling into an unexpectedly relaxed take that seamlessly shifts between straight and double-time swing.
The group's modernistic integration of acoustic and electric textures represents an increasingly popular aesthetic. Like his blend of traditional and contemporary harmonic and rhythmic concepts, Colley clearly doesn't believe in mutual exclusivity. The beauty of Architect of the Silent Moment is its unequivocal sense of purpose, which avoids undue consideration and provides everyone with ample room to move.  -  John Kelman 


Tracks
01. Usual Illusion
02. Strip Mall Ballet
03. El Otro
04. architect of the silent moment
05. Masoosong
06. Feign Tonal
07. From Within
08. Smoke Stack
09. Window of time

SCOTT COLLEY  bass
RALPH ALESSI  trumpet
CRAIG TABORN  piano, fender Rhodes, hammons B-3
ANTONIO SANCHEZ  drums
DAVID BINNEY  sax
JASON MORAN  piano
GREGOIRE MARET  harmonica
ADAM ROGERS  guitar

All music by Scott Colley except “Smoke Stack” by Andrew Hill
CamJazz  CAM  5021

MARIA SCHNEIDER - Allégresse (2000)

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Few would debate composer/arranger and big band leader, Maria Schneider's significance to the world of jazz. A true stylist who possesses a gifted ear, an equally impressive pen and a penchant for extracting the very best out of her band mates, Schneider has three recordings to her credit which includes this highly anticipated new release, titled Allegresse.
In the liners, Schneider states..."For this recording I wanted to create music that conveys beauty." An accurate statement indeed as the overall production encompasses luminous, poetic themes and expressive horn charts. These characteristics become noticeably evident from the onset of the album's opener, "Hang Gliding." Here, the orchestral arrangement evokes imagery of a tiptoe waltz amid climactic developments and mild tempered choruses whereas, the title track combines linear motifs with arched lines atop velvety statements by trumpeter Ingrid Jensen who also performs on flugelhorn.
Schneider also exhibits an acute capacity for integrating space and depth into her arrangements which comes to the forefront on the twenty-minute opus "Dissolutio," as underlying melodies generate stark emotion, humble sentiment and fiery proclamations. The album's closer, "Sea Of Tranquility," boasts a breezy understated arrangement counterbalanced by baritone saxophonist Scott Robinson's soul induced lines.
Basically, Schneider triumphs as a purveyor of beauty, through song, along with a deeply personalized and seemingly unyielding commitment to her craft. Allegresseis the complete package and should be deemed essential listening for ardent fans of orchestral/big band music or jazz lovers alike.  -  Glenn Astarita



Tracks
01. Hang Gliding
      Soloist – Greg Gisbert, Rick Margitza
02. Nocturne
      Soloist – Frank Kimbrough
03. Allégresse
      Soloist – Rick Perry, Ingrid Jensen
04. Dissolution
      Soloist – Tim Ries
05. Journey Home
      Soloist – Charles Pillow, Ben Monder
06. Sea Of Tranquility
      Soloist -  Scott Robinson

Tony Scherracoustic bass, electric bass
Ben Monderacoustic guitar, electric guitar
Charles Pillowalto sax, soprano sax, clarinet, flute, piccolo flute, oboe, English horn
Scott Robinsonbaritone sax, bass saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, alto flute
Jeff Ballarddrums, percussion
Tim Hornerdrums
Frank Kimbroughpiano
Tim Riessoprano sax, clarinet, flute, alto flute
Rich Perrytenor saxophone, flute
Rick Margitzatenor sax, soprano sax, flute
George Flynnbass trombone, tuba
Tony Kadlecktrumpet, piccolo trumpet, flugelhorn
Dave Balloutrumpet, flugelhorn
Greg Gisberttrumpet, flugelhorn
Ingrid Jensentrumpet, fluhelhorn
Laurie, Finktrumpet, flugelhorn
Maria Schneiderconductor, composer

Recorded at Clinton Recording Studios on January 26-27, 2000
Enja Records – ENJ-9393 2

MICK GOODRICK - In Pas(s)ing (1978)

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Guitarist Mick Goodrick once worked alongside Pat Metheny in Gary Burton's band, and they have a similar sound, voicings, and eclectic approach. Goodrick’s 1978 debut as a leader was a strong set that had fusion, straight-ahead, and even almost free pieces. He also headed a strong band, with English saxophonist John Surman at his terse, animated best, plus bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Jack Dejohnette in fine form.  -  Ron Wynn


Tracks
1. Feebles, Fables and Ferns
2. In the Tavern of Ruin
3. Summer Band Camp
4. Pedalpusher
5. In Passing

MICK GOODRICK guitar
JOHN SURMAN soprano and baritone sax, bass clarinet
EDDIE GOMEZ bass
JACK DeJOHNETTE drums

All Compositions by Mick Goodrick except (5) by Goodrick/Surman/Gomez/DeJohnette
Recorded November 1978, Oslo
ECM 1139

MIKE NOCK, DAVE LIEBMAN - Duologue (2007)

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New Zealand-born pianist Mike Nock and American saxophonist Dave Liebman first crossed paths in the ‘60s when Nock was living in the US, first coming to attention with the proto-fusion group Fourth Way.
They haven’t seen each other in over two decades, last working together on Liebman’s The Opal Heart (Enja, 1982). Recorded live at Australia’s Wangaratta Jazz Festival in the fall of 2004, Duologue has the intimate and unassuming feel of two artists for whom the years melted away the minute they hit the stage.
That’s not to say the two don’t challenge each other: they consistently push and prod each other in subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle ways throughout this hour-long performance. Featuring two standards, three pieces by Liebman and one by Nock, none of the originals are new, but here they assume a decidedly new complexion.
Liebman’s “Nadir” is a spacious free piece built around a sketchy premise, and demonstrates why Liebman is the preeminent soprano saxophonist of his generation. That he possesses inimitable skill and an arsenal of extended techniques is without question, but Liebman integrates them in a completely musical way that avoids grandstanding Multiphonics abound with, at one point during the nine-minute piece, Liebman holding onto a high note while, remarkably, a first descending and then ascending harmonic shimmers underneath.
“Breath” has clearer form despite being similarly elastic. Nock takes Liebman’s lyrical theme to a darkly haunting but equally beautiful place, responding with subtle shadings and an equally thematic approach. It’s not so much a case of delineated solos although, with only two players, it might seem that way. “Breath,” like all the pieces on Duologue, truly reflect the title: a conversation between two old friends who are in no hurry to say what needs to be said.
That the six pieces feel so interconnected is as much a matter of spontaneity as it is design. Still, Placing the classic “On Green Dolphin Street” after Nock’s “Acceptance” is especially striking, with the descending chords of the start of “On Green Dolphin Street”’s theme echoing similar movement in Nock’s tune.
While Liebman is often described as an expressionistic player and Nock is nothing if not impressionistic, the two find plenty of common ground. Liebman is wont to inject flurries of notes with a certain restrained energy in the most unexpected of places, but he’s also capable of profound simplicity.
Nock is, quite simply, one of the unsung piano heroes of the past fifty years, all the more so since he returned to Australia in the mid-‘80s.
His discography may be small, but it’s influential and he’s been responsible for nurturing what is now a vibrant Australian scene, in particular in Sydney. With nothing more than a brief rehearsal and reminiscence over dinner before this midnight performance, Duologue is that most serendipitous of happenstances, when two friends reacquaint themselves and discover that time and geography haven’t placed any real distance between them at all.  -  John Kelman

Tracks
01. Acceptance (Mike Nock)
02. On Green Dolphin Street (N. Washington, B. Kaper)
03. Star Crossed Lovers (Ellington & Newton, James Weldon Jr.)
04. Nadir (Dave Liebman)
05. Breath (Dave Liebman)
06. The Panderer (Dave Liebman)

MIKE NOCK  piano
DAVE LIEBMAN  piano

Recorded live at Wangaratta Jazz Festival, October 30th  2004
Birdland Records BL 009  Australia

ORNETTE COLEMAN - This Is Our Music

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This is Our Music is the militantly expressed jumping-off point for alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman on the way to the epochal Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (Atlantic, 1961). Coleman picks up exactly where he left off on Change of the Century and never looks back. He keeps his working band mostly intact save for replacing drummer Billy Higgins with the like- wise sympathetic Ed Blackwell, who adds a phosphorous spark to the proceedings.

Coleman's recordings leading up to the defiant This is Our Music all bear prophetic, even apocalyptic titles: Something Else!!!! (Contemporary, 1958), Tomorrow is theQuestion!!!!(Contemporary, 1959), The Shape of Jazz to Come (Atlantic, 1959) and Change of the Century (Atlantic, 1959). Coleman's choice to title his next recording This is Our Music sounds like a response those critics less sympathetic to his approach in the late 1950s. Coleman takes a stand here, pushing his vision of musical freedom farther than on any previous release.

It is true enough that This is Our Music, opens with "Blues Connotation," a "relatively" straight-forward piece that echoes the opening of Change of the Century in the exquisite "Ramblin.'" Both pieces are steeped in Coleman's Texas blues tradition, brimming with angry virtuosity expressed via craggy skinned- knuckles. Coleman stands on his creative fulcrum, and looks both ways. On the previous Change of the Century the saxophonist carefully recaps his evolution over the previous recordings, ending his consideration with the fully untethered title cut, Coleman's statement that, as far as he was concerned, jazz will never be the same again. On the current recording, after the quasi-contained "Blues Connotation," Coleman fully leaps the edge of tradition into the chaotic and sublime future he, himself, was forging.

The remaining six compositions on This is Our Music firmly foreshadow the next recording, Free Jazz: A Group Improvisation. Melody, harmony, rhythm and time all become Salvador Dali-elastic, gleefully defying Einstein's space-time continuum. Even the only example of a "standard" in Coleman's free library, the Gershwin Brothers'"Embraceable You," is deconstructed and presented in its naked atomic elements. You can find the lost melody, but you must listen closely. And close listening reveals the other creative charms of Coleman's approach. "Embraceable You" is cast as a sound-clip from a noir mosaic, introspectively self- conscious, clothed casually in confidence. It is fitting, in some crazy appropriate way, that Coleman chose "Embraceable You" as his only standard to record during his Contemporary/Atlantic Days.

In October 1947, alto saxophonist Charlie Parkerrecorded "Embraceable You" with trumpeter Miles Davis, pianist Duke Jordan, bassist Tommy Potter and drummer Max Roachfor Ross Russell's Dial label. Parker immediately expressed a different melodic invention over the introductory chords of the well-worn piece, starting a new revolution in improvisation. Where Parker liberated the melody, Coleman set everything else free. Outside of the briefest directorial nudges, Coleman and company head in which ever direction inspired them individually.

"Beauty is a Rare Thing" is a free ballad that presents all of the instruments in their unattached roles. Coleman plays almost sweetly over Blackwell's rolling tom-tom figures. Bassist Charlie Hadenplays a moody arco, while Don Cherry squirts out tart pocket trumpet figures, once strung together, comprising a deranged yet unified solo. So with Cherry's duet sections with Coleman. The two provide one another a fractured counterpoint that resolves as often as it does not.

"Kaleidoscope" fully realizes Coleman's intentional lack of attention to melody and harmony with a frenetic and disjointed opening figure he plays in unison with Cherry and Blackwell. Each then solos like electricity skating across water, unhinged and seemingly without direction. Coleman shows that this is without peril by attaining a natural direction through the centrifugal force of the solo. Blackwell backs him in a way that drummer Elvin Jones would back saxophonist John Coltraneseveral years later, providing a dense rhythmic momentum.

This is Our Music is Coleman at the point of completely letting go. He and his most sympathetic supporters had evolved through varying musical perimeters to the point that he was prepared to forsake any limiting quantity or quality to his creation and performance. Coleman was introducing what Coltrane would perfect before the end of the 1960s, Coleman playing Vivaldi to Coltrane's Bach.  -  C. Michael Bailey


Tracks
1. Blue Connotation
2. Beauty Is A Rare Thing
3 Kaleidoscope
4. Embraceable You
5. Poise
6. Humpty Dumpty
7. Folk Tale

ORNETTE COLEMAN alto saxophone
DONALD CHERRY pocket trumpet
CHARLIE HADEN bass
ED BLACKWELL drums

All compositions by Ornette Coleman except "Embraceable You" by George and Ira Gershwin
Atlantic 1353 / 80767-2

WALT DICKERSON - Peace (1976)

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The name Walt Dickerson is unknown to all but a relative few around the world, even among many longtime Jazz listeners, and that's a damned shame. Active in this music for a good half-century or more, Dickerson is an ultimate master of the vibraphone; his plush, yet ringingly metallic timbre issuing perhaps the most original sound on the instrument since Milt Jackson, even Lionel Hampton himself. A predecessor to the likes of Bobby Hutcherson, Karl Berger, and Jay Hoggard, Dickerson is paralleled only by Gunter Hampel in the unique calibre of professional achievement on this most challenging instrument.

Between this and his slyly melodic, daringly rhythmic compositions (from "Sense Of Direction" and "To My Queen" to "Tell Us Only The Beautiful Things", "No Ordinary Man" and a cornucopia of others), Dickerson's harmonic sorcery bridges the abstract and the plaintive, dissonant groove and consonant swing with remarkable smoothness. Terms such as "avant-garde" and "straight-ahead" are merged, dissolved, and forged into the prime focus of Music. Straight-up, solid, on the case. Music.

Few cases demonstrate the beauty of Walt Dickerson's artistry more fluently than this epic date from the mid-1970s, recorded for the Steepelechase label. With nimbly-stepping bassist Lisle Atkinson and drumlord Andrew Cyrille, Dickerson weaves this alluring, beguiling collection of tone poems conjured from the very air of Peace in instrumentally choral motion. Meditative, engaging, intensely beckoning, perceptions and misconceptions alike will be firmly, gracefully challenged with this set of iridescent rhapsodies representing Jazz freedom at its very finest.

Time and again, History has shown that Walt Dickerson stands with singer Jeanne Lee and pianist Herbie Nichols as a grievously underrated genius, an outstanding African-American original who has made a lasting impression on this time-honored, world-class Music.
Time for the secret to come out, respect fully given, and recognition to be properly paid, at long last.

Time for the lyrical bounties of PEACE.  -  Michael F. Hopkins


Tracks
01. Universal Peace
02. Chant Of Peace
03. Warm Up

WALT DICKERSON  vibes
LISLE ATKINSON  bass
ANDREW CYRILLE  drums

All compositions by Walt Dickerson
Recorded November 14, 1976
SteepleChase  SCCD  31042

NGUYÊN LÊ - Walking On The Tiger's Tail (2005)

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For his ninth record, French-Vietnamese guitarist Nguyên Lê renews musical relationships with two artists who appeared on his first two releases—woodwind multi-instrumentalist Paul McCandless from Lê's '96 debut, Zanzibar, and pianist Art Lande, who played on the '97 record Miracles. That Lande and McCandless also share a musical friendship that dates back over thirty years makes their teaming on Walking on the Tiger's Tail that much more significant.
Over the course of his career, Lê has demonstrated remarkable breadth. From the more culturally traditional Tales from Vietnamand the broader ethnic leanings of Bakida to the rock-inflections of Purple: Celebrating Jimi Hendrix, Lê has demonstrated an ability to place himself in a variety of stylistic spaces. And yet, with a tone and approach that leans towards fusion without ever indulging in the overbearances that so often characterize the genre, he remains distinctive. Whether involved in freewheeling improvisation or more straightforward funk, Lê's style incorporates an unusual way of twisting the end of a phrase, just the slightest hint of microtonality that leans ever so slightly away from his generally more Occidental approach.
It may be the shared musical language of Lande and McCandless, or maybe it's just that their musical personalities are so strong, but much of Walking on the Tiger's Tail has an ambience that supposes how McCandless' longstanding collaborative group Oregon might sound if it were a little more fusion-leaning. Like Oregon, there's a certain pastoral calm on pieces like "Snow on a Flower and "Butterfly Dream, with Lê playing acoustic guitar on the former and a cleaner-toned electric on the latter. But on the more playful "Wingless Flight and "Totsu! Lê indulges in an overdriven and funky tone—and some distinctly rock-inflected lines—that seems to mesh strangely and yet wholly naturally with the more organic textures around him.
Jamey Haddad divides his time between a traditional drum kit and a variety of ethnic percussion instruments, completing the link to Oregon and bringing to mind its mid to late-'80s period, when Trilok Gurtu had replaced the sadly-departed Collin Walcott.
That Lê should choose to form an ensemble without a bassist is not particularly unique. What is unusual is how rhythmically propulsive the whole affair is. Every member of the band takes a turn at carrying the bottom end—whether it's Lê's electronically pitch-shifted guitar, Lande's strong left hand, McCandless' bass clarinet, or Haddad's percussion. This isn't a case of creating a more atmospheric ambience, a la Paul Motian's trio; this is more about not missing the instrument because its role is always being emulated in some way, shape, or form.
Walking on the Tiger's Tail contains some of Lê's most focused writing to date, and it gives the clear sense that he wrote the album with these specific players in mind. Representing a broader world view like Oregon's but with a harder edge at times, Lê has crafted one of his most engagingly melodic and ultimately satisfying records to date.
John Kelman - All About Jazz
I wrote this music after a tough period in my life which paradoxically brought me to a kind of tranquillity that I was both experiencing & searching. This led me to Chinese ancient books - symbols of a universal force & wisdom. Once relieved, I wanted to share & to build on the music of those moments with two very dear friends : Art Lande, the piano player who strongly influenced my first two albums ´ Miracles ª(1989) & ´ Zanzibar ª(1992), & his long time musical partner, Paul McCandless, the outstanding wind player. The three of us have such a great understanding of one another that I wanted a special orchestration for this reunion. Thus the choice of a 'bass-free' band, in which each of us would take up the bass role. The highlighted percussions of Jamey Haddad recall the distant lands where those rhythms find their roots.

I would like to deeply thank all those who expressed their friendship when my health was weak, & I dedicate this music to those who are now facing the Tiger. Music has sustained me as a mother sustains her child, & Music reminds us that each second is a miracle !

Nguyên Lê, December 2004


Tracks
01. Wingless Flight
02. Yielding Water
03. Totsu!
04. Snow on a Flower
05. Jorai
06. Butterfly Dream
07. Walking on the Tiger's Tail
08. Bee
09. Evening Glory
10. Zamora
11. Eventail

NGUYÊN LÊ electric & electroacoustic guitars, electronics
ART LANDE piano
PAUL McCANDLESS tenor, soprano & sopranino sax, oboe, english horn, bass clarinet
JAMY HADDAD drums, percussion

Music written by Nguyên Lê. "Jorai"inspired by a traditional tune from the Jorai ethnic minority in Viet Nam.
Recorded in Oct. & Nov. 2004 at Bauer Studios, Ludwigsburg
ACT 9432 – 2

NGUYÊN LÊ - Bakida (2000)

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One look at the liner notes to the Nguyên Lê Trio's latest disc and you know that Bakidais not going to be your typical jazz record. While Vietnamese guitarist Lê, who now lives in France, has dabbled in a variety of styles with a penchant towards the fusion side of the camp, his international flavour is what truly defines who he is. With a trio that includes Spaniards Renaud Garcia-Fons on acoustic five-string bass and Tino di Geraldo on drums and a variety of percussion, he is already mixing cultures. But check the guest list, which includes artists from the US, Norway, Algeria, Italy and Turkey, and you know this is going to be an affair that blends music from a variety of cultures, often within the confines of a single composition.
Take the opening track, "Dding Dek." With its tuned gongs, ney flute, marimba and tabla, there is already a blend of Middle Eastern and Oriental culture by the time Lê enters with a theme doubled by Garcia-Fons. But as quickly as a cosmopolitan ambience is established Geraldo switches to kit and Lê develops a solo that's equally rooted in rock and blues. Returning to the naive theme of the introduction, Le builds into an ascending chordal passage that is reminiscent of tunes like "Hope" and "Resolution" from John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra classic, Birds of Fire. And that's only the first track and, while it says a lot about Lê, it hardly tells all.
Lê has an uncanny way of blending ethnic themes with more Western-sounding harmonies. He demonstrates the link between Persia and the Celts with the theme to "Madal"; the tune ultimately settles into a funk workout where Lê solos with a clean Stratocaster-like tone before segueing into a more up-tempo but no less groove-centric workout for saxophonist Chris Potter, proving with his characteristically energetic solo that he can be more than merely a strong in-the-tradition player, ultimately building to a climactic motif that becomes a fitting coda to the piece.
Lê's style is an interesting amalgam of the usual fusion culprits, yet over the course of the past ten years he has emerged with a style that, by blending Eastern and Western sonorities, is unmistakably his own. And while there's a certain energy to his playing that might tie him to the fusion genre, his reach is far broader, avoiding its more bombastic trappings. "Romanichel" is a gorgeous trio with Lê (on acoustic guitar), bassist Garcia-Fons, and Norwegian pianist Jon Balke, last heard on his own magnificent Diverted Traveks,  demonstrating Lê's more spacious, impressionistic side. And the title track is a moody piece with a lengthy melody that leads into a solo where Lê tastefully combines rich chordal concepts with a restrained use of his whammy bar.
Bakida , recorded in '99 is another fine record from an artist who truly defines the concept of world music, perfectly blending music from diverse cultures into a personal, contemporary mix.  -  John Kelman

Tracks
01. Dding Dek (Nguyên Lê)
02. Madal (Nguyên Lê)
03. Encanto (Nguyên Lê)
04. Bakida (Nguyên Lê)
05. Chinoir (Nguyên Lê)
06. Noche Y Luz (Nguyên Lê)
07. Feel Feliz (Renaud Garcia-Fons)
08. Heaven (Dominique Borker)
09. Lü (Nguyên Lê)
10. Romanichel (Nguyên Lê)

NGUYÊN LÊ  guitar
RENAUD GARCIA-FONS  bass
TINO DI GERALDO  drums & percussion
CHRIS POTTER  tenor saxophone (2) (5)
PAOLO FRESU  trumpet (9)
CARLES BENAVENT  electric 5-string bass (8)
JON BALKE  piano (10)
KARIM ZAID  gumbri, karkabous, bender Tarija, vocals (9)
ILLYA AMAR  marimba, tuned gongs (1)
HAO NHIEN PHAM  meo and sao flutes, vocals (9)

Recorded at Louxor Studio (Paris), Harryson Studio (Pantin), Rainbow (Oslo) between May and October 1999
ACT  92752

JULIA HÜLSMANN TRIO with REBEKKA BAKKEN - Scattering Poems (2003)

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“Scattering Poems“ exquisitely combines the talents of two exceptional artists, Julia Hülsmann and Rebekka Bakken. They have chosen poems from by major US writer E.E. Cummings as the basis for the texts. Hülsmann found that Cummings' poetic pictorial world and his rhythmic feeling for language was already music. Thus, it was no problem to transform these poems into music.
Julia Hülsmann is a most remarkable pianist on the contemporary German jazz scene. Fully at ease with the jazz tradition, she is able to play with the building blocks of the music. With unerring taste, the pianist combines the most diverse influences: the impressionism of a Ravel, pop music from Sting, the jazz piano tradition from Monk to Hancock and beyond.
Her trio, which she formed in 1997, is considered by jazz enthusiasts to be one of the most subtle and distinctive bands in the German capital.
Rebekka Bakken, the Norwegian singer/songwriter met Hülsmann in New York. With her unique style, in which the influences of Joni Mitchell and Sidsel Endresen are discernable, her depth of feeling, and her stage presence, Bakken has assured herself a place in the front row of great contemporary jazz vocalists.


Tracks
01. Anyone...
02. The moon Is Hiding
03. Same Girl (Randy Newman)
04. The City Sleeps
05. Love Is More Thicker Than Forget
06. Tic Tic
07. The Wind Is A Lady
08. In Justspring
09. Maggie and Milly and Molly and May
10. A Thousand Years (Sting / Kipper)

JULIA HÜLSMANN  piano
REBEKKA BAKKEN  vocals
MARC MUELBAUER  bass
HEINRICH KÖBBERLING  drums (1) (2) (7) (8) (10)
RAINER WINCH  drums (3) (4) (5) (6) (9)

All compositions by Julia Hülsmann (music) and E. E. Cummings (words) except (3) by Randy Newman and (10) by Sting / Kipper
Recorded February 2001 and May 2002 at Studio P2, Berlin.
ACT  9405 – 2  Germany
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