Quantcast
Channel: música en espiral
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2642

MARIA SCHNEIDER ORCHESTRA - Concert In The Garden (2004)

$
0
0

Maria Schneider's first three albums were all Grammy nominated. Yet there was a four-year wait for her fourth CD. Schneider records infrequently because she writes for large ensembles, which are subject to the harsh constraints of jazz economics. Schneider hopes she has found a solution to this dilemma: Concert in the Garden will be sold exclusively through mariaschneider.com. Her new album is more ambitious (consisting of three extended compositions), more tilted toward the classical side of Schneider's jazz/classical balance, and more influenced by Spanish, flamenco and Brazilian forms than any of her previous works.
Because Schneider's music is so subtly shaded, longer pieces are challenged to sustain narrative interest and urgency over time. The 12-minute opening title track is not entirely successful in this regard. The solos from guitarist Ben Monder and pianist Frank Kimbrough are not strong enough to provide sufficient contrast to the piece's slow, hovering progress. But the other two works, "Three Romances" and "Buleria, Solea y Rumba," are revelatory in their complete realization. The first romance, "Choro Dancado," is a meticulous tapestry of formal motives, one of which inspires an epic, sideways, sliding tenor saxophone solo by Rich Perry. The second, "Pas de Deux," gathers intensity so gradually that you do not feel it coming. Suddenly, the piece is no longer quiet, and Ingrid Jensen (on flugelhorn) and Charles Pillow (on soprano sax) are almost wailing-if wailing can be conducted with such elegance. The last romance, "Danca Ilusoria," is one long, exhaustively elaborated, through-composed line, with jewel-like solos embedded in it from Frank Kimbrough and trombonist Larry Farrell. "Buleria, Solea y Rumba" begins softly, but Donny McCaslin's plaintive tenor saxophone cries carry on over the orchestra's whispers in a gradual twisting ascent that pulls the band with him and reaches an exhilarating catharsis.
Maria Schneider expects her audience to be able to concentrate, to follow her intricate, finely woven designs, defined through small details and slight shifts of color. For the listener, the rewards of this attention are the epiphany of perceiving complex diverse elements that cohere into a single arc, a whole-and the experience of being authentically moved by understated emotion.  -  Thomas Conrad, JazzTimes


TRACKLIST
1. Concert In The Garden
      Ben Monder (guitar) 
      Gary Versace (accordion)
      Frank Kimbrough (piano)
2. Three Romances - Part 1 Choro Dancado
       Rick Perry (tenor)
       Frank Kimbrough (piano)
3.
Three Romances - Part 2 Pas De Deux
       Ingrid Jensen (flugelhorn) 
       Charles Pillow (soprano)          
4. Three Romances - Part 3 Danca Ilusoria
        Frank Kimbrough (piano)
        Larry Farrell (trombone) 
5. Buleria, Solea Y Rumba
        Donny McCastlin (tenor)
        Greg Gisbert (flugelhorn)

JAY ANDERSON  bass
GONZALO GRAU  cajón (5)
GARY VERSACE  accordion (1)
JEFF BALLARD  cajón, cajón quinto (5)
CLARENCE PENN  drums
BEN MONDER  guitar
FRANK KIMBROUGH  piano
ANDY MIDDLETON  tenor saxophone (3) (4)
RICK PERRY  tenor saxophone, flute
KEITH O’QUINN  trombone
LARRY FARRELL  trombone
PETER McGUINESS  trombone (3) (4)
ROCK CICCARONE  trombone
GREG GISBERT  trumpet, flugelhorn
INGRID JENSEN  trumpe, flugelhorn
LAURIE FINK  trumpet, flugelhorn
TIM RIES  alto & sopranos saxophones, clarinet, flute, alto & bass flute
CHARLES PILLOW  alto & soprano saxs, clarinet, flute, alto flute, oboe, english horn
SCOTT ROBINSON  baritone sax, flute, clarinet, bass & contrabass clarinet (2)
DONNY McCASTLIN  tenor & soprano saxophones, clarinet, flute
LUCIANA SOUZA  voice (1) (2) (3)
MARIA SCHNEIDER  conductor

Music composed and arranged by Maria Schneider
Recorded at Avatar Studios, New York, March 8-11, 2004

ArtistShare - 0001

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2642

Trending Articles