Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 December 2022

Summertime in Leith

 Summertime in Leith features legendary Canadian jazz musicians, bassist Paul Novotny and pianist, Oscar Peterson protégé Robi Botos in a visceral auditory experience that transports you to a picturesque Ontario hamlet, on a balmy, midsummer evening, in the middle of a jewel-like sanctuary of a historic Canadian church, surrounded by local folks engrossed at the moment.


Summertime in Leith presents an exciting impromptu performance by bassist Paul Novotny and pianist Robi Botos, (Oscar Peterson protégé), two legendary Canadian jazz musicians who want nothing more than to share in the exhilaration of the moment. “Summertime in Leith is sonic electricity.”

https://www.paulnovotnymusic.com/
Triplet Records

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

Wig Game

Afterworld

Black Math Horseman

Everything Returns

 The new album from the modern Yiddish/Klezmer avant-folk group reunited after a 15-year hiatus Black Ox Orkestar formed from Montréal's fertile post-punk scene of the early 2000s, featuring members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Thee Silver Mt. Zion and Sackville, releasing two acclaimed and influential albums Ver Tanzt (2004) and Nisht Azoy (2006). Everything Returns picks up right where the band left off, with incisively atmospheric, uniquely modern Jewish diasporic folk music of brooding balladry filtered through the lens of an indie-rock sensibility, exquisitely recorded by Greg Norman (Nina Nastasia, Jason Molina) Black Ox Orkestar will be making select live concert appearances in Toronto, Montréal, Keene NH and Brooklyn NY, December 13-17 RIYL: A Hawk and a Hacksaw, Daniel Kahn, Leonard Cohen, Nick Cave, Arooj Aftab, Tindersticks, The National, Alasdair Roberts, Xylouris White, The Klezmatics

But I Still Love You

Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You

Cycles of Formation

More Touch

 The release of her critically acclaimed 2021 debut Maquishti marked vibraphonist and marimbist Patricia Brennan as a startlingly original voice on the improvised music landscape. That promise is more than fulfilled with Brennan’s remarkable follow-up, More Touch, which finds the visionary percussionist leading a wholly unique quartet featuring bassist Kim Cass, drummer Marcus Gilmore, and percussionist Mauricio Herrera. Due out November 18 via Pyroclastic Records, More Touch expands brilliantly on the singular vocabulary showcased on Brennan’s solo debut. Enhancing the resonant beauty and percussive melodicism of the vibraphone and marimba with extended techniques and subtle electronic manipulation, Brennan employs an expansive sonic palette that blurs the lines between progressive jazz and contemporary classical music. On More Touch, she bridges tradition and innovation by drawing influences from the Afro-Cuban and Son Jarocho traditions – and their attendant improvisatory practices – of her native Mexico. The singular make-up of Brennan’s quartet was sparked by her experiences playing in percussion ensembles while a conservatory student at Philadelphia’s prestigious Curtis Institute of Music. “A percussion quartet is all about creating a collective texture or timbre,” she explains. “At the same time there's a very strong improvisational culture in my hometown of Veracruz because of the Afro-Cuban music and Son Jarocho influence. In a way, the goal for this quartet was to have four percussionists together as a unifying starting ground, and adapt that idea as closely as possible to a more traditional jazz quartet.” Brennan’s connection with Herrera was another starting point for the project. The Cuban-born master percussionist spent four years in Mexico in the early 2000s before relocating to New York, and brings a shared pool of influences from both the Afro-Cuban tradition as well as his direct experience in Brennan’s homeland. “Mauricio knows the tradition inside and out, which I really appreciate and respect,” Brennan says. “There's a lot of influence from Cuban percussion back home, so just knowing that Mauricio comes from that lineage is inspiring in itself. But within that tradition it can be difficult to find a musician with the mindset to explore different realms. Mauricio has worked with people like Andrew Cyrille and Aruan Ortiz, musicians who lean a bit more into that outer sphere, so he's able to adapt the tradition.” In Marcus Gilmore, Brennan has enlisted one of the most distinctive and original drummers in modern jazz, someone who has explored rhythmic traditions from Cuban, African, and Carnatic musics as well. “Marcus is an incredible musician,” Brennan says. “Like Mauricio, he has a foundation that is aware of the tradition not only of his own instrument but also in the kinds of music that I am inspired by. On top of that, he's able to play really free or swing – he's very malleable, and I was searching for a drummer that could navigate all those avenues.” A bass player may not typically be considered a percussionist, but in completing her reimagined percussion quartet Brennan knew that Cass would think like one. “Kim is very interested in complex rhythmic structures and navigating through them,” she explains. “I wanted him to play the traditional bass role, but I know that he also has the mindset of a drummer. He’s always thinking about different ways of creating texture with rhythm.” Brennan’s own virtuosic yet boundless approach to the vibes and marimba takes the percussive and melodic aspects of the instruments into uncharted territory via her use of electronics, adding further possibilities to an already expansive ensemble. The result is a compellingly unpredictable venture, where reggae soca grooves buoy intricate, angular melodies; warm, ringing tones skitter into electronic glitchiness and give way to redolent, Xenakis-inspired silences; the infectious beat of Cuban son spirals into higher-order geometric designs; and mesmerizing Batá drums become shrouded in resplendent, borealis-like swathes of color. More Touch suggests the tactile nature of this percussion-focused project, but it also hints at the vibrant humanity that ripples through the stunning interplay and evocative silences that make this music such a moving and captivating experience. “The title reflects a constant inner search for me,” Brennan concludes. “It’s about being in touch with who I am and where I come from, but also being in touch with other people. With the right people, music making happens when you don't have to say anything. In order to get to that point, you have to be so connected, so in tune with each other. It comes from being in tune with nature and the universe and the world and other people, all at the same time.” Patricia Brennan Mexican-born vibraphonist, marimbist, improviser and composer Patricia Brennan has been hailed by JazzTimes for her “unconventional sensibilities… reinventing the art of vibraphone composition and technique.” Having performed with the top symphony orchestras in Mexico while still in her teens, Brennan studied at Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where she performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra and such new music ensembles as Eighth Blackbird. Brennan is a member of the Grammy-nominated John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble, Mary Halvorson’s Amaryllis, Michael Formanek’s Ensemble Kolossus, Matt Mitchell’s Phalanx Ambassadors, the Webber/Morris Big Band; and Tomas Fujiwara’s 7 Poets Trio with cellist and composer Tomeka Reid. She has also collaborated with pianist Vijay Iyer as a member of Blind Spot with writer Teju Cole and bassist Linda Oh, and performed and recorded with such renowned musicians as Sylvie Courvoisier, Dan Weiss, Trevor Dunn, Dave Douglas, Fay Victor, Darius Jones, and many others. Brennan’s own projects include her solo debut, Maquishti, and MOCH, a collaborative duo with percussionist, drummer and turntablist Noel Brennan (DJ Arktureye). Pyroclastic Records Pianist-composer Kris Davis founded Pyroclastic Records in 2016 to serve the release of her acclaimed recordings Duopoly, Octopus (with Craig Taborn) and Diatom Ribbons with the goal of growing the label into a thriving platform to serve cutting-edge artists. In 2019, Davis launched a nonprofit to support those artists whose expression flourishes beyond the commercial sphere. By supporting their creative efforts, Pyroclastic empowers emerging and established artists — including those on its 2022 roster: Tony Malaby, Ches Smith, Nate Wooley, Patricia Brennan and Trevor Dunn — to continue challenging conventional genre-labeling within their fields. Pyroclastic also seeks to galvanize and grow a creative community, providing opportunities, supporting diversity and expanding the audience for noncommercial art. Additionally, its albums often feature artwork by prominent visual artists—Julian Charriére, Dike Blair, Mimi Chakarova, Jim Campbell and Raymond Pettibon among recent examples. Patricia Brennan – More Touch Pyroclastic Records – PR 22 – Recorded March 31-April 1, 2022 Release date November 18, 2022

Hodges: Front and Center Vol. 1

 As influential as he’s been on the history of the jazz saxophone, Johnny Hodges is usually discussed wholly in light of his key role in the Duke Ellington Orchestra. On his second release as a leader, saxophonist Owen Broder shifts the spotlight to focus more intently on the legendary altoist. With Hodges: Front and Center, Vol. 1, Broder and his gifted quintet explore nine compositions associated with the Rabbit (the nickname that Hodges earned early in his career and the source of several conflicting stories), culling pieces both from the Ellington repertoire as well as from the saxophonist’s often overlooked catalogue of small group albums. Due out October 14, 2022 via Outside In Music, Hodges: Front and Center is hardly an exercise in nostalgia. On his acclaimed 2018 debut, Heritage, Broder offered striking new interpretations of American roots music from Appalachian folk to early blues, spirituals to bluegrass. He takes a similar approach to Hodges’ music here; the interpretations are not radically altered, but Broder’s insightful arrangements honor the beauty and elegance of the originals while lending them a deeply felt modern vibrancy. “My generation is really a product of all that Charlie Parker brought to this music,” Broder points out. “Bird was such a founding father and introduced the language that became the language of the saxophone. But Johnny Hodges has always been a big influence on my playing. I really enjoy his lyrical, melodic playing and the warm vocal quality of his approach to sound.” Broder was introduced to Hodges’ playing while still a high school student in Jacksonville, Florida. Naturally that initial exposure came via Ellington’s music, with Hodges being one of the foundational voices that the bandleader sculpted his signature sound to fit. Only later did Broder begin to discover Hodges’ extensive small group discography, beginning with a pair of 1959 releases co-led by the two giants: Back to Back and Side By Side. It was the 60th anniversary of those two landmark albums that instigated this project. Broder embarked on a short tour in the summer of 2019, assembling local bands in each city he visited to delve into the Hodges songbook. In the interim he recorded the video album Our Highway with Cowboys & Frenchmen, the eclectic ensemble that he co-leads with fellow saxophonist Ethan Helm. When it came time to record the Hodges project, Broder assembled a stellar group well versed in both modern jazz and the vintage styles that this album (and its follow-up second album, currently slated for the spring of 2023) investigates. In addition to Broder on alto and baritone saxophones, the band features trumpeter Riley Mulherkar, a co-founder of the renowned brass quartet The Westerlies as well as a regular member of Ryan Truesdell’s Gil Evans Project, where he takes on the Miles Davis role; pianist Carmen Staaf, who serves as musical director and pianist for singer Dee Dee Bridgewater and co-leads the band Science Fair with drummer Allison Miller, a frequent collaborator; bassist Barry Stephenson, a member of Jon Batiste and Stay Human as well as the band of drummer/vocalist Jamison Ross, a high school classmate of Broder’s; and Bryan Carter, another high school friend whose drumming has been heard everywhere from Jazz at Lincoln Center to Sesame Street. “Some of them are old friends and some of them are new friends,” Broder says. “But because of their musical backgrounds, they all felt like the obvious choices for this band.” The album opens with Clarence and Spencer Williams’ “Royal Garden Blues,” from Back to Back, which immediately draws the listener in with its buoyant swing and robust excitement. Any fear that this is some backward-glancing museum piece drops away with Broder’s burnished, sinuous solo, followed by Mulherkar’s rambunctious turn on the muted trumpet. Quickly realizing that the two Ellington small group collaborations were almost exclusively made of blues tunes, Broder dug deeper to find material, leading to discoveries like the strolling “Viscount,” from 1957’s The Big Sound, or Gerry Mulligan’s piquant “18 Carrots for Rabbit,” which offers a bold showcase for Broder’s supple bari attack. Ellington is of course represented here, via a rollicking rendition of the immortal “Take the A Train” that reserves the famous theme until the song’s closing moments. The piece’s sheer joy stands in brilliant contrast to Hodges’ achingly gorgeous “Ballade for the Very Sad and Very Tired Lotus Eaters,” with Broder’s breathy, strong yet vulnerable baritone playing revealing all the nuance and lyricism that he learned from Hodges over Carter’s delicate brushwork and Staaf’s gracefully elegiac mood-setting. Bridging six decades of musical evolution with an exuberant spirit and a shrewdly modern perspective, Owen Broder and his standout quintet have crafted a welcome reminder of Johnny Hodges’ profound soul and lyrical genius. Front and Center, Vol. 1 is both a fitting tribute and a luminous expression of the timeless state-of-the-jazz art. Owen Broder Owen Broder is a saxophonist based in New York City who runs in a variety of musical circles. His American Roots Project’s debut album, Heritage, was praised by DownBeat Magazine as a “transcendent work of art,” while his quintet Cowboys & Frenchmen has received critical acclaim for its three full-length recordings. Broder is a member of the GRAMMY® nominated Anat Cohen Tentet and the Manhattan Saxophone Quartet and has performed with internationally respected artists such as Ryan Truesdell’s Gil Evans Project, Trio Globo, and YouTube sensation Postmodern Jukebox. UNCSA’s 2021 Artpreneur of the Year Award and the 2018 Eastman/ArtistShare® New Artist program recognized Broder’s entrepreneurial ventures; most notably, in response to the pandemic, Broder co-founded and performed in Live From Our Living Rooms. Credited as “the first online jazz festival” by Rolling Stone, the initiative raised over $140k in support of US-based musicians whose performance careers were halted due to COVID-19. As an educator, Broder teaches Jazz Theory and Jazz Arranging at Portland State University and saxophone lessons at Pacific University. Owen Broder – Hodges: Front and Center, Vol. 1 Outside In Music – OiM 2224 – Recorded Sept. 10-11, 2021 Release date October 14, 2022

Monday, 12 December 2022

Refraction Solo

Label Trost Records [TR 229]

Released October 28. 2022

Recorded Live July 04, 2021, Church of The Holy Ghost, Igreja do Espírito Santo, Caldas da Rainha, Portugal

New World

Paradise Cove

 Artist: Lisa Hilton

Title: Paradise Cove

Label: Ruby Slippers


“I think we all need jazz in our lives these days,” composer, pianist, bandleader and producer Lisa K. Hilton writes in the liner notes for her release, Paradise Cove (Ruby Slipper Productions 1028).


“From its inception ragtime, jazz and blues were created to boost moods or morale by America’s earliest composers, such as Scott Joplin, Ferdinand “Jelly Rolly” Morton or Nick La Rocca in the early 1900’s. Our world today desires and deserves a lift after the last couple years, and with the music of Paradise Cove we aim to boost spirits everywhere.”


Hilton’s twenty-sixth recording debuts her dynamic new L.I.L.O quartet with Hilton on piano, trumpeter Igmar Thomas, bassist Luques Curtis, and drummer Obed Calvaire. (L.I.L.O. for their first initials). Hilton has performed with the in-demand bassist Luques Curtis regularly for several years, but the charismatic trumpeter Igmar Thomas, Curtis’s former room - mate at Berklee College of Music, is a compelling addition, complimenting Hilton’s fluid style and bluesy riffs.


Drummer Obed Calvaire, who regularly works with SF Jazz Collective as well as Wynton Marsalis, contributes considerable creativity to this cohesive band. After recording at The Village Studios in Santa Monica, California Hilton declared, “The L.I.L.O quartet is my favorite band ever…I bet anyone listening will hear the enjoyment we had!” Hilton chose the title Paradise Cove as a reference to our cultural need to find a ‘cove’ or protected spot in our personal lives on a daily basis to escape, revitalize, or reboot and to create a ‘paradise’ or state of grace amid today’s fast-moving times.



The nine original tracks and two cover tunes range from the expressive melodicism of “Another Simple Sunday With You”, and the title track “Paradise Cove”, to the wildly upbeat blowing on Dizzy Gillespie’s 1957 jazz classic “Birks’ Works,” Hilton’s own “Blues Vagabond” as well as her “Fast Time Blues.” These tracks exhibit plenty of the quartets improvisational fireworks along with some retro vibes. On a quieter note, the wistful cover of the Burt Bacharach/Hal David 1965 tune “What The World Needs Now is Love” and the moving “Storybook Sequel” showcase a band in touch with a range of emotions and performance styles. Hilton also includes a Latin tinge with the exuberant “Cha Cha Cha À La Carte” as well as the trio tune “Mercurial Moments,” which highlights excellent soloing by bassist Curtis and exciting drumming by Calvaire. “Mediterranean Dreams” is a more classical piece for the trio while “Night Cap and a Little Chaos” has an enticing noir energy that rounds out these vibrant and well recorded tracks.


LISA KRISTINE HILTON / PIANO,

IGMAR THOMAS TRUMPET

LUQUES CURTIS / BASS

OBED CALVAIRE / DRUMS

Sunday, 11 December 2022

The Golden Pond

 Cardinal Fuzz (UK/Europe) and Centripetal Force (North America) are pleased to announce Upupayāma's forthcoming album The Golden Pond. The album will be made available for pre-ordering on October 21st, with the album being released on November 25th (Europe). "Alessio Ferrari has let himself wander further into the wild cosmos of German Progressives, French soundtrack psych, and Middle Eastern raw ‘70s rock." - Raven Sings the Blues Upupayāma is the musical persona of Alessio Ferrari, an Italian multi-instrumentalist and songwriter who lives in a small mountain village above the city of Parma. Upupayāma’s music is rooted strongly in Eastern and Western folk traditions, an approach that Ferrari blends with his own modern sensibilities and style. In addition to playing guitar, bass, keyboards, and drums, Ferrari himself also incorporates a number of other instruments into his sound, including sitar, erhu, flute, and a variety of percussion instruments. Artist: UPUPAYAMA Title: THE GOLDEN POND Labels: Cardinal Fuzz (Europe), Centripetal Force (USA), Release Date: 25th November 22 For Ferrari, Upupayāma's 2020 debut was all about the journey. The album served a series of musical vignettes that visited and weaved its way through a succession magical settings. The Golden Pond, conversely, is all about location. Inspired by his frequent visits to a small lake near his mountain home, Ferrari intentionally focused on the details of the place he inhabited, a practice he decided would translate well with his approach to writing music. This is something Ferrari feels is best exemplified with the album's opening companion pieces, "Cuckoos from the House of Golden Tin" and "Entering the Time of Wilderness." The Golden Pond also continues Ferrari's practice of using "invented language" in his lyrics. Ferrari wants his voice to be heard as if it were an additional instrument, a tool that does not convey specific messages. His goal is to allow the listener to assign personal meaning to the music. He says, "I want my incorporating invented language is a way of breaking down the barriers that are sometimes created by language, by having to define something at all costs. Ferrari adds, "I think one of my unconscious dreams is not to have to define anything, but just to be carried away by our feelings." Earlier this year Ferrari put together a group of musicians to help him deliver his live vision of Upupayāma. They made their debut in Rome in May, and they will play a couple of shows in advance of the album being released. Both dates will be in October, one in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland and the other in Esslingen, Germany. Plans to tour throughout Europe in the spring of 2023 are currently in the works via El Borracho Booking. The Golden Pond will be Upupayāma's second album with Centripetal Force and Cardinal Fuzz, the first being the well-received self-titled debut in 2021, which is being repressed to coincide with the release of The Golden Pond in November.

Bajo este sol tremendo

 Inspired by Carlos Busqued's book "Under this terrible sun" (Bajo este sol tremendo) trombonist and composer Daniel Iván Bruno explores a variety of sonorities with creative musicians from Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires. Recorded in one take, this album mixes melodies, textures and improvisation in a joyful way.

credits

released November 15, 2022 - ears&eyes

Daniel Bruno - Trombone
Teby Frontera - Electric guitar
Julian Maliandi - Electric guitar
Martin Delassaletta - Electric Bass
Luciano Monte - Drums

Keep Your Christmas Tree For Burning