Thursday, January 14, 2021

Sidsel Storm - Awake

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:13
Size: 99,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:59) 1. Comes Love
(5:13) 2. The Road
(3:54) 3. You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me
(3:36) 4. I Didn't Know About You
(4:39) 5. Back to You
(4:19) 6. I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)
(5:53) 7. All Through the Night
(6:03) 8. Too Marvelous for Words
(3:31) 9. Awake

The 36-year-old jazz singer Sidsel Storm is ready with his 5th release in his own name. She has been very successful on stages in both Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, Germany and Scandinavia and has taken the audience as well as reviewers by storm with her warm personal voice and her unique presence. Now she is ready with new release and concerts in 2019/20. Sidsel Storm has previously made her marks at home and received prestigious awards such as DPA’s jazz composer award (2008) and a Danish Music Award for “The best Vocal Jazz Release” (2009). In addition, she has gained international recognition with tens of thousands of sold CDs in, Asia and Germany among other things.

AWAKE is recorded in The Village Studio in Copenhagen and in Sidsel’s own small studio in Dragør. The record is mixed and mastered in Nilento Studio, Gothenburg (SE). AWAKE contains songs by Sidsel and other together with the Swedish jazz pianist Magnus Hjorth opens up for a new and exciting compositional collaboration. Sidsel and her husband, pianist and producer Peter Storm Otto, have together written the title composition “AWAKE”. A concept they both recognize after the last couple of years with 3 young children. The songs on AWAKE touch on topics such as presence, love, grief, longing, bad habits and gratitude. In addition to her own compositions, Sidsel also interprets some old standards that are treated with a great deal of respect and love. Sidsel Storm has gathered her regular live team on this record and has also invited a stringtrio on the album. Sidsel feels it is natural to involve the band musicians in both the composition work and the organizer work, as this is often a natural process in the rehearsal room and strengthens the band as a whole and thus the overall expression. http://calibrated.org/portfolio/sidsel-storm-2/

Musicians: Sidsel Storm: Vocal; Magnus Hjorth: Piano; Snorre Kirk: Drums; Tobias Wiklund: Cornet; Lasse Mørck: Double bass

Guest musicians:: Nicole Hogstrand; Violin: Pernille Kristiansen; Bratsch: Jenny Lüning

Awake

Eric Reed - For Such a Time as This

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:13
Size: 130,2 MB
Art: Front

(1:04) 1. Paradox Peace
(4:19) 2. Western Rebellion
(5:31) 3. Thelonigus
(3:51) 4. Stella by Starlight
(5:50) 5. It's You or No One
(6:45) 6. Walltz
(5:50) 7. Bebophobia
(2:52) 8. Come Sunday
(3:55) 9. We Shall Overcome
(5:26) 10. Make Me Better
(8:17) 11. The Break
(2:28) 12. Hymn of Faith

For more than three decades as one of the most influential and beloved jazz musicians, Eric Reed has recorded close to 30 accomplished leader albums showcasing his virtuosic chops, intellectual clarity, unwavering will to swing, and ability to refract and coalesce a wide range of musical, spiritual, and personal influences into a single stream of consciousness. Perhaps the most personal of them all is For Such A Time As This (available November 27 via Smoke Sessions Records), the remarkable November release on which the veteran pianist transcends the high bar he’s established for himself. An important part of this story dates to 2008, when, after two decades in the jazz epicenter of New York City, Reed relocated to Los Angeles, his home as an adolescent and teenager, where he reintegrated into the local scene. It was there in mid-March, when the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic triggered a city-wide shutdown, that Reed began to conceive For Such A Time As This to be recorded in L.A. with local musicians. At the end of June, he was ready and assembled a gifted, young quartet in the studio, adhering to full physical distancing and masking protocols, with remote production by Paul Stache. The end result is Reed’s cogent, impassioned response to the dystopic “new normal” of recording during COVID.

“These are great musicians, each with some quality that I wanted to utilize,” Reed says of the personnel. “My generation came up under mentorship and apprenticeship 7 from Art Blakey, Betty Carter, Wynton Marsalis, Clark Terry, who all believed in hiring young people. That’s where I come from, I’ve come by it honestly, and it’s something that I believe in doing.”He met drum virtuoso Kevin Kanner several years ago though pianist Gerald Clayton, and Australia-born bassist Alex Boneham at a jam session Kanner runs at an L.A. Tenor and soprano saxophonist Chris Lewis “a laid-back, quiet dude who turns into a killer when he puts that horn in his mouth” initially came to Reed’s attention during a master class at Temple University, where Lewis studied with Jazz department head Terell Stafford, and woodwind masters Dick Oatts and Tim Warfield.Assembled for the session, the band nonetheless displays the chemistry of a unit of long standing throughout the program. “Alex and Kevin breathe together,” Reed says. “Alex has an intense bass pulse that keeps you on your toes, and gives an edge, an urgency to the pieces with some tempo.”

That stated urgency infuses the first two quartet numbers, “Western Rebellion” and “Thelonigus (For Thelonious Monk and Charles Mingus),” both Reed originals. The former is an affirmative line depicting the feeling and vibration of L.A.; the title signifies on a group led during the 1970s by master pianist-composer Cedar Walton, to whom Reed paid tribute on his previous Smoke Sessions outing Everybody Gets The Blues. “Thelonigus” layers Monkishly capacious intervals with a motif reminiscent of Mingus’ “Peggy’s Blue Skylight.”A solemn, contemplative quality infuses “Walltz,” a tribute to the late trumpeter Wallace Roney (one of the first Jazz casualties of COVID-19), whom Reed met during his late teens and played with periodically over the years, most notably during a memorable week at Catalina Bar & Grill after his return to Los Angeles.Reed projects a similarly reflective feel on “Paradox Peace,” the solo piano vignette that opens the recital. Reed traces its gestation to a Sunday night drive through normally teeming Los Angeles streets, now completely devoid of pedestrians and drivers. “To witness this calm and quiet was the most beautiful and scariest thing I’d ever witnessed,” he says. “It was so peaceful, but when I thought about the reason why, it made me sad that’s the paradox.”

He also offers fresh readings of old chestnuts “Stella By Starlight,” rendered with impressionistic emotion, and “It’s You Or No One,” which receives a crisp, vertiginous trio reading (piano-bass-drums). There’s also a swinging, harmonically erudite exploration (tenor sax-piano-bass) of “Bebophobia,” an ingenious “Cherokee” contrafact with the idiomatic aura of an undiscovered original line that the iconic bebop tenor saxophonist Teddy Edwards (who hired teenaged Reed for more than a few Los Angeles gigs during the 1980s) might have played during bebop’s glory days. As has been his frequent custom during the last 15 years, Reed whose father pastored a Baptist church in Philadelphia and Los Angeles presents a gospel section, referencing early roots to address portentous present-day realities. In response to the murders of Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, and the protesting and rioting that ensued in the face of racial injustice, Reed explains, “The messages of ‘We Shall Overcome,’ ‘Come Sunday,’ and the ebullient ‘Hymn of Faith’ go hand in hand.” His original composition “Make Me Better,” sung by the soulful Henry Jackson, “puts a fine point on everything I’m hoping and wishing for that I will be made better by this experience, and that I will encourage other people to be better as well.”Towards that aspiration, For Such A Time As This concludes affirmatively with a rousing blues (“The Break”), an impromptu line born out of the first session Eric played with musicians since the quarantine.“This record is the first I’ve done framed by this kind of specific circumstance,” Reed concludes. “But even though we had to do it with these pandemic restrictions, it seemed normal because we were in the recording studio, where there’s no audience anyway. It’s the circumstances surrounding the creativity that were so different. All of that had an impact on the music.” http://news.theurbanmusicscene.com/2020/11/eric-reed-to-release-new-albumfor-such-a-time-as-this/

For Such a Time as This