Sunday, April 18, 2021

Gary Bartz - Monsoon

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:04
Size: 140,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:29) 1. Samuel
( 7:52) 2. Never Never Land
(12:47) 3. Run Before the Sun
( 7:15) 4. Strode Rode
( 9:22) 5. Monsoon
( 7:57) 6. Soul Eyes
( 8:17) 7. Uncle Bubba

Gary Bartz has been known to many as a trail blazer in the music business from the moment he started playing with Art Blakey at his father’s jazz club in his hometown of Baltimore, MD to his own music throughout the 57 years as a professional musician. As if his Grammy Award© with McCoy Tyner in 2005 (‘Illuminations’) wasn’t enough to carve out a place for Bartz in the jazz genre, he has broken the mold with more than 40 solo albums and over 200 as a guest artist.Gary Bartz first came to New York In 1958 to attend the Julliard Conservatory of Music. Just 17 years old, Gary couldn't wait to come to the city to play and learn. “It was a very good time for the music in New York, at the end of what had been the be-bop era,” says Bartz. “Charlie Parker had passed away three years previously but Miles' group was in its heyday, Monk was down at the Five Spot, and Ornette Coleman was just coming to town. Things were fresh.” Back then, Gary could regularly be found drinking Cokes in the all ages “peanut gallery” of Birdland, enjoying a marathon bill of performers. “If I didn't have money to get in. I'd help somebody carry a drum and sneak in,” laughs Bartz. “I learned that early on."

Circa mid-'60s, the alto saxophonist - still in his early 20s - began performing throughout the city with the Max Roach/Abbey Lincoln Group and quickly established himself as the most promising alto voice since Cannonball Adderley. “In those days, we used to go by people's lofts and stay for weeks, just working on music,” says Gary. “Folks would all chip in and buy food, and one of us would cook. But there was always music, because people were dropping by at all hours. We didn't even think about it; that's just what we did. We were very unselfish about what we were writing because, after all, music doesn't belong to any one person. It belongs to the people, to everybody.”

With the splash of his New York debut solidly behind him, Bartz soon joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. According to the story, Gary's parents owned a club in Baltimore, the North End Lounge. When his father hired Blakey for a gig, Gary grabbed the opportunity to fill a sax player vacancy in the band. After his performance that night, the young Bartz was officially hired to join the Jazz Messengers; in 1965, he would make his recording debut on Blakey's ‘Soulfinger’ album. From 1962-64, Gary joined Charles Mingus' Workshop and began practicing regularly with fellow members of the horn section, including Eric Dolphy. In 1968, Bartz began an association with McCoy Tyner, which included participating in Tyner's classic ‘Expansions and Extentions’ albums. Work with McCoy proved especially significant for Bartz because of the bandleader's strong connection to John Coltrane who Gary succinctly cites as a profound influence. During his first two years with Tyner, Gary was also touring with Max Roach and taking some time out to record on Max's Atlantic Records release, ‘Mermbers Don’t Get Weary’. “With Max, there was that bond with Charlie Parker,” declares Bartz. “Charlie Parker is why I play the alto saxophone.”

Bartz received a call from Miles Davis in 1970; work with the legendary horn player marked Gary's first experience playing electric music. It also reaffirmed his yen for an even stronger connection to Coltrane. In addition to working with Miles in the early '70s - including playing the historic Isle of Wight Festival in August, 1970 - Bartz was busy fronting his own NTU Troop ensemble. The group got its name from the Bantu language: NTU means unity in all things, time and space, living and dead, seen and unseen.Outside the Troop, Bartz had been recording as a group leader since 1968, and continued to do so throughout the '70s, during which time he released such acclaimed albums as, ‘Another Earth’, ‘Home’, ‘Music Is My Sanctuary’ and ‘Love Affair’, by the late '70s, he was doing studio work in Los Angeles with Norman Connors and Phyllis Hyman. In 1988, after a nine-year break between solo releases, Bartz began recording what music columnist Gene Kalbacher described as “Vital ear-opening sides,” on such albums as ‘Monsoon’, ‘West 42nd Street’, ‘There Goes The Neighborhood’, and ‘Shadows’.

Bartz followed those impressive works in 1995 with the release of his debut Atlantic album ‘The Red and Orange Poems’ a self-described musical mystery novel and just one of Gary's brilliantly conceived concept albums. Back when Bartz masterminded the much-touted ‘I’ve Known Rivers’ album, based on the poetry of Langston Hughes, his concepts would be twenty years ahead of those held by some of today's jazz/hip hop and acid jazz combos. So it continues with ‘The Blues Chronicles: Tales of Life’ A testimonial to a steadfast belief in the power of music to soothe, challenge, spark a crowd to full freak, or move one person to think. It adds up to a shoe box full of musical snapshots from a life lived and played with passion and stirred - with both joy and sadness - by the blues. Gary's release ‘Live at the Jazz Standard Volume 1 – Soulstice’ is the first of a series of recordings documenting his legendary, non-stop style, live performances. This initial release on his own OYO label bares testimony to Gary's continuing growth as a composer, group leader, and master of both the alto and soprano saxophones. A quartet session recorded in 1998, was followed by ‘Live at the Jazz Standard, Volume 2’ released in 2000, which features Gary's exciting Sextet. His follow up release ‘Soprano Stories’ Gary exclusively performed on the soprano saxophone in a studio quartet setting.br

His follow up album to the highly acclaimed Volume I of the Coltrane Files, Toa Of A Music Warrior, will be released in early 2015 along with his album honoring Woody Shaw entitled ‘Two MF’s’. Gary Bartz continues taken his rightful place in the pantheon of jazz greats and has his sight is set on releasing more music on his label OYO Records. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/garybartz

Personnel: Gary Bartz - alto saxophone, composer; Butch Lacy - piano; Clint Houston - bass; Billy Hart - drums.

Monsoon

Ahmed Abdullah's Diaspora - Dedication

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:24
Size: 164,1 MB
Art: Front

(14:43) 1. Amanpondo
( 7:52) 2. Brazil One
( 5:15) 3. Song of the Force (take 4)
(10:35) 4. Deja's View
(11:21) 5. Song of the Holy Warrior
( 3:37) 6. La Vie en Rose
( 6:16) 7. Song of Love
( 4:24) 8. I'll be Seeing You
( 7:19) 9. Song of the Force (take 2)

In the annals of free jazz drumming names like Sunny Murray, Andrew Cyrille and Milford Graves often percolate to the top of the lists as the progenitors of the tradition. Equally important, if sometimes overshadowed is Charles Moffett, who as a member of Ornette Coleman’s trio with David Izenzon completed one of the most inspiring improvising collectives of the 60s. His achievements were by no means limited to this seminal group and his career stretched well into the decade of the 90s before his untimely passing. What does this capsule reflection on Moffett have to do with the disc at hand by Abdullah’s Diaspora? Actually a great deal. This is not your typical Spirit Room session (if there even is such a thing), in fact this isn’t your routine ‘free jazz’ date either. At its fundamental root this is the product of five men whose lives have been shaped and sustained by the legacy of a sixth- the indomitable Charles Moffett.

Paying praise on this disc is an incredible group comprised of some of the most vibrant voices in creative improvised music. Abdullah convened them not only to pay homage, but also to pour their individual interests into the pool and come up with a fresh nectar of sustaining musical expression. In this respect he largely succeeds building a variegated musical melange that bespeaks the group’s chosen name. The opening “Amanpondo” is built on a slippery calypso beat and segues through a succession of stellar solo statements by each of the players. Cody Moffett, Charles son, holds court on his father’s metal drum kit and builds a stentorian rhythmic presence that fit’s the piece’s ‘island flavor’ perfectly. “Brazil One” shifts the focus to another set of tropical sounds with a beautifully lyric prelude. The piece proper propelled again by Cody’s sensitive drumming drifts along with Abdullah’s robust vocal chant floating on top. Ward eventually moves to the front for a blissful melodic improvisation.

With “Deja’s View” the group takes a totally unexpected turn into hot buttered soul. The gently syncopated beat, mellifluous flute, muted brass and bulbous electric bass that round out the piece would not be out of place on Issac Hayes’ Shaft soundtrack. “Song of the Holy Warrior” builds up momentum rapidly from a rhythmic vamp based in Moffett’s brisk prefatory solo, before Abdullah, Ward and Masujaa spar in a spiraling landslide of cyclonic phrasings. Abdullah takes a well-meaning, but somewhat raspy singing turn on the reading of “La Vie En Rose,” a tune powered largely by Masujaa’s iridescent chording. On “Song of Love” Ward’s shares the spotlight with Abdullah weaving a beautiful spell on dulcet alto that bookends his partner’s sweetly muted brass. Blake gets his chance too, on “I’ll Be Seeing You” his muscular strums and plucks take center stage. Tributes, particularly musical ones, can be a tricky enterprise and reconciling a reverence for the dedicatee with one’s own creative vision is often a delicate balance. Abdullah and his bandmates attain such a harmony on this disc juggling their love for Moffett with their own restlessly creative energies to produce a testament of moving depth and passion.

Personnel: Ahmed Abdullah- trumpet, flugelhorn, voice; Carlos Ward- flute, alto saxophone; Masujaa- guitar; Alex Blake- bass, electric bass; Cody Moffett- drums.

Dedication

Amanda Tosoff - Earth Voices

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:50
Size: 105,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:04) 1. A Dream Within a Dream
(5:25) 2. Sonnet 49
(5:20) 3. Here and Heaven
(5:27) 4. Birdwings
(6:14) 5. Oh, Life
(6:26) 6. The Fiddle and the Drum
(5:59) 7. To a Stranger
(5:51) 8. Finis

Building off the lure of language planted in Amanda Tosoff's Juno-nominated Words (Empress Music Group, 2016), this sixth album from the Toronto-based composer and pianist waves poetic in wondrous fashion. Pairing different guest vocalists and collections of musicians with personalized takes on Parnassian beauty of varied sorts, Tosoff cements the bonds between earthly voices and heavenly sounds with a questioning spirit.

The list of subjects and styles, both in words and music, varies widely on this playlist. But this is no slapdash selection thrown together at will. Reason provides a place of purpose for everything in the mix. "A Dream Within a Dream," featuring vocalist Emilie-Claire Barlow and marrying Tosoff's music with Edgar Allan Poe's work, deals in doubt and uncertainty with both bright-eyed, upbeat accents and open engagement. "Sonnet 49," showcasing Robin Dann's voice, serves as an expansion on Luciana Souza's exploration of Pablo Neruda's emotional arc(s) with gliding grace and chamber-esque adorments. "Here and Heaven," adding weight and personality with strings, grooving like a pendulum swings, and featuring some ear-catching harmonizing from singers Michelle Willis and Alex Samaras , calls to mind the under-appreciated original part of a decade-old collaboration between Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer, Aoife O'Donovan and Chris Thile. And Tosoff's musical investigation of Rumi's "Birdwings," with Samaras' absorbing Kurt Elling-meets Theo Bleckmann interpretation, tackles topics tied clearly to today loss, moving forward, finding solid footing with both sensitivity and strength.

While each of the aforementioned pieces arrives from different angles, their themes almost seem to be working in sympathy, building toward "Oh, Life." Vocalist Laila Biali, offering aching beauty with some help from Samaras, takes on the work of Mike Ross (of Soul Pepper Theatre) and, with Tosoff's sensitive structural refinements surrounding her, creates a meditation on existence and departure. Lydia Persaud's spellbinding delivery of Joni Mitchell's constantly relevant "The Fiddle and the Drum" follows, playing to its own clear truths, and Felicity WIlliams' strings-supported look at Walt Whitman's "To a Stranger" and Barlow's mighty and melodious handling of Marjorie Pickthall's poetry prove wholly complementary to the cross-threaded notions that Tosoff adopts.Despite the dizzying array of influences that inform Earth Voices, there's remarkable consistency and clarity across this program. Tosoff never seems far from home, regardless of reach, and her vision for how to shape these poems and pieces (through her writing and playing), what each represents, and who to tap to bring each one to life, proves profound. Whether taken as a broad glance at authentic existence, a clear address on a compatibility of art forms or a survey of some of Canada's most notable vocal and instrumental talent(s), Earth Voices earns high marks.~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/earth-voices-amanda-tosoff-empress-music-group

Personnel: Amanda Tosoff: piano; Kelly Jefferson: saxophone, tenor; Allison Au: saxophone, alto; Aline Homzy: violin; Beth Silver: cello; Jeremy Potts: violin; Laurence Schaufele: viola; Alex Goodman: guitar; Jon Maharaj: bass; Morgan Childs: drums; Emilie-Claire Barlow: voice / vocals; Robin Dann: voice / vocals; Michelle Willis: voice / vocals; Laila Biali: voice / vocals; Lydia Persaud: voice / vocals; Felicity WIlliams: voice / vocals; Alex Samaras : voice / vocals.

Earth Voices