Sunday, July 30, 2023

Dave Douglas - Devotion

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:20
Size: 125,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. Curly
(5:14)  2. D'Andrea
(4:50)  3. Francis of Anthony
(4:50)  4. Miljøsang
(5:51)  5. False Allegiances
(6:19)  6. Prefontaine
(7:36)  7. Pacific
(5:33)  8. Rose and Thorn
(4:14)  9. We Pray
(5:34) 10. Devotion

The aptly titled Devotion by trumpeter Dave Douglas, pianist Uri Caine and drummer Andrew Cyrille is both a prayer and a dedication. Like a prayer, the trio resolves to maintain a virtuous approach to their celebration of personal heroes, both musical and cultural. The disc opens with "Curly," dedicated to the iconic guileless Stooge, who along with Moe and Larry reigned as the masters of physical comedy in the early 20th century. While there were Three Stooges, Douglas' composition features only a duo between Caine and Cyrille. The piano and drums skid and dance a rollicking scamper of pratfalls and constructed foolishness.  This trio configuration is ideal.

Caine and Douglas have a long history recording in each other's projects and they released the gorgeous duo Present Joys (Greenleaf Music, 2014) which recreated Sacred Harp Psalm music. Add to their duo the master colorist Andrew Cyrille who has been the percussionist of choice for artists such as Wadada Leo Smith, Cecil Taylor, Bill Dixon, Oliver Lake, and Dave Burrell. His hand galvanizes "False Alligences" (for Carla Bley) with mallets, and "Rose And Thorn" with sleight of hand cymbal work. All of which has a sort of ballyhoo-effect on Caine and Douglas. The latter piece shines with Caine's off-kilter stride piano and Douglas' immaculate waxing horn lines. Their dedication to Dizzy Gillespie "We Pray" is a most gentle and reverent composition that fills the heart with its sweet full-bodied sound. Other dedications are to the Italian pianist Franco D'Andrea, Mary Lou Williams, the Olympian runner Steve Prefontaine, and Aine Nakamura and the Mannes/New School composition class. If the finest compliment one can pay to a recording is that you could listen to it repeatedly all day, grab a chair and begin.By Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/devotion-dave-douglas-greenleaf-music-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel: Dave Douglas: trumpet;  Andrew Cyrille: drums, percussion;  Uri Caine: piano.

Devotion

Mark Colby and Vince Maggio - Reunion

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:27
Size: 111,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:20) 1. You and the Night and the Music
(4:30) 2. Windows
(4:51) 3. I'm Gonna Laugh You Right Out of My Life
(4:12) 4. O Grande Amor
(4:42) 5. Lester Left Town
(4:45) 6. Soul Eyes
(4:46) 7. Up Jumped Spring
(3:21) 8. Airegin
(4:18) 9. Miyako
(5:13) 10. Felicidade
(4:22) 11. Once in a Garden

Of all the configurations in Jazz, the duo may be the most challenging. Each partner must be unremittingly observant, ready and able to lend support in any and all circumstances, while, on the other hand, disclosing a persuasive voice of his or her own with plenty of engaging things to say. Kindred souls Mark Colby and Vince Maggio have those bases well covered on Reunion, on which the two play together for the first time since they were musically separated by Colby’s move from Miami to Chicago a number of years ago.

It’s a sublime reunion wherein Colby and Maggio interact as irreprovably as if they’d never been apart. Like any top–drawer session, this one leaves one hungering for more. Their skills are so abundant that even such overworked staples of the Jazz canon as “Up Jumped Spring” or “Airegin” sound fresh and alive. Colby, whose modernist point of view embraces stylistic touches from Trane and Rollins to Joe Henderson, Michael Brecker, Joe Lovano, Lew Tabackin and others, has forged from them a commanding vocabulary that is unmistakably his own.

Maggio has his own convincing point of view as well, derived from but seldom imitative of other post–bop sovereigns of the piano. He can be unrelentingly forceful, like McCoy Tyner, Benny Green or Harold Mabern, for example, or warmly lyrical in the image of a Kenny Barron, Tommy Flanagan or Bill Evans. Both qualities are employed here to ably complement Colby’s biting tenor (and lustrous soprano on the entrancing ballads “Once in a Garden” and Wayne Shorter’s “Miyako”).

Colby and Maggio have chosen the repertoire with care, embracing two classics by Jobim (“O Grande Amor,” “Felicidade”), Mal Waldron’s “Soul Eyes,” Shorter’s “Lester Left Town,” Armando Corea’s “Windows,” Joe McCarthy/Cy Coleman’s “I’m Gonna Laugh You Right Out of My Life” and the Howard Dietz/Arthur Schwartz standard, “You and the Night and the Music,” which opens the session on a suitably devil–may–care note. This is one Reunion that cries out for an encore. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/reunion-mark-colby-corridor-records-review-by-jack-bowers

Personnel: Mark Colby: saxophone.

Reunion

Lluís Coloma Trio - 7 Nights At Central

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:47
Size: 157.5 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[ 5:04] 1. Hurricane's Boogie
[ 4:14] 2. African Gospel
[ 3:58] 3. Coloma's Boogie
[ 4:51] 4. Sleeping
[ 3:51] 5. Betsy's Silent Movie
[ 4:26] 6. Campi Qui Boogie
[ 3:51] 7. Bumble Boogie
[ 8:05] 8. Darkness Dance
[ 4:58] 9. Longhair's Tribute
[ 6:35] 10. The Spirit Of The Blues
[13:02] 11. Cromatic Boogie
[ 5:46] 12. Georgia On My Mind (Bis)

Lluis Coloma (p), Manolo Germán (b), Marc Ruiz (d).

"This CD includes twelve tracks recorded during a week of concerts at Café Central in Madrid. Seven nights wrapped up by a unique atmosphere and the warm audience of one of the most magic places where we have played. With Marc and Manolo, I have shared more than eight years playing concerts, living experiences, traveling, rehearsing, laughing... which make this CD full of complicity and feeling. A honest taste of our music." ~Lluis Coloma

7 Nights At Central

Brian Bromberg - The Magic of Moonlight

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:14
Size: 154,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:39) 1. The Magic of Moonlight
(6:57) 2. Nico’s Groove
(3:40) 3. A New Dawn
(5:44) 4. So, You Think You’re All That?
(6:53) 5. Just Another Beautiful Day
(6:02) 6. Last Day of Summer
(5:39) 7. The Third Child
(6:48) 8. The Orient Express
(5:20) 9. Bedtime Story
(5:49) 10. The Pink Moment
(7:38) 11. In the Hands of God

The Magic of Moonlight is both an evocative and an apt title for this latest outing; as opposed to its predecessor, the freewheeling, open-road feel of A Little Driving Music, Bromberg’s latest album is deeply imbued with the shadow-cloaked mystery and twilight romance of an evening under the full moon. The feeling is also captured on the Magic Hour wonder of “The Pink Moment,” the nickname for the multi-hued sunset on the Topatopa Mountains near Bromberg’s home outside Ojai, California.

“There's a little bit of mystique in the moonlight,” Bromberg muses. “This album has some mysterious vibes and spirituality along with the feel-good, positive energy, so the name just seemed to fit.”

Originally from Tucson, Arizona, Bromberg started out on the drums before switching to the bass at the behest of his junior high school band director though that driving, rhythmic foundation has remained a core component of Bromberg’s sound. With the help of bass great Marc Johnson, then touring as a member of the Bill Evans Trio, Bromberg landed a gig with the legendary saxophonist Stan Getz in late 1979, when he was just 19 years old.

Bromberg has hardly stopped for a moment’s breath since then. In the ensuing decades he’s performed, recorded or toured with a stunning roster of artists across a spectrum of genres. While it might be easier to list the names that he hasn’t played with, a partial list of collaborators will have to suffice: Joshua Redman, Roy Hargrove, Sarah Vaughan, Bob James, George Benson, Lionel Hampton, Chris Botti, Najee, Whitney Houston, Christina Aguilera, Diana Krall, Dizzy Gillespie, Josh Groban, Mike Stern, Dave Koz, Sting, Michael Brecker, Stanley Clarke, Stanley Jordan even Jerry Lewis. And that’s just scratching the surface.

1986’s A New Day launched Bromberg’s solo career, while his follow-up, Basses Loaded, cemented his place in the front ranks of bass innovators. In the years to follow he released a series of acoustic jazz projects alternating with more electric contemporary outings. He recorded tributes to Jaco Pastorius, Jimi Hendrix and Antonio Carlos Jobim and fronted a full orchestra. Throughout he’s captivated audiences and fellow musicians with his staggering agility on an array of basses: four- and five-string axes, hollowbody electric, acoustic, and the piccolo bass, on which his shredding solos rival the speed and versatility of any electric guitar wizard.

The Magic of Moonlight features an all-star roster of guests tailored to the music that Bromberg has devised for the sessions, supplementing a core band that includes drummers Joel Taylor and Tony Moore, keyboardist Tom Zink, guitarist Gannin Arnold and percussionist Lenny Castro. Smooth jazz sax superstar Everette Harp graces three tunes, playing tenor on the title track and the breezy, wind-in-your-hair “Last Day of Summer,” and soprano on the tender “The Third Child,” lovingly dedicated to Bromberg’s sister.

Fusion sax great Gary Meek, well known for his long association with Airto Moreira and Flora Purim, adds his sinuous soprano to the winsome “Just Another Beautiful Day.” Charlie Bisharat’s mesmerizing violin and Grant Geissman’s sitar guitar combine to add a tinge of otherworldliness to the fusion-driven exoticism of “The Orient Express,” while Lin Rountree’s muted trumpet is the sassy topper on the attitude-fueled funk of “So, You Think You’re All That?”

Though few instrumentalists could combine spellbinding musicianship with entrancing songcraft quite like Bromberg, The Magic of Moonlight is another left-field surprise in a discography full of them. “It's impossible for me to make the same record twice,” Bromberg shrugs. “I like to surprise people. The music comes first.”
https://bassmagazine.com/artists/brian-bromberg-announces-new-album-the-magic-of-moonlight

The Magic of Moonlight

Nicola Conte - Umoja

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:17
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:25) 1. Arise
(3:57) 2. Dance Of Love And Peace (Part 1)
(5:54) 3. Life Forces
(5:42) 4. Flying Circles
(8:12) 5. Freedom & Progress
(5:10) 6. Soul Of The People
(5:09) 7. Heritage
(4:13) 8. Into The Light Of Love
(6:55) 9. Umoja Unity
(2:56) 10. Dance Of Love & Peace (Part. 2)
(4:25) 11. Arise (Instrumental)
(4:14) 12. Into The Light Of Love (Instrumental)

Nicola Conte continues on his journey from acid-jazz bohemian to spiritual-jazz sophisticate with this immaculately hip album, fronted on half of its tracks by London-based soul-jazz divas Zara McFarlane and Bridgette Amofah.

Conte began his trajectory with the acid-jazz template Jet Sounds (Schema, 2000), boosted it with Jet Sounds Revisited (Schema, 2002) and, after a brief post-hard-bop detour with Other Directions (Blue Note, 2004), began the spiritual-jazz ascent which has in 2023 reached its new, lofty apogee with Umoja. At all stages, Conte's role has been less that of an instrumentalist and more concerned with composing, arranging, selecting the musicians and producing the sessions.

There is a distinctive, singular thread running through Conte's twenty-three year recorded output. This is a result, in part, of his longtime residence in Bari, an off-the-beaten-track seaport on the heel of Italy's boot on the country's southern Adriatic coast, its location rendering it well placed to shrug off the passing fads and fashions of Rome and Milan. Conte first came to attention in Bari in the 1990s with his Fez Collective, a loose coalition of progressively minded jazz musicians, DJs and cultural activists clustered around the town's alternative club world. Fez was a sort of latter-day musical equivalent of a mid-twentieth century European literary salon.

Continuity has also been created by Conte's collaborator Tommy Cavalieri, at whose Sorriso Studio in Bari Conte's most characterful releases, from Jet Sounds to Umoja, have been recorded.

The new album kicks off with six tracks on which McFarlane and Amofah alternate as lead singers. Within their broadly humanistic paradigm, the lyrics address particular sociopolitical issues such as ethnic identity, and without resorting to prosaic agitprop. The singers are supported by an achingly funky core lineup comprising tenor saxophonist Timo Lassy, multi-keyboardist Pietro Lussu, guitarist Alberto Parmegiani, alternating bassists Ameen Salim, Marco Bardoscia and Luca Alemanno, percussionist Abdissa Assefa and drummer Teppo Mäkynen. Another eleven guest singers and instrumentalists weave in and out (see below for details).

The tracks featuring McFarlane and Amofah are the peaks of the album, for which an honourable mention goes to Lassy, whose sensuous, Pharoah Sanders-like vocalisations behind the singers are terrific. Assefa's percussion work is also noteworthy. And a shoutout, too, for the instrumental tracks "Heritage," featuring flautist Milena Jancuric, and "Arise (Instrumental)," the sans-vocals version of McFarlane's opening track, which features vibraphonist Simon Moullier.

Only on "Into The Light Of Love," featuring male vocalist Myles Sanko, and its album-closing instrumental version, does Conte take his eye, briefly, off the ball, giving us rather too much lurve and a busy but bland quiet-storm vibe. For the rest, Umoja contains some of Conte's most satisfying work to date.

Londoners may like to know that Conte and his band including McFarlane will be performing Umoja at Ronnie Scott's on Thursday 8 June.

The single "Arise" has been released (check the YouTube below). Umoja is scheduled for 30 June 2023.By Chris May
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/umoja-nicola-conte-far-out-recordings

Personnel: Nicola Conte: multi-instrumentalist; Zara McFarlane: voice / vocals; Bridgette Amofah: voice / vocals; Timo Lassy: saxophone; Teppo Mäkynen: drums; Pietro Lussu: keyboards; iAlberto Parmegian: guitar, electric; Abdissa Assefa: percussion; Ameen Salim: bass; Marco Bardoscia : bass, electric; Luca Alemanno: bass
.
Additional Instrumentation: Nicola Conte: composer/arranger/producer; Zara McFarlane: lead vocals (1, 3, 5); Bridgette Amofah: lead vocals (2, 4, 6, 10); Timo Lassy: tenor saxophone; Teppo Makynen: drums; Pietro Lussu: Fender Rhodes, Wurlizter, acoustic piano; Alberto Parmegiani: guitar; Abdissa Assefa: congas, percussions; Ameen Salim: Fender bass and double bass (4, 5, 9); Marco Bardoscia: electric bass (1-3); Luca Alemanno: Fender bass and double bass (6-8); Myles Sanko: lead vocals (8); Simon Moullier: vibraphone (1, 7); Dario Bassolino: Fender Rhodes and Moog (6, 8); Magnus Lindgren: flute (8); Fernando Damon: drums (7); Milena Jancuric: flute (7); Pasquale Calo: tenor saxophone (4); Hermon Mehari: trumpet (5); Paola Gladys: vocals (4, 5); Chantal Lewis: vocals (8); Jaelee Small: vocals (8).

Umoja