Sunday, January 14, 2024

Bernie Senensky, Eric Alexander, Joe Farnsworth - Moment To Moment

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:41
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

( 5:08) 1. Alexander’s Realtime Band
(15:02) 2. Speak Low
( 7:39) 3. Matchmaker
( 9:15) 4. Moment To Moment
(10:35) 5. Blues For E.J.
( 7:18) 6. Make Believe
( 8:57) 7. Stand Pat
( 3:44) 8. Alexander’s Realtime Band (Alt Take)

Canadian pianist Bernie Senensky's latest album, Moment to Moment, encompasses two quartet sessions recorded almost twenty years apart: the first in 2001, the second (live) in 2020. While the rhythm sections differ on each, the one constant (aside from Senensky) is the acclaimed tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander. If you are planning to have only one constant, Alexander is by any measure a superlative choice.

Alexander, whose solos are models of creativity and eloquence, seems to light a fire under Senensky who performs marvelously on every number while giving Alexander copious room to improvise (and granting him the first solo on most tracks). Senensky wrote three of the album's eight numbers, and they are excellent, especially the flag-waving "Alexander's Realtime Band," versions of which open and close the album. The others are the loping "Blues for E.J." and lyrical "Make Believe." For his part, Alexander composed the skittish burner "Stand Pat" as a tribute to his band mate and friend, the late guitarist Pat Martino.

Senensky and Alexander are blessed to have the support of not one but two blue-chip rhythm sections: bassist Dave Young and drummer Morgan Childs on "Speak Low" and "Blues for E.J." (showcasing Young's splendid arco bass) from 2020, bassist Kieran Overs and drummer Joe Farnsworth on the studio session from 2001. Speaking of bassists, Overs has his moment in the sun (and it is a bright one) on "Make Believe," while Childs sparkles on "Speak Low," Farnsworth on "Stand Pat." Alexander's solos, meanwhile, often extend for more than five minutes, and he never runs out of inspiration or passes up a persuasive turn of phrase. His statements on "Realtime Band" are textbook examples of how to unravel a theme and get it right.

On "Blues for E.J.," Senensky and Alexander prove that they can be as blue as needed, much as they cleave to the juggernaut that is "Alexander's Realtime Band" and do not let go until they have made their purpose crystal clear. The album's other songs, so far unmentioned, are Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick's "Matchmaker, Matchmaker" from the Broadway smash Fiddler on the Roof and Henry Mancini/Johnny Mercer's lovely ballad, "Moment to Moment" (from the film of that name), which lends the album its title. "Matchmaker," taken at precisely the correct tempo, spotlights typically impressive solos by Senensky (who leads off this time) and Alexander with staunch support from Overs and Farnsworth, while Alexander shows his tender side on "Moment to Moment" and Senensky frames a second amorous solo.

Alexander shows on every number why he has been ranked high in so many polls for more than two decades; he always comes to play, and never leaves an audience less than pleased and enlightened. Notwithstanding his towering presence, however, this is Senensky's date (or dates), and he demonstrates time and again why he is one of Canada's foremost jazz pianists, whether playing straight-ahead (as he does here) or avant-garde, as he has been known to do on other occasions. From Moment to Moment, Senensky enhances every note and phrase, as do Alexander who is always a pleasure to hear and those exemplary rhythm sections. Quartet sessions simply don't shine much brighter than this.By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/moment-to-moment-bernie-senensky-cellar-music-group__1010

Personnel: Bernie Senensky - piano; Eric Alexander - tenor saxophone; Kieran Overs - bass (tracks 1,3,4,6,7 & 8); Dave Young - bass (tracks 2 & 5); Joe Farnsworth - drums (tracks 1,3,4,6,7 & 8); Morgan Childs - drums (tracks 2 & 5)

Moment To Moment

Vanessa Perica Orchestra - The Eye Is the First Circle

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:02
Size: 115,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:01) 1. The Eye Is the First Circle
(7:34) 2. What a Time to Be Alive
(6:14) 3. Hill of Grace
(7:29) 4. Meet Me at Phoenix Street
(6:56) 5. Song for Cleo
(9:47) 6. Still We Rise
(4:58) 7. Love and War

Czech pianist/composer Kristina Barta's Endless Questions and Answers opens on a rather ominous tone. Drummer Marek Urbanek plays on his toms a shadowy, esoteric rhythm. Tenor Jure Pukl flares in. Barta enters slowly, barely audible with bassist Peter Korman riding shotgun. But soon she controls the barely controllable rush that embodies "Breaking Through Some Border," the breakthrough opener to a fine, fine recording.

Barta a graduate from the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague and a finalist in the 2016 Euroradio Jazz Competition in the Netherlands keeps the action chugging along. "The One Who Believes" is a full bore slice of Euro post-bop: airy, articulate, unfussy. Clean and propulsive. The trio of Urbánek, Korman, and Pukl hold the landscape to task allowing Barta to muse about the sweeping terrain's many highway and byways.

The almost-too-ballady ballad "No Time Ritual" echoes just enough of the other eighheen-million ballads out there to kind of halt the forward spread of motion the previous two tracks had given themselves to. The slow, unfolding, knotty structure of "Everything's Changed" breaks that spell. It is soon followed by "Without Anxiety" where Barta balances her melodic balladry and her instinct for jumpy improv with keen nuance.

The quartet revels in that jumpy bop energy on "Fictional Trips." Barta is all over the Cecil Taylor/Marilyn Crispell playbook and it is a pure rush to listen to. Pukl, his tone classic sax sharp but not strident, resonant with metro narrative pulls with and against Barta, busting space for Urbánek's muscle and Korman's insistence to rule the day. Despite the couple of originals that sound a tad over-studied, Endless Questions and Answers does not disappoint and delivers if not many answers, certainly many promises.By Mike Jurkovic
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/endless-questions-and-answers-kristina-barta-alessa-records-jazz-and-art-second-records

The Eye Is the First Circle

Victor Assis Brasil - Esperanto / Toca Antonio Carlos Jobim

Size: 194,5 MB
Time: 83:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Jazz
Label: Far Out Recordings
Art: Front & Back

01. Ginger Bread Boy ( 6:14)
02. Children (10:14)
03. Marilia ( 6:44)
04. Quarenta Graus A Sombra ( 9:12)
05. Ao Amigo Quartin ( 5:07)
06. So Tinha De Ser Com Voce ( 4:01)
07. Wave ( 9:49)
08. Bonita (11:43)
09. Dindi ( 5:01)
10. Marilia (Alternative Take) ( 7:52)
11. Ao Amigo Quartin (Alternative Take) ( 7:51)

Over the course of the 1960s, Roberto Quartin released more than 20 albums in Brazil on his label Forma, by artists including the likes of Eumir Deodato, Quarteto Em Cy, Baden Powell and Vinicius De Moraës. Selling the rights of Forma to Polygram in 1969, Quartin struck out for pastures new at the dawn of the 1970s with the launch of his self-titled label. Significant works and high-water marks for Brazilian music overall followed in that decade’s first year. These singular gems in Brazilian music, difficult to categorise yet compellingly beautiful, have for too long gone unheard.

Gifted his first saxophone by his aunt at the age of fourteen, only four years later the inherently gifted and determined young musician Victor Assis Brasil recorded his debut album, with a second to follow only a year later. The prodigious young carioca was subsequently granted a place to study at Berklee College of Music, where he played alongside the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry, Chick Corea and Ron Carter. It was also during this period he recorded Esperanto and Toca Antonio Carlos Jobim with Roberto Quartin, upon returning to Brazil in the summer of 1970.

Recorded in the same sessions as the Toca Antonio Carlos Jobim album, Esperanto consists of five deep jazz cuts: original compositions except for a heavy-swinging latin-jazz cover of Jimmy Heath’s ‘Ginger Bread Boy’, alongside more moments of wild frenetic jazz, like ‘Quarenta Graus A Sombra’, amongst more melancholic, but no less captivating compositions like ‘Marilia’ and ‘Ao Amigo Quartin’. Esperanto’s influences span both American continents, finding a meeting point for Latin jazz and North American post-bop, with Roberto Quartin’s perfectionist approach to sound elevating the already incandescent music to divine new heights. The band consists of some mercurial greats of Brazilian music: Dom Salvador (bass), Edison Machado (drums), Helio Delmiro (guitar) and Edson Lobo (Bass).

Victor Assis Brasil passed away aged just thirty-five, due to a rare circulatory disease, but by this point his status was already cemented as one of the most talented musicians in Brazil’s history.

This issue of Esperanto also features a track previously unreleased on vinyl, ‘Children’. All the releases in the Quartin series have been re-mastered from the original 2” tapes, and pressed to high quality heavyweight vinyl.

Esperanto / Toca Antonio Carlos Jobim