Monday, January 22, 2024

Linda May Han Oh - The Glass Hours

Styles: Voice
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:10
Size: 159,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:49) 1. Circles
(6:42) 2. Antiquity
(5:33) 3. Chimera
(8:29) 4. Jus Ad Bellum
(6:37) 5. The Glass Hours
(9:15) 6. The Imperative
(7:23) 7. Phosphorus
(3:44) 8. Respite
(9:24) 9. The Other Side
(5:08) 10. Hatchling

Linda May Han Oh, a bassist and composer of enormous talent, approaches bandleading with fresh and distinctive vision. Backed by a new quintet that works really great, Oh delivers a set of pieces informed by abstract themes of the fragility of time and life, paradoxes and choices, and social issues in our world. The Glass Hours has that adventurous quality often found in her discography, creating a compound of collective exploration and deft improvisation.

The sinuous, complex melody of “Circles” is earnestly declared, side by side, by Portuguese singer Sara Serpa, whose technique is impressive, and saxophonist Mark Turner. The sounds spread within the organized structure, and we have pianist Fabian Almazan and Turner taking improvisational turns before a fearless double bass solo unfolds.

Introduced rubato by bass and piano before sliding into a 7/4 meter, “Antiquity” is a piece with lyrics centered on the weight of the past, whereas “Chimera”, taking the form of a sensual dance, mutates along the way. A swift rhythmic figure takes center stage, creating a motivically induced substratum later embellished with tasteful electronics.

Often abstract, these avant-leanings occasionally invite us to new territory, like “Phosphorous”, which is rendered with a relentless prog-rock rhythm bed. Drummer Obed Calvaire, who worked with Oh on her debut album, Entry (CD Baby, 2009), locks in with the bassist for the sake of a funk-inspired accentuation, supporting ethereal wordless vocals and saxophone cross-cuts. There’s also a more rugged than sweet keyboard solo here.

The composer delves deeply into this musical universe of linear and cyclical forms. With warfare as a topic, “Jus ad Bellum” flows rubato, later probing polyrhythmic patterns with ritualistic precision. More celebratory is the title cut, which has challenging metered cycles rising and waning periodically; Serpa is on the leading edge here, and Turner and Almazan take improvisational turns. Thematically contrary, “The Other Side” is a meditation on the afterlife, employing a push-pull strategy with well-placed staccatos that ground us in the present.

Impeccably layered with boundless energy, The Glass Hours is a mature work that positions Oh in the vanguard of progressive musical creativity.https://jazztrail.net/blog/linda-may-han-oh-the-glass-hours-album-review

Personnel: Sara Serpa: voice; Mark Turner: tenor saxophone; Fabian Almazan: piano, electronics; Linda May Han Oh: acoustic and electric bass, voice; Obed Calvaire: drums.

The Glass Hours

Ahmad Jamal - Emerald City Nights: Live at the Penthouse 1966-1968 Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: Emerald City Nights: Live at the Penthouse 1966-1968 Disc 1
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@160K/s
Time: 45:11
Size: 52,0 MB
Art: Front

( 4:49) 1. Gloria
( 7:33) 2. Fantastic Vehicle
(12:36) 3. Misty
(15:08) 4. Mr. Lucky
( 5:03) 5. Autumn Leaves

Album: Emerald City Nights: Live at the Penthouse 1966-1968 Disc 2
Time: 48:35
Size: 55,9 MB

(11:01) 1. Corcovado (Quiet Night Of Quiet Stars)
( 8:36) 2. Where Is Love
( 9:30) 3. Dance To The Lady
( 6:58) 4. Naked City Theme
( 2:51) 5. Emily
( 9:36) 6. Alfie

It was a time of warring nations, either within themselves or without. John Coltrane had fallen as Miles Davis was firing up the jazz/funk. It was a time of young men screaming, their bodies on fire. Black and white images of villages savaged and children starving.

Into these unrivaled moments they had just taken down a holy man in Memphis a month before Ahmad Jamal, his uncluttered allegiance to cool, underscored syncopation, and profound ease and understanding of Erroll Garner's orchestral maneuvers, rides high the groove on Emerald City Nights: Live At The Penthouse 1966-1968 and conclusively, both then and now, takes your mind off those, and these, turbulent times.

Volume three could unarguably be the master class of the whole endeavor. Which is no small feat considering the gymnastics of Emerald City Nights: Live At The Penthouse 1963-1964 and Emerald City Nights: Live At The Penthouse 1965, (both from Elemental Music, 2022.) Here, Jamal, bassist Jamil Sulieman Nasser and drummer Frank Gant lock into that Vulcan Mind Meld thing we were hearing so much about back then, making these performances no these passing works of art that burn in the brain until only shadows remain lift the audience into a state of euphoria that is hard to explain but one damn well knows it when it hits.

Take for instance the narrative stretch of "Fantastic Vehicle" and "Misty" from September 29,1966 and "Mr. Lucky," and "Autumn Leaves" from just under a year later. True masterpieces of the form each and every one. Yet this trio plays them in an unprecedented manner and exhilarating form. It is that provocative, harmonic grace only Jamal mastered and with which Davis took great electric liberty.

This is sly, rhythmic derring-do at its best. And it is within these four performances alone that the disc becomes invaluable. "Mr. Lucky" rips with a morse code punctuation and Nasser's fast and furious double timing. Hear him rip full force again on Antonio Carlos Jobim's ageless bossa nova "Corcovado (Quiet Night Of Quite Stars)." "Misty" is just an epic performance, that whole Vulcan Mind Meld thing in full swing. These three are tight but increasingly footloose, (let the two relentless Jamal/Gant fusillades be Exhibits A and B. Let Jamal's effortlessly fascinating runs here and, as on "Autumn Leaves," serve as Exhibits C and D)

Even with the 1967-1968 performances holding to a more classical, yet no more gregarious flaunting, trio approach, Emerald City Nights: Live At The Penthouse 1966-1968 is immensely satisfying and promises to be one of those killer hot Record Store Day Black Friday releases. But that is hardly the point and probably of no consequence at all. For the music on Emerald City Nights: Live At The Penthouse 1966-1968 has a decisively no-holds-barred pulse. It may not be exactly the steady beat of the blood, but it is definitely a pulse that keeps one alive.By Mike Jurkovic
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/emerald-city-nights-live-at-the-penhouse-1966-1968-ahmad-jamal-jazz-detective

Personnel: Ahmad Jamal piano; Jamil Nasser bass; Frank Gant drums

Emerald City Nights: Live at the Penthouse 1966-1968 Disc 1, Disc 2

Larry Schneider - Mohawk

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

( 4:43)  1. Mohawk
( 6:05)  2. Moose The Mooche
( 4:48)  3. She Rote
(10:39)  4. Yardbird Suite
( 2:59)  5. Donna Lee
( 7:51)  6. Anthropology
( 9:35)  7. Scrapple From The Apple
( 5:05)  8. Steeplechase
( 9:24)  9. Confirmation

Larry Schneider on this latest recording plays alto sax instead of tenor sax which is his instrument. And when a jazz saxophone player picks up alto, there is one thing in his mind: Charlie Parker. “Larry Schneider Plays Charlie Parker” is what this CD is all about. A formidable task superbly executed.

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone – Larry Schneider;  Bass – Steve LaSpina;  Drums – Anton Fig;  Piano – Andy LaVerne

Mohawk

Ed Wiley, Jr. - In Remembrance

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:13
Size: 154,2 MB
Art: Front

( 5:06)  1. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
(12:03)  2. There's Blues Everywhere
( 3:02)  3. Shaw Nuff
( 9:04)  4. In Remembrance
( 6:20)  5. Lift Ev'ry Voice
( 5:17)  6. Go Down Moses
( 8:05)  7. Jesus Loves Me
(12:21)  8. Let Us Break Bread Together
( 5:52)  9. Sleepy

On this recording, tenor saxophonist Ed Wiley, Jr. pays tribute to the African-American music continuum, from Negro spirituals to bebop. Included is the classic Go Down Moses, and an emotional solo rendition of Nobody Knows which features Wiley's lush, warm tone. The passionate title track, In Remembrance, written by Wiley, captures the essence of Black struggle. Also includes Charlie Parker's up-tempo bebop tune, Shaw-Nuff. This recording features Ed Wiley, Jr. on tenor and alto sax; Milt Hinton on bass; Shirley Scott on piano; Micky Roker and Bobby Durham on drums; Terell Stafford on trumpet; Wycliffe Gordon, longtime member of the Wynton Marsalis band, on trombone. Arrangements by Ed Wiley, Jr. and Shirley Scott. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/In-Remembrance-Ed-Wiley-Jr/dp/B000EZ91FQ