Showing posts with label Brandi Disterheft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brandi Disterheft. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Oliver Jones, Hank Jones - Pleased To Meet You

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2009
Time: 52:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 124,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:29) 1. What Am I Here For?
(5:18) 2. Groove Merchant
(4:19) 3. Ripples
(4:44) 4. Makin' Whoopee
(5:19) 5. I'll Remember April
(6:09) 6. Star Eyes
(4:55) 7. Blues For Big Scotia
(4:38) 8. Cakewalk
(2:32) 9. Monk's Mood
(6:41) 10. I Remember OP
(1:48) 11. Lonely Woman

What a surprise to hear the first-ever recording that joins piano maestros Hank Jones and Oliver Jones.

A Detroit native, ninety-year-old Hank Jones is from the family that gave us Thad Jones and polyrhythmist Elvin Jones, and he has participated in historic bebop sessions with Charlie Parker and memorable duets with Tommy Flanagan. Montreal's Oliver Jones, who once followed in the footsteps of Oscar Peterson, has emerged to forge a virtuosic path as a Canadian music icon not unlike his erstwhile predecessor.

But their performances shine even brighter than the rare nature of this recording. Both men have the virtuosity to turn even an innocuous repertoire into something special, and thankfully don't have to here; Pleased to Meet You gives them something to work with.

Significantly, the label has chosen not to identify the order of their solos on ensemble pieces and duets. Yet it isn't hard to tell the two men apart. Hank Jones has the touch of an alchemist: notes are never ebony and ivory once he touches them lightly. They become burnished purveyors of dynamic sound, full of tonal color and timbral elegance. He holds an ever-burning torch for the stride geniuses of the past, such as Willie "The Lion" Smith, stepping on flatted fifths every once in a while (on "Ripples," for instance). On "Monk's Mood" and "Lonely Woman," both of which he plays alone, American music history flows through, and swirls around him. He is fleet-fingered, playing solos with rapid-fire double helix runs. Sometimes he turns them into inverted commas, pausing before quoting the melodies inside out.

Hank is generous with Oliver, allowing the younger man space to run riot with his florid, almost Byzantine whorls. Once it was well nigh impossible to tell Oliver Jones and Oscar Peterson apart, but the younger pianist has become his own man. He shows occasionally that he has heard Peterson and Ravel and Debussy as well. But he quotes only from his own vast store of intelligent and melodious phrases and metaphors. He constructs his solos like towering architectural wonders with grace and legato splendor. And he is tender as the night as he eulogizes his dear friend on "I Remember OP."

These two giants are joined on bass and drums by young pretenders to their respective thrones: Brandi Disterheft is a princess of the bass violin. She plays with great sensitivity and solos with confident majesty on all her tracks. Jim Doxas, Oliver Jones' drummer, shows himself to be a sublime melodist when he deftly brushes brass and skins on "What Am I Here For."

This is truly rare record a moving document in modern music that recalls the majesty of yesterday and the promise of tomorrow.By Raul d'Gama Rose
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/pleased-to-meet-you-hank-jones-justin-time-records-review-by-raul-dgama-rose

Personnel: Piano – Hank Jones, Oliver Jones (5); Bass – Brandi Disterheft; Drums – Jim Doxas

Pleased To Meet You

Friday, November 6, 2020

Brandi Disterheft, George Coleman - Surfboard

Styles: Post Bop, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:17
Size: 148,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. Surfboard
(2:57) 2. Prelude to Coup de Foudre
(3:51) 3. Coup de Foudre
(6:50) 4. My Foolish Heart
(4:31) 5. Nanã
(3:51) 6. Manhattan Moon
(3:36) 7. The Pendulum at Falcon's Lair
(4:42) 8. On Broadway
(5:20) 9. Speak Low
(5:24) 10. One Dream
(5:05) 11. Portrait of Porto
(3:42) 12. Where or When
(5:43) 13. Del Sasser
(4:37) 14. Reveries

Award-winning Canadian jazz contrabassist, singer, and composer Brandi Disterheft and her Trio have unveiled their new single, “Surfboard” along with a video for the release.

Featuring the legendary saxophonist George Coleman (Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock), “Surfboard” is a Brazilian Jazz album showcasing Juno Award winning Brandi Brandi Disterheft’s inventive writing, power-socket bass playing, and sweet ethereal vocals alongside Portinho the “James Brown of Brazilian Funk Samba” on drums (Harry Belafonte, Paquito De Rivera) this trio shines with slick vignette arrangements paying homage to composers from Carlos Jobim to bassist Sam Jones. The title track from her forthcoming album, Surfboard set for release October 2020 via Justin Time Records the single and its surrounding body of work are touted among Disterheft’s most accomplished yet. Joined by two octogenarian masters virtuoso tenor saxophonist George Coleman and the definitive Brazilian drummer Portinho and world-class pianist Klaus Mueller, Disterheft authoritatively and organically guides the flow on a varied program that reflects her capacious interests. On “Surfboard,” most notably, the artists nothing short of shine with their slick vignette arrangements and fitting homages to composer and co-creator of bossa nova Carlos Jobim, and bassist Sam Jones throughout. Inspired by documentary tandem surfing footage for the video, Portinho shines his signature groove on this pull from the Brazilian Songbook Standards with unrivaled finesse. http://jazzbluesnews.com/2020/11/01/cd-review-brandi-disterheft-with-george-coleman-surfboard-2020-video-cd-cover/

Personnel: Brandi Disterheft, double bass; George Coleman, saxophone; Klaus Mueller, piano; Portinho, drums

Surfboard

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Brandi Disterheft - Blue Canvas

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:58
Size: 106,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:38)  1. Dis Here
(2:19)  2. Prelude to the Crippling Thrill
(4:26)  3. Crippling Thrill
(5:26)  4. Beehive
(4:32)  5. Daahoud
(4:27)  6. Blue Canvas
(4:11)  7. George's Dilemma
(3:39)  8. When the Mood is Right
(4:38)  9. Our Delight
(5:39) 10. Willow Weep for Me

Juno Award winning bassist, composer, vocalist Brandi Disterheft releases "Blue Canvas", the highly anticipated follow up to her critically acclaimed 2012 release ‘Gratitude.’ Like a savvy card player, she pulls out two aces from her deck in the new offering - her third release on the Justin Time Records label - joining forces with hard bop veteran pianist Harold Mabern and drummer Joe Farnsworth. Recorded last summer in Montreal after a successful club engagement at the Festival de Jazz de Montréal, and apart from an array of classic standards like the funky opener, Bobby Timmons' Dis Here, Tadd Dameron's Our Delight and George's Dilemma (a rarely heard Clifford Brown item), "Blue Canvas" also features four of Brandi’s original compositions, in fact she specifically wrote the originals on this album with the trio in mind, including a waltz for the cello When the Mood Is Right and the daringly epic suite/story of the Crippling Thrill. Daahoud showcases the legendary Harold Mabern in his Teddy Wilson stride-like ballad arrangement, and hear how romantic he makes this otherwise up-tempo song. The Beehive, Harold's composition is the highlight of the album with a signature Joe Farnsworth drum solo. In her eloquent liner notes, the multi-talented musician reminds us of the Muses of Ancient Greece, and how these Gods and Goddesses would lead the artist into a state of ecstasy. And such are the feelings that lead her to state that: “This album tells a story about that escape to freedom and the unyielding feeling of coming alive.”~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Blue-Canvas-Brandi-Disterheft/dp/B01D9EZJLI

Blue Canvas

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Vincent Herring - Night and Day

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:29
Size: 143,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:53)  1. Grind Hog's Day
(5:22)  2. Night and Day
(4:44)  3. The Adventures of Hyun Joo Lee
(6:23)  4. Walton
(7:22)  5. The Gypsy
(5:02)  6. Fly, Little Bird, Fly
(5:10)  7. Wabash
(7:08)  8. Theme for Jobim
(8:53)  9. There Is Something About You (I Don't Know)
(5:28) 10. Smoking Paul's Stash

The alto saxophonist Vincent Herring projects his sound in a strong, centered beam, and even his most intense moments suggest a controlled combustion. You could chalk that up to experience Mr. Herring, 50, has been playing seriously since his teens but it probably has as much to do with disposition. There’s footage of him with Horace Silver’s band in the 1980s, sounding like he does now, slashing but calm. So maybe it’s the suggestion of something held in reserve that has kept Mr. Herring from an A-list solo career. Or maybe it’s the idea that he has followed in the wake of Cannonball Adderley, an alto saxophone hall of famer whose style he can willfully evoke (not least in the Cannonball Adderley Legacy Band). Whatever the case, Mr. Herring should have a higher profile, as he confirms with a smart new album, “Night and Day.”

As with Mr. Herring’s 2013 album “The Uptown Shuffle,” recorded live at Smoke Jazz Club and released on the Smoke Sessions label the music here puts a contemporary spin on hard-bop, with a rhythm team of Brandi Disterheft on bass and Joe Farnsworth on drums. But whereas that album featured a quartet, this one involves a quintet with the pianist Mike LeDonne and an excellent trumpeter, Jeremy Pelt, out front. Mr. Herring and Mr. Pelt have a crisp and jostling rapport, and in moments like a headlong dash through Donald Byrd’s “Fly, Little Bird, Fly,” each elevates the other’s game. The meat-and-potatoes repertory  some “I Got Rhythm” changes, some blues, the Cole Porter tune that lends the album its title doesn’t pose a limitation for them.

And when Mr. Herring tips his hat, as on an original, “The Adventures of Hyun Joo Lee,” named for one of his students and built over a chord sequence by John Coltrane, he sounds unburdened by expectations. Still, there’s no doubting his sincerity on “Theme for Jobim,” composed by a dearly missed former mentor, Cedar Walton or on “Walton,” a swinging homage by Mr. LeDonne, which elicits one of the album’s juiciest alto solos. 
~ Nate Chinen http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/12/arts/music/review-night-and-day-vincent-herrings-new-album.html?_r=0

Personnel: Vincent Herring (alto saxophone); Mike LeDonne (piano); Joe Farnsworth (drums); Jeremy Pelt: trumpet; Brandi Disterheft: bass

Night and Day

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Vincent Herring - The Uptown Shuffle

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:29
Size: 157,3 MB
Art: Front

( 7:31)  1. Elation
( 5:47)  2. Love Walked In
(10:18)  3. Tenderly
( 7:57)  4. Uptown Shuffle
( 7:49)  5. The Atholete
( 8:17)  6. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
( 7:22)  7. Strike up the Band
( 9:10)  8. Don't Let It Go
( 4:15)  9. Big Bertha

Following on the heels of their vinyl sampler and an introductory set by pianist Harold Mabern, comes The Uptown Shuffle by alto saxophonist Vincent Herring. This nine-track recital offers a smattering of Herring originals along with some well-chosen standards. Herring's choice of bandmates is nothing short of top shelf, with pianist Cyrus Chestnut and drummer Joe Farnsworth locking in with up and comer Brandi Disterheft on bass. A native of Vancouver, Disterheft has three albums of her own and has been actively making a name for herself here in the States the past few years.

The opening "Elation" is a Herring original of the modal variety with plenty of up tempo fire and panache to go around. Herring's tone has matured over the years and now has a stronger core tone, not unlike that of Kenny Garrett. For "Love Walked In," Herring recalls Lou Donaldson with his buttery tone and rhythmic swagger. Chestnut's original, "Uptown Shuffle" is feel good music of the best kind with a substantive solo from its composer. A master of brisk tempos, Farnsworth makes "Strike Up the Band" bristle with excitement. Check out the Phineas Newborn quote from Chestnut that ushers in a brief series of exchanges with Farnsworth to hear how well this rhythm section collates into a unified whole. A favorite Duke Pearson ditty, "Big Bertha," wraps up the proceedings on a joyous note, making this one of Herrings best presentations to date. 
~ C.Andrew Hovan http://www.allaboutjazz.com/smoke-sessions-a-threesome-from-herring-jackson-and-hazeltine-by-c-andrew-hovan.php#.U6iKhLG4OSo

Personnel: Vincent Herring: alto sax; Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Brandi Disterheft: bass; Joe Farnsworth: drums.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Anne Drummond (Feat. Benny Green, Brandi Disterheft & Kassa Overall) - Revolving

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:24
Size: 86,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. French Folk
(3:29)  2. Elan
(5:25)  3. Harold Land
(4:05)  4. Rustic Room
(1:00)  5. Interlude (French Folk)
(4:18)  6. Magic Beans
(4:39)  7. Early
(0:44)  8. Interlude (Revolving)
(5:37)  9. Revolving
(2:33) 10. Um a Zero

“...(Drummond's) fine technique is imbued with spirit and imagination.”
-JazzTimes

New York-based flutist and pianist Anne Drummond established her career with multiple recordings and international tours with Kenny Barron, Stefon Harris and many others throughout the early 2000s. With "Revolving," she draws from her repertoire of favorite originals to create a warm and diverse recording. Playing alto and soprano flutes as well as piano, she executes her concise, colorful melodies with an ease that is also reflected in the artistry of her world-class bandmates. Pianist Benny Green offers sweeping satisfaction with two of his first recorded originals. Percussionist Keita Ogawa lays down worldly grooves, and Brandi Disterheft serves the music with exceptional bass work. Guitarist Vic Juris, cellist Dave Eggar, drummer Kassa Overall, and pianist David Chesky also contribute great meaning and insight to this eclectic and sweeping set of original compositions.
http://originarts.com/recordings/recording.php?TitleID=82647

Revolving

Friday, October 4, 2013

Brandi Disterheft - Debut

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:48
Size: 107,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. Pennywort
(6:43)  2. Dandy Dangle
(4:21)  3. Duke's Dead
(3:44)  4. Auto-Beauties
(5:16)  5. Typhoon The 27Th Hour
(3:53)  6. Only...
(7:01)  7. Sixty Dollar Train
(5:34)  8. Dah Knee Low
(3:52)  9. Little Space I Need To Fill (Aka Detroit)

While the rest of the world was talking about Esperanza Spaulding another bassist has been busy making a quiet noise, in a voice all her own. Brandi Disterheft's mature bass playing both pizzicato and arco and her ability to write original material and arrange with a natural ear for the tones and textures of strings, brass and woodwinds speak volumes of lessons learned from at least spiritually the legendary Charles Mingus.

The incredibly gifted Disterheft has all at once crossed the threshold of first albums and pushed the horizon much further than any musician of her vintage. Debut (Superfran Records, 2007) is a truly remarkable achievement. The album has nine original compositions that are not just original, but appear to have come from a voice so distinctive that one can safely say, "You've never heard anything like this before." Unless you were the late Oscar Peterson, in which case you might say, "She has the same lope or rhythmic pulse as my bassist, Ray Brown. She is what we call serious." And that, Dr. Peterson, would be putting it all too mildly.

Rarely has a musician been so fearless on his or her first record as leader. Disterheft has pulled out the stops. She has composed music in various challenging and complex meters, written arrangements using tonal colorations to match, and pushed her musicians into interpreting her work on the cutting edge of their own abilities. She has also—and this is rare too—been bold enough to write words to some songs and have them sung by the smoky-voiced young musician, Sophia Perlman. From the evidence of lyrics for "Auto-Beauties" and "If Only," Brandi Disterheft is a lyric poet as well and Perlman is perfect for the moody saudade of the songs, created in no small measure by the texture of the interplay of horns and piano.

By her own admission, Disterheft set out to make her record a show of respect to those musicians who inspired her and provided the impetus for her own music. But this is far from being a tribute album. It is a brave and successful attempt to give back to jazz in several settings trio, quartet, quintet, and more. The album is beautifully paced, right from the trio opening on "Pennywort." You immediately get a sense that nothing will ever be the same. The idiom of the music here is quirky, and like the best jazz, surprising especially in the climactic bridge that leads into a piano break fed by a subtle rattling of and swoosh of the cymbals a calming wind to settle the song after it has taken flight. Disterheft's bass plays a harmolodic role throughout.

"Dandy Dangle" brings horns in counterpoint with guitar and piano. Pianist David Virelles shines here, building his solo from the ground-up, atonal at first, then with sweeping runs into a Thelonious Monk-like architectural soundscape, before drummer Sly Juhas deconstructs the rhythm, turning it inside out, then returns it to its bop melody. This track is followed by the most ambitious one of the disc. "Duke's Dead" is a complex, towering vehicle for its bassist and composer. The dirge-like arco opening, then the dialogue between Disterheft and Juhas and the sly entry of the horns recalls the best Mingus-Richmond tradition, even working the changes from a classic, "Moanin,'" from Mingus' Blues & Roots ( Atlantic, 1959).

"Typhoon The 27th Hour" has a fine free chart that features a charged harmonic interplay between the searching, scorching tenor of Chris Gale and Disterheft, running riot over the bass, while Juhas keeps things going with his chord-like rumbling on toms and tympanis. "Sixty Dollar Train," another straight-ahead song with a surprising Latin break, is a fine vehicle for guitarist Nathan Hiltz to shine on, with his gazelle-like romp through the melody as the horns rumble in contrapuntal harmony. Alexander Brown takes a well-paced solo on flugelhorn. "Dah Knee Low" is a fine chart featuring subtle changes to harmony and rhythm, an oblique reference to the music of pianist Danilo Perez, who also happens to be one of Disterheft's teachers. The pianism of Adrian Ferrugia here is outstanding, as is the bluesy, dry tenor of Gale. Disterheft makes the bass sing as she solos. Debut is the kind of first album that most musicians can only dream of to launch their careers. Praise is also due to fellow West Coaster, Michael Kaeshammer, a fine musician in his own right, for the production.~ Raul D’Gama Rose  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=29866#.UkOdAxBsidk

Personnel: Chris Gale: tenor saxophone (2, 3, 5, 7, 8), baritone saxophone (4); Alexander Brown: trumpet (2, 3), flugelhorn (4, 7); Nathan Hiltz: guitar (2, 7); David Virelles: piano (2, 4, 6, 7); Adrian Ferrugia: piano (1, 8, 9); Brandi Disterheft: bass; Sly Juhas: drums.

Debut

Friday, September 13, 2013

Brandi Disterheft - Gratitude

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:48
Size: 118,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:46)  1. Blues for Nelson Mandela
(3:01)  2. Gratitude (for David Jahns)
(4:11)  3. Mizmahta
(5:53)  4. But Beautiful
(5:48)  5. Portrait of Duke
(8:17)  6. Kissing the Cheek of Providence
(4:49)  7. Le regarder la rencontrer encore (rendez-vous indésirable)
(6:48)  8. Open
(2:16)  9. The Man I Love
(2:53) 10. Compared To What

Canada has had its fair share of fine female jazz exports over the past few decades: piano-vocal crossover star Diana Krall; trumpeter Ingrid Jensen and her equally fabulous saxophone playing sister, Christine Jensen; and pianist Renee Rosnes have all made their mark below the 49th parallel. With the release of Gratitude, bassist Brandi Disterheft is poised to join their ranks.

The Vancouver-born bassist first garnered attention in Canada with her Juno Award-winning Debut (Superfran, 2007) and its well-titled followup, Second Side (Justin Time, 2009), but she's upped her game with Gratitude. Disterheft's move to New York City proved to be a game changer, as it put her in contact with some of jazz's finest practitioners who ably assist her in raising the bar on this originals-heavy affair.

Disterheft wisely uses her A-list accompanists in various groupings and settings, which helps to keep things interesting throughout. She deals a winning hand of blues in piano trio mode ("Blues For Nelson Mandela"), makes it into a foursome with the addition of Anne Drummond's spellbinding flute ("But Beautiful"), uses all of the harmonic horn colors at her disposal on a beautiful lament written to honor her cousin who lost his battle with cancer ("Gratitude"), and jettisons her support crew for an all- too-brief solo bass take on a Gershwin classic ("The Man I Love"). The full band, sans Drummond, has some fun with Disterheft's "Open," which would have fit in nicely in Art Blakey's playlist of the '60s, while the date's piece de resistance comes in the form of "Portrait Of Duke," a piano-bass-trumpet dialogue that finds Disterheft, trumpeter Sean Jones and drummer Gregory Hutchinson in high spirits.

Disterheft's skills as a bassist and composer are clear at every turn on this outing, but her vocal work can be a tougher sell. Her French language vocals on "Le Regarder La Recontrer Encore (Rendez-Vous Indesirable)" are superb, but her vocals on "But Beautiful" fall flat on the emotional spectrum. The funky "Compared To What" is musically and vocally solid, and focuses on the groove chemistry between Hutchinson and Disterheft, but proves to be a bit of a stylistic faux pas. Disterheft deftly works a variety of styles into a cohesive whole here, but socially conscious funk just doesn't fit in.

While the album might have been stronger with the removal of a vocal number or two, Disterheft doesn't disappoint on the majority of the material. She's a major talent who won't stay under the radar for very long. Gratitude features some outstanding music and it should be a boon to her career.~ Dan Bilawsky http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=43302 .

Personnel: Brandi Disterheft: acoustic bass, vocals; Vincent Herring: alto saxophone; Sean Jones: trumpet; Anne Drummond: alto flute, bass flute; Renee Rosnes: piano; Gregory Hutchinson: drums.

Gratitude


Monday, September 2, 2013

Brandi Disterheft - Second Side

Styles: Jazz
Label: Justin Time
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:59
Size: 89,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:34)  1. Sketches of Belief
(3:47)  2. Combien de Chances
(2:17)  3. Second Dawn
(4:30)  4. Twilight Curtain
(2:59)  5. My Only Friends Are the Pigeons
(4:10)  6. He's Walkin'
(1:03)  7. Dawn
(4:20)  8. Liege
(1:56)  9. A Night in Haiti
(4:31) 10. Let Her Shine
(2:48) 11. This Time the Dream's on Me

The Canadian equivalent of Esperanza Spalding, young bassist/vocalist Brandi Disterheft crosses over into many forms of modern and contemporary jazz on this, her second recording. Blessed with a sweet voice and instrumental chops to burn, she mixes up funk, pop, or fusion styles with a different group on every track, and diversity in mind. Like Spalding, Disterheft uses a playful sense of wonder, retaining her youthful exuberance and even innocence. Hip and upbeat during the instrumental waltz "My Only Friends Are the Pigeons," she could also easily hit the adult contemporary charts with the exciting, vocal based "Twilight Curtain." There's a restless spirit present during most of these tracks, whether in reference to the electric Miles Davis, the jangling guitar on top of hard funk, or regal sounds during "Liege." Cameo appearances from pop/jazz vocalist Holly Cole, or straight-ahead singer Ranee Lee on the Harold Arlen/Johnny Mercer evergreen "This Time the Dream's on Me" with a big band, broadens Disterheft's palette further. Though not definitive or sharply focused, Brandi Disterheft proves to be a formidable talent, ready to break out, essentially scratching the surface of her enormous talent and big ears.~Michael G.Nastos http://www.allmusic.com/album/second-side-mw0002028536

Second Side