Showing posts with label Christian Scott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Scott. Show all posts

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - Axiom

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 118:32
Size: 272,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:52) 1. X. Adjuah (I Own the Night)
(16:06) 2. The Last Chieftain (for Big Chiefs Donald Harrison Sr. & Jr.)
(10:53) 3. Guinnevere
( 9:39) 4. Songs She Never Heard
( 4:47) 5. Sunrise in Beijing
( 9:17) 6. Huntress (for Cara)
( 6:45) 7. Incarnation (Chief Adjuah - Idi of the Xodokan)
(15:54) 8. West of the West
( 5:50) 9. Diaspora
( 0:38) 10. Introductions
(12:30) 11. Guinnevere [alt take]
(16:17) 12. The Last Chieftain (for Big Chiefs Donald Harrison Sr. & Jr.)[alt take]

As evidenced here, those in attendance for Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah's 2020 engagement at New York's Blue Note from March 11-15 witnessed what turned out to be some of the most powerful performances of this restricted musical year, just before everyday life changed for most people on the planet. The record is dedicated to the victims of Corona-19. This exceptional concert compilation could well be the first of "jazz's" present day, classic live albums released during the pandemic era (genre is in parentheses respecting Adjuah's stated reluctance regarding potentially disingenuous categorizations). A few brief, between song musings serve as milepost statements of the bandleader's mindset as this millennium's unusual third decade unfolded, but there is no political clutter.

Though many of the songs have previously appeared in somewhat similar forms, the sound is fresh, the musicianship fantastic, and the production basically flawless. Sporadic segments throughout evoke a later stage Miles Davis, like a yesternow Bitches Brew (Columbia Records, 1970) by Tutu (Warner Brothers, 1986) at the Fillmore. The set opens with "I Own the Night," a rousing new number with stirring percussion that continues the African-based rhythmic focus explored on Ancestral Recall (Ropeadope Records, 2019), which was released about a year before these concert pieces took place. Each band member also appeared on that album, with the exception of special guest saxophonist Alex Han; thus the cohesive interplay is always optimal. Flautist Elena Pinderhughes earns supporting MVP honors through numerous inspired solos.

"The Last Chieftain" is another percussive tour de force, with the first of some wonderful extended segments between drummer Corey Fonville and pianist Lawrence Fields. Pinderhughes smooths out the middle sections and leads the crew into another feast on the skins that wraps things up with emphasis on traditions like the djembe and bata. Since he's also credited with percussion work, one can assume that beside his mastery on horns, Adjuah's prowess with the drums grows with each release. "Sunrise in Bejing" from 2015's Stretch Music (Ropeadope Records, 2015) builds with wonderfully shadowed phrases between wind instruments that float like an early dawn over lightning flashes of percussion. Bassist Kris Funn makes the most of every fill he touches. Pinderhughes has become a more widely recognized creative force on the musical forefront while building a substantial body of work with Scott's formations,and she steps to the front again on "Diaspora,"the title tune of the 2017 Adjuah Ropeadope Records release.

Another new song, "Huntress," consists of a gentler melody than most cuts over steadily mixed undertone beats. Pinderhughes' flute floats in a higher register above cascading cymbals that build speed and intensity on increasing layers of percussion until winding back to the original pace for a similarly restrained run on what sounds like reverse flugelhorn. Whatever the instrument, Adjuah puts plenty of emotion into it. Written as a tribute to his mother, it's a very touching piece, especially considering this is one of, if not the first, times it was played in public. The regal "Incarnation" is one of the set's most brass based selections and sounds like it got one of the biggest audience reactions. The song features yet further layers of percussion and another sweet, trio-type break by flute, drums and keys that further illuminates the individual powerhouses Adjuah had on stage with him. The album has been released in multiple formats. This review is based on the edition that includes alternate versions of "The Last Chieftain" and "Guinnevere," each enhanced by Han's scorching sax.

Absent from the CD is the stirring "West of the West," a quarter hour of funked-up fury based on a shithead (read racist) neighbor Adjuah encountered at his home in Los Angeles, featuring further Han fireworks and some of Fonville's supremely strongest smacks. With intense foundational interplay between the keys and percussion instruments the track rocks less but is just as explosive as the guitar-heavy original. Considering the current social state of domestic affairs at the time of recording, the piece constitutes a tumultuous time capsule for the United States circa 2020. It's a shame the song isn't on every edition. "What you're going to experience is the re-evaluation," Scott informed the audience. "We have just crossed into the second century of creative improvised music, or othersowise if you prefer belittling and pejorative terms, jazz. We're re-evaluating what we're playing and why. We want everybody to know that they are free, that they are safe if they want to express themselves; as long as they don't sneeze while doing it, then everyone will be on the same page. We're not runnin,' but wash your damn hands." Following a stated goal to de-colonize musical sectors Adjuah, a descendant Chief in the prominent New Orleans "masking" culture, succeeds magnificently at clearly defining his vision of rhythm and tone. With this album he further proves himself true royalty for the future society of sounds.~ PHILLIP WOOLEVER https://www.allaboutjazz.com/axiom-christian-scott-atunde-adjuah-ropeadope-stretch-music

Personnel: Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah: trumpet; Elena Pinderhughes: flute; Weedie Braimah: percussion; Corey Fonville: drums; Lawrence Fields: piano; Kris Funn: bass; Alex Han: saxophone, alto

Axiom

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Christian Scott - Yesterday You Said Tomorrow

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:26
Size: 157,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:08)  1. K.K.P.D.
(5:30)  2. The Eraser
(7:55)  3. After All
(6:16)  4. Isadora
(8:40)  5. Angola, LA & the 13th Amendment
(5:48)  6. The Last Broken Heart
(6:50)  7. Jenacide
(7:08)  8. American't
(9:42)  9. An Unending Repentance
(3:25) 10. The Roe Effect

Trumpeter Christian Scott started raising expectations in 2006, with Rewind That (Concord), and hit the spot again in 2007 and 2008. Those earlier promises of greatness are clinched by Yesterday You Said Tomorrow. Scott's fourth Concord album is a gym-ripped amalgam of edgy jazz, hip hop and rock rhythms, off-kilter ostinatos, intimate rhapsodies and full-on passions, all welded together by the New Orleans-born player's alternately caressing and searing horn, and by his most tightly focused band to date. Scott's very modern approach to jazz gains added weight from the album's close embrace of the stylists of the mid- to late-1960s. References to trumpeter Miles Davis' second quintet, saxophonist John Coltrane's classic quartet and bassist Charles Mingus' contemporaneous bands abound. As though to emphasise the provenance, the album was co-produced by the veteran Blue Note engineer, Rudy Van Gelder, in whose studio it was recorded. Other 1960s resonances can be heard: the electric acid blues of Jimi Hendrix (guitarist Matthew Stevens is also adept in fluid, Pat Metheny-like lyricism), and, though Yesterday You Said Tomorrow is an instrumental album, the protest movement led by singers such as Bob Dylan and Curtis Mayfield. "I wanted to create a musical backdrop," says Scott in the publicity material accompanying review copies, "that referenced everything I liked about the music of the 1960s."  Fast forward 40 years, and it's what Scott has done with the backdrop that matters. The track titles give a clue. "K.K.P.D.," the ramped-up tune which kick starts the album, has a title which stands for Klu Klux Police Department, and refers to what Scott calls the "phenomenally dark and evil" attitude of the local police toward the African-American citizens of New Orleans. "Angola, LA & The 13th Amendment," its episodic ebb and flow steered by Scott's by turns melancholy and incandescent trumpet, equates aspects of the prison system with slavery. "The American't" targets the same depressingly enduring racism referenced by "James Crow, Jr. Esq." on Live At Newport (Concord, 2008). "Jenacide" needs no explanation. The mood endures, other than on the emollient "The Eraser" (written by Radiohead's Thom Yorke and the only non-original on the album), and two gorgeous ballads, "Isadora," from Live At Newport, and "The Last Broken Heart." Still only 26, Scott has decades of further development to look forward to. Meanwhile, this is his first landmark album, and one to make you feel good about the future of jazz. ~ Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/yesterday-you-said-tomorrow-christian-scott-concord-records-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Christian Scott: trumpet; Matthew Stevens: guitar; Milton Fletcher Jr.; piano; Kristopher Keith Funn: bass; Jamire Williams: drums.

Yesterday You Said Tomorrow

Monday, August 9, 2021

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - The Emancipation Procrastination

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:52
Size: 146,4 MB
Art: Front

( 6:25)  1. The Emancipation Procrastination
( 5:02)  2. AvengHer
( 5:53)  3. Ruler Rebel - X. aTunde Adjuah Remix
( 4:07)  4. Ashes of Our Forever
( 2:24)  5. In The Beginning
( 3:11)  6. Michele with one L
( 4:45)  7. The Cypher
( 4:39)  8. Videotape
( 2:02)  9. Gerrymandering Game
( 5:00) 10. Unrigging November
( 9:34) 11. Cages
(10:45) 12. New Heroes

Jazz has been around a while 100 years, if we're marking its recorded history (the Dixie Jass Band's "Livery Staple Blues" so long ago they didn't even know how to spell "jazz!") Although there's plenty of tradition to look back on now, jazz has traditionally been forward-thinking. Trumpeter Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah embraces this dichotomy on The Emancipation Procrastination, the third and final entry of his Centennial Trilogy. Despite paying homage to a century of jazz, Adjuah prefers to call his work "stretch music." Like young contemporaries Robert Glasper and Kamasi Washington, Adjuah rejects narrow musical definitions, questing for sounds that are "out there" at least according to stodgy jazz purists. "AvengHer" booms with the 808 bass of trap music, as skittering snares and double-tracked trumpets float over the rumbling foundation. Washed-out guitar lends "Ashes of Our Forever" something of a postrock vibe, while "Cages" melds jazz with a classical influence. The standout here, though, is "The Cypher," a beautifully noir ballad where Adjuah and fellow soloists Elena Pinderhughes (flute) and Braxton Cook (saxophone) turn loose over lovely piano arpeggios and a solid beat. https://www.eriereader.com/article/christian-scott-atunde-adjuah--the-emancipation-procrastination

Personnel:  Trumpet, Siren [Sirenette], Siren, Flugelhorn [Reverse Flugelhorn], MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah;  Alto Saxophone – Braxton Cook; Bass – Kris Funn, Luques Curtis; Djembe, Bata, Congas – Weedie Braimah; Drums [Pan-African], MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Joe Dyson Jr.; Drums, MIDI Controller [SPD-SX] – Corey Fonville , Marcus Gillmore; Flute – Elena Pinderhughes; Guitar – Cliff Hines ; Dominic Minix, Matthew Stevens; Piano, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Lawrence Fields; Tenor Saxophone – Stephen J. Gladney;

The Emancipation Procrastination


Sunday, August 8, 2021

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - Diaspora

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:28
Size: 113,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. Diaspora
(4:17)  2. IDK
(3:44)  3. Our Lady of New Orleans (Herreast Harrison)
(2:11)  4. Bae (Interlude)
(5:35)  5. Desire and the Burning Girl
(3:53)  6. Uncrown Her
(3:59)  7. Lawless
(6:19)  8. Completely
(3:00)  9. New Jack Bounce (Interlude)
(6:10) 10. No Love
(5:19) 11. The Walk

Diaspora is a studio album by American jazz trumpeter Christian Scott released on June 23, 2017 by Ropeadope Records. The album is the second installment of The Centennial Trilogy, with Ruler Rebel and The Emancipation Procrastination being the first and the third ones respectively. The title Diaspora refers to the entirety of Adjuah's listening public, even though the term has specific meanings in the African-American experience, celebrating the rhythmic feels and traditions that arose from the historic movement of African peoples to the Americas and around the globe. 

Adjuah explains "We're trying to highlight the sameness between seemingly disparate cultures of sound as a means of showing a broader reverence and love for the people who create the sound and the experiences that lead them to those places." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaspora_(Christian_Scott_album)

Personnel:  Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah – trumpet, siren, sirenette, reverse flugelhorn, SPD-SX, sampling, sonic architecture; Elena Pinderhughes – flute; Lawrence Fields – piano; Kris Funn – bass; Cliff Hines – guitar; Corey Fonville – drums, SPD-SX; Joe Dyson Jr. – pan-African Drums, SPD-SX; Weedie Braimah – djembe, bata, congas; Chief Shaka Shaka – dununba, sangban, kenikeni; Sarah Elizabeth Charles – special guest, vocals

Diaspora

Friday, June 21, 2019

Christian Scott - Stretch Music

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:01
Size: 118,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Sunrise in Beijing
(4:15)  2. TWIN
(4:22)  3. Perspectives
(8:07)  4. West of the West
(4:09)  5. Liberation over Gangsterism
(1:34)  6. The Corner
(7:34)  7. Of a New Cool
(2:07)  8. Runnin 7's
(4:24)  9. Tantric
(7:11) 10. The Last Chieftain
(2:10) 11. The Horizon

Stretch music, according to New Orleans jazz musician Christian Scott, is an approach that engenders a more absorbent and sensitive kind of jazz. "We are attempting to stretch not replace jazz's rhythmic, melodic and harmonic conventions to encompass as many musical forms/languages/cultures as we can," he says on his website. He titled his fifth album after the concept, but this sensibility is visible even in his earliest work as a leader; the title track of 2007's Anthem is jazz in its instrumentation, but it also obeys the rhythms and structures of post-hardcore, a series of contrasting shapes which build an atomically tense and spectral space, like a cathedral at night. His description of "stretch music" somewhat resembles the omnivorous jazz approaches of bassist/singer Esperanza Spalding and pianist Robert Glasper. It's similarly collaborative and elastic. But Scott's genre splicing is not as mosaic as Glasper's. It’s doesn’t lock different genres together in unusual patterns as much as it melts them down into asymmetrical and indivisible sculpture. It's almost curious to call it "stretch music" when it feels as if jazz isn’t so much expanded here as collapsed into small, oblique jewels. Later in his mission statement, Scott describes his intention to draw unusual instruments through distortion. This is how Stretch Music begins: A piano, played by Lawrence Fields, struggles through noise, as if pressing and blurring against a force field. Instruments undergo a kind of metamorphosis in Scott’s aesthetic, which is reflected in the album cover: his trumpet bends and warps into elastic shapes. https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/21105-stretch-music/

Personnel:  Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah – trumpet, sirenette and reverse flugelhorn; Elena Pinderhughes – flute; Braxton Cook – alto, straight alto; Corey King – trombone; Cliff Hines – guitar; Lawrence Fields – piano; Kris Funn – bass; Corey Fonville – drums, SPD-SX pad; Joe Dyson Jr. – pan-African drums, SPD-SX; Warren Wolf - Vibraphone

Stretch Music

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - Ruler Rebel

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:44
Size: 81,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:45)  1. Ruler Rebel
(2:33)  2. New Orleanian Love Song
(4:56)  3. New Orleanian Love Song II (X. aTunde Adjuah Remix)
(4:15)  4. Phases (feat. Sarah Elizabeth Charles)
(3:42)  5. Rise Again (Allmos Remix)
(5:38)  6. Encryption (feat. Elena Pinderhughes)
(5:36)  7. The Coronation of X. aTunde Adjuah (feat. Elena Pinderhughes)
(3:16)  8. The Reckoning

Ruler Rebel is the first of a trilogy to be released this year by the imaginative and increasingly popular 33-year-old New Orleans trumpeter Christian Scott as a commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the first jazz record in 1917, and a typical Scott genre mash with a undisguised socio-political subtext in African American history. Scott’s reverence for Miles Davis is soon plain in his softly exhaled, muted sounds against the silky orchestral synth textures on the title track opener. Two New Orleanian Love Songs embrace open-trumpet sweeps over keys loops and hip-hop grooves. 

The soul-jazz sound of vocalist Sarah Elizabeth Charles (for whom Scott has previously produced) mingles with ghostly brass tones on Phases, and the sensational young jazz flautist Elena Pinderhughes commandingly swoops through the handclap-driven Encryption and the church-bell synth mimicry and terse percussion of The Coronation of X aTunde Adjuah. 

It’s imaginative, studio-produced jazz in the tradition of Marcus Miller’s 1980s work with Miles Davis, but in its references it feels as contemporary as today’s date. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/apr/20/christian-scott-ruler-rebel-review-edgy-reinventions-of-the-jazz-tradition

Personnel: Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah - Trumpet, Siren, Sirenette, Reverse Flugelhorn, SPD-SX, Sampling, Sonic Architecture; Elena Pinderhughes - Flute; Lawrence Fields - Piano, Fender Rhodes; Luques Curtis - Bass; Kris Funn - Bass; Joshua Crumbly - Bass; Cliff Hines - Guitar; Corey Fonville - Drums, SPD-SX; Joe Dyson Jr. - Pan African Drums, SPD-SX; Weedie Braimah - Djembe, Bata, Congas ; Chief Shaka Shaka - Dununba, Sangban, Kenikeni

Ruler Rebel

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Christian Scott - Christian Scott Collection

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:44
Size: 173,7 MB
Art: Front

( 5:46)  1. The Uprising
( 5:19)  2. Rewind That
( 5:29)  3. The Eraser
( 6:25)  4. When Marissa Stands Her Ground
( 5:48)  5. Cease Fire
( 6:53)  6. Jenacide (The Inevitable Rise and Fall of the Bloodless Revolution)
( 6:29)  7. Say It
( 4:45)  8. Spy Boy/Flag Boy
( 6:39)  9. Like That
( 3:33) 10. The Red Rooster
( 7:07) 11. The American't
(11:26) 12. Litany Against Fear

Forward-thinking jazz trumpeter Christian Scott has built a career balancing both jazz tradition and commercial expectation with a sound that touches upon modal jazz, contemporary R&B, experimental hip-hop, and ruminative art-rock. The 2014 Scott anthology, Christian Scott Collection, compiles tracks off his various Concord albums including 2006's Rewind That, 2007's Anthem, 2010's Yesterday You Said Tomorrow, 2011's Ninety Miles, and 2012's Christian a Tunde Adjuah. While Scott's overall approach to making jazz is an eclectic cross-genre one, his sound has remained largely cohesive. Working with a regular crew of sidemen, including guitarist Matthew Stevens, keyboardist Lawrence Fields, bassist Kristopher Keith Funn, and drummer Jamire Williams, among others, Scott quickly developed a group concept for his wide-ranging compositions. While his warm, harmonically adventurous trumpet playing brings to mind the influence of such titans as Miles Davis and Freddie Hubbard, his overall sound is anything but straight-ahead and traditional. Songs like arid "Eraser" and the languid, dramatic "American't," while certainly registering as instrumental, improvisational music, have as much in common with the ruminative, experimental post-rock of bands like Radiohead and Tortoise as they do with any instrumental jazz. Even when Scott delves deep into sultry, laid-back soul-jazz as he does on the half-lidded slow jam, "Like That," it ends up sounding less like a vintage '70s CTI recording (although that does come to mind) and more like a contemporary Christian Scott recording. Ultimately, with Christian Scott Collection, it's evident just how well Scott's highly cross-pollinated jazz holds together from album to album. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/christian-scott-collection-mw0002766077

Personnel:  Christian Scott – Trumpet;  Walter Smith III – Saxophone;  Matthew Stevens – Guitar;  Lugues Curtis – Electric Bass;  Milton Fletcher, Jr. – Piano

Christian Scott Collection

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Stefon Harris, David Sanchez, Christian Scott - Ninety Miles

Styles: Vibraphone, Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:09
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Nengueleru
(4:17)  2. E'cha
(6:47)  3. City Sunrise
(3:53)  4. The Forgotten Ones
(6:21)  5. Black Action Figure
(6:30)  6. Congo
(9:28)  7. And This Too Shall Pass
(5:01)  8. Brown Belle Blues
(5:46)  9. La Fiesta Va

They're all relative youngsters in a jazz world that still finds nonagenarians like Dave Brubeck hitting the summer festival circuit. Tenor saxophonist David Sanchez may be the elder statesman on the marquis of Ninety Miles, with vibraphonist Stefon Harris in the middle position at 38 and trumpeter Christian Scott still on the shy side of 30, but each of them has already made his mark, making this an all-star in-the-making American/Cuban collaboration on an upward trajectory. Scott's visibility has been soaring, with an album almost every year since Rewind That (Concord, 2006), and delivering incendiary live performances like his 2010 Ottawa Jazz Festival appearance. Harris' career has unfolded a little more slowly since bursting out with Cloud of Red Dust (Blue Note, 1998), but an impressive 2006 Montreal Jazz Festival appearance and sophomore set with his electrified Blackout on Urbanus (Concord, 2009) proves his mesh of cerebral sophistication and get-down grooves remains intact. Sánchez is even more patient, with albums coming every three or four years, but in the time between Cultural Survival (Concord, 2008) and now, he's kept busy with Kenny Werner, heard in a 2009 Montreal performance and on the pianist's Balloons (HalfNote, 2011). For non-Americans, the significance of Ninety Miles the distance between coastal United States and Cuba might be lost; small, perhaps, but with the troubled past between the two nations, it's always held greater significance. Over a year of red tape was required to bring Harris, Sánchez and Scott together with two outstanding Cuban piano quartets one led by Rember Duharte, the other by Harold López-Nussa, who wowed audiences at Germany's 2010 Enjoy Jazz Festival but it was clearly worth the effort. Ninety Miles combines originals from the two Cuban pianists with two tunes by Sánchez and three from Harris, including a new look at the title track to the vibraphonist's Black Action Hero (Blue Note, 1999) that's faithful, but achieves far greater liftoff, thanks to López-Nussa's drummer, brother Ruy A Lopez Nussa and percussionist Edgar Martinez Ochoa. It's a song that defines the entire set, filled with irresistible rhythms, memorable melodies and some of the most flat-out exhilarating playing heard from everyone involved. A marriage (well, two, really) made in heaven, then, but one that doesn't neglect the need to balance the more energetic material with some much-needed respite. Despite being propelled lightly by Ochoa's bata, Sánchez "The Forgotten Ones" is an atmospheric breather, a four-minute duet for the saxophonist and the shimmering, ethereal Harris. And while the three stars are working with two similarly configured Cuban groups, Osmar Salazar's electric bass on tracks like the effervescent "Congo" pushes the bottom end differently than acoustic bassist Yandy Martinez González's Latin swing on Harris' "And This Too Shall Pass."  Without compositional representation, Scott has to rely on his inestimable chops and taste to make his presence felt, but with brash solos like his searing, stratospheric work on "Congo," there's little fear of being ignored. Together with Harris, Sánchez and their Cuban friends, Ninety Miles is music that could bridge the gap if it was ninety light years. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ninety-miles-stefon-harris-concord-picante-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Stefon Harris: vibraphone; David Sanchez: tenor saxophone; Christian Scott: trumpet (1-3, 5-8); Rember Duharte: piano (1, 6 8), voice (6); Osmar Salazar: electric bass (1, 6, 8); Eduardo Barroetabena: drums (1, 6, 8); Jean Roberto San Miguel: batá, congas, percussion (1, 6, 8); Harold López-Nussa: piano (2-3, 5, 7, 9); Yandy Martinez Gonzalez: bass (2-3, 5, 7, 9); Ruy Adrian López-Nussa: drums (2-3, 5, 7, 9); Edgar Martinez Ochoa: congas, djembe, percussion (2-3, 5, 7, 9), batá (4).

Ninety Miles

Monday, October 17, 2016

Melissa Morgan - Until I Met You

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:44
Size: 163,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:56)  1. Save Your Love For Me
(4:53)  2. Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby
(4:31)  3. Until I Met You
(3:11)  4. He Loves Me I Think
(3:40)  5. The Lamp Is Low
(3:24)  6. Cool Cool Daddy
(3:38)  7. A Sleepin' Bee
(3:30)  8. Yes, I Know When I've Had It
(4:53)  9. I Wonder
(5:22) 10. I Just Dropped By To Say Hello
(3:40) 11. The More I See You

Many young jazz vocalists reach into the book of standards for their first recording. Melissa Morgan follows the tradition, but in a way that works to her advantage. Morgan, 29, grew up on Teaneck, N.J. She became a jazz fan upon hearing her grandmother's old records the music of such inspirational vocalists as Nancy Wilson, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington and Sarah Vaughan. A 2004 semi-finalist in the Thelonius Monk International Jazz Competition, Morgan performed before a panel of judges that included Quincy Jones, Al Jarreau, Kurt Elling, Dee Dee Bridgewater and Flora Purim. For her debut, Until I Met You, Morgan is accompanied by the quartet of Gerald Clayton on piano, Randy Napoleon on guitar, Joe Sanders on bass and Kevin Kannar on drums. A slightly slower-than-usual pace is heard in the arrangement of "Save Your Love for Me." Morgan's voice at first is flutelike, but as the song warms up, so does her emphasis. The core quartet is complemented nicely by trumpeter Christian Scott, whose middle solo is crisp, clean, and comfortably loud without being overpowering.

Sassy is the theme for "Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby." Morgan begins with a finger-snapping count as the backing quartet adds to the feel, particularly Sanders and Clayton. During the piano solo, Kannar mixes it up on the drums and cymbals, punching here and subtly striking there. As Clayton builds, the other musicians also crank it up before backing off when Morgan reenters. Scott and tenor saxophonist Ben Wendel help on "Cool Cool Daddy" as Morgan delivers like a classic blues singer. The sass is in high gear and evident in the play of all musicians. Wendel and Scott add to the enjoyment of this piece with solos, as well as their answers to Morgan's calls. Already a lively piece, the energy picks up even more to set up the songs emphatic ending.  "Yes, I Know When I've Had It" has a Latin vibe. Scott and Wendel are joined by alto saxophonist Tim Green and trombonist Francisco Torres. The horn section brilliantly supports Morgan and the rhythm quartet. During the middle break, the horns play as a group before ceding the lead to Green. Throughout, Kannar kicks in some action on the toms. The tendency of new recording artists to cover standards can work against them as they're not giving the audience anything they haven't heard. However, Morgan succeeds with the combination of her vocal style and free-spirited arrangements. Until I Met You, named for the Donald Wolf and Freddie Green classic, is an excellent introduction to Morgan. 
~ Woodrow Wilkins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/until-i-met-you-melissa-morgan-telarc-records-review-by-woodrow-wilkins.php
Personnel: Melissa Morgan: vocals; Gerald Clayton: piano; Randy Napoleon: guitar (1-4, 9); Joe Sanders: bass; Kevin Kannar: drums; Christian Scott: trumpet (1, 3, 6, 8); Tim Green: alto saxophone (3, 5, 8); Ben Wendel: tenor saxophone (3, 6, 8); Francisco Torres: trombone (3, 8).

Until I Met You

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Donald Harrison & Christian Scott - Two Of A Kind

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:50
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:25)  1. Summertime
(6:08)  2. A Night In Tunisia
(8:40)  3. Twerk It
(5:38)  4. I'm Barred
(9:05)  5. The Hook Up
(5:17)  6. Cool Breeze
(4:02)  7. Two Of A Kind
(7:51)  8. Oriental Folk Song
(7:38)  9. Nouveau Swing

Donald Harrison, Jr. (who is also known as Big Chief Donald Harrison of Congo Nation) is a celebrated jazz saxophonist, composer, and educator who resides both in New Orleans and New York City. Born in New Orleans on June 23, 1960, Harrison is the son of the late Donald Harrison, Sr., a legendary New Orleans folklorist and, during his lifetime, the Big Chief of four different NOLA tribes. The younger Harrison began his education at the prestigious New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts and studied with Ellis Marsalis. After graduation, he attended the Berklee College of Music. Though he began playing as a professional while in high school, Harrison gained recognition for his tone and acumen on both alto and tenor horns, playing in the bands of Roy Haynes, Jack McDuff, and most famously, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers; along with trumpeter and future musical partner, Terence Blanchard; they succeeded Wynton and Branford Marsalis. The pair left Blakey's band and began recording as the Terence Blanchard/Donald Harrison Quintet. Between 1983-1988, they issued five albums, including New York Second Line (1984) and Discernment (1986), both for Concord, and Nascence (1986), Crystal Stair (1987), and Black Pearl (1988) for Columbia. While with the unit, Harrison also took part in recording sessions in the jazz vanguard: in 1985, he played on the avant The Sixth Sense (Black Saint) with Bobby Battle, Olu Dara, and Fred Hopkins, and in 1986, recorded with Don Pullen. The Quintet split in 1989.

As a bandleader in his own right, Harrison issued the hard bop Blakey tribute album entitled For Art's Sake on Candid in 1991 and followed it with the historic Indian Blues. It was the first time that Harrison actively engaged his New Orleans musical heritage on a large scale. It wedded Mardis Gras Indian tunes and chanting (courtesy of the Guardians of the Flame Mardi Gras Indians with his father on vocals), to funky Crescent City rhythm & blues and modern jazz. The session featured Dr. John, Cyrus Chestnut, Carl Allen, Phil Bowler, Bruce Cox, and Howard Smiley Ricks. Harrison also recorded the smooth jazz date The Power of Cool, which was released in Germany in 1991, but not until 1994 in the States.In 1993, he signed to GRP/Impulse. His first album for that label was Nouveau Swing, the album and concept that gave Harrison his nickname "the King of Nouveau Swing." That set employed straight-ahead jazz concepts on half the set, and Caribbean rhythms on the remainder. His follow-up went even more afield, further establishing the nouveau swing concept by including Latin rhythms, more rhythm & blues, smooth jazz, and even hip-hop. In 1999, Harrison officially became a Big Chief and founded the Congo Nation Mardi Gras Indians to honor his father and further New Orleans African roots culture. To close out the century, he recorded The New Sounds of Mardi Gras, which merged New Orleans traditional music with hip-hop.

In 2000, Harrison issued the landmark Spirits of Congo Square album, recorded with his New Orleans Legacy Ensemble. The album featured parade rhythms and hard bop solos whether the tune was a traditional NOLA number or a jazz standard by a modern composer. In 2002, he issued his first collaboration with nephew, Christian Scott, in a quintet setting of newly arranged jazz standards called Kind of New. In 2003, he recorded a pair of albums for Nagel Heyer Records. The first, Free Style, may have been a thorough jazz date, but it was entirely inspired by hip-hop rhythms. The second, Heroes, with Ron Carter and Billy Cobham, was more conventionally post-bop, but offered extremely inspired playing by each of the trio's members. In 2004, Harrison also issued Paradise Found, his second quintet offering with his nephew. After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Harrison began to immerse himself in New Orleans' life as an educator as well as a musician and Big Chief. He began employing high school students in his bands, and getting them dates with other professional musicians in order to foster the New Orleans musical heritage and give the younger players more professional exposure. Many musicians had left the city due to Katrina's aftermath, and Harrison saw it as his duty to keep the flame alive.

In 2006, he issued Survivor, a straight-ahead jazz date with Mulgrew Miller and others. He also released the first volume of a projected three-album series entitled 3D (one volume to showcase each of his playing styles). This first entry focused on the commercially viable side of Harrison's musical identity in smooth jazz, urban rhythm & blues, and funk. (Volumes Two and Three will be dedicated to straight-ahead jazz and hip-hop, respectively.) In 2008, he released The Chosen in Europe only. In 2009, he released three titles on Nagel Heyer: The Ballads, The Burners, and Two of a Kind with Christian Scott. In 2010, Harrison became an occasional member of the cast of the HBO television series Treme, playing himself. He reunited with Carter and Cobham for a live date entitled This Is Jazz: Live at the Blue Note, playing a program of originals and standards. It included a new Harrison composition entitled "Treme Swagger." ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi  http://www.billboard.com/artist/301152/donald-harrison/biography

Personnel:  Donald Harrison - alto sax;  Christian Scott – trumpet;  Mulgrew Miller – piano;  Eric Reed – piano;  Luques Curtis – bass;  John Lamkin - drums

Two Of A Kind