Showing posts with label Dan Pratt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Pratt. Show all posts

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Dan Pratt - Hymn For The Happy Man

Size: 137,2 MB
Time: 59:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Art: Front

01. Gross Blues (6:28)
02. New Day (7:06)
03. River (9:26)
04. Warsaw (7:37)
05. Junket (5:40)
06. Riddle Me Rhumba (9:16)
07. Hymn For The Happy Man (7:56)
08. Speak Low (5:57)

With two successful organ ensemble recordings under his belt, saxophonist Dan Pratt moves in a new direction with his Hymn for the Happy Man. As his website biography points out: “The California native and longtime Brooklyn resident hadn’t recorded a piano/bass/drums quartet record before, and he felt a need to explore this instrumentation that is such an essential strand to jazz’s DNA.” Some might argue if you’ve got a good thing going, why mess with it? That kind of thinking may well be safe, but it may also lead to artistic stagnation. Safe and stale are not what Pratt is about. And that’s a good thing, because if Hymn for the Happy Man shows anything, it makes clear that new directions pursued with fervor can take an artist to a new level.

Fronting a quartet that features the ubiquitous Christian McBride on bass, Mike Eckroth on drums, and Gregory Hutchinson on piano, Pratt runs through a varied set of seven original compositions that takes him from the quirky blues opening number, “Gross Blues,” through the evocative impressionistic “River,” to the vibrant rhythms of “Junket.” “New Day” is an elegantly beautiful piece channeling the composer’s elation having just met the woman he was to marry. It features fine solo work from both Hutchinson and McBride, not to forget Pratt’s singing tenor sax.

Pratt switches from tenor to alto on the album’s title song as well as another piece called “Warsaw.” It seems he had been playing alto for less than a year, and after all he wanted to stretch. “I just thought for range and timbre it provided something a little different on this tune,” he stated in a press release. A smoldering “Riddling Rhumba” rounds out the set of Pratt originals.

For good measure, the album closes with a dynamic take on the Kurt Weill classic “Speak Low.” Pratt starts with a fairly conventional statement of the well-known melody and then he and the rest of the crew take off in all sorts of rhythmic directions. It is an exciting way to end this intelligently exploratory project.

Hymn For The Happy Man

Monday, July 18, 2016

Dan Pratt Organ Quartet - Springloaded

Size: 132,8 MB
Time: 57:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Jazz: Mainstream Jazz, Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. Grapple With The Apple (6:34)
02. 20-20 (4:43)
03. Did You See What I Saw (7:04)
04. Still Steamin' (7:32)
05. House Of Cards (6:34)
06. Blues With A Limp (5:38)
07. The Other End (5:11)
08. Moraga (7:26)
09. Who Knew (6:26)

DPOQ, as it's named on the cover of Springloaded, stands for the Dan Pratt Organ Quartet, a smokin' band led by tenor saxophonist Dan Pratt. DPOQ draws upon the foundations of organ jazz as set by Jimmy Smith and Larry Young, using modern compositional forms to create up-to-the-minute jazz that combines invention and swing. The members of DPOQ are young and they take no prisoners.

Pratt exemplifies the approach of DPOQ. He composed most of the tunes on Springloaded , using challenging and unorthodox formal devices. Yet the tunes are accessible and melodic, and some of them, such as the up-tempo burner "Who Knew," have the potential to become jazz standards. On tenor sax, Pratt has a huge, warm sound, and he improvises creatively and aggressively. He might play against the rhythm, and more often, he digs in and swings, as on "Blues With A Limp."

Organist Jared Gold demonstrates firm footwork, maintaining solid bass lines even as he negotiates the intricate forms of the tunes, such as the odd-meter funk that's part of "Still Steamin." He seems to be developing a personal style based in Larry Young, including Young's lighter touch, and he solos effectively throughout. Alan and Mark Ferber happen to be identical twins, and they're also excellent musicians. Alan can go outside, blare, riff, or bop like J.J. Johnson. Mark keeps swinging time even through the most complex situations.

But DPOQ's strongest asset might be its unity, its band sound. This is a working band, with deep interplay, and when Pratt and Alan Ferber improvise collectively, their lines intertwine with remarkable clarity.The result is Springloaded, a fine debut by a band to watch. ~AAJ Staff

Personnel: Dan Pratt, tenor saxophone; Alan Ferber, trombone; Jared Gold, organ; Mark Ferber, drums.

MC
Ziddu