Showing posts with label Dave Kikoski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Kikoski. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2024

Alexander Claffy - Memento

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 49:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 113,6 MB
Art: Front

(10:06) 1. Brother
( 8:32) 2. Tokyo
( 7:22) 3. Tassia
( 7:22) 4. Jinriksha
( 8:55) 5. This Nearly Was Mine
( 7:07) 6. Power Station

I’d like to open by thanking everyone who helped to make this album possible. You know exactly who you are and I couldn’t have made it without you.

“Memento”, derived from the concept of “Memento Mori” is my 10th leader effort. By the time this album has been released I’ll be 32 years old. In an age where releasing 50 minutes of consecutive music may seem archaic, I’m just doing my best to document a place and time in my growth and development. When the stars align and I see a group of musicians that can come together and document a sign of the times, I jump at the chance. Even if I myself am not in the exact shape I want to be to record, I’ll take that risk.

This document serves as a reminder of what high level musicianship is still coming out of New York City. To be able to have one of the world’s greatest geniuses, my brother, Kurt Rosenwinkel contributing to this record is a dream within itself. I did my best to assemble some of my favorite voices, and give a pallet which everyone could speak their minds onto.

The goal here was to bring some emotionally powerful music that reminds us each: to enjoy and be grateful. Every day could be your last. And that’s how I’m trying to consistently play and contribute art for the rest of my days. A musical “Memento Mori”, that translates that urgency into song. This Record is dedicated to the memory of my father, Joseph Francis Claffy.
Yours Truly, Alexander Claffy https://alexanderclaffymusic.bandcamp.com/album/memento

Personnel: Alexander Claffy - bass; Kurt Rosenwinkel - guitar; Jimmy Macbride - drums; Matt Chalk - alto sax (tracks 1, 5); Tim Brey - piano (tracks 1, 4-6); Dave Kikoski - piano (tracks 2, 3 & 4); Stacy Dillard - tenor saxophone (tracks 2 & 4); Eric Alexander - tenor saxophone (track 6); Simon Moullier - vibraphone (tracks 1, 2, 4 - 6)

Memento

Friday, April 19, 2024

Gerald Cannon - Live at Dizzy's Club - The Music of Elvin & Mccoy

Styles: Post Bop
Year: 2024
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:22
Size: 166,2 MB
Art: Front

( 8:47) 1. Ej's Blues
( 6:35) 2. Three Elders
(10:34) 3. 3 Card Molly
( 7:47) 4. Search for Peace
(11:16) 5. Blues in the Minor
( 8:33) 6. Home
(13:38) 7. Contemporary Focus
( 5:08) 8. Inception

In June 2022, bassist Gerald Cannon assembled an all-star septet to perform compositions by his late friends and musical colleagues, drummer Elvin Jones and pianist McCoy Tyner, in concert at Dizzy's Club in New York City. It is a respectable blowing session, with capable solos by all hands, albeit a tad less than one might expect from such an esteemed ensemble.

That is not to say anything on the menu is bland or unsavory. Still, expectations are understandably high where an ensemble of this caliber is concerned; this session, even though admirable in many respects, seems more methodical than inspired, in spite of some laudable blowing along the way and a generally solid rhythmic vibe from Cannon and his teammates.

Elvin, one of the Detroit area's talented Jones brothers (Thad, Hank), wrote "EJ's Blues," which opens the session on a buoyant note, and the high-powered "3 Card Molly." Sandwiched between them is Cannon's lone composition, the diaphanous "Three Elders," dedicated to Jones, Tyner and pianist Larry Willis, with whom Cannon performed for eleven years in the Roy Hargrove Big Band. Tyner composed the rest of the session's eight numbers: "Search for Peace," "Blues in the Minor," "Home," "Contemporary Focus" and "Inception."

"EJ's Blues" introduces the ensemble's four-horn front line: tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, alto saxophonist Sherman Irby and trombonist Steve Turre, leading to an engaging solo by pianist Dave Kikoski who is splendid at every turn. Henderson and Turre are smooth and eloquent when called upon, while Lovano relies in part on rapid-fire runs interspersed with high-register screams. Irby never sounds completely comfortable even though he solos capably, especially on "Contemporary Focus." Lovano seems most at home on Tyner's eloquent "Search for Peace," on which he shares blowing space with Henderson.

The septet is present on every number but the last one, Tyner's light-hearted "Inception," performed by Kikoski, Cannon and drummer Lenny White who serves as the group's rhythmic core on every number. Cannon solos only twice, on "3 Card Molly" and "Contemporary Focus," White on "Blues in the Minor" and "Inception." After "EJ's Blues," Turre is not out front again until "Home" and "Contemporary Focus."

There can be no doubt that Cannon's heart was in the right place, his choice of sidemen was splendid, and honorees Jones and Tyner were first-class writers as well as performers. The result is a very good concert which never dips below that level but, for reasons uncertain, seldom rises above it either. Even so, well worth hearing and appreciating.By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-dizzys-club-the-music-of-elvin-and-mccoy-gerald-cannon-self-produced

Personnel: bassist Gerald Cannon; pianist Dave Kikoski; drummer Lenny White; tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano; alto saxophonist Sherman Irby; trumpeter Eddie Henderson; and trombonist Steve Turre.

Gerald Cannon Live at Dizzy's Club the Music of Elvin & Mccoy (Live)

Monday, November 14, 2022

Joe Locke - Wire Walker

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:58
Size: 135,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:46) 1. A New Blue
( 4:57) 2. May You Shine
( 8:33) 3. Barbara
( 5:53) 4. Six Years Remembrance
( 9:49) 5. Stand Inside the Circle
(10:20) 6. A Time for Love
( 4:31) 7. Young and Foolish
( 8:06) 8. Wire Walker

Vibraphonist Joe Locke's career seemed to take off during his time working with Steeplechase, not only because of his formidable playing but his ability to vary his accompanists and the mix of music from one session to the next. This 1992 date features a rhythm section of Dave Kikoski, Ed Howard, and Marvin "Smitty" Smith, as well as saxophonist Danny Walsh.

The group is clearly fired up on the opener, Jimmy Heath's "A New Blue," and easily maintain their momentum throughout the rest of the date. The lush treatment of Johnny Mandel's "A Time for Love" and his revival of the overlooked ballad "Young and Foolish" (inspired somewhat by pianist Bill Evans' trio arrangement) are also outstanding tracks. Locke contributed three originals; the very demanding post-bop "Wire Walker" proves that Locke's quintet can meet almost any musical challenge. Highly recommended. By Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/wire-walker-mw0000436639

Personnel: Vibraphone – Joe Locke; Bass – Ed Howard; Drums – Marvin "Smitty" Smith; Piano – Dave Kikoski; Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – Danny Walsh

Wire Walker

Saturday, August 24, 2019

Ralph Peterson - Triangular 2

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:27
Size: 116,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:53)  1. Jean's Dream
(8:24)  2. Peri
(6:47)  3. Night & Day
(6:20)  4. Games
(4:51)  5. Blues for Jones
(6:50)  6. I Remember Bu
(5:15)  7. Red's Brazilian Fantasy
(6:04)  8. If I Were a Bell

Ralph Peterson's second Sirocco Jazz release is also his second trio recording. On Triangular 2, Peterson is joined by pianist David Kikoski and bassist Gerald Cannon to play six originals  three by Peterson and two standards. Peterson, who is known for his high energy drumming, is more restrained than usual, as expected due to the lack of horns, but Kikoski, who has performed with drum greats Roy Haynes and Billy Hart, and Cannon, a member of Roy Hargrove's group at the time of this recording, are veteran musicians who complement Peterson's energy with their own, forming a very cohesive unit in the process. The trio's arrangement of Cole Porter's "Night & Day" finds Peterson relaxed and swinging on brushes throughout, and features an excellent Kikoski solo. Frank Loesser's "If I Were a Bell," the session's up-tempo burner, is basically a fast and fiery Kikoski solo over Cannon and Peterson's driving rhythm until Kikoski hints at the melody at the end. Other favorites include the finger-poppin' "Blues for Jones," which appeared on two OTB recordings as "Nathan Jones," the melancholy tribute to Art Blakey, "I Remember Bu," and the samba-ish "Red's Brazilian Fantasy." This is a fine recording from a trio of musicians who deserve wider recognition. ~ Greg Turner https://www.allmusic.com/album/triangular-2-mw0000103032

Personnel:  Drums, Producer – Ralph Peterson;  Bass – Gerald Cannon; Piano – Dave Kikoski

Triangular 2

Friday, August 2, 2019

Alex Sipiagin, Dave Kikoski - Bonnie and Clyde

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:20
Size: 141,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:38)  1. Kourke and Spock
(5:40)  2. Henson and Oz
(5:02)  3. Porgy and Bess
(6:34)  4. Arwen and Aragorn
(6:38)  5. Bonnie and Clyde
(6:28)  6. Antony and Cleopatra
(7:46)  7. Samneric
(6:28)  8. Fred and Ginger
(3:42)  9. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
(6:24) 10. Holmes and Watson

Bonnie And Clyde, a set of original music inspired by ten unique pairs of characters, is the latest accomplishment in the very productive and creative career of arranger-composer-trumpeter Dave Lisik. A Canadian who taught high school in Winnipeg, Canada and college in Memphis, Tennessee, Lisik has been a resident of Wellington, New Zealand since 2010 where he teaches at the New Zealand School of Music and has been a very active part of the jazz and creative music scene. While Lisik has written for many larger ensembles, symphony orchestras and his own quintet in his career (with over 450 compositions), Bonnie and Clyde features the duo of trumpeter Alex Sipiagin and pianist Dave Kikoski interpreting his music. Sipiagin, along with Bob Sheppard, had been the principal soloist on Lisik’s 2011 jazz orchestra record Walkabout  A Place For Visions. In 2014, Lisik’s quintet recording Machaut Man and a Superman Hat featured Sipiagin and tenor-saxophonist Donny McCaslin along with the rhythm section of the Mingus Big Band which included Dave Kikoski. “Alex and Dave are both incredible players, technical masters and artists on a really high level,” says Dave Lisik. “As a trumpet player I have a particular appreciation for Alex's ability on the instrument but his inventiveness really stands out for me, even when compared to some of the other top trumpeters playing today. Music just flows out of both of these guys. Alex was in New Zealand for the national jazz workshops in January 2016 and he was already planning some duo gigs with Dave Kikoski. Rather than just writing random tunes for them, it seemed more interesting, given the two-player format, to create a collection of new tunes based on famous pairs from history.”  The adventurous music on Bonnie and Clyde was a challenge for the two players but they quickly came up with fresh and inventive ideas that perfectly fit the pieces. “A few of the tunes start with chord progressions like standards, others are more modern harmonically, and a few are based on ostinatos with melodies and no harmonic progression. It is easy to worry about there not being enough variety with only two instruments but then, as always happens with players at this level, they took the music to places that I had not imagined. The improvisations and interplay are so interesting that it is fun for me to hear what they did with my pieces.” Bonnie and Clyde begins with “Kourke ‘N Spock,” named after Captain James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock from Star Trek. “The odd spelling of Kourke is a nod to the way that Alex, with his Russian accent, pronounces Kirk. It’s identical to how the Russian Star Trek character Pavel Chekov said it, which I found humorous.” The wide intervals played by Sipiagin somehow sounds effortless and relaxed, giving this piece a futuristic feel. “Samneric,” the twin boys Sam and Eric from Lord Of The Flies who were so close that they melded into one character. This dramatic performance has Alex Sipiagin and Dave Kikoski engaging in dramatic interplay as they play off of each other’s ideas throughout the piece. “Antony and Cleopatra,” historic figures who were immortalized by Shakespeare, are musically portrayed by Sipiagin (who hints at the melancholy of Miles Davis on this piece even during his faster runs) and Kikoski, who takes an extended solo filled with twists and turns.

“Porgy and Bess,” the lead characters in George Gershwin’s famed folk opera, are saluted in a thoughtful piece that is a bit nostalgic. "Henson and Oz” celebrates the creative partnership of Jim Henson and Frank Oz who together created Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy and Ernie and Bert. This high energy romp has Sipiagin and Kikoski engaging in playful moments and fiery stretches that jump around with the energy of a children’s television show. About this track Lisik says, “Jim Henson and Frank Oz were one of the most important modern comedy duos. Henson passed unexpectedly in 1990 and Frank Oz eulogizing Jim Henson at his memorial service is one of the most touching moments I’ve seen and a wonderful tribute to the relationship between these two men. “Bonnie and Clyde” is for the Depression era criminals Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow who were depicted in a colorful movie of the same name. Lisik’s music is worthy of a memorable chase scene. “Arwen and Aragorn” is dedicated to two characters from the Lord Of The Rings, a saga that is particularly popular in New Zealand where the films were shot. The particularly lovely chord progression of this romantic jazz waltz is borrowed from “Fairy Tale” by Bob Washut, Lisik’s former teacher at the University of Northern Iowa. The cat and mouse interplay throughout “Holmes and Watson” is perfect for a tribute to Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. The whimsical yet mysterious piece conjures up the image of a Sherlock Holmes tale. “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern” are Shakespearean characters from Hamlet. On this performance and briefly elsewhere, Dave Kikoski is heard on Fender Rhodes, sometimes playing electric and acoustic pianos together with one hand on each. The unisons and general theme on this original are quirky, witty and difficult to predict. Bonnie and Clyde concludes with “Fred And Ginger,” a warm ballad dedicated to Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Too much praise cannot be given to the two musicians who interact spontaneously throughout the ten pieces with the same confidence and relaxed creativity that they would have displayed if they had been stretching out on much more familiar standards. Dave Lisik became involved in music early in his life. After playing organ for five years, he switched to trumpet in sixth grade, performing regularly in his school bands. “Both of my junior high and high school band directors were trumpet players so I'm sure that helped me.” Lisik developed quickly and, while still in high school, he performed for two years in the big band at the University of Manitoba. 

Always interested in writing, he experimented with electroacoustic music while in high school and mostly wrote classical music while in college, but gained experience writing jazz before and during his doctoral study at the University of Memphis. “I wrote for the guest artists who came to the school including Marvin Stamm, Bill Mays, Luis Bonilla, Paul Hanson, Carl Allen, and Kirk Whalum. Once my dissertation was finished, Luis was particularly encouraging and helpful in getting players to record my first big band CD.” Among those jazz composers and arrangers whose music inspired him early on were Bob Brookmeyer, Jim McNeely, Maria Schneider and Thad Jones. In addition to teaching at the New Zealand School of Music in Wellington, Lisik co-directs the New Zealand Youth Jazz Orchestra, founded and produces the NZSM Jazz Festival, and is a trustee of the New Zealand Jazz Foundation. During the past year he has co-written with Eric Allen the book 50 Years at the Village Vanguard: Thad Jones, Mel Lewis and the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra. He has also recorded many inventive CDs of his music with several new projects scheduled to be coming out in the near future. For the future, Dave Lisik says, “I hope to keep writing music for inspiring performers, both in classical music and jazz. I want there always to be some urgency to evolve and keep getting better rather than having my projects be too similar.” Bonnie and Clyde, which is unlike any of Dave Lisik’s previous recordings, succeeds at being fresh, new and full of inventive music. ~ Scott Yanow, jazz author/historian and author of 11 books including Trumpet Kings and Jazz On Record 1917-76 https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/alexsipiagin13

Personnel:  Alex Sipiagin - trumpet; Dave Kikoski - piano

Bonnie and Clyde

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Didier Lockwood - New York Rendez-Vous

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:22
Size: 135,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Jiggling In Central Park
(7:30)  2. Waltzy
(5:25)  3. Cousin William
(6:49)  4. Anatole Blues
(5:28)  5. Gordon
(6:16)  6. Reminesence
(7:02)  7. Don't Drive So Fast
(5:46)  8. Estern Dance
(7:17)  9. Tom Thumb

Here is a fusion record that will delight lovers of the best violinist of the genre to have emerged since Jean-Luc Ponty. With a great melodic ease never faulted and an exemplary phrasing, Didier Lockwood imposes his particular lyricism served by some sizes including a superlative rhythm (Dave Holland / Peter Erskine) and two elders of the group of Miles (Dave Liebman on saxophone, Mike Stern on guitar) whose bassist was also a part. A superb "Anatole Blues" and a cover of "Tom Thumb" by Wayne Shorter should delight fans of Steps Ahead. ~ Hervé Comte https://www.amazon.fr/York-Rendez-Vous-anglais-Didier-Lockwood/dp/B000024HUO

Personnel:  Didier Lockwood (Paintings, Violin);  Peter Erskine (Drums;  Gil Goldstein (Accordion);  Dave Holland (Bass);  Dave Kikoski (Piano);  David Liebman (Saxophone);  Mike Stern (Guitar).

New York Rendez-Vous

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Roy Haynes - Love Letters

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 130,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:48)  1. The Best Thing For You
(6:28)  2. That Old Feeling
(7:15)  3. Afro Blue
(7:31)  4. Que Pasa?
(6:33)  5. How Deep Is The Ocean
(7:42)  6. Love Letters
(5:46)  7. My Shining Hour
(7:13)  8. Stompin' At The Savoy
(4:18)  9. Shades Of Senegal 2

At 77, Roy Haynes is agile, active and still draws a stellar cast of musicians. Those represented on this recording span a generation, and each one endows the music with his own vivid imprint. The division between the players as partners in the adventure of music draws on their strengths and their pliability within the working environ. The chemistry gets going, bonds are forged and a song is given a whole new dynamic. The end result is a veritable feast for the senses. Guitarist John Scofield settles comfortably in the mainstream as he gets into "That Old Feeling," his notes falling in gentle beauty before Dave Holland come in speaking his own language and turning down the tempo slightly. Scofield comes back, picking up the sway with straight ahead explorations before handing things over to Kikoski. Here is a pianist who is completely focused, his playing without fuss yet chockfull of endearing ideas. Haynes, Holland and Scofield etch quite a different picture on "Afro Blue." Scofield spins rhythmic complexities that are invigorated by Holland. The momentum builds and when the tune has been fully essayed, the experience is riveting. Kenny Barron is an elegant and eloquent pianist. He is perfectly cast in the mould, scintillating in the denouement of "The Best Thing For You," with Redman essaying a liquid tenor study in shaded dynamics. The trade-offs between the two on "My Shining Hour" are something to yearn for; McBride, who opens in harmonic closeness on the arco with Redman, gets his say with a lyrical essay in the synthesis of time. Haynes has it all to himself on the last track. His use of timbre, his shading, the accents forge his vision. His control, now as ever, is absolute.~ Jerry D'Souza https://www.allaboutjazz.com/love-letters-roy-haynes-eighty-eights-review-by-jerry-dsouza.php

Personnel: Roy Haynes: drums; Kenny Barron: piano (1, 4, 5, 7); Dave Holland: bass (2, 3, 6, 8); Dave Kikoski: piano (2, 8); Christian McBride: bass (1, 4, 5, 7); Joshua Redman: tenor saxophone (1, 4, 7); John Scofield: guitar (2, 3, 6, 8).

Love Letters

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Jeff 'Tain' Watts - Detained At The Blue Note

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:53
Size: 164,3 MB
Art: Front

(13:47)  1. 107 Steps
(10:56)  2. JC Is The Man
(11:54)  3. Mr. JJ
(19:03)  4. Sigmund Groid
(15:10)  5. ...Like The Rose

On Detained at the Blue Note , Jeff "Tain" Watts' first live outing as a leader, the effusive drummer lets loose with one of the most unrestrained performances he's ever released. Watts' uninhibited style of drumming is best heard in the intimate club setting in which this disc was recorded. The outgoing Tain is inspired by the interaction with a live audience and the listeners respond in kind as the music escalates in intensity, delivering climax after climax to their roaring approval. Opening with Bjork's "107 Steps," the quintet featuring saxophonist Marcus Strickland, pianist Dave Kikoski, guitarist David Gilmour and bassist Eric Revis engage in a liberated dance on the Latinish line, driven relentlessly by the leader's inexorable rhythms. The date's other four tracks reinvent Watts' compositions from his earlier studio dates. "JC Is The Man" from Bar Talk is appropriately a dedication to a former Zinc Bar mixologist (Jean Claude) and not John Coltrane, although the music is most certainly, like most of Watts' compositions, Trane influenced. The group bookends the song with a good-humored vocal chorus; in between they settle into a groove with Gilmore's guitar and Kikoski's keyboards setting a more Milesian mode. 

Watts introduces the "powerful and soulful" Kenny Garrett, who joins the band for "Mr. JJ," raising the excitement level another point with a passionate Coltrane-Sanders inspired solo that culminates in an electrifying duet with the explosive Watts. Strickland holds his own on tenor, once again proving that he is the leading up-and-coming saxophonist on the scene today. Citizen Tain's "Sigmund Groid" receives a thorough treatment on a nineteen-minute examination of Watts' thoughtful melody, featuring a searing extended solo by Garrett. The closing "Like The Rose," a moving ballad by Watts, begins with a beautiful bluesy piano prelude from Kikoski that introduces the leader's vocal recitation of his lyrics, which are almost Shakespearean in their romanticism. Garrett and Gilmore get downright funky on the body of the tune, gamboling joyously over a Tain backbeat that spirals into a whirlwind that drives Gilmore's guitar and Kikoski's keyboards into a frolicking frenzy before returning to the tune's tender words. Few live dates succeed on the level of this one. Watts' ability to capture the hearts and souls of listeners with music that remains uncompromising in its creativity is a shining example to all who aspire to reach a wider audience without sacrificing their integrity. ~ Russ Moto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/detained-at-the-blue-note-jeff-tain-watts-half-note-records-review-by-russ-musto.php

Personnel: Jeff "Tain" Watts (drums, vocal), Kenny Garrett (alto saxophone), Dave Kikoski (piano, synthesizer), Eric Revis (bass), David Gilmore (guitar), Marcus Strickland (tenor saxophone)

Detained At The Blue Note

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Seamus Blake Quintet - Live at Smalls

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:34
Size: 129,7 MB
Art: Front

(11:15)  1. Subterfuge
(12:26)  2. Amuse Bouche
( 8:00)   3. Consequence
(11:05)  4. Stranger in Paradise
(13:45)  5. Fear of Rooming

Recorded at the Greenwich Village club on August 31st and September 1st 2009, Live At Smalls showcases the inventive sound of English-born, Canadian-raised and New York-based Seamus Blake. The tenor saxophonist's career to date includes membership in the Mingus Big Band, BANN and the Victor Lewis Quintet, as well as his own combos. Live At Smalls finds Blake leading a sharp and swinging quintet on a series of post-bop originals and a cover of "Stranger in Paradise." The quintet on these dates also appears on Bellwether (Criss Cross, 2010). The musicians work well together, as an ensemble and also in the soloist/rhythm section format, always complementary in their approach. Blake is a strong player, capable of fast and fairly wild solos, without any danger of losing control. He's also able to craft a more romantic and reflective sound, as he shows on "Stranger in Paradise" or his own "Consequence."  Guitarist Lage Lund is also impressive, both for his precise and crystal clear picking and his fluid and melodic sound. Lund's solos on "Subterfuge" and "Amuse Bouche" are lovely examples of these qualities, bringing well-deserved whoops of pleasure from the crowd.  

The tight and flexible rhythm section underpins Blake and Lund's lead work with flair. Bill Stewart and Matt Clohesy set up stylish rhythms on the ballads and the more up-tempo tunes alike. Stewart's drumming is at the front of the mix occasionally too far to the front, to the detriment of Clohesy's bass sound. Pianist David Kikoski's spacious comping is always effective, while his solo work on "Consequence" and his interplay with Blake on "Stranger in Paradise" are lyrical and romantic.  Live At Smalls documents a quintet on top form in front of an appreciative crowd. Spike Wilner's production ensures that the live atmosphere infuses the entire album, giving a real sense of "jazz as it happens" in this classic venue. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/live-at-smalls-seamus-blake-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php
 
Personnel: Seamus Blake: tenor saxophone; Lage Lund: guitar; Dave Kikoski: piano; Matt Clohesy: bass: Bill Stewart: drums.

Live at Smalls

Friday, September 16, 2016

Eddie Henderson - Time and Spaces

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:05
Size: 119,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:10)  1. Water Babies
(6:58)  2. Spaces
(7:10)  3. Masqualero
(4:42)  4. Tender You
(7:16)  5. Entropy
(5:52)  6. Summer Knows
(5:53)  7. Angola
(7:00)  8. Directions

Long before Wallace Roney became a Miles Davis protege in the late '80s, Eddie Henderson had forgone his training in medicine, falling under the direct and indirect influence of the Prince of Darkness in the late '60s. With groups including Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi band from '70 to '72, Henderson forged a voice whose tone may have been influenced by Davis, but with an adventurous spirit all his own. In the ensuing years, while the spirit of Miles never left him, Henderson developed his own body of work, one that in recent years has seen him returning to a more hard bop style. Until now. His latest release on Sirocco, Time & Spaces , finds Henderson in an almost schizophrenic mood, alternating between the more cerebral post bop of Miles' mid-'60s band and his more fusion-informed work of the later '60s, and a more tender and lyrical disposition. While this could come across as unfocused in lesser hands, it all makes perfect sense under Henderson's leadership. Ably supported by pianist Dave Kikoski (who doubles on Fender Rhodes and synthesizers on two tracks), bassist Ed Howard, and drummer Victor Lewis, Henderson reconvenes the group that was responsible for most of his last recording, '03's So What , for a session that combines the heady intellectualism of Wayne Shorter's "Water Babies," "Masqualero," and "Angola" with a more poignant duet with Kikoski, "Tender You," and the late-night romanticism of "Summer Knows (Theme from Summer of '42)." 

Henderson's own "Entropy," which superimposes a swinging sensibility over a deep, dark groove, may be the revelation of the set, a tune that has its reference point in Miles' work of the late '60s, but is less dense, less brash. Kikowski peppers the piece with abstractions on Fender Rhodes, while Howard and Lewis are more implicit, alluding to a variety of feels without ever settling wholly on them for any length of time. The album closes with a powerful version of Joe Zawinul's "Directions," with Henderson's approach honouring the looser, rockier inflection of the tune without becoming overly aggressive. Over the course of a forty-year career, Henderson has managed to build a strong reputation for integrity and personal vision, even while he remains a little more under the radar than he deserves. Perhaps it is his ongoing reference to Miles that has caused him to be ultimately well-regarded but not considered a creative trend-setter, but that's a moot point. One testimonial of a true performer is the ability to create vibrant music that remains current while honouring the traditions that came before. By mixing the abstract and the corporeal, the tender and the strong, the old and the new, the Time and Spaces , Henderson has created a paradoxical recording that manages to ultimately succeed on its own term as a unified, coherent and cogent statement. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/time-and-spaces-eddie-henderson-sirocco-music-limited-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Eddie Henderson (trumpet), Dave Kikoski (piano, Fender Rhodes/Keyboards on "Entropy," "Directions"), Ed Howard (bass), Victor Lewis (drums).

Time and Spaces

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Dave Kikoski - Dave Kikoski

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:18
Size: 138,3 MB
Art: Front

( 5:14)  1. E
( 8:16)  2. B Flat Tune
( 8:10)  3. Giant Steps
(11:20)  4. Long Ago and Far Away
( 7:22)  5. Chant
( 6:25)  6. The Shadow
( 7:13)  7. 7/4 Ballad
( 6:15)  8. Spacing

This is Kikoski's only recording to date for a major record label. Not only is it his best by far, it is arguably one of the best piano trio albums of the 1990s. Joined by bassist Essiet Essiet and drummer Al Foster, Kikoski scales the heights of jazz with soaring lyricism, harmonic ingenuity, and at times sheer fury. His version of John Coltrane's "Giant Steps" features a stride piano break as technically stunning as it is unexpected. His extended reading of Gershwin's "Long Ago and Far Away" is nothing short of poetic. And of the album's original pieces, "B Flat Tune" and "The Shadow," despite their enormous complexity, sing with an accessibility that marks the finest songwriting. Purists will insist that packaging is irrelevant to great jazz, but not in this instance. The highly evocative cover artwork, quirky typography, laconic liner notes, and aqua-tinted jewel case make the album even more unique, a near classic. ~ David R.Adler http://www.allmusic.com/album/dave-kikoski-mw0000119723

Personnel: Dave Kikoski (piano); Essiet Essiet (bass); Al Foster (drums).

Dave Kikoski

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Caecilie Norby - My Corner of the Sky

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:44
Size: 116,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. The Look Of Love
(3:00)  2. The Right To Love
(4:28)  3. Set Them Free
(3:48)  4. Suppertime
(5:45)  5. African Fairytale
(3:40)  6. Life On Mars
(5:07)  7. Spinning Wheel
(3:10)  8. What Do You See In Her
(3:56)  9. Just One Of Those Things
(5:24) 10. Snow
(3:54) 11. A Song For You
(5:25) 12. Calling You

Danish singer Caecilie Norby's first recording to be released in the United States is quite a mixed bag. At times, Norby comes across as Nancy Wilson, going over the top in places and not showing much subtlety; on Irving Berlin's classic "Suppertime," she does not seem to know what she is singing about, sounding quite upbeat about a lynching. Some other selections are poppish (including odd revivals of "The Look of Love" and "Spinning Wheel"), but there are places (such as on "Just One of Those Things" and Wayne Shorter's "African Fairytale") where Norby shows potential as a jazz singer. 

She is assisted by a strong cast of Americans and Scandinavians (including pianists Dave Kikoski and Joey Calderazzo, keyboardist Lars Jansson, drummer Terri Lyne Carrington, trumpeter Randy Brecker, and, on "Spinning Wheel," tenor saxophonist Michael Brecker).
~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/my-corner-of-the-sky-mw0000020007

Personnel:  Caecilie Norby - vocals, background vocals;  Scott Robinson – flute;  Michael Brecker - tenor saxophone;  Randy Brecker – flugelhorn;  Dave Kikoski, Joey Calderazzo, Lars Jansson – piano;  Lars Danielsson, Lennart Ginman – bass;  Terri Lyne Carrington - drums, percussion;  Alex Riel, Jeff Boudreaux – drums;  Jacob Andersen – percussion;  Louise Norby - background vocals.

My Corner of the Sky

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Wayne Escoffery - Live at Smalls

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:29
Size: 138,7 MB
Art: Front

(13:36)  1. Concentric Drift
(14:26)  2. So Tender
(11:13)  3. A Cottage For Sale
(13:04)  4. Sweet And Lovely
( 8:08)  5. Snibor

"Young Lions" is a term that jazz journalists have been using to describe the long list of straight-ahead, acoustic-oriented jazz improvisers who were born in the '60s, '70s, and '80s, and London native Wayne Escoffery is among the many Young Lions who started building his catalog in the early 2000s. Escoffery, who plays post-bop and hard bop, is a tenor saxophonist with a big, full tone; his influences on the tenor have included, among others, John Coltrane, Wayne Shorter, Dexter Gordon, Joe Henderson, and Sonny Rollins. Escoffery plays the soprano sax as a second instrument, and his most obvious inspirations on the soprano include Coltrane and Shorter. But whether he is on the tenor or the soprano, Escoffery has maintained a decidedly straight-ahead perspective that is quite faithful to the spirit of the Young Lion movement. Although he is originally from Great Britain, he has spent most of his life in the northeastern part of the United States. Born in London on February 23, 1975, Escoffery was only 11 when he left the U.K. with his mother and moved to New Haven, CT in 1986. 

That year, he joined the New Haven Trinity Boys Choir, and it was also in 1986 that he began studying the tenor sax with saxophonist/clarinetist Malcolm Dickinson. Escoffery left the New Haven Trinity Boys Choir when he was 16, and playing jazz saxophone not singing became his primary focus. Escoffery was still in his teens when he met the famous alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, who Escoffery has described as a mentor and a major inspiration in his life; Escoffery studied with McLean (who died in 2006) extensively at the Hartt School, a performing arts school in West Hartford. After that, he attended the New England Conservatory in Boston and graduated from that institution with a Masters in 1999 before moving to New York City the following year at the age of 25. Escoffery's visibility in the jazz world continued to increase; in the 2000s, his long list of activities ranged from being a member of trumpeter Tom Harrell's quintet to playing with the Charles Mingus ghost band to touring with veteran drummer Ben Riley's Monk Legacy Septet (a Thelonious Monk tribute band). Escoffery also backed his share of jazz vocalists in the 2000s, including Laverne Butler, Mary Stallings, Carolyn Leonhart, Cynthia Scott and Nancie Banks. Escoffery's first album as a leader, Times Change, was recorded for the German Nagel-Hayer label in early 2001; a second Nagel-Heyer studio date, Intuition, was recorded in 2003. Escoffery's first live album, Veneration, was recorded in 2006 for the Savant label and was followed by a studio session for Savant, Hopes and Dreams, in 2007. ~ Alex Henderson  https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/wayne-escoffery/id44804239#fullText

Personnel: Wayne Escoffery (tenor saxophone); Dave Kikoski (piano); Ralph Peterson (drums).

Live at Smalls

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Roy Haynes - Birds Of A Feather: A Tribute to Charlie Parker

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 64:24
Size: 147.4 MB
Styles: Neo-bop
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[5:18] 1. Diverse
[5:12] 2. Ah Leu Cha
[5:13] 3. April In Paris
[5:38] 4. Moose The Mooche
[6:03] 5. Now's The Time
[6:03] 6. Rocker
[5:01] 7. Barbados
[4:45] 8. Yarbird Suite
[6:44] 9. The Gypsy
[7:00] 10. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[7:21] 11. What Is This Thing Called Love

To say that drummer Roy Haynes is the driving force behind this session is an understatement verging on insult.

Haynes has been at the forefront of bop long enough to have earned membership in that elite of founding fathers: Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Clifford Brown, John Coltrane, Miles Davis-all of whom Haynes has played and recorded with extensively. Stylistically he follows in a direct line from Kenny Clarke and Max Roach, and, like Art Blakey and Billy Higgins, Haynes has remained faithful to experimenting in the idiom of bebop. So it comes as no surprise that Haynes is in complete control of a combo that thrives on no-nonsense hard bop: trumpeter Roy Hargrove, alto saxist Kenny Garrett, pianist Dave Kikoski and bassist Dave Holland. Like their leader, all of the musicians on Birds of a Feather are hard-driving, take-no-prisoners players, perfect for the material they're working with: six Parker originals and five tunes associated with Bird.

Thanks to the drummerman behind them, the band can be loose and tight at the same time. Focus on the crispness of a head such as "Diverse," then switch to the contrapuntal give and take of the front line on "Ah Leu Cha." With his arsenal of dynamic shadings, Haynes is never content with being a mere metronome. Haynes always has something to say on the drums, but he doesn't dominate or overshadow. He prods, he gooses, he suggests; if there's a call he has a response.

Haynes is one of the most melodic drummers on this planet. When the tune is "April in Paris," or the beginning of "The Gypsy," he provides brush strokes worthy of Cezanne. On "My Heart Belongs to Daddy," he devises an elaborate intro in which he not only sets the tempo, but he sets the mood. He is virtually part of the front line for "What Is This Thing Called Love?" And once that tune gets launched, Haynes sets a jet-propelled environment in which he quietly explodes behind each soloist without interfering with their playing. The secret lies in the fact that he is always listening, always anticipating, which is the true mark of a swinging control freak-and this is in no way pejorative. As pianist Kikoski told the album's liner annotator, Nat Hentoff: "The accents Roy does with his different limbs are more complex than anything that came before him. What he plays on drums is the way he lives, the way he talks, the way he walks."

If Haynes had his way, this tribute to Bird would have been recorded in a club. He loves the excitement of live interaction, as he told writer Chris Slawecki: "Playing is like therapy for me. If I don't play for a while, when I come back to it I'm like a wild man. You gotta tie me down. It's like letting a tiger or lion out of his cage. I try to pace myself and not overplay."

Everyone who plays on Birds of a Feather has grown accustomed to his pace. In fact, even though Haynes will be 76 next spring, his sidemen find themselves trying to match his pace. It conjures up the title of one of the drummer's recent releases for Dreyfus: When It Haynes It Roars. ~Harvey Siders

Birds Of A Feather

Monday, October 20, 2014

Al Foster, Dave Kikoski, Chris Potter, Doug Weiss - Brandyn

Size: 128,9 MB
Time: 55:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1997
Styles: Jazz: Saxophone Jazz
Art: Front

01. The Chief (7:35)
02. Brandyn (5:21)
03. Monk Up & Down (9:11)
04. Barney Rose (7:30)
05. Amsterdam Blues (6:32)
06. Hope (7:25)
07. No Title (5:51)
08. Black Nile (5:51)

Drummer Al Foster is widely recognized as a first call jazz drummer who has worked with many greats, including an extended tour of duty with Miles Davis, as well as stints with Cannonball Adderley, Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk, Freddie Hubbard, Herbie Hancock, and Joe Henderson. This 1996 studio session made for the German Laika label is evidently Foster's first opportunity to record as a leader. Putting together an excellent band, with saxophonist Chris Potter (who doubles on soprano and tenor), pianist Dave Kikoski, and bassist Doug Weiss, Foster writes challenging post-bop compositions that inspire his bandmates, while he is perfectly happy to give them the spotlight. His bittersweet, bluesy "Monk Up and Down," is harmonically rich, with a superb tenor solo by Potter. The saxophonist contributed the percolating "Amsterdam Blues," suggesting the lively night scene of Harlem in its heyday. Kikoski composed the driving "Hope." The one familiar piece is Wayne Shorter's "Black Nile," played with gusto by the quartet. This may not be an easy CD to find, but it is obvious to anyone hearing it that Al Foster merits more opportunities to lead his own record dates. ~Review by Ken Dryden

Brandyn