Showing posts with label Evan Christopher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evan Christopher. Show all posts

Friday, June 17, 2022

Evan Christopher - This Side of Evan

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:20
Size: 139,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:11) 1. I Want to Be Happy
( 6:13) 2. Get out of Town
( 4:50) 3. Paper Doll
( 5:33) 4. Smiles
( 5:56) 5. Mood Indigo
( 4:52) 6. Sonny Boy
( 3:51) 7. Nuages
( 4:31) 8. When Day Is Done
( 4:09) 9. Dark Eyes
( 4:46) 10. In the Wee, Small Hours of the Morning
(10:21) 11. Make Me One Pallet on Your Floor

Evan Christopher (born August 31, 1969) is an American jazz clarinetist and composer. His first musical training was at the Idyllwild School of Music and the Arts. After high school, he studied saxophone at the University of Southern California and graduated from California State University at Long Beach where he studied clarinet. Early mentors include clarinetists Kenny Davern, Tony Scott and soprano saxophonist George Probert.

Career: Tours with singer-songwriter A.J. Croce in the early 1990s brought Christopher to New Orleans. He moved to Crescent City in 1994 and enjoyed varied work before leaving to join the Jim Cullum Jazz Band in San Antonio, Texas in 1996. For nearly three years, he appeared nightly as their featured clarinetist and recorded episodes of the syndicated radio program Riverwalk Jazz. He returned to New Orleans but was forced to leave in 2005 when the federal levees failed because of Hurricane Katrina. He traveled continuously and lived briefly in Paris at the invitation of the city of Paris. During this residency, he formed the Jazz Traditions Project and Django à la Créole. The latter fused Gypsy jazz with New Orleans grooves. Tours with Irvin Mayfield's New Orleans Jazz Orchestra made it possible for Christopher to return to New Orleans. He is a charter member of jazz composer guild, NOLA ArtHouse Music, and the Seahawk Modern Jazz Orchestra in southern California.

Christopher published research on the New Orleans style of clarinet. In 2002 he began pursuing a degree in musicology at Tulane University. From 2008–2009, he taught part-time at the University of New Orleans and taught an ensemble that performed with Lucien Barbarin and Marcus Roberts. In July 2010, he debuted the "Treat It Gentle Suite", a concerto for clarinet and jazz band with the Minnesota Orchestra. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evan_Christopher

This Side of Evan

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Evan Christopher, Spanky Davis, Wycliffe Gordon - Times Like These: Jam Session Concert

Styles: Clarinet,Trumpet And Trombone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 98:09
Size: 225,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:02) 1. Deed I Do
( 9:13) 2. Blues in the Air
( 4:38) 3. Blues in Thirds
( 7:38) 4. Basin Street Blues
( 5:15) 5. Rosetta
( 4:41) 6. Passport to Paradise
( 4:05) 7. Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me
( 9:06) 8. St. Louis Blues
(11:06) 9. Si Tu Vois Ma Mère / Petite Fleur / Summertime / Mood Indigo
( 9:05) 10. Royal Garden Blues
( 5:22) 11. Just One of Those Things
( 7:54) 12. Basin Street Blues II
( 4:42) 13. Passport to Paradise II
( 4:00) 14. Georgia Cabin
( 2:14) 15. Times Like These

"This is a rollicking session that will delight both traditional jazz fans and those with ears inclined to more modern sounds ... Gordon shines here and is clearly having a ball."~ Cadence

"My goal is to maintain the integrity of early jazz styles, its structure, but move forward so that it's speaking to an audience of today instead of being something bottled and preserved."~ Evan Christopher

"The high technical quality of this recording and the creative music, featuring compositions by Sidney Bechet and songs he recorded, is intended to serve the memory of the great Wizard and afford joy to the listener. Vive Bechet!~ Eric D. Offner, President of the Sidney Bechet Society

Personnel: Evan Christopher - clarinet; Spanky Davis - trumpet; Wycliffe Gordon - trombone; Jack Lesberg - bass; Mark Shane - piano; Jackie Williams - drums

Times Like These: Jam Session Concert

Saturday, May 28, 2022

Evan Christopher - Blues in the Air

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 58:40
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:46) 1. Blues Dans le Blues
(4:17) 2. Polka Dot Stomp
(6:35) 3. Southern Sunset (When the Sun Sets Down South)
(5:36) 4. Dans les Rues d'Antibes
(5:02) 5. What a Dream
(3:51) 6. Si Tu Vois Ma Mère
(5:23) 7. Lastic
(5:24) 8. Blues in the Air
(5:09) 9. Girl's Dance (Themes from the ballet: La Nuit Est une Sorcière)
(6:52) 10. This Is That Tomorrow That I Dreaded Yesterday
(4:40) 11. Ghost of the Blues

A more impressive lineup could not be asked for. Five of the most technically proficient, creative, and expressive jazzmen working today appear together for the first time on this album. Men who would have been giants even a generation ago. Evan Christopher, as the American, will be most familiar to our readers, and if you closely follow his work you may have heard him on the Django à la Créole albums with bassist Sébastien Girardot. They also met up on the recent A Summit in Paris, which paired Evan Christopher with Gypsy guitar legend Fapy Lafertin. On another effort, Clarinet Road Vol. III: In Sidney’s Footsteps, recorded during Christopher’s post Katrina residency in Paris, he and Girardot are joined by drummer Guillaume Nouaux. Christopher also appears on Nouaux’s The Clarinet Kings.

Though I would not bet money on it, as far as I could learn from my investigations this is the first time Christopher has been joined on an album by either guitarist Félix Hunot or the trumpet player Malo Mazurié, who, with Girardot, make up the Three Blind Mice. Malo Mazurié has been for several years seen as one of the best trumpet and cornet players alive, particularly in the Bixean tradition. Which is saying a lot for someone who will turn 32 this year. He obviously got an early start, playing in professional environments since the age of ten and since his late teens, touring internationally to festivals. Classically trained, he can play more modern styles of jazz but is most often chooses to play in the style heard here. As a member of Three Blind Mice he has had particular room to shine on three albums I have raved about in this paper.

Guitar takes a special place in the Three Blind Mice line up, and I see Félix Hunot as the person who distinguishes the group from trios with similar instrumentation. His playful interactions with Mazurié, and playful vocals, steer them clear and above the staid technical proficiency they might otherwise fall into and make their output genuinely entertaining. He has appeared as a sideman on a number of recent albums to witch I would offer the moniker, “important,” but they are also thoroughly enjoyable, and his playing is a part of that. They include the David Lukacs led Dream City, Atilla Korb’s Tap Room Swing, and Jérome Etcheberry’s Satchmocracy. I believe the disc at question today will sit proudly on the shelf among them. Around 36 years old, he made his debut as a leader in 2020 with his Jazz Musketeers.

Originally from Australia and long resident in Europe, Sébastien Girardot rounds out the Mice on bass. As top tier bassists often are, he is in demand seemingly everywhere. He appears on the majority of the albums so far referenced here as well as those of Don Vappie, as well as releases with a strictly jazz manouche focus. He also accompanies notables on their visits to the continent, including Cecile McLorin Salvant, Ken Peplowski, Harry Allen, Dan Barrett, and many others. There is a reason so many jazz scenes have that one ubiquitous bassist, when building out a band there is no more critical contributor, and everyone wants the best.

Drummer Guillaume Nouaux’s 2020 album The Stride Piano Kings paired him in duos with seven of the best pianists in our style. While the rhythm and piano combo is one that I am particularly enamored with this album absolutely rose above. As recently as January I recommended it on a radio program, and I was far from the only reviewer who considered it lightning in a bottle, an album that could show anyone what this jazz thing is all about. It sent me exploring his discography, which runs to over 100 albums, with many as a leader. At 45 he is by any measure one of the top classic jazz drummers in the world, he also has a talent for pairing himself with the musicians that can help create his visions.

Which brings us finally to Evan Christopher and through him Sidney Bechet. I found a source that, using the quotation marks, referred to his style of clarinet playing as “contemporary early jazz.” The phrase may have originated with the man himself. It is a fitting descriptor of his choice to both stay true to the old masters but embrace the larger stages not always available to traditional jazz musicians. With his Clarinet Road project he makes early jazz cool, while taking his craft seriously, not unlike Bechet. In addition to Bechet, Christopher has studied the other great New Orleans clarinetists Barney Bigard and Omer Simeon. Though he has very recently relocated to New York, New Orleans remains at the root of his playing. He even leads a mentorship program for New Orleans style clarinet.

At 52, Evan Christopher has earned his earned his prominent place in the scene. He moved to New Orleans in ’94, and played with Al Hirt among others, in ’96 he relocated to San Antonio to be the feature clarinetist for Jim Cullum’s band. After three years he returned to New Orleans where he began to come into his own, touring internationally and beginning to record as Clarinet Road. Then Katrina upended everything and set his career in an unexpected direction. He was invited by the French government to stay in Paris, and success emerged from tragedy.

Django à la Créole combined the gypsy jazz of France and the traditional jazz of New Orleans he had been immersed in. The group was an international sensation. Though of the artists on this album only Girardot was part of that group, the connections began to be formed that bless us all these years later with such an all star lineup.

With a lead in like that I hope you are already sold, but maybe I should talk about the album itself, just in case! It consists of eleven titles associated with Bechet. Some are expected, perhaps required, like “Si Tu Vois Ma Mère.” Others dig deeper. “Girl’s Dance” is taken from Bechet’s Ballet, La Nuit Est une Sorcière. The result is a remarkably cinematic arrangement in which each of the quintet conveys the feel of a whole orchestra section. It is unclear who to credit for that arrangement but the dialogue in the liner notes attributes arrangements for other titles variously to Mazurié and Hunot. Mazurié gets credit for a an engaging slow to fast arrangement of “Dans le Rues d’Antibes” that for me was the album high point.

While Christopher makes every effort to “faithfully render” Bechet the album is of this time not Bechet’s, “contemporary, early jazz” at its finest. Aside from “Polka Dot Stomp,” “Lastic,” “Ghost of the Blues,” and parts of “Dans le Rues d’Antibes” the pace is kept contemplatively subdued but those exceptions are spaced perfectly throughout the album to get your heart pumping again. These musicians have a world to draw on—and do. The rhythm section employs subtle variations from West Indian and other sources, led in these efforts by Nouaux as I’ve never heard him before. “Lastic” is particularly spicy. The playing throughout is rich and harmonious, Christopher is not showy but blends in with the whole and his interactions with Mazurié, even on such tried and true pieces as “Si Tu Vois Ma Mère,” played as a waltz, are marvelous. Hunot and Girardot both have stand out solos on “Blues in the Air.”

“Ghost of the Blues” was an excellent theme to go out on. The arrangement is exciting, rich, dense, hot, the perfect closer, giving everyone on stage a goodbye turn as the audience removes their jackets and sits back down to take it in. There are few albums of this caliber. It goes on sale in March. Get yourself a copy. https://lejazzetal.com/shop/blues-in-the-air/

Personnel: Evan Christopher (clarinet); Malo Mazurié (trumpet); Félix Hunot (guitar); Sébastien Girardot (double bass); Guillaume Nouaux (drums)

Blues in the Air

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Evan Christopher - The Art of the New Orleans Trio



Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:57
Size: 122,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:43) 1. CIty Park Swing
(4:34) 2. Hello, Goodbye Blues
(3:21) 3. The Cascades
(5:03) 4. Trois Danses Des Jeunes
(3:50) 5. Meet Me At The Eagle Saloon
(4:42) 6. Let Me Call You Sweetheart
(4:08) 7. Alone At The Ball
(3:15) 8. Old Sober March
(4:07) 9. You'll Be Cryin' The Blues,Not Me
(4:37) 10. Where A True Heart Waits For You
(4:21) 11. Follow The Second Line
(5:11) 12. Lonesome Me

Evan Christopher combines virtuosity, immaculate taste, and enthusiasm with a commitment to exploring the full range of possibilities in the New Orleans clarinet tradition. His highly personal brand of “contemporary, early jazz” strives to extend the legacies of early Creole clarinet heroes such as Sidney Bechet, Barney Bigard and Omer Simeon. Critics remarking on Christopher’s dynamic expressiveness have coined his style “close-encounter music” (NEW YORK TIMES) and have called his respect for the music traditions of New Orleans, “a triumph, joining the present seamlessly to a glorious past.” (THE OBSERVER, UK).

His journey on Clarinet Road began in 1994, when he left his native California to join the New Orleans music community. Diverse freelance work included gigs with musicians such as Al Hirt and veterans of Preservation Hall to funk and brass bands including the Nightcrawlers and Galactic.But in 1996, he left for San Antonio, Texas to appear nightly for nearly three years with the Jim Cullum Jazz Band and record several of their public radio programs, Riverwalk: Live from the Landing. When Christopher returned to New Orleans in 2001, his published research on the New Orleans clarinet style initiated pursuit of a Master’s degree in Musicology at Tulane University. He began touring internationally and producing his “Clarinet Road” series of CDs (STR Digital).

In August 2005, when Federal levees failed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina decimating the city, Christopher left again for Paris at the invitation of the French Embassy’s Cultural Services division, where he formed his group, Django à la Créole. This Europe-based quartet fused Gypsy Swing with Latin-tinged grooves of New Orleans and beyond and was distinguished for an acoustic intimacy paired with driving swing.
Critics charmed by the group queried, “Is there a more graceful band at work at the moment?” (THE SUNDAY TIMES UK).

Three CDs for Lejazzetal (London), in partnership with Frémeaux & Associés (Paris) Django à la Créole (2007), Finesse (2010), and LIVE! (2014) earned the group critical attention worldwide for its elegant character.As a composer, Christopher’s original songs are the high point of acclaimed recordings including Delta Bound (Arbors, 2007) featuring pianist Dick Hyman, The Remembering Song (Arbors, 2010) featuring guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, his clarinet feature on the Grammy-winning New Orleans Jazz Orchestra’s Book One (2012) and his latest Clarinet Road CD, Bayou Chant & Other Textures (STR Digital, 2016).

In July 2010, he had the honor to debut his Treat It Gentle Suite with the Minnesota Orchestra, which was the first concerto written for clarinet with band in the New Orleans style. Evan Christopher began his musical training on clarinet at age 11. In high school, he received the Louis Armstrong National Jazz Award and was one of the first graduates of the prestigious Idyllwild Arts Academy. He continued studies at the University of Southern California and graduated with honors from California State University, Long Beach. A brief teaching stint at the University of New Orleans saw the creation of a New Orleans music ensemble that performed with guest mentors such as Lucien Barbarin and Marcus Roberts. Since 2008, having returned once again to New Orleans, Christopher actively advocates for the cultural workforce and music education.He frequently tours with and records as a guest with forward-looking artists, while performances under his own name are often complemented by workshops and educational and community outreach. Occasional columns about the music scene and New Orleans culture written for NolaVie.com, evidence Evan's passion for the city’s indigenous traditions. https://www.clarinetroad.com/about/

The Art of the New Orleans Trio

Monday, June 18, 2018

Tom McDermott - Choro Do Norte

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:00
Size: 135.1 MB
Styles: Piano & Clarinet jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[5:12] 1. Casa Denise
[3:37] 2. Atrapado
[5:04] 3. Santa Teresa
[2:43] 4. Choro For Tom
[3:29] 5. Sweetheart Of Mine
[5:20] 6. Swipesy Cakewalk
[3:29] 7. Lizinha
[5:29] 8. Heliotrope Bouquet
[3:09] 9. Choro #1
[5:23] 10. Estatico
[2:48] 11. Realidade É Saudade
[5:39] 12. The Chrysanthemum
[3:35] 13. Driving With Jacob
[3:57] 14. Bamboula

Tom McDermott – Piano; Evan Christopher – Clarinet; Rick Trolsen – Trumpet.

Tom McDermott and his frequent partner Evan Christopher are two of the most creative and forward looking jazz musicians in New Orleans. To call Evan Christopher a world class jazz clarinetist is an understatement. He virtually defines the class, although there are a few players in New Orleans who just might want to challenge that viewpoint! McDermott is a superlative traditional pianist, but he prefers to focus his creative energies on composition.

It is some 20 years now since the well traveled Mr. McDermott first started hearing, then playing, and then creating Brazilian choros. The choro is generally defined as a combination of African, Native Indian and Portuguese music, just one of several types that come to us from Brazil. The samba and bossa nova are two related but different genres. All of them have something of a jazz feel. What makes the choro unique though, is that it goes back as far as the 1870s, but is still evolving today. Early choros have been compared to American ragtime. Some of the pieces on this CD emphasize that relationship, including three Scott Joplin rags.

What makes this CD different, and you’ll know it from the very first cut onward, is the Brazilian rhythm section; three young musicians playing respectively a tambourine related percussion instrument known as the pandeiro, a bandolim, which is the Portuguese version of a mandolin, and a seven string guitar, which has become increasingly popular with guitarists in general and especially with modern jazzmen. The Brazilian musicians are not the only additions to this CD that make the sounds so different. There is also Rick Trolsen on trombone, and, for one cut each, Ray Moore on flute, and Matt Perrine on tuba. ~Steve Steinberg

Choro Do Norte mc
Choro Do Norte zippy

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Evan Christopher's Django A La Creole - Live!

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:45
Size: 179,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:13)  1. Douce Ambiance
(6:35)  2. Riverboat Shuffle
(9:05)  3. Dear Old Southland
(8:07)  4. One For The Duke
(8:24)  5. Mamanita
(5:06)  6. Solid Old Man
(7:26)  7. The Mooche
(5:53)  8. The Crave
(4:05)  9. Feerie
(6:27) 10. Manoir De Mes Reves
(9:19) 11. Songe D'Automne

Both the public and the critics have been won over by Django a la Creeole, the group led by Evan Christopher, no doubt the greatest jazz clarinetist on today's New Orleans scene. Reaching the end of a hugely successful world tour, the band decided to record a live album that would show the rapport they'd created with audiences thanks to the extraordinary color and savor of their music. And here it is, rich with soaring swing, soft and elegant Creole excursions and even sidesteps into bossa nova. The music is intimate and generous, and the band goes way beyond gypsy swing and the jazz of New Orleans: the concept here is to take music outside the notion of genres. In fact, Django, la Creole is a genre of its own: a fantastic universe of sound somewhere between the Old World and the New. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Django-Creole-Live-Evan-Christopher/dp/B00HYID4V8

Evan Christopher (clarinet), Don Vappie (solo guitar, banjo, vocals), Dave Kelbie (rhythm guitar), Sebastien Girardot (bass)

Live!

Friday, May 22, 2015

Evan Christopher, Koen De Cauter & David Paquette - New Orleans Rendezvous

Size: 155,2 MB
Time: 66:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: New Orleans Jazz, Swing
Art: Front

01. Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me (4:40)
02. Histoire De Faussaire (5:35)
03. Chloe (Song Of The Swamp) (5:56)
04. There'll Be Some Changes Made (5:09)
05. Melancholy (4:53)
06. Them There Eyes (5:21)
07. Please (3:58)
08. Luz Que No (4:40)
09. Someday Sweetheart (4:33)
10. Walking Stick (4:57)
11. Blues For Nina (3:48)
12. Les Passantes (4:55)
13. Everybody Loves My Baby (3:57)
14. Song Of The Island (3:35)

Evan Christopher - Clarinet
Koen De Cauter - Guitar
David Paquette - Piano

Evan Christopher combines virtuosity, immaculate taste, and enthusiasm with a deep commitment to exploring the full range of possibilities of the New Orleans clarinet tradition. His highly personal brand of "contemporary early-jazz" strives to expand the unique musical vocabulary created by early Creole musicians such as Sidney Bechet, Omer Simeon, and Barney Bigard.

Christopher's journey on Clarinet Road began in 1994 when he left his native California to join the New Orleans music community. Diverse work included gigs with musicians such as Al Hirt or veterans of Preservation Hall to funk and brass bands including the Nightcrawlers and Galactic until he accepted regular work with the Jim Cullum Jazz Band of San Antonio, Texas in 1996. For nearly three years, he appeared nightly as their featured clarinetist and recorded several of their syndicated radio programs, Riverwalk: Live from the Landing.

When Christopher returned to New Orleans, published research and presentations on the New Orleans clarinet style initiated pursuit of a Masters degree in Musicology at Tulane University. He also began producing his "Clarinet Road" series of CDs (STR Digital) and touring internationally. Other recordings have found him alongside many New Orleans artists including Big Al Carson, Duke Heitger, Irvin Mayfield, Uncle Lionel Battiste, and Tom McDermott. After the the Federal levees failed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in August, 2005, he accepted an artist residency in Paris at the invitation of the French government and formed his current group, Django à la Créole. This Europe-based quartet fuses Gypsy Swing with New Orleans grooves and rhythms of le monde Créole. Three CDs for (Frémeaux & Associés) "Django à la Créole" 2007, "Finesse" 2010, and LIVE 2014 have all gained critical attention and earned the group a worldwide reputation for its elegant, acoustic character.

Having returned permanently to New Orleans in 2008, Christopher is an advocate for the cultural workforce and jazz-based music education. He taught briefly at the University of New Orleans where he coached a "New Orleans Music Ensemble" that performed with guest mentors such as Lucien Barbarin and Marcus Roberts. Locally, although it is rare to find him performing in bars, hotels or restaurants, he does appear occasionally as a guest with groups such as the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra and jazz composer guild, NOLA ArtHouse Music. He also writes columns about the music scene for NolaVie.com

As a composer, his original songs are the high point of acclaimed recordings such as "Delta Bound " (Arbors, 2007) featuring pianist Dick Hyman, "The Remembering Song " (Arbors, 2010) featuring guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, and the Grammy-winning New Orleans Jazz Orchestra's "Book One." (2012). In July 2010, he had the honor to debut his "Treat It Gentle Suite," the first concerto written for clarinet and jazz band in the New Orleans style, with the Minnesota Orchestra. Mr. Christopher began his musical training on clarinet at age 11. In high school, he received the Louis Armstrong National Jazz Award and was one of the first graduates of the prestigious Idyllwild Arts Academy. He continued studies at the University of Southern California and graduated cum laude with a Bachelor's degree from California State University, Long Beach.

New Orleans Rendezvous

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Evan Christopher - Delta Bound

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:39
Size: 153,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:50)  1. Vieux Carre
(5:58)  2. Rampart Street Ramble
(4:02)  3. Creole Belles
(7:26)  4. New Orleans
(3:34)  5. Kiss Me Sweet
(7:22)  6. La Ciudad Criolla
(3:48)  7. The King Of Treme
(4:55)  8. Desire
(3:55)  9. Out Of There
(6:17) 10. While We Danced At The Mardi Grac
(6:30) 11. Sunday Morning
(6:55) 12. Delta Bound

The clarinet and New Orleans share a long tradition of rhythmic swing and lyrical adventure. Long before Pete Fountain and Larry Shields, there were trad jazz pioneers including Lorenzo and Louis Tio, Lorenzo Tio Jr., Albert Nicholas, Alvin Batiste, Johnny Dodds, Barney Bigard, Omer Simeon, Jimmy Noone, Tony Scott and Sidney Bechet. The instrument, with its throaty, wooden timbre, allows emotions to be bared and feelings set free when in the hands of a master. Delta Bound recalls the masters of the clarinet while applying fresh, original songs to a syncopated rhythmic memory that remains timeless. Clarinetist Evan Christopher, still in his thirties, hails from Long Beach, California, where he was exposed to all kinds of music and art as a youngster. Now working on his Masters Degree at Tulane University in New Orleans, he's enlisted the support of pianist Dick Hyman, bassist Bill Huntington and drummer Shannon Powell to 'splain the magic of The Big Easy and all its charming musical elements. 

Christopher has you dancing in the streets, holding a colorful parasol and tossing baubles and beads to passers-by before the CD player reaches the album's title track. Written by Alexander Hill, it drives like a slow freight that knows where the tracks lead, as Christopher's clarinet signals a passive voice above the rhythmic stride of piano, bass and drums. Christopher gives Hoagy Carmichael's "New Orleans a welcome waltz step that swings high and low through the clarinet's registers. "La Ciudad Criolla and "The King of Treme, both originals, balance deep feeling with superb musicianship. A winning combination such as this shares the tradition of New Orleans while lifting spirits to lofty heights. ~ Jim Santella   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/delta-bound-evan-christopher-arbors-records-review-by-jim-santella.php#.U3bqIyi9a5w

Personnel: Evan Christopher: clarinet; Dick Hyman: piano; Bill Huntington: double-bass; Shannon Powell: drums.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Cindy Scott - Historia

Size: 128,6 MB
Time: 55:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Vocals
Art: Front

01. Shaw 'nuff (4:20)
02. There Is No Greater Love (5:29)
03. What's Comin' Atcha (3:57)
04. Historia De Un Amor (7:37)
05. It's Gonna Be Okay (4:21)
06. Turnaround (Feat. Karrin Allyson) (3:40)
07. Look For The Silver Lining (3:15)
08. Laura Lee (5:14)
09. Shenandoah (4:02)
10. I Concentrate On You (5:45)
11. Silence Of The Stars (O Silencio Das Estrelas) (4:29)
12. Some Of That Sunshine (Feat. Karrin Allyson) (3:10)

Stating the obvious right off, vocalist Cindy Scott is from New Orleans. This fact thoroughly and three-dimensionally informs the twelve selections on Historia, Scott's follow-up to Let The Devil Take Tomorrow (Catahoula Records, 2009), without making a burden of it. In subtle and not-so-subtle ways, the aural aroma of the Crescent City appears like an essence, that hyperdistillation that leaves neither finger nor footprint but exists as an indelible mark on the music readily recognised. This mark is made audible immediately in Scott's arrangement (with her lyrics) of the Gillespie/Parker shot- over-the-bow, "Shaw 'Nuff." Looking at that title makes it all too easy to expect an Eddie Jefferson or even Bob Dorough sliced bebop.

What curls from the speakers is something else altogether. A French- Quarter- Sunday-Afternoon march is established by drummer Jamison Ross and perpetuated by pianist Randy Porter channelling Professor Longhair. Guitarist Brian Seeger reaches down deep into the blues and shows where Bo Diddley came from. Scott sings of taking chances to learn, stretching beyond one's conception into that next creative place. Scott makes breezy "No Greater Love," pulling the piece from the dusty silver service of standards. She blow the soot off the classic, polishing it to a high and complex Creole sheen. Porter plays a eutection of impressionistic stride and Antoine Domino- left hand magic against Ross' shimmering cymbals and Scotts wordless song.

On the nominal title cut, "Historia de un Amor," Scott waxes darkly over an earth-pulse played by bassist Dan Loomis. Seeger seasons the piece with electric guitar cries in the extended introduction and then when Scott gets her Spanish on, leading up to Seeger's craggy and urgent solo, overdriven and cutting. Scott picks up and completes this urgent ache, completing the piece as a humid Caribbean tone poem. Scott penned the English lyrics. The original "It's Gonna Be Okay" ia a cross-over dream, a song of certain hope that would be as at home in the modern country realm as it is here, full of Louisiana and sunshine.

"Look at the Silver Lining" and "Shenandoah" are so completely transformed they become a celebration of all that jazz is in its absolute exegesis. In both songs, Scott winds up and throws a wicked curve ball. The former is taken up-tempo and is perhaps the most "jazzy" of all of the selections. The latter is made even more pastoral than the original by its slower tempo amid bass harmonics and Scott's rich flute playing. Scott duets with Karrin Allyson on "Some of that Sunshine" providing an upbeat and inclusive end to a very fine recording indeed.~Review by C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Cindy Scott: vocals; Randy Porter: piano; Dan Loomis: bass; Jamison Ross: drums; Brian Seeger: guitar (1, 4, 5); Shannon Powell: percussion; Evan Christopher: clarinet (11); Karrin Allyson: vocals (12).

Historia

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Tom McDermott & Evan Christopher - Almost Native

Styles: Jazz, New Orleans
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:20
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. Tango Ambiguo
(4:53)  2. Heavy Henry
(5:09)  3. Waltz for All Souls
(4:06)  4. Le Menage Rouge
(7:14)  5. Spooky Blues
(1:58)  6. The Don't Mess with my Two Step
(4:11)  7. Chorando Em Paris
(5:16)  8. Tande Sak Fe Loraj Gwonde
(3:57)  9. Musette in A Minor
(4:35) 10. March of the Pony Girls
(7:38) 11. Irresistivel

Avant-garde art has been described as seeking innovation through experimentation, preferring novelty to formula and defying existing convention. The term "avant-garde traditionalism" could be a way to describe the music of New Orleans pianist Tom McDermott. Although it is rooted in the traditions of his adopted city, he pushes boundaries with his quirky compositions and interest in eclectic styles, such as Brazilian choro, McDermott, active there since 1984, is not as well known outside of New Orleans as he deserves to be. Over the years he has made a series of duets with the clarinetist Evan Christopher, the doyen of the New Orleans Contemporary /traditional new wave. Almost Native is their third collaboration.

The pairing of McDermott and Christopher is an interesting one. Christopher, one of the most expressive musicians in jazz today, is the primary exponent today of the New Orleans clarinet tradition of Sidney Bechet and Barney Bigard where emotional expression was emphasized. In contrast, McDermott takes a utilitarian approach to the piano in the tradition of Jelly Roll Morton where simplicity of interpretation provides a good contrast to Christopher's dynamism. You never feel they're trying to compete with each other; there's always a sense of collaboration much like a dance team in which both have the chance to individually shine.

Almost Native, consists of nine selections written by McDermott and two by Christopher. Subtitled Music From New Orleans and Beyond, Almost Native also explores tangential styles including tango, musette and beguine. It is a mélange of emotional moods and scenes. This range includes the mystery of a dark New Orleans Tango Quarter street in "Tango Ambiguo," the nostalgic musette "Le Ménage Rouge," the appropriately named Monkish "Spooky Blues" to the playful rhumba rhythm of "Heavy Henry." The dancing Brazilian Choro is represented by "Choro Em Paris" and the bonus track originally on the CD New Orleans Duets (Rabadash Records 2009), "Irresitivel." Christopher plays particularly tenderly on his own contribution, the gospel waltz "A Waltz for All Souls" and passionately on his beguine "Tande Sak Fe Loraj Gwonde." McDermott solos on the ho downish "The Dont-Mess-With-My Two-Step" and "Musette in A Minor." His most exciting moment is when he breaks into full stride in "March of the Pony Girls" while Christopher plays obbligato behind him. At the end is a sweet surprise where his solo piano selection Musette in A Minor is reprised on the Accordion.

The piano/horn jazz duet does not come quickly to mind as being part of the New Orleans jazz tradition but this format was first recorded by Jelly Roll Morton and Joseph "King" Oliver in 1924. Almost Native is an emotionally satisfying addition to this tradition. ~ Louis Heckheimer  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=40725#.Umq-2RAueZc

Personnel: Tom McDermott: piano; Evan Christopher: clarinet.

Almost Native

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Eli Yamin & Evan Christopher - Louie's Dream: For Our Jazz Heroes

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:03
Size: 100.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Clarinet jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:44] 1. Louie's Dream
[4:21] 2. The Mooche
[4:52] 3. You Gotta Treat It Gentle
[3:31] 4. It's The Way That You Talk
[4:15] 5. Don't Go Back On Your Raisin'
[4:50] 6. What's Your Story Morning Glory
[4:21] 7. Azalea
[0:26] 8. My Jazz Hero
[0:14] 9. Baraka 75
[0:12] 10. Let His Love Take Me Higher
[4:01] 11. Impromptu
[5:44] 12. Dancers In Love
[2:27] 13. Louie's Dream (Reprise)

From jazz clubs to concert halls and even the White House, the intuitive and playful spark they bring to the bandstand is always marked with passion and dynamic interplay. Yamin and Christopher share a deep commitment to celebrating the enduring legacy and relevance of the greats who inspire them. Yet, even though aural glimpses of their heroes are evident, their dedication to their own personal voices is abundant in this collection of thoughtfully chosen songs. Louie's Dream, is a song recorded only one other time by Louis Armstrong with co-composer Marty Napoleon on piano, the last surviving member of the Armstrong All-Stars. Other selections include The Mooche for Barney Bigard and the Ellingtonians, What's Your Story Morning Glory?. for Mary Lou Williams, Baraka 75, a spiky Yamin original dedicated to poet/activist Amiri Baraka, and You Gotta Treat It Gentle, Christopher's bluesy ballad for Sidney Bechet. Two songs from Yamin's jazz musical about women's suffrage, "Holding the Torch for Liberty, are also featured. The New Orleans flavored It's the Way That You Talk and the heartstring-pulling ballad, Don't Go Back On Your Raisin'. Two Ellington rarities, Azalea and Dancers in Love round out the collection. Label-Yamin Music LLC, co-sponsored by The Jazz Drama Program, a non-profit 501-c3 corporation, inspiring students and teachers with interactive experiences in the jazz arts-storytelling, music, theatre, dance and visual arts.

Louie's Dream: For Our Jazz Heroes