Showing posts with label Gregory Tardy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gregory Tardy. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2022

Gregory Tardy - Sufficient Grace

Styles: Saxophone And Clarinet Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:00
Size: 130,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:33) 1. The Omnipresent Cardiologist
(6:43) 2. For Deacon Rocky
(5:09) 3. I Choose You
(7:32) 4. A Tree and It's Fruit
(8:47) 5. The Intelligent Design
(4:23) 6. Sufficient Grace
(6:57) 7. Nick Hoot
(9:53) 8. Janel's Love Song

There's way more than sufficient grace going on here and a strongly soulful swing that really has the whole album coming together, right on the money! Maybe that's no surprise, though, given that the set's issued on the excellent WJ3 label from Willie Jones III, who plays drums at the core of the record, next to the bass of Sean Conly while Tardy carves out all these wonderfully fluid, feeling lines next to the trumpet of Marcus Printup who himself sounds better than usual, and makes for a perfect fit for Tardy. Keith Brown handles piano on the quintet session, all tunes are Tardy originals, and titles include "Tree & Its Fruit", "I Choose You", "For Deacon Rock", "The Omnipresent Cardiologist", "Janel's Love Song", and "Nick Hoot". © 1996-2022, Dusty Groove, Inc.https://www.dustygroove.com/item/125727

Personnel: Gregory Tardy - Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet and Clarinet; Marcus Printup - Trumpet; Keith Brown - Piano; Sean Conley - Bass; Willie Jones III - Drums

Sufficient Grace

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Michael Dease - Give It All You Got

Styles: Trombone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:43
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:47) 1. A Sliver Of Silver
(5:18) 2. The Next Level
(4:58) 3. Parker's Fancy
(5:23) 4. Word To The Wise
(5:58) 5. Dave's Boogie-Down
(6:08) 6. Ritmo De Brevard
(4:56) 7. Lake Toxaway Getaway
(5:58) 8. Zanderfied
(7:05) 9. Climb The Mountain
(6:08) 10. Transylvania County Funk Parade

Recalling many of those great Blue Note albums with trombonist Curtis Fuller and Art Blakey, Give It All You Got, the eighth Posi-Tone release by one of today’s leading voices on the trombone, Michael Dease, carries that infectious soul-jazz vibe and percolates with similar energy. Dease has appeared over 200 recordings wirh groups as diverse as Grammy winning artists David Sanborn, Christian McBride, Michel Camilo, and Alicia Keys. This one garners inspiration from his life in jazz education.. It focuses on North Carolina’s The Jazz Institute at Brevard Music Center, which is a two-week summer intensive workshop for 80 dedicated students that follow Dease’s custom-designed curriculum for traditional and progressive jazz study. Most of the musicians on the album are Brevard faculty members as well. The renowned trombonist and two-time Grammy award winner currently serves as Associate Professor of Jazz Trombone at the renowned Michigan State University jazz program and has also been on faculty at Queens College CUNY, The New School and Northeastern University. Many of Dease’s current and former students are enjoying successful careers in the music world. Always an informed, but forward-thinking musician, Dease learned the craft from trombone legends Wycliffe Gordon and Joseph Alessi and his extensive resume is far too reaching to cover in this space. Dease’s opener “Sliver of Silver” was inspired by a 2018 visit to Brevard by famed trumpeter Randy Brecker, who played with the piano icon when first coming up.

Throughout Alfredson’s sizzling B3 gives the proceedings a different color than those Blue Note recordings referenced earlier but this straight-ahead hard bop is terrific whether listening to Tardy’s tenor on “The Next Level” or the leader making his own poignant statements. “Parker’s Fancy,” written by drummer Luther S. Allison is not about Bird, but instead for Dr. Andrew Parker of the Institute. It’s familiar sounding groove fits as easily here as it could have in that glorious soul-jazz era of the early ‘60s with sparkling turns from trumpeter Stanco, Tardy, and the leader. Dease’s “Word to the Wise” is a mid-tempo piece with the leader in conversation with Alfredson until Tardy enters midway and the entire sextet brings it home. “Dave’s Boogie-Down,” as title suggests, is a white-hot burner, written by Alfredson but named for David Sanborn, with whom Dease toured extensively. This one features a blistering solo from altoist Sharel Cassity, one of Dease’s most inspired spots, with Tardy and Alfredson on fire as well, bringing it all to an explosive boil before the abrupt end. We then find the soothing Brazilian tones of “Ritmo De Brevard,” a nod to both Brazilian music and especially Dease’s mentor, the late Claudio Roditi as heard in the reverent tones near the end. “Lake Toxaway Getaway” is another Alfredson composition named for LakeToxaway Country Club where the jazz students from Brevard perform a 90-minute show as part of the curriculum. This is joyous tune, capturing the excitement of the students riding the “big ol’ white school bus” making the mountain climb to the site.

“Zanderfied,” named for the founders of the Institute, features an especially soulful Stanley Turrentine-like take from Tardy and the only guitar spot, a bluesy one, for Randy Alexander. “Climb the Mountain,” by Stanco, is Dease’s favorite track, as true to its name, it just keeps building, beginning rather calmly with turns from all three horns before Alfredson sets the stage for the crescendo, the last notes reflecting a deep exhale, as they have reached the summit. “Transylvania County Funk Parade,” the closer, written on the spot by Dease, is an ode to the collective band members roots in blues and soul. Tardy is on fire pushed by Owens Jr. Dease and Alfredson keep the cauldron boiling before the ensemble takes it out. In his notes Dease has this – “Dig these origins: Tardy/NOLA, Stanco/Detroit, Ulysess/JAX, Alfredson & Brooklyn/Lansing, Luther/Charlotte, Gwen/STL, Sharel/OKC, Napoleon/Ann Arbor (we’ll let that one slide) & Dease/Augusta, GA. These are places that like their Blues and Brevard’s Transylvania County is right in there.” This is one smoking session! Highly recommended.~ Jim Hynes https://www.makingascene.org/michael-dease-give-it-all-you-got/

Personel: Michael Dease – trombone; Anthony Stanco – trumpet/flugelhorn; Gregory Tardy – tenor saxophone; Jim Alfredson – organ; Ulysses Owens, Jr. – drums; Gwendolyn Dease – congas/triangle; Brooklyn Dease – percussion; Luther Allison – drums; Sharrel Cassity – alto saxophone; Randy Napoleon – guitar

Give It All You Got

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Craig Brann - Mark My Words

Styles: Guitar Jazz 
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:02
Size: 156,7 MB
Art: Front

( 5:34)  1. Hindsight
( 5:31)  2. The Late Pope
( 7:32)  3. B(ro) Blues
( 8:46)  4. Astral
( 8:01)  5. Still
( 7:35)  6. Turner-Round
( 5:11)  7. Providence
(12:46)  8. What, Though?
( 7:01)  9. Mark My Words

Craig Brann (born April 3, 1978 in Whitefield , Maine is an American jazz musician ( guitar , composition ) of modern jazz . Brann moved from his hometown Windsor in rural Maine to New York City in 1996, where he has been active in the jazz scene there ever since. Under his own name, he presented several albums at SteepleChase ; his debut album Advent (ure) was recorded in mid-2011 with Nicholas Kozak (alto saxophone), Gregory Tardy (tenor and soprano), Joel Weiskopf (piano), Nicholas Morrison (Bass) and Jaimeo Brown (drums). Tenor saxophonist Mark Turner contributed to his publication Mark My Words ; A Conversation Between Brothers , Brann's third album, was created in a trio with bassist Morrison and drummer Matt Wilson. In 2017 he recorded the album Lineage in a quintet line-up . a. with trumpeter John Raymond. He is currently (2019) leading a quintet that includes Freddie Hendrix (trumpet), Ethan Herr (piano), Nick Morrison (bass) and Sanah Kadoura (drums). https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craig_Brann

Personnel: Craig  Brann - guitar; Mark Turner - saxophone; Gregory Tardy - tenor sax, bass clarinet; Nicholas Kozak - alto sax; Nick Morrison -  bass; Rudy Royston -  drums

Mark My Words

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Gregory Tardy - Standards & More

Styles: Saxophone And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:11
Size: 150,1 MB
Art: Front

( 7:49)  1. I See Your Face Before Me
( 6:42)  2. Voyage
( 3:09)  3. How Deep The Father's Love For Us
(10:03)  4. Billie's Bounce
( 6:42)  5. When I Fall In Love
( 6:47)  6. Secret Love
( 5:06)  7. A Prayer for the Preborn
( 5:35)  8. Aural Oasis
( 6:22)  9. How Deep Is The Ocean
( 6:51) 10. Firm Roots

As the title of this new album suggests Gregory Tardy and his excellent ensemble invested their energy in evergreen standards and jazz original classics here to fulfil his musical parents’ requests.“… Not only is he arguably the most original of the band’s improvisers, he’s also the most impassioned. His lines are incisive and hard-edged. Even his most fanciful flights are purposeful. His energetic approach consistently lifts the group’s performance to a higher level….” (Chris Kelsey – JazzTimes on “Steps of Faith” SCCD 31610)“….Of the many stars to have emerged on the jazz horizon during the '90s, one of the most disciplined, emotive and perhaps underrated is the multifaceted Gregory Tardy ….. Tardy takes another step toward establishing himself as one of the most important saxophonists of his generation….” (Matthew Miller - AJJ on “The Truth” SCCD 31583) https://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/13122/gregory-tardy/standards-and-more

Personnel: Gregory Tardy - tenor saxophone, clarinet, composer;  Philip Dizack - trumpet; Keith Brown - piano;  Sean Conly - bass; Jaimeo Brown - drums

Standards & More

Friday, January 11, 2019

Marcus Printup - Peace in the Abstract

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:29
Size: 148,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:17)  1. Your Time Has Come
(7:03)  2. Soul Vamp
(7:13)  3. I Will Sing of You
(5:59)  4. Deddy's Blues
(6:07)  5. Hot House
(8:20)  6. Amazing Grace
(8:36)  7. Peace in the Abstract
(8:32)  8. Everytime We Say Goodbye
(5:19)  9. Soul Mama

A talented trumpeter with a lot of potential, Marcus Printup was discovered by Marcus Roberts at the University of North Florida in 1991. Printup started on trumpet in the fifth grade, played funk as a teenager, and in college was part of a ten-piece band called Soul Reason for the Blues. Since that time, he has toured and recorded with Roberts, played with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, recorded with Carl Allen, performed with Betty Carter, and cut a number of excellent albums as a leader for Blue Note. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/marcus-printup-mn0000673081/biography

Personnel:   Marcus Printup - trumpet; Gregory Tardy - tenor saxophone; Marc Cary - piano;  Kengo Nakamura - bass; Shinnosuke Takahashi - drums

Peace in the Abstract

Monday, November 12, 2018

Keith Brown - The Journey

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:02
Size: 156,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:24)  1. 4G
(5:14)  2. Close Your Eyes and Believe
(4:19)  3. Human Nature
(6:13)  4. Capt'n Kirk
(5:48)  5. Prelude for the One
(7:40)  6. The Journey
(4:50)  7. The Narrow Road
(7:33)  8. Ten Years of Turmoil
(6:02)  9. Deception of the Heart
(6:03) 10. F.R.C.
(3:02) 11. The Biscuit Man
(4:48) 12. (I've Got a) Golden Ticket

Son of Donald, one of the countless talents discovered by Art Blakey, and like him pianist, Keith Brown is not a well-known name. He has worked as a session man in various areas of black music, from soul to jazz, and has already recorded a good record in trio a few years ago. With 'The Journey', the young Brown raises the shot and offers us an ambitious job, a real journey through all his experiences as a musician, synthesized in a fresh jazz with a contemporary cut, innervated by soul, neo-soul, funk , hip-hop - colors, melodies, rhythms and arrangements are clear, even if the group is often acoustic. From this point of view, we can think of points of reference such as Lafayette Gilchrist and especially Russell Gunn , two true master predecessors in the synthesis between jazz and the rest of contemporary black music. 'The Journey' is a complex work, but never difficult: on the contrary, the themes are always very catchy, improvisations, certainly imaginative, work within the harmonic outline, unhinging it gradually, almost without attracting attention. Great importance of the prodigious battery of Terreon Gully, which makes an insistent use of rim-shot in short repeated, broken and recombined polyrhythm patterns, reproducing in this way the typical effect of hip-hop rhythms. On the sax we find musicians in the world such as Kenneth Whalum III, Greg Tardy and Jamal Mitchell, while the bass by Clint Mullican and the Mike Seal guitar complete the training by adding jazz-funk pulsations and further colors to the ensemble moments, arranged in a new way. soul. Ah, and Keith Brown? His style, percussive and bluesy, with considerable independence in his hands and a marked taste for melodic ornamentation and chiselling, is the direct son of musicians such as John Hicks and Kenny Kirkland (to whom 'Capt'n Kirk' is dedicated), to the youngest Marc Cary. Almost all the compositions - except for the 'Human Nature', where for the most part the sax repeat the theme while the rhythm section is unleashed, dictating the dynamics and the development of the piece, then releasing the tension at the time of the sax solos, and '(I've Got a) Golden Ticket' (yes, that of the classic 'Willie Wonka And The Chocolate Factory'!), enunciated by the piano that alludes to the stride, slowed in a wrap-around soul jazz by the band and finally closed by a suspended electric piano tail. To have heard it before, 'The Journey' would have finished straight into the top 10 of the past year. Patience. Beautiful album of pure modern jazz at the highest level, excellent also to bring neophytes closer to this music. (Negrodeath) Translate by Google http://freefalljazz.altervista.org/blog/?p=14914
 
Personnel:  Keith Brown on piano;  Terreon "Tank" Gully on drums;  Gregory Tardy on saxophones;  Kenneth Whalum III on saxophones;  Jamel Mitchell on saxophones;  Mike Seal on guitar;  Clint Mullican on bass

The Journey

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Gregory Tardy - Jam Session, Vol. 21

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:17
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

( 8:57)  1. I Remember April
( 9:53)  2. Impressions
( 4:43)  3. Misty Thursday
( 3:23)  4. Self Portrait In Three Colors
( 5:20)  5. Crazy Love
(10:59)  6. What Is This Thing Called Love
(11:10)  7. On Green Dolphin Street
( 8:47)  8. Au Privave

Born. c. 1964, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Tardy studied classical clarinet as a child, encouraged by his parents, both of whom were opera singers. His mother, Jo Anne Tardy, after singing classical music became a gospel-influenced jazz singer. After switching to tenor saxophone, Tardy played with funk bands in Milwaukee before his brother urged him to listen to jazz, after which he was especially influenced by John Coltrane’s recordings. He studied at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music and at the University of New Orleans, along the way encountering Ellis Marsalis who became tutor and mentor. Resident in New York City from 1992, Tardy became deeply involved in the contemporary jazz and improvised music scenes. Among musicians with whom he has played are Rashied Ali, Omer Avitel, Jonathan Blake, Betty Carter, Steve Coleman, George Colligan, Ravi Coltrane, Sean Conly, Xavier Davis, Dave Douglas, Bill Frisell, Aaron Goldberg, Russell Gunn, Eric Harland, Tom Harrell, Antonio Hart, Andrew Hill, Elvin Jones, Joe Lovano, Ellis Marsalis, Jason Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis, Jay McShann, Mulgrew Miller, James Moody, John Patitucci, Nicholas Payton, Chris Potter, Dewy Redman, David Schumacher, Mark Turner and Bobby Watson, the latter being cited as an especially important influence.

Tardy customarily leads his own quintet but is also a regular member of other bands, including a cooperative quartet, the Knoxville Jazz Orchestra, recording 2007’s Blues Man From Memphis released by Blue Canoe Records. Others in this quartet are John Clayton, Stefon Harris and Donald Brown. Although primarily playing tenor saxophone, Tardy has also latterly returned to the clarinet for some sessions. He has regularly returned to New Orleans, playing usually with contemporary bands, including the Young Olympians. On his 2007 recording Steps Of Faith, Tardy’s mother sings on one track, ‘Great Is Thy Faithfulness’. A distinctive and forceful player, Tardy has rapidly built a reputation not only for his playing but also for his interesting compositions, which form the core of his repertoire. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/gregory-tardy-mn0000162540
 
Personnel: Christian Winther, Gregory Tardy, Wayne Escoffery (tenor saxophone); Billy Drummond (drums).

Jam Session, Vol. 21

Monday, September 19, 2016

Gregory Tardy - He Knows My Name

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:29
Size: 141,1 MB
Art: Front

(10:49)  1. Christ The Redeemer
( 9:34)  2. Lord Revive Us
( 3:12)  3. As The Deer
( 7:17)  4. Holy Ghost Fall On Me
( 1:48)  5. He Cares
( 9:44)  6. Amen
( 7:18)  7. Jordan River
( 2:47)  8. He Knows My Name
( 8:57)  9. Remember Me

Jazz was once heavily influenced by gospel music and spirituals, though in the 21st century, many younger players have discarded it for the most part. But tenor saxophonist Gregory Tardy not only embraces his Christian upbringing but devotes this entire CD to music that has lifted up his life. Starting with a powerful rendition of the late Rev. James Cleveland's "Christ the Redeemer," Tardy preaches through his majestic horn, with superb backing from pianist Xavier Davis. The influence of John Coltrane is unmistakable in the passionate take of the spiritual "Lord Revive Us" (though Coltrane never recorded, or likely performed this piece), which adds guest trumpeter Philip Dizack and alto saxophonist Riley Bandy. He also explores works by modern composers, including Sharp Radway's snappy "Holy Ghost Fall on Me" and jazz pianist/bandleader Eric Reed's heartfelt miniature "He Cares," the latter an intimate duet by Tardy on clarinet with Davis. 

The guests are also present on a foot-tapping arrangement of the spiritual "Jordan River" and "Remember Me." If the music in churches would swing as hard as Gregory Tardy's band on this session, attendance would likely improve. Highly recommended! ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/he-knows-my-name-mw0000793982

Personnel: Gregory Tardy (clarinet, saxophone); Riley Bandy (alto saxophone); Philip Dizack (trumpet); Xavier Davis (piano); Mike Hawkins (upright bass); Uros Markovic (drums).

He Knows My Name