Showing posts with label Hal Galper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hal Galper. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Hal Galper Feat John Scofield - Ivory Forest Redux

Styles: Piano And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:16
Size: 92,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:36) 1. Ivory Forest
(6:39) 2. Continuity
(6:34) 3. My Dog Spot
(6:02) 4. Monk's Mood
(3:47) 5. Yellow Days
(9:34) 6. Rapunzel's Luncheonette

Around the early 90’s when my John Scofield fascination led me back to his catalog prior to his Miles Davis association, I picked up his 1978 Rough House CD. While the guitarist’s advanced bop vocabulary was already fully developed by this time and he also demonstrated emerging composing chops this early on, this was a very different record than the ones he has made from, say, Still Warm onward. His signature tone wasn’t fully in place yet and he was a more balls-to-the-wall player back then. This is also one of the fairly infrequent times Sco is leading a band that included an acoustic pianist. These recordings don’t present the John Scofield that put him in the elite status he enjoys today but taken on its own merits, Rough House remains a solid jazz record today.

However, this article isn’t about Scofield specifically, it’s about the guy who played piano on that old record, Hal Galper. Less than a year after the two recorded Rough House with Adam Nussbaum on drums and Stafford Jones on bass, Scofield, Galper and Nussbaum with bassist Wayne Dockery made a similar record Ivory Forest, this time under Galper’s leadership.

While not quite a household name, Hal Galper has led a jazz career that can only be deemed a success. He’s worked with luminaries such as Chet Baker, Stan Getz, Joe Williams and Anita O’Day. He had stints in the bands of Cannonball Adderley and Phil Woods. At this writing, he’s on the faculty of both the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music and William Paterson College. But my introduction to Galper came from his late 70’s association with Scofield.

They gigged together, primarily in NYC and Europe, and both made records for the West German Enja label. Ivory Forest, in fact, was originally issued co-headlined by Galper and Scofield, which made sense because this was ostensibly supposed to be a Scofield record but he was unable to officially lead the date due to just signing with another record company.

Scofield even has a track all to himself: an unaccompanied interpretation of “Monk’s Mood” that solves the riddle of Thelonious’ gorgeously elusive melody as he directs his big time chops toward making the song even more beautiful.

But all the originals here are Galper’s, and beginning with the title track, Galper reveals himself to be tradition-anchored but forward-looking. He throws gauntlets at Nussbaum that pushes the ever-shifting rhythm in and out of the jazz idiom, and Nussbaum handles it with equanimity. Meanwhile, Galper’s soloing (and comping) is fresh and contemporary.

While that song is groove-based, “Continuity” is introspective, made even more so by the intimacy of this being a Galper/Scofield duet. Galper uses single-line notes with discretion, showing a bias for the orchestral possibilities afforded by the full chordal capabilities of the piano. For his part, Scofield had noticeably widened his range from the prior year’s recordings.

“My Dog Spot” is a spritely change of pace, a Brazilian samba involving the whole quartet but Galper’s chord changes contain vague echoes of “Giant Steps” and Scofield seems to be mining this festive melodic progression for all it’s worth. “Rapunzel’s Luncheonette,” with its quicksilver and knotty post-bop lines, is the closest this album comes to Rough House but instead of Scofield doing a scorching five-minute run, it’s Galper. Behind his and Sco’s clinics, Nussbaum is putting one on of his own.

Galper takes on Álvaro Carrillo’s standard “Yellow Days” with only Dockery in tow, sticking to a presentation that brings out the pleasing melody that found its way into the repertoire of Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis and Count Basie, among others.

Sadly, Ivory Forest had been out of print stateside for a long time, perhaps twenty years or so. Origin Records had apparently licensed the rights to the masters from Enja and under Galper’s supervision, the tapes were remastered for release in late 2022 as Ivory Forest Redux. Thumbs up on the remaster job, too, as it’s easy to hear the separation between the players and gain a good appreciation of how well they were attuned to one another.

Hal Galper’s Ivory Forest Redux easily justifies the decision to polish up these recordings and take them back out of obscurity. Artists well-known and should be better-known all shine on it. By S. Victor Aaron https://somethingelsereviews.com/2023/01/01/hal-galper-feat-john-scofield-ivory-forest-redux-1979-2022-reissue/

Personnel: Piano – Hal Galper (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 6); Bass – Wayne Dockery (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6); Drums – Adam Nussbaum (tracks: 1, 3, 6); Guitar – John Scofield (tracks: 1 to 4, 6).

Ivory Forest Redux

Friday, April 29, 2022

Hal Galper Trio - Trip the Light Fantastic (feat. Jeff Johnson & John Bishop)

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:19
Size: 102,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. Alice in Wonderland
(6:57)  2. Babes of Cancun
(5:52)  3. Get Up & Go
(7:49)  4. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry
(5:56)  5. Suspension
(8:07)  6. Trip the Light Fantastic
(5:34)  7. Be My Love

About eighty percent of the jazz piano players out there can fit into one of two schools: that of the introspective, harmonically rich Bill Evans mode; or the more percussive and gregarious Bud Powell bebop approach. There's also a small slice of the that pie that draws it primary inspiration from bright and splashy Art Tatum/Oscar Peterson pre-bop playing style, along with various subsets. Then there are those who take a foundation of one of those approaches and craft something quite unique, the path that Hal Galper has taken over the past decade. A veteran of the groups of trumpeter Chet Baker and alto saxophonist Phil Woods, Galper can certainly claim a bebop foundation. But he has taken that foundation and flown free with it, as documented in his recent Origin CDs Furious Rubato (2007) and E Pluribus Unum (2010) where he explored the rubato style of playing, an approach that lends elasticity to time and tempo, and often engenders wildness and abandon. Galper opens the set with Sammy Fain/Bob Hilliard's "Alice in Wonderland," a tune famously covered by Evans on his masterpiece Sunday at the Village Vanguard (Riverside Records, 1961). 

This is not a floating Evans version, however; Galper and band mates drummer John Bishop and bassist Jeff Johnson take the tune on a furiously tumultuous ride, full of urgency, pushing in the direction of flying out of control, without ever doing so. Jule Styne's standard "Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry" is more restrained, a deeply ruminative and intimate conversation between Galper and Johnson that leads into the ominous Galper original, "Suspension," which puts the trio's edgy interactivity and ability to sustain a prickly momentum on full display. The title tune, another Galper original, has a swaying, fractured grandeur, an off-center, freewheeling beauty full of mystery and intrigue. The trio wraps it up with "Be My Love," a film tune written for vocalist Mario Lanza. Bishop's drums sizzle and detonate unpredictably; Johnson's bass rumbles; and the piano notes careen with a scintillating, headlong freedom, closing out Galper's finest trio outing to date. ~ Dan Mcclenaghan   
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=40802#.UwzZuoVZhhk
 
Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums.

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Hal Galper Trio - Invitation to Openness: Live at Big Twig

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:40
Size: 165,1 MB
Art: Front

(11:18) 1. Embraceable You
(10:51) 2. Rapunzel's Luncheonette
( 9:45) 3. Winter Heart
( 6:56) 4. Ambleside
( 8:41) 5. Invitation to Openness
( 8:38) 6. Take the Coltrane
( 7:58) 7. Wandering Spirit
( 7:28) 8. Constellation

Pianist Hall Galper turned away from the life of touring in 2000, and eased into "the shed," to work on some innovative ideas that would change the shape of the piano trio. Rubato is where he went a style of playing that stretches time, making it flexible, unpredictable and free. It takes special trio mates to assist in this, and he found them in his East Coast Trio, with bassist Tony Marino and drummer Billy Mintz, eventually, the group responsible for the fittingly-titled 2006 album, Agents Of Change (Fabola Records).

The change in Galper's trio approach blossomed fully on six subsequent Origin Records recordings with his West Coast Trio, featuring drummer Jeff Johnson. Two of those Origin Records recordings Airegin (2012) and O's Time (2014) stand as late-career masterpieces for Galper. Given the decade and half of productivity and consistent excellence of the West Coast Trio, Galper's work with Marino and Mintz might seem a footnote, with only one album in the books. But that footnote becomes bigger and better with 2022's Invitation To Openess, recorded in 2008 with Galper's east coast crew. This offering catches the threesome in fine form, opening with a eleven-plus minute take on Gershwin's "Embraceable You." This tune in these hands demonstrates just how beautiful odd beauty can be. This conventional (though superior; it is Gershwin) Great American Songbook tune goes to unexpected places straight ahead at times, often aggressive, warped away from recognizability at others, surprises around every corner.

Galper's creative foundation comes, in part, from the straight ahead tradition, having served considerable time with trumpeter Chet Baker and alto saxophonists Cannonball Adderley and Phil Woods. But he also did a stint in saxophonist Sam Rivers' band, which must have nudged him further in the free direction than he might otherwise have gone. In his semi-retirement over the course of time spent in the shed he sounds completely free. Those of a religious persuasion might say "Let go and let God." Of Hal Galper we could say he "Let go and let rubato."

As with all of his rubato releases, Galper makes wise choices in jazz standards and Great American Songbook tunes on Invitation To Openness, exploring the permutations of the previously-mentioned Gershwin composition, pianist John Taylor's "Ambleside," Duke Ellington's "Take the Coltrane" and Charlie Parker's "Constellation," with four of his own distinctive tunes mixed in. All of this moves into exhilarating and unexpected territory, no matter how familiar the source material, in this a look back at the beginnings of Hal Galper's move into rubato.~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/invitation-to-openness-hal-galper-trio-origin-records

Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Tony Marino: bass; Billy Mintz: drums.

Invitation to Openness: Live at Big Twig

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Hal Galper, Jerry Bergonzi - Just Us

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:08
Size: 147,9 MB
Art: Front

( 5:46)  1. Just Us
(10:37)  2. Unforgettable
(11:02)  3. Moon Glaze
( 8:41)  4. Stablemates
(10:58)  5. Bye Bye Blackbird
( 7:29)  6. Lover Man
( 9:35)  7. I'll Never Be The Same

Jazz pianist, composer, and educator Hal Galper is among the finest post-bop performers, known for his fluid solo performances and work with icons like Chet Baker, Phil Woods, and the Brecker Brothers. An East Coast native, Galper first came to the public's attention playing with Baker's quartet in the mid-'60s before launching his own career with albums like 1972's The Guerilla Band. From there, he played with a string of marquee artists like Lee Konitz, Tom Harrell, and Woods, while also releasing his own largely acoustic piano albums. Since the '80s, he has also contributed to the world of academia, teaching at the New School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and Purchase Conservatory. Galper remains an active performer, balancing his time between teaching, and playing with his trio. Born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1938, Galper first began taking piano lessons at age six. A gifted performer, he entered Berklee School of Music in Boston in 1955, honing his skills by studying with noted pianist and teacher Madame Chaloff. During college, he hit the jazz clubs, playing with such luminaries as Sam Rivers, Herb Pomeroy, and Jaki Byard. He also garnered his own gigs, working as the house pianist at such Boston venues as The Stables, Connelly's, and Lennie's on the Turnpike. 

After graduating, he launched his professional career, touring and recording for three years with iconic trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker. From there, he also played with such luminaries as Joe Henderson, Cannonball Adderley, and others. By the '70s, he had begun to embrace an expansive soul-jazz and fusion sound, a style he showcased on two 1971 recordings for Mainstream Records; The Guerilla Band and Wild Bird, both of which featured trumpeter Randy Brecker and his brother, saxophonist Michael Brecker. A third Mainstream session, the trio date Inner Journey, followed in 1972 and found Galper returning to a more acoustic sound. He then joined saxophonist Lee Konitz for the straight-ahead duo session Windows. Galper's follow-up as leader, 1976's Reach Out, reunited him with the Brecker Brothers for a fiery and searching post-bop set. Along with several more sessions with the Breckers, he rounded out the '70s with dates on several Enja albums, including Now Hear This with trumpeter Terumasa Hino, and Ivory Forest with guitarist John Scofield. 

The '80s were also a busy time for Galper, who recorded again with Baker. He also worked steadily with Phil Woods for much of the decade, appearing on 14 of the saxophonist's albums. Consequently, his own output slowed somewhat, though he did deliver several highly regarded efforts like 1982's Naturally with bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Victor Lewis, 1986's Dreamsville, and 1987's Time to Remember. After releasing his 1989 trio album Portrait, he decided to return to more regular solo work. Over the next decade, Galper's output increased steadily and he recorded for such labels as Concord, Enja, and Philology with albums like 1992's Tippin', 1995's Rebop, and 1999's Let's Call This That. Along with performing, Galper has worked as an educator he helped found New York's New School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, and taught at Purchase University until 2014. He also authored a highly regarded theory text book, Forward Motion. During these years, he remained active, recording a handful of trio albums including 2007's Agents of Change with bassist Tony Marino and drummer Billy Mintz, 2009's Art-Work with former John Coltrane bandmates bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Rashid Ali, and 2012's Airegin Revisited with bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop. In 2018, he delivered Cubist, a quartet date featuring saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/hal-galper-mn0000550317/biography

Personnel: Piano – Hal Galper;  Tenor Saxophone – Jerry Bergonzi; Bass – Pat O'Leary; Drums – Steve Ellington;

Just Us

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Dizzy Gillespie - Dizzy Gillespie Meets Phil Woods Quintet

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:48
Size: 117,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:24)  1. Oon-ga-wa
( 8:09)  2. Loose Change
( 6:01)  3. Whasdishean
(12:47)  4. Round Midnight
( 8:49)  5. Love For Sale
( 8:37)  6. Terrestris

As the greatest musical heir on alto sax to Charlie Parker, it seemed only natural for Phil Woods to record a date with Dizzy Gillespie. This European studio session features Dizzy as a special guest sitting in with one of Woods' greatest quintets, with pianist Hal Galper and the brilliant trumpeter and flugelhornist Tom Harrell. In fact Dizzy's chops had already slipped somewhat during the decade and Harrell clearly outplays him even though he clearly isn't trying to embarrass the legendary trumpeter. Gillespie is at his best with a muted solo on "'Round Midnight," while Woods, Harrell and Galper are all outstanding throughout the entire CD. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/dizzy-gillespie-meets-the-phil-woods-quintet-mw0000916751

Personnel:  Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet;  Phil Woods - alto saxophone;  Hal Galper - piano;  Steve Gilmore - bass;  Bill Goodwin - drums;  Tom Harrell - trumpet, flugelhorn

Dizzy Gillespie Meets Phil Woods Quintet

Saturday, September 15, 2018

Randy Brecker - Score

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:10
Size: 88,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:34)  1. Bangalore
(7:17)  2. Score
(5:14)  3. Name Game
(1:21)  4. The Weasel Goes Out To Lunch
(4:09)  5. Morning Song
(4:33)  6. Pipe Dream
(5:14)  7. The Vamp
(5:44)  8. The Marble Sea

Randy Brecker's debut album features the trumpeter leading two distinct all-star small groups, each with younger brother Michael (who was only 19 when this was recorded) on tenor sax, Larry Coryell on guitar, and Hal Galper on piano. The tunes alternate between jazz-rock (a style the Brecker Brothers were later to successfully exploit) and modern mainstream jazz. There are the customary fades, popular at the time, and a light, though constant, beat throughout that makes the music both accessible and even danceable, an impressive feat considering that virtually all the tunes are originals. The Brecker Brothers exhibit a command of their horns and a maturity that was to serve them well for many years. The recording has weathered the years well, in part because even the fusion pieces never lose their focus, nor do they compromise artistry for popular fads. "The Weasel Goes Out to Lunch" is a cute, though very short, take on the childhood theme, with the remaining tracks fine examples of late-'60s popular jazz. With well-constructed arrangements, strong soloing, and catchy melodies, Brecker knew he was onto something, and this album was the first of several successful ventures. 
~ Steve Loewy https://www.allmusic.com/album/score-mw0000097519

Personnel:  Randy Brecker - Trumpet, Flugelhorn;  Michael Brecker - Tenor Saxophone;  Jerry Dodgion - Alto Flute;  Larry Coryell - Guitar;  Hal Galper - Piano;  Eddie Gomez - Bass;  Mickey Roker - Drums;  Chuck Rainey - Electric Bass;  Bernard Purdie - Drums

Score

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Hal Galper Quartet - Cubist

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:08
Size: 158,6 MB
Art: Front

( 5:51)  1. Solar
( 9:09)  2. Israel
( 5:24)  3. Artists
(11:21)  4. Kiwi
( 8:10)  5. Cubist
(13:00)  6. Scene West
( 7:29)  7. In a Sentimental Mood
( 8:41)  8. Scufflin'

Hal Galper has been in the jazz limelight now for over a half century, establishing his trademark sound in more traditional settings with alto saxophone luminaries Cannonball Adderly, and Phil Woods, and trumpet legend Chet Baker. Yet in the new century, Galper has turned the piano trio concept on its collective ear, something that hadn't taken place in the jazz universe since Bill Evans entered the fray with his conversational approach to the trio with Scott LaFaro, and Paul Motian. Galper has pushed the boundaries of the music in his distinct rubato style, an open and interpretive concept of time where the musical continuum achieves a high degree of elasticity. Galper has found the perfect partners in this reshaping of the art form in trailblazing bassist Jeff Johnson and sophisticated intuitive drummer John Bishop. The trio has found a home at Origin records, now a legacy of six albums beginning with the 2007 release Furious Rubato (Origin, 2007). 

On his new release on Origin, Cubist, Galper expands his vision to the quartet, bringing in long time colleague and friend, tenor saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi. Bergonzi adds yet another dimension to the rubato equation, adding avenues of collective insight that fits in seamlessly with this trio that has achieved such a rare subconscious understanding of each other. Recorded in an open session format before a small audience, the music has an overwhelming emotional honesty, and visionary artistry. The quartet seems to match musical character and personality perfectly between the four participants.

Bassist Jeff Johnson, long one of the most musical of jazz bassists, contributes four compositions that define his unique approach to writing. His conception of time and space is uniquely compatible to Galper's vision of the same. Johnson has played in Galper's trio since the early 90's, and has submitted a number of tunes to him in the process, most of which going unrecorded. For this session, some of them 'clicked,' including the aptly titled "Cubist." States Galper, "It struck me how apt the title was, how our Rubato Style is similar to Cubist painting." Indeed, the metaphor is striking, the visual concept of all the elements being there, yet with many of them out of place, and emphasized in different variables. "Scene West" conjures audible snapshots of Johnson's solo recordings, in particular the eclectic The Art of Falling (Origin, 2001). Johnson leads his partners into the fray with a dark, rhythmic undercurrent that results in a free, tumbling whirlwind of a solo from Galper. Bergonzi adds a restrained subtlety to the conversation that builds into an urgent frenzy, in the end dropping off into Johnson's deeply colored melodicism.

There is a certain radiant tonality to the playing of drummer John Bishop. Indeed, as in many ways that one might describe these same tonal qualities in a horn player, Bishop has his own distinctive sound, one that a listener can identify on any recording. His intuitive sensitivity, chant-like use of cymbals, and masterful brush work serve as a spatial touchstone throughout Cubist. His long term artistic relationship with Johnson predates his association with Galper, and those qualities that can only be chanced upon over time shine brightly when merged with Bergonzi's full bodied dynamic articulation, and Galper's visionary freewheeling conception of time. Galper's original, "Scufflin" highlights his innovative processes as a pianist. His lightning quick fluidity, melodic phrasing, and ability to move the music, and reactions of his bandmates in variable directions at will, are astoundingly unique to his gigantic talents. Throughout the linear historic timeline of great jazz pianists, Galper undoubtedly falls along the lines of Duke Ellington, Bill Evans, Bud Powell, and Ahmad Jamal in terms of their approach to intimate trio playing. After six albums together on Origin, Galper could have very well chosen to sustain the momentum with his mates Johnson and Bishop, continuing to record and tour as a trio. The addition of Bergonzi turns out to be another stroke of collective genius for Galper, and his forward moving approach to modern jazz music. His playing from start to finish on this record is truly transformative. It states clearly his ability as a leader to value the whole greater than the collective parts. The result is a compelling rubato experience for the listener.

Much is mentioned here, and in every subsequent review of his recordings over the past decade, of the advanced conception of time utilized by Galper. It must be stated that while the music may often travel in uncharted territory, it nonetheless travels in the same universe where the jazz tradition resides, where an elastic sense of freedom can ground itself in swing, and the finer qualities of post bop free thinking. Galper has found the perfect four personalities to travel through this musical labyrinth with. All four have emerged from past histories with jazz legends to bushwack a trail through the never ending expedition into musical exploration and discovery. On Cubist, they have revealed a work of true artistic mastery, and generational significance. In many ways, it personifies the direction of jazz music into the 21st century, a mantle to be grasped and moved forward by generation next. ~ Paul Rauch https://www.allaboutjazz.com/cubist-hal-galper-origin-records-review-by-paul-rauch.php

Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Jerry Bergonzi: tenor sax; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums

Cubist

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Hal Galper - Now Hear This

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:30
Size: 112,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:27)  1. Now Hear This
(6:16)  2. Shadow Waltz
(5:36)  3. Red Eye Special
(9:08)  4. First Song in the Day
(5:12)  5. Mr. Fixit
(6:16)  6. Bemsha Swing
(7:32)  7. First Song in the Day [#][*][Take]

Hal Galper has had a long, distinguished career as a jazz pianist, bandleader, composer and educator. While the pianist has made a flurry of recordings over the past few years, record labels are beginning to mine the wealth of material he produced during the '=1970s. Now Hear This was first issued by Enja in 1977 and subsequently reissued in its original form, though this edition sports a redesigned cover and a bonus track. Galper's inspired quartet includes trumpeter Terumasa Hino, bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Tony Williams. The title track, which was recorded by its composer with a different quintet during the same decade, benefits from the stripped-down quartet and a decent piano (something not available for the live Century LP Speak With a Single Voice (1978)and reissued as the Double Time CD Children of the Night).  "Now Hear This" is one of Galper's most infectious works, as the pianist launches into a furious solo, with Hino's contribution followed by Williams' simmering break. The playful "Red Eye Special" suggests a bit of McCoy Tyner's influence, punctuated by Hino's searing trumpet. Galper builds "First Song of the Day" upon a simple repeated riff, intermingling thunderous chords and lightning runs in his solo, while both Hino's and McBee's features are equally full of fire. This expanded reissue includes a previously unreleased alternate take of it, which is a bit shorter but no less intense than the master. In addition to Galper's five originals, he includes a sauntering, sassy interpretation of Thelonious Monk's "Bemsha Swing." This is easily one of Galper's best recordings of the 1970s and very desirable to have in this expanded, brighter sounding 24bit edition. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allaboutjazz.com/now-hear-this-hal-galper-enja-records-review-by-ken-dryden.php

Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Terumasa Hino: trumpet, flugelhorn; Cecil McBee: bass; Tony Williams: drums.

Now Hear This

Monday, March 20, 2017

Hal Galper - Reach Out!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:53
Size: 116,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:13)  1. Reach Out
( 7:15)  2. I'll Never Stop Loving You
( 5:57)  3. Spidit
( 3:51)  4. My Man's Gone Now
( 8:09)  5. Waiting for Chet
( 3:14)  6. I Can't Get Started
(13:11)  7. Children of the Night

Hal Galper was on a tear during the 1970s, writing a number of adventurous post-bop compositions and getting regular opportunities to record them. This 1976 studio session for Steeplechase features the pianist with trumpeter Randy Brecker, tenor saxophonist Michael Brecker, bassist Wayne Dockery, and drummer Billy Hart. The turbulent opener, "Reach Out," must have been incredible to hear in a live setting; this studio version features an intense, constantly searching solo by the leader, as well as impassioned solos by the Brecker Brothers. Michael switches to flute for the brisk "Spidit," which blends post-bop and elements of Latin jazz. Galper, a former sideman for Chet Baker, penned the multi-faceted "Waiting for Chet," possibly to represent the tumultuous life of the troubled trumpeter; in this song, Michael starts on flute but switches to tenor sax. The leader arranged terrific interpretations of two Gershwin standards. Ending the CD is the extended composition "Children of the Night," in which everyone solos, though everyone drops out as Wayne Dockery delivers a stunning performance. This is easily one of Hal Galper's best recordings. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/reach-out-mw0000191866

Personnel: Hal Galper (piano); Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone); Randy Brecker (trumpet); Wayne Dockery (bass); Billy Hart (drums).

Reach Out!

Friday, March 17, 2017

Hal Galper - Invitation to a Concert

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:45
Size: 157,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:06)  1. The Lamp Is Low
( 5:10)  2. It Never Was You
( 6:25)  3. Bright Moments
( 7:33)  4. Hey There
( 9:46)  5. What's New
( 7:52)  6. Summer Night
(13:51)  7. I'll Remember April
( 9:00)  8. Balcony Rock

Recorded shortly after he left the security of Phil Woods' Quintet, pianist Hal Galper's Concord CD is a thoughtful and relaxed outing for his trio. "The Lamp Is Low" gets a groove by bassist Todd Coolman reminiscent of Ahmad Jamal's treatment of "Poinciana," with Galper not even hinting at its melody until five minutes into the performance. 

"It Never Was You" is quite somber, while "Bright Moments" is optimistic and the only uptempo piece, "Hey There," finds the pianist displaying a very light touch a la Wynton Kelly. The other selections emphasize close communication between Galper, Coolman and drummer Steve Ellington. This subtle session grows in interest the closer one listens. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/invitation-to-a-concert-mw0000674781

Personnel:  Hal Galper (piano), Todd Coolman (bass), Steve Ellington (drums).

Invitation to a Concert

Sunday, May 15, 2016

The Hal Galper Quintet - Let's Call This That

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:57
Size: 146.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz, Post bop
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[ 8:14] 1. Let's Call This That
[ 9:11] 2. The Babes Of Cancun
[ 9:02] 3. Diane's Melody
[12:03] 4. Upon The Swing
[ 8:20] 5. In Love In Peacock Park
[ 9:58] 6. I'll Keep On Loving You
[ 7:06] 7. Constellation

Hal Galper expanded his regular trio to a quintet for this 1999 studio session, adding trumpeter Tim Hagans and tenor saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi; bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer Steve Ellington round out the group. The pianist kicks off the date with Sam Rivers' angular blues "Let's Call This That"; following his guests' straight-ahead solos, Galper mixes some unusual runs into his solo. Jaki Byard's "Diane's Melody" had special meaning to the leader, as its composer was found shot to death just two weeks prior to the making of this recording. Written as a tribute to one of Byard's two daughters, it takes on a melancholy air. Bergonzi is prominently featured in the soothing treatment of Bud Powell's "I'll Keep on Loving You," backed by Galper and Johnson. University of Miami music professor Ron Miller (one of Galper's favorite composers) contributed two songs, the lively "The Babes of Cancun" and the lyrical waltz "In Love in Peacock Park." The quintet finishes the date with a flourish, with a wild interpretation of Charlie Parker's "Constellation," in which Byard's influence on Galper's piano style is readily apparent. This CD is well worth acquiring. ~Ken Dryden

Let's Call This That

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Phil Woods Little Big Band - Evolution

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 55:04
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

( 5:13)  1. Hal Mallet
( 7:12)  2. Alvin G
(10:10)  3. Black Flag
( 5:44)  4. Thaddeus
( 8:51)  5. Which Way Is Uptown
( 6:32)  6. Song For Sisyphus
( 5:05)  7. Miles Ahead
( 6:13)  8. Rain Go Away

This release is somewhat special for the Phil Woods Quintet (consisting of the altoist/leader, trumpeter Tom Harrell, pianist Hal Galper, bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin) is joined by trombonist Hal Crook (who would take Harrell's place in the near future), baritonist Nick Brignola and tenor saxophonist Nelson Hill to form the "Phil Woods Little Big Band." Woods contributed five of the eight songs (which are played along with selections from Crook, Jerry Dodgion and Miles Davis) and, since the chatty liner notes make no mention of it, chances are that he also wrote the colorful arrangements. 

The consistently inventive horn solos (which are often concise) and the telepathic communication by the rhythm section (which had been together for years) makes this a particularly notable release even among the dozens of excellent Phil Woods recordings. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/evolution-mw0000652982

Personnel: Phil Woods (alto saxophone), Tom Harrell (trumpet, flugelhorn), Nick Brignola (baritone saxophone), Hal Crook (trombone), Nelson Hill (tenor saxophone), Hal Galper (piano), Steve Gilmore (bass), Bill Goodwin (drums).

Evolution

Monday, December 22, 2014

Hal Galper Trio - O's Time

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:06
Size: 112,6 MB
Art: Front

(8:14)  1. Like Sonny
(9:04)  2. Wildflower
(8:23)  3. O's Time
(8:28)  4. Moonglazed
(7:42)  5. Smile
(7:12)  6. Our Waltz

It's hard to be innovative in the piano trio format. The last big change happened in the late fifties and early sixties, with pianist Bill Evans' groundbreaking trio featuring bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian. The democratization of input and interplay changed the trio game, and countless groups have worked on refining that Evans approach ever since. A more recent development has been bombast and the inclusion of rock and poplar tunes into the jazz piano trio endeavor with varying degree of success. Rubato playing, the stretching of the varying of tempos, in a three way improvisational way, is pianist Hal Galper's contribution to piano trio innovation.  O's Time is Galper's fifth recording in the rubato style on Origin Records. His trio, with bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop, perfected their approach with 2011's Airegin Revisited. The current offering rolls that artistic peak out on a high plateau, twsiting the familiar (John Coltrane "Like Sonny," Charlie Chaplain's "Smile") into different shapes, revealing different sides to the melodic threads. "Coltrane's "Like Sonny" opens the set. The three voices bounce off each other like a cocktail party conversation, synchronous and discordant at the same time. 

And like that party, as the drinks flow, the volume rises toward the raucous, without, on this tune at least, actually going there. Then there's the Zen serenity of a Johnson bass solo, sparely comped by Galper. Saxophonist Wayne Shorter's "Wildflower" has a "fractured then put back together" feeling, turbulent drums from Bishop behind Galper's relative restraint. "O's Time," written by Galper in honor of alto saxophonist/free jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman, moves away from the concept of restraint. It rolls and tumbles and sounds like, at its peak, a piano trio stuffed into a burlap bag and pushed down the stairs, with the players hanging on tight and still keeping the tune from chaos. And Charlie Chaplain's much-covered smile sounds like they're set up on the back of a flatbed truck, careening ninety miles an hours down a winding mountain road.  Exhilarating! The Hal Galper Trio shows the others guys what innovative is all about.
~ Dan McClenaghan  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/os-time-hal-galper-origin-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php
 
Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums

Monday, April 14, 2014

Hal Galper Trio - Airegin Revisited

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:09
Size: 156,4 MB
Art: Front

(11:23)  1. Embraceable You
( 6:09)  2. Ascendant
( 7:28)  3. One Step Closer
( 9:27)  4. Ambleside
( 8:44)  5. Melancholia
(10:57)  6. Conception
(13:59)  7. Airegin

Hal Galper's Airegin Revisited is exhilarating. The pianist has been working at his artistry for more than a half century, and he is moving surely into the "elder statesman of jazz" category, riding the furious wave of several distinctive and idiosyncratic trio recordings. Galper, like alto saxophonist Lee Konitz and pianist Martial Solal, has gone deeper into the music than seems possible, taking a great many standards and unleashing them, reshaping the familiar tunes with his unwavering vision into a new art. Galper has, in recent years, found a new home at Origin Records, offering a discography Furious Rubato (2007), Art-Work (2009) E Pluribus Unum (2010) and Trip the Light Fantastic (2011) that gets better and more compelling, with each subsequent release. He has also found two likeminded musical brothers in bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop, versatile and sophisticated players who can keep up with his rubato concept, one of playing loose and free with tempo and harmony even structure twisting the familiar forms like a rubber band, then pulling them back and letting them fly free. 

Opening with an eleven minute-plus take on George Gershwin's "Embraceable You," the trio shifts shapes and colors, playing with the melody in a joyous exploration that slips, near the end, into a brief straight reading. The floating "One Step Closer," a Galper original inspired by Brazilian harmony, finds Johnson and Bishop laying down a subtle and graceful rhythm, with the pianist going into a sparkling Erroll Garner groove in his solo. Galper did what he calls his "post-graduate work" in Sam Rivers' band in the mid-sixties, and played on the saxophonist's A New Conception (Blue Note, 1966). Homage is paid to the teacher on Rivers' "Melancholia." Rivers was a rule-breaker, and student Galper learned lasting lessons, with the trio's version paying homage by slowing things down to evoke a sense of loss at Rivers' passing near the end of 2011. In another homage, Galper closes the disc with saxophone legend Sonny Rollins' title track. A fourteen-minute tour de force with, Bishop's cymbals steaming, and Johnson, bowing, it adds a viscous underpinning to an exuberant finale to this stunning album.    ~ Dan McClenaghan  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=43489#.U0WjF1dSvro
 
Personnel: Hal Galper: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; John Bishop: drums.