Showing posts with label Herlin Riley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herlin Riley. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Bria Skonberg - What It Means

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Size: 127,7 MB
Time: 55:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Art: Front

1. Comes Love (4:30)
2. Sweet Pea (3:40)
3. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans (4:13)
4. The Beat Goes On (6:51)
5. In The House (6:23)
6. Cornet Chop Suey (4:44)
7. Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy) (5:27)
8. Days Like This (3:23)
9. Petit Fleur (4:35)
10. Elbow Bump (7:05)
11. Lullabye (Goodnight My Angel) / A Child is Born (4:29)

Trumpeter and vocalist Bria Skonberg says the great joy of music has always been in sharing it. “I love to perform. I love to prepare songs in ways that surprise and delight listeners.” WHAT IT MEANS is Skonberg’s heartfelt homage to the music and traditions of New Orleans. Most of the musicians on the album are from New Orleans; Ben Jaffe on sousaphone, singer Gabrielle Cavassa, trombonist Ethan Santos, Guitarist Don Vappie, drummer Herlin Riley, bassist Grayson Brockamp, and saxophonist Rex Gregory.

One of the most famous songs about the Crescent City is, ‘Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans.’ By shortening the title to WHAT IT MEANS Skonberg transforms it into a broader statement, encouraging her audience to consider what truly matters to them personally.

Not everything on WHAT IT MEANS is from the world of jazz. John Lennon’s ‘Beautiful Boy’ took on new meaning when Skonberg had her first child. There are tunes by Billy Joel, Sonny Bono, and Van Morrison.

Skonberg’s wah wah mute is used to great effect on the 1939 jazz standard ‘Comes Love.’ Aurora Nealand’s soprano saxophone echoes Sidney Bechet, but it’s smoother, without Bechet’s gritty vibrato. Ben Jaffe’s sousaphone evokes New Orleans parade music. The mood shifts with Chris Pattishall’s piano solo, transporting the music to Cuba. Skonberg is mute-less and playing beautiful unison lines with the band, and engaging in an animated call and response with drummer Herlin Riley.

Skonberg’s playing is marked by crisp articulation and a powerful attack, perfectly capturing the spirit of Louis Armstrong’s 1926 recording ‘Cornet Chop Suey.’ Don Vappie’s banjo helps preserve the authentic feel of Armstrong’s Hot Five.

‘In the House’ was one of the original compositions Skonberg wrote for the album, and it’s a beaut. It sounds more hard bop than traditional New Orleans jazz, but It really shows off her trumpet chops. I like the way she switches from playing with a mute, and then not. Pattishall’s melodic piano and the bass work from Grayson Brockamp make this one of the album’s highlights.
I have never liked Sonny Bono’s ‘The Beat Goes On.’ Skonberg is a much better singer, but I thought this is a song that should be left to the ashes of history until I heard her band resurrect this sixties turkey and give it life. Rex Gregory’s tenor saxophone has a lot of fun with the melody. Skonberg’s trumpet playing is a delight. It’s obvious she’s having fun on this album. Ethan Santos’s trombone playing adds a lot to this tune.

Skonberg wanted to record some pop songs from her past that she loved, and I respect that. I don’t have as warm a spot in my heart for some of those pop hits from the past. There is a lot to enjoy on Bria Skonberg’s WHAT IT MEANS. It is a wonderful tribute to the music and the history of New Orleans.By Tim Larsen https://jazzviews.net/bria-skonberg-what-it-means/

Personnel: Bria Skonberg – Trumpet & Vocal; Don Vappie – Guitar, Banjo (track 6); Chris Pattishall – Piano; Grayson Brockamp – Acoustic Bass; Herlin Riley – Drums, Percussion; Aurora Nealand – Soprano Saxophone (track 1); Rex Gregory – Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet (tracks 4,8-10); Ethan Santos – Trombone (tracks 4, 8-10); Ben Jaffe – Sousaphone (tracks 1, 10); Gabrielle Cavassa – Vocal (track 8)

What It Means

Monday, September 16, 2019

Herlin Riley - Perpetual Optimism

Styles: Vocal, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:23
Size: 137,0 MB
Art: ront

(6:54)  1. Rush Hour
(5:50)  2. Be There When I Get There
(4:49)  3. Borders Without Lines
(5:40)  4. You Don’t Know What Love Is
(7:06)  5. Perpetual Optimism
(7:20)  6. Touched
(6:23)  7. Wings and Roots
(6:34)  8. Wang Dang Doodle
(4:05)  9. Stella By Starlight
(4:38) 10. Twelve’s It

Herlin Riley, a drummer from New Orleans, is a member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, led by Wynton Marsalis. Indeed, he played a large part in developing the drum parts for the Pulitzer Prize-winning album by Marsalis, Blood on the Fields (Columbia, 1997). On his own album, Riley leads a mainstream quintet playing five of his own numbers, Gene de Paul's lovely ballad "You Don't What Love Is," Victor Young's "Stella By Starlight," Ellis Marsalis' "Twelve's It" and Willie Dixon's knockabout "Wang Dang Doodle," on which he takes a joyous and highly competent vocal. It's a wonderfully relaxed mixture, a reminder of what mainstream jazz is all about, or should be having fun yet being creative. There's some great music here, notably Godwin Louis' alto on "Touched," the stand-out track, which also features fine bass by Russell Hall. Then there's Bruce Harris' trumpet on the choppy "Rush Hour." Throughout, Emmet Cohen's piano and the leader's drums hold everything together. The Latin-tinged title track is a light-as-air foot-tapper, with Godwin Louis doing a fine job on saxophone before Cohen takes over. Add some words and it could be a show tune. Riley's drumming propels the number along but without ever drowning out the others. "Wings and Roots" features more fine saxophone and some excellent ensemble passages. Louis gets down to it on "Wang Dang Doodle," where Riley's vocal is suitably low down and funky. He returns for an encore on "Twelve's It," in which he pays a tongue-in-cheek tribute to the song's author. If more albums like this were being made today, the world wouldn't be in the terrible state it's in. People would be far too happy to want to do the dirty on one another. ~ Chris Mosey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/perpetual-optimism-herlin-riley-mack-avenue-records-review-by-chris-mosey.php

Personnel: Herlin Riley: drums and vocals; Emmett Cohen: piano; Russell Hall: bass; Godwin Louis: alto saxophone; Bruce Harris: trumpet.

Perpetual Optimism

Friday, January 5, 2018

Herlin Riley Quintet - Watch What You're Doing

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:15
Size: 129,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:28)  1. Watch What You're Doing
(8:53)  2. New York Walk
(4:05)  3. John Lewis
(5:16)  4. Soscalalah Blues
(6:45)  5. Sunshine in My Pocket
(5:57)  6. Coodie Coo
(5:28)  7. Warm All Over
(8:30)  8. Myrosa's Mirage
(5:49)  9. Blood Groove

While I’d hate to be accused of hyperbole, we’ll save a lot of time here if we just cut to the chase. Drummer Herlin Riley’s debut set as a leader is as strong a maiden voyage as anything in recent memory, along with being an early contender for one of the best new jazz releases of 2000. Taking a cue from boss Wynton Marsalis, Riley has assembled a diverse and devastatingly attractive set of nine originals that have been tailored to meet the needs of the ensemble at hand, very much in keeping with Ellington and Marsalis conventions. Even if you weren’t aware of Riley’s New Orleans heritage, the title track sports a buoyant second-line groove complete with those Southern spices, Victor Goines’ lusty baritone akin to James Carter’s forays on the instrument. Tweak things up a notch and you’ve got the up-tempo burner “New York Walk,” complete with an extended tag that launches some pyrotechnics from Riley at the tune’s conclusion. Creative voicings come your way with soprano sax and muted bone on “Coodie Coo,” an odd-metered line in 7/4. 

In fact, a break with conventional time signatures continues with “Myrosa’s Mirage” which is in five and with “Soscalalah Blues” which shuffles between a 12/8 groove and a straight ahead 4/4. As lead voices, Gordon, Goines and Kisor (on two cuts) conjure a robust sound that actually makes this band sound like a larger unit than what it is in reality. The former makes delicious use of various mutes, while the latter develops a distinctive voice on his many saxophones as well as clarinet. Whitaker and Barron form an exceedingly unified team with Riley, whose own well-dispersed solos are musical blockbusters in their own right. But there I go belaboring the point. Grab this disc. It’s a gem; ‘nuff said. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/watch-what-youre-doing-herlin-riley-criss-cross-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php?width=1920

Personnel: Herlin Riley- drums; Ryan Kisor- trumpet (tracks 2 & 4 only), Wycliffe Gordon- trombone; Victor Goines- clarinet, tenor, soprano, & baritone saxophone; Farid Barron- piano; Rodney Whitaker- bass.

Watch What You're Doing

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Herlin Riley - New Direction

Styles: Vocal, Post Bop
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:40
Size: 147,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:53)  1. New Direction
(6:01)  2. Spring Fantasy
(6:43)  3. The Crossbar
(6:14)  4. The Big Banana
(5:54)  5. Shake Off the Dust
(5:32)  6. Connection to Congo Square
(7:03)  7. Herlin's Hurdle
(7:19)  8. Hiccup Smooth
(7:22)  9. Harlem Shuffle
(4:34) 10. Tootie Ma

There’s a subtle but pointed message implied in the title, as it relates to most of the music on this disc: Contrary to what some revivalists and progressives might insist, music can explore new directions without self-consciously proclaiming either its iconoclasm or its purity. Discovering new beauty and truth is a triumph of the spirit, not an ideological manifesto. Herlin Riley is a New Orleans native, and the streetsy, Latin-tinged rhythms of that city’s musical heritage wind through this set. “Connection to Congo Square,” on which Riley and guest conguero Pedrito Martinez interweave with joyful abandon, propelling a melody line that roils with postbop fury, exemplifies this ancient-to-the-future continuum. But then so does “Harlem Shuffle,” which evokes “Night Train” updated with soul-jazz swagger. There, Godwin Louis’ alto saxophone solo reaches back to Johnny Hodge’s swing-era grace, and trumpeter Bruce Harris combines a classicist’s precision with modernist exultation and freedom. “Hiccup Smooth” plays on the paradox of its title with juxtaposed rhythms/time signatures; Louis negotiates the shapeshifting rhythmic terrain with confidence. Although he’s the session leader, Riley is mostly content to set the groove, adding coloration and texture and goading his bandmates-Louis, pianist Emmet Cohen, Harris, bassist Russell Hall, Martinez, guest guitarist Mark Whitfield-with an unforced but relentless will. The major exception is “Herlin’s Hurdle,” written by Cohen, on which Riley allows himself a tightly wound yet explosively unfettered solo. The ballad “Shake Off the Dust” may sound conventional, even prosaic at first listen, but in fact could serve as this set’s manifesto: By revisiting vintage conceits and celebrating their vivacity, we can transform them into vehicles for fresh exploration. David Whiteis https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/herlin-riley-new-direction/

Personnel:  Herlin Riley – Drums & Vocals;  Emmet Cohen – Piano;  Russell Hall – Bass;  Bruce Harris – Trumpet;  Godwin Louis – Alto & Soprano Saxophone;  Pedrito Martinez – Conga;  Mark Whitfield – Guitar

New Direction