Showing posts with label Jay Anderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jay Anderson. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Ben Haugland - A Million Dreams

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2015
Time: 52:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 119,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:51) 1. When Day Met Night
(6:19) 2. Birds Of a Feather
(8:20) 3. Here's That Rainy Day
(6:52) 4. Dreamscape
(5:32) 5. Second Sight
(5:20) 6. A Weaver Of Dreams
(7:17) 7. Dedicated To You
(4:27) 8. Big Foot

During the course of A Million Dreams, pianist Ben Haugland's second date as a leader, most of the trappings of a typical mainstream jazz record are present and easy to identify. Not unlike a lot of young leaders who are fusing their own creative aspirations with an allegiance to the tradition, Haugland penned four of the disc's eight tracks, and chose three American Standards and a Charlie Parker tune to round out the program. Another recognizable element is the presence of a propulsive, flexible, sensitive rhythm section comprised of Haugland, bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Chris Smith. Haugland, tenor saxophonist Stephen Jones, and trumpeter Scott Wendholt are capable soloists with stimulating things to say, excellent organizational skills, and ample technique.

While all of these things are significant in themselves, the factors that make A Million Dreams qualitatively different than a slew other recent recordings with a similar conception and instrumentation aren't quite as easy to delineate. A careless listener might contend that the disc is, stylistically and spiritually, just another knockoff of any number of Blue Note, Prestige, or perhaps, Contemporary sides from the 50s or 60s. However, a hasty, facile verdict doesn't come close to telling the whole tale. Though the disc can be listened to casually and enjoyed as such, only repeat visits, close attention, and a willingness to focus on the work from different perspectives reveals the full extent of the band's virtues, as well as delivering some very large rewards.

The overall sound of Haugland's group surpasses the individual contributions. These guys play the leader's genuinely original compositions and the rest of the material with absolute conviction, as well as a great deal of skill and precision. No one sounds anxious to rush through the heads in order to seize an opportunity to blow. For example, the band navigates the twists and turns of Haugland's lively, extended "When Day Met Night," with élan. In lesser hands the composition might not sound nearly as convincing. The same can be said for his lovely, pensive "Dreamscape," in which the group underscores the composition's lyrical quality, and delivers just the right degree of assertiveness.

Haugland, Anderson, and Smith find a number of ways to spur the band while sharing the same sonic space. The pianist's bright, poetic comping during the heads and amidst the soloists is rhythmically incisive as well as utterly sympathetic to each of the songs. He brings so much to the table without overstepping boundaries or clashing with his cohort. For instance, the chords and single notes during Jones' melody statement and the solos on "Here's That Rainy Day" add another dimension to the track, while often ringing out joyously like bells.

Anderson and Smith are a prime example of a bass and drums team who function effectively and add spice to a largely straight-ahead context. Regardless of the tempo, rhythmic feel, and their willingness to shake things up in the spur of the moment, the center always holds and the music maintains an unwavering certainty. Check out Anderson's firm placement of the beat and the inspired note choices of his walking line on Jones' first two choruses of "Big Foot." Or, his ingenious, utterly assured broken line throughout "Dreamscape."

Smith is ready to take his place in the crowded, intensely competitive field of New York City trapsters. On up tempo tracks such as "When Day Met Night" he often plays straight, relatively unadorned time for long stretches before executing stealth buzz strokes, or leaves the ride cymbal to play expertly timed phrases of different lengths on various combinations of drums. The head of "Big Foot" exemplifies Smith's ability to tailor a number of snare drum strokes to key points of Charlie Parker's composition. He seasons the conclusion of "Dreamscape" with a few soft, spread out, rolls to the tom toms and the snare drum with the snares off. Generally speaking, regardless of how busy or inventive he gets, Smith is never assertive to a fault and, in conjunction with Anderson, the pulse always remains firm and true.

Haugland is a mature, substantive improviser who, on a track-by-track basis, offers ample helpings of different aspects of his artistry. He always gives the impression that his mindset and creative impulses encompass the song and the goings on of the bass and drums. The pianist's turn on "Dreamscape" germinates from the head, carefully filling in Anderson's and Smith's nuanced, barebones accompaniment, and evincing a patient, balanced vibe even as the lines become more fleet and complex.

"Second Sight" constitutes one long, thrill ride, in part because of his firm, incisive touch. Exhibiting fervor and calculation in equal measure, Haugland pits punchy, unrelenting, Tyner-like chords against hard, biting single note lines and, uncharacteristically, grabs ahold of the bass and drums and yanks them into his orbit. He achieves a purity of expression while playing less than a couple of dozen notes in the first eight bars of a haunting and deeply satisfying "A Weaver Of Dreams" solo. Each note is carefully paced and bears a precise amount of weight in relation to the middling tempo swing of Anderson and Smith.

Apart from their invaluable contributions to Haugland's compositions and arrangements, Jones' and Wendholt's solos are another essential component of the recording. Haugland lays out for the first two choruses of Jones' turn on "When Day Met Night," making it easy to savor the tenor man's medium weight tone, and the manner in which his phrases playfully dart in and around Anderson's and Smith's firm foundation. Taken in its entirety, the solo entails the accumulation of telling details, a persistence that never sounds hectic or unwieldy, and the occasional sustained note that serves as a soulful transition between ideas. Wendholt's single chorus on "A Weaver Of Dreams" begins on an even keel. His rounded tone and smart, melodically rich phrases gradually, almost imperceptibly, build momentum before he unleashes weighty, bravado phrases in the last eight bars.

A Million Dreams is a confluence of excellent original compositions, empathetic ensemble playing and group interplay, as well as memorable solo statements.Highly recommended.
By David A. Orthmann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/a-million-dreams-by-david-a-orthmann

Personnel: Ben Haugland: piano; Scott Wendholt: trumpet; Stephen Jones: tenor saxophone; ; Jay Anderson: bass; Chris Smith: drums.

A Million Dreams

Thursday, May 11, 2023

Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra - Evanescence

Styles: Big Band, Contemporary Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:55
Size: 168,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:29) 1. Wyrgly
(11:23) 2. Evanescence
( 9:02) 3. Gumba Blue
( 5:52) 4. Some Circles
( 8:08) 5. Green Piece
( 7:09) 6. Gush
( 4:53) 7. My Lament
( 7:30) 8. Dance You Monster To My Soft Song
( 8:24) 9. Last Season

Maria Schneider's debut as a leader is quite impressive. Her complex arrangements of her nine originals are most influenced by Gil Evans and Bob Brookmeyer, although her own musical personality shines through. There are strong solos from tenors Rick Margitza and Rich Perry, trumpeter Tim Hagan, altoist Tim Ries, and particularly pianist Kenny Werner, but it is the moody ensembles that most stick in one's mind. Schneider's arrangements are often dense, a bit esoteric, and thought-provoking; this music may need several listens for one to grasp all that is going on. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/evanescence-mw0000114781

Personnel: Maria Schnieder – conductor; Mark Vinci – alto saxophone, flute, alto flute, clarinet, piccolo; Tim Ries – alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute, clarinet; Rich Perry – tenor saxophone, flute; Rick Margitza – tenor saxophone; Scott Robinson – baritone saxophone, bass saxophone, bass clarinet, clarinet; Tony Kadleck – trumpet, flügelhorn; Greg Gisbert – trumpet, flügelhorn; Laurie Frink – trumpet, flügelhorn; Tim Hagans – trumpet, flügelhorn; John Fedchock – trombone; Keith O'Quinn – trombone; Larry Farrell – trombone; George Flynn – bass trombone, tuba; Ben Monder – guitar; Kenny Werner – piano; Jay Anderson – bass guitar; Dennis Mackrel – drums; Emidin Rivera – percussion on "Gush"; Bill Hayes – flexatone on "Gush"

Evanescence

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Maria Schneider Orchestra - Data Lords (Disc 1), (Disc 2)

Album: Data Lords (Disc 1)
Styles: Big Band
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:58
Size: 121,6 MB
Art: Front

( 9:41) 1. A World Lost
(13:37) 2. Don't Be Evil
(10:17) 3. CQ CQ Is Anybody There?
( 8:11) 4. Sputnik
(11:11) 5. Data Lords

Album: Data Lords (Disc 2)
Time: 43:06
Size: 99,1 MB

( 5:45) 1. Sanzenin
( 5:42) 2. Stone Song
( 9:04) 3. Look Up
( 3:59) 4. Braided Together
(11:11) 5. Bluebird
( 7:22) 6. The Sun Waited For Me

The skillfully designed cover art tells part of the story; a leaf half as nature intended the remainder, a circuit board doppelganger. The pastoral soundscapes associated with the music of Grammy-winning composer/bandleader Maria Schneider belie her activist alter-ego. An outspoken critic of copyright protections, prejudicial revenue schemes and the abuses of "big data," Schneider has authored op-eds and testified before the US Congress. She ventures onto unfamiliar terrain, coalescing her passions on a masterwork double album, Data Lords.

The two discs are respectively designated as "The Digital World" and "Our Natural World" and the first CD opens with the ominous "A World Lost." Ben Monder's brooding guitar and Richard Perry's tenor sax preside over rumbling brass; the piece is as dark as the title suggests. Monder's electric guitar becomes an emblematic figure in a substantial portion of the digitally-focused disc. "CQ CQ, Is Anybody There?" is based on the low-tech forerunner of the digital world; Schneider's engineer father was a ham radio operator.

The piece features Donny McCaslin on tenor saxophone and Greg Gisbert on trumpet, with electronics, a rarity in Schneider's recordings. The two set up a clash between organic and enhanced sounds. A harbinger of the competition for technological dominance is manifested in the shadowy "Sputnik" where Scott Robinson's baritone sax takes center stage. The title track closes the first disc with an appropriately chaotic and conflicted warning of the potential risks of an AI dominated world.

Returning to more familiar ground, "Our Natural World" is not a divestiture from the concept but solace from the intrusion of mechanization. The striking "Sanzenin" is a meditative reflection on the Buddhist gardens in Ohara, Japan. Gary Versace's accordion evocatively soars above the low reeds. Schneider further lifts the spirits with the lavishly textured "Look Up" with Marshall Gilkes' inspired trombone interwoven with pianist Frank Kimbrough. Schneider builds on her visual observations of nature in the eleven-minute "Bluebird" and the second-disc closing piece "The Sun Waited for Me." Both of those, hopeful and energized arrangements are in the vein of her work on The Thompson Fields (ArtistShare, 2015).

Schneider found her inspiration to take a larger risk in working briefly with David Bowie on his final studio album Blackstar (ISO Records, 2016). The post-production version of the single "Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)" caught Schneider off guard but also opened her mind to new ideas. Data Lords was commissioned by the Library of Congress and premiered at the Library in 2016. Schneider has described the project as "very dark, chaotic, and intense." By comparison to her other releases, it's true but that account shouldn't be off-putting to her fans. Data Lords is often gorgeous and always intriguing. It is Schneider's best collection to date and sure to end up on most of the appropriate year-end lists. This is intoxicating music and highly recommended. By Karl Ackermann https://www.allaboutjazz.com/data-lords-maria-schneider-orchestra-artist-share

Personnel: Composed By, Conductor – Maria Schneider; Accordion – Gary Versace; Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute, Alto Flute, Piccolo Flute – Dave Pietro; Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute, Alto Flute – Steve Wilson (2); Bass – Jay Anderson; Bass Clarinet, Contrabass Clarinet, Baritone Saxophone – Scott Robinson (2); Bass Trombone – George Flynn (2); Drums, Percussion – Johnathan Blake; Guitar – Ben Monder; Piano – Frank Kimbrough; Tenor Saxophone – Rich Perry; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Donny McCaslin; Trombone – Keith O'Quinn, Marshall Gilkes, Ryan Keberle; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Greg Gisbert, Mike Rodriguez (9), Nadje Noordhuis, Tony Kadleck

Data Lords (Disc 1),(Disc 2)

Thursday, April 20, 2023

Mark Soskin - Empathy

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:36
Size: 156,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:27) 1. Saints And Sinners
(4:32) 2. Three Flowers
(5:00) 3. Waltz For Zoe
(5:30) 4. In a Silent Way
(6:04) 5. Shadow Dancing
(5:09) 6. Small Victories
(5:56) 7. Little Fingers
(5:33) 8. Breathless
(6:55) 9. Wanderlust
(5:25) 10. Better Time
(6:36) 11. Fuchsia
(5:23) 12. Empathy

Empathy is the perfect title for this intimate session from pianist Mark Soskin and bassist Jay Anderson a set that's spare, but never sleepy or too relaxed as the players really understand each other well enough to swing at most moments, even when gentle as they make their way through a batch of material that was mostly penned for the record by Soskin. His tunes include "Fuchsia", "Better Times", "Little Fingers", "Small Victories", "Shadow Dancing", and "Waltz For Zoe"all beautiful numbers with a vibe that's as poetic as their titles balanced by nice takes on "Three Flowers" and "In A Silent Way". © 1996-2023, Dusty Groove, Inc.

Empathy

Friday, February 17, 2023

Mike Richmond - Turn out the Stars

Styles: Contemporary, Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:57
Size: 142,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:10) 1. Mean To Me
(8:24) 2. Waltz For Debbie
(8:46) 3. Bill's Hit Tune
(8:38) 4. B Minor Waltz
(6:16) 5. Peri's Scope
(7:34) 6. Turn Out The Stars
(6:59) 7. Orbit (Unless It's You)
(6:07) 8. You Must Believe In Spring

Mike Richmond's fourth cello album focuses on Bill Evans' music. Award winning bassist Richmond has a long exceptional career performing with Miles Davis, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Horace Silver, Gil Evans and others. Richmond has recently been drawn more to playing cello which allows him a greater freedom in refined expressions.

Cello is wonderful in jazz. It's soulful, melodic, and is best in small combos. That's what you have in Mike Richmond: La Vie en Rose. ~ Cadence Magazine https://www.propermusic.com/sccd31941-turn-out-the-stars.html

Personnel: Mike Richmond: cello; Andy Laverne: piano; Jay Anderson: bass; Anthony Pimciotti: drums

Turn out the Stars

Thursday, February 16, 2023

Mike Richmond Cello Quartet - The Pendulum

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:57
Size: 152,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:43)  1. The Pendulum At Falcon's Lair
(6:21)  2. Cello Again
(8:59)  3. Two Litle Pearls
(6:18)  4. Laverne Walk
(7:28)  5. Why Not? That's What!
(7:00)  6. Tricotism
(7:32)  7. Tamalpais Love Song To The Winds
(6:39)  8. My Little Cello
(8:53)  9. Oscalypso

Not a record with four cellos in the lead but a set that features bassist Mike Richmond picking up the instrument in a glittering tribute to the genius of Oscar Pettiford! The set features all Pettiford compositions, played by a swinging group that features Peter Zak on piano, Jay Anderson on bass, and Billy Drummond on drums players who provide a warm core while Richmond mostly plucks the cello, and uses the instrument in wonderfully melodic ways that mixture of deep groove and lyrical swing that Pettiford brought to his most unique recordings of the 50s. Zak's piano has a harder bite, which makes for a nice contrast in tones and titles include "Why Not That's What", "Laverne Walk", "Cello Again", "The Pendulum At Falcon's Lair", "My Little Cello", "Tamalpais Love Song To The Winds", and "Oscalypso".  
© 1996-2018, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/837788/Mike-Richmond-Cello-Quartet:Pendulum

Personnel:  Mike Richmond (cello); Peter Zak (piano); Jay Anderson (bass); Billy Drummond (drums).

The Pendulum

Friday, February 10, 2023

Gary Versace - Time Frame

Styles: Post Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
oyston Time: 59:37
Size: 136,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:38) 1. Cold Duck Soup
(9:32) 2. Distant Call
(7:14) 3. Red Cross
(6:51) 4. Faro
(8:52) 5. Panda Blue
(7:49) 6. Sweet Surprise
(3:56) 7. Evidently
(6:41) 8. One Year From Today

Since basing himself in New York City in June of 2002, jazz organist, pianist, and accordionist Gary Versace has quickly become one of the busiest and most versatile musicians on the scene, often featured in bands led by musicians such as John Scofield, John Abercrombie, Maria Schneider, Matt Wilson, Lee Konitz, Eliot Zigmund, Scott Wendholt, Joe Magnarelli, Danny Gottlieb, Seamus Blake, John Hollenbeck, Andy LaVerne, Adam Nussbaum, Brad Shepik, Ingrid Jensen, Tim Ries and many others.

Versace was voted a "rising star" on the Hammond organ in the last three Downbeat critics polls, and was the subject of a feature article in the July 2004 issue of Keyboard magazine.

Versace has been a featured soloist on several critically acclaimed recordings of recent years: accordionist on Maria Schneider's Grammy-winning recordings "Concert in the Garden" and "Sky Blue" and as the pianist on John Hollenbeck's Grammy-nominated large ensemble recording, "A Blessing."

Over the past five years, Versace has appeared as a leader for the Criss Cross and SteepleChase labels, and as a sideman on over 50 recordings with artists on various labels including Palmetto, ACT, Omnitone, Songlines, Pirouet, High Note, Justin Time, ArtistShare, Fresh Sound, Kind of Blue, and many others.

As a pianist, Versace performed in a two-piano recital with Marian McPartland, and in April of 1999 appeared on her acclaimed National Public Radio program, "Piano Jazz." McPartland has called him "...endlessly inventive...(Versace) really has an extraordinary talent."

Gary Versace has a masters degree in music performance from the Eastman School of Music, and spent eight years as a tenured associate professor in the jazz studies department at the University of Oregon. He remains active as a clinician and guest soloist both nationally and around the world.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/gary-versace/

Personnel: Piano – Gary Versace; Bass – Jay Anderson; Drums – Rudy Royston

Time Frame

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Andy Laverne - Between Earth & Mars

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:30
Size: 157,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:53)  1. Retrospect
(8:23)  2. Gardenia
(5:35)  3. On Green Dolphin Street
(8:15)  4. Tenderly
(6:04)  5. Blue in green
(8:32)  6. Tri-tones
(8:18)  7. Maiden voyage
(8:39)  8. Between Earth & Mars
(5:48)  9. B.E.

Like label mate Harold Danko, pianist Andy LaVerne possesses talent that should be commensurate with a much broader public awareness. One of sax legend Stan Getz’s favorite accompanists, LaVerne has built a sizable catalog for SteepleChase over the past two decades- some 18 strong- with Between Earth & Mars serving as a reunion with vibraphonist Dave Samuels. Also thrown into the mix is bassist Jay Anderson, who completes this rather atypical trio. Far away from his visibility as a past member of the popular group Spyro Gyra, Samuels contributes a singular performance that reminds us that he is indeed one of the finest practitioners of his craft.

LaVerne strives in this type of configuration as his style is strongly rooted in a deep sense of lyricism and an advanced harmonic knowledge. Anderson does enough to keep things buoyantly afloat to the point that a drummer just isn’t missed. The piano and vibes combination is a real winner- of course Gary Burton and Chick Corea taught us that long ago- and LaVerne and Samuels have developed attractive arrangements that make the most of a smart mix of contemporary standards and originals. “Blue In Green” is especially arresting in this new form, taken a bit faster than the original (check out another fine duo performance of this one by Burton and Ralph Towner). The title cut, a LaVerne tune, is also a highpoint, sporting an intense solo from Samuels. It may have taken almost a decade for LaVerne and Samuels to create a follow-up to Fountainhead but it was well worth the wait. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/between-earth-and-mars-andy-laverne-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Andy LaVerne- piano, Dave Samuels- vibes, Jay Anderson- bass

Between Earth & Mars

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Stephen Riley - I Remember You

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:19
Size: 161,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:58) 1. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(7:45) 2. My Ideal
(8:17) 3. I'll Remember April
(8:22) 4. Wild Flower
(6:58) 5. I Remember You
(7:14) 6. Ugly Beauty
(8:22) 7. Alone Together
(9:07) 8. God Bless The Child
(7:11) 9. Equinox

American tenor saxophonist Stephen Riley lists John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz and Lester Young as his influences. When he just 17, Riley won the Stan Getz/Clifford Brown fellowship, and he has toured and recorded with a host of musicians including, Wynton Marsalis, Joe Levano, Joe Henderson and Michael Brecker. In other words, this man has chops. Riley had recorded around a dozen albums before this one as a leader, and decided that he wanted a change of direction, and use a guitarist rather than a pianist.

The player he chose was in fact, an old music teacher of his, Vic Juris, a guitarist who had played with the likes of Larry Coryell, Lee Konitz, Gary Peacock, Dave Liebman and Joe Locke. Sadly, these would be the last sessions Juris played, because he died from cancer soon after their conclusion. This gives the album’s title a certain poignancy, and on the band photograph on the back of the CD booklet, the three other band members have a trace of a smile on their faces, while Juris looks haunted. The album is dedicated to him.

Bassist Jay Anderson has been a sideman for many including, Bob Belden, Paul Bley, George Cables, Lee Konitz, Bob Mintzer and Maria Schneider. He’s also played with Frank Zappa and David Bowie. Drummer Jason Tiemann’s resume includes Benny Gilson, Dave Liebman and Harold Mabern.

This is a straight-ahead jazz album, with the band playing nine covers, some of them standards from the pop and jazz worlds the composers include Wayne Shorter, Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane. The complementary nature of guitar and sax is strongly evident throughout the album, from the opening bossanova-tinged ‘You Stepped Out Of A Dream’ to the powerful closer, Coltrane’s ‘Equinox’. On the former, the influence of Getz is easy to discern, with Riley’s s airy sax phrases producing a cascade of wispy, sighs, and Juris comping excellently, before playing a solo with such touch and delicacy, that the notes sparkle like raindrops dancing off a lake.

On the nine-minute plus Billie Holiday number ‘God Bless The Child,’ Riley and Juris play together softly and tenderly - Juris’s opening, delicate chords and harmonics are a joy to listen to. The band plays a lovely swinging version of Arthur Schwartz’s ‘Alone Together.’ Riley’s opening, snaking solo is accompanied by more superb comping by Juris (just listen to the chiming chord he strikes at around the 1.45 mark). Wayne Shorter’s waltz-time composition ‘Wild Flower’ is played with some zest, while the title track composed by Gene DePaul is an uptempo, feet-tapping, rendition. A note should be made about the great support provided by the rhythm section of Anderson and Tiemann, Anderson also solos excellently on many tracks including, ‘You Stepped Out Of A Dream,’ ‘Equinox,’ and the band’s excellent interpretation of Monk’s haunting waltz, ‘Ugly Beauty.’

This album was a great pleasure to listen to, and one hopes that Riley reaches an even wider audience with it he deserves too. And it’s a fitting swansong to the talented and much-missed Vic Juris.~George Cole https://www.jazzviews.net/stephen-riley---i-remember-you.html

Personnel: Stephen Riley (tenor sax); Vic Juris (guitar); Jay Anderson (bass); Jason Tiemann (drums)

I Remember You

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Scott Wendholdt - Jam Session Vol.5

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:30
Size: 157,0 MB
Art: Front

( 6:27)  1. Dig
( 8:22)  2. Up jumped spring
( 5:51)  3. Body and Soul
( 8:02)  4. Strikezone
( 4:47)  5. If you could see me now
( 5:57)  6. After Thought
( 4:31)  7. The Duke Ellington Sound Of Love
(10:01)  8. World Wide Web
( 8:27)  9. Onion Straw

The Danish Steeplechase imprint has long recognized the fertile dynamics of jam sessions, fronting the resources for many in its roster of players to convene in just such supportive surroundings. Volumes 5 and 6 in the continuing series offer up vernal combinations and surprises while upholding producer Nils Winther’s credo of “positively no rehearsal.” Volume 5 follows the template of past entries, at least in theory, focusing on a single frontline instrument, in this particular case the trumpet. Earlier volumes, incidentally, have focused on saxophone and guitar. Fortunately Wendholt, Gisbert and Ballou are markedly different stylists on their respective brass and the resulting diversity dispels any sense of homogeneity from the bandstand. The first two players have close ties to the mainstream tributaries of bop and hard bop, while Ballou straddles these strains and also shows a strong affinity for freer forms of improvisation. Laverne heads up the rhythm section with sensitivity and poise, while Anderson and Drummond fulfill their support roles in equally amicable fashion. 

Miles Davis’ “Dig” delivers perfect fodder for the three front men to flex their embouchres and each solos brightly in loose succession. Gisbert’s tart tone contrasts with Ballou’s more rounded note runs, but it’s Wendholt who proves the smoothest of the three, peeling off buttery streams that dance and cavort against the bustling rhythm before a string of expressive exchanges takes the tune out. Freddie Hubbard’s statuesque standard “Up Jumped Spring” serves as well-chosen follow-up, as Ballou and Wendholdt don their mellow ballad hats and blow soothingly through the tune’s demulcent changes. Laverne’s elegant but understated comping acts as accommodating foil. All three also enjoy a tune apiece, individually. Wendholt steps up first, trying his hand at a romance-laden rundown of “Body and Soul,” and the rhythm section shines right alongside him, fitting his solo improvisations like hand in glove. For Gisbert it’s a lovely reading of the Tad Dameron chestnut “If You Could See Me Now.” Reclining on the plush changes, the trumpeter eases back into a solo of measured restraint and makes full use of his instrument’s satin tone. Ballou proves the most adventurous of the three, tackling Mingus’ “The Duke Ellington Sound of Love” and capturing the spirit of both departed composers in the gilded bell of his horn. A pair of Laverne-penned originals provides clever interludes while still fitting seamlessly into the overall programmatic scheme. On “Afterthought” Ballou’s pitch-perfect appraisal of the theme paves a path for the composer’s own brief but beguiling variation and a stately unison close. The somewhat regrettably titled “World Wide Web” belies the triviality of its name through another circle of outstanding brass statements and even a rare solo turn from Anderson. Everything comes together on the closer, Ballou’s “Onion Straw,” a modal tune built on dark structures reminiscent of Andrew Hill’s Sixties work for Blue Note, opening plenty of space for blowing. Trumpet fans take note: this disc is chock full of the sort of spot on playing that the instrument was designed and built for. ~ Derek Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jam-session-volume-5-various-steeplechase-records-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel: Scott Wendholt- trumpet; Dave Ballou- trumpet; Greg Gisbert- trumpet; Andy Laverne- piano; Jay Anderson- bass; Billy Drummond- drums.

Jam Session  Vol.5

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Steve Slagle - Plays Monk

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:42
Size: 139,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:45)  1. Think Of One
(11:20)  2. Worry Later
( 7:12)  3. Ugly Beauty
( 5:23)  4. Criss Cross
( 7:58)  5. Jackie-Ing
( 4:52)  6. Monk
( 4:33)  7. Light Blue
( 6:02)  8. Bemsha Swing
( 6:33)  9. Epistophy

Well, let's admit it; the whole idea of doing tribute albums has really gotten out of hand recently. But if you're going to do this type of thing, then saxophonist Steve Slagle and his talented crew have the right idea. For starters, a piano is nowhere to be heard from, with the chameleon-like guitar of Dave Stryker taking on the chordal functions. Right there we avoid any inclinations to produce a mere clone of the original. And instead of delivering the umpteenth version of "Round Midnight" or "Straight, No Chaser," Slagle has opted for a more intelligent selection of Monk charts while including one original of his own (this simply-titled affair, "Monk," also happens to be one of the highlights of the entire disc).  While it would have seemed logical for Slagle to pursue perhaps a tribute to Mingus, owing to his time currently spent with the Mingus big band, the Monk concept actually fits him quite well. His pungent alto, along with Stryker's biting tone, gives this music a contemporary edge that offers a new stance without sacrificing integrity. As an added bonus, Slagle pulls out his alto clarinet on "Jackie-ing" to great effect, at times suggesting the collective attack of Don Byron's work with Bill Frisell. Throughout, bassist Anderson and drummer Nussbaum are supportive and interactive, with Stryker's voicings often suggesting a larger front line than what we have in reality. In the final analysis, what a breath of fresh air it is to find a tribute album that manages to tip a hat to its honoree while also maintaining an identity and integrity of its own. And for anyone out there still ill at ease regarding the future survival of jazz, the sounds of Slagle and Stryker, both as a pair and separately, are just a few of the many coming from committed players who are proving you don't have to reject tradition in order to innovate. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/steve-slagle-plays-monk-steve-slagle-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Steve Slagle- alto saxophone & alto clarinet (track 5 only), Dave Stryker- guitar, Jay Anderson- bass, Adam Nussbaum- drums

Plays Monk

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Stanley Cowell - Reminiscent (Plus a Xmas Suite)

Styles: Piano Jazz, Christmas
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:59
Size: 149,9 MB
Art: Front

( 4:10) 1. Intermezzo
( 6:05) 2. Re-Confirmed
( 7:54) 3. A Child Is Born
(10:02) 4. Medley: A Xmas Suite
( 6:44) 5. Peace
( 9:06) 6. Midnight Diversion
( 3:33) 7. Hear with Me
( 6:48) 8. Time
( 5:11) 9. Reminiscent
( 5:21) 10. Sweet Song

'Reminiscent' includes a featured program of Christmas melodies ("A Xmas Suite") as well as Stanley Cowell originals and compositions by Brahms, Thad Jones and Richie Powell. His trio includes the acclaimed bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Billy Drummond. Since his retirement in 2013 from the professorship at the prestigious Rutgers University, where he led its jazz department, pianist/composer Stanley Cowell has been increasingly active on the scene both in concerts and recordings.

In a glittering career Cowell has recorded for labels such as Strata-East - the cult jazz label he started with Charles Tolliver, ECM, Galaxy, and as a sideman on Blue Note, Atlantic, Muse, Impulse! and many others. He has recorded with an array of jazz stars, including Bobby Hutcherson, Stan Getz, Johnny Griffin, Art Pepper, Max Roach, Charles Tolliver and Clifford Jordan. "It's a great pleasure to hear Stanley Cowell's It's Time: a finely crafted collection of mostly originals that is at once sophisticated, both aggressive and pensive, and simply fascinating to listen to."
~ Greg Simmons, All About Jazz(on 'It's Time') https://www.amazon.es/Reminiscent-Plus-Suite-Stanley-COWELL/dp/B011Q9HDCG

Personnel: Stanley Cowell (piano, thumb piano), Jay Anderson (bass), Billy Drummond (drums)

Reminiscent (Plus a Xmas Suite)

R.I.P.
Born: 05-05-1941
Died: 17-12-2020

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Dave Stryker Quintet - Passage

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 131,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:27)  1. In The Now
(6:23)  2. Kalahari
(6:48)  3. Passage
(7:27)  4. It's You Or No One
(7:06)  5. Jungle
(5:16)  6. Violation
(3:02)  7. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(5:58)  8. Minor Jones
(7:49)  9. Pursuit

An adept jazz guitarist with a strong blues- and soul-influenced sound, Dave Stryker has worked as both a sideman and bandleader. Born in 1957 in Omaha, Nebraska, Stryker first began playing guitar at age 10. He initially learned to play from listening to records by the Beatles, Cream, and Johnny Winter. Soon, however, he was investigating the music of influential blues artists like Freddie King, as well as more heady jazz improvisers like Wes Montgomery, Kenny Burrell, and Miles Davis. By his teens, he was gigging regularly around Omaha, and in 1978, he moved to Los Angeles where he studied for a time with guitarist Billy Rogers and first befriended Hammond B-3 organist Brother Jack McDuff. After moving to New York City in the '80s, he toured for several years with McDuff's soul-jazz outfit. In 1986, he met Stanley Turrentine, and spent the next decade touring with the saxophonist, during which time he developed significantly, coming into his own as a guitarist. As a solo artist, Stryker debuted in 1991 with Passages on SteepleChase, which also featured Joey Calderazzo, Adam Nussbaum, and others. From there, he delivered a steady stream of well-regarded albums for SteepleChase, including 1993's Full Moon, 1994's Nomad, and 1996's Big Room.

More albums followed in the 2000s, like 2001's Changing Times and 2005's Big City, which showcased his eclectic brand of guitar-based blues, swing, New Orleans funk, soul-jazz, and rock. During this period, he also made appearances on albums by Kevin Mahogany, James Williams, and Royce Campbell, and co-led several dates with saxophonist Steve Slagle. In 2010, he paid homage to longtime bandmate, drummer Tony Reedus (who died from a pulmonary embolism in 2008) with the organ-steeped One for Reedus. Another organ quintet session, Blue Strike, followed a year later.  In 2014, Stryker launched his own Strykezone Records imprint, kicking things off with Eight Track, featuring Stefon Harris, Jared Gold, and McClenty Hunter. Messin' with Mister T followed a year later, and included guest spots from Eric Alexander, Jimmy Heath, Chris Potter, and many more. After a follow-up to his first Eight Track effort (Eight Track, Vol. 2), he released the 2017 quartet session Strykin' Ahead. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dave-stryker-mn0000575988/biography

Personnel: Dave Stryker - guitar, composer; Steve Slagle - alto saxophone, composer;  Joey Calderazzo - piano; Jay Anderson - bass;  Adam Nussbaum - drums

Passage

Saturday, July 11, 2020

The Stryker, Slagle Band - The Scene

Styles: Guitar, Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:22
Size: 127,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:38)  1. Skee
(6:18)  2. The Scene
(7:08)  3. Six For Teo
(6:55)  4. Two Sense
(5:25)  5. Kindred Spirits
(5:43)  6. Hopewell's Last
(7:48)  7. Brighter Days
(3:43)  8. Fingers In The Wind
(5:42)  9. Strikology

Consummate professionals, guitarist Dave Stryker and saxophonist Steve Slagle continue to raise the bar of instrumental interplay with The Scene. This pair eschews gimmickry for chops and produces some of the best post-bop anywhere. Joe Lovano, himself one of the busiest and best tenor saxophonists around, joins them again, as he did on their previous release, Latest Outlook (Zoho, 2007).  Along with this powerful frontline, a rhythm section of bassist Jay Anderson and Victor Lewis on drums and the music's compositional strength turns what would otherwise be a good collaboration into a great one. Take, for example, the opening "Skee" dedicated to the late bassist Dennis Irwin on which Lovano and Slagle blend beautifully against a hypnotic rhythm, or Slagle's tribute to his late brother, "Hopewell's Last," a gorgeous soprano (Slagle)/tenor (Lovano) showcase.  The aptly titled "Kindred Spirits" finds Stryker breaking out his acoustic to dovetail with Slagle's alto and Lewis' superb cymbal work, while Roland Kirk's "Fingers In The Wind" pairs an understated acoustic guitar with flute for an arrestingly melodic interlude. "Strikology," with bop chops emerging fore and aft, closes out another strong effort from the Stryker/Slagle Band.~ Elliott Simon https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-scene-stryker-slagle-band-zoho-music-review-by-elliott-simon.php

Personnel: Dave Stryker: guitar; Steve Slagle: alto and soprano sax, flute; Jay Anderson: bass; Victor Lewis: drums; Joe Lovano: tenor sax (1, 3, 6, 7).

The Scene

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Stephen Riley - Friday the 13th

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:50
Size: 158,9 MB
Art: Front

( 9:25)  1. Love For Sale
(10:49)  2. Four
( 8:58)  3. Freedom Jazz Dance
( 5:11)  4. Friday The 13th
( 6:38)  5. Hoe Down
( 7:20)  6. Round About Midnight
( 8:53)  7. Our Man Higgins
( 6:13)  8. Willisee
( 5:18)  9. Gingerbread Boy

Several subjective connotations are gleanable from the title of saxophonist Stephen Riley’s latest album as a leader for Steeplechase. First, there’s the numerical reference reflecting his thirteenth session as a leader for the Danish label. More transparently, Friday the 13th is a Thelonious Monk composition, at once part of the program and reflective of Riley’s open-ended approach to the pieces selected for the project in sum. It’s also a sardonic (if probably unintentional) metaphor for the past four luckless years of American political life. Riley’s brand of jazz has always been the opposite of that disastrously fractious debacle, and instead ripe with amicable collaboration, inquisitive exploration, and equity-minded improvisation. Only eighteen-months have elapsed since Riley’s band hit the studio, but the gestation period for the date may still feel painfully protracted for anyone familiar with the players. Riley and cornetist Kirk Knuffke have been circling around the promise of a piano-free quartet encounter for years. The tenorist’s early recordings emphasized bass and drums accompaniment and his last added the trumpet of Joe Magnarelli to an already potent crew. Knuffke had something of unrelated dry run eight-years ago in the company of elder Ted Brown, a tenorist whose sound has much in common with Riley by way of Warne Marsh. The two played together on a steady string of projects under the leadership of guitarist Pierre Dørge, and vocalists Allegra Levy and Steve Herring before finally landing in the studio in undiluted association.

The collective strength of the program’s nine pieces makes the delay behind this occasion almost instantly forgivable. Tonally and harmonically, Riley and Knuffke are like siblings separated at birth. Each ekes exacting, breath-suffused phrasing from his instrument that is saturated in striated textures and billowy warmth. The opening tandem salvos on “Love for Sale” are the first of many examples of just how well they mesh in the complementary investigation of a melodic line. “Four” is even more intentionally diffuse on the surface as a loose string of diaphanous solos starting with a richly nuanced Riley soliloquy reveals an umbrella logic in execution grounded by bassist Jay Anderson’s shading and shadow commentary. Knuffke absorbs it all patiently before taking talkative wing himself on the tail end. Eddie Harris’ “Freedom Jazz Dance,” “Oliver Nelson’s “Hoe Down,” and Dewey Redman’s “Willisee” almost sound like classic Ornette Coleman performances in terms of the amount of melodic equilibrium achieved between the players. Drummer Billy Drummond’s propulsive snare rolls kick off the former, supporting a staggered statement of the theme by the horns that’s plump with playful swagger and deceptively slippery in terms of rhythmic center. The Nelson tune is bright and bouncy, too, with a barn dance vamp giving way to another Riley reverie built from cotton candy phrases that glom together into a confectionary aural gestalt. Knuffke and Riley are a directly collaborative pairing now and their partnership politely demands many more dates like this one. ~ Derek Taylor https://dustedmagazine.tumblr.com/post/616199901347545088/stephen-riley-friday-the-13th-steeplechase

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Stephen Riley; Trumpet – Kirk Knuffke;  Bass – Jay Anderson; Drums – Billy Drummond

Friday the 13th

Friday, February 28, 2020

Mike Richmond - La Vie En Rose

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:11
Size: 154,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:31)  1. I'm Getting Sentimental over You
(9:53)  2. Stranger in Paradise
(8:30)  3. Come Sunday
(6:33)  4. How Deep Is the Ocean
(7:37)  5. Zingaro
(7:52)  6. Love Is A-Many Splendored Things
(9:00)  7. Duke Ellington's Sound of Love
(8:13)  8. La Vie En Rose

Rich, round tones from Mike Richmond one of the few improvising cellists we know in jazz a musician who can pluck the instrument with all the depth of a bassist, and whose work here takes us back to classics in the tiny genre by Ron Carter, Oscar Pettiford, and Eldee Young! The setting is lean, and the cello lines are clean really inflected with a mix of melodic and rhythmic vibes the latter of which are underscored by deeper conventional bass work by Jay Anderson, in a quartet with Peter Zak on piano and Billy Drummond on drums! The lineup have a great way of swinging gently, as Richmond moves between plucking and bowing on titles that include "Stranger In Paradise", "Come Sunday", "La Vie En Rose", "Duke Ellington's Sound Of Love", and "Zingaro".  © 1996-2020, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/934085/Mike-Richmond:La-Vie-En-Rose

Personnel:  Mike Richmond - cello;  Peter Zak - piano;  Jay Anderson - bass;  Billy Drummond - drums

La Vie En Rose

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Stephen Riley - Oleo

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:58
Size: 154,1 MB
Art: Front

( 7:36)  1. Ornithology
( 9:10)  2. Doxy
( 6:56)  3. St. Thomas
( 7:06)  4. Valse Hot
( 8:23)  5. On Green Dolphin Street
( 6:10)  6. Minority
( 6:20)  7. Oleo
( 3:59)  8. Lazy Bird
(11:14)  9. Don't Get Around Much Anymore

Magnificent long-blown solos from tenorist Stephen Riley  on an album named after a Sonny Rollins tune, and which definitely carries a bit of the Rollins approach in its sound! Yet the album's also got plenty of Riley's strengths in the mix, too  that great raspy sound he can get on the tenor, which also echoes a bit of Ben Webster, but with more contemporary phrasing  matched in the frontline by the trumpet of Joe Magnarelli, who we always love in an open date like this  with just the bass of Jay Anderson and drums of Adam Nussbaum for support. The lack of piano allows for plenty of structural freedom on the tunes and titles include "Oleo", "Minority", "Doxy", "Valse Hot", "Lazy Bird", "On Green Dolphin Street", and "St Thomas".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/928719/Stephen-Riley:Oleo

Personnel: Stephen Riley - tenor saxophone; Joe Magnarelli - trumpet; Jay Anderson - bass; Adam Nussbaum - drums

Oleo

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Vic Juris - Two Guitars

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:02
Size: 143,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:04)  1. Cerise
(4:59)  2. E. S. P.
(3:48)  3. In Three for Two
(6:52)  4. To John
(5:34)  5. Sarasota
(7:03)  6. A Chant for Larry
(7:38)  7. Julia
(5:02)  8. Dreaming
(7:02)  9. Mayaguez
(6:56) 10. Kirby's Scene

The title of Vic Juris’ latest release references one of the album’s chief strengths. Largely devoted to original, recently minted tunes, it’s brimming with tonal contrasts generated by hollowbody electric and steel-string acoustic guitars (both played by Juris, but not simultaneously). When you consider the colorful sonic spectrum, the fresh themes, and the alert, subtle, sometimes propulsive support provided by bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Adam Nussbaum, it’s no shocker that Juris regards Two Guitars as one of his finest recordings and the best illustration of how the trio currently sounds live. Certainly, fans of the late John Abercrombie and Larry Coryell will want to give a listen, as album highlights include striking Juris-penned tributes to them. A close friend of both guitarists and an occasional collaborator too, Juris imbues “To John” and “Chant for Larry” with a soulful air and abiding affection. Both of these electric performances conjure a distinctly evocative mood, thanks in part to the rhythm section’s customary finesse. Elsewhere in the session, reminders of Juris’ fascination with intriguing harmonic schemes surface. For starters, there’s “Cerise,” a tricky, brush-stroked theme deftly enhanced by Anderson’s sonorous interlude and the guitarist’s spiraling flights. In more straightforward electric settings, Juris’ engaging flair for offsetting single-note runs with resonant chords often comes into play, adding texture and drive to the tight arrangements. An imaginative take of Wayne Shorter’s “E.S.P.” moves from arpeggiated lines to swift angular swing; the shimmering acoustic waltz “In Three for Two” elegantly pairs Juris and Anderson. And yet another pleasure: hearing Juris, again on acoustic, join his session mates in orchestrating a pop hit as simple (on first listen) as Lennon and McCartney’s “Julia” without ever obscuring its tuneful allure. ~ Mike Joyce https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/vic-juris-two-guitars-steeplechase/

Personnel: Vic Juris (guitar), Jay Anderson (bass), Adam Nussbaum (drums)

Two Guitars

Monday, August 12, 2019

Dave Stryker - Blue to the Bone III

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:41
Size: 167,9 MB
Art: Front

( 7:57)  1. Stan's Shuffle
( 8:31)  2. Complicity
( 5:21)  3. Crazy House
( 6:05)  4. If 6 Was 9
(11:09)  5. For Jack & T
(11:20)  6. Going Home
(10:01)  7. So Long Eric
(10:43)  8. Soulful Mr. Timmons
( 1:29)  9. Doin' the Bone

Dave Stryker’s Blue to the Bone Band, ongoing since ’96, features the guitarist with three other rhythm players and four horns. Established to showcase his blues side, it covers the jazzier realm of the blues as opposed to primitive, gutbucket territory. The horn section (alto saxophonist Steve Slagle, baritone saxophonist and chief arranger Bob Parsons, trumpeter Brian Lynch, and trombonist Clark Gayton) functions as an extension of Stryker’s guitar sound, and the rhythm section (pianist James Williams, bassist Anderson and drummer Tim Horner) keeps the blues feeling true underneath. Stryker’s “For Jack and T” salutes the late organist Jack McDuff and tenorman Stanley Turrentine, two of the guitarist’s former employers. “Doin’ the Bone” is a short, funky cut with Tower of Power-style horns. Slagle arranged Charles Mingus’ “So Long, Eric,” and Williams and Parsons arranged the pianist’s “Soulful Mr. Timmons,” in which the composer takes a stomping, most satisfying solo. There are solid solos from all hands throughout the album, with the lesser-known Gayton taking honors here and there with his triphammer tonguing. Based on the personnel and the feeling of these performances, I’d like to catch this group live. ~ By Owen Cordle https://jazztimes.com/archives/dave-stryker-blue-to-the-bone-iii/

Personnel: Alto Saxophone – Steve Slagle; Baritone Saxophone – Bob Parsons ; Bass – Jay Anderson; Drums – Tim Horner; Guitar, Liner Notes – Dave Stryker; Piano, Organ – James Williams ; Trombone – Clark Gayton; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Brian Lynch

Blue to the Bone III

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Dave Stryker - Blue To The Bone II

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:13
Size: 143,3 MB
Art: Front

( 4:27)  1. Rockin' in rhythm
( 1:32)  2. Goin' to New Orleans - introduction
( 8:07)  3. Goin' to new Orleans
( 5:43)  4. Sittin' on top of the world
(11:22)  5. 24 for Elvin
( 6:40)  6. Mystery street
( 5:18)  7. The squeeze
( 8:28)  8. Mood
(10:33)  9. Mug shot

Considering that forty-something guitarist Dave Stryker has made over a dozen albums under his own name, leads a sharp quartet with Steve Slagle, and is in constant demand as a sideman working in the past with Stanley Turrentine, Jack McDuff, Javon Jackson, and Kevin Mahogany, you'd think he'd be practically a household name. Unfortunately that's not the case, but his first Blue to the Bone project from a few years back did seem to attract some critical plaudits and bring into the circle some added new fans. And now that the second offering in this series has just made its debut here in America, one can only hope that the good vibes just keep building. As great as the first set was, it's without hesitation that I deem this new one a valiant leap forward. For the neophyte, the concept is really quite simple- get together a modest-sized horn section, bring a B-3 along, and write some charts that accent a "blue" point of view. But while the prior record leaned a bit more on the classic 12-bar blues form, this set offers up a colorful diversity in terms of song structure. Of course, Stryker can get down with his bad self, as he more than adequately proves on a cover of Howlin' Wolf's "Sittin' On the Top of the World." Somehow the spicy gumbo of the Crescent City proves to be a perfect adjunct to the blues in Stryker's mind, with both originals "Mystery Street" and "Goin' To New Orleans" spurred on by Adam Nussbaum's "second line" drumming and the guitarist's processed tone, akin to a slide-steel at times. 

His solo spot on the former makes potent use of distortion and note bending. Balanced by an Ellington gem and a Steve Slagle original, a few tunes that have been previously recorded get a facelift too, including "Mood" and "24 For Elvin," an extended form with a modal quality to it that does indeed suggest Elvin Jones' work with the classic John Coltrane quartet. Sharing the solo honors with Stryker and equally beguiling in the long run are trumpeter Brian Lynch, alto saxophonist Steve Slagle, pianist Bruce Barth, and drummer Adam Nussbaum. They, along with the charts and an elation that the blues almost paradoxically provide, make for an end product that is indeed greater than the sum of the parts. Now, here's waiting with baited breath for the release of Stryker's latest project inspired by Miles Davis' Bitches Brew period. Bring it on SteepleChase! 
~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/blue-to-the-bone-ii-dave-stryker-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Dave Stryker- guitar, Brian Lynch- trumpet, Steve Slagle- alto sax & flute, Clark Gayton- trombone, Bob Parsons- baritone saxophone, Bruce Barth- piano & organ, Jay Anderson- bass, Adam Nussbaum- drums

Blue To The Bone II