Showing posts with label Jeff Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Johnson. Show all posts

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.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Karrin Allyson - Some of That Sunshine

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:28
Size: 132,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Wish You Were Mine
(4:21)  2. Home
(4:31)  3. As Long as I Know You Love Me
(4:56)  4. Some of That Sunshine
(4:17)  5. Shake It Up
(4:32)  6. Just as Well
(4:59)  7. Time Is a Funny Thing
(4:35)  8. One of These Days
(4:03)  9. Nobody Said Love Was Easy
(5:37) 10. Happy Now
(4:30) 11. Right Here Right Now
(3:51) 12. You Don't Care
(3:02) 13. Big Discount

Throughout her fifteen albums, Karrin Allyson, five-time Grammy nominee in the Best Jazz Vocalist category, has demonstrated an uncanny ability to ‘get inside’ a lyric  to take over a song and reshape it into something magical. “Ever since her impressive debut (I Didn’t Know About You, Concord, 1992) Karrin Allyson has successfully pulled material from both the pop and jazz world and it all works well with her voluptuous huskiness and rhythmic sensibility.” ~ Roger Crane, The International Review of Music

Stephen Holden, in a NY TIMES concert review, praised Allyson as “one of the most grounded singers working today,” with an “exceptionally keen eye for the smart, semi-obscure pop or jazz number that speaks directly to the moment.” In his Wall Street Journal preview, writer Will Friedwald buzzed, “she sings with amazing subtlety.” And in his lead Jazztimes Magazine CD review, VOX critic Christopher Loudon said Allyson’s songs “shimmer with tender vibrancy.” Now, in a brand-new album to be released on 3 August 2018, Karrin steps forward commandingly in a new role as songwriter, revealing thirteen new songs in an astonishing range of styles and moods. Teaming up with the remarkable L.A. producer and recording artist Chris Caswell and her very talented current working band  Miro Sprague on piano, Jeff Johnson on bass, Rod Fleeman on guitar and Jerome Jennings on drums and featuring guest artists Regina Carter on violin and the magisterial Houston Person on tenor saxophone, she has produced an album full of unexpected delights, including a guest appearance from mega-bassist Lee Sklar. “It feels like coming home in a way,” says Allyson “As a young musician I was writing songs in a variety of styles, even before I discovered jazz. I loved the singer-songwriters of my youth and I followed their influence. Now, after years of performing all sorts of jazz and Brazilian and French music, I’m coming back to where I started.”

“These songs are quite varied in style very ‘Allyson-like’, I suppose you could say. I’ve always loved to mix things up. Take the title track “Wrap Up Some of that Sunshine” featuring violinist and MacArthur fellow Regina Carter that’s more of a traditional swing- standard. And then there are a few unabashedly romantic ballads like “Just As Well” featuring Houston, “You Don’t Care”, (lyrics by my Dad) and "Time is a Funny Thing”. I drop back more into my pop roots with songs like “As Long as I Know You Love Me”, "One of these Days”, "Happy Now”, and “Home"…and dig into the blues with “Right Here Right Now”, “Wish You Were Mine” and "Nobody Said Love was Easy”. I am acutely aware of the political scene and its challenges and so I penned a couple songs begging for change; "Big Discount" and "Shake it Up”. “Though I take every song I sing very personally, of course, there’s something extremely personal-and scary too, about singing your own stuff... the audience gets to know you even better  And I’m ready for that.” So, if you like soulful, sly, heartfelt, groovy songs with meaningful (and fun) lyrics here they are brand new, welcome and somehow beautifully familiar. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/karrinallyson2

Personnel:  Karrin Allyson, voice and piano, Rhodes;  Chris Caswell, Hammond B-3, accordion;  Miro Sprague;, acoustic piano and Rhodes;  Jeff Johnson, bass;  Jerome Jennings, drums.

Special Guests:  Lee Sklar featured on “One of These Days”;  Regina Carter (Some of That Sunshine, Time is a Funny Thing, Big Discount);  Houston Person (Right Here, Right Now, Just as Well, Nobody Said Love Was Easy).

Some of That Sunshine

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

Friday, December 23, 2016

Thomas Marriott - Constraints & Liberations

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:12
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

( 4:14)  1. Diagram
(10:46)  2. Up From Under
( 7:33)  3. Constraints and Liberations
( 6:56)  4. Waking Dream
( 9:35)  5. Early Riser
(10:43)  6. Clues
( 4:22)  7. Treadstone

Trumpeter Thomas Marriott keeps growing as an artist. He has released CDs at a healthy pace since 2005: an introduction for many perhaps unwary jazz fans to some warped country western flavor on Crazy: The Music of Willie Nelson (Origin Records, 2008); cranking an all-star quintet up in a modern mainstream mode on Flexicon (Origin Records, 2009); and letting it rip on a two-trumpet blow fest with fellow brass man Ray Vega on East-West Trumpet Summit (Origin Records, 2010). Constraints and Liberations ups his output to two releases in 2010. Spontaneity has always been a big part of Marriott's jazz game, but with Constraints and Liberations, it seems he has gone deeper into that mode. The set opens with his original "Diagram." A bright splendor of two-horn harmony introduces the tune with a teaming of the leader's open horn and Hans Teuber's haunting tenor saxophone, leading to a shift into brass/reed conversation, with Teuber telepathically finishing Marriott's opening statement. Here, and throughout the set, the rhythm team pianist Gary Versace; bassist Jeff Johnson, and drummer John Bishop maintains a low key tumult that keeps things on edge.

The sound of Constraints and Liberations is often moody and atmospheric, giving the impression of a soundtrack from a movie dealing with impending danger. Marriott is in excellent form, his tone by turns bright or dark, clean or murky, and sometimes anguished, always telling an eloquent story. Teuber's tenor has a distinctive sound, cool and hollow, and somehow diaphanous, like a saxophone played by a disconcerted ghost, while the versatile Versace who has contributed brilliantly to Maria Schneider's orchestra on accordion, and on organ, piano and accordion on numerous sideman dates including drummers John Hollenbeck and Matt Wilson, well as his own discs as leader slips into any accompanist/soloist task at hand, with a fluid sparkle on the title tune, or a quirky solo aside on "Diagram." "Waking Dream" opens with piano teardrops accompanied by a gorgeously introspective muted trumpet. Johnson's bass looms in and lies low, adding, with Bishop's whispering drums, a foundation to the abstraction. "Clues" introduces, in its inception, a late night, foreboding dark alley feeling, bass and drums lurking in the shadows, Marriott and Versace trying to shine a light. Thomas Marriott keeps moving the art forward. Constraints and Liberations may be his best so far. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/constraints-and-liberations-thomas-marriott-origin-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Thomas Marriott: trumpet;  Hans Teuber: tenor saxophone;  Gary Versace: piano;  Jeff Johnson: bass;  John Bishop: drums.

Constraints & Liberations

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Carrie Wicks - Maybe

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:25
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Ghost of a Perfect Flame
(6:50)  2. Small Day Tomorrow
(4:22)  3. Desolation Moon
(4:04)  4. It Could Happen to You
(3:23)  5. Maybe
(5:43)  6. Watercolor Rhyme
(6:11)  7. Afternoon
(4:20)  8. The Bottom of Your Heart
(5:23)  9. Dreamtime
(4:04) 10. Waltz Beyond
(4:48) 11. Solitude

Reaching deep into a space of quiet joy and beauty, tinged with bit of melancholy, Seattle vocalist Carrie Wicks presents a new set of original songs that complement lyrically and melodically the three accompanying classics, Bob Dorough's 'Small Day Tomorrow,' Van Heusen and Burke's 'It Could Happen To You,' and Ellington's 'Solitude. ' Featuring the same superb, simpatico trio as her prior two recordings, pianist Bill Anschell, Jeff Johnson on bass, and drummer Byron Vannoy provide a comfortable, warmly swinging environment for Wicks' lyrics to shine. '. . . a skilled vocalist, top-notch in her phrasing and intonation, but she also possesses an ineffable 'something extra' that's both compelling and engaging. . . Carrie Wicks proves herself a very convincing storyteller. ' - All About Jazz ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Maybe-Carrie-Wicks/dp/B013R4QHC0

Personnel: Carrie Wicks: vocals; Bill Anschell: piano; Jeff Johnson: bass; Byron Vannoy: Drums.

Maybe

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.