Showing posts with label Joshua Breakstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joshua Breakstone. Show all posts

Monday, April 23, 2018

Joshua Breakstone - A Jamais

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:21
Size: 131.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:49] 1. A Jamais
[5:50] 2. B's Way
[5:03] 3. Taken For Granted
[6:37] 4. Tomorrow's Hours
[7:06] 5. Raids On The Unspeakable
[6:01] 6. 1802
[4:01] 7. Chanson Des Cevennes
[5:04] 8. Arrivederci Moma
[6:47] 9. Sittin' On The Thing With Ming
[3:16] 10. On The Wall
[2:43] 11. Hallucinations

Joshua Breakstone (guitar), Louis Petrucciani (bass), Joel Allouche (drums).

Joshua Breakstone may well be the torch bearer for traditional jazz guitar that few have heard. While he has released some fourteen recordings in the past twenty years for a number of labels, his work on other people's recordings is sparse indeed. And that’s unfortunate because one of the ways that an artist gains exposure is through collaboration. Why Breakstone is so underutilized is a mystery, because he is a lyrical and understated player who comes from the same places, as Jim Hall, Wes Montgomery and, in particular, Grant Green. His new release, A Jamais , is as good a sampling of what he is about as one is apt to find. Deeply melodic and economical to the extreme, Breakstone rarely plays two notes when one will do, usually allowing his carefully chosen notes breathe luxuriously. His tone is so warm that it is akin to being wrapped in a comfortable blanket. And he has an innate sense of swing that, while occasionally firing up, is more apt to be expressed in a relaxed manner. On this record, which features largely his own compositions, Breakstone aims for cool jazz territory, with a penchant for melodious phrases that retain the essence of the material while, at the same time, expanding on them and carefully exploring where they might go. The term "considered" can often be detrimental when applied to music and, in particular, improvisation, but in the case of Breakstone it isn’t. Every phrase, every chord seems carefully deliberate; Breakstone is clearly not going for a stream-of-consciousness approach; but there remains a deep emotional impact. While he clearly chooses his notes meticulously, he never over-intellectualizes.

Supported by bassist Louis Petrucciani and drummer Joel Allouche, the session manages to be light without being lightweight. The trio swings hard on the title track yet remain always at ease. “B’s Way,” with its relaxed bop theme, demonstrates just how good the trio’s sense of time is, utilizing space liberally. “Taken for Granted,” an up-tempo blues with a theme built around repeated patterns, has Breakstone alternating between rapid-fire lines and phrases where notes seem to hang interminably, until he breaks the tension and picks up the pace again. The two solo pieces—“Chanson des Cevennes” and Bud Powell’s “Hallucinations”—may, however, be the most revealing pieces of the set. Lush and sensuous, with an expansive tone, Breakstone manages to say so much with so little.

A Jamais may not break new ground, but in its honesty, lack of ego, and purity of approach it is an album with much to recommend. Breakstone is a guitarist who deserves to reach a broader audience; but unless he gets out and mixes it up a bit he will, unfortunately, remain one of New York’s well-kept secrets. ~John Kelman

A Jamais mc
A Jamais zippy

Friday, January 13, 2017

Joshua Breakstone - The Music Of Bud Powell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:02
Size: 128.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:58] 1. Tempus Fugit
[6:29] 2. Una Noche Con Francis
[6:17] 3. Strictly Confidential
[4:20] 4. Elegy
[8:49] 5. Celia
[7:56] 6. Un Poco Loco
[4:30] 7. Sub City
[3:40] 8. Comin' Up
[6:30] 9. Time Waits
[3:30] 10. The Scene Changes

As Breakstone points out in his notes, Bud Powell is severely underrated as a composer. What credit he does get (and it is nowhere near enough) is as a soloist. A guitar-trio record wouldn't seem the ideal showcase for Bud's richly harmonized compositions, but the lines stand well on their own, and the setting of Un Poco Loco is most impressive.

Breakstone is a fluid and convincing soloist with a style perfectly suited to Bud's bop. His lines build logically and even at breakneck speed he's in command of his box. I like the way he paces himself, developing his ideas in a leisurely way even when they involve a long stream of eighth notes. I also like the way he refers back to the melodies and his penchant for sly, unobvious quotes (was that the "Harlem Nocturne" bridge in the middle of "Una Noche Con Francis"? Sure was.)

Keith Copeland proves his considerable worth as a big-eared drummer, and Earl Sauls has a great bass sound and understands the importance of staying out of the leader's way. The trio interplay is terrific, the guitar soloing top-notch, and the choice of material exemplary. How can you go wrong? ~Duck Baker

The Music Of Bud Powell                 

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Joshua Breakstone - 2nd Avenue

Size: 164,2 MB
Time: 70:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Guitar Jazz
Art: Front

01. Thingin' (9:30)
02. Home (8:43)
03. I'm An Old Cowhand (6:57)
04. I Wish I Knew (6:03)
05. Evergreenish (7:03)
06. The Lamp Is Low (5:20)
07. Hit It (9:20)
08. My Conception (8:38)
09. 2nd Ave/Blues For Imahori (9:10)

A touch of nostalgia as I glanced at the sleeve - "Joshua Breakstone uses Ernie Ball strings exclusively". If I'd had a lousy dime for every set of Ernie Ball Super Slinky's I'd sold during my 30 year incarceration in Newcastle's Central Arcade I'd be worth a bob or two (well maybe one bob).
I don't suppose Joshua Breakstone ever bought any Super Slinkys from me, him being 3000 miles away, which is a pity because, if he had done, I'd have been able to claim to have had some involvement in one of the most listenable guitar albums I've heard since Charlie Christian showed the way.
This is guitar playing as cool as Stan on tenor or Chet on trumpet, music that makes you want to lay back and luxuriate in the sounds with maybe a G & T to hand.
We've also got a cello in the mix which is great. I've long advocated the cello - not as a double bass substitute - but as a frontline horn which is what we get here.
Bass players such as Harry Babasin, Oscar Pettiford and Sam Jones have dabbled with cello so it is far from being a first. Nevertheless, it's a worthy successor to these earlier efforts although I'd have preferred more arco and less pizzicato (I find I made a similar comment in my review of their previous album - With the Wind and the Rain) - still, I doubt if the boppy heads would have been as clean if the instrument had been bowed so what do I know!
The five tracks with cello are Thingin' (Konitz); Home (Cannonball); I'm an Old Cowhand (Mercer); Evergreenish (Dexter) and Hit It by bassist Atkinson..
The trio numbers are I Wish I Knew (Harry Warren/Mack Gordon); The Lamp is Low (Ravel and others); My Conception (Sonny Clark) and a Breakstone original 2nd Ave: Blues For Imahori.
Breakstone describes the quartet as A Chamber Jazz Foursome and I see no reason to quibble although I would have referred to it as The Chamber Jazz Foursome!
Recommended!

2nd Avenue

Monday, May 26, 2014

Joshua Breakstone - With The Wind And The Rain

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:05
Size: 149.0 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[6:59] 1. Some Kinda Mean
[6:17] 2. I Told You So
[9:11] 3. Short Story
[7:37] 4. Be Anything
[6:51] 5. La Verne Walk
[6:15] 6. La Villa
[8:21] 7. The Very Thought Of You
[7:53] 8. Visitation
[5:37] 9. With The Wind And The Rain In Your Hair

Prolific recording artist Joshua Breakstone delivers his twentieth album as leader tipping his hat to a major influence in his professional life, the late Japanese promoter and bassist Mitsuru Nishiyama, to whom With the Wind and the Rain, is dedicated. A guitarist of note with at least fifty tours of Japan under his belt, his experience performing in a format where the late bassist played the cello in an essentially expanded rhythm section, left Breakstone with a desire to document the sound and this effort is the result. To accomplish this, the leader performs with a standard guitar-trio and adds veteran bassist/cellist Mike Richmond to the mix making for a 14-string (cello, bass, and guitar) rhythm section and quartet on four of the nine-repertoire set. ~Edward Blanco

With The Wind And The Rain