Showing posts with label Mark Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Lewis. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Mark Lewis - Of Hip Do I Sing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:44
Size: 166.5 MB
Styles: Modern creative jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:13] 1. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
[9:25] 2. Nature Boy
[3:50] 3. Sunlight Shines In
[5:37] 4. Going Away
[4:20] 5. Of Hip Do I Sing
[8:57] 6. Reverence
[3:51] 7. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
[2:50] 8. Love Doesn't Lie
[5:10] 9. Common Denominator
[5:22] 10. I Remember You
[6:19] 11. Song For Mom
[5:20] 12. The Ermitage
[2:01] 13. Haiku
[4:21] 14. What James Said

Mark Lewis is master of the alto sax, baritone sax, flute and piano; author of approximately 1,700 compositions; and has recorded and produced more than twenty albums on various labels. A well-traveled saxophonist and flutist, he’s been a part of jazz scenes from Seattle and San Francisco to Rotterdam and Paris. Rotterdam, the Netherlands was Mark's home base for many years. He toured and played in the better clubs throughout Europe, and taught jazz theory and improvised music classes in several music conservatories. Mark lived and performed for several years in San Francisco and Victoria, BC as well. Jazz musicians Mark has performed and recorded with include pianists George Cables, Willem Kühne, Mark Levine, Overton Berry and Ted Gioia; drummers Victor Lewis, Candy Finch, Frans van Grinsven and Eddie Moore; bassists James Long, Hein van de Geyn, David Friesen, Larry Grenadier and Chuck Metcalf; saxophonists Noah Howard and Art Foxall; trumpet player Randy Brecker; and vibraphonists Bobby Hutcherson and Lodewijk Bouwens. Mark often subbed for Stan Getz and John Handy during his time in San Francisco.

Of Hip Do I Sing mc
Of Hip Do I Sing zippy

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Mark Lewis - Live and Well

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:33
Size: 114,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:17)  1. I Remember You
(6:12)  2. My Funny Valentine
(5:22)  3. The Day Has Come
(4:20)  4. Solar
(6:09)  5. Misty
(4:41)  6. Lullaby of Birdland
(7:58)  7. Stella by Starlight
(6:14)  8. What is This Thing Called Love
(2:15)  9. Goodbye Pauly (Dedicated to Paul Moen)

Music is a way of life for Mark Lewis. As an instrumentalist, composer, producer, engineer, and teacher, he has earned the reputation of being one of the most dynamic and innovative forces in music today. Mark was exposed to music at an early age. On one side, his grandmother, Elaine Lewis, was a concert pianist while on the other, his grandfather, Ray Street, played saxophone. As a child Mark played on his grandfather's C melody sax, and at the age of ten was given his uncle's old alto to begin his formal musical education. Influenced by his parents' extensive record collection, which included artists like Count Basie, Lester Young, Art Tatum, and Duke Ellington, Mark's playing was soon highly regarded in the school jazz and concert ensembles. His first group was formed at age 14 to play at dances and local sporting events. At South Kitsap High School, Mark played lead alto in the stage band, sang in concert and jazz choirs, played alto clarinet in the concert band, and performed music in school plays. He worked with his own groups professionally while attending Western Washington University and The Cornish Institute of Allied Arts. Some of his most noted instructors included Dr. Edwin La Bounty, Gary Peacock, and Americole Biasini.  Upon moving to Seattle, not far from his birthplace of Tacoma, Mark hooked up with great players like Candy Finch, Art Foxall, Bea Smith, Dee Daniels, and Buddy Catlet to become a regular feature in Norm Bobrow's "Jazz at the Cirque." But even though he was becoming successful in the Seattle area, Mark felt the need to broaden his horizons. Following the advice of Dizzy Gillespie's veteran drummer, Finch, he left Seattle in 1978 with a one-way ticket to Amsterdam, an alto saxophone, and 500 dollars in his pocket.

Rotterdam became Mark’s home base for many years. He toured and played in most of the better clubs throughout Europe with great success, and with some of the finest musicians in Europe. His music is so diverse that in Holland he used three different groups: The Mark Lewis Quartet with Willem Kühne, James Long, and Frans van Grinsven; for neo-bop and experimental works, the Mark Lewis Trio featuring Carlo de Wijs (an organ trio); and for music based on traditional ethnic rhythms, the Mark Lewis International Quintet, featuring musicians from India, Holland, Africa, and South America.  His record company, Audio Daddio, recorded several albums in Rotterdam and Seattle. Artists recorded on the Audio Daddio label include Art Foxall, Vonne Griffin, Al Hood, Art Lande, and David Friesen. Mark frequently traveled back and forth between Europe and the US, recording and promoting Audio Daddio albums, and performing along the way. The last European Audio Daddio recording was “The Rotterdam Session” featuring legendary jazz drummer Philly Joe Jones and tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan. It was the last album Philly Joe Jones recorded before he died. Mark arranged several European tours for American musicians and American tours for Dutch musicians. He worked as a commercial studio musician for Dutch radio and television, and produced an annual Audio Daddio New Music Festival in Rotterdam. He taught improvised music and jazz theory classes at several music conservatories in Holland.

Mark returned to North America and played up and down the West Coast for a year until he was “discovered” by musician/author Ted Gioia. Mark was asked to audition for a record deal in the San Francisco area. At the end of the audition he found out that he was playing for the great tenor saxophone master Stan Getz, who loved his playing. His first album with this record label, “In The Spirit,” reached into the top 40 on the Billboard Jazz Charts and sold over 900,000 copies. During his time in the Bay Area, Mark recorded and/or performed with many top jazz musicians such as pianists Mark Levine and Ted Gioia, vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson, trumpet player Randy Brecker, and drummer Eddie Moore. He frequently subbed for saxophonists Stan Getz and John Handy. He performed at jazz festivals and opened for Carmen McRae at the Palo Alto Jazz Festival. He was called back to Seattle to perform at Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley. Mark also lived for a year and a half in Victoria, British Columbia. His music was very well received throughout British Columbia. He was a fixture at Herman’s Jazz Club in Victoria, and he played for the inauguration of Michael Harcourt, former Premier of British Columbia. As a musician and composer, Mark’s music is filled with sensitivity and change. The musicians involved with his work understand that the music he shares with them represents his life. This can be felt in the way the members of the groups interact to perform concerts that are both intelligent and exciting. Musical technique moves from simplicity to complexity and back again creating textures influenced by bop, blues, classical, and ethnic music. It is music of the moment.

Although Mark performed predominantly original music in Europe, he is also master of a vast repertoire of jazz standards, as well as popular music of the last 50 years. As a teacher, Lewis has helped many people discover their musical potential. He began giving improvised music workshops in 1981 when his bass player, Hein van de Geijn, recommended him to an organization in Nijmegen. Mark now teaches privately in Bremerton, WA, where he lives to be near family. Mark's teaching begins with the physical properties of sound and the ways in which music has developed from them. It is based on understanding and unifying melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic concepts in order to realize music's intention. He shows that through being sensitive to these concepts and developing the needed technique, one’s essence can pass through music more easily. He places much emphasis on listening and being aware of the moment. Mark has to his credit more than twenty album productions, over 1000 compositions, and his own record company and studio. His most recent CD, “Worlds Apart,” is a collection of original compositions and improvisations combining Mark’s soulful alto sax and flute with his own keyboard accompaniment. Mark Lewis is dedicated to creating positive human interaction through the unique music he composes, performs, and records. His standards are high and he is considered by many to be one of improvised music's most important artists. https://www.cdbaby.com/cd/marklewis1

Personnel:  Mark Lewis - Alto Sax;  Bud Schultz – Piano;  Ted Enderle - Acoustic Bass

Live and Well

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Mark Lewis - New York Session

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:42
Size: 150.4 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[7:35] 1. Koan
[4:59] 2. Child's Play
[5:47] 3. Dl Blues
[6:06] 4. Boberto's Magical World
[6:57] 5. Connie
[7:20] 6. Sierra Leone
[4:05] 7. Up To It
[5:29] 8. Not As Beautiful As You
[5:47] 9. Summer Is Over
[6:18] 10. The Lydian Express
[5:13] 11. Roll 'em Joe

As well-traveled and widely recorded as alto saxophonist Mark Lewis has been over the past four decades, his new CD "The New York Session" is likely to be the album that helps rectify his current under-the-radar reputation. Recorded last year in Brooklyn with a world-class rhythm section—pianist George Cables, bassist Essiet Essiet, and drummer Victor Lewis—the new disc was released by Lewis’s Audio Daddio label on January 27. It’s the work of an artist clearly reveling in the company of fellow masters making the most of his tasty compositions.

“There’s so much to savor and admire here,” writes critic Ted Gioia, a self-professed Mark Lewis fan who contributed the CD booklet notes. “Lewis’s musicality, his inventiveness, his humor, his ability to immerse himself in the soundscape of the performance with total emotional commitment—these all stand out here in track after track.”

Based in Bremerton, a small city west of Seattle on the Puget Sound where he returned to be close to his family, Lewis maintains a busy schedule that includes teaching private students and college clinics. He continues to expand his daunting book of compositions, which number over 1,700. Though he’s recorded more than 20 albums, only a fraction of his compositions have been documented on record, another reason why "The New York Session" is a particularly important release. The discovery of a master improviser is always thrilling, but finding a player/composer at the peak of his powers is a rare occurrence indeed. Though fully aware of his accomplishments, Lewis sees himself as part of a modern jazz continuum. “I try to approach each composition, each performance, with knowledge and technique from studying the masters who came before and also the innocence of a child,” he says. “I hope it keeps the music authentic and genuine.”

New York Session