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

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Mark Weinstein - Con Alma

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:08
Size: 140.0 MB
Styles: Flute jazz, Afro-Cuban jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[6:57] 1. Santi's Africaleidoscope
[4:05] 2. Broadway Local
[5:14] 3. Con Alma
[6:28] 4. Crescent
[5:58] 5. Fee Fi Fo Fum
[3:10] 6. Evidence
[6:10] 7. La Coneja Loca
[2:48] 8. Gotcha
[8:50] 9. Soul-Leo
[5:50] 10. Monte Adentro
[5:33] 11. Stella By Starlight

Mark Weinstein and his San Francisco Bay area-based Latin jazz quintet perform bop-oriented Afro-Cuban jazz, music that is not all that much different than the Latin jazz of the '50s and '60s. Weinstein has an attractive sound and a fluent style on flute, pianist Mark Levine gets nearly as much solo space as the leader, and the rhythm section keeps the music swinging, grooving, and danceable. Weinstein, whether jamming on the chord changes of "Giant Steps" ("Broadway Local"), playing tunes by Wayne Shorter or Thelonious Monk, or Latinizing obscurities, is in top form throughout. Fans of Cal Tjader (despite the lack of vibes), 1960s Herbie Mann, and traditional Latin jazz will enjoy this likable set. ~Scott Yanow

Con Alma

Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Mark Weinstein & Omar Sosa - Tales From The Earth

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:34
Size: 157,9 MB
Art: Front

(1:22)  1. Sunrise
(5:52)  2. Invocation
(4:46)  3. Walking Song
(2:36)  4. Tea Break
(3:32)  5. Forest Journey
(5:57)  6. River Crossing
(4:39)  7. Children At Play
(7:08)  8. Men's Talk
(5:21)  9. Flirtation
(1:39) 10. Praise
(4:30) 11. Spirit Messenger
(5:52) 12. Celebration
(4:02) 13. Elders Speak
(5:13) 14. Gratitude

Tales from the Earth by flutist, Mark Weinstein and pianist/vibraphonist, Omar Sosa, is one of the most extraordinary musical expeditions in a long time. The need for a subtext is not necessary; the extraordinary depth and ethereal beauty of the music would suffice. Nevertheless, once that subtext becomes evident, then the music touches parts of the body that much music might not. There is really no beginning and no end; this musical continuum needs only be entered with eyes wide shut and ears open; listening with the heart, soul, and every pore of the being is essential. Perhaps it is the result of a childhood epiphany, which Weinstein recalled years later. Like epic music that is worshipful and healing, profoundly hypnotic as an interminable dance, it simply skips and rushes, cartwheels and catapults. The notes and phrases are alive and breathe as they entwine into each other like gilded braid. One strain, an idea, and then the voice of another world of music unfolding almost like an ocean tumbling in harness. Suddenly drums and kalimbas sing and, with a rumble and thud, quaking of the earth begins. Sadness flows as one of the darkest moments of human history is relived; then, not joy, but resignation and peace. Such primeval beauty in melody, harmonic and utterly exquisite polyrhythms, slicing through voices that meander in more melodic counterpoint.

Weinstein probably imagined something like this all his life, however it is pure chance that brought the flutist together with guitarist extraordinaire, Jean-Paul Bourelly and piano wizard Sosa. The occasion was the Black Atlantic/Congo Square series that Bourelly was organizing in Berlin in 2004. For Weinstein, the opportunity to play with these musicians, as well as bassist Yola Wesolowska and balaphon master Aly Keita, was the lure. Then the chilling subtext comes into play the venue for the recording was the same building that was once the Ministry of Information during the Nazi era. For Weinstein the project now must have been one by Divine design and the music reflects just that; none of the music was written. The music appears to have been dictated by a Divine muse and attendant spirits. Nothing else can explain the mesmerizing set that simply flows from track to track. The heavenly suite opens with a brilliant "Sunrise" dawn aglow and alive with kalimba and brass percussion. The stage for the exorcism of pain is set by contrapuntal voices led by Aho Luc Nicaise, and the musical healing begins. In this 14-part suite, unwritten yet unfolding with inspired beauty through each of its sections as it tracks the journey of the group in a tale reminiscent of the ancient Legend of Gilgamesh the musical expedition makes its "Forest Journey" and "River Crossing." Then "Praise" and the "Spirit Messenger," who helps them through the "Celebration" of lives lived and pain left behind. Santeria and catharsis for Mark Weinstein and the whole Human Diaspora as the extraordinary improvised musical experience closes appropriately with "Gratitude." ~ Raul D´Gama Rose https://www.allaboutjazz.com/tales-from-the-earth-mark-weinstein-ota-records-review-by-raul-dgama-rose.php
 
Personnel: Mark Weinstein: concert alto and bass flutes; Omar Sosa: vibraphone, marimba, piano, percussion; Aly Keita: balafon; Jean Paul Bourelly: guitar; Stanislou Michalak: bass; Marque Gilmore: drums; Aho Luc Nicaise: lead vocals, percussion; Mathias Agbokou: vocals, percussion.

Tales From The Earth

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Eddie Palmieri & Cal Tjader - Bamboleate

Styles: Latin Jazz, Salsa, World Fusion
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:21
Size: 76,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:25)  1. Bamboleate
(2:30)  2. We've Loved Before
(5:39)  3. Resemblance
(5:23)  4. Mi Montuno
(3:53)  5. Samba do Sueno
(3:48)  6. Guajira Candela
(5:38)  7. Pancho's Seis por Ocho
(3:02)  8. Come and Get It

The second album pairing Palmieri and Tjader, Bamboleate moves beyond El Sonido Nuevo into the respective territories of each artist. "Bamboleate" is the Latin cooker ones expects from Palmieri but didn't find on the more subdued El Sonido Nuevo. "Semejanza" is an equally affecting jazz lilt led by Tjader. Framed by a melody that could have come straight off the Vince Guaraldi Trio's Charlie Brown Christmas album, it has an equally indelible, locomotive rhythm. Tjader's samba, "Samba de Los Suenho," is a welcome departure from the relative rigidity of El Sonido Nuevo. Also vital are the vocal tracks (Palmieri's), but the blatant channel-switching in "Guajira Candela" is an abuse of stereo separation. "Pancho's Seis por Ocho" is typical of the deep, midtempo Afro rhythm of Bamboleate and El Sonido Nuevo. 

Trombonist Mark Weinstein contributes the closing "Ven y Recibelo (Come an' Get It)," a mod/soul cooker on par with the best of Verve all-stars Tjader, Ogerman, Winding, and Schifrin. Finally, the album was reissued in 1977 as Tico LPS-88806 and distributed by Fania. The reissue at least features illustrations of Tjader and Palmieri by Jose Vargas. 
~ Tony Wilds https://www.allmusic.com/album/bambol%C3%A9ate-mw0000273328

Personnel:  Eddie Palmieri - piano, writer; Cal Tjader - vibraphone, writer;  Barry Rogers - trombone;  Mark Weinstein - trombone, writer; George Castro - flute; Bobby Rodríguez - bass;  Kako - timbales;  Manny Oquendo - percussion; Tommy López - conga;   Ismael Quintana - chorus; Willie Torres - chorus

Bamboleate

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Mark Weinstein - Jazz Brasil

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:27
Size: 131,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:16)  1. I Mean You
(6:20)  2. Triste
(6:04)  3. Nefertiti
(7:00)  4. Brazil
(5:44)  5. Ruby My Dear
(6:06)  6. Sambosco
(7:34)  7. Dawn's Early Light
(4:37)  8. Memphis Underground
(4:33)  9. If You Never Come To Me
(4:08) 10. Isotope

Mark Weinstein has quietly established himself as one of the most wildly inventive flutists in modern memory. He is also one of the finest virtuoso players in the entire spectrum of 20th and 21st century music. His only rivals may well be the late Eric Dolphy, the Canadians, Jane Bunnett and Bill McBirnie, and, of course, the great James Galway. Weinstein is radically different from Dolphy, who imparted a speech-like quality to his flute, inspiring the mighty John Coltrane in the bargain and radically expanding the vocabulary of that instrument. Weinstein, on the other hand prefers to stay within the confines of the almost classical language of the instrument, but like the others mentioned, makes soaring leaps and swoops from the stratosphere and into the oceanic depths of music, bringing a renewed elasticity to the alto and bass flutes, as well as the concert flute (although his astounding album, Tales from the Earth (Ota Records, 2009), with pianist Omar Sosa, might suggest that he now resides closer to Dolphy in the extremely creative improvisations).

Weinstein has also been steady in his output in recent years, with four albums in as many years, but more than quantity, the consistency of his form has been quite impressive. Jazz Brasil, however, must surely rank as one of his finest albums to date. It is radically different from his album with Omar Sosa; more like the earlier Jazzheads album, Lua e Sol (2008), which also paid tribute to the Brazilian milieu. Jazz Brasil is not as thematically connected as the former Brazilian album, featuring a greater sense of urgency and seeking to unite two great traditions, by melding the jazz swing of delight with the shuffle of samba. His reading Ary Barroso's classic, "Brazil," is a case in point. Rather than play this chart like wave upon wave of thundering rhythm (as Maria Beth once did, for instance), Weinstein drops the song into a trance-like Bossa Nova groove, with master bassist Nilson Matta chugging along with a steady shuffle and swing. Likewise, his interpretations of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Triste" and "If You Ever Came to Me" are magnificently linear re-imaginings of Brazilian standards, crafted, no doubt, with Matta in tow. The bassist had a leading hand in this album. His joyous playing also raises the level of excitement exponentially. Matta is positively buoyant on his own compositions, employing great leaps, covering multiple octaves on the bass with unbridled technical virtuosity. His double stops on "Brazil" are breathtaking. Pianist Kenny Barron must surely be an inspired choice for this musical journey. The ingenuity of this decision is borne out on the set's two Thelonious Monk charts, "I Mean You" and "Ruby My Dear." While Weinstein skips and pirouettes his way through the songs, Barron plays perfect foil, recreating the charts in singular fashion. Drummer Marcello Pelliteri not only completes the quartet, but leaves an indelible mark on this unforgettable album. ~ Raul d'Gama Rose https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-brasil-mark-weinstein-jazzheads-review-by-raul-dgama-rose.php
 
Personnel: Mark Weinstein: concert flute, alto flute, bass flute; Kenny Barron: piano; Nilson Matta: bass; Marcello Pelliteri: drums, percussion.

Jazz Brasil

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Mark Weinstein - In Jerusalem

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:29
Size: 108,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:26)  1. Berditchever Nigun
(4:40)  2. Repozarás
(6:27)  3. Mizmor L' David
(4:40)  4. Yaakov U' Malka
(8:44)  5. Adayin Chashoock
(3:42)  6. Ozidanie
(4:08)  7. Meir's Nigun
(6:39)  8. Breslov Nigun

Flutist Mark Weinstein has made a career of fusing world music elements with jazzy sensibilities with finesse and style. On In Jerusalem he tackles the rich Hasidic heritage of song. He and his band interpret both secular and religious tunes as well as original compositions with delightful spontaneity and ethereal diapason. The Sabbath hymn "Repozaras" opens with Weinstein's flute dancing over bassist Gilad Abro's oud like strums and dual thumping gallop of drummer Haim Peskoff and percussionist Gilad Dobrecky. Weinstein embellishes the melodic theme with lyricism and effervescence while Dobrecky lays down infectious rhythms. The resulting ambience is uplifting and celebratory. Dobrecky engages Haim Peskoff in a thunderous and thrilling duet on the blues-flavored take of "Mizmor L'David." Guitarist Steve Peskoff takes center stage with a complex, pensive improvisation that simmers with reserved passion. Weinstein deftly expands on the song's motifs with a fluid and soulful approach all the while preserving its mystical essence.

The Russian dance "Ozidanie" is performed gently like a lullaby as Weinstein's mellifluous lines float within a hypnotic atmosphere. Dobrecky's instruments chime and cascade like rainfall while Haim Peskoff spellbinding solo complements Abro's deeply sonorous and heady reverberations. Abro demonstrates breathtaking agility as he constructs a complex extemporization with surefootedness and alacrity on Steve Peskoff's cinematic "Adayin Chashoock." Weinstein showcases his characteristic charm and elegance as his warm, thick phrases undulate over the rumbling, rattling refrains. Peskoff's unhurried and expressive string work builds a captivating monologue that draws upon Middle Eastern harmonies and Western Classical structural rigor. The engaging album concludes on a high note with the sublime "Breslov Nigun." Rolling thuds and primal beats set a dramatic ambience that Weinstein's muscular, yearning flute enhances. 

Steve Peskoff's thick resonant chords add a serene and solemn mood. An intriguing group conversation gives way to Abro's poetic and angular monologue. Weinstein's expectant and evocative tones close the piece with nocturnesque melancholy. ~ Hrayr Attarian  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/in-jerusalem-mark-weinstein-zoho-music-review-by-hrayr-attarian.php
 
Personnel: Mark Weinstein: concert, alto and bass flutes; Steve Peskoff: guitar; Gilad Abro: bass; Haim Peskoff: drums; Gilad Dobrecky: percussion.

In Jerusalem

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Mark Weinstein - Latin Jazz Underground

Styles: Flute Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:51
Size: 128,1 MB
Art: Front

(8:04)  1. Gregorio's Mood
(6:21)  2. Open or Close
(8:58)  3. Dance of the Tripedal
(7:40)  4. For Emilio
(7:59)  5. Tete's Blues
(5:52)  6. Nature Boy
(5:17)  7. Mellifluous Cacophony
(5:36)  8. Mark's Last Tune

Has flautist Mark Weinstein run out of ideas on how to merge various dialects of Latin jazz with other musical tongues? The answer is a resounding "no." Latin Jazz Underground finds Weinstein saluting the loft jazz scene of the '70s by tackling the work of jazz iconoclasts-turned-icons pianist Andrew Hill and saxophonists Ornette Coleman and Sam Rivers and like minded originals. That concept, in and of itself, doesn't distinguish this project, as plenty of people have traveled down those thorny paths, so the twist comes with the infusion of Afro-Cuban ideals. Such a marriage is a risky union, but one that ultimately works here. There's really no better person to attempt such a unique hybrid, as Weinstein is an expert at conflating Latin sounds and other styles. He was also around to observe and participate in the loft scene, working with trumpeter Bill Dixon when trombone, not flute, was his instrument of choice. Weinstein deserves the credit for realizing this project and coming up with the Afro-Cuban angle in the first place, but the initial idea to look back to the loft scene came from pianist Aruan Ortiz. He previously worked with Weinstein on one of the flautist's strongest releases El Cumbanchero (Jazzheads, 2011) and he does a killer job on this album.

Together, Weinstein and Ortiz have managed to do the near impossible: they've created common ground for rhythmically scintillating sounds and uncertain tones to walk hand-in-hand over. These two men prove to be expert bridge-builders, but they don't do all the heavy lifting. A special sort of rhythm section is required for a project that's so focused on a tight-loose duality. Here, it comes in the form of percussionist Roman Diaz , a player who's as happy upholding tradition as he is mutating it, drummer Gerald Cleaver, renowned for his ability to work both sides of the free-focused fence, and bassist Rahsaan Carter, an open-minded thinker who comfortably volleys between poles and ideas throughout. Latin Jazz Underground opens with Weinstein and Ortiz locked together on an angular head, introducing the concept of the day on Ortiz's "Gregorio's Mood." As the piece plays out, the expected unexpected arrives. Strict time evaporates and everybody is invested in the moment. Percussive underpinnings serve the music once things get back on track, but risk still runs through the piece until the very end. The modus operandi for the date is firmly established on this one.

The structure-meets-freedom aesthetic is deepened and broadened on Coleman's "Open Or Close," a stormier work complete with chanting. Ortiz gets a chance to please with some pummel-and-pounce pianisms, entering the arena as a gladiator of the keys. "Dance Of The Tripedal," the first of two Rivers pieces on the program, is set in motion by Carter's bass riff. The relationship between Weinstein's flute solo and Carter's bass line(s) comes into focus here, as Ortiz leaves a bit more space for this sonic meeting to take place. The pianist later joins Cleaver and Diaz, as all three carry out a rumble-versus-groove game below. As the program continues, Weinstein turns to his bass flute, serving as musical shaman on Hill's "For Emilio." A sense of impending danger informs Ortiz's "Tete's Blues," which is grounded by a slow-and-steady, back-and-forth bass line. Diaz's jittery clave underscores the journey while Cleaver simultaneously creates and breaks things up, allowing for Weinstein and Ortiz to do their respective thing(s) on top. "Nature Boy" finds Weinstein turning to his alto flute. The performance is loyal to a point, but a slight muddying of the harmonic waters helps to keep things interesting.

While this piece is far calmer than most of the other music, the murky, out-of-focus quality that surrounds the melody is in keeping with the general tone of the album. Rivers' "Mellifluous Cacophony" is tough to grab hold of at first, but things start to really gel when Ortiz, Carter and Cleaver interact. Cleaver-born chaos is met with a degree of calm from Weinstein and Carter on "Mark's Last Tune," which closes out the album. That encounter leads to a drum-and-percussion stampede which, in turn, leads to one of the most simple and tuneful episodes on the album. Praising the music that Weinstein makes here is easy, but his most admirable quality goes beyond music and art. He's a man who never stops growing and trying different things. In that respect, he's set an example that everybody could stand to learn from. ~ Dan Bilawsky  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/mark-weinstein-latin-jazz-underground-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Mark Weinstein, concert flute, alto flute, bass flute; Aruan Ortiz: piano; Rahshaan Carter: bass; Gerald Cleaver: drums; Roman Diaz: percussion.

Latin Jazz Underground