Showing posts with label Matthias Lupri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthias Lupri. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Matthias Lupri - Transition Sonic

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:40
Size: 101,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:23)  1. Sonic Prelude
(7:58)  2. Sonic
(6:43)  3. Middle Zone
(6:21)  4. The Day After
(5:17)  5. Prairie
(1:21)  6. Intro
(7:15)  7. Earlier Years
(6:20)  8. Sonic Reprise

Vibraphonist Matthias Lupri has always captured the essence of straight-ahead jazz at its best. He provides a groove over which his bands improvise in the classic tradition. Echoes of Gary Burton, Bobby Hutcherson, and Milt Jackson abound. From this modern jazz historical foundation, however, he's always felt free to explore. With his latest release, Lupri retains the traditional bebop spirit that has given us immeasurable pleasure for more than half a century, but brings it all to us from the perspective of original compositions. From eerie and dramatic romps to free and playful cavorts in the park, his suite-like images allow the music to grow. The mainstream has indeed become modern, as the vibraphonist and his stellar ensemble find new ways to express their ideas. Electronic trumpet echoes and wide guitar reverberations fit in nicely between pages and pages of familiar-sounding soundscapes. The added features are used sparingly, and serve to punctuate the ensemble's original thematic material.  The vibraphone's timbre blends well with just about any instrumental combination. Here, Mark Turner, Nate Radley and Cuong Vu ensure that Lupri's instrumental voice fits the ensemble sound like a hand in a glove. Their subdued tones all blend together as one emotional vote for quality in the sounds that we experience every day. Vu's mellow trumpet, Turner's robust saxophone, and Radley's fluid guitar fit well with Lupri's rain shower of tonal colorations. Together they've created a superb sound and a highly recommended album. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/transition-sonic-matthias-lupri-summit-records-review-by-jim-santella.php

Personnel: Matthias Lupri- vibraphone; Mark Turner- tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone; Cuong Vu- trumpet; Nate Radley- guitar; Thomson Kneeland- acoustic bass; Jordan Perlson- drums.

Transition Sonic

Monday, April 24, 2017

Matthias Lupri Group - Metalix

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:52
Size: 164.5 MB
Styles: Modern jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[1:34] 1. Metalix Iv Prelude
[7:52] 2. Wondering & Wandering
[7:46] 3. (Another) Lost Creek
[1:32] 4. Still
[6:38] 5. (Still) Lingering
[7:17] 6. Glass Stairs
[2:24] 7. Metalix
[1:39] 8. Metalix Abstract
[8:29] 9. Dream Nocturne
[3:37] 10. Ghost Clusters
[1:02] 11. Lonely Interlude
[4:56] 12. Flowers For Mary Jane
[1:28] 13. Td Vibe Intro
[9:44] 14. Time Design
[3:35] 15. Wondering & Wandering Reprise
[2:13] 16. Metalix Deja Vu

Matthias Lupri: vibraphone, electronics; Myron Walden: alto and soprano saxophones, bass clarinet; Donny McCaslin: tenor and soprano saxophones, alto flute; Nate Radley: guitar, electronics; Thomas Kneeland: acoustic bass, electronics; Jordan Person: drums, percussion.

While Same Time Twice (Summit, 2002) found vibraphonist Matthias Lupri emerging as a noteworthy contemporary jazz composer, Transition Sonic (Summit, 2004) represented a significant compositional leap. Lupri fashioned a suite of pieces that, while generally unrelated thematically, ultimately created a longer, more complex narrative whose whole was greater than the sum of its parts. With Metalix Lupri continues honing that process.

This album bears some comparison to Pat Metheny Group's The Way Up (Nonesuch, 2005). Not to say that the two records are stylistically the same—they're not. Nor, to be honest, is Lupri as advanced a writer, possessing the same level of orchestral skill as Metheny and his long-time partner, Lyle Mays. The Way Up centers on some specific motifs that pop up in various ways throughout its 68-minute duration. The sixteen pieces on Metalix, while sonically linked, are more discrete. Still, the four idiosyncratic "Matalix tracks are loosely related and the upbeat "Wondering & Wandering makes an appearance at both ends, giving the recording a distinct arc and sense of emotional completeness. Like Metheny and Mays, Lupri often favours irregular meters and shifting bar lines, even as he couches them in melodies so engaging that any complexities are only noticeable on deeper analysis. Metheny Group records, while never short on captivating solos, weigh more heavily on the compositional side of the equation. Lupri, on the other hand, makes great use of the orchestral possibilities of his sextet but clearly favours the improvisational side.

On Metalix Lupri features two rising stars of the New York scene—saxophonists Myron Walden and Donny McCaslin—along with three lesser-known players who have worked with Lupri over the past few years—guitarist Nate Radley, bassist Thomas Kneeland and drummer Jordan Person. Everyone solos with total conviction, and while Radley leans perhaps a tad heavily on an approach that resembles Metheny filtered through Kurt Rosenwinkel, his playing has grown considerably since Transition Sonic and continues to demonstrate real promise. Lupri, too, continues to grow as an improviser. He blends innate lyricism with a remarkable textural sensibility. He cites Gary Burton as a strong influence, and it's no surprise that his approach also shares some common ground with Metheny, who first cut his teeth in Burton's group in the 1970s. "Glass Stairs, with its cymbal-driven pulse, could easily fit within Burton's ECM ouevre. But Lupri also incorporates electronics into his palette, even more so than on Transition Sonic, and so while the roots of Metalix are clear, so too are its contemporary innovations.

At times powerful, at times delicate, this recording also finds Lupri exploring freer territory. For example, he segues the abstract "Ghost Clusters into the plaintive bass clarinet solo of "Lonely Interlude, and ultimately the dark and blues-informed "Flowers for Mary Jane." Lupri is growing as an artist with a capacity to develop long-form concepts and improvise passionately and intelligently. He continues to learn and grow with each album, and Metalix is unequivocally his most evolved and compelling effort to date. ~John Kelman

Metalix