Showing posts with label Michael Feinberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Feinberg. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2023

Michael Feinberg - From Where We Came

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 130,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:15) 1. Louisville
(5:27) 2. Cairo
(3:39) 3. Tryon
(9:39) 4. Pontiac
(8:34) 5. Hamlet
(9:00) 6. East St. Louis
(4:37) 7. Tokyo
(8:23) 8. Nogales

At the dinner table or in the studio, there are many subtle methods to interject a staunch conversation starter. Or you can always burst into the room with your hair on fire. Veteran soprano saxophonist Dave Liebman, he of many rich and complex lines past, here opted for the latter approach. After bassist and leader Michael Feinberg opened the record with a mood leveling bass intro, Liebman grabbed the attention of his younger generation bandmates in the Feinberg composition "Louisville," named after the birthplace of the great Muhammed Ali. Said bandmates, in addition to Feinberg, tenor saxophonist Noah Preminger, pianist Gary Versace and drummer Ian Froman responded with intelligence and verve.

In all, eight songs, all composed by Feinberg, are consummate vehicles for expressive interplay and open-ended conversation. Feinberg named all the tunes after the hometown of his musical and athletic heroes. He also wrote all these pieces with his personnel in mind. He gets the best out of all of them by creating passages that employ responsive windows. Compositional depth is very much at the core of From Where We Came.

That said, the quintet takes it over the top by continually firing on all cylinders. Feinberg is no doubt the glue. However, we need not get stuck on that point, as his fluency enriches the interaction. Froman is, as well, much more than pocket perfect. He deftly moves the conversation through transitions and is impactful in facilitating his mates. Often heard as a third member broadening the rhythm section, Versace also adds timely and intuitive remarks to the ever-growing conversations. Liebman and Preminger take this session to a whole other level. Preminger's exuberance, coupled with his learned chops, bring both excitement and insightfulness to the party. Fueled in the moment by Liebman's blaze and intensity, Preminger joyfully rises to the occasion. Liebman lit the spark at the outset and pushed his improvisational bliss forward throughout. He brought his full and expansive arsenal with him...and didn't leave any on the table.

As for the song titles, "Cairo" (Geogia) is the birthplace of legendary Jackie Robinson. "Tryon" (North Carolina) honors Nina Simone. On "Pontiac" (Michigan) you hear Froman taking a run at the peppered swing of Elvin Jones. Every member of the band has a connection to the incomparable drummer. Feinberg once fronted a band called the Elvin Jones Project and Liebman played with Jones in the early 1970s. John Coltrane is dually honored with "Hamlet" (North Carolina). Miles Davis grew up in "East St. Louis" (Missouri), but championed here are trumpeter Russell Gunn and drummer Terreon Gully who also grew up there. Feinberg had the opportunity to see them both on a weekly basis in Atlanta while in high school. "Tokyo" was written for film scorer Ryuichi Sakamoto and with "Nogales" (Arizona) Feinberg pens and plays in memory of Charles Mingus. A well paired and well-prepared quintet present a dense forest of musical interaction and conversational integrity. They covered a lot of ground, geographically, historically, and musically. A substantial listening and thought provoking experience.~ Jim Worsley https://www.allaboutjazz.com/from-where-we-came-michael-feinberg-steeplechase-productions

Personnel: Michael Feinberg: bass; Dave Liebman: saxophone, soprano; Noah Preminger: saxophone, tenor; Gary Versace: piano; Ian Froman: drums.

From Where We Came

Friday, January 20, 2023

Michael Feinberg - Blues Variant

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:51
Size: 114,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:11) 1. Blues Variant
(6:03) 2. Saqqara
(3:58) 3. High Or Booze
(4:35) 4. The Healing Power Of Grits
(4:57) 5. Eye Of The Hurricane
(5:51) 6. The Water Brouht Us, The Water Spirit Will Take Us Home
(5:27) 7. Gather Power
(4:26) 8. Improvisation (For Leslie)
(4:43) 9. Cycle Song
(5:36) 10. Year Of Ox

An intriguing element of Michael Feinberg’s superb Criss Cross debut is that the leader could easily have titled it “Bassist In The Background” (Fans of Duke Ellington’s wonderful 1960 LP "Pianist In The Background" will know what I mean). Throughout Blues Variant which includes six tunefully percolating originals by Feinberg, one by tenor saxophonist Noah Preminger, and one by pianist Leo Genovese the 35-year-old bass maestro hews to the mantra, “If you want to hear me solo, come to a gig, where I often play a solo on every tune”.

“I’m serving the music,” Feinberg continues. “What I appreciate about a bass player is how they make the other people in the band sound. I love hearing the soloistic abilities of Christian McBride, John Patitucci, Dave Holland and the people I idolize, but they’re amazing because, when they play, it feels incredible and they push their bandmates to be the best versions of themselves or go beyond what they think they can do.” As another example, Feinberg mentions Jimmy Garrison, who triangulated between McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones with the “spiritually transcendent” John Coltrane Quartet between 1961 and 1965. “He rarely plays a solo, but you don’t get the Coltrane quartet with anyone else. So I don’t care about the solos, or being on top of the mix to indicate ‘this is a bass player’s record.’ I play a ton of notes. I’m playing the whole time. Can’t miss it.”

Feinberg’s remarks on the Garrison effect carry a certain gravitas; since the early 2010s, when he did The Elvin Jones Project, he’s delved into Coltrane’s repertoire on its own terms of engagement on numerous gigs, most of them featuring Preminger playing tenor saxophone and Ian Froman on drums. On the pan-stylistic Blues Variant, he connects with the spirit of the great drum griot via the presence on three intense selections of Elvin alumnus Dave Liebman, Preminger’s teacher during student years. who has often employed Froman. Feinberg’s introduction to Liebman’s singular sound was Earth Jones, a 1982 Elvin-led release with Liebman, trumpeter Terumaso Hino, pianist Kenny Kirkland and bassist George Mraz. “I know every note of it,” Feinberg says. “I’ve been a fan of Dave’s playing for a long time.”
https://www.crisscrossjazz.com/album/1413.html

Personnel: Bass – Michael Feinberg; Drums – Nasheet Waits; Piano, Keyboards – Leo Genovese; Soprano Saxophone, Flute – Dave Liebman; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Noah Preminger

Blues Variant