Showing posts with label Michele Hendricks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michele Hendricks. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Paul Nash (featuring Tom Harrell, Michael Cochrane, Michele Hend - Second Impression

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:36
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:25)  1. Song for Lanie
(4:34)  2. New York Nocturne
(8:30)  3. After Words
(5:02)  4. Intermission
(5:32)  5. (It's A Few Steps) From Broadway to Amsterdam
(2:20)  6. Uplift
(6:11)  7. Pentepic
(3:15)  8. Passing Glance
(7:44)  9. Starlit Skylight

The music of composer and guitarist Paul Nash reflects a restless commitment to musical experimentation integrating by turns the sound worlds of jazz, classical, and rock through his own personal synthesis. Nash’s musical path began in the late 60’s when his Bronx teenage rock band opened for the Blues Project and followed a then unknown Jimi Hendrix at the Cafe Wha? in Greenwich Village. This was followed by years of music study earning respectively B.M. and M.A. degrees in music composition from the Berklee College of Music in Boston in 1972 and Mills College in Oakland (CA) in 1976. San Francisco provided a fruitful outlet for his passion for larger jazz aggregations. In 1977, the ten-piece Paul Nash Ensemble, which featured saxophonist Noel Jewkes, drummer Eddie Marshall and trumpeter Mark Isham, began performances around the Bay Area and in Los Angeles. Later, Nash became instrumental in the creation of the Bay Area Jazz Composers Orchestra (BAJCO), a new type of jazz orchestra that included a string quartet founded in 1987. Upon his return to New York City, Mr. Nash expanded on that same instrumental model by establishing the Manhattan New Music Project in 1990. Nash’s interest in classical forms has evolved alongside his work in jazz. Among the music groups that have performed Nash’s chamber and orchestral pieces have been the St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble, the Aspen Music Festival, the Chamber Symphony of San Francisco, the San Francisco Symphony, the Reading Symphony Orchestra (PA) and Ridgefield (CT) Symphonies is scheduled in 2002. Musical Elements, and Composers Concordance and Eclectix.

As a leader, Nash has produced five impressive recordings including three for Soul Note Records (Italy), which have featured jazz artists such as Tom Harrell, Jack Walrath, Tom Varner, David Samuels, Mark Isham, and Art Lande. Paul Nash: A Jazz Composers Ensemble (1979), Second Impression (1985), Night Language (1987), Mood Swing (1993) and Soul of Grace (2000). His jazz writing suggests somewhat contradictory influences, most notably the cool orchestration of Gil Evans and the fiery proclamations of Charles Mingus. Projects slated for publication in print include Fingerstyle Jazz Workbook (Mel Bay Music) and Jazz Duos for alto sax and piano (Advance Music). An accomplished guitarist, Mr. Nash's musical thinking is also distinguished by his adoption of system of a symmetrical tuning in fourths as well as his use of custom designed acoustic and electric seven string guitars. In 1997 Nash began a new musical direction with the creation of site-specific musical work, culminating in a series of nine special performances in New York City parks. His Still Sounds Run Deep deploys musicians around public spaces and provides for interactivity with ambient sounds and the rhythms of passersby. Another long standing goal was realized in the his hour long theater creation, Intimate Structures, fashioning a dialogue adapted from Lovers’ Discourse by the late French philosopher Roland Barthes, and supporting it with an hour of continuous music blending baroque, modern jazz and ambient sounds. Grants and fellowships have served as a vital support for Nash’s work, coming from sources such as the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, the Jerome Foundation, the Banff Center for the Arts, Yaddo, Meet the Composer, the National Endowment for the Arts, the University of California at Berkeley, the MacDowell Colony, and the Djerassi Foundation. Finally, Nash has been an arts advocate as well, serving as a nationally elected Board Member of the American Composers Alliance. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/paulnash

Personnel: Michael Cochrane – piano; Tom Harrell – trumpet; Alan Braufman – alto sax, soprano sax; Gerard Carelli – trombone; Paul Nash – seven string guitar, flute; Anthony Cox – bass; Jimmy Madison – drums; Gregory Yasinitsky – soprano sax on Intermission, tenor sax on Starlit Skylight; Ann Yasinitsky – flute; Michele Hendricks – voice

Second Impression

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Michele Hendricks - A Little Bit Of Ella

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:52
Size: 143.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[5:22] 1. Sweet Georgia Brown
[6:58] 2. How High The Moon
[5:34] 3. Love For Sale
[5:34] 4. It Don't Mean A Thing
[5:23] 5. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
[6:03] 6. Oh! Lady Be Good
[6:21] 7. Our Love Is Here To Stay
[5:12] 8. A Little Bit Of Ella (Now And Then)
[4:11] 9. Airmail Special
[4:58] 10. Everytime We Say Goodbye
[7:11] 11. Sweet Geogia Brown (Ext Vers)

Michele Hendricks (voc), Tommy Flanagan (p), Peter Washington (b), Lewis Nash (dm), Brian Linch (tp), Robin Eubanks (tb), David Newman (ts), Jon Hendricks (voc on 2)

The daughter of Jon Hendricks, Michele has gradually emerged from her father's shadow to carve out a niche of her own. She started singing at the age of eight and often accompanied her dad on road trips, sometimes getting the opportunity to sing with him on-stage. After being a dance and drama student in London at Gradison College, Michele joined Jon Hendricks & Family. She performed with her father's Evolution of the Blues show and then from 1981, was part of Jon Hendricks & Company, one of the top vocal groups of the 1980s and a logical extension of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. Michele Hendricks spent a couple years outside of jazz in the mid-'80s, trying to decide her eventual musical path and then in 1987, she recorded the first of several excellent bop-oriented dates as a leader for Muse. ~ Scott Yanow

A Little Bit Of Ella