Showing posts with label Nicole Glover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicole Glover. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Nicole Glover - Plays

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 42:35
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 98,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:52) 1. Open or Close
(4:47) 2. The Fox
(5:01) 3. The A-Side
(5:09) 4. Munsoon
(6:01) 5. Inception
(4:59) 6. One Second, Please
(5:51) 7. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(5:50) 8. Blues for Mel

Nicole Glover's a hell of a tenorist one with a deep, rich tone, but also lots of modern edges too able to spin out really long, imaginative solos in a style that's almost at the level of vintage Sonny Rollins, especially given that the setting here is a trio on half the album! Nicole blows alongside the bass of Tyron Allen and drums of Kayvon Gordon, players who keep things loose and very open so that Glover has all this space to express herself with a very unique voice.

And half the record also features vibes from the great Steve Nelson who seems to have some bolder, harder tones in his instrument to match Glover's energy. Titles include "Munsoon", "Inception", "Blues For Mel", "One Second Please", "The Fox", and "Open Or Close".© 1996-2024, Dusty Groove, Inc.https://www.dustygroove.com/item/170370/Nicole-Glover:Nicole-Glover-Plays

Plays

Saturday, April 20, 2024

Nicole Glover - Strange Lands

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 50:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 117,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:15) 1. Strange Lands
(5:47) 2. Hive Queen
(7:07) 3. The Twilight Zone
(6:39) 4. Dindi
(3:42) 5. Parks
(4:56) 6. The Switch
(6:01) 7. Notturno
(5:07) 8. A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing
(8:17) 9. I Concentrate on You

Time was when a jazz trio without a piano or guitar was a rare occurrence. But once Sonny Rollins went chordless at the Vanguard the die was cast and, though the instrumentation is still not exactly thick on the ground, it is an important subset in the list of saxophone-fronted jazz groups. For the last three years tenor saxophonist Nicole Glover has embraced this format with her regular band featuring colleagues Daniel Duke (bass) and Nic Cacioppo (drums).

Here, for her first album with the group and her Savant Records debut, she has attracted the attention of keyboard great George Cables, who appears on four tracks of the recording. Michael J. West points out in the album's liner notes that to Glover, "Cables represents the continuum of the music, its past, present and future; she wanted that wisdom and energy to manifest itself and inform the band's work."

In the trio numbers, mostly originals, the musicians display a unity of thought that goes far beyond the notes, one that takes the freedom of a chordless ensemble and runs with it. Their music is full of strength and power, challenging but communicative with a sly sense of playfulness peeking out occasionally all providing a memorable musical experience that is at once high-spirited and deeply felt. https://propermusic.com/products/nicoleglover-strangelands

Personnel: Nicole Glover (tenor saxophone), Daniel Duke (bass), Nic Cacioppo (drums) with special guest: George Cables (piano)

Strange Lands

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Artemis - In Real Time

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:23
Size: 117,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:05) 1. Slink
(6:17) 2. Bow and Arrow
(6:18) 3. Balance of Time
(4:51) 4. Lights Away from Home
(7:30) 5. Timber
(7:03) 6. Whirlwind
(5:34) 7. Empress Afternoon
(5:42) 8. Penelope

The all-star jazz sextet Artemis further coalesce their sophisticated post-bop sound with their sophomore album, 2023's In Real Time. When the group debuted with 2020's eponymous title, the all-women group brought each of the member's extensive solo experience to bear on their vibrant group sound.

While part of the line-up has shifted since then, the group (still led by pianist Renee Rosnes) sounds even more united. Part of this is due to the increased time Rosnes and her rhythm section partners, including bassist Noriko Ueda and drummer Allison Miller, have spent touring and performing together.

Also returning is trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, whose warm tone and lithe, Kenny Wheeler-esque harmonies work as a bold herald to the group's lush interplay. Coming on board this time out are tenor saxophonist Nicole Glover and alto saxophonist/multi-reedist Alexa Tarantino, who both bring their distinctive improvisational styles to the fore. While originality is still at the core of Artemis' sound, there's a feeling that Rosnes and her bandmates are also exploring their influences.

It's a vibe that's evident from the start on their sparkling rendition of longtime Pat Metheny bassist Lyle Mays' "Slink," a song culled from his 1985 self-titled album. Here, Artemis transform the contemporary synths of Mays' original into a more organic-sounding arrangement, one where the contrapuntal bass groove is nicely off-set by colorful flute, sax, and vocal harmonies.

They further underscore the deep influences at play on In Real Time with album's closing take on Wayne Shorter's "Penelope" fleshing out the late sax legend's composition with Jensen's muted, night sky trumpet leads, Rosnes' luminous pianos chords, and spectral saxophone solo from Glover. Equally potent are the group's own originals, including Miller's "Bow and Arrow" (a roiling tune in the '60s hard bop tradition) and Tarantino's atmospheric waltz "Whirlwind" (recalling Miles Davis' '60s recordings).

There's also Jensen's "Timber," her vocal-like trumpet textures framed by a funky '70s-style groove and Rosnes' dewy Fender Rhodes accents. While much of In Real Time evokes the deep well of the post-bop jazz tradition that inspires Artemis, they never fail to inspire on their own terms.By Matt Collar
https://www.allmusic.com/album/in-real-time-mw0003961691

Personnel: Renee Rosnes: piano; Ingrid Jensen: trumpet; Alexa Tarantino: alto and soprano saxophone, flute; Nicole Glover: tenor saxophone; Noriko Ueda: bass; Allison Miller: drums.

In Real Time

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Nicole Glover - First Record

Size: 108,1 MB
Time: 46:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Water Ritual (6:56)
02. Waning And Waxing (7:12)
03. Marshmallow (6:08)
04. Snow Dance (4:07)
05. String Quartet In F (7:23)
06. Blood Moon (4:53)
07. Conscience Of The King (6:38)
08. Tennessee Waltz (3:18)

If for some reason Portland-native Nicole Glover's First Record ended up being her only one, she would still have made a lasting impact on the jazz world. The 24-year-old saxophonist's debut is an ambitious one that lays a lot on the table and seeks not only to establish her as a capable player, but a voice in the crowded world of jazz tenor. Aided by fellow Portlanders, both in her peer group (Jonathan Lakey on bass) and a few generations above her (George Colligan on piano and Alan Jones on drums), Glover's quartet record is a sonically and emotionally powerful one. It leaves aside niceties and dues- paying formalities and comes out swinging, shouting and dancing.

A significant aspect of First Record is a sense of contrast. Glover's originals seize on dichotomies and ranges of ideas in both intensity and function, sometimes over long periods of time and sometimes almost instantly. The first track, "Water Ritual," lilts out a pretty melody in 5/4 that gradually becomes edgier as Colligan's harmony becomes denser and more dissonant, almost as if the optimism of the melody is being called into question. Glover's solo takes a similar arc, shoving its way out of the groove and into an intense stratosphere of searing high notes and full-range atonality. She improvises as such on "Conscience of the King," arcing her solo up from the low, rhythmic vibe of the post-bop head into twisty combinations of runs, tremolos and single-note stabs. Glover's ideas, while organized and rhythmically pocketed, don't often follow the usual path of linear, swung, tension-to-resolution bop soloing. They sort of creep in unexpectedly, dart in unusual ways and explode by the time they're done. It's a textural approach, not just in terms of sound, but also the impression that it leaves after its finished.

The record's diverse trio of covers also celebrates contrast. Glover and Colligan rip their way through "Marshmallow" (an enormously complex Warne Marsh contrafact on "Cherokee" that pushes the limits of harmony and rhythm over familiar changes), wherein Glover wisely doesn't try to outdo the head and just deftly and learnedly plays the Cherokee harmony. She transforms a section of Maurice Ravel's "String Quartet in F" into a sprawling, bombastic jammer, taking on the decades old jazz tradition of taking the powerful melodies and impressionistic harmonies of Western classical music and turning the intensity up. Not all of the covers are war horses, though; her gentle take on Stewart and King's "Tennessee Waltz" is just as poignant and palatable as Patti Paige's version, lingering on gospel roots of the melody and letting Colligan expand into a loose-time expansion that sounds straight out of a church service.

As Glover's teacher and mentor in real life, Colligan's role on the record is no different. He lends his incredible and deft talent at the keys, but doesn't overshadow her. His solo on "Waning and Waxing" fits neatly into record's theme of neatness and beauty meeting unrestrained adventure, slowly evolving into wild, flowing runs with his right hand while the left hammers out polyrhythmic quarter notes. He's fully capable of allowing Glover to keep the spotlight on tunes like "Blood Moon," where he follows Glover's sinewy solo with one composed mostly of chords. Colligan even puts aside his keyboard chops for a pocket trumpet on "Snow Dance," which recalls the jolly melodies and abstract soundscapes of "New York is Now!"/"At Golden Circle"-era Ornette Coleman.

The quality that excites and promises the most from Glover is her simultaneous rejection of tenor saxophone clichés while still celebrating the instrument in its fullest. She mostly avoids the linear and harmonic pitfalls of obviousness that many young tenors mire in, and yet, nothing she plays would make sense on any other instrument. It does, of course, draw crucial bits and pieces from recognizable sources, from Wayne Shorter's mystery to John Coltrane's prayer-like intensity, reaching out to the reedy, understated rhythms of Marsh and Lee Konitz to the elusive and flammable zig-zags of players like Joe Henderson and Tony Malaby. Largely, though, Glover is making quick approaches to sole propriety of her own sound, which, especially for her age, is as important as it is rare. ~Daniel Lehner

Personnel: Nicole Glover: tenor saxophone; George Colligan: piano, pocket trumpet; Jonathan Lakey: bass; Alan Jones: drums.

First Record