Showing posts with label Pat Bianchi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pat Bianchi. Show all posts

Monday, March 4, 2024

Pat Bianchi - Back Home

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:35
Size: 131,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:48)  1. Fifth House
(7:00)  2. Midnight Mood
(8:34)  3. Lithia
(5:47)  4. Back Home
(4:43)  5. Blues Connotation
(7:21)  6. Portrait of Jenny
(7:07)  7. Just In Time
(8:10)  8. Hammer Head
(3:00)  9. Fifth House - alternate

Organist Pat Bianchi's turn to be in the spotlight as a premier player on his instrument is long overdue, and with the release of Back Home, it's clear his time has finally come. Since the 2006 issue of his album East Coast Roots on the Jazzed Media label and his estimable work with guitarist Corey Christiansen, Bianchi's star has been steadily rising, but now he's reached his zenith. Playing with two different groups, Bianchi transcends soul-jazz by playing the C-3 (church) organ, choosing heady progressive material, and showing his acumen on his instrument similar to peer Larry Goldings (see the Goldings masterpiece Sweet Science). With his "A" group the very energetic sidemen of drummer Ralph Peterson, tenor saxophonist Wayne Escoffery, and trumpeter Terell Stafford alongside, Bianchi whips out compositions not necessarily thought of as vehicles for organ, evidence including the super-fast and tricky Ornette Coleman post-bop piece "Blues Connotation" and Chick Corea's 6/8 groove and bop track "Litha," which came directly from fusion originally with electric piano. The "B" trio with drummer Carmen Intorre and guitarist Gilad Hekselman also tackles difficult music John Coltrane's "Fifth House" (and an additional shorter alternate take) challenges rhythmic parameters in a modal sense while Bianchi goes off à la Larry Young. But where Bianchi's three pieces also explore a mellower sound during ballads and blues, it is his deeply hued style on the C-3 that identifies a new approach to playing modern jazz. What Bianchi is doing is very nearly innovative, and this should only be the tip of the iceberg. ~ Michael G.Nastos https://www.allmusic.com/album/back-home-mw0001987608

Personnel:  Pat Bianchi - Organ; Ralph Peterson Jr. - Drums ; Terell Stafford - Trumpet; Wayne Escoffery - Saxophone; Carmen Intorre Jr. - Drums; Gilad Hekselman - Guitar

Back Home

Monday, August 22, 2022

Pat Bianchi - In the Moment

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:54
Size: 138,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:43) 1. Humpty Dumpty
(7:20) 2. Blue Gardenia
(7:29) 3. Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing
(3:46) 4. Mr. PM
(7:51) 5. Barracudas (General Assembly)
(5:25) 6. Crazy
(6:51) 7. No Expectations
(5:43) 8. I Want to Talk About You
(7:11) 9. Fall
(4:29) 10. Four in One

If you glance at the tracks listed here, you may be tempted to start out with two notable collaborations and one Willie Nelson-penned country classic. Not a bad move, as it turns out. The cameos by vocalist Kevin Mahogany, who died in late 2017, and guitar legend Pat Martino, organist Pat Bianchi’s mentor and bandmate, swiftly live up to expectations, albeit in sharply contrasting performances.

And the thoroughly reinvigorated reprise of Nelson’s “Crazy” somehow manages to salute both Patsy Cline and vintage organ-combo traditions with as much ingenuity as ease. It’s just one of several reminders of Bianchi’s flair for devising fresh, compact arrangements. Over the course of 10 tracks, Bianchi and a seasoned cast of session mates cover a lot of ground. Besides Nelson and Billy Eckstine the prime inspiration for Mahogany’s luxe, soulful rendering of “I Want to Talk About You” In the Moment features compositions by Chick Corea (“Humpty Dumpty”), Stevie Wonder (“Don’t You Worry ’Bout a Thing”), Miles Davis/Gil Evans (“Barracudas [General Assembly]”), Wayne Shorter (“Fall”), and Thelonious Monk (“Four in One”).

Throughout, Bianchi, guitarist Paul Bollenback, and drummer Byron Landham make an agile, tightly cohesive trio. The keyboardist and guitarist often display a mutual talent for offsetting resonating atmospherics with flashing chromaticism, while Landham is busy neatly negotiating dynamic tempo shifts and tricky rhythmic displacements. It soon becomes clear that the trio’s special guests are prepared for similar challenges. So don’t be surprised when guitarist Peter Bernstein, vibist Joe Locke, and drummer Carmen Intorre, Jr. suddenly snare, and reward, your attention. ~ Mike Joyce https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/pat-bianchi-in-moment-savant/

Personnel: Pat Bianchi (organ); Paul Bollenback (guitar); Byron Landham (drums). With special guests: Peter Bernstein (guitar); Carmen Intorre Jr.(drums); Joe Locke (vibes); Kevin Mahogany (vocal); Pat Martino, (guitar)

In the Moment

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Tim Warfield - Jazzland

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:48
Size: 158,7 MB
Art: Front

( 6:00)  1. Lenny's Lens
( 6:24)  2. Theme for Malcolm
( 6:13)  3. Sleeping Dancer, Sleep On
(10:36)  4. Ode to Billie Joe
( 6:42)  5. He Knows How Much I Can Bear
(10:52)  6. Tenderly
( 6:31)  7. Shake It for Me
( 8:23)  8. Wade in the Water
( 7:04)  9. Hipty Hop

You'll know you're in Jazzland from the very first note of this excellent set from saxophonist Tim Warfield as the music has this wonderfully-wrapped sound that comes from his work on tenor and soprano sax, the trumpet of Terrell Stafford, and the Hammond of Pat Bianchi! The three musicians in the frontline all have this key contemporary vibe so that they're not just working through older shades of soul jazz, and instead use the setting to really open up some great colors and moods all with a quality that's as warmly soulful as Warfield's other records, and which definitely lives up to Stafford's legacy too! 

The group also features Byron Landham on drums and Daniel Sadownick on percussion and titles include "Shake It For Me", "Hippity Hop", "Lenny's Lens", "Theme For Malcolm", "Sleeping Dancer Sleep On", and "Ode To Billie Joe".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/877589/Tim-Warfield:Jazzland

Personnel:  Tim Warfield - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, composer; Terell Stafford - trumpet, flugelhorn;  Pat Bianchi - Hammond organ; Byron Landham - drums

Jazzland