Showing posts with label Peter Leitch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Leitch. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2025

Peter Leitch - From Another Perspective

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1992
Time: 66:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 154,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:25) 1. For Elmo, Sonny and Freddie
(6:45) 2. 91-1
(6:15) 3. If You Could See Me Now
(8:14) 4. Con Alma
(7:16) 5. Somewhere in the Night
(8:07) 6. Yemenja
(6:51) 7. Ruby, My Dear
(6:22) 8. Elda
(3:35) 9. Embraceable You
(6:26) 10. Blues for Ivan Symonds

Peter Leitch is a New York Based jazz guitarist and composer. He performs in such popular rooms as Sweet Basil, Sweet Rhythm, Jazz Standard, Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, The Blue Note, Bradley's, Zinno, Visiones and Birdland and has placed several times in the DownBeat International Jazz Critics Poll. He has been profiled in numerous magazine articles.

A tour favorite, Peter and his groups have appeared at festivals and clubs in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Australia. Versatile in a broad range of jazz artistry, he has worked/recorded with some of his profession's greatest performers: Oscar Peterson, Ron Carter, Milt Jackson, Woody Shaw, Pepper Adams, Jaki Byard, Jack McDuff, Kenny Wheeler, Al Grey, and John Hicks.

Peter is also an accomplished black and white photographer and has mounted several solo shows of his work, including of fellow musicians, New York street scenes, Mississippi and the South, and the newest New York to New Orleans. In addition, he has co-created several videos for which he has composed music. This has led to an exploration of new (and old) areas of music. Click on the icons above to see!

In 1997, Peter initiated his Sunday Nights at Walker's, one of New York City's longest running jazz engagements. Still playing more than ten years later, each weekly engagement features a duo performance with a guest artist. Gary Bartz, Ray Drummond, Bobby Watson, Sean Smith, Harvie S, Dwayne Burno, Steve Wilson, Jed Levy and Charles Davis have all shared Sunday's spotlight in this enduring jazz tradition.

During 1993-94, Peter was the Musical Director of "Guitars Play Mingus," the 5-guitar and rhythm section ensemble performing the music of Charles Mingus.

In 1991, Peter was artist-in-residence at Western Australia Academy of the Performing Arts, Perth and Elder Conservatorium, Adelaide.

Peter has been an adjunct professor at Long Island University and has taught at the National Guitar Workshop and the Vermont Jazz Center, the Summer Guitar Workshop at New York University and the Berkeley College of Music. He conducts workshops, master classes and clinics in jazz guitar and improvisation in the United States, Europe, Canada and Australia
. Peter's recordings are available on the Reservoir, Concord and Criss Cross Jazz labels.

Peter Leitch is available with his New York-based quintet, quartet, trio or duo, or as soloist with your rhythm section.From http://peterleitch.com https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/peter-leitch

Personnel: Guitar – Peter Leitch; Bass, Guest – Ray Drummond; Drums, Guest – Marvin "Smitty" Smith; Flute [Alto], Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Jed Levy Guest, Alto Saxophone – Gary Bartz; Piano, Guest – John Hicks

From Another Perspective

Friday, August 25, 2023

Peter Leitch Quintet - Portraits and Dedications

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:47
Size: 139,2 MB
Art: Front

( 5:56) 1. Pepper
( 5:25) 2. Visage De Cathryn
( 4:36) 3. Modes for Wood
( 4:38) 4. Warm Valley
( 5:35) 5. Colorado
( 6:21) 6. Portrait of Sylvia
( 2:46) 7. The Winter of My Discontent
( 7:18) 8. A Blues For 'Nita
( 5:45) 9. The Bulldog
(10:22) 10. Shades of Stein

It often seems like the Dutch label Criss Cross is much more enlightened when it comes to recording talented young American jazz musicians than major labels within the U.S.A. Such is the case with guitarist Peter Leitch, who's heard leading this 1988 session.

With alto saxophonist Bobby Watson, pianist James Williams, bassist Ray Drummond, and drummer Marvin Smitty Smith added to the mix, great music was the only possible result. Leitch's "Pepper," a tribute to the late Pepper Adams (who gave him his first job in New York), is a brisk affair with sterling solos by all parties.

His easygoing samba "Portrait of Sylvia" adds Jed Levy's alto flute. Duke Ellington's "Warm Valley" is a soulful duet with Watson that is full of fun and features great interplay as well. Leitch captures the moody air of Alec Wilder's infrequently performed ballad "The Winter of My Discontent" in his solo interpretation. Recommended. By Ken Dryden
https://www.allmusic.com/album/portraits-and-dedications-mw0000429152

Personnel: Peter Leitch (Guitar); Jed Levy (Alto Flute); Bobby Watson (Alto Saxophone); Ray Drummond (Bass); Marvin "Smitty" Smith (Drums); James Williams (Piano).

Portraits and Dedications

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Peter Leitch - Blues On The Corner

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:06
Size: 162.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[ 7:13] 1. Blues On The Corner
[ 6:57] 2. The Hillary Step
[ 7:20] 3. Nothing Ever Changes My Love For You
[10:23] 4. Johan Carolyn
[ 6:34] 5. Monk's Mood Bemsha Swing
[ 7:42] 6. K. Zee
[ 8:24] 7. Wendy's Shoes
[ 2:40] 8. Bud 'n Bird
[ 7:53] 9. How Long Has This Been Going On
[ 5:55] 10. From This Moment On

Canadian jazz guitarist Leitch continues to be a top player in this idiom as evidenced by his track record of fine recordings, this being another one. There are curiosities that pop up when Leitch's sparsely treated, lean electric guitar sound melds with Kendra Shank's mostly wordless vocalizing and the saxophone musings of Bobby Watson. Renee Rosnes plays piano on six of the ten cuts, while the bass of Dwayne Burno and the poignant drumming of Billy Hart anchor the varied combos. Leitch wrote half of the material. "The (Sir Edmund) Hillary Step" is steeped in bop; Shank's over-the-hump scat sets off a busy Watson and Rosens, then Shank and Hart trade ideas. The lovely, light-bossa swinger "Johan Carolyn," running over ten and a half minutes, sports beauteous guitar and alto sax unison over the modal chords of Rosnes as a vehicle for longer solos. The most gloriously constructed melody is extant during "K. Zee," which offers another unison line but darker, with Shank's sultry voice added to Watson's soprano and Leitch's wide-eyed line. Rosnes is more astounding on a choppy, chiming piano solo. "Wendy's Shoes" is a straight bluesy number scatted by Shank and spiced by Watson's fluent alto. Leitch goes it solo on "Bud & Bird," all in a fast, bright, evenly keeled bebop language. The guitar/bass/drums trio do the Gershwin ballad "How Long Has This Been Going On?" while "Nothing Ever Changes for You My Love" uses the same instrumentation in a bossa-to-swing style. The session is bookended by two anomalous, nay, disappointing or perhaps questionable numbers. The McCoy Tyner-written title track has Leitch displaying a little twang, and the intro chorus has Shank scatting only the first few bars of the melody twice, but all the way through at the end. The hip, charged bop of "From This Moment On" has Shank only singing the name of the tune, but not the lyric, then scatting a bit. This is an interesting aside for Leitch, not his best, but a change up of instrumentation and stance which is certainly unique for him, and, in many instances, welcome. ~Michael G. Nastos

Blues On The Corner