Showing posts with label Ralph Alessi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ralph Alessi. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2019

Lonnie Plaxico - Emergence

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:33
Size: 147,9 MB
Art: Front

(0:31)  1. The Mahayana (Great Vehicle) - Interlude
(4:58)  2. Transformation
(4:05)  3. Delusion
(4:12)  4. Emergence
(1:00)  5. Paramita (To Arrive at the Other Side) - Interlude
(7:34)  6. Libertarian
(3:51)  7. Changing Line
(5:37)  8. Emancipation
(7:34)  9. Red Light District
(2:29) 10. Sokoni (From the Sea) - Interlude
(5:39) 11. Equilibrium
(1:02) 12. 2 Bass - Interlude
(4:44) 13. Inner Voice
(2:39) 14. Kalomo (The Unexpeced) - Interlude
(6:30) 15. Matrix
(1:00) 16. Oji (The Gift Bearer) - Interlude

Emergence begins with a bang but then goes gradually downhill. Plaxico alternates between acoustic and electric bass, and mightily tries to reconcile the jazz and funk elements of his vision. Although most tracks feature driving rhythms, incredibly intricate horn writing, and compelling solos, the album grows numbingly repetitive as it proceeds. On the jazz side, "Transformation" begins the record with riveting post-bop fire, while "Libertarian" and "Red Light District" provide new perspectives on the standards "Dear Old Stockholm" and "Love for Sale," respectively. On the funk side, "Delusion" and "Emancipation" stand out, recalling the dissonant colors heard on Sam Rivers' acclaimed 1999 album Inspiration. But Plaxico seems to run low on ideas by the time he gets to "Equilibrium," "Inner Voice," and Chick Corea's "Matrix." Six brief interludes featuring bass and/or percussion are interspersed throughout the program, yielding mixed results the most effective being "Paramita (to arrive at the other side)." Monster players abound, including the wonderful Don Braden on saxophones, Ralph Alessi on trumpet, and Jason Moran on piano. Emergence is also distinguished by several lesser known but highly capable musicians: Larry Lunetta on trumpet, Tim Hegarty on sax, Eric Lewis on piano and organ, Lionel Cordew on drums, and Jeffrey Haynes on percussion. Haynes produced the interludes, and noted vocalist Cassandra Wilson, for whom Plaxico has served as musical director, produced the main tracks. ~ David R.Adler https://www.allmusic.com/album/emergence-mw0000055907

Personnel:  Lonnie Plaxico (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar); Tim Hegarty (saxophone, tenor saxophone); Don Braden (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Ralph Alessi, Larry Lunetta (trumpet); Eric Lewis (piano, electric piano, organ); Jason Moran (piano); Lionel Cordew (drums, percussion); Jeff Haynes (percussion)

Emergence

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Don Byron - Love, Peace, And Soul

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:51
Size: 169,7 MB
Art: Front

( 6:08)  1. Highway To Heaven
( 6:24)  2. When I've Sung My Last Song
( 7:54)  3. It's My Desire
( 4:49)  4. Sham Time
( 5:19)  5. Consideration
(10:09)  6. Take My Hand, Precious Lord
( 3:54)  7. Beams Of Heaven
( 6:22)  8. Hide Me In Thy Bosom
( 5:30)  9. Himmm
( 7:11) 10. I've Got To Live The Life I Sing About In My Song
( 4:34) 11. Didn't It Rain
( 5:31) 12. When I've Done My Best

Don Byron's catalog reveals him to be a musical chameleon and master conceptualist. The range of music he's had fun melding with jazz Raymond Scott's, Mickey Katz's classical arias and lieder, Blaxploitation funk and more is expansive. It should come as no surprise then, that Love, Peace and Soul is an album of (mostly) classic gospel tunes, primarily written by Thomas A. Dorsey. It was Dorsey who kept the blues and ring-shout lineages inherent in gospel as it evolved, and revolutionized the music in the process. The other inspiration here is master guitarist and vocalist Sister Rosetta Tharpe. While she played primarily sacred music drenched in jazz and blues, she moved effortlessly between it and secular tunes. Byron's New Gospel Quintet are D.K. Dyson on vocals, pianist Xavier Davis, bassist Brad Jones, and drummer Pheeroan akLaff, with guest appearances by guitarists Brandon Ross and Vernon Reid, trumpeter Ralph Alessi, vocalist Dean Bowman, and baritone saxophonist J.D. Parran. Byron’s clarinet and akLaff's tom-toms introduce "Highway to Heaven," adding the spirit of Sidney Bechet's and Louis Armstrong's New Orleans jazz to Dorsey's blues before Dyson cuts loose on the vocals; Jones' funky bassline makes the entire thing pop. The spirit of improvisation on this set is alive and well too, as evidenced by "When I've Sung My Last Song," the very next cut. Byron's clarinet and Dyson's vocal play on and around the melody before the band enters, and while Dyson moves more toward the straighter end of the lyric, akLaff creates a slippery sense of time and establishes a jazz groove, and Davis' piano solo solidifies it. Given the feel of the album's first three sacred numbers, the juxtaposition of Eddie Harris' funky party anthem "Sham Time" feels right at home. Even the more reverential numbers, such as Dorsey's "Take My Hand Precious Lord" (introduced by a beautiful duet between Byron's saxophone and Dyson's vocal) carry blues into melodic jazz improvisation. Charles Tindley's "Beam of Heaven" is drenched in early blues, from Jones' bumping bassline, Byron's swooping clarinet, akLaff's shuffling kit, and Ross' acoustic slide guitar. Dyson's vocal is simply sublime. In Dorsey's “I’ve Got to Live the Life I Sing About," the hard blues in Tharpe's example underscore the message in the lyric. Love, Peace and Soul is another successful Byron experiment, but it's more than that. While its grooves are not a vision of gospel music since Dorsey, the music points to possibilities for the future that, like Dorsey's and Tharpe's examples, never lose sight of the blues. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/love-peace-and-soul-mw0002289389

Personnel: Don Byron: clarinets and saxophones; DK Dyson: voice, choirs; Xavier Davis: piano, choirs; Brad Jones: acoustic and electric bass, choirs; Pheeroan Aklaff: battery. Guests: Brandon Ross: electric and acoustic guitar; Vernon Reid: electric guitar; Dean Bowman: solo voice; Ralph Alessi: trumpet; JD Parran baritone sax.

Love, Peace, And Soul

Monday, June 18, 2018

Ralph Alessi & This Against That - Look

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:44
Size: 134.5 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz, Modern Creative
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:52] 1. Near Cry
[5:11] 2. It's Just A Toy
[5:14] 3. At The Seams
[6:05] 4. Hands
[3:07] 5. The Tooth Fairy And Pistol Pete
[4:56] 6. Lap Nap
[5:34] 7. Brown Hat
[3:34] 8. Look
[3:59] 9. Words, Actions
[4:44] 10. Platform Velvet
[7:18] 11. Old Beady Eyes
[4:03] 12. Sir

Ralph Alessi: trumpet, flugelhorn; Andy Milne: piano; Drew Gress: bass; Mark Ferber: drums; Ravi Coltrane: tenor saxophone (2,8,10,11).

Like the angelic blast of Gabriel's horn, trumpeter Ralph Alessi plays his mortal trumpet with exhilaration and sublime finesse. A popular session player, he has heightened recordings like Scott Colley's Archtiect of the Silent Moment (CamJazz, 2007) and Simone Guiducci's Dancin' Roots (Felmay, 2005). Alessi's own recordings as a leader—including Vice & Virtue (RKM, 2003) and This Against That/Vice & Virtue (RKM, 2002) —are obscure gems of eclectic music; but Look is an outstanding work of intellect and fire, showing what a progressive trumpeter sounds like without gimmicks or effects. A man, his horn, and a band—complete in its creative element.

Alessi's quartet of leading players includes the unsung, talented pianist Andy Milne and the superb rhythm section of bassist Drew Gress and drummer Mark Ferber; plus, on four tracks, a special guest: saxophonist Ravi Coltrane. The group is excellent at executing Alessi's eclectic and original pieces and making them enjoyable and seductively challenging. The leader's strength as a trumpeter is obvious, but another attribute that surfaces is his ability as a composer, which includes a gift for tying disparate threads of jazz, avant-garde, and classical persuasions into a vibrant work of contemporary music. Some tunes are ostensibly simplistic yet harmonically complex, like "Near Cry, where Alessi solos hotly over a tricky vamp. Other times there's a repeating phrase, as on "At the Seams, where Gress and Ferber not only sustain the effervescence but also contribute their own voices. ~Mark F. Turner

Look mc
Look zippy

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Ralph Alessi - Quiver

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:27
Size: 129,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:57)  1. Here Tomorrow
(5:18)  2. Window Goodbyes
(6:56)  3. Smooth Descent
(6:46)  4. Heist
(9:49)  5. Gone Today, Here Tomorrow
(6:14)  6. I to I
(5:17)  7. Scratch
(7:05)  8. Shush
(4:14)  9. Quiver
(1:47) 10. Do Over

Quiver finds trumpeter Ralph Alessi and his quartet in a lyrical, reflective mood. Alessi describes the atmosphere in the recording studio as "pensive," a quality that imbues this music. The group includes most of the players from Alessi's acclaimed ECM leader debut Baida (2013). Drew Gress (double-bass) and Nasheet Waits (drums) return, with Gary Versace taking the piano chair in place of Jason Moran. Tempting to ascribe the differences between the two sessions to the pianists, but I think it has more to do with the material and the interaction of the whole band. "Here Tomorrow" opens the set with a brief legato meditation, and the mood for much of the album is established from the start. Versace often begins the pieces with an unadorned statement of the harmony, and doesn't even take a solo until the third track, "Smooth Descent" (which is also a bit more up-tempo). "Heist" breaks the mold by opening with solo trumpet, but it makes room for another piano solo and a bass solo from team player Gress. At almost ten minutes "Gone Today, Here Tomorrow" is the longest selection, and it too contains more moderate up-tempo music, finally giving Waits an opportunity to cut loose a bit. While there's no burning here, it certainly is not all taken at rubato or ballad tempo. "Scratch" is built upon an ostinato, following some lovely piano playing on "I to I." "Shush" combines all of the previous musical elements by beginning rubato. building to an energetic middle section, then closing with a repeating pattern. Only the closer "Do Over" provides a large contrast, as the band plays the only really up-tempo tune in the program while Waits solos all the way through. It's far too short, and it's a shame the record doesn't contain a bit more of this kind of playing. The variety would have been welcome. But while it's a generally low-key session, it's full of beautiful playing and empathetic group interaction. ~ Mark Sullivan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/quiver-ralph-alessi-ecm-records-review-by-mark-sullivan.php

Personnel: Ralph Alessi: trumpet; Gary Versace: piano; Drew Gress: double-bass; Nasheet Waits: drums.

Quiver

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Ralph Alessi - Cognitive Dissonance

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:29
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:27)  1. Cognitive Dissonance
(4:28)  2. Buying, Selling
(2:55)  3. Dog Walking
(4:38)  4. Duel
(3:26)  5. A Plenty
(3:45)  6. One Wheeler Will
(3:47)  7. Sir
(3:42)  8. Goodbye Ruth's
(6:37)  9. Hair Trigger
(3:33) 10. Better Not To Know
(3:42) 11. Sunflower
(3:55) 12. Same Old Story
(4:45) 13. Option
(3:51) 14. Wait
(2:53) 15. Goodbye Ruth's (slow)

For his Cam Jazz debut, trumpeter Ralph Alessi recruits two key players from his sadly overlooked Look (Between the Lines, 2007). But while ubiquitous bassist Drew Gress (Marc Copland, Claudia Quintet) is a mainstay of Cognitive Dissonance, pianist Andy Milne only guests on the knottily themed but swinging "Sir" and a quirkily, near-unrecognizable version of Stevie Wonder's "Same Old Story." The rest of the album's fifteen tracks eleven by Alessi, in addition to a free-spirited yet surprisingly lyrical version of Sam Rivers' "Sunflower" and two collective improvs with Gress and drummer Nasheet Waits feature pianist Jason Moran, once again demonstrating his greater strengths as a sideman.The same needn't be said about Alessi who, along with fellow trumpeter Ron Miles, remains one of America's most perennially (and curiously) undervalued trumpeters. His plangent, warm and somehow compressed tone is just one compelling reason to check out bassist Scott Colley's Architect of the Silent Moment (Cam Jazz, 2007) (and his forthcoming 2010 Cam Jazz follow-up, Empire), guitarist Joel Harrison's The Wheel (Innova, 2008) and Gress' The Irrational Numbers (Premonition, 2008). With a relatively diminutive self-led discography, the avant-tinged trumpeter has also proven himself an astute bandleader and fine conceptualist, ranging from the oddly configured Vice & Virtue (RKM, 2003) to the more orthodox (but far from conventional) instrumental line-up of This Against That (RKM, 2002). Cognitive Dissonance covers a lot of ground in an hour. The irregularly metered but unfailingly grooving title track kicks things off on a high note, with Gress and Waits building an M-Base-centric foundation over which Moran's funkified piano sets a broad harmonic context. Alessi's impressive opening salvo sets the tone for an album where the soloists are challenged to say a great deal in a short timeframe, succeeding consistently. Despite only one track exceeding six minutes, with the majority ranging between three and four, there's never a sense of being hurried, as Alessi solos with equal invention over the even more rhythmically intricate "Buying, Selling" his even briefer solo (on a tune where the head occupies a full minute of its 2:56 running time) a muted combination of spare, swinging ideas and equal consideration of space, with Moran's staggered accompaniment leading to a similarly well-conceived solo, supported by the ever-pliant, ever-responsive Gress and Waits.

Alessi waxes lyrical on the balladic "Dog Waking" and tango-esque "One Wheeler Will," written for William Coltrane son of legendary saxophonist John Coltrane's son (and also very fine reed man) Ravi Coltrane. An inadvertent nod to expat Canadian trumpet icon Kenny Wheeler in the trumpeter's tone and expressive melancholy, "One Wheeler Will" also features a robust, yet metallic and Gary Peacock-like solo from Gress that's a Cognitive Dissonance highlight. With so much ground covered, it would be easy for Cognitive Dissonance to lose its focus, to become overly eclectic. But with Alessi's writing a challenging combination of memorable themes, harmonically and rhythmically tricky contexts and improvisational largess and an unfettered yet focused playing style that never succumbs to excess, Cognitive Dissonance easily deserves consideration alongside the music of better-known contemporaries like Dave Douglas. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/cognitive-dissonance-ralph-alessi-cam-jazz-review-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: Ralph Alessi: trumpet; Drew Gress: double-bass; Jason Moran: piano (1-6, 8-11, 13-15); Andy Milne: piano (7, 12); Nasheet Waits: drums.

Cognitive Dissonance

Friday, August 25, 2017

Marc Copland - Better By Far

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:33
Size: 143,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:55)  1. Day and Night
(6:25)  2. Better by Far
(4:33)  3. Mr DJ
(9:40)  4. Gone Now
(5:20)  5. Twister
(8:29)  6. Room Enough for Stars
(5:16)  7. Evidence
(8:08)  8. Dark Passage
(5:43)  9. Who Said Swing

Marc Copland got his start in jazz in New York City as a sometimes plugged-in alto saxophonist, working with drummer Chico Hamilton's Quartet, and releasing an overlooked album, Friends (Oblivion Records, 1973) featuring his own quartet. Then he went away, and came back as a pianist, and has since shaped himself into one of finest jazz piano guys around, an artist with a supple touch, a feel for intricately gorgeous melodies and a deep immersion into complex harmonies. In 2015, after a fruitful career that shifted from one record label to another, Copland started his own Inner Voice Records, and offered up the maiden release, Zenith (2015), a quartet affair with Ralph Alessi on trumpet, with bassist Drew Gress and drummer Joey Baron rounding out the rhythm section. The year 2017 finds Copland offering up his second release on the label, Better By Far, a reconvening the Zenith quartet. The music consists of three group improvisations, five Copland compositions, and a Thelonious Monk tune, "Evidence." Two of Copland's most significant teamings over the years have been with guitarist John Abercrombie, and now with trumpeter Alessi. Where Copland's brush paints sound with a developed delicacy of touch, shimmering chords, and gorgeous, amorphous shapings, Alessi uses brighter colors and sharper edges. Especially edgy are the group improvisations, like "Mr. DJ," that opens with Baron's soft drum whispers, joined by Alessi's stabs of metallic notes, Copland's percussive ruminations. "Twister" is a more fluid, more introspective, darker-toned piece that builds momentum along the way. Speaking of dark tones, the Copland-penned "Gone Now," has a pensive, melancholy mood similar to that of Gershwin's "Gone, Gone, Gone," from the masterpiece, Porgy And Bess (1938). "Room Enough For Stars" floats. It's a beautiful ballad like only Copland can write, featuring Alessi in a patient laying down of the melody, and a piquant bass turn by Gress; while Thelonious Monk's "Evidence" finds the group in a more playful mood an energetic romp that stretches the Monkian angularity with an appealing malleability. With Better By Far Marc Copland and Company continue to create the highest level of jazz. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/better-by-far-marc-copland-innervoice-jazz-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel:  Marc Copland: piano;  Ralph Alessi: trumpet;  Drew Gress: bass; Joey Barron: drums.

Better By Far