Showing posts with label Stan Sulzmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Sulzmann. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2019

Kenny Wheeler Quintet - Butterfly Flutter By

Styles: Flugelhorn, Cornet Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:33
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

(9:33)  1. Everybody's Song But My Own
(5:11)  2. We Salute The Night
(9:21)  3. Miold Man
(8:51)  4. Butterfly Flutter By
(8:23)  5. Gigolo
(7:14)  6. Little Fella

Recorded at a time when trumpeter Kenny Wheeler was playing regularly in bassist Dave Holland's band, this quintet outing with Holland, Stan Sulzman (who switches between soprano, tenor and flute), pianist John Taylor and drummer Billy Elgart features six of Wheeler's originals, some of which were written quite a few years before. "Everybody's Song But My Own" and "Flutter By, Butterfly" are probably the most memorable of the compositions but each of the performances (which feature consistently rewarding solos) are worth hearing.
 ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/flutter-by-butterfly-mw0000197545

Personnel: Kenny Wheeler - flugelhorn, cornet; Stan Sulzmann - soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, flute; John Taylor - piano; Dave Holland - bass; Billy Elgart - drums

Butterfly Flutter By

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Kenny Wheeler - Dream Sequence

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:33
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(13:45)  1. Unti
( 6:29)  2. Drum Sequence
( 5:11)  3. Dream Sequence
( 9:35)  4. Cousin Mary
( 7:06)  5. Nonetheless
( 7:46)  6. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
( 4:52)  7. Hearken
(11:47)  8. Kind Folks

The latest edition to trumpeter/flugelhornist Kenny Wheeler's discography commences with variable pulses and emphatic horn charts on "Unti." But while this production launches with an up-tempo groove, the majority of this set simply corresponds to the wistful implications set forth by the album title. 

Recorded during several visits to London's Gateway Studio spanning 1995 to 2003, Wheeler performs solely on flugelhorn, along with a core sextet separating into duo, trio, and quintet consortiums. Simply stated, the great flugelhornist is a weaver of dreams! Featuring alto saxophonists Ray Warleigh, Stan Sulzmann, guitarist John Parricelli and others, the group delves into ethereally executed blues motifs and airy dreamscapes. Warleigh's misty flute work and Parricelli's mid-toned electric guitar voicings on "Nonetheless" propose a vibe that might suggest a trouble-free world. The dreaminess continues with a sublime quartet rendition of Billy Strayhorn's ballad "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing." Here, Wheeler's yearning lines bespeak a sense of solitude, marked by wraithlike overtones. Wheeler and his musical associates project a dirge-like momentum on "Kind Folks." However, they equalize the rhythmic aspects via positive intimations by quietly soaring skyward. In sum, the musicians project a velvety soundscape supplanted by warmly stated choruses and keenly articulated soloing spots. (Highly recommended...) ~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dream-sequence-kenny-wheeler-psi-review-by-glenn-astarita.php

Personnel: Ray Warleigh, alto saxophone & flute; Stan Sulzmann, tenor saxophone; Tony Levin, drums; Kenny Wheeler, flugelhorn; John Parricelli, guitar; Chris Laurence

Dream Sequence

Friday, September 30, 2016

Kenny Wheeler - Six for Six

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 132,9 MB
Art: Front

( 8:18)  1. Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 1)
( 5:06)  2. Canter N. 6
( 5:55)  3. The Long Waiting
( 8:06)  4. Four, Five, Six
( 7:24)  5. Ballad N. 130
( 5:34)  6. Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 2)
( 6:56)  7. The Imminent Immigrant
(10:38)  8. Upwards

When artists move into their eighties, every new album is a gift. It's difficult enough for any octogenarian musician to maintain his/her game, but especially horn players, for whom embouchure and breath are so essential to tone and reach. Six for Six is, however, a curious gift from expat Canadian trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, who's made Britain his home since the mid-'50s. Recorded in 2008, it's his first sextet recording since 2003's Dream Sequence and even that album only featured one piece for all six players. What that really means, then, is that Six for Six is Wheeler's first real sextet date since 1980's Around 6, and his very first with a lineup consisting, in addition to his inimitable horn work, of two saxophones, piano, bass and drums. It's a curious program: a full six of its eight tracks were heard just last year on Wheeler's superb big band outing, The Long Waiting (Cam Jazz, 2012), but they couldn't be more different, demonstrating just how malleable Wheeler's charts can be. Recorded in 2011, The Long Waiting, "Seven, Eight, Nine" was a relatively concise, mid-tempo swinger that featured just one solo (Wheeler); here, it's broken into two parts spread across the record. The album-opening "Part 1" opens with a powerful a cappella intro from drummer Martin France that sets the tone for an album that's Wheeler's most flat-out incendiary since Double, Double You (ECM, 1984). Unlike The Long Waiting's mixed meter reading of 7/8, 6/8 and 4/4, "Part 1" here sticks with a constant 4/4, but at a much brighter clip and with plenty more solo space for Wheeler, tenor saxophonist Bobby Wellins and soprano saxophonist Stan Sulzmann.

Excising the original's second theme for further extrapolation, "Seven, Eight, Nine (Part 2)," is taken at a slightly slower pace than "Part 1" (but still considerably brighter than the big band version) and, while significantly shorter, still leaves room for impressive solos from Sulzmann (this time on tenor), Taylor and Wheeler, with Laurence a firm but pliant anchor and France, once again, playing with fire and unfettered freedom throughout this bright 6/8 take. Wellins is the only new face here, with Sulzmann, pianist John Taylor and bassist Chris Laurence all longtime Wheeler collaborators; and, although France only made his first recorded appearance with Wheeler on The Long Waiting, he's been gigging with the trumpeter for some time, and has been a member of Taylor's trio since the pianist's superb Angel of the Presence (Cam Jazz, 2006). Still, with Wellins an alumnus of British luminaries like Stan Tracey and Tubby Hayes, it's unlikely that this is the first time he and Wheeler have broken musical bread together. On the flip side to more powerful tracks like "Upwards," which more closely mirrors the energy of The Long Waiting's version, albeit with a significantly altered arrangement, Six for Six's fresh look at "The Long Waiting," with its spare duo intro from Wheeler and Taylor, is taken at a slower pace, while the more amiable pulse of the big band's "Four, Five Six" is deserted here for a shorter version that still manages to squeeze in another piano/trumpet intro, a fiery rubato exchange between Sulzmann and Wellins and, finally and at a faster clip space for concise but high octane solos from Wellins, Taylor, Wheeler and France.

It's not just because, with the exception of The Long Waiting, Six for Six is Wheeler's first Cam Jazz recording to feature a drummer though France certainly lights one heckuva fire underneath his band mates, while still proving capable of a gentler disposition on more subdued fare like "Ballad N. 130" and the brighter, but lighter-textured "The Imminent Immigrant," making its first appearance since Wheeler's quartet date All the More (Soul Note, 1997). In a career now approaching its sixth decade, Wheeler's writing has not lost any of the unmistakable lyricism that's been a defining touchstone since early recordings like the classic Gnu High (ECM, 1976), but even as he's passed the 83 mark this year, Wheeler's lost neither his tone nor his remarkable reach his closing, stratospheric note at the end of "Four, Five, Six" being something to which many trumpeters half his age still aspire. Not since Double, Double You has Wheeler released an album as exhilarating as Six for Six. With a sextet capable of delivering both the firepower and the poetry, hopefully this won't be another of the one-shot deals that have defined the rest of Wheeler's nevertheless impressive discography. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/kenny-wheeler-six-for-six-by-john-kelman.php
 
Personnel: Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn; Stan Sulzmann: tenor and soprano saxophone; Bobby Wellins: tenor saxophone; John Taylor: piano; Chris Laurence: bass; Martin France: drums.

Six for Six

Saturday, November 15, 2014

The Jim Mullen Organ Trio Feat. Stan Sulzmann - Smokescreen

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:14
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:56)  1. Consolidation
(6:58)  2. Stairway to the Stars
(5:15)  3. It Never Entered My Mind
(5:56)  4. Walk on By
(4:58)  5. When I Grow Up
(5:07)  6. Smokescreen
(5:08)  7. Aja
(4:28)  8. Cornelius
(5:03)  9. The White Cockade
(4:34) 10. Buzzard Count
(4:48) 11. Chances Are

It's hard to find even the most spartan abstract-music fan who isn't a closet admirer of Hammond organ jazz. The gospel-powered style popularised by Jimmy Smith in the 1960s still crosses generations. (The Hammond's gospel roots go back to the era when not all churches had organs, but the Hammond had wheels, allowing preachers to drive them to the service). Jim Mullen, the great Scottish funk and jazz guitarist, runs a mellow, lightly-swinging, more idiomatically wide-ranging version, with the elegantly boppish Mike Gorman doing the organ honours - and saxophonist Stan Sulzmann is a welcome guest on three tracks. The Scottish traditional The White Cockade works unexpectedly well with Sulzmann's soprano. And Mullen's silky sound, and a slow account of Stairway to the Stars makes the best of the guitarist's singing tone Mullen has the remarkable knack of sometimes making his instrument suggest Ray Charles's voice. 

Mullen's springy rhythmic sense and Gorman's twisting lines also make a classy job of It Never Entered My Mind. The only catch is that the music has a restrained, lounge-jazzy feel occasionally, and you wish for a burst or two of vulgar, old-fashioned Hammond-bashing hyperbole. But this is a popular UK touring band, faithfully presented. ~ John Fordham  http://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/dec/15/jazz3

Personnel:  Jim Mullen – guitar; Mike Gorman - Hammond organ; Matt Skelton – drums; Stan Sulzmann - sax