Showing posts with label Sullivan Fortner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sullivan Fortner. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Sullivan Fortner - Solo Game Cd1, Cd2

Sullivan Fortner - Solo Game Cd1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 46:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 107,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:50) 1. Don't You Worry About a Thing
(9:24) 2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(4:39) 3. Congolese Children
(4:29) 4. I'm All Smiles
(4:45) 5. Invitation
(6:31) 6. Once I loved
(3:17) 7. Cute
(5:01) 8. This Is New
(4:37) 9. Come Sunday

Sullivan Fortner - Solo Game Cd2

Time: 32:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 75,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:15) 1. Power Mode
(5:07) 2. It's a Game
(5:28) 3. Snakes And Ladders
(1:25) 4. Hounds and Jackal
(2:04) 5. King's Table
(1:07) 6. Stag
(2:54) 7. Cross and Circle
(4:51) 8. Space Walk
(3:20) 9. Valse du petit chien
(1:56) 10. Fred Hersch, notes on Solo
(3:58) 11. Jason Moran, notes on Game

Mentored by Fred Hersch and Jason Moran, and produced by Hersch, Solo Game puts pianist Sullivan Fortner in a really good place. That is before the music even starts. Then it does start with a sly and subdued solo on Stevie Wonder's buoyant 1973 top tenner, "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing," while dropping subtle hints to the trip ahead, forged by Fortner's quixotic self.

Fortner, who has steadily grown a discography which includes his own quartet recording Aria (Impulse!, 2015), a seven year stint with Roy Hargrove, and choice sessions with Paul Simon, Cecile McLorin Salvant (who adds her ethereal magic to the "Tubular Bells" like "Snakes and Ladders"), and Melissa Aldana just to name a few. With his perfect pitch and classic stride approach, the pianist has a long and illustrious career ahead of him.

An autumnally seasoned approach to Richard Rodgers' "I Didn't Know What Time it Was" belies Fortner's age. There is a clear sense of yearning yet knowing the years reveal as they will. Hersch's production is pristine, throwing light on Fortner's clearly articulated vision a new and most assured take on things of beauty over convenience, things with eternal presence.

The pianist does what all great artists, innovators, and true creators (not Tik Tok spin offs) do; they challenge themselves and rise well above said challenge. So, Randy Weston's "Congolese Children" sounds fully conceived and of a piece, as does Antonio Carlos Jobim's luscious "Once I Loved." Fortner is so aware of those who have mastered the keys before him that, by the time we get to singularly malleable romps through Neil Hefti's bouncing "Cute" and Kurt Weill's neo-ragtime "This Is New," visions of Art Tatum and Bud Powell are dancing in our heads.

These solo ventures can get over-wrought at times think of young Keith Jarrett's one man Restoration Ruin (Vortex, 1968) but Solo Game for the greater part avoids those youthful pratfalls. Though it does have its wrought moments, such as "It's A Game" the second track on Disc Two it runs a bit too long, predictably. Here the pianist takes on a host of instruments including vibes, celeste, chime tree, Moog, Vocoder, Rain Maker, Hammond B3, and egg shaker.

Fully composed by Fortner, the brooding Shaft-like undertow "Snakes and Ladders" falls victim to, once again, its length. "Hounds and Jackals" on the other hand, is too short. "Space Walk " is. well, the new generation watching 2001: A Space Odyssey. But, given the gravity and the gravitas of Solo Game, this is really nitpicking. These two discs are beyond question worth the time it takes to get pulled into their gracious and sustainable orbit. By Mike Jurkovic Sullivan Fortner: Solo Game album review @ All About Jazz

Personnel: Sullivan Fortner: Piano (Steinway B), Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3 Organ, Vibes, Celeste, Chime Tree, Moog, Vocoder, Rain Maker, Hand Percussion, Egg Shaker, Triangle, Vocals, Hand Claps, Shakers, Canopus Bass Drum, Mongolian Gong (2); Kyle Pool: hand claps on (2-2); Cecile McLorin Salvant: vocals on (2-3).

Solo Game Cd 1, Cd 2

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Mike Moreno - Standards from Film

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:33
Size: 153,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:30) 1. Beautiful Love
(5:30) 2. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(6:55) 3. There Will Never Be Another You
(6:39) 4. Stella By Starlight
(8:17) 5. Laura
(7:31) 6. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(7:00) 7. On Green Dolphin Street
(4:16) 8. My Foolish Heart
(8:06) 9. Invitation
(9:44) 10. Days Of Wine And Roses

At last. An enjoyable alternative to the ghastly albums of "jazzed up" hymns and Christmas carols which spew forth every holiday season. There is nothing overtly Christmassy about guitarist Mike Moreno's Standards From Film, but it is appropriate that the album, recorded in New York in December 2021, was released in the UK in early December 2022 and came out in the US a month or so earlier. It nails the seasonal nostalgia spike and then some.

Moreno, always a lyrical player and never more so than on this occasion, has chosen ten of his favourite evergreens, each of which was either commissioned for a movie soundtrack or included in one within a year or so of being published. They are Wayne King, Victor Young and Egbert Van Alstyne's "Beautiful Love," Herb Brown's "You Stepped Out Of A Dream," Harry Warren's "There Will Never Be Another You," Victor Young's "Stella By Starlight" and "My Foolish Heart," David Raksin's "Laura," Jule Styne's "I Fall In Love Too Easily," Bronislau Caper and Ned Washington's "On Green Dolphin Street," Kaper's "Invitation" and Henry Mancini's "Days Of Wine And Roses." Happily, Moreno does not reinvent, reimagine, recalibrate or otherwise re-screwup any of the tunes; "My Foolish Heart" is given a novel rhythmic foundation, but it works.

After the brief, unaccompanied guitar reading of "Beautiful Love" which opens the album, the remaining tracks have average playing times of just over seven minutes, plenty of time for bookending theme statements and solos that unfold without rush in between. Moreno is the chief soloist, but pianist Sullivan Fortner and bassist Matt Brewer each get turns in the spotlight; Brewer delivers a particular gem on "There Will Never Be Another You."

Moreno, the producer, has inserted brief dialogue soundbites from the source movies at the start or finish of most tracks. This could have been tacky but, if one lightens up and goes with the flow, it works. Check the clip of "Stella By Starlight" below for an example. Less successful is the microphone placement. The piano is close mic'd within an inch of its life and there are occasions, especially when Fortner uses the sustain pedal, that the bass register of the instrument threatens to overwhelm everything else that is going on. But the 4-star rating stands.By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/standards-from-film-mike-moreno-criss-cross

Personnel: Mike Moreno: guitar; Sullivan Fortner: piano; Matt Brewer: bass; Obed Calvaire: drums.

Standards from Film

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Cécile McLorin Salvant - The Window

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:22
Size: 162,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:11)  1. Visions
(2:09)  2. One Step Ahead
(2:34)  3. By Myself
(4:55)  4. The Sweetest Sounds
(5:53)  5. Ever Since The One I Love's Been Gone
(2:05)  6. A Clef
(3:10)  7. Obsession
(3:21)  8. Wild Is Love
(3:00)  9. J'ai L'Cafard
(7:10) 10. Somewhere
(4:29) 11. The Gentleman Is A Dope
(3:47) 12. Trouble Is A Man
(3:20) 13. Were Thine That Special Face
(5:00) 14. I've Got Your Number
(3:28) 15. Tell Me Why
(1:10) 16. Everything I've Got Belongs To You
(9:34) 17. The Peacocks

Cécile McLorin Salvant has one of the most powerful voices in jazz. Which doesn't make her always easy to listen to. Sometimes she instills new meaning to an old lyric, other times she tries too hard and goes over the top. Still, at least she tries. She comes from Miami, daughter of a Haitian father and a French mother. Aware of the power of her voice from an early age, she trained in classical music, but then fell in love with the voice of Sarah Vaughan when she was 14. "I just wanted to sound as much like her as I possibly could," she recalls. She went on to win an assortment of awards, including, in 2010, the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Vocals Competition, and attracted rave reviews. Wynton Marsalis says of her, "You get a singer like this once in a generation or two." That's a maybe. Singers that impress you are not necessarily those you'll want to hear again and again. Especially when they go into diva screech mode. But McLorin Salvant says: "I never wanted to sound clean and pretty. In jazz, I felt I could sing these deep, husky lows if I want, and then these really tiny, laser highs if I want, as well." On The Window, her fifth album, she is accompanied on nearly all tracks by pianist Sullivan Fortner. On only one, "The Peacocks," is anyone else present, this being Melissa Albana playing wispy tenor saxophone. The sparse setting grows tiresome. Highlights? There are plenty: "Ever Since The One I Love's Been Gone," singing to a live audience; "Wild Is Love," "The Gentleman Is A Dope," "Trouble Is A Man" and "I've Got Your Number" and "Everything I've Got Belongs To You." On Richard Rodgers' "The Sweetest Sounds," she is upstaged by a magnificent solo by Fortner. She sings in French on two numbers, her own "A Clef" and "J'ai L'Cafard," on which Fortner plays organ. Leonard Bernstein's "Somewhere," from West Side Story, suffers from being given the big treatment and "Were Thine That Special Face" is Cole Porter at his most precious and should have been left in the dusty vault from which it was taken. ~ Chris Mosey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-window-cecile-mclorin-salvant-mack-avenue-records-review-by-chris-mosey.php

Personnel: Cecile McLorin Salvant: vocals; Sullivan Fortner: piano; Melissa Aldana: tenor saxophone.

The Window