Showing posts with label Victor Gould. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victor Gould. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2024

Black Art Jazz Collective - Ascension

Styles: Post Bop,Jazz Contemporary
Size: 110,1 MB
Time: 48:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Art: Front

1. Ascension (5:36)
2. Mr. Willis (4:16)
3. Involuntary Servitude (6:46)
4. Twin Towers (6:28)
5. No Words Needed (1:54)
6. Tulsa (6:32)
7. Iron Man (6:31)
8. For the Kids (5:33)
9. Birdie's Bounce (4:27)

On Ascension, the Black Art Jazz Collective, a like-minded sextet co-founded in 2012 by trumpeter Jeremy Pelt and saxophonist Wayne Escoffery to salute the artistry of their mentors and musical heroes while moving the idiom forward into the twenty-first century, is unbending in its allegiance to the straight-ahead canon espoused by the architects of modern jazz. It's a stance that gives rise to pluses and minuses.

On the upside, this is splendid music, rhythmically and melodically pleasing, well-played by an ensemble whose members are bright and durable pillars on the New York-area scene. On the downside, the burnished performance can't becloud the fact that there's nothing special on the menu, simply well-arranged jazz that seems somehow vaguely familiar. In other words, the meal is meat and potatoes, even though remarkably well-cooked. Perhaps this has something to do with the fact that every number is an original composition: three by Pelt, two each by pianist Victor Gould and trombonist James Burton III, one apiece by Escoffery and the late Jackie McLean, and, even more so, that none would have seemed out of place in a straight-shooting Prestige-Blue Note session from the '50s or '60s.

That's not to suggest that anything here is less than appetizing. Everyone writes well, and solos are as sharp and resourceful as one would expect from musicians with their awareness and expertise. Still, one can't evade the impression he/she has heard this before in other contexts. And yet, even an "encore" can be no less than agreeable when it is mapped out as well as this. Ascension embodies jazz whose contemporary framework is bolstered by an unerring trust in time- honored precepts as its anchor. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ascension-black-art-jazz-collective-highnote-records

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt, trumpet; Wayne Escoffery, tenor saxophone; James Burton III, trombone; Victor Gould, keyboards; Rashaan Carter, bass; Mark Whitfield Jr., drums.

Ascension

Sunday, July 7, 2024

Black Art Jazz Collective - Truth To Power

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Size: 144,2 MB
Time: 62:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Art: Front

1. Black Heart (5:49)
2. The Fabricator (6:16)
3. Truth To Power (8:20)
4. It's Alright (7:51)
5. Coming Of Age (5:29)
6. Dsus (5:29)
7. Code Switching (5:51)
8. Soliloquy (For Sidney Poitier) (4:20)
9. Lookin' For Leroy (6:45)
10. Blues On Stratford Road (6:30)

Many jazz fans break out in a sweat when they see the word “collective" in the name of a jazz group. One assumes the music is going to be avant-garde and free form to the point of incoherence. You'll be happy to know that that the Black Art Jazz Collective's new album Truth to Power (HighNote) is warmly stormy and soulfully engaging.

This collective is a sextet that has been around since 2014 and features topnotch musicians carrying on the tradition of black jazz of the 1960s and '70s that was both spirited and socially conscious. The album includes the following musicians on different tracks: Jeremy Pelt, Josh Evans and Wallace Roney Jr. (tp), James Burton III (tp), Wayne Escoffery (saxophones), Xavier Davis and Victor Gould (p,el p), Vincent Archer and Rashaan Carter (b) and Johnathan Blake and Mark Whitfield, Jr. (d).

tracks are: Black Heart; The Fabricator; Truth to Power; It's Alright; Coming of Age; Dsus; Code Switching; Soliloquy (for Sidney Poitier); Lookin' for Leroy; Blues on Stratford.

The music is hard-charging ("Truth to Power," “Dsus," “Lookin' for Leroy" and “Code Switching") and sensual ("It's Alright" and “Soliloquy for Sidney Poitier". In some places the group reminds me of Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers with Wayne Shorter and in others the Jazz Crusaders.

Overall, the Black Art Jazz Collective has its own sound that delivers a strong message. This is jazz from a black point of view as I remember it in the 1960s and '70s, which means it's deeply felt and muscular in a poetic, meaningful way. Check it out. By Marc Myers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/black-art-jazz-collective-and-39truth-to-power-and-39/

Personnel: Wayne Escoffery - (tenor saxophone); Jeremy Pelt - (trumpet); Josh Evans, Wallace Roney Jr; James Burton III - (trombone); Xavier Davis - (piano on tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 9 & 10); Victor Gould - (piano on tracks 3, 6, 7 & 8); Vicente Archer - (bass on tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 9 & 10); Rashaan Carter - (bass on tracks 3, 6, 7 & 8); Johnathan Blake - (drums on tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 9 & 10); Mark Whitfield Jr - (drums on tracks 3, 6, 7 & 8).

Truth To Power

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Jeremy Pelt - The Art of Intimacy, Vol. 2: His Muse

Styles: Vocal, Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:52
Size: 116,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:30) 1. …For Whom I Love So Much
(5:19) 2. Slow Hot Wind
(3:04) 3. If I Ruled the World
(4:38) 4. I Can't Escape from You
(6:08) 5. There'll Be Other Times
(4:57) 6. Don't Love Me
(6:40) 7. Blues in Sophistication
(4:33) 8. Two Different Worlds
(4:25) 9. When She Makes Music
(4:34) 10. Two for the Road

Playing jazz is a lot like love itself, it is as much about poignancy as it is about joy, whether we listen to a torch song or read a love poem by Shelley, we experience their creator's pain or we share in their euphoria.

And it is Jeremy Pelt's understanding of this dichotomy of passion and restraint that makes this album so compelling. The set list is as all-encompassing as a love affair - from the straight-ahead feeling of "I Can't Escape from You" to the breathless stillness of his muted trumpet on "There'll Be Other Times." His sly, half-valve effects on "Blues in Sophistication" show an impish delight while Henry Mancini's "Slow Hot Wind" throbs with an ever so discreet Latin feel.

This may be considered a "with strings" record but Pelt does not allow it to descend into a vibrato-laden string sound. There is an unusually classical feel to this album with the string quartet supporting, reinforcing and commenting on Pelt's playing rather than sugar-coating it. Buddy Rich once said, "Jazz should be treated the same as classical music." He was right. He "got it" and, as evidenced herein, so does Jeremy Pelt.

Personnel: Jeremy Pelt: trumpet, vocal; Victor Gould: piano; Buster Williams: bass; Billy Hart: drums; Chico Pinheiro: guitar (track 10 only), String Ensemble arranged & conducted by David O'Rourke

The Art of Intimacy, Vol. 2: His Muse

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

David Gilmore - Transitions

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:08
Size: 129,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:28)  1. End of Daze
(5:31)  2. Beyond All Limits
(7:06)  3. Blues Mind Matter
(5:57)  4. Bluesette
(5:05)  5. Both
(6:32)  6. Spontanuity
(5:37)  7. Kid Logic
(9:13)  8. Farralone
(4:36)  9. Nem Un Talvez

Veteran guitarist David Gilmore has assembled a marvelous band for this album: tenor saxophonist Mark Shim, pianist Victor Gould, bassist Carlo DeRosa and drummer E.J. Strickland. He’s also chosen to de-emphasize his own compositions and focus on the work of artists who have (to borrow from the title) transitioned to the next world, three of them Bobby Hutcherson, Victor Bailey and Jean “Toots” Thielemans quite recently.

Hutcherson gets two nods, with intricate versions of “Farralone,” featuring Bill Ware on vibes, and “Blues Mind Matter,” which draws particularly well-conceived solos from Gould, Shim and Gilmore. For a funky, percussion-led and piano-less take on Bailey’s “Kid Logic,” Gilmore plays electric and acoustic guitar, impressively choosing the latter to navigate the hand-cramping central riff in unison with DeRosa. Thielemans’ “Bluesette” is converted to 4/4 time and given a set of reharmonized changes that seem to repeatedly circle in on themselves. Guest harmonica player Grégoire Maret’s wistful playing keeps the tune at least partly connected to its roots.

A few living composers are represented on Transitions too. Annette Peacock’s “Both” is the vehicle for some suitably spooky group improv. Hermeto Pascoal’s “Nem um Talvez” receives a tender reading on nylon-string acoustic. And there are two Gilmore originals, “End of Daze” and “Spontanuity,” both of which brilliantly combine the abstract and the visceral. Producer Gerry Teekens deserves extra audio-geek kudos for panning DeRosa’s bass toward the left side of the stereo spectrum and Strickland’s drum kit toward the right rather than, as is far more common, orienting both in the center. It’s a move that arguably gives listeners a better sense of what the rhythm section’s doing, and ought to be considered more often.~ Mac Randall https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/david-gilmore-transitions/

Personnel: Electric Guitar – David Gilmore; Bass – Carlo DeRosa; Drums – E.J. Strickland; Harmonica – Gregoire Maret (tracks: 4); Piano – Victor Gould; Tenor Saxophone – Mark Shim; Vibraphone – Bill Ware (tracks: 8)

Transitions

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Jeremy Pelt - Noir en Rouge

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:03
Size: 151,7 MB
Art: Front

( 5:30)  1. Make Noise!
( 8:08)  2. Re-invention
( 9:38)  3. Sir Carter
( 7:02)  4. Black Love Stories
(10:34)  5. Evolution
(11:48)  6. I Will Wait for You
( 5:30)  7. Melody for V
( 7:50)  8. Château d’eau

A really great live set from trumpeter Jeremy Pelt  who seems to use the format to open up with even more bold energy than his recent studio albums! There's a freewheeling vibe here that reminds us of the way that Freddie Hubbard could really transform in a live setting both searing as a soloist, and this very powerful force as a leader really urging the best out of his group on the date a quintet that includes Victor Gould on piano, Vincente Archer on bass, Jonathan Butler on drums, and Jacqueline Acevedo on percussion! The other players have this incessant energy that can't help but drive Pelt forward  and the whole group gels together wonderfully, on titles that include "Black Love Stories", "Sir Carter", "Re-Invention", "Make Noise", "Evolution", and "I Will Wait For You".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/877866/Jeremy-Pelt:Noir-En-Rouge-Live-In-Paris

Personnel: Trumpet, Producer – Jeremy Pelt; Bass – Vicente Archer; Drums – Jonathan Barber; Percussion – Jacquelene Acevedo; Piano – Victor Gould

Noir en rouge

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Victor Gould - Earthlings

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:39
Size: 131,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. Farewell to Dogma
(4:58)  2. Love Vibrations
(4:14)  3. Earthlings
(5:57)  4. Spider
(5:27)  5. Rise
(5:52)  6. Roses Poses
(5:06)  7. Blues on Top
(5:06)  8. Lover
(5:34)  9. Con Alma
(8:51) 10. Resilience

Darkly beautiful sounds from pianist Victor Gould an up-and-coming player who's also turning into a hell of a leader too! Vic works here with a fantastic core trio Dezron Douglas on bass and Eric McPherson on drums both players who are perfectly suited to set up the right sort of arcing, angling elements that fit the mode of Gould's piano which seems to run up and down in these blocky flights of deeper tones that are completely wonderful! The album also features guest horns on about half the set the soprano sax of Tim Warfield on three tracks, and the alto of Godwin Louis on three more plus some light percussion from Khalil Kwame Bell. 

Titles include the originals "Rise", "Resilience", "Spider", and "Blues On Top" plus versions of "Love Vibrations", "Farewell To Dogma", "Earthlings", and "Con Alma".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/870271/Victor-Gould:Earthlings

Personnel: Victor Gould - piano,composer; Dezron Douglas - bass,composer; Eric McPherson - drums

Earthlings

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Victor Gould - Clockwork

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:44
Size: 149,2 MB
Art: Front

(7:37)  1. Clockwork
(7:07)  2. Room
(5:20)  3. Chaancé
(5:18)  4. Blue Dales
(7:53)  5. The Return
(3:09)  6. Apostle John  (Prelude)
(8:58)  7. Apostle John
(0:44)  8. Sir Carter  (Intro)
(4:50)  9. Sir Carter
(5:36) 10. Nefertiti
(8:06) 11. Three Souls

There are lots of moving parts that make clocks tick. Each has its own function, harmoniously aligned with the others, and every single one helps to sustain the very concepts of time and flow. The analogy can clearly be drawn from these mechanisms behind timepieces to jazz in general, but it's rarely as obvious to the ears as it is on this album in particular. Pianist Victor Gould's debut utilizes a variety of large gears, pinions, and regulators to help fashion his own ideas. You just never know who'll be standing in for which of those parts. The high-octane combination of Gould, bassist Ben Williams, and drummer E.J. Strickland is at the center of each scene, but they're joined, at different times, by a variety of other musicians and instruments saxophones, trumpet, flute, strings, and percussion which help to create an intricate sonic mesh and add a variety of tonal colors to the mix. It's heady modernistic jazz language and high art rolled into one. The album opens on the title track, a bubbly Latin cauldron fired and forwarded by the aforementioned trio in cahoots with percussionist Pedrito Martinez. The pieces that follow "Room," a sunny yet contemplative work in three, and "Chaance," a mellow, strings-enhanced feature that puts the spotlight on Jeremy Pelt's flugelhorn and the composer's piano stand apart in mood and musical complexion, marking Gould as a composer of great ambition and skill. 

While shifting focal points, different emotional tides, and the track-to-track addition and subtraction of musicians all allow the listener to indulge in a variety of musical worlds and fantasies, Gould's voice rings true in each and every one . He excels at every turn, regardless of where those turns may lead. He brilliantly works the beautiful-to-brooding range on the prelude to "Apostle John"; he shows patience and restraint over a throbbing base/bass on that tune proper, standing in stark contrast to the raw intensity that comes from his colleagues; and he delivers a scene-stealer statement full of daring and darting maneuvers on "Blue Dales." It's easy to see what his A-list employers trumpeter Wallace Roney, drummer Ralph Peterson, and saxophonist Donald Harrison, among others see in Gould. He's got the musical world on a string, in his mind, and at his fingertips. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/clockwork-victor-gould-fresh-sound-new-talent-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Victor Gould: piano; Jeremy Pelt: trumpet (1-3, 6-8, 11); Godwin Louis: alto saxophone (1-3, 5-8, 11); Myron Walden: tenor saxophone (1-3, 6-8, 11); Anne Drummond: flute (3, 7); Ben Williams: bass (1-5, 7, 9-11); E.J. Strickland: drums (1-5, 7-11); Pedrito Martinez: percussion (1, 4, 7); Yoojin Park: violin (3, 6, 7); Heejin Chang: viola (3, 6, 7); Veronica Parrales: cello (3, 6, 7).

Clockwork