Time: 63:41
Size: 145.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front
[5:08] 1. Tip Toe
[2:32] 2. Mira
[6:01] 3. Epitaph I Doo-Wee-Inn
[6:44] 4. Orange Was The Color Of Her Dress, Then Blue Silk
[3:18] 5. Little You
[4:03] 6. Epitaph II Line For Lackritz
[7:05] 7. I'm Still Here
[5:02] 8. Sentinel
[4:19] 9. Broken Shadows
[5:22] 10. Sunset And The Mockingbird
[3:55] 11. Epitaph III J-Mac
[5:45] 12. Epitaph IV The Kid From Albany
[4:23] 13. The Single Petal Of A Rose
This trio session, with bassist Steve Haines and drummer Jason Marsalis packs Eby's music aspirations from varying musical inspirations. Opening with Thad Jones' "Tip Top," Eby sports a soprano saxophone sound acquired from John Coltrane circa 1961. That unadorned sound, seemingly simple to the ear, reveals Eby's mastery of the very difficult straight horn. He returns to the soprano on his original "Little You," altering his tone, rejuvenating the sixties sound into a modern chamber feel and then morphing once again on his tribute to Steve Lacy on "Epitaph II: Line For Lackritz" with a more acerbic tone.
The "Epitaph Suite," four commissioned compositions, allows Eby to pay homage to Dewey Redman, Ray Charles, Jackie McLean and Lacy. Each piece displays a little of the honoree, but is more telling of Eby's sound. They can dribble an enticing blues for Charles, slowly defrosting a sexy tenor sound or cleanly snap off notes in praise to McLean without sounding derivative or clichéd.
Saxophonist Branford Marsalis joins Eby's trio on two tracks. The two tenors reprise Marsalis' duel with Joe Lovano on "The Sentinel," from The Dark Keys (Columbia, 1996); the two also interlock horns on the Redman tribute, "Epitaph I: Doo-We-Inn." Like Marsalis, Eby's tenor tone can be boundless, blues-inflected, and wholly satisfying. These two players are indeed simpatico. ~Mark Corroto
Recording information: The Rubber Room, Chapel Hill, NC.
Chad Eby (saxophone, tenor saxophone); Doug Wamble (guitar); Jason Marsalis (drums).
The "Epitaph Suite," four commissioned compositions, allows Eby to pay homage to Dewey Redman, Ray Charles, Jackie McLean and Lacy. Each piece displays a little of the honoree, but is more telling of Eby's sound. They can dribble an enticing blues for Charles, slowly defrosting a sexy tenor sound or cleanly snap off notes in praise to McLean without sounding derivative or clichéd.
Saxophonist Branford Marsalis joins Eby's trio on two tracks. The two tenors reprise Marsalis' duel with Joe Lovano on "The Sentinel," from The Dark Keys (Columbia, 1996); the two also interlock horns on the Redman tribute, "Epitaph I: Doo-We-Inn." Like Marsalis, Eby's tenor tone can be boundless, blues-inflected, and wholly satisfying. These two players are indeed simpatico. ~Mark Corroto
Recording information: The Rubber Room, Chapel Hill, NC.
Chad Eby (saxophone, tenor saxophone); Doug Wamble (guitar); Jason Marsalis (drums).
Broken Shadows