Creative music should challenge us, make us think and move us forward. Music can make one's life better and fuller, one of life's greatest pleasures.
Saturday, July 31, 2021
Meeting Shawn Maxwell
Wednesday, July 28, 2021
Open Skies & Illuminations
Photo: Sara Pettinella |
Photo: Pablo Reyes |
Photo: Dave Stapleton |
Thursday, July 22, 2021
Mr. Parker's Trios
Photo: Peter Gannushkin |
Earlier this year, AUM Fidelity released "Migrations of Silence Into and Out of the Tone World", a massive yet splendid 10-album set of original music composed and arranged by bassist-composer William Parker. 10 separate groups, 91 tracks, 594 minutes of music, which takes down to ingest, ruminate upon, and understand. Like the recent works of Wadada Leo Smith and Anthony Braxton (also multiple disk sets), Mr. Parker's music is telling stories, narratives that blend tradition, history, and are very much a reflection of the present day. In the weeks leading to the Pandemic shutdown, the bassist recorded two albums that continue the exploration that his earlier albums began.
Photo: Peter Drukker |
Monday, July 19, 2021
Historical Recordings That Bring Joy & Generate Excitement
Photo: Mark Sheldon |
Photo: Jean-Francois Laberine |
Photo: Francis Woolf/Blue Note |
Photo: Tom Copi |
Photo: H Nolan |
Friday, July 16, 2021
Remembering Frank Kimbrough With Song & Much Love
Look at this list:
Addison Frei, Alexa Tarantino, Alexis Cuadrado, Allan Chase, Allan Mednard
Ben Allison, Ben Monder, Ben Rosenblum, Ben Wolfe, Billy Drummond
Clarence Penn, Craig Taborn
Dan Tepfer, Dave Douglas, Dave Treut , Dezron Douglas, Donny McCaslin, Douglas Marriner
Elan Mehler, Elio Villafranca, Evan Harris
Francisco Mela, Fred Hersch
Gary Versace, Glenn Zaleski
Helen Sung
Immanuel Wilkins, Isaiah J. Thompson
Jacob Sacks, Jay Anderson, Jeff Cosgrove, Jeff Hirshfield, Jeff Williams, Jesse Neuman
Joe Lovano, Joel Wenhardt, John Hébert
Kirk Knuffke
Martin Wind, Marty Jaffe, Matt Wilson, Micah Thomas, Michael Blake, Michael Formanek
Noah Halpern, Noah Preminger
Olivia Chindamo
Patrick Cornelius
Rich Perry, Rich Rosenzweig, Riley Mulherkar, Rob Jost, Ron Horton, Rufus Reid
Ryan Keberle
Samora Pinderhughes, Satoshi Takeishi, Scott Robinson, Scott Spivak, Sean Mason
Steve Cardenas, Steve Wilson
Ted Nash, Tim Horner, Todd Neufeld, Tony Moreno, & Tony Scherr
What do they have in common?
This person:
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Pianist, composer, arranger, and educator Frank Kimbrough, who died on December 30, 2020, is who. Kimbrough, who was born in North Carolina, settled in New York City in 1981 and slowly, steadily, built his career as a first-class soloist and accompanist, first came to critical exposure when he joined the Jazz Composers Collective in 1991 (co-founded by bassist Ben Allison with trumpeter Ron Horton, saxophonists Ted Nash and Michael Blake). Two years later, Kimbrough took over the piano chair in the Maria Schneider Orchestra, staying there until his untimely passing.
(From the Press Release): (On July 16), Newvelle Records is releasing "KIMBROUGH", a collection of 61 original compositions by jazz artist and educator Frank Kimbrough, who passed away in December 2020. Featuring tributes from 67 of Frank’s former bandmates, students, and friends across multiple generations, "KIMBROUGH" was recorded over three and a half days in New York as the musical world began reawakening in May 2021. All proceeds from this definitive collection of Frank’s music, available on high-quality digital download on Bandcamp, will benefit the Frank Kimbrough Jazz Scholarship at The Juilliard School.
“Frank was a genuine ‘musician’s musician’ whose talent as a player, composer, and teacher fueled generations of artists in the New York jazz community,” said Elan Mehler, cofounder and artistic director of Newvelle Records, and a student of Frank’s at New York University in the 1990s. “There is something miraculous about attracting 67 world-class artists together in a studio, just as the world began emerging from the pandemic. Only someone of Frank’s impact could inspire such an ambitious project.”
The album, available on Bandcamp for $20.00 and streaming everywhere, was recorded and mixed by Marc Urselli on May 10-14, 2021 at EastSide Sound, mastered by Colin Bryson at The Bunker Studios, and produced by Elan Mehler. All songs were written by Frank Kimbrough, Kimbrough Music BMI. Executive produced by Maitland Jones, Jim Harvey, Steve Satterfield, Matt Steinfeld and JC Morisseau.For more information, to listen and to purchase the album, go to https://newvellerecords.bandcamp.com/album/kimbrough.
Here's the opening track, "The Call". The musicians include Scott Robinson (tenor saxophone), Allan Chase (alto saxophone), Riley Mulherkar (trumpet), Ryan Keberle (trombone), Samora Pinderhughes (piano), Ben Wolfe (bass), and Jeff Hirschfield (drums).
Monday, July 12, 2021
Outer Space & Inner Spaces
While visiting family in Chicago last month (6/21), I took the opportunity to meet (on separate occasions) with musicians Sam Pilnick (pictured left) and Shawn Maxwell. Both are saxophonists and composers with Pilnick just beginning his career and Maxwell twenty+ years into his (my next post will feature his two new releases). The younger musician teaches middle-school Band in a Chicago suburb and has been performing with various ensembles since moving to the city four years ago. One of those groups is the Sam Pilnick Nonet Project featuring himself on tenor saxophone and eight of his close musical friends. He composes pieces that play to each member's strength and his debut recording is a fine example of that
"The Adler Suite" (Outside In Music) started its life when the composer served as a chaperone on a school trip to the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. Not only was Pilnick impressed by the architecture (see photo below) but was fascinated by the many displays that spoke of man's quest to discover what's beyond the sky. Each time he returned to the Planetarium, Pilnick would take notes and begin composing themes about different aspects of exploration. The first three solo trumpet notes of the opening track, "Squawk Box", leads one to believe that the piece is a rewrite of Richard Strauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra"; the piece soon moves into a harmonic adventure that invites in the nonet. The composer-arranger uses variations on those three notes throughout the first several minutes before a short bowed bass solo opens the music up to the reeds, brass, and piano creating musical universe. Pianist Meghan Stahl creates an introspective solo that is fllwed by an excellent bass clarinet solo from Ted Hogarth. In case you wondered, the title of the piece comes from the apparatus NASA would place in an astronaut's home so the family could hear the communications between those in outer space and Mission Control.The Adler Planetarium |
Photo: Yoel Levy |
Photo: Gangi N all that jazz |
Wednesday, July 7, 2021
Mr. Braxton Requests....
Reed master, composer, arranger, conceptualist, and interpreter Anthony Braxton is soft-spoken, gentle, and delightfully scholarly. However, when he composes new works or interprets "standards", he is fearless. Mr. Braxton has two new major projects that have just been released; the first is a 12-disk set of original pieces composed for sextet, septet, and nonet using his ZIM Musical System, the other a 13-CD set of standards recorded on a European tour in early 2020 utilizing a trio based in Great Britain.
Photo: Michael G. Stewart |
Taylor Ho Bynum - brass
Dan Peck - tuba
Jacquline Kerrod - harp
Shelley Burgon - harp (on "Compositions 402, 412, 408-410")
Tomeka Reid - cello (on "Compositions 402, 408-410, 413-416")
Adam Matlock - accordion, aerophones (all tracks except "Composition 402")
Jean Cook - violin ("Compositions 418-420")
Stephanie Richards - trumpet ("Compositions 418-420")
Ingrid Laubrock - saxophones ("Compositions 418-420")
Brandee Younger - harp ("Compositions 413-416")
Miriam Overlach - harp ("Compositions 418-420")
Photo: Fabio Lugaro |
Photo: Edu Hawkins |
Photo: Edu Hawkins |
Alexander Hawkins - piano
Neil Charles - bass
Stephen Davis - drums