There are many listeners of contemporary music no matter the genre are usually looking for spiritual uplift. Listeners say they love technical prowess or "new" sounds but what makes us return to music is how it moves us. Music is a "full-body experience" – for this listener, it usually starts with moving my feet, then enters into my brain, and finally into my heart. If it feels "real nice", play it twice. That's why I like the music of John Coltrane, of McCoy Tyner, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Bill Withers, Bruce Hornsby, Bonnie Raitt, and others. And Anthony Branker. His music often makes one think, his titles lead one to investigate Black experiences and history, and his rhythms often bring you up out of your seat. Over the course of 10 albums, all released by Origin Records, he's assembled some of the best musicians, given them music to sink their creative teeth, and a created a lot of memorable performances.
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Inspiration, Imagination, & Intent
Given the overt political nature of a good number of his albums (2013's "Uppity", 2014's, "The Forward (Towards Equality) Suite", and 2023's "What Place Can There Be for Us"), Dr. Branker's 10th album (and third with his group Imagine), "Songs My Mom Liked" takes a different tack. His 88-year old mother (she turns 89 on June 27) has been dealing with the ongoing effects of cognitive dementia. Dr. Branker has been driving her to appointment and elsewhere playing his albums in the car. His mother responded so positively to certain songs that he began to collect a group of them, rearranging them for this septet that features Fabian Almazan (piano), Linda May Han Oh (bass), Rudy Royston (drums), Pete McCann (guitar), Phillip Dizack (trumpet), Donny McCaslin (tenor and soprano saxes), and Aubrey Johnson (voice). Nine of the 12 songs are from Dr. Branker's earlier albums and none recorded by this particular group.
One of the other highlights is the trio version of "Imani (Faith)" with Ms. Oh and Royston laying down a reggae beat for McCaslin's tenor to soar and roar atop. The bass solo stands out for its melodic reach and bluesy intent.
Pete McCann performs on a couple of tracks including "When We Said Goodbye", where he states the handsome melody while producing a rippling solo supported by the responsive rhythm section. McCaslin builds off the energy of the guitar solo for his own splendid spot.
The album closes with the one song not composed by Dr. Branker. "If..." was composed by his daughter Parris at the age of 11! The proud father arranged the piece for the group with McCann replacing Dizack. It's a high tempo, high spirited conclusion to a most excellent program.
"Songs My Mom Liked" is a treat from start to finish. The excellent septet of musicians transform the 12 songs in the program into living representations of Dr. Anthony Branker's spirit, beliefs, and desire to communicate through music. There are moments where one hears the spirit of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, the fire of Max Roach, the cool burn of Miles Davis, the spirituality of John Coltrane and McCoy Tyner, and the Caribbean roots of his family (Trinidad and Barbados). These songs are glorious prayers to the power of belief, love, family, hope, and music. All of Dr. Branker's albums are recommended, all are excellent: "Songs My Mom Liked" is, arguably, the best he and his groups have yet produced.
For more information, go to www.anthonybranker.com/ – the site needs to be updated but there is still plenty to learn. To hear more and to purchase the album, go to https://anthonybranker1.bandcamp.com/album/songs-my-mom-liked-2.
Listen to "Sketches of Selim":
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Samuel Torres's Three Universes in A Dance for Birds
Percussionist and composer Samuel Torres, a native of Bogota, Colombia, has been in the United States for 25 years during which he has played with many great jazz, Latin, classical, and popular music stars as well as with symphony orchestras around the world. His own groups have combined rhythms from the African diaspora, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and the Southern Hemisphere of America with richly detailed melodies and smart solos. In 2019, Torres won the Latin GRAMMY in Classical Music for his album with the Neuva Filarmonia (Colombia) – titled "Regreso", the program features two four-part suites plus an encore composed for congas and symphony orchestra. For his new project, he was inspired by the artwork of Colombian artist and Jazz promoter Diego Pombo, especially a piece that featured a human-like winged creature. Torres was inspired by the image to create a nine-movement suite "A Dance for Birds" which also takes its inspiration from the various dance styles of Central and Latin America plus the Caribbean. The title of this post mentions "three universes" which for Torres is contemporary classical music, Afro-Latin rhythms, and jazz.
You'll hear all that and more on the recording of "A Dance for Birds" (Blue Conga Records). Besides the leader on congas and hand percussion, the ensemble features Alex Norris (trumpet), Troy Roberts (tenor saxophone), Ahmed Alom (piano), Ricky Rodriguez (bass), and Jimmy Macbride (drums) plus the Bergamot String Quartet – Ledah Finck (1st violin), Sarah Thomas (2nd violin), Amy Tan (viola), and Irene Han (cello). Not sure what's more impressive – is it how the strings are integrated into the ensemble or how Torres can lead from the congas or how the music easily shifts from one piece to another? It's fascinating how the instrumentalists interpret bird song, the call-and-response, the joy, the worry, the feeling of never really settling down, always on the move. You, the listener, sit still and be transported to new dimensions.
The album comes to a close with "Strength in Unison", a celebratory piece that draws on the Torres's Colombian roots. The trumpet, saxophone, and piano trade short solos while the rhythm section bounces behind them. The main melody uses the strings in glorious counterpoint and, yes, unison to pull you up out of your seat and dancing.
"A Dance for Birds" is a great success, music that gives one hope and a smile in the midst of our crazy times. When Samuel Torres migrated to the United States, to a professional career that has taken to stages and concert venues around the world, he brought the rhythm and melodies of his native Colombia with him –– the world is so much better for that.
Monday, June 24, 2024
Challenges, Changes, and New Avenues for Expression
Photo: Shervin Lainez |
The results of the experiment can be heard on "Ryan Truesdell Presents: Synthesis: The String Quartet Sessions" released through ArtistShare. Besides recording three of of his own string quartet pieces, the producer, who is the Manager of the Bob Brookmeyer Music Estate, used a work that the St. Louis Symphony had commissioned from the late trombonist-composer (1929-2011) but never recorded. Anyone who listens to contemporary Big Band music will recognize Jim McNeely, John Clayon, Christine Jensen, John Hollenbeck, Alan Ferber, Dave Rivello, and, perhaps, Miho Hazama but Truesdell also invited younger composers such as Joseph Borsellino III, Nathan Parker Smith, Vanessa Perica, and Asuka Kakitani. Producer and arranger extraordinaire Oded Lev-Ari debuts a new work as does bassist Rufus Reid, who premieres his "String Quartet #1".
Photo: Leo Mascaro |
Photo: Leo Mascaro |
Photo: Dina Regine |
Perhaps that's the best way to enter into this glorious project: just listen to the musicians. Throw aside expectations and comparisons. Dive in, test the musical waters – take your time but also make the time to go back and really allow the music to move you out of the everyday and into its special worlds.
As stated above, "Ryan Truesdell Presents: Synthesis: The String Quartet Sessions" is only available through ArtistShare. Go to www.synthesissqs.com/ for more information. To learn more about Ryan Truesdell, go to https://ryantruesdell.com/.
Here's a little morsel:
Saturday, June 15, 2024
This Rock...
How does one use music to teach? Can a song or song cycle change someone's mind? Can art persuade a society to move forward? One imagines this to be a project in futility. Still, many artists over the past six decades have written songs that point to the issues surrounding climate change and here's one new recording that stands out for its creativity, intelligence, and musicality.
Photo: Luke Marantz |
"This Rock We're On: Imaginary Letters" (Palmetto Records) is an often dazzling, mesmerizing, and highly inventive two-CD collection of songs influenced by the lifework of six people who have shown us the beauty of the natural world as well have warned us of the damage that human beings can create through overuse, through destruction, and neglect. Not only has Mike Holober composed and arranged the music, he has also composed letters in the mindsets of Rachel Carson, Wendell Berry, Sigurd Olson, as well as Castleton Tower in Utah to Terry Tempest Williams, from a tree to Robin Wall Kimmerer, and from a child to the world. Holober also sets to music a poem from Ansel Adams to his wife Virginia Best Adams – the tenor solo on "Dear Virginia" is played by Virginia Mayhew, the Adams' granddaughter!
Photo: Luke Marantz |
The album with the title song. The lyrics are first sung by Ronan Rigby, tenor saxophonist Jason Rigby's eight year-old son and then is passed on to James Shipp. After a short solo by Carl Maraghi (baritone sax), Ms. Ayres takes over the vocal with guitarist Felder responding beneath her. The tempo slows, young Mr. Rigby returns to sing the song title only and then his father's tenor sax flutters atop the Orchestra and the story comes to a close.
While the message in the lyrics is loud and clear, take your time to absorb the music that Mike Holober has created for the Gotham Jazz Orchestra. Also take the time to read Terry Tempest Williams' "real" letter in the album booklet. Swirl the words and music around in your senses, let the rhythms pull you along and the solos take you away. Do listen and perhaps you'll understand what needs to done for the survival of what the crew of the Apollo 17 spacecraft called the "Blue Marble".
For more information, go to www.mikeholober.com. To hear more and purchase the album, go to https://mikeholober.bandcamp.com/album/this-rock-were-on-imaginary-letters.
Here's "Tower Pulse" with solos by Chris Potter (tenor sax) and Nir Felder (guitar):
PERSONNEL
Mike Holober - composer, lyricist, piano, Fender Rhodes
Jamile Staevie Ayres - voice
Jody Redhage Ferber – cello
Ronan Rigby – child voice on This Rock We’re On
Saxophones/Woodwinds
Charles Pillow - alto, soprano, flute, alto flute, bass flute, clarinet
Ben Kono - alto, soprano, flute, alto flute, clarinet (flute on Three Words for Snow)
Jason Rigby - tenor, soprano, flute, clarinet
Adam Kolker - tenor, soprano, flute, clarinet
Chris Potter - tenor, clarinet (Lay of the Land, Tower Pulse)
Virginia Mayhew - tenor (Dear Virginia, Dirt Lover’s Almanac)
Carl Maraghi - baritone, bass clarinet
Trumpet/Flugelhorn
Tony Kadleck
Liesl Whitaker
Marvin Stamm
Scott Wendholt
Stuart Mack (Skywoman Falling, Tower Pulse)
Trombones
Matt McDonald
Mark Patterson
Alan Ferber (Erosion, Domes, Boundary Waters)
Jason Jackson (Tides, Dirt Lover’s Almanac, Skywoman Falling)
Sara Jacovino (Lay of the Land, Tower Pulse, This Rock We’re On)
Jeff Nelson - bass trombone
Rhythm Section
Nir Felder - guitar
John Patitucci - bass, electric bass
Jared Schonig - drums
James Shipp - vibraphone, percussion, synth, voice
Mike Holober - composer, lyricist, piano, Fender Rhodes
Jamile Staevie Ayres - voice
Jody Redhage Ferber – cello
Ronan Rigby – child voice on This Rock We’re On
Saxophones/Woodwinds
Charles Pillow - alto, soprano, flute, alto flute, bass flute, clarinet
Ben Kono - alto, soprano, flute, alto flute, clarinet (flute on Three Words for Snow)
Jason Rigby - tenor, soprano, flute, clarinet
Adam Kolker - tenor, soprano, flute, clarinet
Chris Potter - tenor, clarinet (Lay of the Land, Tower Pulse)
Virginia Mayhew - tenor (Dear Virginia, Dirt Lover’s Almanac)
Carl Maraghi - baritone, bass clarinet
Trumpet/Flugelhorn
Tony Kadleck
Liesl Whitaker
Marvin Stamm
Scott Wendholt
Stuart Mack (Skywoman Falling, Tower Pulse)
Trombones
Matt McDonald
Mark Patterson
Alan Ferber (Erosion, Domes, Boundary Waters)
Jason Jackson (Tides, Dirt Lover’s Almanac, Skywoman Falling)
Sara Jacovino (Lay of the Land, Tower Pulse, This Rock We’re On)
Jeff Nelson - bass trombone
Rhythm Section
Nir Felder - guitar
John Patitucci - bass, electric bass
Jared Schonig - drums
James Shipp - vibraphone, percussion, synth, voice
Thursday, June 13, 2024
Potpourri
Much has befallen (emphasis on "fall') since the previous post. Now I have two fractures to heal! Still listening to plenty of music but writing is slow and cumbersome. Here's a sampling of what I was working on between the two accidents.
Unless you have paid no attention to Black American Music over the past decade-plus, the name Luke Stewart should be quite familiar. The bassist has worked with David Murray, Wadada Leo Smith, Nicole Mitchell, the late Jaimie Branch, Marshall Allen, and so many more. He leads several different ensembles including the Exposure Quartet, Heart of the Ghost, and the Remembrance Quintet as well as co-leading Irreversible Entanglements. He also leads Silt Trio, an ensemble featuring tenor saxophonist Brian Settles, and drummers Trae Crudup or Chad Taylor. The Trio's 2020 debut, the self-released "No Trespassing" did not carry the Silt Trio monicker, has Crudup on drums, and sounds like a totally improvised set. 2022's Cuneiform release, "The Bottom", features Taylor and showsw three voices working as one, not beholden to any one style and also displaying Stewart's ear for melody – the songs are not "blowing tunes" but composition and free improvisation often reside in the same pieces.Silt Trio's new recording "Unknown River" (Pi Recordings) is made up of four tracks recorded in Tempo House studios in Baltimore, MD, and three recorded live in Trinosophes, a cafe/ performance space in Detroit, MI. The studio tracks open the album with Crudup in the drum chair (he's also worked with saxophonist James Brandon Lewis). Listen below to "Seek Whence", the opening track – the bass and drums lay down a "tight" groove and the underappreciated Settles delivers the melody then creates a solo that is his response to both that melody and the rhythmic drive. "Baba Doo Way" follows and it's easy to see where the tune got its title. Doesn't take long for the Trio to move up and away from the melody into a frenetic, at times, improvisation that shows how deeply they listen to each other plus the strength of the bass lines to allow Crudup to explore poly-rhythmic pathways.
Photo: Luciano Rossetti |
"Unknown Rivers" may refer to the numerous underground water sources that fill our lakes, bays, reservoirs, and oceans or, more to the point, to the rivers of music that course through the musicians bodies as they are creating in real time. Luke Stewart Silt Trio creates fascinating music on this, their third album, and one imagines they must thrive in the concert/ club setting. If you're a fan of saxophone trio music, this album ranks up there with Sonny Rollins' "Freedom Suite", with Air's "Air Time", and Matana Roberts, Josh Abrams, & Chad Taylor's "Sticks and Stones", arguably my favorites.
For more information and to purchase the album, go to https://lukestewart.bandcamp.com/album/unknown-rivers.
Here's the opening track:
There's a delightful new recording from percussionist-composer Samuel Torres. Titled "A Dance for Birds", Torres has created a nine-movement suite of music for the Latin Chamber Ensemble that features the members of his Sextet plus the Bergamot String Quartet.
Here's the video for "The Song" with graphics created by Colombian visual artist Diego Pombo:
Here's the group's take on The Barenaked Ladies "When I Fall":
Turboprop is:
Tara Davidson - Alto Saxophone
Joel Frahm - Tenor Saxophone
William Carn - Trombone
Adrean Farrugia - Piano
Dan Loomis - Bass
Ernesto Cervini - Drums
Joel Frahm - Tenor Saxophone
William Carn - Trombone
Adrean Farrugia - Piano
Dan Loomis - Bass
Ernesto Cervini - Drums
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