Thursday, March 11, 2021

Cecilie Strange - Blikan (April 16, 2021 April Records)

Cecilie Strange grew up in a musical home and she began playing the saxophone already at age 12. Strange has studied music in the Danish city of Odense with the great jazz saxophonist Hans Ulrik and in New York with top saxophonist Chris Cheek, and her deep and soulful tenor sound has gained international acclaim. So far, she has released two solo albums and her third solo album, 'Blikan', will be released on April Records on April 16th, 2021. Together with guitarist Anna Roemer, she also makes up the ambient electro jazz duo, Kaleiido, who have collaborated with names like Mikkel Hess, Kasper Tranberg, Anders "AC" Christensen og Stine Steendorph. Besides that, Strange has also played in various jazz ensembles and folk groups and even in one pop band.

"Blikan", an Icelandic word derived from the Old Saxon language, means “to shine" or "to appear”. And as its title suggests, 'Blikan' came together almost magically. Recorded at The Village in Copenhagen on June 10 and 11, 2019, the two-day session was the first time Cecilie Strange had ever played with the three artists she intuitively knew were the ideal ensemble to manifest her vision: pianist Peter Rosendal, bassist Thommy Andersson and drummer Jacob Høyer. Their collaboration was so creatively inspired it produced not just one, but two, full-length albums. 'Blue', the tenor saxophonist’s second release as a leader, came out on April Records in May of 2020 to glowing reviews.

'Blikan' brings the session full circle, and is an essential companion piece to 'Blue'. Both herald Strange’s arrival as an exciting new voice in today’s dynamic Copenhagen jazz scene, as both a deeply intuitive tenor player and a visionary composer. Acutely attuned to the natural landscape, in both her native Denmark, and all the Far North countries around it, Strange paints sketches of Scandinavia with an achingly melancholic palette of tonal colors that also radiate with hope and light.
1. Eudaimonia 09:09
2. The Clearing 04:19
3. The Dance # 9 06:13
4. When Sunny Smiles 07:44
5. Wild Flower 06:05
6. Jag vet en dejlig rosa 07:03
7. Arise (CD Bonus track) 05:20

Cecilie Strange: Saxophone
Peter Rosendal: Piano
Thommy Andersson: Bass
Jakob Høyer: Drums

Recorded at The Village Recording, June 10th & 11th, 2019, by Thomas Vang
Mixed by August Wanngren/Oui Music
Mastered by John Fomsgaard at Karmacrew

Jakob Dinesen / Anders Christensen / Laust Sonne - Blessings (April 9, 2021 April Records)

Saxophone player Jakob "Dino" Dinesen and bass player Anders “AC” Christensen have been household names on the Danish jazz scene since the nineties, where they played together in the now legendary Once Around the Park. Here they are joining up with drummer Laust Sonne.

Laust Sonne is one of the most versatile musicians in Denmark and he has been the drummer in the popular Danish rock band, D-A-D, for over 20 years. He has also played drums in the avant jazz rock outfit, Bugpowder, and has made a career for himself with his own rock band, Dear. He has also recorded two solo albums and in 2007 he received the prestigious Danish music award, Ken Gudman Prisen.

Anders "AC" Christensen has been a member of Paul Motian’s ensemble and has played in Polish jazz legend Tomasz Stańko’s band. In Denmark, he has played with the Hess brothers in Spacelab, for over 25 years. In 2009 he made his only solo album so far, ‘Dear Someone’, featuring Aaron Parks and Paul Motian. “AC” is highly in demand among Danish jazz musicians and he has even played in a lot of rock bands, like Sort Sol and The Raveonettes.
Jakob Dinesen has made a long string of albums in his own name and has received several prizes. He has played with loads of internationally acclaimed jazz musicians, such as Paul Motian, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Eddie Gomez, Ben Street, Tony Allen, Nasheet Waits and Steve Swallow. He has also been a member of the acclaimed Danish jazz groups Hugo Rasmussen Allstarz and Beautiful Day and has played with Danish musicians as distinct as Thomas Blachman, Thomas Helmig and Lars H.U.G..

The three musicians have known each other for many years. In their younger days, they often ended up together, playing late night jams and gigs at parties.

The corona outbreak in the first half of 2020 finally brought the three musicians together again, as mos of their other plans were cancelled because of the virus. As a blessing in disguise, they began to play together again, in the rehearsal room. They found, and created, a space for their thoughts and ideas. A space for listening and playing.

1. Free Eddie 06:43
2. I’ve Told Every Little Star 07:22
3. Anouar 09:11
4. Tyk vals 08:49
5. Sandino 07:47
6. Freedom Jazz Dance 07:48

Jakob Dinesen - Sax
Anders Christensen - Bass
Laust Sonne - Drums

Recorded live at Sommer i Haveselskabet, Copenhagen, Denmark, July 27th, 2020

Sound engineer: Kim Khan
Mastered by John Fomsgaard

Little North - Finding Seagulls (2021 April Records)

Adrian Younge's T.A.N. | FILM TRAILER AVAILABLE NOW | Jazz Is Dead & Amazon Music

ADRIAN YOUNGE’S THE AMERICAN NEGRO

T.A.N. – AN AMAZON MUSIC
ORIGINAL FILM BY ADRIAN YOUNGE

SEE DEADLINE'S EXCLUSIVE TRAILER PREMIERE HERE

WRITTEN, DIRECTED, EDITED, SCORED & FILMED BY YOUNGE
AVAILABLE ON MARCH 24TH VIA THE
AMAZON MUSIC APP AND PRIME VIDEO

Companion Film to Younge’s Acclaimed Album
‘The American Negro’ & ‘Invisible Blackness,’
Younge’s Amazon Original Podcast featuring
Conversations with Chuck D, Michael Jai White,
Keyon Harrold, LadyBug Mecca & More

WATCH THE TRAILER HERE

“In Adrian Younge’s Ambitious New Project,
James Baldwin Meets Marvin Gaye” – VULTURE / SWITCH ON POP

“...a profound undertaking… This impassioned dissection of modern America
is a challenging work well worth every second” – THE GUARDIAN
Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer and former law professor ADRIAN YOUNGE will release his debut short film T.A.N. later this month via the Amazon Music app and Amazon’s Prime Video. A true Renaissance Man, Younge wrote, directed, edited, filmed and composed the score for the film. T.A.N. is a narrative film that sees five fragile souls, confused and in a haze of consciousness and intolerance, enter an eerie dimension. Piece-by-piece, each person realizes their destiny, and the darkness they’ve left behind. “T.A.N. represents the racial friction that exists between Black and White society,” notes Younge. “As a Black American, it’s my way of synthesizing our discarded history with a new vision for survival.” Today, Younge shares the film’s trailer -- watch here

T.A.N. is a companion to Younge’s acclaimed recent album The American Negro: his most ambitious and deeply personal project to-date. The multimedia project sees Younge share an unapologetic critique detailing the systemic and malevolent psychology that afflicts people of color. The American Negro is a powerful, multifaceted statement that reflects perennial injustices and serves to act as a lever of change during a time of mass disillusionment: an album for the people that details the evolution of racism in America.
Younge also recently launched the Amazon Original podcast Invisible Blackness with Adrian Younge to better explain the intricacies of the album’s message. The podcast series analyzes the Black consciousness with new historical parallels to the future and the past. The podcast also includes a series of extended conversations with Black musicians, filmmakers, actors and scholars to reveal, illustrate and make visible the dominant ideologies embedded in America’s culture. To date, featured conversations include the legendary Public Enemy frontman Chuck D, Digable Planets’ LadyBug Mecca, jazz musician Keyon Harrold who discusses his recent run in with “Soho Karen” and, most recently, a discussion with actor Michael Jai White. Listen here

Adrian Younge is a member of The Midnight Hour and has produced for entertainment greats ranging from Jay Z, Kendrick Lamar and Wu-Tang Clan. He’s composed for television shows such as Marvel’s Luke Cage, and films including Black Dynamite. He owns the Linear Labs boutique record label and analog studio, and is co-owner of Jazz Is Dead. When he’s not working on scores for major studios or networks, he’s making albums that speak to his own artistry. Most recently, Younge and his The Midnight Hour bandmate / A Tribe Called Quest’s Ali Shaheed Muhammad have teamed up again to compose the music for Queen Latifah’s new CBS show The Equalizer and Eddie Huang’s debut film Boogie.

Adrian Younge | The American Negro
The American Negro (album) | Available everywhere Feb. 26, 2021 via Jazz Is Dead
Invisible Blackness (podcast) | Available exclusively on Amazon Music Feb. 4, 2021
T.A.N. (film) | Available exclusively on Amazon Prime Video & Amazon Music March 24, 2021

Follow Adrian Younge & Jazz Is Dead:
Adrian Younge: Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

Out Friday, March 12: Dan Blake's Da Fé (Sunnyside Records)

Saxophonist/Composer Dan Blake finds hope for a better future through compassionate action on his inspiring new album


Da Fé, due out March 12, 2021 via Sunnyside Records, encourages activism in the fight against

climate catastrophe, poverty and hunger with a spirited ensemble featuring

Carmen Staaf, Leo Genovese, Dmitry Ishenko and Jeff Williams


Livestream release concert Friday, March 26 at Soapbox Gallery in Brooklyn at www.soapboxgallery.org


"Blake, whose versatility and probing ears have made him a ripe collaborator for both Julian Lage and Anthony Braxton… brings an intelligence and taste for adventure but also a solid swing and tradition-hugging mandate to his work as both player and writer." – Josef Woodard, DownBeat

“Saxophonist Dan Blake is one of those musicians who are always on a quest to expand their musical horizons… As both a player and a composer, Blake demonstrates an intensity coupled with a very fertile and searching mind.” – Budd Kopman, All About Jazz

Pondering the existential crises that face humanity today – global climate catastrophe, poverty, hunger – can be overwhelming, especially when compounded with the more mundane trials we face every day. Social activism, despite its daunting challenges, is fundamentally an act of faith: faith in a better future and in our species’ capacity for positive change. On his inspiring new album, Da Fé, saxophonist and composer Dan Blake pays tribute to the spiritual leaders and political activists who’ve offered him hope while adding his own singular voice to the optimistic chorus of those crying out for solutions.
Due out March 12, 2021 via Sunnyside Records, Da Fé is an outgrowth of Blake’s own activism. A practicing Buddhist since his college years, Blake has served since 2015 on the board of Buddhist Global Relief, an organization dedicated to combatting chronic hunger and malnutrition around the world. He has also organized concerts to benefit other charitable organizations, including Extinction Rebellion, the Poor People’s Campaign and Show Up for Racial Justice. While he’s quick to downplay his own role in favor of those who dedicate their lives to activism, his music follows a socially conscious path blazed by the likes of Max Roach and Alice Coltrane before him.

“Climate catastrophe is an issue that I've been concerned about for a while,” says Blake, who credits moving to Mount Kisco, New York and raising his two young daughters as inspiration. “Moving away from the city provided some perspective and made me much more aware of nature in my day to day life. Becoming a parent was another causal factor in bringing more urgency to my own personal awareness of this issue. As humans, our relationship to nature can be so sympathetic, but then something like the California wildfires reminds us how our collective abuse of the natural world has become incredibly dangerous to our survival as a species.”

Da Fé translates to “of faith,” and stems from the phrase “auto da fé,” which refers to the burning of heretics during the Spanish Inquisition. While Blake changed the term to avoid direct reference to that historical context, he does see a connection in the fires blazing across millions of acres in California. “There's a certain violence to this time that we're in, as we seem to be sacrificing ourselves at the altar of commodities. But there's still a possibility of realizing a better future that we can put our faith in. That's where these activist organizations come in.”

To provide his music with the tension and urgency it required, Blake enlisted a remarkable cross-generational band. He initially recorded with a quartet featuring pianist/keyboardist Carmen Staaf, bassist Dmitry Ishenko, and veteran drummer Jeff Williams. The latter was a member of the pioneering world-jazz fusion band Lookout Farm led by DaveLiebman, one of Blake’s mentors in both music and activism. He then teamed with longtime collaborator Leo Genovese, with whom he worked in Esperanza Spalding’s band, to reimagine the music in post-production via additional piano, synths and multiple saxophone lines.

“I wanted to take full advantage of the studio on this album,” Blake explains. “My model for that is Wayne Shorter's work from the 1980s – his mid-period albums like Atlantis, Phantom Navigator or Joy Ryder, where he interacts with himself playing multiple parts to realize a bigger sonic landscape from the horn. I was envisioning a sax chorus through a reflective, hall of mirrors idea.”
Staaf opens the album solo with the prayer-like, through-composed “Prologue – A New Normal.” Unsettling, static-like electronics ultimately consume the meditative piece, suggesting the threats that lie ahead, especially if we continue to accept increasingly dangerous new normals. The modal “Cry of the East” evokes John Coltrane’s yearning work on soprano sax on a dedication to the plight of the Palestinian people and, as Blake says, “all the unseen, unheard souls whose suffering has been caused by the actions of Western powers and policies.”

The turbulent “Like Fish in Puddles” takes its title from a piece in the Atthakavagga, a collection of Buddhist poems. The piece’s desperation cries out for a shift in perspective; many of us, it suggests, believe we’re swimming in the ocean while we’re simply flapping around in our limited puddles, with limited time and resources to draw upon. Opening with a strident solo by the composer, “Pain” draws on both universal and personal strife, inspired by the recent loss of Blake’s father and grandmother. The dark-hued “The Grifter” hardly needs much explanation, given the looming con-man presence who’s preoccupied our thoughts in recent years.

Blake particularly enjoys exploring vamps with Williams, as they do on “The Cliff,” whose rhythmic complexities feel like striding uncertainly along the edge of a jagged precipice. “Doctor Armchair” is a satirical look at the tendency towards offering unearned “expertise” as a solution to every issue – not strictly medical, though the notion has taken on additional weight in the midst of a contentious pandemic. Genovese’s cosmic synths layer on the hypnotic atmospherics for the title track, before the album ends with the meditative coda “Epilogue: It Heals Itself” – a suggestion not to ignore problems, but to pause a moment in our frantic activities to allow healing to begin.

“I’m very inspired by the ideal of compassionate action,” Blake says. “Activism is very important to my musical creativity, and is the impetus for this album. I believe musicians and artists can play a powerful role in these dangerous and urgent times by awakening a compassionate vibration in others, one that can spur action. I also believe artists like myself have a lot to learn from the dedicated activism and leadership of others who sacrifice so much to do the good work that must be done to wrest power from corrupt politicians and place it into the gentle and loving hands of the people.”

1. Prologue - A New Normal
2. Cry Of The Eas
3. Like Fish In Puddles
4. Pain
5. The Grifter
6. The Cliff
7. Doctor Armchair
8. Da Fé
9. Epilogue - It Heals Itself

Dan Blake - soprano & tenor saxophone
Carmen Staaf - piano & Fender Rhodes
Leo Genovese - Moog, Prophet, Farfisa, Six-Trak, Fender Rhodes & piano
Dmitry Ishenko - acoustic & electric bass
Jeff Williams - drums

Maria Schneider wins major French Award for 'Data Lords'

Revered composer and orchestra leader Maria Schneider wins
major French Award
 
Le Grand Prix de l’Académie du Jazz
 
Best Record of the Year for double album Data Lords
with the Maria Schneider Orchestra available via ArtistShare

Boundary-defying composer and orchestra leader Maria Schneider has won Le Grand Prix de l’Académie du Jazz for her revelatory double album Data Lords. Inspired by conflicting relationships between the digital and natural worlds, Data Lords (July 2020, ArtistShare) features the world-class Maria Schneider Orchestra.

“I am grateful to l’Académie du Jazz for this tremendous honor,” says Schneider. “To receive this award from this excellent organization in France, a country that is awake to the ravages of big tech companies on our lives and our rights, is of special significance to me. I am grateful to my incredible band who truly make the music what it is. I would like to dedicate this award to pianist Frank Kimbrough, who was such an important part of my band for so many years, and whom we lost suddenly this year.” 
Data Lords – which was made, funded and documented through ArtistShare, the world’s first crowd-funding internet platform – has earned two Grammy nominations and broad critical acclaim:

“Now it's finally here, in the form of a magnificent double album, Data Lords. . . it parses into thematic halves, ‘The Digital World’ and, as an antidote, ‘The Natural World.’ On the whole and in the details, it amounts to the most daring work of Schneider's career, which sets the bar imposingly high. This is music of extravagant mastery, and it comes imbued with a spirit of risk." – Nate Chinen, NPR

“Beyond the dualism in its format, Data Lords is a work of holistic creativity. The music of outrage and critique in the first album has all the emotion and conceptual integrity that the music of melancholy and reverence does in the second. I can’t conceive of anyone else creating this music, unless Delius has been writing with Bowie on the other side.” – David Hajdu, The Nation

“Data Lords is a major piece of work…. The message, the rancour, the sense of injustice are deeply embedded in every moment of the first album. And yet Schneider’s craft and judgment are such that music in the eerie, dystopian world has the marvellous feeling for structure, pacing and often sheer beauty that listeners who know Schneider’s music will be expecting…. The second disc Our Natural World is a complete contrast. It is epic, glorious.” – Sebastian Scotney, TheArtsDesk.com

“Data Lords is a boldly conceptual immersion in a critical duality of modern life…” – David Fricke, JazzTimes cover story

“The prodigiously gifted composer, arranger, and bandleader Maria Schneider has a whole lot on her mind these days, and much of it has made its way into her impressive new double CD, Data Lords.… she exhibits a masterly control of bold and inventive tonal landscapes and subtler orchestral shadings.” – Steve Futterman, The New Yorker

4-stars. “With Data Lords – a steeliness and even bleakness now shares a stage with her familiar pastoral side. . . . The inner tensions behind this compelling session promise a revealing new phase in Schneider's remarkable work.” – John Fordham, The Guardian

Maria Schneider’s music has been hailed by critics as evocative, majestic, magical, heart-stoppingly gorgeous, imaginative, revelatory, riveting, daring, and beyond categorization. Blurring the lines between genres, her varied commissioners stretch from Jazz at Lincoln Center, to The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, to the American Dance Festival, and include collaboration with David Bowie. She is among a small few to receive Grammys in multiple genres, having received the award in jazz and classical, as well as for her work with David Bowie.

With her first recording Evanescence (1994), Schneider began developing her personal way of writing for her 18-member collective made up of many of the finest musicians in jazz today, tailoring her compositions to the uniquely creative voices of the group. They have performed at festivals and concert halls worldwide, and she herself has received numerous commissions and guest-conducting invites, working with over 90 groups in over 30 countries.

Unique funding of projects has become a hallmark for Schneider through the trend-setting company, ArtistShare. And, in 2004, Concert in the Garden became historic as the first recording to win a GRAMMY with Internet-only sales. Even more significantly, it blazed the "crowd-funding" trail as ArtistShare’s first release, and was eventually inducted into the 2019 National Recording Registry.

Schneider’s many honors also include: 14 Grammy nominations, 5 Grammy Awards, numerous Jazz Journalists Association awards, DownBeat and JazzTimes Critics and Readers Poll awards, an honorary doctorate from her alma mater, the University of Minnesota, ASCAP’s esteemed Concert Music Award (2014), the nation's highest honor in jazz, “NEA Jazz Master” (2019) (NEA Jazz Master Speech found here), and election into the 2020 American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

A strong voice for music advocacy, Schneider has testified before the US Congressional Subcommittee on Intellectual Property on digital rights, has given commentary on CNN, participated in roundtables for the United States Copyright Office, has been quoted in numerous publications for her views on Spotify, Pandora, YouTube, Google, digital rights, and music piracy, and has written various white papers and articles on the digital economy as related to music and beyond.  “Musicians have been the canary in the coal mine,” Schneider says. “We were the first to be used and traded for data.” 

Data Lords is available exclusively at Mariaschneider.com.

l’Académie du Jazz (The French Jazz Academy) is the oldest and most respected music awards institution in France. Its successive presidents are well known in the world of arts and music (Jean Cocteau, André Hodeir, Maurice Cullaz, Stéphane Grappelli, Martial Solal, Claude Carrière, and current president François Lacharme). A non-profit association, the Academy is fiercely independent and collects votes from some 60 journalists, photographers, writers and radio/TV producers. Due to Covid, this year’s ceremony turned into a broadcast on Wednesday, March 10 via French radio FIP’s "Club Jazz à FIP” program. Only a few recipients attended and performed due to pandemic restrictions, but the rich history of the Académie du Jazz was discussed and the winners announced. The podcast of the program is available on fip.fr.  Previous recipients of the Grand Prix de l’Académie du Jazz include Brad Mehldau, Joe Lovano, Eddie Daniels & Roger Kellaway, Ambrose Akinmusire, and Christian McBride, among many others.

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Dan Ford - Across the Wide Bay (March 17, 2021)

Saxophonist Dan Ford leads a quintet featuring some of Brisbane’s finest musicians on his 2021 album “Across the Wide Bay”. Inspired by the natural beauty of Fraser Island in Queensland, the album is a collection of original compositions set to swing and modern grooves. The title track features Jess Spina on vocals.

1. C.C.T. 05:29
2. Across the Wide Bay 05:32
3. Nos Pillamos 06:58
4. Afterglow 06:46
5. Solitude 05:17
6. Pirouette 05:50
7. Night Song 06:05

Dan Ford - tenor and soprano saxophone, Wurlitzer and keyboard on track #7
Elliott Parker - double bass
Chris Evans - drums
Eden Armstrong - piano
Michael Anderson - guitar (on all tracks except #6)
Jess Spina - vocals
Luke Greenhalgh - guitar (on track #6)

All compositions by Dan Ford, except #2 (music by Dan Ford, lyrics by Grant Thomas), and #6 (composed by Luke Greenhalgh).

Across the Wide Bay was recorded at Jazz Music Institute, Brisbane, Australia, in January 2021.

Produced by Dan Ford and Mark Smith
Engineered, mixed, and mastered by Mark Smith for Real Productions

Florian Weiss' Woodoism - Alternate Reality (May 21, 2021 nWog Records)

We are thrilled to announce, that we'll be joining the NWog-Family with our upcoming release "Alternate Reality"! We can't wait to share our new music with you. Stay tuned!

1. Inhale, Exhale
2. Shivering Timbers
3. Valse des Papillons de Nuit
4. Wabi-Sabi
5. The Woods are Lovely, Dark and Deep
6. Feuer im Termitenhügel
7. Fuge für A.
8. Alternate Reality (Visiting Oz)
9. Alternate Reality II (Delirium)
10. Alternate Reality III (Awakening)


All compositions by Florian Weiss

Recorded by Werner Angerer on Nov 3rd - 5th 2020 at 4tune Studio, Vienna (Austria)
Mixed by Werner Angerer
Mastered André Pousaz
Artwork by Corinne Hächler
Produced by Woodoism

March 20: Pianist Yoko Miwa performs at streaming East Coast Jazz Fest

Please join the
Yoko Miwa Trio
for a streaming performance as part of the
East Coast Jazz Festival
Saturday, March 20 at 10 p.m. EST

Admission is pay what you can, information at

The trio will be one of 60 featured performers. Six jazz clubs on the East Coast have come together to create the event featuring virtual live sets and pre-recorded sessions. The Yoko Miwa Trio will be presented by Blues Alley in Washington, D.C. in partnership with the Japanese Embassy in celebration of the annual Cherry Blossom Festival. The pre-recorded concert will feature music from the trio's acclaimed new release Songs of Joy.

“Songs of Joy is an enthralling body of work that will become an important release for the year ahead.” – Andrew Read, Jazz in Europe

4-stars “Miwa approaches ‘Freedom’ with a McCoy Tyner-like muscularity, backed by the dense rhythmic back drop from bassist Will Slater and drummer Scott Goulding. It is a powerhouse, all-things-possible sound, spiritual and temporal at the same time.” – Dan McClenaghan, All About Jazz

"Pianist Yoko Miwa injects a lot of drama into her playing by creating sheer power, by rolling and tumbling and sounding larger than life... One of the best things I’ve heard in months." – Marc Phillips, Part-Time Audiophile

Gary Bartz, Ali Shaheed & Adrian Younge - Gary Bartz JID006 (April 2, 2021 Jazz Is Dead Records)

The shadow that Gary Bartz casts over the last six decades of progressive Black music, and his continued dedication to the same, makes him a logical and very welcome contributor to the Jazz Is Dead label. An alto saxophonist steeped in the history and tradition of his instrument who is also restlessly experimental and not prone to purism of any kind, he enjoys both the respect and admiration of his peers and the hero worship of several generations after him – including Ali Shaheed Muhammad and Adrian Younge, which inevitably led to Gary Bartz JID006.

A look at his body of work reveals dalliances with bebop, hard bop, free jazz, spiritual jazz, soul jazz, jazz-funk, fusion and acid jazz, all while resolutely remaining unmistakably Gary Bartz. There’s early work with Eric Dolphy and McCoy Tyner in Charles Mingus’ Jazz Workshop, work with Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln, a stint in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, and also one with Miles. There’s his groundbreaking and highly influential Ntu Troop albums of the early ‘70s and his jazz-funk work including two classic albums with the Mizell Brothers, one of which supplied A Tribe Called Quest with a sample that was smooth like butter. And while on the subject of samples, the Bartz catalog has provided hip-hop and other genres with a rich source of them, and artists who have gone to his well when producing beats also include Black Sheep, Jurassic 5, Casual, RPM, Warren G, Photek, Statik Selektah, Chi-Ali, 3rd Bass, Showbiz, Z-Trip, Young Disciples, and many others.

The socio-political content of much of Bartz’s work, particularly during the early ‘70s, is another factor that has captured the attention of and influenced many. He was wide awake to the pressing issues of his day, which sadly haven’t changed much in a half-century—long before the term “woke” was ever coined—which adds continued relevance and resonance to albums like the two Harlem Bush Music LPs. Speaking his mind and expressing thoughts and feelings lyrically and vocally were a consistent aspect of his work during this era, but even with all this there’s always still a space within Gary’s oeuvre for the celebration of simple and beautiful basic truths.

“Working with Gary Bartz epitomizes the ethos behind Jazz Is Dead,” says Younge. “He’s a luminary that has contributed so much to music culture, for decades. His musical ability is expanding with age and we’re honored to be a part of his world.”

“Day By Day” brings Bartz full circle by placing him in a more modern context which he contributed to creating in the first place. It takes certain sonic cues from Muhammad’s old group, A Tribe Called Quest, while also calling to mind neo-soul a little bit. But the icing on the cake is the unexpected and gorgeous vocal chorus which is like the sun coming out and which once again harks back to an element familiar to Mizell fans.
With its propulsive bassline steadily prodding the track along, “The Message” is strongly rooted in classic ‘70s modal jazz and serves as the spiritual and emotional centerpiece of the album. The instrumental interplay and textures would have been perfectly at home on the Black Jazz label even though there’s also a certain almost intangible postmodern, 21st century approach to that style, perfectly in keeping with Bartz’s well-known tendency to look forward, not backwards.

The main thrust of “Black And Brown” is an immersion in classic jazz-funk, a short blast of vintage fusion riffing that ultimately feels like one of those classic extended ‘70s jams condensed down to its most intense just-under-three-minutes with Bartz blowing freely over very familiar musical territory and sounding like he’s having an amazing time doing it.

If “Spiritual Ideation” calls anything immediately to mind, it’s the overall vibe and atmosphere of the compositions on 1975’s classic Mizell-produced The Shadow Do album. Its chords seem to move along in similar fashion to a few of the tracks on that album, but they’re transposed on to what has quickly become the JID signature sound. Bartz’s tone and phrasing is instantly recognizable and sits on top of the Younge/Muhammad-produced backing as snugly as it did on the Mizells’ groove 45 years ago.

Bartz brought his historically busy touring and recording schedule into the new millennium, re-establishing his deep jazz credentials even as another generation of DJs and hip-hop producers discovered the untold riches contained in his back catalog. He remains spry, fit and energetic at age 80 and his new collaboration with Jazz Is Dead’s Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad is the glorious proof. This is what Gary Bartz brings to this Jazz Is Dead collaboration, and as can be expected, his questing spirit fits the Jazz Is Dead style like a glove and has produced an album that’s a cutting-edge addition to his immense canon as he effortlessly interfaces with the next generation.

1. Spiritual Ideation
2. Visions of Love
3. Black and Brown
4. Blue Jungles
5. Day By Day
6. Distant Mode
7. The Message
8. Soulsea

John Patitucci / Vinnie Colaiuta / Bill Cunliffe - TRIO (2021 Le Coq Records)





Three veteran jazz virtuosos join forces for the first time as pianist Bill Cunliffe, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta for a high-spirited, vigorously swinging standards session titled, simply, Trio – after all, with three names like those on the marquee, no further embellishment is needed.

Trio, due out February 19, 2021 via Le Coq Records, came together spontaneously, making the exhilarating chemistry and dynamic interplay all the more remarkable. Cunliffe has become something of a house arranger and musical director for many of the newly-launched imprint’s projects, and Patitucci and Colaiuta have quickly become part of the Le Coq family. It was at label founder/producer Piero Pata’s urging that the trio let loose in Hollywood’s storied Capitol Studios without a script.

“Piero surprised us as we were working on some other projects with him,” Patitucci recalls. “He had the idea for us to do this trio record. It was very impromptu, like in the Blue Note record era, where you basically do a record in a day. We had a lot of fun and it was really relaxed.”

“I was like a kid in a candy store,” gushes Cunliffe. “It was pretty challenging because it just three guys in a room. But it was a lot of fun, because these are two master musicians whose work I’ve loved for years.”

A GRAMMY® Award-winning arranger, Cunliffe typically embarks on a project with far more preparation. Since beginning his career as pianist and arranger with the Buddy Rich Big Band, Cunliffe has worked with such luminaries as Frank Sinatra, Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Benny Golson and James Moody, while establishing himself as a renowned solo artist and bandleader with more than a dozen albums under his name. All of which made this recording a daunting but ultimately thrilling experience – in the making as much as in the listening.

“I like jazz music that has shape,” Cunliffe explains, “that has a beginning, middle and end, and drama. Usually I craft those elements in my arrangements. John and Vinnie are able to create those qualities on the spot.”

Patitucci may be best known for his long and meaningful associations with Chick Corea and Wayne Shorter, but he’s worked with a who’s who of artists in and outside of jazz. With Corea he came to prominence as a member of the pianist’s Akoustic and Elektric Bands; for the last two decades he’s been a member of the Wayne Shorter Quartet alongside pianist Danilo Pérez and drummer Brian Blade, perhaps the most revered small band in jazz today. But he’s also played throughout the world with Herbie Hancock, Stan Getz, Pat Metheny, Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman, Michael Brecker, McCoy Tyner, Nancy Wilson, Sting, Aaron Neville, Natalie Cole, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Astrud and Joao Gilberto, and many more.

Colaiuta has also bridged the worlds of jazz and pop throughout his career. He rose to fame playing with Frank Zappa, Joni Mitchell and Sting, while touring with jazz greats from Herbie Hancock to Chick Corea. He’s also a prolific first-call studio drummer whose work graces recordings by Leonard Cohen, Barbra Streisand, James Taylor, Billy Joel and countless others.

Patitucci and Colaiuta are no strangers to one another, of course. Colaiuta is one of three drummers on the bassist’s self-titled debut album on GRP from 1987; they’ve crossed paths scores of times over the intervening decades, including as a version of Chick Corea’s Akoustic Band that recorded Live From the Blue Note Tokyo in 1996. Cunliffe has worked with both of them at various times as well, but Trio marks the first time they’ve been able to interact as a trio.

“Both John and Vinnie have spent a lot time in different aspects of the pop world,” Cunliffe says. “But they both grew up in jazz like I did. They’re both stone cold jazz guys.”

“Working with Bill Cunliffe,” Colaiuta says, “you can always expect – at the very least –amazing skill and professionalism, some deep swinging, and a big bucket of fun!”

The tone for the session is set with the trio’s sprightly take on George Shearing’s “Conception.” Introduced by a brisk solo shot by Colaiuta, the tune sparks, nimble, graceful solos from all three members, all clearly in upbeat spirits. It’s followed by a swooning version of David Raksin’s classic theme from “Laura,” a more winsomely romantic interpretation than the noir-tinged usual.

They then delve into the repertoire of Patitucci’s longtime bosses for a steely plunge into Wayne Shorter’s “Anna Maria” and a graceful rendition of Chick Corea’s “The One Step,” on which the bassist speaks with eloquent lyricism. Colaiuta’s rifle-crack rhythm sets the pace for a blistering run through the Miles Davis favorite “7 Steps To Heaven,” while the drummer’s lush, whispering brushwork conjures a cloud-soft foundation for Cunliffe to ruminate nostalgically on the classic ballad “Good Morning Heartache.”

The camaraderie that the three locked into so quickly and (seemingly) easily is playfully evident on their loose, celebratory spin on the well-worn standard “My Shining Hour,” while their taut link-up braces a slyly grooving rethink of Thelonious Monk’s “We See.” The album concludes on a wistful note, with a tender but lively “Just In Time.”

The mix of standards and songs familiar to the trio’s members was not only a practical consideration given the impromptu nature of the session, Cunliffe explains; it was key to capturing such brilliantly conversational playing. “Except for ‘The One Step,’ we did all of the tunes from memory, without using any music at all. That means we were able to look at each other, hear each other, challenge each other and react to each other in the moment. It felt very organic and was so much fun. Vinnie and John really lifted me and made me play better than I ever could.

1. Conception 05:25
2. Laura 03:30
3. Ana Maria 05:18
4. The One Step 05:53
5. 7 Steps to Heaven 04:45
6. Good Morning Heartache 05:28
7. My Shining Hour 05:27
8. We See 04:16
9. Just In Time 08:19

John Patitucci on Bass
Vinnie Colaiuta on Drums
Bill Cunliffe on Piano

Dennis González Ataraxia Trio+2 - Nights Enter (March 20, 2021 Ayler Records)

The music on Ataraxia Trio's second offering "Nights Enter" (after their first "Ts’íibil Cháaltun" from 2016) is unlike anything else in Dennis González’ substantial discography. The confluence of organic and electronic elements is seamless, and the swirling blend of textures has a dreamlike quality. Derek Rogers’ shimmering electronic beds contrast with the earthiness of Jagath Lakpriya’s percussion and the muscularity of Drew Phelps' deep song. Jess Garland’s harp adds dazzling points of light, and Dennis proves himself once again to be a master of melody – a trait he shares with the greatest jazz musicians. On "Nights Enter", Ataraxia and friends provide a healing balm for troubled times.
(from Ken Shimamoto's liner notes)

1. Rain Storm
2. The Yendi
3. Cromlech
4. Drift
5. Sita
6. Göbelki Tepe
7. The Loop
8. Approaching Dawn
9. Nights Enter

Dennis González - Treated C trumpet, percussion, conch shell
Drew Phelps - Electric & acoustic bass
Jagath Lakpriya - Tabla & djembe

with:
Derek Rogers - Moog
Jess Garland - Harp

Baptiste Boiron - Lá (2021 Ayler Records)

It is during a residency from February to April 2020 at the Domaine de Kerguéhennec, in Brittany, that saxophonist and composer Baptiste Boiron composed and created the repertoire of the trio “Là”.

As a saxophonist, Baptiste Boiron has been navigating between jazz and contemporary music that he studied with Jean-Yves Bosseur. He has performed with many improvisers as much as he has interpreted the scores of Jean-Sébastien Bach, Claude Debussy, Edgard Varèse, Georges Aperghis and many others ...

From the first track, our ears are caught by the superposition of ostinatos and proposals, as much as by the polyphonic abundance and the multiplication of modes of play, conventional or alternative. This diversity is only matched by the multiplicity of writing processes emanating from an artist whose pen, like saxophones, testifies to a long experience in the classical and contemporary field. These processes are relayed here by his two fellow musicians who, in addition to the spaces left to their own initiatives as improvisers, have contributed to the completion of these scores in which the boundary between the premeditated and the ‘impromptu’ blurs.

The repertoire – all originals, except for three titles – is dedicated to various artists (musicians or not, "who helped me build myself" says the composer) whose names are only delivered to our perspicacity in the form of anagrams. They say something more about this music where the narrative qualities and emotion show through beautiful instrumental and compositional techniques.

1. MAlin né délivré 04:22
2. Là 05:54
3. J’étais cet homme 03:14
4. trace de Fard Gris 06:11
5. Fleurette Africaine 04:21
6. nus, MonoliThe ok 05:06
7. B- Choir nu, l’envol 07:45
8. hAt noyant Bronx 07:48
9. avec StyLe 06:35
10. Bander brutaL 05:16
11. Prayer 03:30
12. Dur trac Mec 14:54
13. Le sourire à travers les larmes 06:39
14. Lonnie’s Lament 07:18

Baptiste Boiron - Soprano, alto & tenor saxophones
Bruno Chevillon - Double bass
Frédéric Gastard - Bass saxophone

All music composed and arranged by Baptiste Boiron
at Centre d’Art de Kerguéhennec, Bignan, France, except
#5 by Duke Ellington, #11 by Keith Jarrett & #14 by John Coltrane
Recorded, mixed and mastered by Fred Woff
Cover photo by Baptiste Boiron

Nicolas Souchal / Michael Nick / Daunik Lazro / Jean-Luc Cappozzo - Neigen (2021 Ayler Records)

« neigen », from the German verb: to tend towards.

Improvisers aspire to the unpredictable, in a relationship of mutual trust. Each one, braced in the moment, is inhabited by the memory of countless music played, heard, dreamed of. Determined by instrumental practice, acquired experience, and by instinct and thought of one’s own.

They strive for those suspended moments where they surrender to this magic that runs through them, of which they become receivers, conducting bodies. They cultivate an appetite for these intense plateaus where one experiences, sometimes fleetingly, an intuitive connection between musicians linked by a telepathic thread.

1. Neigen 04:05
2. Connexe 03:35
3. Point d'assemblage 08:05
4. Narcisse Watered 03:18
5. Apnée D'Aphné 09:29
6. Super Spell 03:49
7. Fenêtre de périodes impaires 07:42
8. Terra motu 04:15
9. L'attracteur étrange 05:13

Nicolas Souchal, trumpet, flugelhorn
Michael Nick, acoustic violin, electro-acoustic octave violin
Daunik Lazro, tenor & baritone saxophones
Jean-Luc Cappozzo, trumpet, flugelhorn, objects

Harry Mitchell - Symmetry (April 5, 2021)

1. Run
2. Peca Por Peca
3. Symmetry
4. Doing The Rounds
5. Donny
6. Nova
7. Nimor
8. Chug
9. Uber Fugue
10. Reprieve
11. Pie Cowboy

Saxophone - Jamie Oehlers
Guitar - Jeremy Thomson
Bass - Zac Grafton
Drums - Ben Vanderwal

All compositions by Harry Mitchell

Recorded by Kieran Kenderessy Jan 30/31 2021
Mixed and Mastered by David Darlington

Miller Wrenn - Because Change is the Law (March 2021)

This past year I've been drawn to a much less formal mode of music-making, certainly out of necessity, which offered me an opportunity to focus on solo playing in a way I hadn't before.

The process of getting to this music was long. I did my best to let it unfold organically, gently, and I hear that energy reflected in the music. This album, my first of solo pieces, presents sounds that are often small, struggling, hiding behind each other, and/or competing for resonance. It values each sound for what it is and for as long as it needs to be heard.

1. Seeks Knowledge and Doing 04:08
2. Kahguyaht 05:19
3. Speak of the rich years when rainfall was plentiful 02:14
4. Burned at the Bottom 03:51
5. Little By 06:53
6. Muster 02:32

Dedicated to Milford Graves.

Solo contrabass

Recorded January-February 2021 in Los Angeles, Ca.