Showing posts with label Aaron Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aaron Parks. Show all posts

Monday, March 7, 2022

Aaron Parks / Matt Brewer / Eric Harland - Volume One (March 2022)

In August of 2021, Eric Harland, Matt Brewer and I got together for an impromptu recording session. We didn’t rehearse, or talk much about the music, or listen back after takes; after such a long period of pandemic isolation and remote music-making, it felt restorative to just play in real time without any agenda. The three of us have been friends for over twenty years now and have a deep history both on and off the bandstand, and I think that you can hear that sense of fellowship in the music. There’s something playful and imperfect and joyous and raw in these recordings, and we hope they bring some measure of happiness to you as you listen.

1. Greetings 06:31
2. All The Things You Are 07:18
3. Aspiring to Normalcy 09:13
4. Centering 03:51
5. Maiden 09:13
6. Eleftheria 07:02
7. Of Our Time 05:42

Aaron Parks, piano
Matt Brewer, bass
Eric Harland, drums

Recorded by Josh Guinta at GSI Studios
Mixed by Chris Allen
Mastered by Nate Wood

"Greetings" and "Eleftheria" are by Aaron Parks
"All The Things You Are" is by Jerome Kern & Oscar Hammerstein II
"Aspiring to Normalcy" and "Of Our Time" are by Matt Brewer
"Centering" is by Frank Kimbrough
"Maiden" is by Eric Harland

Monday, September 27, 2021

Ivo Perelman - Brass & Ivory Tales (Fundacja Słuchaj)

Great saxophonist, improviser Ivo Perelman celebrates its 60th birthday this year. Brass & Ivory tales - 9 CDs box-set is a gift for this phenomenal musician, great human being, and marvelous artist. Nine studio sessions with nine top and most creative pianists like Dave Burrell, Marilyn Crispell, Aruan Ortiz, Sylvie Courvoisier, Angelica Sanchez, Aaron Parks, Agusti Fernandez, Craig Taborn, and Vijay Iyer in a beautiful box with liner notes from Grammy Award Winner writer Neil Tesser

IVO PERELMAN - BRASS & IVORY TALES

CD 1: Tale One with Dave Burrell
CD 2: Tale Two with Marilyn Crispell
CD 3: Tale Three with Aruán Ortiz
CD 4: Tale Four with Aaron Parks
CD 5: Tale Five with Sylvie Courvoisier
CD 6: Tale Six with Agustí Fernández
CD 7: Tale Seven with Craig Taborn
CD 8: Tale Eight with Angelica Sanchez
CD 9: Tale Nine with Vijay Iyer

CD1: Tale One - Ivo Perelman with Dave Burrell

01. Chapter One 37.09
02. Chapter Two 20.02
Total Time: 57.11

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Dave Burell – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Dave Burrell Lanikai Sounds Publ. Company (BMI)
Recorded January 2020

CD2: Tale Two – Ivo Perelman with Marilyn Crispell

1. Chapter One 6.56
2. Chapter Two 5.12
3. Chapter Three 7.46
4. Chapter Four 2.55
5. Chapter Five 5.23
6. Chapter Six 3.23
7. Chapter Seven 6.35
8. Chapter Eight 7.41
9. Chapter Nine 6.51
Total Time: 52.42

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Marilyn Crispell – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Marilyn Crispell Crispell Publishing/BMI
Recorded March 2014

CD3: Tale Three – Ivo Perelman with Aruán Ortiz

1. Chapter One 9.25
2. Chapter Two 3.21
3. Chapter Three 4.02
4. Chapter Four 11.01
5. Chapter Five 10.36
6. Chapter Six 10.15
7. Chapter Seven 7.02
Total Time: 55.40

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Aruán Ortiz – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Aruan Ortiz Naurazitro Music/SESAC
Recorded December 2017

CD4: Tale Four – Ivo Perelman with Aaron Parks

1. Chapter One 19.14
2. Chapter Two 10.16
3. Chapter Three 10.12
Total Time: 39.42

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Aaron Parks – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Aaron Parks Invisible Cinema Music (BMI)
Recorded March 2020

CD5 Tale Five – Ivo Pereleman with Sylvie Courvoisier

1. Chapter One 3.32
2. Chapter Two 3.04
3. Chapter Three 5.04
4. Chapter Four 5.45
5. Chapter Five 4.33
6. Chapter Six 5.28
7. Chapter Seven 5.29
8. Chapter Eight 7.41
9. Chapter Nive 2.39
10. Chapter Ten 5.17
11. Chapter Eleven 5.55
Total Time: 54.26

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Sylvie Courvoisier – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Sylvie Courvoisier Sylvie COURVOISIER MUSIC ASCAP 560146375
Recorded March 2018

CD6 Tale Six – Ivo Perelman with Agustí Fernández

1. Chapter One 8.45
2. Chapter Two 6.11
3. Chapter Three 8.28
4. Chapter Four 4.02
5. Chapter Five 5.28
6. Chapter Six 7.21
7. Chapter Seven 6.23
8. Chapter Eight 2.11
9. Chapter Nine 5.02
Total Time: 54.10

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Agustí Fernández– piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Agustí Fernández SGAE (Sociedad General de Autores de España)
Recorded July 2017

CD7 Tale Seven – Ivo Perelman with Craig Taborn

1. Chapter One 26.20
2. Chapter Two 4.40
3. Chapter Three 5.22
4. Chapter Four 19.52
5. Chapter Five 8.37
Total Time: 65.01

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Craig Taborn – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Craig Taborn LightMadeLighter Publishing BMI
Recorded June 2021

CD8 Tale Eight – Ivo Perelman with Angelica Sanchez

1. Chapter One 3.35
2. Chapter Two 3.04
3. Chapter Three 5.47
4. Chapter Four 7.40
5. Chapter Five 8.18
6. Chapter Six 8.33
7. Chapter Seven 6.38
8. Chapter Eight 7.45
9. Chapter Nine 9.51
Total Time: 61.29

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Angelica Sanchez – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Angelica Sanchez Sancha Music/ Sesac
Recorded June 2021

CD9 Tale Nine – Ivo Perelman with Vijay Iyer

1. Chapter One 17.10
2. Chapter Two 3.36
3. Chapter Three 25.27
4. Chapter Four 14.26
5. Chapter Five 2.28
Total Time: 63.16

Ivo Perelman – tenor saxophone
Vijay Iyer – piano
Ivo Perelman ivomusic/ ASCAP, Vijay Iyer Sonocentric Publishing (ASCAP) administered by Kobalt Music
Recorded May 2021

Monday, October 29, 2018

Christian Frank & Deniss Pashkevich - Yours Faithfully (2108)


The 3. album by the Deniss Pashkevich & Christian Frank Co-operation. This time they have formed a quintet with the american rising stars pianist Aaron Parks and the highly respected danish drummer Lisbeth Diers and the young, but allready established bassist, Kenneth Dahl Knudsen. The music is composed by Deniss Pashkevich and Christian Frank - mostly atmospheric ballads - calmness and relaxation is experienced all through the album and Aaron Parks shows his incredible talent both in his way of backing up the rest of the musicians and as a soloist. 

"Yours Faithfully" has a deep and sofisticated vibe and it will be a must for any musiclover with a taste of quiet but intens modern jazz. 

Christian Frank - guitar
Deniss Pashkevich - tenor saxophone
Aaron Parks - piano
Kenneth Dahl Knudsen - bass
Lisbeth Diers - drums

1. Yours Faithfully 05:09
2. Major & Minor 06:09
3. Choice 03:40
4. Burden 04:04
5. Aramaic Man 07:18
6. Rethought 06:05
7. Sons Of Levy 06:32

2,3,4,6 by Christian Frank
1,5,7 by Deniss Pashkevich

Recorded in location Studio,Copenhagen, Denmark

Monday, October 1, 2018

Aaron Parks - Little Big (ROPEADOPE RECORDS October 19, 2018)


Aaron Parks Little Big, the new Ropeadope album from the acclaimed pianist, keyboardist and composer, is at once the culmination of his brilliant early career and the long-awaited follow-up to his Blue Note Records debut, Invisible Cinema. That 2008 release, with its gorgeously melodic writing and improvising and deft use of indie-rock, electronica and hip-hop elements, established Parks as one of the most gifted and original young voices in jazz. “This is the natural successor to that record,” says the New York-based artist, 34. “It’s taking the ideas of that project and doubling down on them—fully committing to that direction.” 

Little Big also marks the recorded debut of the intuitive working group that gives the album its title (and which takes its name from a fantastical novel by John Crowley—a favorite book of Parks and, the pianist notes, Wayne Shorter). Parks handled the production duties, with engineering by Daniel Schlett (whose credits include The War on Drugs and Ghostface Killah). The album was mixed by both Schlett and Grizzly Bear bassist/producer Chris Taylor, the latter of whom Parks met in a Seattle big band at the age of 10. “We put a lot of time and care into the way this record sounds, and the result”—simultaneously crystalline and warm, postmodern and natural—“makes me really happy,” Parks adds. 

After experimenting with various lineups and sessions, Parks landed on three musicians ideally suited for this atmospheric, genre-bending new work. “This feels like a real band, one that will be around for a while,” he says. Greg Tuohey is the longest-running member, a guitarist who places taste and tone ahead of chops-focused bravado—or, as Parks puts it, “It’s like he’s chasing Miles Davis’ phrasing with Jimi Hendrix’s attitude.” On electric bass is David “DJ” Ginyard Jr., a left-handed player with a distinctively lyrical approach and an aptitude for seeing the bigger musical picture. “He really understands what the bass does, and he thinks super compositionally,” Parks says, noting how some of Ginyard’s basslines have become integral to the songs. Anchoring the unit is Tommy Crane, a forward-looking, stylistically resourceful drummer who brings both explosive creativity and a producer’s knack for precision. “He has a very unique ability to internalize and commit to the particular heartbeat of each song,” Parks explains, “but always with this vital and elastic human element, which is rare to hear in combination with the kinds of grooves we’re exploring.” 



Together they interpret a panoramic set of Parks’ original compositions—from the 21st-century fusion of “Kid,” to the odd-metered studio jam “Professor Strangeweather,” to the trip-hop ambiance and folkish melody of “Bells.” The psychedelic “Aquarium”—“probably the sexiest tune on the album,” Parks says, chuckling—conjures up the trippy, sultry neo-soul vibe of Meshell Ndegeocello, before Tuohey offers a solo that channels Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood. “Digital Society” somehow manages to evoke Afrobeat, bluegrass and Aphex Twin. “Lilac” is, as Parks describes it, “a solo-piano pop tune.” The leader’s “secret favorite” cut, “Doors Open,” seeks inspiration in late Talk Talk and the “earnestness” of Brian Blade & the Fellowship Band. That closing track is “definitely not afraid to go straight for your heart,” Parks says with a laugh. 

A prodigal talent raised outside of Seattle, Parks moved with his family to study at the Manhattan School of Music when he was 16. Two years later, on the recommendation of a teacher, NEA Jazz Master Kenny Barron, he was invited to join trumpet great Terence Blanchard’s band. That tenure began the relationship with Blue Note that would yield Invisible Cinema, released when Parks was just 24. In The Guardian, John Fordham called the album “a real independent vision,” adding that “Parks is a fast-rising star.” In the September 2008 issue of JazzTimes, Parks was named a “New Jazz Visionary” alongside current giants like Esperanza Spalding, Robert Glasper and Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah. Over the ensuing decade, Parks certainly made good on that early promise. He was an essential presence in Kurt Rosenwinkel’s band, including on the guitarist’s well-received double album from 2012, Star of Jupiter. As a member of the supergroup James Farm, also featuring saxophonist Joshua Redman, bassist Matt Penman and drummer Eric Harland, Parks put out two celebrated albums on Nonesuch. In 2013 he released his first disc as an ECM Records artist, Arborescence, which DownBeat’s J.D. Considine called “a forest-invoking solo-piano effort marked by wonderfully detailed narratives and a harmonic palette worthy of Ravel.” Find the Way, an ECM trio session with bassist Ben Street and drummer Billy Hart, followed last year and garnered equally enthusiastic reviews. 

On Little Big, Parks taps into the lessons he’s absorbed throughout those far-reaching experiences, while also progressing some of the au courant sounds he investigated on Invisible Cinema. “This feels like the most personal record I’ve ever made,” he says. What’s more, the album reflects his worldview, an outlook in which optimism and inclusion supersede politics. “There’s a lot out there right now to protest against, and it feels like it’s the artist’s duty to create music that reckons with the issues of the day. Nonetheless, this is not a protest record. It’s not against anything; it’s much more for something. What we’re aiming to do is blend genres and ideas in an open and fluid way, so that structure and freedom work together to serve the larger concept of the song. It’s a way of working together that feels representative of the kind of world I could imagine many of us might want to live in.” 



Aaron Parks - piano, keyboards
Greg Tuohey - guitar
David Ginyard - bass
Tommy Crane - drums

1. Kid
2. Small Planet
3. The Trickster
4. Professor Strangeweather
5. Lilac
6. Aquarium
7. Digital Society
8. Siren
9. Mandala
10. Hearth
11. The Fool
12. Bells
13. Rising Mind
14. Good Morning
15. Doors Open

all songs written by aaron parks (invisible cinema music, bmi)

produced by aaron parks
mixed by chris taylor & daniel schlett
recorded by daniel schlett at strange weather
mastered by greg calbi at sterling sound
executive producers - aaron parks & tommy hawk wilson
creative consultant - judie stein

additional keyboards by eliot krimsky
additional production by chris taylor
additional engineering by zach brown
assistant engineers garret deblock & kiri stensby
assistant mastering engineer steve fallone

album photography by aaron parks
album design by aaron parks & ania parks
album layout assistance by kaya marks
band photography by deneka peniston


Sunday, September 16, 2018

Gilad Hekselman - Ask for Chaos (MOTEMA MUSIC 2018)


GILAD HEKSELMAN'S passionate artistry and complexity are at the forefront of his new album ASK FOR CHAOS. Named Rising Star guitarist in 2017 by DownBeat Magazine, on his sixth album he combines his melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic expertise, bringing together his two touring bands – his acoustic-based gHex Trio, and his electric-leaning ZuperOctave. The result is his most compelling and innovative sound to date.

ASK FOR CHAOS features Gilad with two exciting formations taking turns as they perform ten new and original Hekselman compositions.

ZUPEROCTAVE is: Gilad Hekselman: Guitar/Bass, Aaron Parks: Synths/Rhodes/Piano and Kush Abadey: Drums/Pads.

While the

GHEX TRIO is: Gilad Hekselman: Guitar, Rick Rosato: Bass & Jonathan Pinson: Drums.


1. Prologu0001101
2. VBlues
3. It Will Get Better
4. Tokyo Cookie
5. Stumble
6. Milton
7. Home to You
8. Little Song For You
9. Clap Clap
10. Do Re Mi Fa Sol



Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Matt Penman - Good Question (SUNNYSIDE RECORDS June 8, 2018)



"The music on this recording is a series of musical questions I posed to my bandmates over two days, that I might get their input on a range of subjects that interest me. Much like having prescribed topics for conversation, I wrote these tunes in the hope of starting a dialogue that could provoke reactions, new angles and corollaries that were unforeseen, yet welcome. In fact all of the musicians on this album have their own points of view and a strong opinion, as well as a natural inclination to collaborate, and these are the reasons why I wanted to record with them. This is also why the musical discussion proved to be so rich and wide-ranging." – Matt Penman 


Bassist/composer Matt Penman has spent much of the past decade developing and presenting music for the illustrious SFJazz Collective and the fantastic James Farm collective. That had left a gap between solo recordings that he felt it was time to abate. The result of his efforts are presented here on Good Question, a poignant recording of pieces meant to challenge, engage and entertain both its listeners and the musicians involved in its creation. 

Originally from New Zealand, Penman, since his arrival in 1995, has been an essential voice in the musical landscape of New York. His experience in the States has provided him with both inspiration and exasperation. He has chosen to address his feelings as a part of his new music: 

"There are a variety of musical moods and spaces, some written with these exact musicians in mind, some not; some written as a response to the cultural and political climate in the country I have chosen to make my home, and some as purely musical excavations. Overall, you could say that the album represents a general delight, bemusement, indictment and celebration of the American experiment through the eyes of a foreigner who has now lived more than half his life in the States." 

The ensemble that Penman assembled features not only the top musicians in jazz but also his regular collaborators and friends, including saxophonist Mark Turner, pianist Aaron Parks and drummer Obed Calvaire. There are also guest appearances by guitarist Nir Felder, saxophonist Will Vinson and percussionist Rogerio Boccato. 

Penman’s compositions are meant to stimulate the ensemble into reactions and conversations within their framework. The pieces either present musical puzzles or are think pieces for reflection on topics, mainly natural or political. The ensemble handled the task with aplomb over three days of recording at Brooklyn Recording during the spring and summer of 2017. 

The recording begins with the shimmering “Mr. Right,” which poses questions of how much freedom is too much and do the boundaries of a closed song form encourage creativity? The challenge behind the deceptively difficult yet beautiful “Small Famous” is to make the tune’s complex harmonic form sound easily formulated. The quietly insistent “Fifths and Bayou” presents the players with defined phrase lengths and a set form with the hopes that they would transcend them, as does the soaring soprano saxophone of Will Vinson. A moving excursion on “Blues and the Alternative Truth” explores the many possibilities of the open space allowed by paring down the ensemble to a trio of piano, bass and drums. The exploratory “Cave Life” is about portraying a scene and creating a story about it, in this case spelunking. 

“Ride the Paper Tiger” is an adventurous piece that provides ample opportunity to highlight the talents of the ensemble, including guest guitar slinger Nir Felder. On “Copeland,” Penman asks the ensemble to create an aural safe haven from the traumas of modern life, “a place for political refugees, PTSD sufferers, ex-White House staffers and anyone undergoing a tax audit.” The impressively wrought “Meats” is through composed with a little solo wriggle room given to drummer Calvaire. The concluding piece, “Big Tent, Little Tent,” is a grooving, easygoing composition that frees the ensemble as it closes out the set. 

After posing his questions and framing his scenarios to his open-minded ensemble, Matt Penman has been awarded with a fascinating and moving recording in Good Question, knowing all along that there might not be any answers to his queries at all. 

"'Good question' becomes a response when we don’t actually know the answer, but are willing to ponder further."

1. Mr. Right
2. Small Famous
3. Fifths and Bayou
4. Blues and The Alternative Truth
5. Cave Life
6. Ride the Paper Tiger
7. Copeland
8. Meats
9. Big Tent, Little Tent

Mark Turner - tenor sax (1, 2, 5, 7-9)
Aaron Parks - piano, Rhodes, organ, vibraphone
Oded Calvaire - drums
Nir Felder - guitar (6 & 9)
Will Vinson - soprano sax (3)
Rogerio Boccato - percussion (3)

Saturday, March 10, 2018

Thiefs (feat. Aaron Parks, Mike Ladd & Gaël Faye) - Graft (la Greffe) JAZZ&PEOPLE 2018

Pour son second album, Thiefs, le trio franco-américain voleurs de beats, fait claquer les langues et pose la question du déracinement et de la greffe (graft) culturelle. Avec des contributions exceptionnelles du pianiste Aaron Parks (ECM), du poète et MC américain Mike Ladd et du romancier rappeur franco-rwandais Gaël Faye, il signe un disque manifeste entre jazz de la rue, électro expérimentale et hip-hop conscient.

1. Graft 01:49
2. I Live in Fear (feat. Mike Ladd & Gaël Faye) 05:07
3. Fields (feat. Mike Ladd) 04:39
4. Pas d'ici (feat. Gaël Faye et David Frazier Jr) 03:35
5. Iwbah 04:14
6. Beat One (feat. Grey Santiago & Edgar Sekloka) 07:34
7. Anthro (feat. Guillermo E. Brown) 04:43
8. Pas d'ici part II (feat. Mike Ladd and Aaron Parks) 03:11
9. Make a Fist 02:43
10. The Leaf Node (feat. Gaël Faye) 04:19
11. Pas d'ici part III 02:10


Produced by Keith Witty & Christophe Panzani for The Drops Music
Recorded by Jason Candler at The Speakeasy, NYC
& Andy Taub at Brooklyn Recording, NYC
Mixed by Keith Witty & David Darlington at Bass Hit Recording, NYC
Mastered by Kevin Peterson at The Mastering Palace, NYC

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Aaron Parks - Find The Way (ECM 2017)



For the second ECM album by Aaron Parks – following the solo release Aborescence, which JazzTimes praised as “expansive, impressionistic… like a vision quest” – the prize-winning pianist has convened a trio featuring bassist Ben Street and drummer Billy Hart. The rhythm pair, which also teams in Hart’s hit quartet for ECM, blends fluidity and strength – what Parks calls “an oceanic” quality, producing waves of energy for the pianist to alternately ride and dive into. Find the Way has the aura of a piano-trio recording in the classic mold, from melody-rich opener “Adrift” to the closing title track, a cover of a romantic tune Parks grew to love on an LP by Rosemary Clooney and Nelson Riddle. Parks also drew inspiration for this album from the likes of Alice Coltrane and Shirley Horn (for whom Hart played); space and subtlety are a priority.


1.ADRIFT (Aaron Parks) 05:46
2.SONG FOR SASHOU (Aaron Parks) 06:22
3.UNRAVEL (Aaron Parks) 04:43
4.HOLD MUSIC (Aaron Parks) 04:19
5.THE STORYTELLER (Aaron Parks) 04:52
6.ALICE (Aaron Parks) 07:09
7.FIRST GLANCE (Aaron Parks) 05:41
8.MELQUÍADES (Aaron Parks) 05:27
9.FIND THE WAY (Ian Bernard) 05:58

Ben Street   Double Bass
Billy Hart   Drums



Friday, March 24, 2017

Hermon Mehari - Bleu (2017)


Hermon Mehari’s anticipated debut album as a leader, “Bleu”, marks a new era in his career. The music covers both the ground of his contemporaries and his own original music in such a way to illustrate his current musical path. “Bleu” includes ECM recording artist Aaron Parks on piano, Blue Note recording artist Logan Richardson on alto saxophone, Peter Schlamb on vibraphone, Ryan J. Lee on drums and Rick Rosato on bass. Mehari was the recent winner of the 2015 Carmine Caruso International Trumpet Competition and a semifinalist in the 2014 Thelonious Monk Jazz Competition. In 2014 he released the CD "Our Journey" with Diverse, his second with the group. Mehari maintains a touring schedule around the world with his own group and as a sideman. He was the headliner of the 2014 Jazz en Tête Festival in Clermont-Ferrand, France and was featured on the world-renowned saxophonist Bobby Watson's 2013 release, "Check Cashing Day".

Mehari was also the winner of the 2008 National Trumpet Competition and placed 2nd in the International Trumpet Guild competition in Sydney, Australia. As a founding member of Diverse, whose eponymous debut album on Seattle-based Origin Records reached the Top 40 on the Jazzweek Radio Charts, he has performed professionally with noted saxophonists Jaleel Shaw, Logan Richardson, Bobby Watson, and Ben Van Gelder. He has also performed with Joe Sanders, Hubert Laws, Randy Brecker, Tony Tixier, Dave Pietro, Clay Jenkins and many other great musicians. The band Diverse notably shared a double bill with Roy Haynes' Birds of a Feather band as headliners of the 2008 Gene Harris Jazz Festival.

Hermon Mehari received his BM in Jazz Performance from the University of Missouri - Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance in 2010. In addition to performing, he dedicates himself to being a serious educator and has participated in clinics and panels around the world.


1. Tatra 06:22
2. Eleven Thirteen Une Nuit Noire 07:42
3. Don't Ya Think Interlude 00:51
4. Moment's Notice 05:55
5. Awakening 04:42
6. Cold (feat. Kevin Johnson) 03:50
7. Sunset Park 05:31
8. Our Journey Revisited 04:28
9. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face 04:39
10. We Love 05:13

Aaron Parks, piano
Logan Richardson, saxophone alto
Peter Schlamb, vibraphone
Rick Rosato, double bass
Ryan J Lee, drums


Sunday, October 2, 2016

Matt Brewer - Unspoken (2016) CRISS CROSS RECORDS



On the heels of his critically-acclaimed Criss Cross debut, Mythology (Criss 1373 CD), bassist Matt Brewer presents an inspired quintet recording, convening tenor saxophonist Ben Wendel, pianist Aaron Parks, guitarist Charles Altura, and drummer Tyshawn Sorey -- all top-of-the-pyramid under-40 improvisers and consequential composers in their own right -- to perform a nine-tune program that includes seven Brewer originals, and reimagined versions of Bill Frisell's "Twenty Years" and Charlie Parker's "Cheryl".

Having garnered wide acclaim as a sideman playing the challenging music of such major figures as Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Greg Osby, Steve Coleman and Vijay Iyer, among others, Brewer displays not only his lyric gifts and virtuoso instrumental prowess, but his ability to convey his intentions by allowing his bandmates freedom to express their perspectives within the flow of his ideas.


01. Juno (Matt Brewer)  4:41
02. Unspoken (Matt Brewer)  6:53
03. Twenty Years (Bill Frisell)  4:03
04. Lunar (Matt Brewer)  9:08
05. Evil Song (Matt Brewer)  3:00
06. Cheryl (Charlie Parker)  8:06
07. Anthem (Matt Brewer)  6:10
08. Aspiring To Normalcy (Matt Brewer)  8:38
09. Tesuque (Matt Brewer)  5:27

Matt Brewer, bass
Ben Wendel, tenor sax
Charles Altura, guitar
Aaron Parks, piano
Tyshawn Sorey, drums

Total Time: 56:25
Recorded February 19, 2016 in Brooklyn, NY, USA by Joe Marciano



Monday, September 26, 2016

Ricardo Grilli - 1954 (October 7, 2016) TONE ROGUE RECORDS



Brazilian-born guitarist/composer Ricardo Grilli explores personal, musical and cosmic history on 1954, out October 7 on Tone Rogue Records

Grilli’s entrancing second album features the stellar line-up of pianist Aaron Parks, bassist Joe Martin and drummer Eric Harland

“Evocative, ethereal, and eclectic… Grilli [hits] that sweet spot somewhere between post bop and the avant garde.” – Critical Jazz

“Excellent... Can't stop listening.” – Steve Greenlee, JazzTimes



The title of 1954 (due out October 7 via Tone Rogue Records) comes from the year in which Grilli’s father was born – one possible beginning point for his own story. It also falls at the dawning of the Space Age, a time when people were looking optimistically forward to a future full of innovation and exploration. Significantly for the music contained within, it was also a time when jazz - bebop in particular - was thriving in Grilli’s adopted home of New York City, ghosts of which he can’t help but encounter as he walks through the city today.

“It gets a little mystical as you imagine it in your head how things were back then,” Grilli says. “I wonder if those musicians ever thought that the music they were shaping would evolve to become the way it is now. The concepts we use in today’s jazz still very much use the format of the bebop and hard bop era, even though they have more modern harmonies and meters.”

No matter how much he engages in a dialogue with the past, Grilli’s music is decidedly of the moment, replete with sleek, captivating melodies over tense, balance-challenging rhythms, combined in intricate but emotionally engaging structures. His compositions reveal the influence of modern masters like Kurt Rosenwinkel and Mark Turner alongside adventurous pop experimentalists like Radiohead and Sigur Ros, with a relaxed but expressive melodicism imbued by a youth spent absorbing the tropical sounds of Jobim and Elis Regina.

Grilli’s 2013 debut, If On a Winter’s Night a Traveler, captured the guitarist in a transitional moment. It documented not only his move from Brazil to Boston and then New York, but also his emergence onto the jazz scene after graduating from Berklee College of Music. Having picked up the guitar for the first time at the relatively advanced age of 20 and starting school at 23, five years later than most of his classmates, he recorded the album feeling like an underdog facing an uphill struggle.

That notion is left behind on 1954, which finds a more mature, self-assured Grilli in sophisticated communication with some of modern jazz’s most renowned musicians. “For the longest time I felt like I had missed the start of the race and had to catch up to the competition,” he says. “However, I have been very lucky to be able to play with so many of my heroes, and this record is, hopefully, a statement of my acceptance of my own playing and thinking myself worthy of playing with the musicians on it.”


Long fascinated with astronomy and the cosmos (Stephen Hawking sits on his bookshelf beside the likes of Italo Calvino, the surrealist author who lent both If On a Winter’s Night a Traveler and the current album’s “Vertigo” their titles), Grilli weaves interstellar concepts throughout the tunes on 1954. Opening track “Arcturus” is named for the brightest star in the eastern celestial hemisphere, its gradual build in intensity (thanks to Harland’s subtly insistent rhythms) suggesting the massive star’s gravitational pull. 

“Cosmonauts,” meanwhile, was inspired by the story of “phantom cosmonauts,” an unconfirmed theory suggesting that Yuri Gagarin’s successful flight may have been preceded by other ill-fated attempts.

“It’s a terrifying story,” Grilli says. “I imagined the fear of going into the unknown and not coming back. Jazz has a bit of that feeling, but not in the deadly sense. So I wanted to write an eerie, sad song, something a little somber, dark and mysterious.”


That combination of the cosmic and the intimate is echoed throughout 1954. Especially poignant is the lovely, ethereal “Rings,” which suggests the celestial rings surrounding Saturn and other planets as well as being a musical analog for the rings that symbolize union between people. The simmering, atmospheric “Radiance,” partially inspired by Brian Blade’s soulful Fellowship Band, evokes the far-off glow of heavenly bodies while pondering the loss of loved ones. “Breathe,” essentially a cha cha cha with modern contours, provides a respite from the frantic “Arcturus,” replicating the moment that a shuddering spacecraft breaks through the atmosphere into weightlessness.

Grilli also pays homage to some of his peers and mentors on 1954. “Pogo56” was written for trumpeter and Berklee professor Jason Palmer, while “Far Away Shores” is an homage to pianist Julian Shore, a close friend and collaborator. The album closes with “Pulse,” a final word on the idea of looking backward to look forward: a modernist bop tune that swings hard over contemporary harmonic movement.




Thursday, September 22, 2016

Luigi Masciari, Aaron Parks & Roberto Giaquinto - The G-Session (2016) TOSKY RECORDS



Tosky Records® announces a new release for the New Expression Jazz line: “The G-Session” by Luigi Masciari. The title is borrowed from the homonymous recording studio of Brooklyn, which was the last setting of Masciari as a band leader. “The G-Session” is a musical performance realized together with two outstanding musicians. It is an impressive composition of warmth, vibration and sound very dear to the New York Jazz music but still original, an important feature which makes Masciari stand out as an eclectic and inspired composer, whose musical language is a mix of groove and melodic moments.


01. Mr. Jay (L. Masciari)
02. Vox (L. Masciari)
03. Seven Dollars (L. Masciari)
04. Music Man (L. Masciari)
05. Boogie Blue (L. Masciari)
06. Echoes* (L. Masciari – O. Rea) feat. Oona Rea
07. Don’t Touch My Chords (L.Masciari)

Luigi Masciari (guitar)
Aaron Parks (Fender Rhodes, piano)
Roberto Giaquinto (drums)

Oona Rea (vocals)