Showing posts with label Cuong Vu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuong Vu. Show all posts

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Cuong Vu 4Tet - Change In The Air (RareNoise Records 2018)



As a followup to 2017’s acclaimed Ballet: The Music of Michael
Gibbs, Seattle-based trumpeter Cuong Vu joins forces once again
with guitar great Bill Frisell, bassist Luke Bergman and drummer
Ted Poor on the boundary-pushing quartet outing for RareNoise
Records, Change in the Air. With all the members of the quartet
contributing compositions, this one finds the four participants on
equal footing on ten adventurous originals. From Poor’s dreamy,
noirish opener “All That’s Left of Me Is You” and his lonesome
echo-laden waltz “Alive” to Bergman’s dynamic “Must
Concentrate,” Frisell’s delicate “Look, Listen” and his beguiling
heartland melody “Long Ago” and Vu’s angular “Round and
Round” and his edgy and electrified “March of the Owl and the
Bat,” these four stellar musicians are truly on one accord and
dealing with a rare level of nuance and depth of communication
on Change in the Air.

“It was a team effort,” said Vu. “The only real leader thing that I
did was make sure everyone had the studio dates in their
calendars, set up rehearsals, made sure they knew where the
studio was; more like secretarial work, is what I did. My only
intention was that we should all bring in tunes to make it as
collective as we could. This collection of people allowed me to let
go and trust, and I knew that we all just wanted to make the best
music that we could together.”

Poor added that the team effort developed quite naturally. “Cuong
invited us all to contribute and I'm very pleased with how the band
was able to sincerely welcome such a broad range of
compositions into the fold. We needed repertoire and I think
everyone felt comfortable and confident bringing in their own
music. At that point we had played a lot of music together and I
for one felt as though we were well on our way to developing a
clear band sound and identity.”

Vu commented on the various compositional qualities that his
three bandmates brought to the table on Change in the Air. “Bill’s
writing, like his playing, at first glance is seemingly simplistic
though always full of character. And when you patiently zoom in
you find that it’s filled with multi-layered info that is cohesively
bonded. His pieces can be played on any collection of
instruments and arranged in any way, and the truth of what he
intended will come through as the listener will find it as deeply
moving as it is beautiful. Luke’s writing is smart, clever, ironic,
funny and feels inevitable. He comes from having seriously
investigated a wide and eclectic range of music but he’s rooted in
a rock band-based type of viewpoint. I think it all comes out in the
music that he writes. And Ted is one of these guys who sounds
like the source music for whatever genre he plays, and he sounds
like a wise, experienced elder playing it. What I find impressive is
in how he’s able to get deep into whatever type of music and so
quickly absorb it. He’s like a jack-of-all-trades type of drummer
because of that ability, along with the technical freedom to
execute it all. I’m not surprised that his writing reflects all that. The
three tunes that he brought to the table are so different from each
other and they all feel extremely rooted and focused in the
specific context that each inhabits.”

Regarding his three stylistically wide-ranging compositions on
Change in the Air, Poor offered: “I liked the idea of trying to writing
something that could pose as an old standard found in an archive
somewhere, and that’s how I came up with ‘All That’s Left of Me
Is You.’ The title is a potential lyric for the final melodic phrase of
the song. While the song does not in fact have lyrics I wanted us
to play it as if we were playing an instrumental version of a
standard song like ‘Embraceable You’ or ‘If You Could See Me
Now.’ For ‘Lately’ I just had the sound of Cuong and Bill playing
the melody and chords vividly in my ears, and I wrote it in one
sitting not long before our recording session. ‘Alive’ was written
back in 2012 for a gig I had in New York with Mark Turner and
Pete Rende. I have enjoyed playing that tune with a number of
different bands but until now it hasn't been recorded. We needed
a few tunes with intensity and tempo to balance the set and ‘Alive’
felt like an obvious choice.”

Poor’s sublime brushwork is beautifully showcased on “All That's
Left of Me Is You,” “Lately” and particularly on the rubato closer
“Far From Here,” which bears the stamp of the late drumming
great and longtime Frisell collaborator Paul Motian. “Paul Motian
is a hero of mine,” said Poor. “Seeing him at the Village Vanguard
with Frisell or with his own bands is something I'll never forget.
His playing was riveting, provocative and pure music. Regarding
brushwork, he’s definitely one of my favorite drummers, along
with Andrew Cyrille, Elvin Jones and Philly Joe Jones (his brush
playing on ‘Young and Foolish’ from Everybody Digs Bill Evans
comes to mind). All of those great players are able to extract
infinitely nuanced sound and a powerful specificity of mood and
feel. Brushes are exciting for me because they allow you to create
sustain and offer such a wide range of attack, from staccato to a
legato bloom of sound that has no attack at all.”


Frisell, who moved from New York to Seattle in 1988 and
remained there for 30 years before returning to the Big Apple,
says the chemistry for this particular quartet began in the Emerald
City. “I was lucky to have first met Luke Bergman and over the
years we have been playing more and more in all kinds of
different situations together. It’s been awesome connecting with
him. Then as soon as Ted moved to Seattle we started playing a
lot together too, just getting together at his house and playing
tunes. It was the same with Cuong. As soon as he came to
Seattle we started playing together. So it was great to have
someone to be able to get together with and practice together and
just play music together. That happened with all those guys
separately and then eventually the four of us got together as a
quartet. Cuong has been such an incredible inspiration-energizer
for music in Seattle. Luke and Ted too. They all make things
happen.”

While the quartet tackled the music of composer-arranger and
Frisell's mentor Michael Gibbs on its first RareNoise record
together, they decided to stick strictly with originals on Change in
the Air. Vu’s trumpet work is brilliant throughout. Whether its his
extraordinary lyricism on Frisell’s “Look, Listen” and Poor’s
dreamy jazz ballad “All That’s Left of Me Is You,” his plaintive call
on Poor’s melancholy “Lately” or his staccato bursts and
skronking statements on his own “March of the Owl and the Bat,”
his playing is marked by bold instincts and nuanced expression.
Poor cited one possible influence on Vu’s “March of the Owl and
the Bat”: “Cuong has written a number of pieces over the years
that are based on driving, angular syncopated rhythms. We are
both huge fans of the Swedish heavy metal band Meshuggah and
their rhythmic language informs our approach significantly. We
worked off of a chart in the studio and the biggest challenge was
to internalize the rhythms and meters and make them feel good.
From there the embellishment and shaping of the tune flowed
naturally.”

Frisell offers authoritative solos and beautiful, pianistic
accompaniment to the fabric of these ten tunes on Change in the
Air. “I’m just trying to listen and do the right thing,” he said. “I’m a
huge fan of master accompanists like Hank Jones, John Lewis,
Tommy Flanagan, Richie Powell, Horace Silver…all guys that are
working from the inside out. I for sure love hearing someone play
a great solo but much more than that what really gets me off is
trying to figure out what’s going on with the whole band and how
all the pieces fit together. When I listen to Miles’ band with Herbie
Hancock, Ron Carter, Tony Williams and Wayne Shorter.…man!
Every note from all of them all the time is astounding and
essential. The magic is in how they play together.”


Vu also commented on his uncanny chemistry with Frisell, which
is especially apparent in their intimate interactions on Frisell’s
chamber-like “Look, Listen” and the sparse closer, “Far From
Here”: “It’s pretty much a necessity for me to be surrounded by
deeply empathetic listeners whose main priority is to serve the
music being created in each instance. And it takes a long time to
find the right people who’ll create the right mixture together. I
really do think that all three of us (Luke, Ted, and I) have a natural
strength in ‘empathic listening’ — making the others sound better
while stating your own opinion with an openness to all possibilities
in the immediate moments. And I do really think that we’re pretty
decent at that approach. But add Bill to the mix…that’s his
genius! He makes everybody that he’s ever played with sound
better and always puts them in a different light. It helps that I’m in
that same zone of thinking, but it’s really about Bill making it
happen.”


Frisell also commented on the the source of the quartet’s
remarkable chemistry: “You play with someone for the first time
and you feel something that makes you want to come back for
more. And I think the key to that is pretty simple. We listen. The
best things happen when everyone’s attention is focused on
everyone else around them ...away from themselves.”

Regarding the source of the album’s title, Vu pointed to the state
of world affairs today as a kind of dark undercurrent to Change in
the Air. “I’ve never felt so much anxiety about the future on so
many levels — environmentally, politically and especially with the
‘leadership’ in our country — than I do now,” he said. “In terms of
what’s going on and how we’ve gotten to this place, it feels
overwhelmingly ominous, dangerous and as if it’s only the
beginning of what will come. I’m scared but, hopefully, just
paranoid.”

Born on September 19, 1969 in Saigon, Vietnam’s largest city, Vu
moved with his family to Seattle when he was six years ago. He
picked up trumpet at age 11 and later received a scholarship to
attend the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. After
moving the New York City in 1994, he formed the group Ragged
Jack with keyboardist Jamie Saft, saxophonist Andrew D’Angelo
and drummer Jim Black in 1997. During his time in New York, Vu
worked with Laurie Anderson, David Bowie, Gerry Hemingway,
Myra Melford, Bobby Previte, Dave Douglas and more. He
appeared on Pat Metheny’s Grammy-winning albums Speaking of
Now (2002) and The Way Up (2005). Vu returned to Seattle in
2007 to teach at the University of Washington, where he is
currently a full professor.


3, 9, 10 composed by Bill Frisell
6, 7, 8 composed by Cuong Vu
4 composed by Luke Bergman
1, 2, 5 composed by Ted Poor

1. All That’s Left Of Me Is You
2. Alive
3. Look, Listen
4. Must Concentrate
5. Lately
6. Round And Round
7. March Of The Owl And The Bat
8. Round And Round (Back Around)
9. Long Ago
10. Far From Here

Recorded May 14, 15, 16 2017 at London Bridge Studio, Seattle
Recorded by Julian Anderson
Mixed by Luke Bergman
Mastered by Nich Wilbur at Anacortes Mastering
Executive Producer for RareNoiseRecords : Giacomo Bruzzo
Artwork and Design by Petulia Mattioli


Saturday, April 29, 2017

Cuong Vu 4-Tet - Ballet: The Music Of Michael Gibbs (RareNoiseRecords 2017)




On the heels of his acclaimed 2016 recording, Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny (Nonesuch Records), and his 2014 collaboration with electro-acoustic pianist-composer and Director of the School of Music at the University of Washington Richard Karpen on their Ellington-Strayhorn tribute That The Days Go By And Never Come Again (RareNoiseRecords), trumpeter-composer Cuong Vu joins forces with guest guitarist Bill Frisell on Ballet, a tribute to renowned composer-arranger Michael Gibbs.

With regular Vu 4Tet bassist Luke Bergman and drummer Ted Poor, the four exchange ideas in the moment in a collective fashion on the expansive opening track, “Ballet,” which gradually morphs into a kind of quirky, dissonant blues waltz featuring brilliant solos from Vu and Frisell. The ethereal ballad “Feelings and Things” showcases Frisell’s more sensitive and spacious side while Vu turns in a remarkably lyrical solo here. “Blue Comedy,” a tune recorded by the Gary Burton Quartet (with Larry Coryell, Steve Swallow and Bob Moses) on 1968’s In Concert, kicks off with a drum salvo from Poor before Frisell and Vu join together on some tight unisons through the intricate head. As the piece progresses, it picks up a kind of shuffle-swing momentum which Frisell solos over with his signature fractured phrasing and surprising detours. Vu and Poor engage in some spirited exchanges near the end of this jaunty number. The most dramatic piece on the album, “And on the Third Day,” which originally appeared on Gibbs’ 1970 self-titled debut album, evolves gradually from a peaceful opening drone to a turbulent crescendo featuring powerful. soaring solos from both Vu and Frisell, the latter power chording with impunity and kicking on his fuzz box and backwards pedal for maximum effect.


“This recording came about as Bill’s wish to bring Mike Gibbs out to the University of Washington to do some of his arrangements of Bill’s music for orchestra,” says Vu. “Mike is indeed an iconic hero to Bill and it all came about from Bill’s desire to bring him to the UW.  I asked the boss, Director of the School of Music, Richard Karpen, and he gave us the green light because he wanted to honor Bill. We did two nights with the first night being the orchestra night and the second being the big band night (both student ensembles). The quartet of Bill, Ted Poor, Luke Bergman and myself was a featured part of those (both the orchestra and the big band) performances. In addition to that, the quartet (sans orchestra/big band), played Mike’s music as the second set each night. This recording is from the second night.”

Regarding this exhilarating Vu 4Tet project, Vu says,

“This was a very collective/equal opportunity effort, so we just played and dealt with the cards collectively as they were dealt. I think it just comes down to the collection of players and our individual aesthetics coming together and trying to find a common goal/language.”

They succeed in triumphant fashion on Ballet, the second collaboration between Cuong Vu and Bill Frisell (their first was Vu’s 2005 ArtistShare album Mostly Residual).


1 Ballet
2 Feelings and Things
3 Blue Comedy
4 And on the Third Day
5 Sweet Rain 

Cuong Vu - trumpet
Bill Frisell - guitar
Luke Bergman - bass
Ted Poor - drums


Saturday, November 19, 2016

Tom Collier - Impulsive Illuminations (ORIGIN RECORDS 2016)



"Collier...is so well-equipped academically that his sleight-of-hand solos already are a fascinating study." LOS ANGELES TIMES

For his eighth recording on Origin, vibist Tom Collier assembled a set of five improvised compositions with pianist Richard Karpen to be recorded in a trio setting. Added to the duo for each piece are several of the more empathetic and forward-looking creative musicians of the past 50 years, all who happen to be colleagues of theirs at the University of Washington, where Collier recently retired after a thirty-year career. William O. "Bill" Smith and Stuart Dempster both nurtured his thirst for improvised music in the late '60s through their contemporary music program at the UW. More recently, trumpeter Cuong Vu, guitarist Bill Frisell and drummer Ted Poor have all made dynamic contributions to the program. Here they each contribute to an album that, while abstract and complex, is also full of beauty and emotion.


1 Impulsive Illuminations 14:56
2 Odious Mode 10:21
3 Out Of The Cistern 14:52
4 Ligneous Oscillations 10:47
5 Discontinuous Impunity 17:25

Tom Collier - vibraphone, marimba
Richard Karpen - piano
Bill Frisell - electric guitar
Stuart Dempster - trombone, didjeridu
William O. "Bill" Smith - clarinet
Cuong Vu - trumpet
Ted Poor - drums




Monday, May 9, 2016

Cuong Vu Trio + Pat Metheny - Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny (2016) NONESUCH RECORDS





present


Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny, due May 6, 2016, on Nonesuch Records, joins guitarist, composer, and bandleader Pat Metheny with a trio led by longtime Pat Metheny Group trumpeter Cuong Vu. The album comprises five tunes written by Vu plus one by Metheny and one by Andrew D'Angelo.

The Cuong Vu Trio includes Stomu Takeishi on bass and Ted Poor on drums. Metheny says of his record with the Trio, "This project is something that Cuong and I have talked about doing for years. For as much as I loved what Cuong has brought to my bands along the way, I always wondered what it would be like to join his group for a project, to see what I might be able to offer those guys. Cuong came up with a great set of tunes for the project, and we all met in NYC for a few days and recorded this music quite quickly and spontaneously."

Vu, who first heard a cassette of Metheny's Travels as a teenager and credits it for leading him into a career in music, adds: "Pat came to the session and killed it, taking us to different territories. We (the Trio) assimilated his sound into ours and made music that still felt uniquely ours." The trumpeter has played with a wide range of artists, including Laurie Anderson, David Bowie, Dave Douglas, Myra Melford, Cibo Matto, and Mitchell Froom. Vu, a graduate of the New England Conservatory, began his career leading various groups while touring extensively throughout the world. As a leader, he has released eight recordings, each making critics' lists of the 10 best recordings of their respective years. His awards and honors include two Grammys (with Pat Metheny Group). He is currently an associate professor in jazz studies at the University of Washington.

Over the course of more than three decades, guitarist Pat Metheny has set himself apart from the jazz mainstream, expanding and blurring boundaries and musical styles. His record-setting body of work includes 20 Grammy Awards in 12 separate categories; a series of influential trio recordings; award-winning solo albums; scores for hit Hollywood motion pictures; and collaborations and duets with major artists like Ornette Coleman, Steve Reich, Charlie Haden, Brad Mehldau, and many others. His band the Pat Metheny Group, founded in 1977, is the only ensemble in history to win Grammys for seven consecutive releases.

Acid Kiss
Not Crazy (Just Giddy Upping)
Seeds of Doubt
Tiny Little Pieces
Telescope
Let's Get Back
Tune Blues

MUSICIANS
Cuong Vu, trumpet
Stomu Takeishi, bass
Ted Poor, drums
with Pat Metheny, guitar

PRODUCTION CREDITS
Produced by Cuong Vu and Pat Metheny
Recorded, Mixed and Mastered by Pete Karam
Recorded February 4–6 at Avatar Studios, New York, NY
Assistant Engineer: Tim Marchiafava

All music composed by Cuong Vu except "Telescope" by Pat Metheny and "Tune Blues" by Andrew D’Angelo

This recording is funded in part by the Donald E. Petersen Endowed Professorship from the University of Washington

Cuong Vu is a Yamaha Artist


NONESUCH Releases Two New Albums from Pat Metheny on May 6 The Unity Sessions, Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny




Nonesuch Records releases a pair of new albums from guitarist, composer, and bandleader Pat Metheny on May 6, 2016. Metheny is well-known as a musical collaborator, and both records feature friends and colleagues with whom he has worked for years. The Unity Sessions is taken from a filmed performance with Pat Metheny Unity Group that was recently released on DVD; the set comprises 13 songs by Metheny, one he co-wrote with Ornette Coleman, and one well known standard by Ray Noble. And Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny joins the guitarist with a trio led by longtime Pat Metheny Group trumpeter Cuong Vu. It comprises five tunes written by Vu plus one by Metheny and one by Andrew D'Angelo. Pre-orders of The Unity Sessions and Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny are available now at iTunes and in the Nonesuch Store, each with an instant download of a track from its album ("This Belongs to You" and "Let's Get Back," respectively; you can hear both below).

In 2013, for the first time since 1980, Metheny recorded with a band that highlighted tenor saxophone. The resulting Unity Band, which went on to win him his 20th Grammy Award, featured Chris Potter on sax and bass clarinet, longtime collaborator Antonio Sanchez on drums, and Ben Williams on bass. Metheny then took that same ensemble into new territory with the addition of his Orchestrion and a focus on more through-composed material and christened the ensemble Pat Metheny Unity Group. The Group's first record, Kin (←→), was released by Nonesuch in 2014 and was named the best jazz album of the year in the DownBeat Readers Poll Awards. The Group went on a world tour of more than 150 cities; at the end, they hunkered down in a small Manhattan theater to film new performances of music from the original Unity Band, the expansive Kin(←→), and touchstones from the entirety of Metheny's music catalog. The results were released on DVD last year as The Unity Sessions, and now Nonesuch releases the album of the same name.


The Cuong Vu Trio includes Stomu Takeishi on bass and Ted Poor on drums. Metheny says of his record with the Trio, "This project is something that Cuong and I have talked about doing for years. For as much as I loved what Cuong has brought to my bands along the way, I always wondered what it would be like to join his group for a project, to see what I might be able to offer those guys. Cuong came up with a great set of tunes for the project, and we all met in NYC for a few days and recorded this music quite quickly and spontaneously."

Vu, who first heard a cassette of Metheny's Travels as a teenager and credits it for leading him into a career in music, adds: "Pat came to the session and killed it, taking us to different territories. We (the Trio) assimilated his sound into ours and made music that still felt uniquely ours." The trumpeter has played with a wide range of artists, including Laurie Anderson, David Bowie, Dave Douglas, Myra Melford, Cibo Matto, and Mitchell Froom. Vu, a graduate of the New England Conservatory, began his career leading various groups while touring extensively throughout the world. As a leader, he has released eight recordings, each making critics' lists of the 10 best recordings of their respective years. His awards and honors include two Grammys (with Pat Metheny Group). He is currently an associate professor in jazz studies at the University of Washington.

Over the course of more than three decades, guitarist Pat Metheny has set himself apart from the jazz mainstream, expanding and blurring boundaries and musical styles. His record-setting body of work includes 20 Grammy Awards in 12 separate categories; a series of influential trio recordings; award-winning solo albums; scores for hit Hollywood motion pictures; and collaborations and duets with major artists like Ornette Coleman, Steve Reich, Charlie Haden, Brad Mehldau, and many others. His band the Pat Metheny Group, founded in 1977, is the only ensemble in history to win Grammys for seven consecutive releases.




Monday, January 25, 2016

Joel Harrison 5 - Spirit House (2015)




Spirit House is a Joel Harrison original! Original compositions, ideas, instrumentations, and grooves. While jazz sometimes repeats itself (in style, instrumentation, or choice of songs etc.), Harrison creates completely new music worth listening to, "repeatedly." 

I say this because he wrote the music "specifically for this unique group of individuals," using electric guitar with bassoon (Paul Hanson), and the echoed voicings of trumpeter Cuong Vu. Add in veteran drummer Brian Blade and bassist Kermit Driscoll, and you have a spirit-band of professional brothers. 

For example, the first song "An Elephant in Igor's Yard" makes use of the bassoon doubling the bass line to get a lumbering but well defined elephant sound, and Cuong Vu answers by improvising as the trunk. But that description doesn't do the song justice, because throughout there is a feeling of incense or spirits floating over the band. 

Harrison says "I kept the composing fairly simple, wanting to lean on the intuitive skills of the players, and went for a feeling of openness, spirit and soul in the music." 

When I first heard Spirit House my impression was one you might get sitting in a small listening room hearing the musicians delicately and almost within arms reach, as in a small circle. 

Harrison was using an East Asian miniature structure, a Spirit House, as a metaphor for the album. 


Some tunes groove more, such as "Left Hook," which has Driscoll on electric bass playing back and forth off of Blades, while Vu solos, and Harrison adds blankets of chordal sounds, although he is apt to add rock distortions and effects. But the tune transitions into a softer section, allowing Hanson to express himself sax-like, and it all resolves into a tight, written outro. 

Johnny Broken Wing features a lightly charged but sensitive guitar intro. Harrison is able to arrive at his style in this setup, and the tune picks up when the bass and drums bring in the beautiful organic sounding head played duet style, trumpet and bassoon. The musicians are really listening well to each other on tunes like this. 

"You Must Go Through a Winter" is a light structure of a tune leaving room for trio play between guitar upright bass and drums, before Vu enters on improv. 

The band toured together on the West Coast in 2013 and was able to play through these songs for several days before recording, allowing them to take a unique approach throughout the album's nine songs. 

"Sacred Love" perhaps best captures the mood of the whole project, which has gorgeous intro lines with Vu Hanson and Harrison, breaking into a Blade and Driscoll groove. While Blade has remained soft in approach for much of the album, he's able to drive a stake in the ground on this one, and the band goes for a sort of "group hug" (LOL) improvising all together.

An Elephant in Igor's Yard
Old Friends
Left Hook
Johnny Broken Wing
Some Thoughts on Kenny Kirkland
You Must Go Through a Winter
Sacred Love
Spirit House
Look at Where You Are

Joel Harrison: guitar/voice
Cuong Vu: trumpet
Paul Hanson: basson
Kermit Driscoll: bass
Brian Blade: drums/voice


Domi