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Bird Songs, Tripping Fantásia, Real Harmony & Klezmer-Hop
ByAlex Bird
vocalsb.1990
You Are the Light and the Way
Self-Produced
2021
You Are the Light and the Way presents an interesting challenge for a writer. Twelve new songs by Canadian vocalist

Alex Bird
vocalsb.1990

Johnny Mercer
composer / conductor1909 - 1976
But sometimes it really is that simple. You Are the Light and the Way is an absolute joy. Bird's voice is a strong and supple lead instrument, sometimes resounding echoes of Canada's pop vocal legend

Paul Anka
vocalsb.1941
Bird's voice strolls all alone into the first verse of the opening "You Are the Light and the Way," cold and sharp as an icepick. The Mavericks slip in and pull the second verse down into a funky blue groove made up of gospel, pop, R&B, and jazz filtered through the musical colors of New Orleans, while drummer

Eric West
drumsAlexander Brown
trumpetYou Are the Light and the Way turns the spotlight not only on Bird's commanding voice but also on the Jazz Mavericks. "Tell Me It's You," which sort of glides out from under the closing curtain of the preceding "I Held You In My Arms," somehow digs deep into a throaty, romantic saxophone sound but luxuriously floats like a drifting cloud upon the rhythm section's languid tempo. "Back to You" stretches the Mavericks out the most: In the first verse, West splashes cymbals and drums to rattle dissonant and eerie saxophone moans, then the second verse drops dead into the pocket of a blues stride so cool that it burns icy hot. Brown smolders through Miles Davis' acoustic muted ballad sound in "Sittin' By My Lonesome," a beautifully hurting sound so sweet it sings like a ballad and so sad it aches like a blues.
"Old Soul" rumbles from its opening swinging big-band sound into a finger-snapping stroll which Bird's vocal seems to relish with all the finger-snapping cool of

Bobby Darin
vocals1936 - 1973

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998
Sometimes, it really is just that simple.


Dave Devine
guitarb.1974
Played Against the Harmony of the Real
Self-Produced
2021

Dave Devine
guitarb.1974
Paul McDaniel
bass
Matt Mayhall
drums"Wolf City" and "Sopris" sound inspired by the free, open spaces and wildlife of the western mountains near Devine's Denver (Colorado) homebase. "Wolf City" builds in the tension between Devine's liquid classical guitar and Mayhall's robotic drumming, and eventually takes shape around his repeated guitar phrases but remains weird around the edges. Acoustic and electric keyboards jamming together and with the guitar pump a progressive rock-jazz groove into "Sopris" that also skips along Mayhall's bright sunburst cymbal splashes. (Devine's press sheet provides occasionally hilarious, inscrutable yet accurate one-line track descriptions: "Sopris" is "a glorious mountain near Aspen" and "Wolf City" is "classical guitar therapy.")
Played Against the Harmony seems to grow more focused and "real" as its music rolls on and culminates in a family-based trilogy near the end of the set. In the lovely "Wife Song," glistening cymbals and whispered brush drumming build up a shimmering, suspended sonic wave for Devine's electric blues guitar to surf and glide upon. "Son Song" blasts off with spacy strummed guitar that rockets back and forth in stereo and sets up a grinding conflict with Mayhall's avalanche of power drumming their two sounds working against instead of with each otherbefore settling into a more surefooted straight-ahead stride. The trilogy concludes with "Daughter Song," a tender yet spacy Soft Machine jazz-rock groove that Devine's guitar wraps itself around with a unique, protecting and nurturing, jazz-rock sound.
The melancholy guitar with vocal ballad "Vanish" ("Elliott Smith meets
Barclay James Harvest
band / ensemble / orchestra

Jacopo Ferrazza
bass, acousticb.1989
Fantásia
Teal Dreamers Factory Records
2022

Jacopo Ferrazza
bass, acousticb.1989
Its first two tracks firmly establish this ethereal mood. The leadoff and title track opens with an acoustic piano melody that Diodati's evocative, wistful voice picks up and traces. But just as her voice lifts up and begins soaring over this spacy landscape, the music erupts into disparate bass, drum and trumpet sounds: Bass and drums dig so deep down they seem to claw a hole in the song's floor while guest

Fabrizio Bosso
trumpet"The Explorers" is a great description of this ensemble as they traverse this tune. Drums open with a staccato beat that Ferazza's bass quickly picks up and strings together. Then the music goes through so many different passages, including a vocal section where synthetic and human voices dance on a melody as colorful and fleeting as a butterfly, that it's difficult to keep track. This leads drummer Valeria Vantaggio and pianist
Enrico Zanisi
piano"Step By Step" seems to build in precisely that way: Cello and violin twirl the first verse into a beautiful dance with piano and Diodati's spectral voice; pushed hard by the rhythm section, the remaining steps grow in power without increasing tempo or volume. Ferrazza's sympathetic bass thrusts and tugs, energizing pianist Zanisi's closing solo, a gorgeous jazz crown atop this curiously satisfying combination of instrumental styles.
Bosso's guest trumpet and Diodati's ethereal, haunting voice whisper eternity into "Old Souls," another beautiful reflection in this expansive journey through Fantásia.


David Krakauer
clarinetb.1956

Kathleen Tagg
pianoMazel Tov Cocktail Party!
Table Pounding Music
2022
When

David Krakauer
clarinetb.1956

Kathleen Tagg
piano"Celebration" captures the riotous, joyous sound of Mazel Tov Cocktail Party! in a single word. Or at least as close as one word can get to capturing the sound of an ensemble co-led by multi-instrumentalist Tagg (assorted keyboards, cello, electronics and beats) and Krakauer, one of the world's leading (and certainly among the world's most experimental) klezmer clarinet playersit is built upon a rhythm section teaming American bassist

Jerome Harris
guitar, electricb.1953
Yoshie Fruchter
guitarWith klezmer, hip-hop, calypso, polka, and other dance forms as their baseline, this party opens with a square dance. Krakauer blows clarinet like hot wind into the sails of "North Country Square Dance (Square Dance All Night)" to keep it rolling while Harris' bass lines bounce like a tuba player blowing in a moonshine jug, and hipster Tagg throws down a rap (including a verse in either patois or French) that doubles as a square dance call. In the same way, Krakauer's swinging clarinet, Harris' thumping tuba basslines, and Tagg's vocal throwdown energize "Krakky's Rainbow Polka," even as the surrounding music bounces from polka to calypso to techno/electro to hard funk and rock. But best of all, "Krakky's Rainbow Polka" makes playing the clarinet sound like fun. How great is that?
Just like these first two, the last two tunes are joyous celebrations. "Wedding on the Cyclone" is a perfect fit and description: A marriage made up of different musical cultures whirled together and collectively poured out with primal force. Krakauer's clarinet leads a repeating three-step dance through which the rhythm section keeps inventing new pathways, with mouth harp adding an extra twangy bounce, and the entire ensemble blooms into a lusty melodic and rhythmic roar as the leader rips into a few choruses of the traditional "Hava Negila" before dismissing the troops. "The Happy Hour Crew Theme Song" drops an enthusiastically wild and crazy coda on this enthusiastically wild and crazy set.
Musical and other cultural references whiz in and out of Mazel Tov Cocktail Party! like the howling flying monkeys in The Wizard of Oz, and it's a decent bet that you've most likely not heard too much music like this before.
Tracks and Personnel
You Are the Light and the WayTracks: You Are the Light and the Way; Where the Blackbird Sings; Way Back Home; My Cutie Pie; Sittin' By My Lonesome; Fool for Love; Thinkin' 'Bout You Tonight; Old Soul; I Held You in My Arms; Tell Me It's You; Back to You; Honey Bee Lullaby.
Personnel: Alex Bird: vocals; Ewan Farncombe: piano, Hammond B-3; Eric West: drums; Leighton Harrell: bass; Jacob Gorzhaltsan: saxophone, clarinet; Alexander Brown: trumpet; Jesse Ryan: alto sax; Patrick Smith: baritone sax; Tom Richards: trombone; William Lamoureux: violin; Mo M. Mitchell: violin; Andrew Chung: viola; Jill Sauerteig: cello.
Played Against the Harmony of the Real
Tracks: Short Story Long; Canadian Yarnart; Sopris; Played Against the Harmony of the Real; Wolf City; Wife Song; Son Song; Daughter Song; Vanish; Mondegreen.
Personnel: Dave Devine: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, keyboards, loops, treatments, vocals; Paul McDaniel: acoustic bass, electric bass, synth bass; Matt Mayhall: drums, piano, glockenspiel, percussion.
Fantásia
Tracks: Fantàsia; The Explorers; River Theater; Old Souls; Land Of Time; La Course; Blue Glow; Step By Step; The Tree Of Life.
Personnel: Jacopo Ferrazza: double bass, synthesizers; Alessandra Diodati: vocals; Enrico Zanisi: piano, synthesizers, live electronics; Livia de Romanis: cello; Valerio Vantaggio: drums; Fabrizio Bosso: trumpet; Marcello Allulli: soprano sax.
Mazel Tov Cocktail Party!
Tracks: North Country Square Dance (Square Dance All Night); Krakky's Rainbow Polka; Bella's Calypso (Bella suit son c?ur); Jammin' with Socalled; Mazel Tov Cocktail Party; I'm A Poor Wayfaring Stranger; Drum and Hornpipe: Poll Ha'penny; Wedding on the Cyclone; The Happy Hour Crew Theme Song.
Personnel: David Krakauer: clarinet, vocals; Kathleen Tagg: piano, prepared piano, keyboard, accordion, cello, beats/electronics; Sarah MK: rap vox, vocals, organ, tambourine; Yoshie Fruchter: electric guitar, oud, mandolin; Jerome Harris: electric bass, vocals; Martin Shamoonpour: daf (Iranian Frame drum), jaw's harp, whistles; Bergsonist: samples, electronics; Jeremy Flower a/k/a Keepalive: samples, electronics; Socalled: samples, electronics.

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