Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Harris Eisenstadt: Canada Day II
Harris Eisenstadt: Canada Day II
ByThe disc follows 2009's Canada Day, on Portugal's Clean Feed label, with the same lineup. Eisenstadt infuses each recording with a buoyancy and high-spiritedness, not unlike fellow drummers

Matt Wilson
drumsb.1964

John Hollenbeck
drumsb.1968
Eisenstadt, a student of African drumming, has written for large jazz bands, chamber ensembles, and small groups playing music from classical to rock. His jazz inflection is flavored by his experience in all these genres, but seems to have an overriding impulse towards motility and progression.
The compositions rely on seemingly simple melodies, executed with increasing intricacy. That task is managed by the stellar lineup of the next generation of jazz stars. The slightly sentimental "Song For Owen," dedicated to the drummer's new son, glides on melody and some agreeable soloing by saxophonist

Matt Bauder
saxophone, tenorb.1976

Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974

Chris Dingman
vibraphone
Eivind Opsvik
bassThe band draws on the 1960s sounds of

Bobby Hutcherson
vibraphone1941 - 2016

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997
The glue here is the perpetual groove, be it applied by the drummer, bassist, or vibraphone as on "To Be," someone is always carrying the freight. That makes for better solos and a crisp accessible sound. ">
Track Listing
Cobble Hook; To Seventeen; Song For Owen (for Owen Eisenstadt); Now Longer; To Eh; To Be;To See/Tootie; Judo For Tokyo Joe (for John Zorn).
Personnel
Harris Eisenstadt
drumsNate Wooley: trumpet; Matt Bauder: tenor saxophone; Chris Dingman: vibraphone; Eivind Opsvik: bass; Harris Eisenstadt: drums, compositions.
Album information
Title: Canada Day II | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Songlines Recordings
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
