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Harris Eisenstadt: Canada Day Octet
ByHarris Eisenstadt
drums

Dan Peck
tubab.1983

Ray Anderson
tromboneb.1952
Eisenstadt's compositions, with their complex but unforced use of varying rhythmic devices to demarcate alluring melodic materials, serve as vehicles not for blowing, but for individual vignettes which craftily extend the chart's parameters to include dissonance and out of tempo extemporization. While none of the tunes here are quite as gorgeous as some of the Canadian's previous efforts (particularly on Woodblock Prints), they are still far more attractive and listenable than your average modern jazz workhorse.
Eisenstadt is prominent only on the intro to "The Ombudsman 1," but his concept courses through this project like electricity through copper wire. After a hocketed melody shared between the horns, come a series of solos introducing the new arrivals, each enjoying different backing arrangements. Anderson convinces as blustery but convivial, while Mears' muscular alto becomes fractious. A probing duet for tuba and " data-original-title="" title="">Garth Stevenson's bowed bass finally gives way to a free form colloquy of chattering horns to take the piece out. Each cut is similarly diverse.

Matt Bauder
saxophone, tenorb.1976

Chris Dingman
vibraphone
Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974
In the liners, Eisenstadt visualizes the Ombudsman as mediating between those who like creative music and those who are mystified by it. That could stand as an epigram for all the drummer's work: endless ways of deriving elegant solutions to the inside out conundrum. ">
Track Listing
The Ombudsman 1; The Ombudsman 2; The Ombudsman 3; The Ombudsman 4; Ballad for 10.6.7.
Personnel
Harris Eisenstadt
drumsNate Wooley: trumpet; Ray Anderson: trombone; Dan Peck: tuba; Jason Mears: alto saxophone; Matt Bauder: tenor saxophone; Chris Dingman: vibraphone; Garth Stevenson: bass; Harris Eisenstadt: drum, compositions.
Album information
Title: Canada Day Octet | Year Released: 2012 | Record Label: 482 Music
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