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Criss Cross Records: The Healing Power Of Authenticity

Elvin Jones was once asked how often he had played 'My Favorite Things' with John Coltrane. 'Once or twice a night for six years,' he said. 'That's 1,500!' said his questioner. Jones leaned forward: 'But we played it like there'd be no tomorrow, every night, you dig?'
Fortunately, Criss Cross survives and is in 2023 in rude health. Shortly before Teekens passed, his son Jerry promised his father that he would keep the label alive and on track. The owner of a real estate company, with no first-hand experience of the music business, Teekens Jr. faced a steep learning curve. But he is doing well: guitarist

Mike Moreno
guitarTrumpeter

Alex Sipiagin
trumpetb.1967

Michael Feinberg
bassb.1987
The photo above shows Feinbeg's band. Back row l-r: Feinberg, tenor saxophonist

Noah Preminger
saxophone, tenorb.1986

Leo Genovese
keyboardsb.1979

Nasheet Waits
drumsb.1971

Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946

Mel's Vision
Criss Cross
2023
Alex Sipiagin's disc is the thirteenth album the Russian-born trumpeter has recorded for Criss Cross since emigrating to New York. It was made with a virtuosic band, whose members have all crossed paths with Sipiagin before: tenor saxophonist

Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971

David Kikoski
pianob.1961

Matt Brewer
bassb.1983

Johnathan Blake
drums
Oded Tzur
saxophone, tenorIt is a great lineup, but the music does not quite live up to expectations. There is technical excellence in spades, there is lyricism, there is sinew. Yet try as one might, one senses too little of Teekens Sr.'s holy grail"some fire and some blood." An exceptional track is the cover of the Ukrainian folk tune "Vesnianka." Sipiagin says in the liner notes that he included it as a salute to his many friends in Ukraine, for whom "my heart bleeds." The remaining trackstwo originals by Sipiagin, one by Potter,

Don Friedman
piano1935 - 2016

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
In 1986, on a train in Italy,

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Listen to Sipiagin and company's version of Tyner's "Four By Five." It is good, the performances are technically accomplished, and Chris Potter brings some fire to his solo. Now listen to the original on The Real McCoy (Blue Note, 1967). A band can play with all the technical excellence in the world, but in the end it is the emotional weight behind the notes that counts.

Blues Variant
Criss Cross
2023
Now this is the real deal. That is signalled during the first few bars of the opening track and is the case through the entire fifty-minute album. As it happens, Elvin Jones figures in the backstory here, too. In 2012, Feinberg released The Elvin Jones Project (Sunnyside), with

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940
There are also shades of

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007
There is only one cover on the album, of

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Feinberg's final sentence in the liners gets to the nub of things. "It all comes down to authenticity," he says.
Tracks and Personnel
Mel's VisionTracks: Mel's Vision; Summer's End; Four By Five; Maritima; Vesnianka; Bird Food; Balmoral Point; Peggy's Blue Skylight; Bird Food (alternate take).
Personnel: Alex Sipiagin: trumpet, flugelhorn (2, 4); Chris Potter: tenor saxophone; Johnathan Blake: drums; Matt Brewer: bass; David Kikoski: piano.
Blues Variant
Tracks: Blues Variant; Saqqara; High Or Booze; The Healing Power Of Grits; Eye Of The Hurricane; The Water Spirit Brought Us, The Water Spirit Will Take Us Home; Gather Power; Improvisation (for Leslie); Cycle Song; Year Of The Ox.
Personnel: Michael Feinberg: bass; Noah Preminger: tenor saxophone; Nasheet Waits: drums; Leo Genovese: piano, Rhodes (3, 4, 9); Dave Liebman: soprano saxophone (5-7).
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