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Freaks in Mayberry & the Boney Oscar Stomp

Courtesy Club d'Elf
Giuseppe Paradiso
drumsParallel Dimensions
Ubuntu Music
2022
Parallel Dimensions steers the listener's imagination through a luxurious multicultural tapestry woven in music by drummer, vocalist, composer, arranger and producer

Giuseppe Paradiso
drums
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Two drum pieces propel the leader front and center. He builds up the power and volume of a basic rhythm across his tom-tom and bass drums until "Joriki" growls and grumbles like tribal thunder, with " data-original-title="" title="">James Hazlewood-Dale rolling through bass notes so low they're more felt than heard and percussionist
MALICK NGOM
percussion
Tony Allen
drums1938 - 2020

Fela Kuti
saxophone1938 - 1997

Idris Muhammad
drums1939 - 2014

Utar Artun
pianob.1987

Mark Zaleski
saxophone, altoThe title track wanders yet moves purposefully through Zaleski's evocative saxophone song, and he blows through his alto with a ferocious attack and percussive sound. Likewise,

Phil Sargent
guitarIn reflecting on the genesis of this music, Paradiso reveals a much larger truth: "I began composing the Parallel Dimensions album during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020," he recalls. "This album is an attempt to describe the different and parallel realities that each one of us experience even living the same event, at the same time and in the same place."

Social Hour
Mama Records
2022
"For as long as I can remember, I've wanted to have my own big bandan epic jazz orchestra of 17+ musicians," writes trombonist

Sean Nelson
tromboneb.1983
Nelson, also a member of the United States Coast Guard Band, contributes half of these dozen tunes (and arranges "When You Wish Upon A Star"). His compositions reach across and into the broad sound that 17 voices afford, and particularly flatter guitarist " data-original-title="" title="">Doug Maher, whose forty years of performing experience began as guitarist with the Jazz Ensemble of the U.S. Army Band, The Army Blues, and trumpeter
Haneef Nelson
trumpet
Donald Byrd
trumpet1932 - 2013

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007
The leadoff title track jumps right out of the box with the band swinging high, hard and hot. " data-original-title="" title="">Nathan Lassell's cymbals and snare drum power "Social Hour" from behind, the powerfully yet sweetly voiced horn ensemble drives it from out front, and Haneef Nelson drops a dizzying cameo in his solo. Haneef Nelson also wrote the long and lean big-band blues stroll, "Blues from the News," which his opening trumpet calls to order like morning reveille. Nelson's trumpet cuts through the mellow, hazy-blue accompaniment like

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
Lou Bocciarelli
bassMaher's blues guitar stirs some thick sweetness and spice to cook the leader's "Brisket and Beans," and the alto sax duel between
Erik Elligers
saxophone, altoCedric Mayfield
saxophone, tenorLeader Nelson helps himself to some spotlight, too. He takes on the mythical "Chupacabra" in an Afro-Cuban groove kicked in the rhythm by

Chris Smith
drumsBut "Freaks in Mayberry," featuring Nelson's electric trombone, throws the knockout punch in what could be described as heavy prog-metal big band rock. "Freaks" hit the street with Nelson's electric trombone snarling and sneering as steely blue and hard as tungsten; then drummer Lassell counts off and drops the band into a 4/4 stomp. Cedric Mayfield's tenor sax solo on top of Lassell's drums echo the epic

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

Puzzlebox
MoonJune Records
2022
Puzzlebox is precisely that: A hard-cover box of musical curios arranged around an 11-minute improvisation ("As Tympani Melt in the Greek Heat") performed not by a band but by a rotating caravan of progressive jazz and rock musicians organized by multi-instrumentalist and composer Clint Bahr. Bahr's collaborators in this curious collection include pianist

Marilyn Crispell
pianob.1947

David Cross
violinb.1949

Yes
band / ensemble / orchestraPeter Banks
guitar
Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Rahsaan Roland Kirk
woodwinds1935 - 1977

Dick Griffin
tromboneb.1939

The Roots
band / ensemble / orchestraBecause it presents so many different contributors in so many different formats, Puzzlebox comes off like an anthology boxed set even though it's only one CD. Bookend versions of "Tabula Rasa 1" and "Tabula Rasa 2" open and close with a heady psychedelic mixture of sitar, tambura and flute, a captivating effect that loops its ending back into its beginning.
But after that tranquil opening, Puzzlebox grows more dense, heavy and hard. Bahr plays three different basses (4-, 8-and 12-string) to drive "New Design" into a prog-rock stomp that quickly turns violent and fierceespecially its sputtering bridge, which sounds so angry that it can barely spit out the right notes. Horns singing in eastern/oriental tones simultaneously complement and contrast with its brittle, angry rock stomp. Together, the rhythm and horn charts pull this "New Design" together into a sound that suggests Deep Purple and Jade Warrior, stalwarts at very different ends of the British prog-rock spectrum, jamming together.
Bahr's bass seems barely able to restrain the extended improvisation for piano, violin, trombone and percussion "Plate" as it keeps growing for nearly eight minutes. The trombone seems to play off the relatively straight bass-and-drum shuffle but pianist Crispell seems to have recorded a different tune played in a different time, and then superimposed it (like an upside-down plate) on top. If you've ever wondered what improvisational pianist

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Soft Machine
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1966
The centerpiece improvisation "As Tympani Melt in the Greek Heat" is psychedelic and evocative, more of a painting in sound than a song. Drummer Mike Hough sets up rhythms in which none of the other instruments sound interested; the trombone, woodwind and piano all seem to go their own way. Then in the last minute, the chaotic sound clears and surreally reveals what sounds like the digital dawning of a new day.
Puzzlebox arranges smaller curio pieces ("Belt & Braces," "Oslo" and the improvisation "Triangles, Circles & Squares") like side orders and relishes around these main pieces.
Puzzlebox also celebrates two decades of Clint Bahr's relationship with MoonJune Records founder Leonardo Pavkovic: The self-titled debut of Bahr's protean NYC-based power trio " data-original-title="" title="">TriPod was the fourth release in MoonJune's fledgling catalog in 2003.


Club d'Elf
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1998
You Never Know
Face Pelt Records
2022
You Never Know is the

Club d'Elf
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1998
But more importantly, You Never Know celebrates light born from darkness. Bassist and bandleader

Mike Rivard
bass, acoustic
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Frank Zappa
guitar, electric1940 - 1993

Joe Zawinul
keyboards1932 - 2007
It's surprising that these sonic shape-shifters didn't record their own interpretation of the Prince of Darkness' protean "In A Silent Way / It's About That Time" until this, the band's twelfth release. Its opening hovers in space like a sweet, luscious cloud of cotton candy, then electric guitar slices through with the haunting blue melody, and their two sounds together resonantly float and dance. By "That Time," the music twirls like a gyroscope on pinwheeling circles of snare drum and cymbal, and then this famous electric meditation ends with guitar roaring into what sounds like madness.

Frank Zappa
guitar, electric1940 - 1993

Richard "Groove" Holmes
organ, Hammond B31931 - 1991
You Never Know revisits "Zeed Al Maal," traditional gnawa trance which Rivard has been exploring onstage (at least) since 2015's Live at Club Helsinki.

Brahim Fribgane
oud- 2024
"Boney Oscar Stomp" is like listening to The Staples Singers warm up a funk groove on their instruments while they're waiting for their acid to kick in...and then their acid kicks in. Like just about everything else on You Never Know, you might call this opening tune Buzz Lightyear music: It takes the listener to infinity, and beyond.


Shiri Zorn
vocalsInto Another Land
Self-Produced
2022
Into Another Land braids together the voices of percussionist

Mauricio Zottarelli
drumsb.1975
George Muscatello
guitar
Shiri Zorn
vocalsZorn studied music in her native Israel, steeping herself in the magic of

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996

Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990

Carmen McRae
vocals1920 - 1994

Tierney Sutton
vocalsb.1963
On the opening "Witch Touch," one of two originals and this set's leadoff track, Zorn's voice rings out on pitch point, light but in no way thin or weak. There's so much space between these three voices that the arrangement sounds open and clean. It starts as a call and response, with each instrument answering her vocal, but twists into a more inventive passage where her wordless vocal pings around as a kind of melodic percussion, singing with the percussionist's rhythm but in notes from the melody. The other original, "I Wasn't Ready," unleashes the guitarist and percussionist in a long instrumental passage and tells its story with its title; Muscatello wrote this melody in 2014 but Zorn's lyrics didn't come along to complete it until 2021.
Two

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988
This reinterpretation of the warhorse "How Deep Is the Ocean" is genuinely inventive jazz: Muscatello and Zottarelli create an open, expansive framework for the singer to explore, and Zorn's wordless introduction resounds with the sound of classic Brazilian vocalese as it bounces like rattling pots and pans off of the percussion, which keeps changing accents and colors to keep her vocal from singing lines the same way twice. "I fell in love with this song in my twenties, listening to

Peggy Lee
vocals1920 - 2002
Tracks and Personnel
Parallel DimensionsTracks: Kaizen; Memories of the Future; Joriki; It's Only the Beginning; Parallel Dimensions; Tony.
Personnel: Giuseppe Paradiso: drums, percussion, electronics, vocals; Mark Zaleski: alto sax, soprano sax, clarinet; Utar Artun: piano, keyboards; Phil Sargent: electric guitar; James Hazlewood-Dale: upright bass, electric bass, fretless bass; Malick Ngom: West African sabar drums, percussion, vocals.
Social Hour
Tracks: Social Hour; Brisket and Beans; El Chupacabra; Countin' Freckles; The Clearing; Blues From the News; Freaks in Mayberry; Devil's Punchbowl; Small Town, Big Band; Let There Be Light; When You Wish Upon a Star; Every Possible History of the Universe.
Personnel: Erik Elligers: alto sax, flute; Tyler Wilkins: alto sax, flute, clarinet, bassoon; Cedric Mayfield: tenor sax, flute, clarinet, tárogató; Josh Thomas: tenor sax, flute, clarinet; Jeff Emerich: baritone sax, contralto clarinet; Bryce Call: trumpet, flugelhorn; Seth Bailey: trumpet, flugelhorn; Haneef Nelson: trumpet, flugelhorn; Tom Brown: trumpet, flugelhorn; Sean Nelson: trombone, electric trombone, alto trombone; Leroy Loomer: trombone; Vince Yanovich: trombone; Brian Sturm: bass trombone; Jen Allen: piano, Hammond B3 organ, Wurlitzer organ; Doug Maher: guitar; Lou Bocciarelli: upright bass, electric bass; Nathan Lassell: drums, percussion; Megan Weikleenget: vocals; Ryan Foley: flute; Laura Pirruccello: flute; Megan Nelson: alto flute; Robert Durie: clarinet, contrabass clarinet; Chris Smith: steel pans, percussion; Rob McEwan: tabla; Megan Sesma: harp.
Puzzlebox
Tracks: Tabula Rasa; New Design; Plate; Shelter; As Tympani Melt In The Greek Heat; Fall From Grace; Belt & Braces; Triangles Circles And Squares; Oslo; Kicking The Wasps Nests; Lifeguard In The Rain; Tabula Rasa 2.
Personnel: Clint Bahr: tambura, vocals, basses, acoustic guitar, mellotron, Moog taurus pedals, baglama raz, wood flute, percussion, Chapman stick, harmonium, megaphone, slide whistle, theremin; David Jackson: flutes, woodwinds, effects; Dan Parkington: sitar, violin; Mike Hough: drums, cymbals; Jeff Schiller: baritone sax, tenor sax, clarinet, bass clarinet, oboe; Marilyn Crispell: piano; Dick Griffin: trombone; Billy Ficca: drums and cymbals; Colin Carter: vocals; David Cross: violins, viola; Stephanie Feyne: dialogue; Peter Banks: guitar.
You Never Know
Tracks: Boney Oscar Stomp; Zeed Al Maal; Now Open Your Eyes; Golden Hour; In A Silent Way / It's About That Time; Dark Fish; Dervish Dance; Lalla Aisha In Jhaptal; Allah Ya Moulana; King Kong.
Personnel: Mike Rivard: acoustic bass, sintir, electric bass, tambura, chorus vocal; Brahim Fribgane: oud, bendir, karakab, vocal, cajon, frame drum, dumbek, percussion; Dean Johnston: drums, chorus vocal; Duke Levine: guitar, electric manodcello, six-string bass; Kevin Barry: guitar, lap steel; Paul Schultheis: keyboards; John Medeski: organ, Hammond B-3, keyboards; David Fiuczynski: guitars; Mister Rourke: turntables; Amit Kavthekar: tabla; Andrew Rogliani: tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone; Phil Grenadier: trumpet; Thorlleifur Gaukur Davidsson: harmonica.
Into Another Land
Tracks: Witch Touch; How Deep Is the Ocean; Zingaro (Retrato Em Branco E Preto); Beautiful Love; I Wasn't Ready; Vivo Sonhando (Dreamer); Willow Weep for Me; Detour Ahead.
Personnel: Shiri Zorn: vocals; George Muscatello: guitar; Mauricio Zottarelli: percussion.
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