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Groovin’ Hard In Every Style
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Runnin' for the Ghost
Peace & Rhythm | Blank Slate Records
2017
On Runnin' for the Ghost, Big Mean Sound Machine sounds intent on obliterating every imaginable musical border: the lines between regional or geographic styles, the divide between acoustic and electronic instruments, the boundary between live and sampled music, the gap between ancient and contemporary music...just about any and every musical "box" you can think of.
The fourth full-length chapter in the musical story of this ten-piece afrobeat band led by bassist Angelo Peters was inspired by performing with master afrobeat drummer

Tony Allen
drums1938 - 2020
Runnin' for the Ghost continually grows in density, color and dynamics, and feels like you've jammed your ears into the high-speed spin cycle of an afrobeat washing machine. "Seeing the Bigger Picture" synthesizes afrobeat guitar and melody with Afro-Cuban percussion patterns, convening near the Caribbean through Peters' hard-rocking bass line (as if meeting in their geographic middle), with a synthesizer solo wriggling through like a line scribbled in fluorescent color.
"Van Chatter," which blends Central African Soukous with West African Highlife, kicks off from

The relentlessly undulating serpentine horn chart in the title track is remarkably arranged and even more expertly played. This tune comes out of the box sounding like it's already been (pre-)remixed by The Chemical Brothersa computerized rhythm like the underbelly of a rampaging mechanical bull driving a Latin brass band's march through ancient Egyptian deserts, and ending with a birdsong's curtain call of solitary flute against harmonizing electronics. Simply remarkable.
Recorded live, with half captured in a Baptist church, Runnin' for the Ghost presents the sound of tomorrow's music, more than a few days early.

Kenny Clarke-Francy Boland Big Band
band / ensemble / orchestraAll Smiles
MPS Music
2017
The
Kenny Clarke-Francy Boland Big Band
band / ensemble / orchestraBelgian pianist and arranger Francy Boland began making music with American expatriate Kenny "Klook" Clarke, the original drummer for The Modern Jazz Quartet, in 1961. The combination of their exquisite jazz sensibilities soon attracted first-call jazz musicians from both sides of the Atlantic, and they quickly stepped up to co-lead their erudite ensemble. Clarke, one of the original bebop drummers, was somewhat incredibly supported by a British drummer named
Kenny Clare
b.1929"Let's Face the Music and Dance" could not call out a better opener. It glides as elegantly as the

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Benny Bailey
trumpet1925 - 2005

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988
"By Strauss," the Gershwins' tribute to "The Waltz King," spotlights solos by Boland and tenor saxophonist Ronnie Scott. While Scott's tenor can sound a bit odd in this waltz, it serves to bridge the gap between waltz and jazz; Boland's solo sounds playful without playing around, and his bright dexterity rings out the sound of

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Vince Guaraldi
piano1928 - 1976
"You Stepped Out of a Dream" would be my alternate title for this set, which seems to have risen like a dream from an earlier, somewhat more refined and less convoluted era. Listening to this musical snapshot is sure to leave you with nothing but All Smiles.

The Hot 8 Brass Band
band / ensemble / orchestraOn the Spot
Tru-Thoughts Records
2017
On the Spot celebrates the fifth album and twenty year history of
The Hot 8 Brass Band
band / ensemble / orchestraCertain music seems to come at you roaring and then detonate in between your ears with a sonic boom. On the Spot is just that type. There's no getting around it: The sound of "8 Kickin' It Live" is the sound of 'round-the-clock Mardi Gras, overflowing with vocal and instrumental calls and responses, merging the

Dirty Dozen Brass Band
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1977
On the Spot launches several outside compositions into the Hot 8's unique musical orbit. It combines "Annie Mae" (

Natalie Cole
vocals1950 - 2015

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950

Sade
vocalsb.1959
Yet they pull the worn and torn New Orleans blues standard "St. James Infirmary," a slow-rolling funeral procession full of hurt and heart, through an eight-minute moan led by trumpet which spans the emotional heights of heaven and depths of hell, and a roughhouse vocal that honors New Orleans' most famous and favorite son,

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
Whether they're ripping through the US, the UK, elsewhere in Europe or across Australasia, The Hot 8 Brass Band simply doesn't stop. "We are privileged to tour and to tell the stories of life in our city, to keep alive the memories of our band members who have passed, as well as all the musicians who have gone before," explains band leader and tuba player Bennie Pete. "We can't wait to share this new music and party with our fans, who help us to keep pushing ourselves on."

Entremundos
Far Out Records
2017
Entremundos translates into "Between Worlds," and the second full-length offering from this remarkable ten-piece Brazilian orchestra is full of songs about motion and movement, written and performed in their S?o Paulo observatory. And while listening to the complete set takes you less than fifty minutes, the musical journey it takes you on is endless.
We begin in the "Jardins De Zaira," the "Gardens of Zaira" district of S?o Paulo where the Orquestra meets and rehearses. Simple, strummed acoustic the guitar opens the gate, and remains your lifeline through this river of melody in which flute, percussion, and horns swim and splash like colorful exotic fish. We traverse "Terra Fértil" ("Fertile Land") with wind instruments growling animal sounds while keyboard notes rain down like a cooling shower of electric rain, and percussion and drums rumble in accompanying thunder.
We more leisurely wind our way down the "Estrada Para Camomila" ("Road to Chamomile"), which weaves soul guitar, turntables and digital samples like a crown of wildflowers into its melody; the cool mid-song break, where the bass picks up its tempo from jazz walk to jazz stride just long enough for you to notice, feels like tripping through the Brazilian jungle with

Henry Mancini
composer / conductor1924 - 1994
"Rinoceronte Blues" stomps on a heavy-footed beat while harmonica and tenor sax jointly wail and growl the blues into a thoroughly beastly howl which circles back upon itself. "Vale De Boca Seca" sounds even more ferocious: The rhythm section, horn section and fuzz-toned lead guitar hook all seem to be playing in subtly different yet intersecting times, cooking up a scalding cauldron of

Jeff Beck
guitar1944 - 2023

Tower of Power
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1968
Entremundos never once reaches beyond its grasp, and is even better than the Orchestra's eponymous debut, which was one of the best recordings I've ever heard. Even if they were to disband and stop right now, Nomade Orquestra would go down as one of the best progressive bands in Brazil's storied music history. But let's hope that this is just the beginning of what's becoming a remarkable story instead.

Moonlight Vision
Self-Produced
2017
Led by songwriter, singer and guitarist Mark Sexton, The Sextones retreated to the relative isolation of Prairie Sun Studios in Sonoma (one of

Tom Waits
piano and vocalsb.1949
Moonlight Vision captures the band's no-nonsense neo-soul sound in no-frills production, and overspills with the sound and feel of classic Motown, Stax, Hi and other legendary soul labels. (Its packaging lists the songs on "Side 1"and "Side 2," as if it was an old-school vinyl recording, too.) For example, I'd love to hear

Al Green
vocalsb.1946
Sexton floats up into his own falsetto in "Drunk Off Your Love," which spreads blue-eyed soul like thick and sticky Hall & Oates jam. The opening "Push On Through" does precisely that with a torrential flow of soul and R&B and rock straight from the band's collective heart, very much like a Stax Records shout by Sam and Dave except with only one singer (who also shreds some mean guitar rock in his bridge solo).
Punched up with horns in airtight arrangements, "Goodbye Yesterday" and "Blame It On My Youth," a hymn to the virtues of being young enough to get away with trouble, sound like

Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1972

Donald Fagen
piano and vocalsb.1948
Most of all, Moonlight Vision catches the sound of a young band still in search of itself but looking in some mighty promising directions. "Love, resentment, growing up, fear, stubborn defiance, and dissatisfaction with current times are reoccurring themes for Moonlight Vision," Sexton muses. Such themes won't be going away any time soon, and should give The Sextones plenty of material for wherever their follow-up may take them.

Groovin' Hard: Live at the Penthouse 1964-1968
Resonance Records
2016
In the five years spanning 1958 to '62, not only a time of great consolidation and experimentation in jazz but a glorious age for the label, who would you guess was Blue Note Records' best-selling act? Thanks to their nine albums and nearly two dozen more jukebox singles, it was " data-original-title="" title="">The Three Sounds.
Led by pianist

Gene Harris
piano1933 - 2000
Andy Simpkins
b.1932Bill Dowdy
drumsb.1933
"Gene came out of the church and he loved the blues. But he loved

Erroll Garner
piano1921 - 1977

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007

Monty Alexander
pianob.1944
Groovin' Hard genuinely grooves hard. "Blue Genes" translates its boogie-woogie shuffle into an all-out sprint, with the rhythm section laying down the four/four and the piano leaping and dashing like an Olympic hurdler. Harris' original "Rat Down Front" has boogie form but rock 'n' roll delivery, like

Art Tatum
piano1909 - 1956

Jerry Lee Lewis
pianob.1935
Harris' touch with ballads and other gentle ruminations proves deft and distinguished. "The Shadow of Your Smile" faithfully renders

Johnny Mandel
arrangerb.1925

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
Groovin' Hard sounds and feels like a smooth glass of the finest brandy served neat, with each track its own small yet intoxicating sip. "The Three Sounds were my introduction to bluesy, funky style jazz and I have cherished them and collected their recordings ever since," explains Resonance Records founder George Klabin. Adding Groovin' Hard to their distinguished legacy must be so rewarding to him.
Tracks and Personnel:
Runnin' for the Ghost
Tracks: Return of the March; Seeing the Bigger Picture; Van Chatter; Runnin' for the Ghost; Hired Guns; Burning Van; Kang's Lament; Triple Bacon; The G; Sahara Cell Phones; Another Grain of Sand.
Personnel: Alicia Aubin: trombone; Ray McNamara: guitar; Tyler Burchfield: baritone sax, flute; Greg Blair: baritone sax; Andrew Klein: drums, cymbals, percussion; Lucas Ashby: congas, percussion, effects; Angelo Peters: bass, mini-moog, synthesizers; Dan Barker: guitar, baritone guitar; Dana Billings: Roland Juno, mini-moog, combination organs; Paulie Philippone: mini-moog, Wurlitzer electric piano; combination organs; Lex Schmidt: congas, percussion; Bobby Spellman: trumpet; Jamie Yaman: tenor saxophone; Josh Oxford: mini-moog, synthesizers; Jack Storer: trumpet.
All Smiles
Tracks: Let's Face the Music and Dance; I'm All Smiles; You Stepped Out of a Dream; I'm Glad There Is You; Get Out of Town; By Strauss; When Your Lover Has Gone; Gloria's Theme; Sweet & Lovely; High School Cadets.
Personnel: Benny Bailey: flugelhorn, trumpet; Francy Boland: keyboards, piano; Kenny Clarke: drums; Tony Coe: tenor sax; Jimmy Deuchar: trumpet; Sonny Grey: trumpet; Johnny Griffin: tenor sax; Derek Humble: alto sax; Nat Peck: trombone; Ake Persson: trombone; Dave Pike: vibes; Ronnie Scott: alto sax; Sahib Shihab: baritone sax, flute; Idrees Sulieman: trumpet; Erik Van Lier: trombone; Kenny Clare: drums; Jimmy Woode: bass.
On the Spot
Tracks: 8 Kickin' It Live; Get It How You Live; Bottom of the Bucket; On the Spot; St. James Infirmary; That Girl; Sweetest Taboo; Annie Mae; Working Together; Can't Nobody Get Down; Keepin' It Funky.
Personnel: Terrence Andrews: bass drum; Gregory Veals: trombone; Corey Peyton: trombone; Wendell Stewart: saxophone; Dr. Michael White: clarinet; Raymond Williams: trumpet; Gregory Veals: vocals; Michael Harvey: violin; Bennie Pete: sousaphone; Harry "Swamp Thang" Cook: bass drum; Raymond "Dr. Rackle" Williams: trumpet; Terrell "Burger" Batiste: trumpet; Alvarez "Big Al" Huntley: trumpet; Larry "Big World" Brown: trombone; Tyrus "Tito" Chapman: trombone; Dwayne "Douchie" Finnie: trombone; John "Prince" Gilbert: saxophone; Solomone Doyle: washboard; Sammy Cyrus: snare drum; Shawn King: snare drum; Philip Armand: snare drum; Errol Marchand: snare drum; Christopher Cotton: trumpet.
Entremundos
Tracks: Intro; Jardins De Zaira; Rinoceronte Blues; Terra Fértil; Estrada Para Camomila; Felag Mengu; Vale De Boca Seca; Madame Butterfly; Deliriuns; Olho Do Tempo; Travessia (Hidden Track).
Personnel: Guilherme Nakata: drums; Ruy Rascassi: bass; Fabio Prior: percussion; Luiz Eduardo Galv?o: guitars; Marcos Mauricio: keyboards; Beto Malfatti: saxophones, flutes, pickups; Bio Bonato: baritone sax; Marco Stoppa: trumpet; André Calixto: tenor sax, soprano sax, flutes; Victor F?o: trombone; Beto Montag: vibes; Danilo Oliveira: VJ.
Moonlight Vision
Tracks: Push On Through; Drunk Off Your Love; How Could I Have Known; Analog Girl; Home Is You; Goodbye Yesterday; Blame It On My Youth; I Still Care; Can't Stop; Moonlight Vision; The End.
Personnel: Mark Sexton: vocals, guitar, Hammond B3, Mellotron; Alexander Korostinsky: electric bass, synthesizer bass, sitar; Daniel Weiss: drums, percussion; Ryan Taylor: Hammond B3, Wurlitzer, clavinet, grand piano, synthesizers; Eric Johnson: tenor sax; Ben Caiazza: trumpet, flugelhorn; Graham Marshall: violin; Jessica Vann: background vocals.
Groovin' Hard: Live at the Penthouse 1964-1968
Tracks: Girl Talk; The Night Has a Thousand Eyes; Blue Genes; The Shadow of Your Smile; Rat Down Front; Yours Is My Heart Alone; A.M. Blues; Bluesette; Caesar and Cleopatra; The Boogaloo.
Personnel: Carl Burnett: drums; Bill Dowdy: drums; Gene Harris: piano; Kalil Madi: drums; Andy Simpkins: bass.
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