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Ike Sturm: Ike Sturm: JazzMass

JazzMass
Self Produced
2009
Ask any jazz fans if he or she knows "When The Saints Go Marching In" or
John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
Turning to the black churches of the south of the US circa 1900 is to find the roots of jazz. Be it in the servants' psalmodies, the congregations' responsorial chanting, or simply in the singing of hymns and spirituals to ease the hardships of every day life, black music has since nourished the music of countless musicians, from trumpeter

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Mahalia Jackson
vocals1911 - 1972

Ray Charles
piano and vocals1930 - 2004
Though he has been busy leading his own ensemble, Sturm's principal occupation is as Assistant Director of Music for the Jazz Ministry at Saint Peter's Church in New York City, a position surprisingly similar to the ones classical composer Bach held throughout his career. These responsibilities include writing new music, assembling and rehearsing the choir, and helping with the organization of the music worships. That being said, although JazzMass draws from the same sense of piety and devotion such celebrations invoke, it nevertheless ventures far from the usual forms of devotional music, which, in the end, may not be such a bad thing at all.
For both its massive instrumental apparatus (choir, strings orchestra and jazz combo) and slightly altered formal organization, Sturm's "Mass" hardly qualifies as a liturgical work, at least not one apparently destined to accompany a typical Roman Catholic Mass. For example, besides the aforementioned orchestra, the credo was abandoned. Instead instrumental interludes, songs and full-blown solo sections have been woven into the remaining sections of the Mass as transitional material, making the end result sound more like an extended suite than a musical liturgy.
"Our Father," for example, takes the allure of a conventicle as saxophonist

Donny McCaslin
saxophone, tenorb.1966

Ted Poor
drumsSturm offers a weighty yet luminous work that is profound and appealing, in terms of its spirituality, amalgam of human voices, richly textured harmonies and superior improvisers.
Tracks: Kyrie; Gloria; Interlude; Hymn: Just As I Am; Offertory: Stillness; Sanctus; Thanksgiving; Our Father; Agnus Dei; Hymn: Shine.
Personnel: Misty Ann Sturm: vocals; Loren Stillmean: alto saxophone; Donny McCaslin: tenor saxophone; Ingrid Jensen: trumpet, flugelhorn; Adam Benjamin: piano, Rhodes; Ryan Ferreira: guitar; Ted Poor: drums; Tim Allbright: trombone (5); Sara Caswell: violin (5); Madeline Sturm: clarinet (5); Ike Sturm: bass; choir; string orchestra.
">Personnel
Ike Sturm
bassAlbum information
Title: Ike Sturm: JazzMass | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: Unknown label
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