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Innervisions, Improvisations and Other Jazz Fevers
ByLili Añel
vocalsBetter Days
Winding Way Records
2019
Singer-songwriter

Lili Añel
vocals
Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943
To accompany this very real sense of real-ness in her songs, A?el keeps soul and R&B in the neighborhood or at least around the corner of every verse and beat for example, this slightly blue and somewhat jazzy take on

Sly and the Family Stone
band / ensemble / orchestraKeyboard player
Dale Melton
keyboards
Jonathan Whitney
drumsb.1977
Doctor John
b.1940Jeffrey Blount
bass
Korey Riker
saxophone, tenor
Christopher Stevens
trumpetb.1982

Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1972


Benjamin Boone
saxophoneb.1963
Joy
Origin Records
2020

Benjamin Boone
saxophoneb.1963
The seeds of Joy were planted when composer-saxophonist Boone spent a year as a US Fulbright Scholar in Ghana in sabbatical from his professorship at California State University (Fresno), to study the country's music and musical traditions. The music Boone found made him feel at home: "These guys know American jazz inside and outbut with a definite Ghanaian twist," he explains.
The Ghana Jazz Collective boasts an amazingly dexterous and powerful rhythm machine: After studies at Berklee, pianist

Victor Dey Jr.
pianob.1980

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950

Hugh Masekela
flugelhorn1939 - 2018

Courtney Pine
saxophoneb.1964
Frank Kissi
drumsBright Osei
bassDuring his time in Ghana, Boone was invited to sit in with the band at the 233 Jazz Bar & Grill in Accra. "The 233 Jazz Bar" re-extends this invitation into technicolor big city club funk via Osei's room-shaking, finger-popping bass line. Electric keyboards float synthetic chords that tie the rhythm and melody together, and Boone sprints (not steps) into his solo like he's already three minutes late and must catch up!
"The Intricacies of Alice" presents a dynamic musical portrait of the leader's wife and one of the band's favorite originals. "Alice can be a number of things at once, wickedly sardonic and funny while at the same time full of empathy," Boone explains. "The band thinks this tune is a hoot, alternating between three different grooves and two meters, because they know her, and know it fits." It certainly sounds like the band plays this tangled steeplechase of saxophone and piano solos in several different ways from more than one direction.
"Curtain of Light" and "Maiden Voyage" (

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Sandra Huson
vocals"In Ghana, music is participatory, egoless, and woven into the very fabric of existence," Boone says. "People live with Joy and make music with Joy."

BossaCucaNova
arranger
Roberto Menescal
guitarb.1937
Bossa Got The Blues
Six Degrees Records
2019
Listening to
BossaCucaNova
arrangerBossa Got The Blues maintains the preeminence of BossacucanovaAlex Moreira on keyboards, Marcelinho Da Lua on scratches and samples, and Marcio Menescal on Fender and keyboard bassamong contemporary Brazilian bands whose sound springs from filtering traditional bossa nova through modern production and electronica. It also showcases one of the founding fathers of bossa nova guitar: guitarist, composer, and producer

Roberto Menescal
guitarb.1937
Thanks to Papa Roberto, Bossa Got The Blues and some sweet, swinging

Grant Green
guitar1935 - 1979

Gilberto Gil
guitarb.1942
These ten tracks would split and retrofit quite nicely into two sides of a vinyl LP, and Gandleman plays on the songs that would close side one (track five, "Blue Bossa") and two (track ten "Galeria Menescal"). "Blues Bossa" cribs the melody to "Don't Get Around Much Anymore" before opening up a dance floor jointly rocked by Menescal's electric guitar chords and Gandelman's moaning and groaning baritone and tenor saxophones. Gandelman adds tenor, baritone and flute in a lovely dance with acoustic guitar and vibraphone to "Galeria Menescal" (which opens, in case you missed all the old school, with the sound of a needle coming down on a vinyl album).
Yes, you could downshift and grind your Bossacucanova sportster into a deeper, harder and more powerful gear. But when you feel as good as the sound of Bossa Got the Blues!, why mess with simply perfect?


Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1987
The Music of Wayne Shorter
Blue Engine Records
2019
As a saxophonist, founding member of

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestra
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Christian McBride
bassb.1972
Ellington and his Orchestras are an essential reference point for these JALC Orchestra retellings of ten Shorter originals, all featuring the composer as soloist. Close your eyes while listening to the opening "Yes or No" and it's easy to imagine dapper " data-original-title="" title="">Duke Elllington And His Orchestra fronting his orchestra, snapping his fingers with sophisticated cool as he wraps the traditional yet hip orchestral sound around vibrant solos from Shorter on saxophone, JALC Orchestra Music Director

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Dan Nimmer
pianob.1982
"Hammer Head" swims in and out of deep blue orchestral swing, with Shorter's tenor and

Sherman Irby
saxophoneb.1968

Ben Webster
saxophone, tenor1909 - 1973
The collective sound and vision grow even larger and stronger as this set progresses through disc two. "Armageddon" swaggers through some blues until it stumbles and breaks into the sound of things falling apart but then resolutely rebuilds the original riff and settles into a slick stride, kept slippery by pianist Nimmer's plump chords, by the end of Shorter's solo. Trumpeter

Marcus Printup
trumpetb.1967

Ali Jackson
drumsThe set-ending "Mama 'G'" is a full-throttle instrumental solo round blowout. Shorter leans in and makes sure his final turn counts: Each studied pause lines up the perfect spot, then his tenor howl jumps back into the rhythm, turning notes into phrases, turning these phrases inside out and upside down, then splattering those notes back out into new patterns. "Mama 'G'" is the perfect celebratory sound to end The Music of Wayne Shorter.


Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
From This Place
Nonesuch Records
2020
When a musician of

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
Each of these ten new compositions seems to reflect a different aspect of Metheny as composer and guitarist, casting his bright and articulate voice in various configurations of his core band (Welsh pianist

Gwilym Simcock
pianob.1981

Linda May Han Oh
bass, acousticb.1984

Antonio Sanchez
drumsb.1971

MeShell NdegeOcello
bass, electricb.1968

Gregoire Maret
harmonicab.1975

Luis Conte
percussionb.1954

Hollywood Studio Symphony
band / ensemble / orchestraListening to From This Place is like drinking from a firehouse: There is just so much great music that it's almost mind-boggling to hear it all in one sitting. Make the time to take your time with this one.
Simcock's capacity to engage musically and emotionally on piano with Metheny's guitar honors the memory of

Lyle Mays
keyboards1953 - 2020
The opening widescreen travelogue journeys for more than thirteen sprawling minutes and reaches several exhilarating destinations but still leaves "America Undefined." Simcock sounds mellow piano chimes to counterpoint Metheny's guitar, then jackrabbits into a steeplechase with the rhythm section to drive the melody hard. The second half of "America Undefined" kind of sounds like the first half of "America Undefined" just floats up into the air and disintegrates into pieces: Weird electronic sound wobbles across the speakers, a clanging train bell zips past, the music collapses upon itself and then explodes like a brilliant star in a bluesy march full of atmosphere and orchestral strings and power and majesty...a genuine cinematic treat for your ears, a truly awesome composition, and most likely one of Metheny's best.
The title track was inspired by the seismic shift in US politics institutionalized by the November 2016 election, with vocalist Meshell Ndegeocello breathing soul and fire into Metheny's lyrics. Conductor Joel McNeely swaddles "Love May Take Awhile," another Metheny guitar ballad so lyrically beautiful you almost feel him singing through his guitar strings, in the sweet orchestral sound of

Nelson Riddle
arranger1921 - 1985
From This Place is a genuine masterpiece because it simultaneously consolidates all the styles in which we've heard Pat Metheny play but does more than just look back: It steps into new directions and sounds that make his future seem as exciting as his legendary past.


Bobby Previte
drumsb.1957
Music from the Early 21st Century
Rare Noise Records
2020
Music from the Early 21st Century presents music captured during a brief trio tour by keyboardist

Jamie Saft
piano
Nels Cline
guitar, electricb.1956
"Captured during a brief trio tour" doesn't do justice to this wild, ravenous sound. Trapped and caged like a snarling animal seems more like it.
Each track takes its inspiration from a colloquial expression that emerged in 21st century American English. Cline opens "The Extreme Present" by banging the chords to "Sgt. Pepper" together like clanging metal pots, calling out Saft's sheets of thick and heavy chords. Guitar and keyboard jointly veer off into their own solo directions, until Cline's guitar finally settles into a blues groove line that quickly swirls into a blizzard of white sound. "Totes" doesn't open as much as it seems to float, with Cline worrying his guitar strings like an anxious person does their fingernails until all three musicians blissfully settle into the same glistening chord, knitting the music tightly together in rare unified time. "The Extreme Present" is also an excellent description of how Saft, Previte, and Cline recorded this set.
Previte sets up a solid drum floor to prop up "Paywall," a sturdy spot from which Cline and Saft trade hard and heavy guitar and keyboard riffs, fracturing the music's surface into overlapping ripples. Previte, Saft and Cline do an amazing job with spacing in such dense music, keeping out of but still connecting to the other sounds like you're listening to two or even three separate pieces of music that sometimes intersect to create a completely new thing.
The closing "Flash Mob" sounds like an after-hours party hosted by the machines in a shuttered video game arcade. The trio opens with a bit of straight funk, with Previte thumping out the drum heartbeat, Saft belching out keyboard basslines like heartburn, and Cline chopping out guitar to keep the beat moving. Halfway in, "Flash Mob" falls apart, leaving each instrument to wander until organ cues the closing and all three instrumental sounds wander safely home.
"If you've improvised for many years, that music can be spontaneous and exciting and deep. It can visit countries that one could never write down in one's wildest imagination," Previte suggests. "Once the three of us got together, it was obvious that this band discovered a territory that has not been well explored."
Tracks and Personnel
Better DaysTracks: Thin Line; Better Days; Number One; Take It From Me; The Wrong Time; Family Affair; Peace of Mind; Supposed To Be; George Bailey's Lament.
Personnel: Lili A?el: vocals, acoustic guitar; Dale Melton: grand piano, Fender Rhodes, Hammond B-3; Jeffrey Blount: bass; Jonathan Whitney: drums, percussion; John Lilley: electric guitar; Korey Riker: tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, alto saxophone; Christopher Stevens: trumpet, flugelhorn.
Joy
Tracks: The Intricacies of Alice; Maiden Voyage; Slam; Curtain of Light; The 233 Jazz Bar; Without You; Joy.
Personnel: Benjamin Boone: alto and soprano saxophone; Bernard Ayisa: tenor saxophone; Victor Dey, Jr.: keyboards; Bright Osei: bass; Frank Kissi: drums; Sandra Huson: vocals.
Bossa's Got the Blues
Tracks: 1937; Mandacaru; Train to Ipanema; Sambalaya; Blues Bossa; Laudir's Theme; Bossa Got The Blues; Klaunga Rocket; Vou Nessa; Galeria Menescal.
Personnel: Cris Delanno: vocals; Laudir DeOliveira: percussion; Renato Endrigo: percussion; Leo Gandelman: saxophones, flute, horn arrangements; Flávio Guimar?es: harmonica; Marcelinho Da Lua: sampling, scratching; Carlos Malta: bass flute, piccolo; Márcio Menescal: Fender Jaguar, synthesizer bass; Roberto Menescal: arranger, composer, electric guitar; Jota Moraes: vibraphone; Alex Moreira: Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3, synthesizer; Ian Moreira: percussion; Sidinho Moreira: percussion; Rio Maracatu: percussion; Paulinho Trompete: flugelhorn, horn arrangements, trombone, trumpet.
The Music of Wayne Shorter
Tracks: Disc One: Yes or No; Diana; Hammer Head; Contemplation; Endangered Species; Disc Two: Lost; Armageddon; The Three Marias; Teru; Mama "G."
Personnel: Sherman Irby: alto and soprano saxophones, flute, piccolo, Bb clarinet; Ted Nash: alto and tenor saxophones, C And alto flutes, piccolo, Bb clarinet; Victor Goines: tenor saxophone, Bb and Eb clarinets; Walter Blanding: tenor and soprano saxophones, Bb clarinet; Paul Nedzela: baritone and alto saxophones, bass clarinet; Ryan Kisor: trumpet; Kenny Rampton: trumpet; Marcus Printup: trumpet; Wynton Marsalis: trumpet; Vincent Gardner: trombone; Chris Crenshaw: trombone; Elliot Mason: trombone; Dan Nimmer: piano; Carlos Henriquez: bass; Ali Jackson: drums.
From This Place
Tracks: America Undefined; Wide and Far; You Are; Same River; Pathmaker; The Past in Us; Everything Explained; From This Place; Sixty-Six; Love May Take Awhile.
Personnel: Nico Abondolo: bass; Charlie Basharat: violin; Jacqueline Brand: violin; Jacob Braun: cello; Laura Brenes: french horn; Rob Brophy: viola; Eric Byres: cello; Heather Clark: flute; Stuart Clark: clarinet; Luis Conte: percussion; Stephen Dress: bass; Alma Fernandez: viola; Lorenz Gamma: violin; Jessica E. Guideri: violin; Trevor Handy: cello; Dylan Hart: french horn; Tamara Hatwan: violin; Amy Hershberger: violin; Dan Higgins: clarinet; Steven Holtman: trombone; Alex Iles: trombone; Benjamin Jacobson: violin; Maia Jasper White: violin; Steve Kujala: flute; Songa Lee: violin; Phillip Levy: violin; Dane Little: cello; Larry Mah: Pro-Tools; Shawn Mann: viola; Grégoire Maret: harmonica; Serena McKinney: violin; Joel McNeely: conductor; Pat Metheny: arranger, composer, guitars, keyboards; Meshell Ndegeocello: lyricist, vocals; Helen Nightengale: violin; Linda May Han Oh: arranger, bass, vocals; Jenn Olsen: flute; Sara Parkins; violin; Bill Rechenbach: trombone; Lynn Richburg: viola; Alison Riley: lyricist; Antonio Sanchez: drums; Andrew Shulman: cello; Gwilym Simcock: arranger, piano; Tereza Stanislav: violin; Sarah Thomblade: violin; Cecilia Tsan: cello; Diana Wade: viola; Dave Walther: viola; Roger Wilkie: violin.
Music from the Early 21st Century
Tracks: Photobomb; Paywall; Parkour; The Extreme Present; Totes; Occession; The New Weird; Machine Learning; Woke; Flash Mob.
Personnel: Jamie Saft: Hammond organ, Fender Rhodes, MiniMoog; Nels Cline: electric guitar, effects; Bobby Previte: drums.
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