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Joe Chambers: Moving Pictures Orchestra: Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola
By
Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007

Bobby Hutcherson
vibraphone1941 - 2016

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020
Not so, for the ever-evolving Chambers. Moving Pictures Orchestra is irrefutable evidence that, in a new millennium, Chambers is looking to shine a greater spotlight on his inestimable skills as a composer, arranger and orchestrator. "I started writing early, at this very advanced high school for the time in Chester, next to Philly," Chambers explains. "I studied arranging and orchestration there, and when I moved to D.C. from '60-63, I was studying composition in university and playing in the clubs six nights a week."
After an early chance to apply lessons learned on some of Blue Note's most important albums of the mid-to-late '60s ("Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff didn't care what you played, as long as you put something in there they could put on the jukebox"), Chambers continued to hone his craft over the decades. Moving Pictures Orchestra's genesis is more contemporary, however, dating back to 2003 when Jazz at Lincoln Center commissioned Chambers to write two pieces for its Year of the Drum. "They were looking for a drummer/percussionist who could write and arrange for orchestra, and that happened to be me," Chambers says with unassuming nonchalance. "So I did this piece called 'Moving Pictures,' and it was successful, but I never really listened to it afterwards. Then, last winter, I asked them to send me a CD of the music and it sounded good, so I thought, 'I've gotta put this out.'"
With Chambers in Wilmington, NC, where he's been Tom Kenan Distinguished Professor of Jazz at UNCW since 2008, the drummer relied on trumpeter

David Weiss
trumpetb.1964

Dwayne Burno
bass1970 - 2013

Xavier Davis
piano
Steve Berrios
percussionNicole Guiland
vocalsAnd get right in it, they do. From the opening "Prelude" of the four-movement, five-part "Moving Pictures" suite that bookends the disc, Chambers creates layered structures flexible enough to leave his orchestra room to manoeuvrein this case trumpeter

Josh Evans
trumpetIn between, an arrangement of "Tu-Way Pock-e-Way" by Italian saxophonist Mario Raja (the set's only non-Chambers arrangement) turns Chambers' programmed tune from The Outlaw into something more intrinsically organic, while Chambers' reverent look at

Benny Carter
saxophone, alto1907 - 2003

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001
With knockout performances from a band that also includes saxophonist

Craig Handy
saxophoneb.1962

Conrad Herwig
tromboneb.1959

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 John Kelman.
Moving Pictures Orchestra: Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola can be purchased here.
Contact John Kelman at All About Jazz.
With the realization that there will always be more music coming at him than he can keep up with, John wonders why anyone would think that jazz is dead or dying.
Track Listing
Moving Pictures Suite: 1st Movement, Prelude, 2nd Movement, Irina, 3rd Movement, Ruth; Lonesome Lover; Power to the People; Tu-Way-Pock-E-Way; Theme from "M" Squad; Mendacity; Moving Pictures Suite: 4th Movement, Clave de Bembe, 4th Movement, Clave de Bembe II.
Personnel
Joe Chambers
drumsTim Green Saxophone
saxophone, altoSharel Cassity
saxophoneCraig Handy
saxophoneSam Dillon
saxophone, tenorFrank Basile
saxophone, baritoneFrank Greene
trumpetDavid Weiss
trumpetGreg Gisbert
trumpetJosh Evans
trumpetConrad Herwig
tromboneSteve Davis
tromboneJames Burton
tromboneMax Siegel
tromboneXavier Davis
pianoDwayne Burno
bassSteve Berrios
percussionNicole Guiland
vocalsAlbum information
Title: Moving Pictures Orchestra: Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola | Year Released: 2012 | Record Label: Savant Records
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