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Rediscovery and Re-Creation, and an NYC Farewell

Courtesy Brasuka
Greg Abate
saxophoneb.1947
Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron
Whaling City Sound
2021
Musicians will sometimes honor another musician who influenced their lives or work with a tribute or memorial recording after that influential musician has passed on. There's an abundance of first-rate music on the double-disc Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny Barron. But the best thing about is that the leader, flutist and saxophonist

Greg Abate
saxophoneb.1947

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943
Abate enlisted bassist

Dezron Douglas
bass
Johnathan Blake
drums
Rudy Van Gelder
various1924 - 2016
The results are consistently brilliant. On disc one, harmonized alto and tenor saxophones lend a classic be-bop luster to "Golden Lotus," tinged with blue notes from jazz and the Orient. Barron leans into Latin jazz underneath Abate's rollicking solos, which sometimes sound like

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014
Disc two opens in the crosscurrents of "Lemuria," blown like a hot dry wind by Abate's harmonizing alto and tenor saxophones and anchored by powerhouse Barron, whose churning left and right hands convene like an army on the march. Blake's drumrolls serve as the runway for "Voyage" to soar into swinging ensemble jazz, with the pianist and rhythm section sounding so much larger than only three musicians behind the leader's hard-rocking multitracked horns. The closing "And Then Again" keeps this hot jazz burning, with Abate honoring the flame of

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Greg Abate's tribute to pianist Kenny Barron, played with pianist Kenny Barron, is truly a magic dance.


Charlie Ballantine
guitarReflections/Introspection: The Music of Thelonious Monk
Self-Produced
2021
Reflections/Introspection... follows-up guitarist Charlie Ballentine's Life is Brief: The Music of Bob Dylan, the guitarist's tribute to another (and very different type of) iconoclastic modern composer and one of the best albums of 2018. He absolutely bounces through this double-LP (one trio, one quartet) on a merry joyride through the compositions of "the onliest Monk."
"Monk has such an incredible catalogue that one of the big challenges we faced was what songs to choose and also what instrumentation to use," explains Ballentine. "There is just so much timeless material from Monk's trio work as well as his quartets with legendary saxophonists like 'Trane,

Johnny Griffin
saxophone, tenor1928 - 2008

Charlie Rouse
saxophone, tenor1924 - 1988
There's no piano on this Monk tribute but even if there was, Ballentine's playing would make it irrelevant. He makes it sound just as easy if not easier to bend and twist and fracture noteswhich Monk enjoyed so muchon guitar.
Ballentine first dives into the guitar trio setting with bassist

Chris Parker
drums
Cassius Goens
drumsb.1985
Saxophonist

Amanda Gardier
saxophone
Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968

James Blood Ulmer
guitarb.1942
Monk would probably like Reflections/Introspection..., which would be high praise for music played in his honor.

A Vida Com Paix?o
Outside In Music
2021
Brasuka first came together as a side project, led by keyboardist and vocalist

Rosana Eckert
vocalsb.1974
Ricardo Bozas
percussion
Sergio Mendes
piano1941 - 2024
Eckert's lead vocal on the title track to A Vida Com Paix?o ("A Life With Passion") glows with soft yet intense romance, so much like Janis Hansen's in the original Brasil '66 ("The Look of Love" is a great example), a description offered as both comparison and compliment. Piano and keyboard parts often seem to direct the music other instruments play, just like Mendes seemed to conduct Brasil '66 through his own keyboards. Brasuka's frantic raveup through "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" to close this show places the period at the end of all this 1960s afterglow.
"Road to Hermeto" documents the first tune Brasuka composed together. Eckert's voice floats and whispers like clouds of

Flora Purim
vocalsb.1942

Hermeto Pascoal
fluteb.1936
Denny Robinson
pianoThe title track bounces Portuguese vocals atop Caribbean reggae with clattering drums, and ventures through a pinwheeling electric guitar solo before winding up in another fun singalong.
But the opening "Samba Jiji" is the prototype for this set and the best place from which to start. It immediately showcases Eckert's vocal and Bozas' percussion, both steered by strong piano lines into a luscious musical ride as powerful yet smooth as a luxury vehicle. Its closing verses explode into a joyous vocal chorus shot through with saxophone improvisation, police whistles, and other party sounds. "This song best represents the band. It's based on the Partido Alto rhythm which is a different kind of samba that is modern and funky," Eckert explains. "It's danceable, and like many of our songs, has a big sing-along at the end."
"We're trying to create happy music. We want to tell stories and get people to dance. We want to bring people together."


Dominican Jazz Project
band / ensemble / orchestrab.2011
Desde Lejos
Summit Records
2021
DJP's primary composer and keyboard player

Stephen Anderson
pianoPrimarily composed by Anderson in his COVID "compositional woodshed" (his term for lockdown) plus two ballads by singer-guitarist
Carlos Luis
guitarThe unaccompanied sax introduction to the leadoff "Fuera De La Oscuridad" opens a world of inventive and colorful music that emerges "Out of the Darkness" of silence. Anderson's first solo unleashes a true piano monster and bursts like a great white shark through the churning bass, drum and percussion rhythms. Just as saxophonist

Sandy Gabriel
saxophoneb.1900

Guy Frometa
drumsDavid Almengod
percussion"Siempre Adelante" ("Ever Moving Forward") features trumpeter
Mayquel Gonzalez
trumpet"Pero Aún No Es El Fin" ("But the End is Not Yet") captures the most free-wheeling eight minutes of musical "wow" on this set. Soloists Anderson, Gonzalez, and Gabriel dust the top with staccato flurries of sparkling notes that twist and turn back on themselves and yet simultaneously reach farther and farther out, while drummer Frómeta often sounds like

Stewart Copeland
drumsb.1952

Bill Bruford
drumsb.1949
"Pero Aún No Es El Fin" rings out a message of hope and promise particularly fit to fight against the discouraging thoughts of pandemics and lockdowns.

Couleur
Cumbancha
2021
The personal life of singer-songwriter Dobet Gnahoré can be seen as a journey back to its source, which started in her native C?te d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), wound and lingered through an adopted homeland (France), and then returned, in part to reconnect with family and creative spirits, to the Ivory Coast.
Gnahoré's musical life has been a journey, too. Her band Ano Neko received a Best Newcomer nomination at the 2006 World Music Awards for its recorded debut. "Pearls," her collaboration with w/American singer-songwriter

Gnahoré stuffs Couleur, her sixth full-length recording, full to its bursting seams with supercharged dancefloor sounds and shades. You hear in the opening "Désert" how the connected, collective spirit of African musicwith very few solo parts, but each part locking into the othersinfluenced 1980s/1990s American and European dance/club music, especially through artists such as Grace Jones. "Désert" sounds simpler than it is, with an edgy spirit of ferocity, pride and defiance.
Even so, Gnahoré the songwriter rarely seems to challenge Gnahoré the singer on Couleur. Its production polish seems to turn to impenetrable steel on some pieces ("Zaliguéhi," "Mon ?poque"), leaving the singer little more to do than toast and rap in staccato.
Songs that allow for something different prove refreshing. In "Jalouse," her double-tracked harmonized vocal shines sunny and warm, providing cover for music that seems to blossom under and around it; when her voice floats and lingers in her upper register, it leaves traces of Sade like melancholy clouds behind.
"Rédemption" sounds written more for listening than for dancing, with a flute melody and violin counterpoint/response to the lead vocal. Its tick-tock ending rocks the music to sleep like a baby in the warm comfort and security of its mother's arms, a beautiful incongruity.
The multi-cultured, multicolored "Woman" is Couleur's crowning glory, pumping out a dancefloor rhythm as strong, mysterious, sleek, sensuous and beautiful as the woman it sings about. It's uniquely Afro-Euro-disco, which also turns into a great way to describe the diva Dobet Gnahoré.


Reggie Quinerly
drumsb.1980
New York Nowhere
Self-Produced
2021
Born in Houston, drummer

Reggie Quinerly
drumsb.1980

Jimmy Cobb
drums1929 - 2020

Lewis Nash
drumsb.1958

Kenny Washington
drumsb.1958
Quinerly composed New York Nowhere, his fourth release as a leader, as his farewell to the city he called home for more than half his life, before relocating to Los Angeles.
"You're surrounded by eight million people," Quinerly muses. "But everybody has their own story and everybody's living their own life with a very singular focus. So even in the midst of all these people, you're kind of completely alone. It's everywhere and nowhere at the same time."
Recorded at Bunker Studios in Brooklyn, NY, New York Nowhere has the full, warm jazz sound of a classic Blue Note recording at Rudy Van Gelder studios. When pairing up the voices alongside him in the rhythm section and out in the front melodic and solo lines, Quinerly selected longstanding musical teams: pianist

John Chin
piano
Sean Conly
bass
Antoine Drye
trumpet
John Ellis
saxophone, tenorb.1974
"Reflections on the Hudson" opens with a sense of movement, as if you're in a taxi watching the scenery move as you pass, which the band maintains even as they settle into its comfortable groove. Drye's trumpet sounds like comfortably worn-out leather, soft and supple yet strong, and his interplay with saxophonist Ellis often leads them to singing in a single voice.
Their combined voices also swivel and bop into "Somewhere on Houston," with saxophone and trumpet full of solos sounding so cool they leave traces of frost, gliding along the piano chords and rhythm section's funky swing. Quinerly leads throughout with drumming so reliable and airtight that he feels like a digital clock: set it, then forget it.
Their first visit to "New York Nights" jumps on a hot hard-bop rhythm and sax and piano solos that bounce up and down like a jazz silhouette of the craggy Manhattan skyline. "In New York, I realized the importance of surrounding yourself with like-minded musicians; finding the right team and collecting the right personalities to be around you," Quinerly says.
By the time you wander through their revisited "New York Nights" which closes this setwith more of a Latin feeling, and elastic after-hours soundit's quite evident that Quinerly put together a studio band that sounds like a genuine band to help write his goodbye letter to the city that never sleeps.

Stove Top
Rare Noise Records
2021
If nothing else, the trio of

Mike Pride
drums
Brandon Seabrook
guitarb.1984

Mike Watt
bassStove Top began cooking when Pride appeared as a guest on Watt's podcast. Suspecting their musical connection, Pride recorded a series of drum tracks and sent them to Watt, who laid down matching bass tracks and then sent both layers to Seabrook to finish. "I knew Brandon was a big fan of Watt's and kind of carries a lot of that ethos that Watt carries around in his own work," Pride explains. "I thought it would be musically cool and karmically cool to connect those two guys." (Two slices were prepared differently: Seabrook laid down the first layer to "Shepherds" and Watt the foundation for "Ballad of the Gobsmacked.")
Plotting the musical histories of Pride, Seabrook and Watt on a graph chart would resemble a seizure: Pride leads several of his own ensembles and has worked with iconoclasts from

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Nels Cline
guitar, electricb.1956

Henry Kaiser
guitarb.1952

Vinny Golia
woodwindsb.1946

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
"Big Burner" busts up a lot of hard rock in less than three minutes: Drums crunch out a straight-on beat and pop off firecrackers as unaccompanied fills, electric guitar saws off curt, brusque chords and lines in spasms of melody and rhythm, and bass draws thick rubbery lines that tie everything together in a hard knot. "I love the fact that this record is improvised but there are parts of it that are very composed and complex, and that everything still sounds like a rock band," Pride explains. "It doesn't sound like some jazz dudes putting on the rock hat."
While the title of "Big Burner" suggests an AC/DC or ZZ Top B-side, the title of "Luminous RangeAnxious Valve" seems like it was randomly picked out a machine repair manual. At the beginning, Pride's pinwheeling, rolling sound suggests

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Tracks and Personnel
Magic Dance: The Music of Kenny BarronTracks: Disc One: Sunshower; Cook's Bay; Golden Lotus; Innocence; Water Lily; Sonia Braga; Bud Like; Disc Two: Lemuria; Concentric Circles; Rain; Voyage; Magic Dance; Song For Abdullah; And Then Again.
Personnel: Greg Abate: flute, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone; Kenny Barron: piano; Dezron Douglas: bass; Johnathan Blake: drums.
Reflections/Introspection: The Music of Thelonious Monk
Tracks: Reflections; Bemsha Swing; Off Minor; Ugly Beauty; Raise Four; Bemsha Swing (alternate take); Pannonica (solo); Brilliant Corners; Green Chimneys; Introspection; Evidence; Ask Me Now; Monk's Dream; Brilliant Corners (alternate take); Let's Cool One (solo).
Personnel: Charlie Ballantine: guitar; Amanda Gardier: saxophone; Chris Parker: drums; Cassius Goens III: drums; Jesse Wittman: bass.
A Vida Com Paix?o
Tracks: Samba Jiji; A Vida Com Paixao; Road to Hermeto; Marakandombe; Deusa Do Meu Carnival; Reina's Song; Praia Felix; La Higuera; Confundido; Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band .
Personnel: Ricardo Bozas: percussion, vocals; Rosana Eckert: vocals, keyboards; Denny Robinson: keyboards, vocals; Tom Burchill: acoustic guitar, electric guitar, vocals; Brian Warthen: bass, percussion; Jose Aponte: drums, vocals; Daniel Pardo: flutes, melodica; Drew Zaremba: flute, tenor sax; Jeff Robbins: tenor sax.
Desde Lejos
Tracks: Fuera De La Oscuridad; Ritmos De Baní; Sin Palabras; Como Un Rayo Ciego; Si Tu Supieras; Pero Aún No Es El Fin; Siempre Adelante; Una Más; Un Cambio De Ritmo.
Personnel: Sandy Gabriel: saxophones; Rahsaan Barber: tenor saxophone; Mayquel González: trumpet; Guillo Carias: clavietta; Carlos Luis: guitar, vocals; Stephen Anderson: piano, accordion; Ramón Vázquez: bass; Craig Butterfield: bass; Jason Foureman: bass; Guy Frómeta: drums; David Almengod: percussion, vocals; Juan ?lamo: percussion; Marc Callahan: coro.
Couleur
Tracks: Désert; Lève-toi; Jalouse; Yakané; Rédemption; Wazii; Woman; Vis Ta Vie; Zaliguéhi; Ma Maison; Mon ?poque; Mi Pradj?.
Personnel: Julien Pestre: guitar; Colin Laroche de Feline: guitar; Romy N'guessan: bass; Dobet Gnahoré: vocals; Makoleking: vocals; Yabongo Lova: vocals; Louis Stephen Dijrabou; Attebe Mirelle Linda: vocals; Nafasi: vocals; Sangare Siriki: peul flute; BLACK K: vocals .
New York Nowhere
Tracks: Reflections on the Hudson; Dreaming in Place; Somewhere on Houston; New York Nights; Celso; Wine Cooler Heads Prevail; New York Nights (Revisited).
Personnel: Reggie Quinerly: drums; Antoine Drye: trumpet; John Ellis: tenor saxophone; John Chin: piano; Sean Conly: bass.
Stove Top
Tracks: Beatified, Bedraggled and Bombed; Big Burner; A Durable Quest; Shepherds; Tiller; Primary Fuel; Luminous RangeAnxious Valve; Ballad Of The Gobsmacked.
Personnel: Brandon Seabrook: guitar, banjo, tapes; Mike Pride: drums, marimba, glockenspiel, bells, organ; Mike Watt: bass.
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