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One For All: Big George
ByAt the end of the day, mutual respect goes a long way in determining the successful results of group endeavors. In the case of One For All, delight and camaraderie abounds.

One for All
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1997
To put this era into perspective, let's consider some of the more intriguing highlights of the year of One For All's maiden voyage. Bill Clinton would be starting his second presidential term as the year kicked off. The DVD would make its debut as a new video format in the United States even while James Cameron's Titanic would be hitting the big screen in its American debut. Furthermore, in what would become an endemic sign of the times, the iconic firm F.W. Woolworth closed its doors after 117 years in business. Fast forward some 27 years and it would be difficult to fully ascertain just how different the world is these days both in terms of the music and the ways human beings choose to interact. To say that the individual members of One For All have traveled disparate and divergent paths over the years would be somewhat of an understatement. Lest we forget the major sea change brought forth by the pandemic, occurring between the October 2015 sessions that produced The Third Decade and those in the fall of 2022 that yielded the album at hand.
Weighing in on the desire for the group to renew its efforts,

Steve Davis
tromboneb.1967
The strong desire to make a reunion happen can at times be no match for the logistical trials involved with juggling so many individual schedules. "This band has always been a challenge schedule-wise," explained

Jim Rotondi
trumpet1962 - 2024

David Hazeltine
pianob.1958
With seven years between albums in and of itself being reason enough to celebrate a group reunion, an added windfall would come in the addition of renowned saxophonist

George Coleman
saxophone, tenorb.1935

Eric Alexander
saxophone, tenorb.1968
As Hazeltine hinted to prior, the production plan utilized by Smoke Sessions producers Paul Stache and Damon Smith usually involves a band working their new material at the club for four nights, followed by a day off and a subsequent day in the studio. For various and sundried reasons, things would take a different route this time around. "We went into the studio with no rehearsal and never having played these tunes before, explained Hazeltine. "We were looking at the material for the first time." Totally unfazed by this fact, Alexander added, "That's typical of how we roll. We get to the studio and things get tweaked in the spur of the moment. We've made enough recordings that we trust each other fully."
Eric Alexander's opening ruse, "Chainsaw," sounds unlike anything else the band has previously offered with some thorny passages that appear way more challenging than its composer admits to. "It's just a straight ahead four all the way," Alexander clarified. "The guys came up with some interesting ideas in the studio that were not what I had envisioned or expected to hear, but I really liked how it turned out." Over the course of solos from Rotondi, Alexander, Davis, and Hazeltine, the groove shifts between funk and straight ahead swing.
While Alexander seems to be all business in his advanced storytelling during his time in the spotlight, his sly sense of humor embodies the title and its backstory. "Because of the two-note pattern in the melody, I wanted it to be a two-syllable title. While I was sitting in my living room thinking of a title, AMC was running a retrospective on the Texas Chainsaw Massacre. It occurred to me that 'chainsaw' would fit the bill. I have played it quite a few times live and it does get a response from the audience. They are either amused, horrified, intrigued, or possibly all three."
A sunny bossa beat ushered in by Joe Farnsworth opens "In the Lead," quickly giving way to a swinging tempo that allows all the horns and composer David Hazeltine a chance to take a few choruses. "That one is dedicated to the leaders of our band, the horns," said the pianist. "I consider that horn section to be the best currently, and certainly one of the best in history. I can't think of three guys who played better together other than maybe

Curtis Fuller
trombone1934 - 2021

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
Hazeltine establishes the groove on Davis' "Edgerly" with a riff consisting of four chords ascending and then descending, thus supporting the leading line. Farnsworth also uses repeated motifs when telling his story in a fine display just prior to the reprise of the opening head. "Edgerly is actually the name of a street in Boston right around the corner from the Berklee College of Music where I've been teaching for the last two years," Davis explained. "It's in an area that I like to call a beehive, with musicians walking around and generally just a lot of activity. There were moments in the session that had a little bit of an edge to them as well. I think the band in our best moments has a bit of an edge. I thought the title was appropriate then on two different levels."
With a melody that somewhat recalls

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007
The other two pieces that include Coleman are part and parcel of the type of things Coleman does regularly in the clubs. The Victor Young and Ned Washington chestnut "My Foolish Heart" was first introduced in the 1949 film of the same name. "Steve and I did the horn parts together. I sat at the piano and figured out the notes and he wrote everything down," stated Rotondi.

Hank Mobley
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1986
"Cove Island Breeze" strikes a sunny pose with an opening line that circles back on itself to wrap up the melody and properly launch the soloists. At first, composer Steve Davis was at a loss for a title, but soon the tune's looping melody reminded him of the beach path that he and his wife favored during the solitary days of the pandemic. "There are actually three city beaches within the city limits of Stamford," Davis enthused. "Our favorite quickly became Cove Island because it's a very beautiful place so close to home. The tune has that same kind of wistful, breezy swing."
Rounding out a diverse program, there would be the need for yet another ballad statement, Hoagy Carmichael's venerable "The Nearness of You" fitting the bill. Since its debut in 1938, this chestnut of popular songs has been performed by countless artists of all genres from

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998

Norah Jones
pianob.1979
By contrast, "Lemo" serves as homage to the celebrated hard bopper

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972

Harold Mabern
piano1936 - 2019
At the end of the day, mutual respect goes a long way in determining the successful results of group endeavors. In the case of One For All, delight and camaraderie abounds. "We get to play a mere handful of dates together in a year," Hazeltine said, "but you wouldn't know it listening to us because it's such a tight group." Alexander called the band "one of the musical joys of my life." Rotondi confirmed, "We all just want to continue the whole tradition of Smoke, the venue and the label." But perhaps, Davis summed it up best. "As the great Larry Willis would say, we have many choruses yet to play together."
Track Listing
Chainsaw; In the Lead; Edgerly; Oscar Winner (feat. George Coleman); My Foolish Heart (feat. George Coleman); This I Dig of You (feat. George Coleman).
Personnel
One for All
band / ensemble / orchestraJim Rotondi
trumpetEric Alexander
saxophone, tenorSteve Davis
tromboneDavid Hazeltine
pianoJohn Webber
bass, acousticJoe Farnsworth
drumsGeorge Coleman
saxophone, tenorAlbum information
Title: Big George | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Smoke Sessions Records
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About One for All
Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
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