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NYConnection: Party Of Four
ByJaska Lukkarinen
drums
Roy Assaf
pianob.1982
Assaf and Lukkarinen are joined by Bulgarian bassist

Peter Slavov
bass
Joel Frahm
saxophone, tenor
Bobby Timmons
piano1935 - 1974
NYConnection's music isn't built with a specific esthetic in mind, and no single ideal permeates this album, but the idea of musical geo-chemistry is constantly in play. This should come as no great shock, with four different personalities from four distinctly different locales meeting at the jazz crossroads of the world, but it still deserves mention. Each of these four men has a deep respect for what the others bring to the table, but none are subservient in the face of creation; they let their respective personalities come alive within each given structure.
Slinky and sly suggestions can be found at the front end of the program (Timmons' "Dat Dere"), but that's only chapter one of the story. As the album unfolds, NYConnection introduces songs with subplots and side stories that don't fit into a nice little box. Icy and open Nordic pathways, for instance, introduce "Can I Just Call You David," but the music eventually coalesces into a more stable form, gets a touch of Middle Eastern exoticism from Assaf, and reaches a more tempestuous place when all parties involved ratchet up the tension. Elsewhere, loping swing and tumbling drum phrases serve as a leaping off point for a more nuanced journey ("Fault Zone"), and bluesy, boppish and beyond share the same living space ("Hey Man In The Line")
NYConnection is just one more exampleand a fine one at thatof how jazz is the great cultural equalizer; four men from four different realms find common ground in the city that never sleeps.. ">
Track Listing
Dat Dere; Out Now; Can I Just Call You David; Fault Zone; Suddenly; Hey Man In The Line; Shilgia; Party Of Four.
Personnel
Roy Assaf: piano; Jaska Lukkarinen: drums; Joel Frahm: tenor saxophone; Peter Slavov: bass.
Album information
Title: Party Of Four | Year Released: 2013 | Record Label: Self Produced
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