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Jeremy Udden: Plainville
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Either/Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1985
On this, his second album as a leader, Udden heads far from the Ethiopian sounds of the Gershon disc. He heads back home, in fact: Plainville is named for Udden's Massachusetts hometown.
Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

Jim Black
drumsPlainville appropriates two elements of

Todd Sickafoose
bass, acoustic
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
The instrumentarium is bizarre, and prevents the tunes from becoming cloying at their sweeter moments. Especially noteworthy is Rende's panoply of slightly beaten-up sounding keyboards. The playing of Rende and banjoist/guitarist Seabrook seems to owe little immediately discernible debts to mainstream jazz improvisers, in keeping with the hybrid nature of this record's musical philosophy, but they solo imaginatively. Udden's is the most distinctively jazz-oriented voice on Plainvillehe really does sound like Phil Woods sometimes.
The charming irony of this record is that Udden, looking backward, has created something that sounds fresh and novel. ">
Track Listing
Plainville; Red Coat Lane; Curbs; Christmas Song; 695; Modest; Big Lick; The Reunion; Empty Lots.
Personnel
Jeremy Udden
woodwindsJeremy Udden: alto and soprano saxophones, cymbals (5); Pete Rende: pump organ, Fender Rhodes, pedal steel guitar, Prophet; Brandon Seabrook: banjo, electric guitar, steel string acoustic guitar; Eivind Opsvik: bass; RJ Miller: drums; Nathan Blehar: nylon-string acoustic guitar (1, 4); Mike Baggetta: electric guitar (9); Justin Keller: tenor saxophone (2).
Album information
Title: Plainville | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: Fresh Sound New Talent
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