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Riding Waves, Moving Boundaries, and Building The Wall
ByFranco Ambrosetti
trumpetb.1941
Long Waves
Unit Records
2019
Trumpeter

Franco Ambrosetti
trumpetb.1941

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Ambrosetti was profoundly changed when he inevitably discovered

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Beautiful cries from Ambrosetti's trumpet make Long Waves a lyrical masterpiece worth mentioning in the same whispered breath as the legendary Davis. But there are other good reasons, too. Ambrosetti strategically surrounds himself with a generational cast of first-class musicians, technicians and visionaries, as Davis did with his first and second great quintets; for Long Waves, a rhythm section of bassist

Scott Colley
bassb.1963

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942

Uri Caine
pianob.1956

John Scofield
guitarb.1951
Tunes include two jazz standards that further conjure Davis' influential ghost: A nine-minute visit with "Old Folks" which begins and ends with piano and flugelhorn in misty reverie played so true and recorded so cleanly that their sound waves wash like ripples of soft and sad emotion into your mind; and a cool brisk walk through colors and corners "On Green Dolphin Street" to close the set.
"One For The Kids" bubbles up the flipside to those "Old Folks" on a bouncy mix of New Orleans funk and jazz drumming, slipping and sliding into Ambrosetti's trumpet melody and eventually a cool, long-striding bop section where Scofield and the leader swap sharp funk chops and Caine tosses back some double-barreled piano boogie of his own.
Long Waves also includes two love letters to the trumpeter's wife Silli, the shimmering "Silli's Long Waves" and languid "Silli's Waltz," which bobs and weaves on the rhythmic ripples of DeJohnette's cymbals and snare. But this entire set is Ambrosetti's love letter to the powerful joy of creating beautiful art. "After one rehearsal, I felt like I had played with this group every night for the last five years," he said upon its release. You hear it in this music for sure.


Dave Bass
pianoNo Boundaries
Whaling City Sound
2019
In 2015,

Dave Bass
pianoBass seems intent on proving the title of No Boundaries by opening and closing it with tunes by two of modern music's most challenging pianists. "To my mind,

Lennie Tristano
piano1919 - 1978

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966

Carlos Henriquez
bassb.1979

Jerome Jennings
drumsThree tracks that swap Jennings out for percussionists
Carlos Caro
percussion
Mauricio Herrera
percussionMiguel Valdes
percussionBass just keeps pushing (stylistic) walls down: A cinematic moody brooding with saxophonist

Ted Nash
saxophoneb.1960

Elmo Hope
piano1923 - 1967

Karrin Allyson
vocalsMulti-instrumentalist Nash contributes saxophones, clarinets, and flutes, and co-produced No Boundaries with Bass. "I don't generally produce other people's records, but I really think that Dave is an evocative composer and I believe in his vision," suggests Nash. "I love his passion. He has the enthusiasm of a college student, plus maturity, and he's hearing very personal sounds."


Club d'Elf
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1998
Night Sparkles (Live)
Face Pelt Records
2019
On December 16, 2011, bassist and bandleader

Mike Rivard
bass, acoustic
Club d'Elf
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1998
"Moussa was someone I had heard a lot about but had never met or had the chance to play with," relates Rivard. "It was immediately apparent that this was going to be serious, and he and our conga player
Vicente Lebron
congasClub d'Elf is not a large ensemble: This version features Rivard (bass, sintir) and percussionist Lebron with
Dean Johnston
drumsPaul Schultheis
keyboards
David Tronzo
guitar, electricb.1957
Edited into a single piece of music in six movements, Night Sparkles transports the listener onto a different plane. Rivard's bass drives and steers the ensemble through the epic two-part adventures "End of Firpo" and "Ecstatic Cling" and tosses the "Ball of Confusion" Motown bass line into the open-ended African funk groove "Dance of the Machine Elves," which also features white-hot percussive interplay between Traore, Lebron and drummer Johnston. Throughout, Tronzo unravels the studied recklessness of Robert Quine into fluorescent threads of jazz, rock, blues and even twangy country-western guitar.
Most of this stuff is just flat-out crazy but in the best possible musical way, as if the

Sun Ra Arkestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1956


Eumir Deodato
keyboardsb.1942
Os Catedráticos 73
Far Out Records
2019
In 1973,

Eumir Deodato
keyboardsb.1942
Deodato's next move, Os Catedráticos 73 doesn't mess with that successful formula but throws a lot more of his own keyboard playing on top. For its rhythm tracks, Deodato recorded a Brazilian rhythm machine featuring himself with bassist Sergio Barroso, percussion master Orlandivo, and drummer

Ivan Conti
drums1946 - 2023

Azymuth
band / ensemble / orchestraNo horn or guitar solos, only keyboard solos, is the unique and best part of Os Catedráticos 73: In this fertile Brazilian-jazz hybrid context, Deodato sounds intent on growing classic '70s soul-jazz keyboard jam: the soul-jazz organ sound of Brother Jack McDuff, but surrounded by the cool, nurturing grooves of

Sergio Mendes
piano1941 - 2024
This purpose sounds quite evident in "Rodando Por Ai (Rudy's)," a Deodato original that funks and chunks along like a

Quincy Jones
arranger1933 - 2024
When first released, "Arranha Ceu (Skyscrapers)," the sonic sister to Deodato's "Zarathustra" monster, was this set's biggest hit. It glides upon a bass line copped from "Memphis Soul Stew" as its firm yet funky disco-jazz foundation, and then horns open up into a day full of bright and brassy sunlight for Deodato's keyboard solos to prowl through and explore.
"Carlota & Carolina (Carly & Carole)" wraps up Os Catedráticos 73 in a push and pull, electric keyboard tune so blue and sweet it paints a picture of

Joe Sample
piano1939 - 2014

MonkTime
Jazz Avenue Records
2019
MonkTime is

Leon Lee Dorsey
bass, acousticb.1958

Greg Skaff
guitar
Mike Clark
drumsb.1946
"We pay tribute to the master in a context not normally associated with

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
It's no great revelation that even Monk's most "standard" tunes, such as "Blue Monk" or "Well You Needn't," can sound difficult or at least odd, and that playing such music on completely different instruments can at least potentially present additional challenges. But this trio approaches each tune with great skill and honorable intent, and their music is powerful.
Their production, jointly credited to Skaff and Dorsey, is too: The comfortable space around and between each instrument gives MonkTime an airy and spacious, cool jazz feel. For example, "Monk's Dream" is recorded so cleanly that it gives you the chance to hear the melody split between bassist Dorsey as the pianist's "left hand" and guitarist Skaff as his "right," with Clark's butterfly cymbals fluttering between to connect them both.
Taking on "Well You Needn't" as their opener quickly proves the band's chops. Skaff keeps churning ideas in a quicksilver sound that stitches together jazz and blues while bassist and drummer sound intuitively connected until Dorsey's bass solo climbs up and down inside Monk's construction. "Blue Monk" opens with Skaff's solo guitar see-sawing up and down its fretboard with a clean blues sound until the rhythm section tumbles in like a child trundling downstairs to greet Christmas morning, and then steps out in a high-spirited yet lowdown walking blues.
In "Little Rootie Tootie,"one of the composer's own favorites (named after Monk's son, nicknamed "Toot"), strummed guitar chords ring out like the brassy horns that ignited arranger

Hall Overton
piano1920 - 1972
It's both wonderful and curious, just like the music he left behind, how Thelonious Monk's music inspires so many musicians who don't play piano.

Grupo Fantasma
band / ensemble / orchestraAmerican Music Vol. VII
Blue Corn Music
2019
The thirteen new tracks on American Music Vol. VII celebrate
Grupo Fantasma
band / ensemble / orchestraIn several ways, Vol. VII sounds like much of their previous music: This Grupo can spice up and rock an energetic, celebratory party sound that few other bands can match. But this music also sounds and feels different and as a result remains vibrant and vital, too.
Its clattering, polished surface comes from Grupo's collaboration with Miami-based Colombian musician, songwriter and producer Carlos "El Loco" Bedoya, who helps the band inject booster shots of Columbian folk rhythms and instruments throughout this set. "La Cruda" and the opening (and quite topical, as later explained) "El Fugitivo" feature Josh Baca on accordion, and the closing maritime mariachi "Sombra Roja" spotlights accordion courtesy of Mr. Vallenato.
Vol. VII also marks the first time that a singer from another band sings lead on a Grupo Fantasma song: Tomar Williams (of Tomar & the FCs) steps up to front the boogaloo chunk of funk "Let Me Be," shadowboxing with its horns and cowbells. It also presents one of their rare English lyrics in "LT," which roars and snarls through its guitar hook into a torrid funk-rock groove.
More than many sessions, American Music Vol. VII was impacted by where it was recorded: Sonic Ranch, long on the group's "musical bucket list" and the world's largest residential recording complex, located in the small border town of Tornillo, Texas. As the band began wrapping up final versions of their songs, Tornillo coincidentally became the site for one of the US government's immigrant border detention centers.
So, it's natural to wonder if "The Wall," this multicultural, multicolored tribal polyglot with Locos Por Juana and

Ozomatli
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1995
Upon its release, the band issued a statement that the title of American Music: Vol. VII was a "direct response to the concept of identity as well as the pigeon-holing of our music, which we've dealt with throughout our careers."


Manu Katche
drumsb.1958
the scOpe
Anteprima Prime Productions
2019

Manu Katche
drumsb.1958
Katché entered the Paris Conservatory as a pianist but switched to percussion as his studies progressed; his mature style eventually incorporated his French and African roots into this classical training. the scOpe emphasizes the melodic nature, alongside the rhythmic and percussive nature, of Katché's unique drum style. "I have built the tracks around the drums, and it is no wonder I've always played that instrumentmy Dad's from the Ivory Coast," he suggests.
the ScOpe features more songs with vocals than often found on a drummer's project. A beautiful ode to peace and love titled "Let Love Rule" co-written and performed with singer-songwriter

Jonatha Brooke
vocalsBut there's no shortage of other beautiful music here. Katché polishes the repetitive groove of "Glow" until it shines, and its old-school soul strings in a space-age feel make the production somehow feel both full and full of empty space. He steers the straightforward beat "Please Do" toward but not quite into trip-hop, splashing his cymbals for maximum rhythmic effect.
Tuned percussion simultaneously plays the melody and rhythm that reveals the industrial-strength instrumental melancholy of "Goodbye For Now" to close this set in soft, reflective notes and tones. The electric rock, house and disco of "Tricky 98': Le Match de legend," recapturing a single he released in late 2018, feels tacked onto the end.
the scOpe illustrates that Manu Katché is more than

Peter Gabriel
vocalsb.1950

Sting
bass, electricb.1951

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943
Tracks and Personnel:
Long Waves
Tracks: Milonga; Try Again; Silli's Long Waves; One For The Kids; Old Folks; Silli's Waltz; On Green Dolphin Street.
Personnel: Franco Ambrosetti: trumpet, flugelhorn; John Scofield: guitar; Uri Caine: piano; Scott Colley: bass; Jack DeJohnette: drums.
No Boundaries
Tracks: Lennie's Pennies; Spy Movie End Credits; Agenbite of Inwit; If I Loved You; La Mulata Rumbera; Tango Adagio; Time of My Life; Siboney; Neither Have I Wings; Danzon No. 1; Swing Theory; In the Rain; Hallucinations.
Personnel: Karrin Allyson: vocals; Dave Bass: piano; Carlos Caro: bell, bongos, guiro; Carlos Henríquez: bass; Mauricio Hernández: maracas, timbales; Jerome Jennings: drums; Mauricio Herrera: percussion; Ted Nash: clarinet, flute, alto flute, alto sax, soprano sax, tenor sax; Miguel Valdes: bata, congas.
Night Sparkles (Live)
Tracks: End of Firpo Part 1; End of Firpo Part 2; Dance of the Machine Elves; Night Sparkles; Ecstatic Cling Part 1; Ecstatic Cling Part 2.
Personnel: David Tronzo: slide guitar; Paul Schultheis: Rhodes, Moog, melodica; Mike Rivard: bass, sintir; Vicente Lebron: congas, percussion; Dean Johnston: acoustic drums, electronic drums; Moussa Traore: djembe (#3-#6); Leo Blanco: melodica (#6).
Os Catedráticos 73
Tracks: Arranha Ceu (Skyscrapers); Flap; Rodando Por Ai (Rudy's); O Jogo (Soccer Game); Atire A 1a Pedra; Puma Branco (The White Puma); Passarinho Diferente (The Byrd); Extremo Norte (The Gap); To Fazendo Nada (Down The Hill); Menina (Boy Meets Girl); Carlota & Carolina (Carly & Carole).
Personnel: Eumir Deodato: leader, piano, RMI electric piano, organ, arranger, conductor; Durval Ferreira: guitar; Zé Menezes: guitar; Sergio Barroso: electric bass; Ivan "Mam?o" Conti, drums; Bebeto: congas; Hélcio Milito: percussion; Orlann Divo: percussion; John Frosk: trumpet, flugelhorn; Marvin Stamm: flugelhorn, trumpet; Phil Bodner: tenor saxophone, flute; Wayne Andre: trombone; Romeo Penque: baritone saxophone, flute.
Monk Time
Tracks: Well You Needn't; Monk's Dream; Monk's Mood; Blue Monk; Little Rootie Tootie; Ugly Beauty; We See; Epistrophy.
Personnel: Leon Lee Dorsey: bass; Greg Skaff: guitar; Mike Clark: drums.
American Music Vol. VII
Tracks: El Fugitivo; Nubes; LT; Qué Es Lo Que Quieres De Mi?; The Wall; La Cruda; Nosotros; Let Me Be; Ausencia; Hot Sauce; Cuidado; Yo Quisiera; Sombra Roja.
Personnel: Josh Baca: accordion; Mr. Vallenato: accordion; Angela Miller: backing vocals; Lauren Cervantes: backing vocals; The Soul Supporters: backing vocals; Josh Levy: bariton saxophone; Greg Gonzalez: bass; Wil-Dog Abers: bass; Matthew "Sweet Lou" Holmes: congas, bongos; Sunny Jain: dhol; John Speice: drums, percussion; Beto Martinez: guitar; Raul Pacheco: guitar; Kino Esparza: lead vocals, hand percussion; Carlos "El Loco" Bedoya: keyboards, backing vocals; Dan Bechdolt: tenor saxophone, alto saxophone; Mark "Speedy" Gonzales: trombone, trumpet; Gilbert Elorreaga: trumpet; Itawi Correa: vocals; Justin Poree: vocals; Tomar Williams: vocals, keyboards; Jaime Ospina: vocals, percussion, gaita; José Galeano: vocals, timbales.
the scOpe
Tracks: Keep Connexion; Glow; Vice; Overlooking; Please Do; Paris Me Mange; Let Love Rule; Don't U Worry; Goodbye For Now; Tricky 98': Le Match de légend.
Personnel: Manu Katché: drums, percussion, vocals; Jim Grandcamp: guitar; Kandia Kouyaté: kora; Frédéric Kret: cello; Michael Nguyen: viola; Hugues Borsarello: violin; Kayla Galland: vocals; Faada Freddy: vocals; Jazzy Bazz: vocals; Alexandre Tassel: flugelhorn; Jonatha Brooke: vocals.
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