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Soul Songs, Mose Songs & COVID Aid for Djibouti

Courtesy Janto Djassi

Bohemia After Dawn
Buyú Records
2020
Soulful original music laced with judicious and striking samples, Bohemia After Dawn serves a textbook example of music that packs an impact larger than the sum of its parts. Written, arranged, produced and performed by Oliver Belz and André Neundorf (the Bahama Soul Club) plus guest musicians and singers live and looped, Bohemia After Dawn sets body, mind and soul to "simmer" from its opening "Afrodisia" through the end of its closing "Castelejo."
"Mango" slips and slides on its reggae beat while horns call and echo the melody in sweet and sticky scoops of sound. In the follow-up "Mango" (Club des Belugas Remix), a cool conga beat helps transports this reggae from the Caribbean to a nightclub in Brazil. "Alma Sola" walks along an ice-cold finger-snapping electric bass line with flute and purring female vocals drizzling sweet heat on top. Guitarists Ralli King and Bela Heine slice out soul-jazz blues chords and solos that feature touches of

George Benson
guitarb.1943

Albert King
guitar, electric1923 - 1992

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

John Lee Hooker
guitar1917 - 2001
In "Never Roam No More," the producers fold the gravelly growl and thunder of Hooker's inimitable voice into an improbable yet magical, thick and vibrant dance groove as smooth and cool as satin bedding. The SMOOVE Remix adds a full minute of extra music plus a whole lot of additional rhythm: a two-step drum kick, the synthetic disco pulse, and bass and guitar tweaked into Chic dancefloor funk, all sparkling in a slick Hamilton Bohannon-style mix. (I had to take review notes for this track three different times because the first two I wouldn't [or couldn't] stop dancing.)
The closing "Castelejo (Hommage à Vitor Hugo)" opens like a large jungle cat slowly waking, yawning, stretching, and then unraveling into a prowling instrumental, sounding thick and sparse, and creating moods both powerful and subdued.


Chasm
guitar, acousticWood Wind & Skin
Sticks & Stones Music
2020
When

Mark Esakoff
variousMichael Whipple
variousIn Chasm, Esakoff's primary voices are nylon string guitar and marimba (which he professes to play like a "log drum piano"), and Whipple's are flute, keyboards and drums. Whipple also plays bass and percussion and sings on Wood, Wind & Skin, while Esakoff adds luitars (lute-guitars), ukuleles, bass and vocals.
Esakoff and Whipple are both natives of Ventura (California). This might not at first seem relevant, but if you've hiked through sunlit mountains, there's a good chance you'll recognize the sound, vision and (especially) the feel of Wood, Wind & Skin. After the reverential two-minute introduction "Praying for Rain," the music skips easy and carefree into the warm "Sideways Sunshine" and then tumbles into the bright and pretty "Look at Her Glow."
"Arctic Crossing" turns much more cold and brittle and seems to float frozen in space, suspended by arching strings, until quick and sharp guitar notes pierce its static sound like icy needles of frozen rain. "Inner Jungle" turns even darker and more mysterious: A cymbal keeps anxious time while percussion slithers and rattles out from shadows and bass builds a Middle Eastern mood, then a solitary horn rises up like

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013
It's surprising to find a tune by heavy metal monster gods " data-original-title="" title="">Black Sabbath in the midst of such sweetness and light, but Chasm find and magnify the beauty in "Laguna Sunrise," a melodic pause co-written by all four Sabbath members for their sprawling 1972 double-vinyl Vol. 4. It's a great reminder of how the gentleness and simplicity of Wood, Wind & Skin almost disguises the instrumental dexterity and profound connection between Mark Esakoff and Michael Whipple. Almost disguises, but not quite.


Jerry Granelli
drums1940 - 2021
Plays Vince Guaraldi & Mose Allison
RareNoise Records
2020
Drummer

Jerry Granelli
drums1940 - 2021

Brad Jones
bass
Jamie Saft
pianoGranelli possesses deep personal insight into both principals. He landed in the drum chair in

Vince Guaraldi
piano1928 - 1976

Bola Sete
guitar1923 - 1987
Granelli subsequently served for nearly four decades as

Mose Allison
piano and vocals1927 - 2016
"We all love the blues, whether we play them all the time or not, and we all love great songsand these are really great songs."
It's simply remarkable that even just the opening notes to "Cast Your Fate" still cast such a haunting and evocative spell, more than merely beautiful, with Granelli, Jones and Saft all finding new pictures to paint in Guaraldi's familiar colors.
Then this set turns most thoroughly and magically blue. The trio stretches "Parchman Farm" across eight skintight minutes, their roaring musical monster eventually growing three distinct instrumental heads: Jones' bass throbbing like a blues toothache, Granelli's bass and snare drums treacherously bombing the beat, and Saft dropping in familiar blues lines and shapes but not in the places or times you're used to hearing them, splattering blue color and sound like an impressionist

Ramsey Lewis
piano1935 - 2022
Saft softly steers "Star Song" to the edge of

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
A lot of music that comes out on the Rare Noise label can go over my head in concept or sound, but Plays Vince Guaraldi & Mose Allison lands squarely in my mind and heart.

The Dancing Devils of Djibouti
Ostinato Records
2020
A historic cultural achievement, The Dancing Devils of Djibouti celebrates the first recording to emerge with international distribution from the East African nation of Djibouti.
Djibouti, among the smallest and youngest nations of Africa, sits on the historic Bab El Mandeb (Gate of Tears) strait, a global trade corridor that connects the Indian Ocean with the Red Sea and Suez Canal. Through this geography, the native Afar and Somali music of Djibouti washes in musical streams originating in East Asia, the Arabian peninsula, India and other distant places.
The Dancing Devils captures the first studio recording by Djibouti's national ceremony musical ensemble Groupe RTD, which performs for national events by day but unleashes their own joyous music when they're off the state clock. Led by guitarist Abdirazak Hagi Sufi and Mohamed Abdi Alto (a saxophonist so talented that he adopted his instrument into his legal name), Groupe RTD describe their sound as the meeting of Jamaican dub and reggae, more subtle African rhythms, sleek American jazz horns, and singalong synthesizer melodies, led by reggae toasting and Bollywood-style male and female vocals.
This recording fits the bustling dynamics and colors of that description. "Buuraha U Dheer (The Highest Mountains)" and "Raga Kaan Ka'Eegtow (You Are the One I Love)" feature female vocalist Asma Omar, who then drops back to duet and support male vocalist Hassan Omar Houssein through the rest of the set. These first two tunes with bubbling reggae basslines, communal African rhythms and grooves and celebratory lead vocals, all wrapped up in the majestic colors of India and Africa plus a delightful Arabian wiggleabsolutely explode out of this production.
"Suuban (Joy)" is smartly titled, with Houssein's voice tying together the call and response between the rhythm and melody instruments that keep this powerful music rolling like a strong and implacable river. "Wiil Wille (The Jumping Man)" ends the set with vocals and drums that march Groupe RTD off to fight another day.
The COVID pandemic has been particularly hard on Djibouti and other African nations. A portion of Bandcamp sales is donated in equal parts to the Djiboutian Embassy in Germany to purchase masks and other essential supplies for Djibouti, and to the Amref Health Africa COVID-19 Fund.

Move On!
Consolidated Artist Productions
2020
In a 1977 magazine interview, New York Yankees Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson (in)famously referred to himself as "the straw that stirs the drink" for his team. On this trio set with organ player and composer

Ron Oswanski
organ, Hammond B3b.1974

Christian Fabian
bass
Bernard Purdie
drumsb.1939
The leadoff "The Red Plaza" and subsequent "BPP Blues" (referencing the famous Bernard "Pretty" Purdie nickname) immediately reveal this set's heart and soul: It's the sound of sheer musical joy. Purdie stretches out and snaps back the beat as he strolls through "The Red Plaza," while bassist Fabian fingerpops some funk and Oswanski keeps pace by playing soul with the fever and speed of rock 'n' roll.
Fabian's arrangement neatly keeps "Can't You See (You're Doin' Me Wrong)" from

Tower of Power
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1968

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
The last three tunes close Move On! with howling hurricane force. Fabian's tight New Orleans bass line, twist-tied to Purdie's rollicking drumbeat, provides the straw that stirs the title track. The trio completely blows up the 160-year-old warhorse "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" into a free and easy jam that you might hear rising out of some smokey little speakeasy late on a Saturday night, much more fun and playful than you'd reasonably expect.
Oswanski stretches out

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Brian Auger
organ, Hammond B3b.1939


Various Artists
variousNew Orleans Mambo: Cuba to NOLA
Putumayo Records
2020
The distance between New Orleans (Louisiana, USA) and Havana (Cuba) is almost exactly 670 miles, about a two-hour flight. But it takes only one listen to Putumayo Records' anthology New Orleans Mambo: Cuba to NOLA to bridge the distance between the two.
With such a wide and colorful net to cast, assembling this collection must have been a lot of fun. This includes the companion booklet, which contextualizes the cross-cultural dance between New Orleans and Cuba by quoting New Orleans jazz pioneer

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941
Cuba to NOLA starts with

Poncho Sanchez
bongosb.1951

Preservation Hall Jazz Band
band / ensemble / orchestraThere are wonderful sights and sounds from Cuba to NOLA in between. You'd be hard pressed to find three minutes that represent New Orleans better than "Mos' Scocious," with piano and vocals by

Dr. John
piano1940 - 2019

The Meters
band / ensemble / orchestra
Allen Toussaint
piano and vocals1938 - 2015
One of the first families of New Orleans musical royalty, the
Neville Brothers
variousBut this update on "Jive Samba" by Los Po-Boy-Citos, whose very name Latin-izes a famous New Orleans sandwich, delivers this collection's biggest musical surprise and smiles. Their yummy triple-decker sandwiches the verses of

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975


Walter White
trumpetBB XL
IFUNU Music
2020
Born in a musical family near Detroit and classically trained at Juilliard, trumpet and flugelhorn player

Walter White
trumpetManhattan Jazz Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestraDavid Matthews
arrangerb.1911

Conrad Herwig
tromboneb.1959

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Mingus Big Band
band / ensemble / orchestraA stellar collection of covers, originals and crackerjack musicians, BB XL provides extra-large helpings of White's horns in a big jazz sound, and he takes advantage of every opportunity to blow out his chops. It opens with a journey across "Atlantic Bridge" that seems to rise "Up, Up and Away" with a lovely floating feeling; piano and winds twirl in counterpoint to the luxuriantly bright, glowing brass, and the band tosses the melody across different sections of the band like a celebratory toast.
White strings classic jazz and ballad covers together on BB XL like gorgeous pearls. His trumpet tap-dances as soft-but sure-footed as Fred Astaire on the melody to "The Way You Look Tonight," arranged as a jazz samba, and then sings out "My Foolish Heart" like a soul balladeer, two quick snapshots of this set's keen, bright and accessible sound.
White builds most of the rest of BB XL upon three enduring pillars of the jazz canon. This relaxed arrangement of "Cantaloupe Island" (

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Then the XL BB burns like fire through "Blue Rondo a la Turk" (

Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Maynard Ferguson
trumpet1928 - 2006
Tracks and Personnel
Bohemia After DawnTracks: Afrodisia; Ain't Nobody's Business (featuring Billie Holiday); Mercy Me (featuring Josephine Nightingale); Mango (featuring Arema Arega); Never Roam No More (featuring John Lee Hooker); Troubles All Be Gone (featuring Taly); Alma Sola (featuring Arema Arega); Riding The Train; Tears Run Down (featuring Sister Wynona Carr); Never Roam No More (SMOOVE Remix); Mango (Club des Belugas Remix); Castelejo (Hommage à Vitor Hugo).
Personnel: All tracks written and performed by Oliver Belz & André Neundorf with York: saxophones (Afrodisia), flutes (Troubles All Be Gone); Ralli King: guitar (Mercy Me, Riding the Train); Holger Stonjek: bass (Mercy Me, Troubles All Be Gone, Alma Sola, Riding the Train); Lars Lehmann: bass (Mercy Me); Maike Jacobs: backing vocals (Mercy Me); Claus Hartisch: guitar, bass (Mango); Bela Heine: guitar (Riding the Train); Vitor Hugo: cana rachada (Castelejo); Rui Correia: accordeon (Castelejo).
Wood Wind & Skin
Tracks: Praying for Rain; Sideways Sunshine; Look at Her Glow; Strange Currents; On a Lark; Mountains; Inner Jungle; Agua Blanca; The Memory Box; Laguna Sunrise; Element People; Arctic Crossing; The Silence Between the Words.
Personnel: Mark Esakoff: guitar, marimba, luitar, ukelele, bass, vocals; Michael Whipple: flute, keyboards, drums, percussion, vocals.
Plays Vince Guaraldi & Mose Allison
Tracks: Cast Your Fate to the Wind (Vince Guaraldi); Parchman Farm (Mose Allison); Baby Please Don't Go (Traditional); Mind (Prelude 1); Everybody's Cryin' Mercy (Mose Allison); Star Song (Mose Allison); Young Man Blues (Mose Allison); Mind (Prelude 2); Your Mind Is on Vacation (Mose Allison); Christmas Time Is Here (Vince Guaraldi / Lee Mendelson).
Personnel: Jerry Granelli: drums; Brad Jones: bass; Jamie Saft: piano.
The Dancing Devils of Djibouti
Tracks: Buuraha U Dheer (The Highest Mountains); Raga Kaan Ka'Eegtow (You Are the One I Love); Kuusha Caarey (The Pearl Necklace); Raani (Queen); Alto's Interlude; Uurkan Kaadonaya (I Want You); Halkaasad Dhigi Magtiisa (That's Where You'll Leave His Reward); Iiso Daymo (Look at Me); Suuban (Joy); Wiil Wille (The Jumping Man).
Personnel: Mohamed Abdi Alto: saxophone; Asma Omar: vocals; Guessod Abdo Hamargod: vocals; Hassan Omar Houssein: vocals; Omar Farah Houssein: drums; Moussa Aden Ainan: keyboards; Abdirazak Hagi Sufi "Kaajaa": guitar; Abdo Houssein Handeh: bass; Salem Mohamed Ahmed: dumbek.
Move On!
Tracks: The Red Plaza; BPP Blues; Can't You See (You're Doin' Me Wrong); 84-85; Got Groove (pt. 2); Love You Madly; Move On!; The Battle Hymn of the Republic; So What.
Personnel: Bernard Purdie: drums; Christian Fabian: bass, arrangements; Ron Oswanski: organ.
New Orleans Mambo: Cuba to NOLA
Tracks: Going Back To New Orleans (Poncho Sanchez); Mos' Scocious (Dr. John); Jive Samba (Los Po- Boy-Citos); Coconut Milk (Bo Dollis & The Wild Magnolias); Jambalaya (New Orleans Heartbreakers with Big Al Carson); Man?anita (Zazou City); Panama Tones / Nuevo Boogaloo (The Iguanas); Yellow Moon (The Neville Brothers); Nature Boy (Otra); Kreyol (Preservation Hall Jazz Band).
Personnel: Poncho Sanchez (Going Back To New Orleans); Dr. John (Mos' Scocious); Los Po-Boy-Citos (Jive Samba); Bo Dollis & The Wild Magnolias (Coconut Milk); New Orleans Heartbreakers with Big Al Carson (Jambalaya); Zazou City (Man?anita); The Iguanas (Panama Tones / Nuevo Boogaloo); The Neville Brothers (Yellow Moon); Otra (Nature Boy); Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Kreyol).
BB XL
Tracks: Atlantic Bridge; Blue Rondo a la Turk; Cantaloupe Island; Nica's Dream; Portus Apostoli (Intro); Portus Apostoli; The Way You Look Tonight; My Foolish Heart; Yo Conecto.
Personnel: Alex Foster: soprano sax, tenor sax; Ron Blake: alto sax, tenor sax; Steve Kenyon: baritone sax; Tristan Cappel: alto sax; Donell Snyder: tenor sax; baritone sax, soprano sax, alto sax; Keith Kaminski: alto sax, baritone sax, tenor sax; Conrad Herwig: trombone; Dave Mosko: trombone; Adam Machaskee: trombone; David Taylor: trombone; Altin Sencalar: trombone; Chris Glassman: trombone; Rob Killips: trombone; Don Anderson: tuba; Walter White: trumpets; Wayne Bergeron: trumpet; Ken Robinson: trumpet; Gary Schunk: piano; Ruben Rodriguez: bass; Jack Dryden: bass; James Simonson: bass; Jeff Trudell: drums; Graham Hawthorne: drums; Oscar Cruz: congas; Pablo Batista: percussion.
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