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Vámanos – Let’s Go!
By
Mortissa
Asphalt Tango
2013
?i?dem Aslan was born in the cultural crossroads of Istanbul. She moved to London, hoping to advance her onstage and classroom studies in various musical cultures; these studies include her Songs of Smyrna project, which celebrates rebetiko and sephardic music from Turkey, and joining the She'Koyokh Klezmer Ensemble and the Balkan group Dunav. Mortissa is her solo debut, composed of rebetiko and smyrniac songs (often called "the blues of the Agean") from the 1920s and '30s. "Most of the songs are in Greek," she explains, "and I didn't know the meaning when I first heard them. It was the music I could relate to. I felt close to them even if I didn't understand a word. Once I learned what they were about, it was even better. Most of them are love songs. They're familiar to me in the way they express things. The way a woman tells off her lover is similar to what I heard in Turkey."
Aslan recorded most of Mortissa with aces from North London's Greek and Turkish musical communities, including kanun (plucked dulcimer) master Nikolaos Baimpas; She'Koyokh backs up the rousing sing-along "Trava Vre Manga Kai Alani (Away With You, Manga)" and head-spinning clarinet jam "Ferece (Veil)."
"Kanarini (Canary)" sings a beautiful vocal and instrumental melody nourished by Middle Eastern percussion and strings. Like an impending storm, "To Dervisaki (Little Dervish)" grows more intense as violin, guitar and clarinet twist and bow in a dance with Aslam's vocal, so overwhelmingly mysterious that it sounds a bit dangerous.
"Nenni (Lullaby)"will stop you dead in your tracks. Aslan's unaccompanied vocal introduction is so perfect it's bewitching; beautiful, mysterious, vibrant, haunting, evocativeher voice is all these and more. Starkly illuminated by the backup of a solitary acoustic guitar, Aslan's vocal leaves in its wake the sense that "Nenni" is a vocal incantation passed down from voice to voice, from person to person, from generation to generation.
Mortissa is more than music: It is an open window into different cultures and histories. "What I'm doing is adding details and highlighting the similarities between the cultures," Aslan concludes. "Even something like a double bass in there makes it more modern. It's adding your personality. What I'm doing is putting my feelings into the songs, trying to reflect what they make me feel."
"It shows there are no cultural boundaries in music."

Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio
Whaling City Sound
2013
Drummer, composer and bandleader

Gerry Gibbs
drumsb.1964

Terry Gibbs
vibraphoneb.1924

Clark Terry
trumpet1920 - 2015

James Moody
woodwinds1925 - 2010

Gary Bartz
saxophone, altob.1940

Sam Rivers
saxophone, tenor1923 - 2011

Cedar Walton
piano1934 - 2013

Kenny Kirkland
piano1955 - 1998

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943
Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio presents a huge piece of work, 15 tracks spanning 74 minutes that would consume a double-vinyl album set. These include four new Gibbs originals: Musical portraits of Carter ("Here Comes Ron"), pianists

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Don Pullen
piano1941 - 1995
The considerable grasp and reach of this Dream Trio is immediately evident: Three of their first four tracks brilliantly juxtapose compositions by

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Burt Bacharach
composer / conductor1928 - 2023

Johnny Mandel
arrangerb.1925

Ben Riley
drums1933 - 2017
Later in the set, Gibbs programs two adventurous

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio is a trio album not only a piano trio, but a genuine unified ensemble of three equal voicesof exceptional vision, dexterity and energy.

Out of Nowhere
Charleston Square
2013

Fareed Haque
guitarb.1963

Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005

Grant Green
guitar1935 - 1979
Raised in Chicago by a Pakistani father and Chilean mother, Haque sang an indispensible voice in the late, lamented electric jam ensemble

Garaj Mahal
band / ensemble / orchestra
Paquito D'Rivera
clarinetb.1948

Sting
bass, electricb.1951

George Mraz
bass1944 - 2021

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

John Tate
bass, acoustic
Doug Weiss
bass, acousticThe trio sessions include the "Out of Nowhere" title track, where Haque's acoustic guitar shimmers with riffs that shine like quicksilver while Mraz and Hart heat up the rhythm pot to boiling beneath, altogether sounding like music made by Haque's inspiration, Martino. The trio closes this set with a meandering, abstract waltz, led by Mraz's bass, through "Lollipops & Roses," a Perry Como pop hit. Haque's parents had this Como album (By Request [RCA, 1962]) when he was a child, and he recalls it fondly: "It was great, if you like that kind of singing. You have to be in the right mood. If it's Christmas Eve with a fire going in the fireplace and you put on that record, it's the perfect mood."
Through the coolly meditative ten-minute opener "Waiting for Red," the quintet launches you deeply into Haque's music and his guitar sound, which seems to draw straight connecting lines between the boldness and brilliance of Martino and

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968
"I have recorded a lot of music," Haque concludes, "but at the end of the day I'm still from Chicago and I grew up playing jazz, blues and R&B on the Chicago scene. And this new album reflects that."

Lineage
Whaling City Sound
2013
In 2010, saxophonist

Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946

Michael Stephans
drumsb.1945

Vic Juris
guitar1953 - 2019

Evan Gregor
bass, acoustic
Bobby Avey
piano
Elvis Presley
vocals1935 - 1977

The Beatles
band / ensemble / orchestra
Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021
Gutbucket guitar and tenor sax whip "Tequila" into a froth until the bottom drops completely out, leaving Liebman to freely swing without a net ("a quirky, angular and space funky re-take in 7/8 time," Stephans suggests). In their group improvisation on "Wipeout," the rhythm section keeps churning the original rhythm but Liebman stretches out the melody until it finally snaps. "Walk, Don't Run" dissolves into a hard-charging, piano-less saxophone trio where Liebman's free-fall stretches out the original tune way past the point of recognition. These three tunes use pop to construct jazz that hits as hard as rock.
Liebman and Stephans rework

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950

Return to Forever
band / ensemble / orchestra
John Scofield
guitarb.1951

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969
"What we'd hoped to do was to 'put old wine in new bottles,' using the language of contemporary improvised music to re- clothe 'the oldies' in new harmonies and new rhythms, without destroying the integrity of the originals," Stephans explains. Mission accomplished.

Say That to Say This
Verve
2013
For his third Verve album, Troy Andrews, a/k/a

Trombone Shorty
tromboneb.1986

James Brown
vocals1933 - 2006

The Meters
band / ensemble / orchestraNeville Brothers
variousAt 35 minutes (albeit across ten tracks), Say That to Say This is hardly Andrews' magnum opus. But his trombone solos consistently punch, ride and swing the beat hard and funky, and its best tunes seriously cook. "Get the Picture" dives headlong (not just knee deep) into slippery New Orleans funk rhythms, then turns to stomp and rock beneath Andrews' looped "I play the funk" vocal. The bright instrumental "Vieux Carre" bows then dances toward the Caribbean while the horn section dishes out sumptuous Crescent City soul stew.
Andrews and Saadiq build "Shortyville," a model replica of Andrews' musical birthplace, from the ground up. Its lush rhythm track deftly grooves like D'Angelo and Marvin Gaye jamming up and down Bourbon Street: Every instrument tucks into each other just right, overspread like thick sweet jam by Andrews' trombone solo and then set on fire by his blistering, funk-rock trumpet solo until he burns it out.
Say That also features the historic reunion of The Meters on "Be My Lady," from The Meters' eighth and final album (New Directions, 1977, Warner Bros.). Andrews telephoned each Meter and asked if they'd like to record it with him, and each replied that if the others would do it, he was in too. "After we were done,

George Porter Jr.
bassb.1947

Peru Maravilloso
Tiger's Milk
2013
Peru Maravilloso: Vintage Latin, Tropical and Cumbia demonstrates what's best about the digital media revolution: It resurrects 15 singles released by homegrown Peruvian labels across the 1960s and '70s, two of the most vibrant musical decades in the history of Peru (and just about everywhere else). Compiled by label managers Duncan Ballantyne, Andres Tapia and Martin Morales, it presents the lively South American styles of cumbia and guaracha and more electric sounds of chicha with strains of music from the Caribbean and Cuba leaking through like radio static.
As you'd expect, this robust and hearty musical stew of Peruvian, Cuban, African, Spanish and Andean influences bounces all over the map to radiate a quirky and colorful charm. Several Maravilloso tracks open windows into not just the music but the mood of a different culture and time: "Salsa 73" (by Chango y su Conjunto), dynamic if not perfect salsa spiced with tongue-tingling trumpet; and "La Cumbia Del Pacurro" (Juaneco y su Combo), "Para Chachita" (Los Zheros) and the psychedelic and percussive tropical chicha "Bailando en la Campi?a" (Los Orientales), each built upon the dominant instrument, all around the world, of 1960s and '70s popthe electric guitar.
"Pira?a" (Pedro Miguel y sus Maracaibos) swirls together classic Cuban son montuno and tropical cumbia with trumpet so hot it snaps against the Afro-Cuban percussion and jangling electric guitar. Pop about the throes of mescaline, "Meshkalina" (Paco Zambrano y su Combo) is impossibly, irresistibly psychedelic '60s go-go in execution and production (with the chorus, "Let me die, meshkalina..."). Like " data-original-title="" title="">The Adventures in Jazz Orchestra swimming through an epic tequila bender, "El Chacarero" (Los Gatos Blancos) pours out more psychedelic 60s instrumental guitar pop.
In "Sue?o de Amor" (Zulu), Miguel Orbegozo's theatrical lead vocal rolls like waves in and out of the piano's strong groove, and when acoustic guitars and horns jump in for its closing verse, the sound clearly changes to reflect

Sergio Mendes
piano1941 - 2024
Each track was remastered from its original 7"/12" vinyl for Peru Maravilloso and is herewith presented for the first time since that single was originally issued in Peru.
Tracks and Personnel:
Mortissa:
Tracks: Aman Katerina Mou (Oh My Katerina); Vale Me Stin Agalia Sou (Take Me in Your Arms); To Dervisaki (Little Dervish); Bir Allah (One God); Pane Gia To Praso (Out for Leek); Trava Vre Manga Kai Alani (Away With You, Manga); Ferece (Veil); Nenni (Lullaby); ?akici; Sto Kafe Aman (At the Café Aman); Usakli Kiz (Girl from U?ak); Kanarini (Canary); S'agapo (I Love You).
Personnel: Nikos Angousis-Doitsidis: clarinet; ?igdem Aslan: vocals; Matt Bacon: guitar; Nikolaos Baimpas: baglama, kanun, mandola, mandolin, santouri, vocals; Makis Baklatzis: violin; H. Cahit Baylav: violin; Pavlos Carvalho: bouzouki; Philippos Demetriou: bells, finger cymbals, spoons; Odysseas Elia: bouzouki; Susi Evans: clarinet; Meg Hamilton: violin; Sevtap Isik: vocals; Vasilis Lemonias: cello; Paul Melas: guitar, vocals; Tahir Palali: baglama, davul, fretless guitar, oud, vocals; Vasilis Sarikis: finger cymbals; Guy Schalom: bendir; She'koyokh; Paul Tkachenko: double bass, mandolin.
Gerry Gibbs Thrasher Dream Trio:
Tracks: Epistrophy; Promises, Promises; When I Dream; The Shadow of Your Smile; The Woman on the TV Screen; The Eye of the Hurricane; Tell Me a Bedtime Story; A Feeling; Don't You Worry 'Bout a Thing; Sunshower; Here Comes Ron; Impressions; The Thrasher; Mr. Clean; The Theme.
Personnel: Gerry Gibbs: drums; Ron Carter: bass; Kenny Barron: piano.
Out of Nowhere:
Tracks: Waiting for Red; Tex Mex Jungle; Flood in Franklin Park; I Got It Bad; Giant Steps; Inner Urge; Out of Nowhere; Lollipops and Roses.
Personnel: Fareed Haque: electric guitar, acoustic guitar; George Mraz: bass; Billy Hart: drums; John Tate: bass; Doug Weiss: bass; Corey Healey: drums; Rob Clearfield: piano; Salar Nader: tabla.
Lineage: Rock and Pop Classics Revisited:
Tracks: Mr. Sandman; Eleanor Rigby; Visions; Tequila; I Only Have Eyes for You; Walk, Don't Run; Woodstock; Wipeout; Here, There and Everywhere; Love Me Tender.
Personnel: Bobby Avey: acoustic piano, electric piano, organ; Evan Gregor: electric bass, acoustic bass; Vic Juris: electric guitar, acoustic guitar; Dave Liebman: wooden flute, also saxophone, soprano saxophone; Michael Stephans: drums, percussion; Matt Vashlishan: clarinet, EWI, flute, alto saxophone, soprano saxophone.
Say That to Say This
Tracks: Say That to Say This; You and I (Outta This Place); Get the Picture; Vieux Carre; Be My Lady; Long Weekend; Fire and Brimstone; Sunrise; Dream On; Shortyville.
Personnel: Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews: trombone, congas, drums, trumpet, percussion, vocals; Michael Ballard: bass; Lemar Carter: drums; Charles Jones: organ; Pete Murano: guitars; Art Neville: keyboards, organ; Cyril Neville: vocals; Leo Nocentelli: guitar; Joey Peebles: drums, percussion; George Porter, Jr.: bass; Raphael Saadiq: bass, clavinet, guitar, keyboards, vocals; Charles Smith: percussion; Taura Stinson: vocals; Calvin Turner: bass; Zigaboo Modeliste: drums.
Peru Maravilloso: Vintage Latin, Tropical and Cumbia:
Tracks: Mambo de Machaguay; Salsa 73; La Cumbia Del Pacurro; Para Chachita; Pira?a; Meshkalina; El Chacarero; Sue?o de Amor; Bailando en la Campi?a; Trinan las Golondrinas; Me Siento Felíz; Toro Mata; El Zambito Rumbero; La Gallina; Los Fabulosos en Onda.
Personnel: Lucho Neves y su Orchestra; Chango y su Conjunto; Juaneco y su Combo; Los Zheros; Pedro Miguel y sus Maracaibos; Paco Zambrano y su Combo; Los Gatos Blancos; Zulu; Los Orientales; John Benny y Los Ribere?os; Los Ecos; Lucia de la Cruz; Manzanita y su Conjunto; Félix Martinez y sus Chavales; Aniceto y sus Fabulosos.
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