CD/LP/Track Review

Jenny Scheinman: Crossing the Field (2008)

By
SEAN PATRICK FITZELL,
Sean Patrick Fitzell

Sean Patrick Fitzell

CD/DVD Reviewer since 2003

Fitzell lives in Brooklyn (in a neighborhood full of great musicians) and his work has also appeared in The Villager and Downtown Express newspapers and The Independent Film and Video Monthly magazine, among others.

Recent articles (117 total)

Published: November 14, 2008
Jenny Scheinman: Crossing the Field

Celebrating the release of 12 Songs (Cryptogramophone, 2005), violinist Jenny Scheinman assembled a string orchestra to augment her septet in performance at New York's Tonic. The addition enlivened the buoyant melodies and spurred the soloists with lush accompaniment. The thrilling results prompted Scheinman to write more for this instrumentation on Crossing the Field, her fifth and most ambitious CD to date.

She uses the string section as an integrated voice that interacts with, rather than playing alongside, the other instruments. On "Born into This," the strings weave a lilting cushion for the leader's solo, punctuated by Jason Moran's tinkling piano. "I Heart Eye Patch" finds bassist Tim Luntzel and drummer Kenny Wollesen propelling the ensemble with a bouncy march, eliciting a spry retort from the strings. Moran's bluesy rumbles unfurl over the mid-tempo groove of "Hard Sole Shoe," with clever embroidery from the orchestra. More traditionally, the strings swell with romantic sweeps over "Ana Eco" and dynamically shift from hushed whispers to dramatic flourishes on the cinematic "Einsamaller," recorded at the Tonic show.

Songs for smaller groupings temper the orchestra pieces, including two for violin, piano and drums. Moran stretches on "That's Delight," inverting the melodic line, and sparring with the leader on Duke Ellington's "Awful Sad," the sole cover. Bill Frisell's shimmering guitar colors the piano theme of "Processional," its sparse movement accentuated with rolling cymbals and Doug Wieselman's clarinet. He struts over the Afro-beat of "Song For Sidiki," as Scheinman's soaring line plays off the irrepressible groove. Cornetist Ron Miles gallops a call to the races for "Three Bits and a Horse," a feature for his horn and the punchy rhythm.

Filtering a wealth of stylistic influences—traditional and contemporary, American and international—Scheinman has honed a sincere, personal expression, its breadth revealed in the elegant sonority of Crossing the Field and the poignant musings on her simultaneously released eponymous vocal debut.

Track Listing: Born Into This; I Heart Eye Patch; That's Delight; Ana Eco; Hard Sole Shoe; Einsamaller; Awful Sad; Processional; The Careeners; Three Bits And A Horse; Song For Sidiki; Ripples In The Aquifer; Old Brooklyn.

Personnel: Jenny Scheinman: violin, piano (8); Jason Moran: piano (1-5, 7, 9, 10); Bill Frisell: guitar (1, 2, 4-6, 8-11, 13); Ron Miles: cornet (1, 2, 4-6, 8-11, 13); Doug Wieselman: clarinets (1, 2, 4-6, 8, 9, 11, 13); Tim Luntzel: bass (1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13); Kenny Wollesen: drums (1-5, 7-11, 13); Eyvind Kang: conductor (6); Brooklyn Rider: string orchestra leaders (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 12).

Record Label: KOCH International Jazz
Style: Beyond Jazz

comments powered by Disqus
Download jazz mp3 “Ali Farka Touche” by Jenny Scheinman Download jazz mp3 “Song of the Open Road” by Jenny Scheinman

Giveaways

Marc Ribot

Marc Ribot

About | Enter

Jeffrey Gimble

Jeffrey Gimble

About | Enter

Tommy Flanagan

Tommy Flanagan

About | Enter

Dan Lehner

Dan Lehner

About | Enter