Quantcast
NEWS: Enter the Mosaic Records "The Complete Arista Recordings of Anthony Braxton"... STORES: CDs/DVDs/Vinyl/Sleeves | Downloads | Posters | Art
jazz
HOME NEWS REVIEWS ARTICLES MUSICIANS PHOTOS FORUMS
  Login   |   MY AAJ Signup  
Intro Site Map Shows Free Daily MP3s Videos Upcoming Releases Guides Editorial Calendar Contests Help Wanted  
Advanced
Contact Us   |   Advertise   |   For Contributors   |   For Musicians





Raindrops
Duane Andrews
Second Time, Improvisations Cycle
Claude Marc Bourget
Lifelines
Bruno Raberg with Chris Cheek and Ben Monder
Summer Samba
Irene and Her Latin Jazz Band
Cover Up!
George Kahn
Tough Guys
The Generations Band with Jimmy Cobb and Eric Alexander
Advertise Here




Jazz Excursion Radio



"Waltz for Daphne"
Brian Bromberg
It's About Time: The Acoustic Project

Listen Now






Push AAJ Content
AAJ Live | RSS | Widsets

Black Dahlia
Bob Belden | Blue Note Records



By Craig Jolley Discuss        

Black Dahlia comes off better felt than listened to. In the liner notes Bob Belden describes his programmatic suite as a portrait of a mysterious, romantic loner who lived out her brief life through movies in post-WWII Hollywood. He borrows "moody" techniques from 1940's film score writers and gives them a jazzy spin.

Miles Davis and Gil Evans serve as the primary jazz inspirations. The most prominent soloist, trumpeter Tim Hagans, evokes Miles' stark, blue sound with and without harmon mute. He recalls Miles' open-ended "Solea" solo on "City of Angels." The rhythm section occasionally takes its feel from Miles' 1960's band (Hancock-Carter-Williams). For example the drum motif in "Dreamworld" is borrowed from Tony Williams ("In a Silent Way"). The orchestral sonority often derives from Evans' "Sketches of Spain" charts, and lush strings otherwise add to the period nostalgia. The most extroverted piece, "The Edge of Forever," evokes a late-40's big band feel complete with Latin jazz trappings.

Besides Hagans a variety of soloists are liberally featured, but they mainly stay in place, reinforcing moods by noodling on Belden's shadowy themes before fading away. Belden briefly solos on "Dreamworld" with a mid-50's Coltrane (Miles Davis quintet) sound but without Coltrane's urgency. The high point is the intuitive tenor-cello (Lovano-Friedlander) duet on "Danza d' Amore." Herwig promisingly launches his "The Edge of Forever" statement with the "Resolution" motif from Coltrane's A Love Supreme, but like most other soloists he remains within the lines.

Bob Belden at All About Jazz.
Visit Bob Belden on the web.


Track listing: Genesis; In Flight; Dawn; City of Angels; Dreamworld; Prelude to Love; Danza d'Amore; Zanzibar; Black Dahlia; The Edge of Forever; 101 North; Elegy.

Personnel: Bob Belden - composer, arranger, conductor, tenor; Tim Hagans, Lew Soloff - trumpet; Conrad Herwig - trombone; Lawrence Feldman, Mike Migliore - alto; Joe Lovano - tenor; Lou Marini - flute; Charlie Pillow - English horn; Marc Copland, Kevin Hays - piano; Eric Friedlander - cello; 60 piece studio orchestra.

Published: April 01, 2001
Style: Mainstream/Bop/Hard Bop/Cool


Read more reviews of Black Dahlia.


Discuss         Add to Google  




More Articles by Craig Jolley
Meet Joe Diorio
In The Company of Friends
Zane Musa Quintet at Descanso Gardens
Meet John McNeil
Meet Kate McGarry and Keith Ganz
Meet Phil Woods
One More: Music of Thad Jones




More Recent Reviews
Bob Belden - Black Dahlia Bob Belden
Black Dahlia
Mahavishnu Orchestra - Birds Of Fire Mahavishnu Orchestra
Birds Of Fire
Carla Helmbrecht - Be Cool Be Kind Carla Helmbrecht
Be Cool Be Kind
Curtis Stigers - Baby Plays Around Curtis Stigers
Baby Plays Around
Curtis Stigers - Baby Plays Around Curtis Stigers
Baby Plays Around
The Dave Brubeck Quartet - At Carnegie Hall The Dave Brubeck Quartet
At Carnegie Hall


CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 

Most Read: CD Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Most Read: Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time


 
More CD Reviews



Claude Marc Bourget
Secret Ice
From Second Time, Improvisations Cycle
04:25

More | Recent | Top




Steve Elmer
New CD: Fire Down Below









Make a donation and support All About Jazz
Contribute to the continued operation of
jazz's most important online resource.
  Privacy Policy | Dedicated Servers All material copyright © 2008 All About Jazz and/or contributing writers/visual artists. All rights reserved.