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Jazz Articles about Alan Pasqua
Kozo Suganuma, Robert Walter, Snarky Puppy and Allan Holdsworth
by Len Davis
Drummers Kozo Suganuma and Senri Kawaguchi. Funky sounds from Robert Walter and Snarky Puppy. Allan Holdsworth, Jimmy Haslip, Alan Pasqua and Chad Wackerman from Proto Cosmos, plus Virgil Donati, Alex Lofoco and CAB. Playlist Into The Night War Elephant" from Into The Night (Arpeggio Musicl) 00:00 Robert Walter Security" from Better Feathers (Royal Potato Family) 06:44 Snarky Puppy Mean Green" from Empire Central (GroundUp) 13:29 Alan Holdsworth Red Alert" from Proto Cosmos (Blue Canoe) 20:07 Alan Pasqua Fast ...
read moreAllan Holdsworth & Alan Pasqua: Proto-Cosmos
by Jim Worsley
If the song title Proto-Cosmos" brings Tony Williams to mind then step to the front of the class. Alan Pasqua's tune is featured on the drummer's 1975 album, Believe It (Columbia). The record is considered by some to be the best fusion album of all time. In addition to Pasqua and bassist Tony Newton, a young British guitarist named Allan Holdsworth introduced himself to the masses. Fast forward to 2022 and it has been five and a half years since ...
read moreAlan Pasqua, Peter Erskine, Darek Oles: Live In Italy
by Jim Worsley
Pianist Alan Pasqua and drummer Peter Erskine have been playing together for over fifty years now. For over twenty years Darek Oles has completed the trio on double bass. While brilliant upper-echelon musicians in their own right, the magic that ensues in this trio is remarkable. Could playing together for so long, performing thousands of shows over the years lead to burnout or it becoming old hat?" Not for these three true jazz cats. The conversations just get deeper, their ...
read moreMatt Gordy: Be With Me
by Richard J Salvucci
There is an expression of high regard for playing, in the tradition," which basically means, yeah, that is jazz, music of the highest order. Matt Gordy's Be With Me" is particularly arresting because it is in the tradition, but neither a recreation nor an exercise in nostalgia. Everyone from Charlie Christian to Modern Jazz Quartet has played Topsy" (1937) in one form or another. It lends itself to multiple blues changes and swing to boppish solos, all of ...
read moreThe Matt Gordy Jazz Tonite Sextet: Be With Me
by Jack Bowers
In 2006, drummer Matt Gordy heeded the mandate to go west, young man," moving from Boston to Los Angeles, while he was still young at heart," and quickly becoming a mainstay of the local scene, after years of success as a jazz and classical drummer in New England, and even with the Maracaibo, Venezuela, Symphony Orchestra, where he spent nine years as chief percussionist. After fifteen years gigging in Los Angeles, Gordy decided it was time to record his first ...
read moreJeff Ellwood: The Sounds Around The House
by Pierre Giroux
As a professional musician hoping to have a meaningful career, hiding one's light under a bushel, may not be the best way to recognizable success. Such might be the case for tenor saxophonist Jeff Ellwood. He may have fallen into the trap evinced by the Dave Frishberg ditty I Want To Be A Sideman." But as the saying goes; better late than never" as Ellwood released a self-produced debut, The Sounds Around The House. ...
read moreAlan Pasqua: Day Dream
by Jim Worsley
When you hear that Alan Pasqua has put out a new record, the first thought--other than perhaps happiness--is what genre are we talking about? Pasqua has worn many hats in his career. To his credit, he looks quite fashionable in any of them. Maybe you think of fusion Pasqua, who mixed it up with the genre's finest, from Tony Williams to Allan Holdsworth. Perhaps it is the highest order of straight ahead jazz with the likes of Peter Erskine on ...
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