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538

Article: Album Review

Jim Hall / Bill Frisell: Hemispheres

Read "Hemispheres" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


Hemispheres is a wonderful collaboration between two esteemed veteran guitarists, Jim Hall and Bill Frisell. Though each has travelled different yet celebrated paths, this is their first full length (double CD) release together. Hall's masterful playing, tempered by a smooth rotund tone, has been appreciated since the 1950s in performances with such names ...

409

Article: Year in Review

Dan McClenaghan's 2008 Top Ten

Read "Dan McClenaghan's 2008 Top Ten" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Here are ten of 2008's jazz CDs that charmed and seduced me, or grabbed my lapels and wouldn't let go. Bobo Stenson Trio Cantando ECM Records A piano trio set of incredible subtlety, depth and beauty, with Swedish pianist joined by bassist Anders Jormin ...

231

Article: Album Review

Satoko Fujii Orchestra Nagoya: Sanrei

Read "Sanrei" reviewed by Eyal Hareuveni


There is no doubt that out of the four big bands that Japanese composer and pianist Satoko Fujii leads, Orchestra Nagoya is the wildest one. It is also the fastest and the loudest one. It may feel like being hit by a huge adrenalin shot while listening to Sanrei, the orchestra's third release; but rest assured ...

271

Article: Album Review

Noah Preminger: Dry Bridge Road

Read "Dry Bridge Road" reviewed by Jeff Dayton-Johnson


Readers and theatre-goers probably found Anton Chekhov disquieting when they first encountered his work at the turn of the twentieth century. Here was a guy who used nineteenth-century materials--the bourgeois drawing room, issues of social class, well-behaved prose--to depict what would become emblematic twentieth-century themes: psychology, anomie, the little heart breaks of daily life.Wunderkind ...

347

Article: Album Review

Natsuki Tamura / Satoko Fujii: Chun

Read "Chun" reviewed by Troy Collins


Chun is one of seven new albums released in 2008 by tireless Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii in celebration of her fiftieth birthday. Issued concurrently with Sanrei (BKM), by her Orchestra Nagoya, and Summer Suite (Libra), by her Orchestra New York, Chun is the fourth duet session Fujii has recorded with her husband, trumpeter Natsuki Tamura.

403

Article: Album Review

Glenn White: Sacred Machines

Read "Sacred Machines" reviewed by Elliott Simon


For Sacred Machines, tenor man Glenn White has enlisted some of the most recognizable working jazz musicians in New York for a session of precisely played original modern jazz. White's horn is soulful and rich and he expertly uses the talents of his supporting players, particularly the subtle genius of pianist Roberta Piket and Jamie Baum's ...

192

News: Award / Grant

Frank Macchia's "Landscapes" Nominated for 51st Grammy Awards

Frank Macchia's "Landscapes" Nominated for 51st Grammy Awards

Frank Macchia's Landscapes received a Grammy nomination in the category of Best Instrumental Arrangement for his original interpretation of the classic song “Down In The Valley." It's Macchia's second consecutive nomination; last year he was nominated for the song “Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair." Listen to “Down In The Valley" in its ...

247

Article: Album Review

Satoko Fujii Orchestra Nagoya: Sanrei

Read "Sanrei" reviewed by Mark Corroto


Satoko Fujii's Sanrei might smell like teen spirit, but it isn't a rock power trio disc; it's an orchestra sent here from nirvana by way of Nagoya, Japan.  Pianist Fujii eschews the keyboards for a conductor's baton, leaving the chords to guitarist Yasuhiro Usui to shred with abandon. Probably best known for ...

516

Article: Album Review

Mostly Other People Do The Killing: This Is Our Moosic

Read "This Is Our Moosic" reviewed by Eyal Hareuveni


The cover of the third release by the avant-bop quartet Mostly Other People Do the Killing (MOPDtK) suggests the obvious for anyone who has listened to this excellent ensemble. They reference the classic 1960 Ornette Coleman Quartet Atlantic recording, This Is Our Music, not only by the precise, though humorous position of its members on the ...

216

Article: Album Review

Satoko Fujii Orchestra Nagoya: Sanrei

Read "Sanrei" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Satoko Fujii has a rock and roll soul and heart, judging from the opening cut on Sanrei, by her Orchestra Nagoya. The tune thumps and slashes to life on a bass/drums/guitar intro that sounds like Deep Purple searching for the groove on “Kentucky Woman," an early burst (1968) in the heavy metal mode. The ...


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