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4

Article: Multiple Reviews

Criss Cross Jazz Roundup

Read "Criss Cross Jazz Roundup" reviewed by C. Andrew Hovan


In the past several years there has been a marked change in the jazz landscape that has somehow managed to further spread the demarcation lines between those musicians who practice mainstream leanings and those with a hyper vigilance towards the new avant-garde. Oddly enough, leave it to Criss Cross Jazz, a label that has historically been ...

Album

I'll Take My Chances

Label: Criss Cross
Released: 2013
Track listing: Good Tree, Good Fruit; JFK International; Adrift; Dirty; Unrequited I, Prelude to a Kiss; Field of Landmines; I'll Take My Chances; Weezy; Unrequited II

1

News: Performance / Tour

Italian Jazz Days - Oct 12-22 - New York City To Washington D.C.

Italian Jazz Days - Oct 12-22 - New York City To Washington D.C.

ITALIAN JAZZ DAYS OCT 12-22, 2013 New York City To Washington DC TwinsMusic Enterprises is proud to announce the annual cultural celebration - Italian Jazz Days 2013 - October 12-22, 2013. Thanks to the involvement of Italian Cultural Institute of New York and the Italian nonprofit organization, C-Jam Music, this year the ...

6

Article: Album Review

Dayna Stephens: I'll Take My Chances

Read "I'll Take My Chances" reviewed by Andrew Luhn


For his second Criss Cross release I'll Take My Chances, saxophonist Dayna Stephens has put together an impressive recital showing off his skill for composition, arranging, and improvisation. The ten tunes presented here are a nice mix of Stephens's originals, an Ellington classic, and original tunes from contemporary pianists Brad Mehldau and Aaron Parks. The tunes ...

3

Article: Album Review

Erik Jekabson: Anti-Mass

Read "Anti-Mass" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Trumpeter Erik Jekabson likes to stroll through San Francisco's DeYoung Museum and imagine what the visual works there would sound like. In league with his Sting-tet ensemble, he explores the textures and colors, the harmonies and melodies of these artworks, translating them into sounds on Anti-Mass. Teaming with violin, viola, saxophone, bass and drum, and with ...

55

Article: Album Review

Linda Oh: Initial Here

Read "Initial Here" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


President Theodore Roosevelt's famous quote, “Walk softly and carry a big stick," epitomizes Linda Oh, the soft-spoken bassist/composer who draws total respect with her intrepid musicianship. With her highly acclaimed self-released debut, Entry (2010), and increased visibility through recording dates and gigs like Dave Douglas' “Tea for 3" Tour, Oh is emerging as one of jazz's ...

50

Article: Album Review

Sara Leib: Secret Love

Read "Secret Love" reviewed by Dan Bilawsky


A cursory glance at the track listing for Secret Love may paint it as another simple celebration of standards, but that's not the case. Singer Sara Leib takes the road less traveled by delivering ear-opening, metrically twisted, stylistically broad interpretations of oft-covered classics with a to-die-for cast of cutting-edge collaborators. Leib, who holds ...

128

News: Recording

Embracing Nicole Henry

Embracing Nicole Henry

The song stylist sells out a pair of New York City shows on the eve of the release of her critically-acclaimed new album, Embraceable Miami Beach, FL: Glowing reviews have embraced the arrival of the fifth album from song stylist Nicole Henry, which was released Tuesday (August 23) by ArtistShare. On Monday night, Henry performed many ...

373

Article: Album Review

Gretchen Parlato: The Lost and Found

Read "The Lost and Found" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


Gretchen Parlato is emerging as the most important jazz singer since Cassandra Wilson. Her vocal approach is so unique and her repertoire so eclectic that she stands to create a jazz vocal genre unto herself. After placing first in the 2004 Thelonious Monk International Jazz Vocals Competition, Parlato released her eponymous debut, self-produced, in 2005. Warmly ...

274

Article: Interview

Gretchen Parlato: Quiet Revolutionary

Read "Gretchen Parlato: Quiet Revolutionary" reviewed by Ian Patterson


It's safe to say that singer Gretchen Parlato has her admirers. The Boston Globe praised her as “the most original jazz singer in a generation," and pianist Herbie Hancock has described her connection to music as “almost magical." Saxophonist Wayne Shorter has likened her art to that of Frank Sinatra. It's hard to remember the last ...


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