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490

Article: Album Review

Bobby McFerrin: VOCAbuLarieS

Read "VOCAbuLarieS" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


For nearly thirty years, Bobby McFerrin's illustrious career has proven that there is no instrument like the human voice. With an ability to cover any vocal range, his spontaneous inventions have spanned inventive a cappella singing, wonderful mimicries and global dialects, through memorable performances and recordings with the likes of the Vienna Philharmonic, Yo-Yo Ma, Chick ...

490

Article: Album Review

John Blake Jr.: Motherless Child

Read "Motherless Child" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


The precursor to the blues as a music form was first heard in the chants and songs of African American slaves. Their lyrics of hardship, perseverance, and faith were expressed through work songs, hymns, and spirituals, some of which are beautifully interpreted on John Blake Jr.'s Motherless Child. Growing up in South Philadelphia, Blake had this ...

198

Article: Album Review

Matthew Charles Heulitt: Room To Run

Read "Room To Run" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


A subtle change in the opening “Resurrected" is an indicator of things to come on guitarist Matthew Charles Heulitt's Room To Run, as the introductory chord progression deviates from its western motif. That shift is informed by the guitar's sweeping volume swell, before opening the path for a statically charged solo and resonating touches by bassist ...

512

Article: Album Review

Abraham Inc: Tweet Tweet

Read "Tweet Tweet" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


Time and time again, artists from different backgrounds have found ways to connect and transcend cultural differences through music. This is clearly the case in the unique collaboration of Abraham Inc's Tweet Tweet , the first release from a touring band that blends Klezmer music, funk, hip hop and jazz into an infectious and eclectic stew. ...

310

Article: Album Review

The Wee Trio: Capitol Diner Vol. 2: Animal Style

Read "Capitol Diner Vol. 2: Animal Style" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


Based loosely in New York, The Wee Trio's origins form a cross-section of the United States, with drummer Jared Schonig from Los Angeles, vibraphonist James Westfall living in New Orleans and bassist Dan Loomis hailing from St. Louis. Notwithstanding that there isn't an abundance of vibraphone-centered recordings such as Joe Locke's For the Love of You ...

387

Article: Album Review

Absolute Ensemble featuring Joe Zawinul: Absolute Zawinul

Read "Absolute Zawinul" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


The musical legacy of Austrian-born composer/keyboardist Joe Zawinul extends further than his illustrious tenure with Cannonball Adderley and Miles Davis (1960s-1970s) or as co-leader of the fusion super-group Weather Report (1970s-1980s) with fellow icon musicians Wayne Shorter and Jaco Pastorius. In his later days, although with less notoriety, he continued to gain momentum by recording and ...

410

Article: Album Review

Sheryl Bailey: A New Promise

Read "A New Promise" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


A New Promise by Sheryl Bailey is an outstanding work from a guitarist (and a rare release from a female jazz guitarist) who can run with the big dogs, in this case a big band ensemble. While her confident and stylish chops might suggest the phraseology of Kenny Burrell or Pat Metheny, she has a unique ...

361

Article: Album Review

Ralph Bowen: Due Reverence

Read "Due Reverence" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


Thanks to an American Idol culture and any number of other circumstances, the jazz universe is filled with extremely bright, if lesser known stars, who are just as talented as their more noted constellations. Such is the case with saxophonist Ralph Bowen, a truly bad-ass player who has appeared on over 60 recordings as a sideman ...

252

Article: Album Review

Jeff Campbell: A Declaration of Optimism

Read "A Declaration of Optimism" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


Bassist Jeff Campbell's A Declaration of Optimism's underlying theme of positivity is channeled into an engaging trio recording. An associate professor of jazz studies and contemporary media at the Eastman School of Music, Campbell divides his many duties between family, teaching, and performances with notables across the globe. When a good thing works, ...

275

Article: Album Review

Johnny Butler: Solo

Read "Solo" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


On any street corner or venue it's possible to hear a musician playing solo saxophone, its reed-song beckoning down thoroughfares to anyone that will listen. But by putting a spin on things, it's quite another matter to hear and see that horn wired into a laptop computer, as it provides multiphonic voices and looped patterns, fed ...


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