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388

Article: Album Review

Jon Gold: Brazil Confidential

Read "Brazil Confidential" reviewed by Jerry D'Souza


Jon Gold is a fluid and lyrical pianist with a deft approach, who lets his ideas flow with facile ease. His artistry is not surprising, given that his early influences were classical composers like Ravel, as well as jazz pianists Oscar Peterson and McCoy Tyner. He was entranced enough by Tyner to learn almost all of ...

415

Article: Album Review

Geri Allen: Flying Toward The Sound

Read "Flying Toward The Sound" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


One of modern jazz's foremost pianists, Geri Allen exhibits a musical profundity that is coupled by lyricism and soul. Whether leading a trio of esteemed peers--Charlie Haden and Paul Motian--at that landmark venue, Live at the Village Vanguard (DIW, 2000), or giving homage to the obscure jazz matriarch, pianist Mary Lou Williams, with Zodiac Suite: Revisited ...

528

Article: Live Review

Andy Fusco and Friends

Read "Andy Fusco and Friends" reviewed by David A. Orthmann


Andy Fusco and Friends Kean UniversityEnlow Recital Hall Hillside, NJ March 25, 2010 There was a stark contrast between the first and the second half of a concert billed as “Jazz on the Fazioli" and “Andy Fusco and Friends." Pianist Ted Rosenthal opened with jazz interpretations on classical ...

299

Article: Album Review

Oles Brothers with Rob Brown: Live At SJC

Read "Live At SJC" reviewed by Mark Corroto


It's funny how certain jazz players find other kindred spirits to play with. Where would Ornette Coleman have been if he hadn't found Charlie Haden? Or McCoy Tyner without John Coltrane? Like minds always seem to find and sometimes track down each other. Such is the case with the Polish brothers Marcin Oles (bass) and Bartlomiej ...

1,363

Article: Album Review

John McLaughlin and The 4th Dimension: John McLaughlin and The 4th Dimension: To The One

Read "John McLaughlin and The 4th Dimension: To The One" reviewed by John Kelman


After two studio albums that fell into the category of special projects--the large-casted but surprisingly cohesive Industrial Zen (Verve, 2005) and synth-laden Floating Point (Abstract Logix, 2008), where the iconic guitarist flipped his past concerns of playing eastern music with a western sensibility by recruiting a largely Indian group to play some very western fusion--John McLaughlin ...

247

Article: Album Review

Brandon Wright: Boiling Point

Read "Boiling Point" reviewed by Dan Bilawsky


The word tenor, in Latin, refers to “a continuous holding to a course," and tenor saxophonist Brandon Wright does just that on Boiling Point. Whether Wright is engaging in a musical boxing match with trumpeter Alex Sipiagin or crooning over pianist David Kikoski on an established ballad, he always seems to maintain a consistent musical presence ...

235

Article: Album Review

Tobias Gebb & Unit 7: free at last

Read "free at last" reviewed by Terrell Kent Holmes


On free at last, drummer Tobias Gebb shows great depth and maturity as a composer and arranger. This recording is a balanced mix of originals and standards, from various musical genres, combined to produce rich sounds and vibrant colors. Veteran altoist Bobby Watson and young tenor lion Stacy Dillard take star turns on ...

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 ...

439

Article: Bailey's Bundles

The State of OA2 Records 2010: Nelda Swiggett and Debbie Poryes

Read "The State of OA2 Records 2010: Nelda Swiggett and Debbie Poryes" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


The umbrella record label Origin Arts has three imprint labels beneath it: Origin Records, founded in 1997 by Seattle drummer John Bishop, focusing primarily on prominent jazz artists from the Northwest United States. OA2 records was begun in 2002 with the aim of broadening Origin's talent attention countrywide. Origin Classical was later founded with not simply ...

307

Article: Album Review

Jessica Williams: The Art of the Piano

Read "The Art of the Piano" reviewed by Jack Bowers


Jessica Williams has been playing piano since she was four years old, and realized early on that she wanted to continue doing so for the rest of her life. Her choice is our reward. The Art of the Piano, a solo piano set, was recorded in May 2009 at the Triple Door in Seattle, WA. The ...


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