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Eugene Marlow's Heritage Ensemble: Celebrations

by Bruce Lindsay
Celebrations, the Heritage Ensemble's second album following Making The Music Our Own (MEII Enterprises, 2006), is subtitled Eugene Marlow's Heritage Ensemble Interprets Festive Melodies From The Hebraic Songbook. The review copy arrived with a polite but serious covering letter rather than the usual hyperbolic press release. The album's closing track is a lecture by bandleader and ...
Wonderful Discovery

Label: MEII Enterprises
Released: 2007
Track listing: Mr. O's Groove; Song for an Old Soul; Summertime; Arturo's Reverie; Flight; Go Like The Wind; Down the Road;
Raices (Roots); A Smile for Everyone; Take-A-Break; Old Havana; Wonderful Discovery.
Wonderful Discovery

Label: MEII Enterprises
Released: 2007
Track listing: Mr. O's Groove; Song for an Old Soul; Summertime; Arturo's Reverie; Flight; Go Like The Wind; Down the Road; Raices (Roots); A Smile for Everyone; Take-A-Break; Old Havana; Wonderful Discovery.
Arturo O'Farrill: Wonderful Discovery

by Michael P. Gladstone
Pianist Arturo O'Farrill acknowledges the compositions of Dr. Eugene Marlow on Wonderful Discovery, where one of the composer's longtime wishes is fulfilled with an all Latin jazz album of his tunes. All but three of the dozen tunes are from Marlow's pen, along with one O'Farrill composition ("Arturo's Reverie"), an improvisation by percussionist Bobby Sanabria ("Raices"), ...
Arturo O'Farrill and Friends: Wonderful Discovery

by Ken Dryden
Even though Dr. Eugene Marlow has an impressive résumé as a composer/arranger and educator, many jazz fans are likely to have never heard of him at all though he has written numerous jazz and classical pieces for solo instruments, chamber ensembles and big bands, while also participating in the BMI Jazz Composers Workshop since 1998. Wonderful ...
Arturo O'Farrill and Friends: Wonderful Discovery

by Jerry D'Souza
Long before the Wonderful Discovery that constitutes the music and the musicians on this CD, Eugene Marlow had discovered Latin music. The muse hit him way back in London, England in the '40s. Jump cut to the '90s and Marlow was listening to Tito Puente. From then on, there were quite a few Latin bands that ...
Eugene Marlow: Making the Music Our Own

by Jim Santella
Jazz pianist and composer Eugene Marlow reinterprets songs from the Jewish vernacular on Making the Music Our Own, along with a mainstream trio and quintet. The first five tracks were recorded in 1986 with a bassist and drummer whose names have been lost. The next four were recorded in 1995 along with the personnel listed. Marlow's ...