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Article: Play This!

The Five Corners Quintet: Trading Eights

Read "The Five Corners Quintet: Trading Eights" reviewed by Ludovico Granvassu


The Five Corners Quintet was a Finnish combo that doubled as both launchpad and meeting point--bringing together up-and-coming players and established figures alike, with veteran Eero Koivistoinen as well as younger musicians including Timo Lassy (saxophones), Jukka Eskola (trumpet and flugelhorn), Kim Rantala and Mikael Jakobsson (piano), Antti Lötjönen and Tapani Nevalainen (bass), and Teppo Mäkynen ...

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Article: Record Label Profile

We Jazz Records: Finland's indie label shaking up the global conversation

Read "We Jazz Records: Finland's indie label shaking up the global conversation" reviewed by Rob Garratt


The past decade's genre-bending jazz renaissance has been well-documented, but between the trailblazing players taking improvised music to increasingly hip places, and the ever-growing audience queuing up to hear them, sits the homegrown labels bottling these brave, thrilling (r)evolutions for all to hear. In conversations about the state of jazz today, it's often easier to distil ...

Album

Lampela x Eskola

Label: Ricky-Tick Records
Released: 2010

Album

Firstborn

Label: Ricky-Tick Records
Released: 2009

Album

Round Two

Label: Ricky-Tick Records
Released: 2009

Album

Chasin' The Jazz Gone By

Label: Ricky-Tick Records
Released: 2005
Track listing: Blue Cycles; Trading Eights; Interlope; This Could Be The Start Of Something; Straight Up; Three Corners; Case Study; Lighthouse; Before We Say Goodbye; Unsquare Bossa; The Devil Kicks; Jamming (With Mr. Hoagland).

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Article: Album Review

The Five Corners Quintet: Chasin' The Jazz Gone By

Read "Chasin' The Jazz Gone By" reviewed by Budd Kopman


Chasin' The Jazz Gone By is the product of producer Tuomas Kallio, who wanted to recreate, using both analog and digital equipment, the sound and the visceral coolness of jazz from the 1950s and 1960s, which means the Blue Note sound of hard bop. And make no mistake, this record is very, very cool, deeply enjoyable ...


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