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320

Article: Album Review

Joel Harrison String Choir: The Music of Paul Motian

Read "The Music of Paul Motian" reviewed by John Kelman


Joel Harrison has stretched the boundaries of form and freedom for over fifteen years, but Urban Myths (HighNote, 2009) and, in particular, the ambitious The Wheel (Innova, 2008), have represented significant evolutionary leaps. The Wheel married a conventional horn-led jazz quintet with a classical string quartet, its collection of Harrison originals pushing the limits of cross-pollination ...

417

Article: Extended Analysis

Roberta Piket: Sides, Colors

Read "Roberta Piket: Sides, Colors" reviewed by Victor L. Schermer


Roberta Piket Sides, ColorsThirteenth Note Records2011 Roberta Piket is a pianist with rich musical abilities who is making a name for herself as one of the best of her generation of keyboard players. Her 2011 release, Sides, Colors is a well-conceived recording, using her trio supplemented by strings and ...

516

Article: From Far and Wide

Charles Fambrough: A Friend Unlike Any Other, R.I.P.

Read "Charles Fambrough: A Friend Unlike Any Other, R.I.P." reviewed by Mark Kramer


For my dear friend Charles, my second Brother: Bassist Charles Fambrough, born in Philadelphia on August 25th, 1950 and known as “Broski," died on January 1st, 2011 at 5:00 p.m. with his daughter and wife at his side. Reportedly, he ever-so-gently squeezed their hands as he held them, and smiled. Then he was gone. ...

Album

Pieces of Jade

Label: Resonance Records
Released: 2010
Track listing: I Hear A Rhapsody; Sacre Bleu (take 1); Green Dolphin Street; Sacre Bleu (take 2); Woody'n You; My Foolish Heart (Rehearsal Tape: Bill Evans and Scott LaFaro; Interview with Bill Evans by George Klabin; Memories for Scotty.

246

Article: Album Review

Boris Kozlov: Double Standard

Read "Double Standard" reviewed by Dan Bilawsky


Selling a solo bass disc--both artistically and commercially speaking--is no easy feat. The demanding physical aspects of such a project, requiring a bassist to have the endurance to sustain perpetual motion and interest on such a behemoth of an instrument, is one problem. Another issue is general marketability. The average jazz fan might be quite happy ...

500

Article: Interview

Linda Oh: Persevering Against the Odds

Read "Linda Oh: Persevering Against the Odds" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


In an arena that is overwhelmingly dominated by her male counterparts, bassist Linda May-Han Oh is going to be a force with which to be reckoned. Her auspicious, self-produced debut, Entry (2009), was lauded by critics, and was one of pianist Vijay Iyer's top picks for 2009. Born in Malaysia and living in New York, Oh ...

149

Article: Album Review

Jean-Michel Pilc: True Story

Read "True Story" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


There are few pianists in any realm of music as expressive, and with such extraordinary touch and dynamics, as Jean-Michel Pilc. He is also so enormously inventive that he might be perhaps one of very, very few pianists to inhabit the same rarefied atmosphere as Bill Evans. And that is only half the story. To Pilc, ...

116

Article: Album Review

Dave Wilson: Spiral

Read "Spiral" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


The nature of successful interlocking is that the pieces fit each other with seamless perfection. In a group of disparate musicians this is not always possible. However, with the ensemble that saxophonist Dave Wilson has put together the pieces seem to fit with enviable perfection. There is a swirling energy that keeps the unit cohesive; but, ...

433

Article: Album Review

Kerry Politzer Quartet: Blue in Blue

Read "Blue in Blue" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


Two of the most enduring and popular ensemble set-ups in jazz are the piano trio--piano/bass/drums--and the piano trio, with a saxophone joining in. Pianist Kerry Politzer combines formats on Blue in Blue, with six tunes featuring her trio and four more with guest saxophonist Donny McCaslin.While You Took Me In (Polisonic Records, 2007) featured ...

147

Article: Album Review

Dave Wilson: Spiral

Read "Spiral" reviewed by Dan Bilawsky


Saxophonist Dave Wilson's Spiral isn't directed at one specific jazz-listening demographic. High-brow originals ("Spiral") line up next to new arrangements of neglected jazz works (Richie Beirach's “Elm"), while rock-based performances (Creed's “My Own Prison") reside near gentler soprano saxophone statements ("Summer Breezes"). Fortunately, disparate stylistic directions don't derail the overall sound or focus of this project ...


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