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Turtle Island Quartet: A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane
by Terrell Kent Holmes
The Turtle Island Quartet honors saxophone titan John Coltrane with A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane, putting its distinct signature on tunes written by, inspired by, or associated with Trane in ways that are faithful to the original concepts while giving them new dimensions and depth. Jimmy Garrison's signature four-note bass ...
Michel Camilo: Spirit of the Moment
by Joel Roberts
Although he was born in the Dominican Republic and has won Latin Grammy awards, it would be inaccurate to lump pianist Michel Camilo into the catch-all category of Latin jazz. Sure, his roots are in Latin music and he imbues much of his playing with Afro-Caribbean beats, but he's best described as a jazz artist. Period. ...
Stanton Moore: III
by AAJ Italy Staff
Questo terzo lavoro da solista di Stanton Moore rimanda ad alcune tappe significative della storia del blues e della musica popolare statunitense. Le dodici misure e le cadenze blues qui sono colte nel loro incontro con il folklore, con il jazz e le sue forme improvvisative, con il rock e il funk, di cui questo disco ...
Hiromi: Time Control
by Jim Santella
"It is time to be out there...in many different ways. - from Hiromi's liner notes to Time Control. It's true. She can easily take Best of the Year honors with this album, but Hiromi is still an unknown quantity. Many have yet to hear the exciting and creative sounds that come from ...
Turtle Island String Quartet: A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane
by C. Michael Bailey
John Coltrane has been the inspiration for a number of musical considerations. Karrin Allyson's Ballads: Remembering John Coltrane (Concord, 2001) was a brilliantly well-conceived thematic recording. The Marsalis brothers each released Coltrane-related thoughts in Wynton's Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra A Love Supreme (Palmetto, 2005) and Branford's Branford Marsalis Quartet Performs Coltrane's A Love Supreme Live in ...
Tierney Sutton Band: On The Other Side
by Ernest Barteldes
For this studio album, Los Angeles-based vocalist Tierney Sutton and her band came up with the concept of assembling a collection of songs which had to do--for better or worse--with the pursuit of happiness, something our founding fathers guaranteed us, among other things, as stated on the disc's sleeve. The songs, however, are ...
The Very Tall Band: Oscar Peterson, Ray Brown, Milt Jackson: What's Up
by C. Michael Bailey
What's Up is the addendum to Telarc's 1999 release of Live at the Blue Note, cataloging a holiday performance of elder statesmen pianist Oscar Peterson, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, and bassist Ray Brown with the support of relative youngster drummer Karriem Riggins. Recorded on Thanksgiving weekend, 1998 at New York City's Blue Note Club, these performances are ...
Hiromi: Time Control
by C. Michael Bailey
Should one listen chronologically to Hiromi Uehara's still-young musical output, Another Mind, Brain, and Spiral, then Time Control should come as no surprise. Hiromi has been progressing toward the outer reaches of fusion with every release, and with the addition of Screaming Headless Torso guitarist David Fiuczynski to her lineup, she has achieved the synthetic Nirvana ...
Randy Brecker: Some Skunk Funk
by Hrayr Attarian
Occasionally delving into something familiar and getting exactly what one expects can be safe and reassuring. One does not want to be surprised all the time, because adventure has its place--and so does a cozy everyday routine. This release by Randy Brecker, which is pleasant but lacks any surprises, feels exactly like going to your neighborhood ...
The Very Tall Band: What's Up?
by Franz A. Matzner
Like director's cuts, material scrounged from studio archives isn't always worthy of release. As with scenes that belong on the cutting room floor, some tracks, particularly from live performances, should remain closeted away--or at the very least held for box set bonus tracks targeting the completist. Hearing the seven tunes presented on What's ...





