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Album

Waiting for Columbus

Label: Warner Music Group
Released: 2000
Track listing: Join The Band; Fat Man In The Bathtub; All That You Dream; Oh, Atlanta; Old Folks Boogie; Dixie Chicken; Tripe Face Boogie; Rocket In My Pocket; Time Loves A Hero; Day Or Night; Mercenary Territory; Spanish Moon; Willin'; Don't Bogart That Joint; A Political Blues; Sailin' Shoes; Feats Don't Fail Me Now.

268

Article: Album Review

Pat Metheny: Trio > Live

Read "Trio > Live" reviewed by David Adler


This two-disc release documents performances from the 2000 world tour of the Pat Metheny Trio, featuring Larry Grenadier on bass and Bill Stewart on drums. Like the trio’s spectacular studio release from earlier this year, the live album draws on material that spans Metheny’s career. The opener takes us back to the first track on Metheny’s ...

281

Article: Album Review

Pat Metheny: Trio > Live

Read "Trio > Live" reviewed by David Adler


This two-disc release documents performances from the 2000 world tour of the Pat Metheny Trio, featuring Larry Grenadier on bass and Bill Stewart on drums. Like the trio's spectacular studio release from earlier this year, the live album draws on material that spans Metheny's career. The opener takes us back to the first track on Metheny's ...

255

Article: Album Review

Fourplay: Yes, Please!

Read "Yes, Please!" reviewed by Dave Hughes


There's no doubt that Fourplay is, collectively, one of the most talent-laden ensembles in contemporary jazz today. But their output to date, while always accessible to the masses, has alternated between interesting, worthwhile comtempo fare (their eponymous debut CD and their third release, Elixir ) and more watered-down, commercially-oriented “smooth jazz" ( Between the Sheets and ...

318

Article: Album Review

Brad Mehldau: Places

Read "Places" reviewed by David Adler


Aside from being his most directly personal statement to date, Places is also Brad Mehldau's second all-original album, the first being 1999's solo piano tour de force, Elegaic Cycle. The young piano sensation splits the program evenly between solo piano explorations and trio pieces with his regular cohorts, bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jorge Rossy. Each ...

298

Article: Album Review

Mark Turner: Ballad Session

Read "Ballad Session" reviewed by Mike Neely


Mark Turner’s Ballad Session presents a tenor saxophonist of extraordinary poise and emotional attunement. Throughout this recording Turner deftly maintains his balance, avoiding sentimentality, presenting a consistently direct emotional response to the compositions and to his fellow musicians. This disc reveals Mark Turner to be a young musician to watch carefully. Pianist Kevin Hays is an ...

254

Article: Album Review

Joshua Redman: Beyond

Read "Beyond" reviewed by David Adler


Joshua Redman debuts a new quartet on this formidable set of originals. Pianist Aaron Goldberg, bassist Reuben Rogers, and drummer Gregory Hutchinson quickly establish themselves as a killer unit on “Courage (Asymmetric Aria)" and “Belonging (Lopsided Lullaby)", two fast and busy odd-metered romps. Interestingly, Redman plays alto on the latter, as well as on the gripping ...

194

Article: Album Review

Yellowjackets: The Best of Yellowjackets

Read "The Best of Yellowjackets" reviewed by David Adler


From this greatest hits collection one learns that the album to get is 1981's Yellowjackets, the one with the honeycomb cover. The album to avoid, on the other hand, is 1985's Samurai Samba. Mirage a Trois, released in 1983, falls somewhere in between. Sweepingly general overview: The group started out great with fire-breathing guitarist Robben Ford, ...

184

Article: Album Review

Steely Dan: Two Against Nature

Read "Two Against Nature" reviewed by David Adler


It’s hard to know what to expect from a band after an absence of nearly two decades, but safe to say that this new batch of Steely Dan songs takes a little while to grow on the listener. Some just don’t work: “What a Shame About Me" tells a compelling tale but gets bogged down in ...

184

Article: Album Review

Steely Dan: Two Against Nature

Read "Two Against Nature" reviewed by David Adler


It’s hard to know what to expect from a band after an absence of nearly two decades, but safe to say that this new batch of Steely Dan songs takes a little while to grow on the listener. Some just don’t work: “What a Shame About Me" tells a compelling tale but gets bogged down in ...


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