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Showing posts with label Music Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music Review. Show all posts

15 February 2009

Much Brass, a Bit of Twang and Plenty of Ray Charles

Note from a booth: Dan Nimmer, Wynton Marsalis' pianist, is from Milwaukee, that hotbed of Jazz artistry...the New Orleans of the North? Based on who I know and what I've heard, yes. Dan is what Mitch likes to call "a baller"... really, really, really good. But then, would Wynton have a schlemiel playing piano for HIM? No way.

Randy Shiner

Music Review

Much Brass, a Bit of Twang and Plenty of Ray Charles

Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times

Wynton Marsalis, left, and Willie Nelson performed at the Rose Theater on Monday.

Published: February 10, 2009

Willie Nelson and Wynton Marsalis first shared a stage at Frederick P. Rose Hall two years ago, finding common cause in the wide, slow river of American music. That interaction yielded an album, “Two Men With the Blues” (Blue Note), that flattered them equally. So there was recent precedent to draw on at the Rose Theater on Monday night, in the first of two sold-out concerts presented by Jazz at Lincoln Center.

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To their credit, the headliners didn’t repeat themselves; they played just one song from the album. It was “That’s All,” by Merle Travis, and, as on the album, it appeared as a grace note. Instead, following the suggestion of Mr. Nelson’s manager, they played songs associated with Ray Charles, the artist who most credibly covered all the pertinent terrain: jazz, country, blues and gospel, along with R&B and soul.

This was a fine idea made finer by the inclusion of Norah Jones, whose style can suggest a well-tended middle ground between the home bases of Mr. Marsalis and Mr. Nelson. She emerged early on to sing “Come Rain or Come Shine,” taking adroit and thoughtful liberties, and stayed on to join Mr. Nelson on “You Are My Sunshine,” over a loping Latin rhythm. For the rest of the night, drifting on and offstage, she added hints of cool refinement and (to a lesser degree) sensuous comfort. But by and large it was a night for companionable tensions. Mr. Nelson, seated with an amplified acoustic guitar, sang in the appealingly modest, intractably casual style that has always been his calling card. Mr. Marsalis, armed with his trumpet and his quintet, advanced a dapper erudition.

Some of the best teamwork came on trudging, hard-luck fare like “Busted” and “Losing Hand.” But Mr. Nelson also worked small wonders with “Unchain My Heart” and “Crying Time,” which had Ms. Jones singing harmony.

The arrangements, by Mr. Marsalis and others, featured plenty of intricate maneuvers for trumpet and saxophone. At times this seemed at odds with the vocals: Mr. Nelson’s plain-spoken grace on “I Love You So Much (It Hurts)” was half obscured by the chromatic scrawl of Mr. Marsalis and the tenor saxophonist Walter Blanding. On some other tunes the solo sections stretched long enough that the singers appeared stranded, despite engaging work by the soloists, including Mr. Nelson’s harmonica player, Mickey Raphael.

And a few anticipated highlights fell short. “Here We Go Again,” which Ms. Jones recorded with Charles shortly before he died in 2004, sounded unrehearsed. “What’d I Say” and “Hit the Road Jack” were rousing but contrived. And the absence of “Georgia on My Mind” felt like a missed chance, though it appears on “Two Men With the Blues.” (It’s the song that best connects Mr. Nelson to Charles, and Ms. Jones could have nailed it.)

But the concert’s core results were compelling, largely because of a workhorse rhythm section: Dan Nimmer on piano, Carlos Henriquez on bass and Ali Jackson on drums. Whatever the groove, they were sharp and committed, making the others sound better. With that foundation, Mr. Nelson and Mr. Marsalis were free to move as far in each other’s direction as needed, with every ounce of their easy aplomb.

23 July 2008

Live at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival


Was listening/watching "Canteloupe Island" by Herbie Hancock live from the Monterrey Jazz Festival on the MCJAZ station, and wanted to see who played the alto sax on the track and came up with this very fine review of Thelonius Monk live at the Monterey Jazz Festival 1964. It looks to be a fine addition to the library. By the way, this was Herbie in fine, fine form. "Canteloupe Island" never fails to impress.

Randy Shiner


Live at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival
Thelonious Monk | Monterey Jazz Festival Records (2007)
By Greg Camphire Discuss

As part of the series of recordings launching the Monterey Jazz Festival’s new record label, this previously unreleased 1964 set by Thelonious Monk offers a glimpse of the maestro with an augmented version of his working quartet of the time, during which the pianist was finally receiving much-deserved mainstream attention from the public. Monk can be heard clearly enjoying his time in the spotlight after more than two decades of perfecting his singular approach; he plays some of his better-known tunes in a relaxed manner and gives his sidemen ample space to stretch out before an appreciative audience.
Most of the six tracks on Live at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival approach or eclipse the ten-minute mark, allowing plenty of solo opportunities for the quartet as well as the added MJF Workshop horns, who are led by multi-reedist and west coast legend Buddy Collette and appear on two of the album’s tracks: “Think of One” and the often-played staple “Straight, No Chaser.”

Considering the possibilities of having five additional horns delving deeply into Monk’s dense harmonic frameworks, it’s slightly disappointing to hear the only-average results. While the extra brass does add some heft to the melody statements, their casual background punctuations otherwise come off as cursory sketches rather than fully integrated arrangements. Perhaps the collaboration was rushed, but it’s only a minor complaint. Special mention goes to trumpeters Bobby Bryant and Melvin Moore, who both rise to the challenge with hot, energetic solos full of daring verve and showmanship.

Elsewhere, right-hand man Charlie Rouse expounds upon Monk’s themes masterfully, as the tenor saxophonist is captured here at about the halfway point in his 10-year tenure with the composer. His bright lines become intricately threaded within the architecture of the compositions, even when Monk’s accompaniment develops into sparse, haiku-like commentary, or when the pianist lays out entirely.

Indeed, these moments when Monk is absent behind any given soloist are fascinating; presumably the pianist is getting up and doing his patented dance around the bandstand, indulging in the funky freedom his music embodies while the band splits into a horn/bass/drums trio anchored by an effervescent Ben Riley and solid subbing bassist Steve Swallow. The non-chordal lineups reflect the similar experiments of Monk disciples Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane with that particular format, allowing for further extrapolations of a song’s finer points while unencumbered by any specific harmonic weight that the pianist might suggest.

At this point in his career, Monk received some complaints from die-hard fans that found his appealingly unorthodox approach somewhat tempered by age; that he had settled a bit too comfortably into his own repertoire. While the familiar set list and lengthy sidemen solos of Live at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival may reflect some of these observations, one listen to the album’s fierce rendition of “Evidence” reveals that Monk and his band are at the height of their creative powers. The quartet tears it up throughout the frenetic, tightly-wound changes, encapsulating a perfect description of Monk’s music: distinctively angular, sharp-witted and, most of all, swingin’.

Visit Thelonious Monk on the web.
Thelonious Monk at All About Jazz.


Track listing: Blue Monk; Evidence; Bright Mississippi; Rhythm-a-ning; Think of One; Straight, No Chaser.

Personnel: Thelonious Monk: piano; Charlie Rouse: tenor saxophone; Steve Swallow: bass; Ben Riley: drums; Buddy Collette: saxophone, flute (5, 6); Lou Blackburn: trombone (5, 6); Jack Nimitz: baritone saxophone (5, 6); Bobby Bryant: trumpet (5, 6); Melvin Moore: trumpet (5, 6).

Style: Modern Jazz/Free Improvisation | Published: October 05, 2007




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greg camphire is a musician/writer born and raised in pittsburgh, PA who currently resides in los angeles, CA for some strange reason. More about greg