Listening Room – “Hidden Treasures”

This piano-less trio recording by Gary Smulyan showcases one of the  most talented baritone sax players around today.  He is joined by top-notch players Christian McBride and Billy Drummond, and as the title suggests Smulyan chose to record ten jazz pieces that have not been re-visited much since they were originally released.

HIdden Treasures
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Released 2006  :  Reservoir Music  :  Catalog # 185

Players:
Gary Smulyan – Baritone Sax
Christian McBride – Bass
Billy Drummond – Drums

Gary Smulyan – Stretch in F from “Hidden Treasures”

Gary Smulyan – Off The Cuff from “Hidden Treasures”

“Looking to the Present While Peeking at the Past”

peace

NY TIMES
April 24, 2009
By NATE CHINEN

The Five Peace Band, a jazz-rock juggernaut, presents a parody of abundance. Led by the guitarist John McLaughlin and the keyboardist Chick Corea — both restless virtuosos, and legends at 67 — the group works hard and fast, with heroic stamina and superhuman technique. Its overall effect can be exhilarating and exhausting. On Thursday, in its first of several sold-out nights at the Rose Theater, a three-hour concert became a tempest, extravagant in almost every sense.

But it wasn’t as if the crowd came unprepared. Mr. McLaughlin and Mr. Corea initiated their partnership last year, touring widely and generating a glut of bootleg videos online. More to the point, the Five Peace Band can’t help recalling a pair of fusion flagships from the 1970s: the Mahavishnu Orchestra, led by Mr. McLaughlin, and Return to Forever, led by Mr. Corea. And as Mr. McLaughlin acknowledged near the top of the show, it has been 40 years since he and Mr. Corea worked on the Miles Davis album “In a Silent Way,” a calmer touchstone of the jazz-rock era.

Here they made some effort to turn the page, opting not to play “In a Silent Way” or its companion piece, “It’s About That Time.” Yet there was a ’70s-era notion of valor coded into much of their playing. Mr. McLaughlin’s solos were marvels of velocity and precision, and though he introduced the occasional quirk — say, a pitch slightly bent with his guitar’s tremolo arm — the outcome always felt resolute.  Full Article…

Listening Room – “Hand in Hand”

Mulgrew Miller – “Grew’s Tune”

Mulgrew Miller – “Hand in Hand”

From “Hand in Hand” : 1992 : Novus Records

Pianist Mulgrew Miller put together a great band for this 1992 release on Novus Records.  It was also no small feat that album featured exclusively Miller originals and there is not weak moment on the record.  This is modern post-bop at its finest.

Players:
Mulgrew Miller – Piano
Kenny Garrett – Alto Sax
Joe Henderson – Tenor Sax
Eddie Henderson – Trumpet
Steve Nelson – Vibes
Christian McBride – Bass
Lewis Nash – Drums