Listening Room (Repost) – “Earfood”
Roy Hargrove - I'm Not So Sure
From "Earfood" : 2008 : Emarcy/Groovin' High 176418
Trumpeter Roy Hargrove recorded this album with his working quintet and it was immediately met with great reviews and is definitely one of the best recordings of 2008. The opening track is the Cedar Walton composition I'm Not So Sure which sets the table for the rest of the album with the players giving the tune all they've got and not letting up. The Stinger is a swinging track by Hargrove that features some fiery playing by Justin Robinson, while Mr. Clean by Weldon Irvine is a nice showcase for the talents of Gerald Clayton on the keys.
Players:
Roy Hargrove - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Justin Robinson - Alto Sax
Gerald Clayton - Piano
Danton Boller - Bass
Montez Coleman - Drums
“Jazz Standards That Aren’t”
NEWSWEEK
April 25, 2009
By SETH COLTER WALLS
If Ellington went indie, he'd sound something like Darcy James Argue
In high-school jazz bands there's always a group of players who yawn at the song list. Even when the music isn't that old, it sounds that way to them. Once rehearsals are over, though, the kids pop in headphones to get their fix of their kind of music: maybe Charles Mingus, but more likely hip-hop, punk or dance. It's not hard to see why, since there hasn't been a common language between big band and the large swath of modern pop forms for a long time. Though big band has produced many (mostly unheard) innovators since the days of Count Basie and the Duke—think Sun Ra or Carla Bley—a lot of that music has belonged to the free-jazz fringe. By contrast, the gentler innovators who snuggle up close to classical music might seem a tad tame to listeners who need their jazz to cook. This isn't the fault of the free-jazzers or the classically minded composers. It's just that jazz has needed writers and players to reconnect the tradition to more modern forms, without falling victim to pastiche.
Each generation tries its hand at grafting new styles onto jazz, with varying results—note Gil Evans's not-always successful use of Jimi Hendrix's music—but lately there have been some hip moves in this direction. On the small-ensemble front, Jason Moran has turned the hip-hop anthem "Planet Rock" inside out on piano, while the Bad Plus have proved they can work up a fever interpreting, by turns, the music of Nirvana and Stravinsky. But often as not, the thrills given off by these mash-ups are those of reinvention, as opposed to sui generis invention itself.
For a wholly original take on big band's past, present and future, look to Darcy James Argue, a 33-year-old Brooklynite who has composed a batch of manifestoes that draws on past legacies, and adds a little postpunk energy to boot. A onetime student of big-band visionary Bob Brookmeyer, Argue himself seems a natural product of an era in which genres can be shuffled with ease on iPod playlists. Talking with him, you go from discussing obscure Italian serialist composers to indie bands like TV on the Radio. The composer calls his music "steampunk big band," a reference to the niche art movement that fantasizes about modern tech innovations existing in the steam-powered era. That range is reflected—and, more important, is made frictionless—on Argue's debut record, "Infernal Machines." Argue's tunes can command your attention anywhere—no small feat in our media-saturated world. He and his 18-piece Secret Society band pull off the trick by pairing electro-influenced rhythms with fuzzed-out guitars, fearsome horns and chamber-music voicings in the woodwinds. For all this panstylistic erudition, though, Argue's music still swings hard whenever it wants. "Transit" explodes with an elaborate fire that recalls Mingus's "Let My Children Hear Music." The song "Jacobin Club," named after Robespierre's merry band, slinks with the sly wit of "Such Sweet Thunder"–era Ellington, proving Argue is no enemy of history. Listen on headphones, and you can hear a lot of rocklike production layering. Two thirds through "Habeas Corpus (for Maher Arar)"— a civil-rights ode that's timely in light of the Obama administration's release of Bush-era "torture memos"—the production supports its trombones, stabbing like sirens, with a guitar that chugs ominously low in the mix. Full Article...
“Icons Among Us – Trailer”
Here is a promo for "Icons Among Us". I personally don't get The Documentary Channel (as I am sure is true for most of you) but I am very excited for this to come out on DVD, hopefully sooner than later...
“Icons Among Us”
“Icons Among Us,” a four-part series beginning Monday on the Documentary Channel, serves as a retort to Ken Burns’s 2001 television documentary “Jazz.” It doesn’t make this explicit, but it doesn’t need to. There’s no other elephant in the room.
Mr. Burns’s series, you may remember, outlined styles and eras and individual accomplishments. His film — with a narrator supplying context and imposing historical judgments — attempted to tell the story from the music’s beginning. He put forth a big extra-musical idea: jazz is the music of sophisticated Americans coming to terms with their country’s sickness about race. And he did not bother much with current trends, putting all of jazz since 1960, more or less, inside its final episode.
When Mr. Burns’s documentary came out, some viewers protested the way he seemed to shine up jazz’s past at the expense of its present. This new film strikes a vague blow for those dissenters. In many ways “Icons Among Us” is starkly anti-Burnsian. It suggests jazz more as a philosophical ideal — “a reflection of what life could be,” in the guitarist Bill Frisell’s on-camera words, “where there’s infinite possibilities, and no one gets hurt” — and less as a particular sound or tradition. It’s mostly about musicians currently under 50. It has a lot of time for jazz that’s basically pop: specifically, jam-band music or hip-hop. It presents jazz musicians as gifted but down-to-earth people, not demigods. And it’s extra-wary about the tyranny of the past. Full Article....
Listening Room – “Pass It On”
This 2008 release by the Dave Holland Sextet features new arrangements of eight original compositions by Holland that have appeared on his past recordings and show why Holland is one of jazz's great modern composers. For "Pass It On" Holland employs a three horn front-line as well as including the massive talents of pianist Mulgrew Miller and drummer Eric Harland. The one non-Holland composition on the album is the stellar opening track The Sum of All Parts, written by trombonist Robin Eubanks. The track Rivers Run (originally recorded in 1988) is a nice tribute by Holland to his 1970's duets partner, the great free jazz saxophonist Sam Rivers.
Released 2008 : Emarcy / Dare2 Records : Catalog # 06007
Players:
Dave Holland - Double Bass
Robin Eubanks - Trombone
Antonio Hart - Alto Sax
Alex Sipiagin - Trumpet
Mulgrew Miller - Piano
Eric Harland - Drums
Dave Holland Sextet - The Sum of All Parts from "Pass It On"
Listening Room – “A Ride To The Other Side…”

Derrick Gardner & The Jazz Prophets - "Mac Daddy Grip"
Derrick Gardner & The Jazz Prophets - "Funky Straight"
From "A Ride To The Other Side" : 2008 : Owl Studios
This is trumpeter Derrick Gardner's second album with his band The Jazz Prophets. Utilizing a very talented three horn front line, the music is reminiscent of the great hard-bop albums of the sixties while incorporating some elements of nu-jazz to sound very modern at the same time.
Players:
Derrick Gardner - Trumpet
Rob Dixon - Tenor Sax
Vincent Gardner - Trombone
Anthony Wonsey - Piano
Rodney Whitaker - Bass
Donald Edwards - Drums
Listening Room – “Compass”

Joshua Redman - "Faraway"
Joshua Redman - "Hutchhiker's Guide"
From "Compass" : 2009 : Nonesuch Records
Released in 2009 on Nonesuch Records, this is Joshua Redman's second stellar piano-less trio album in as many years, although this album does include a couple of quartet and quintet tracks as well. Redman has brought together some great players, including the great young bassist Reuben Rogers and drummer Brian Blade . Far from being a commercially friendly release, "Compass" assures the adventurous jazz listener that there is still some great talent out there exploring the directions that jazz can go.
Players:
Joshua Redman - Tenor Sax
Larry Grenadier - Bass
Reuben Rogers - Bass
Brian Blade - Drums
Gregory Hutcherson - Drums



