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Bop n Jazz writes up Kenny Shanker’s new CD “Action City”….

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criticaljazz.com

Kenny Shanker’s Action City is ridiculously good!

Shanker’s sophomore release on the acclaimed Posi-Tone label shows an exponential growth for an artist whose musical stock should be an arrow pointing straight up! This quintet can swing like a beast and given the fact that Action City boasts all original compositions, Kenny Shanker is indeed a rising star!

The band is A list and his regular rhythm section to boot so the chemistry leaps from your speakers. A gifted and intense lyrical surgeon, Kenny Shanker’s tone has grown yet never overshadows this amazing collective. Pianist Mike Eckroth, bassist Yoshi Waki and drummer Brian Fishler are all working from the same page of the Shanker harmonic playbook. An old fashioned straight ahead blowing sessions with contemporary compositions, it doesn’t get much better than this. While the percussive and more Latin influenced “Summer Siesta” smolders, the gorgeous ballad “Another Morning” may just be the hidden gem of the release. 

Action City has surprises for everyone and is easily one of the best for 2014. 

 

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JazzTimes review of Michael Dease “Relentless”…

Michael Dease - Relentless cover

 

 

 

 

jazztimes.com

Michael Dease
Relentless
Posi-Tone

 Like doo-wop, trad-jazz or rockabilly, big-band jazz is so closely associated with a bygone era that any musician testing its waters must find a way to transcend retro or just give in and drag out the charts from the swing era. Trombonist Michael Dease, on his debut big-band effort, transcends.

One way the bandleader—who’s led smaller combos and served as a prolific sideman—achieves that is by recruiting a stellar cast of contemporary players, each comfortable enough to comprise five percent of a team but also capable of stepping up to deliver a minute or two of compelling, bracing soloing. In addition to Dease, the band consists of five other trombonists (plus two others, including Wycliffe Gordon, guesting); five saxophonists (and another on a single track); seven trumpeters and a crack rhythm section: pianist Miki Hayama, bassist Linda Oh, drummer Ulysses Owens Jr. and Gwendolyn Burgett on percussion.

Dease is a dexterous traffic cop who knows precisely when to keep the ensemble swinging en masse and when to invite one of his chosen crewmembers to let go and blow. But the greater task at hand, at which arranger Dease and producer Marc Free excel, is how to shape the sound of a battery of horns to appeal to a modern audience. They do so by stressing the rich melodicism built into the compositions while allowing the musicians to go to town manipulating trickier rhythms and taking edgier solo turns.

“Two Bass Hit” eschews the angularity of both Miles’ and Dizzy’s interpretations but is in its own way even wilder. Randy Brecker’s “Roppongi” (with guest guitarist Andrew Swift) has more in common with Tower of Power than anything the classic big bands might’ve conjured. Of Dease’s own compositions, the title track’s loping airiness and the hard-bop intensity of “The Takeover” ensure that no one will ever confuse Relentless with a lost Glenn Miller session.

 

 

 

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Joe Magnarelli “Lookin’ Up!” is the KIOS CD of the Month…

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kios.org

Joe Magnarelli, who grew up in Syracuse, New York and has resided in
New York City for over 25 years.He has played with some of the best in
the business including Jimmy Cobb, Lionel Hampton and Brother Jack
McDuff. He has led his own bands for twenty years and has released
nine recordings of his own as a leader.

His latest is “Lookin’ Up!” on the Posi-Tone label. It’s a straight ahead affair
featuring stellar playing by Magnarelli on trumpet and flugelhorn and a top notch
roster of players including Steve Davis on trombone, Anthony Wonsey on piano,
Mike Karn on bass and Jason Brown on drums. The playing throughout this new
session is outstanding.

Some of the highlights include the lead track “44” , a straight ahead bopper that
gets the set rolling. “Inner Beauty” is a lovely ballad that features Magnarelli’s lyrical
and romantic side of his playing. Wonsey adds a lovely solo on piano. The John
Coltrane piece, “Miles’ Mode” has Magnarelli on muted trumpet and Karn steps into
the spotlight soloing on bass. Magnarelli and Davis make a great team on the front
line. Davis’ solo on “You Go To My Head” in particular is a real delight.

All in all it’s a winning combination of talent backing Magnarelli on this new release
with fine performances throughout the entire ten tracks offered here. This record
should be getting major airplay at jazz radio around the country by the time you read
this. It’s a delightful summertime treat for sure. For more info, you may visit
www.posi-tone.com

 

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Joe Magnarelli gets covered by Dusted in Exile…

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dusted.com

Publish or perish. It’s an old maxim that applies equally well to academic and musical circles. Trumpeter Joe Magnarelli is well-versed in both realms of endeavor, starting his professional career three decades ago and eventually accepting adjunct teaching posts at both Julliard and Rutgers. He also routinely teaches master classes and clinics on the side. That kind of diversification is requisite when it comes to making ends meet as a jazz musician. Performance alone just doesn’t cut it anymore. Productivity these days involves getting one’s name and work out however possible.

Magnarelli’s been keeping decent pace with the pressure to record. Lookin’ Up! is his ninth date as a leader and follows a framework similar to his past works. Artful postbop is the order of the day with trombonist Steve Davis (another Positone regular) balancing the frontline on six cuts. Pianist Anthony Wonsey fronts the rhythm section with bassist Mike Karn and drummer Jason Brown also on board. The program is an even split between originals and standards with five of each. The first in the former category, “44” gets the date of to a less than auspicious start with a smooth unison horn statement over a fairly generic, Latin-lite rhythm. The later “Blue Key” suffers under a similar rhythmic yoke, but Magnarelli’s muted leads bring it up a notch.

Things pick up considerably with “Third Set,” a brisk bop blower that makes the most of the brass rapport between the leader and Davis. Wonsey’s steady, sharp angled comping also earns points, particularly as backdrop for Magnarelli’s lithe solo. “Inner Beauty,” another original, gives Davis a breather and compels Brown to break out brushes as the band brings on a convincing balladic mood. Magnarelli’s goes lush and pliable on flugelhorn, rolling out soft trills and legato slurs as Karn plucks a plump contrapuntal line that aligns with first trumpet and then piano. “Easy Transition” echoes the sort of writing Freddie Hubbard popularized during his Sixties tenure at Blue Note, with an agreeably dissonant piano prelude segueing into straightforward swing for the tune proper.

“Suddenly It’s Spring” and “Miles’ Mode” aren’t exactly left field choices, but Magnarelli puts his stamp on both. The first bursts with effervescence thanks to a bustling rhythm, a nimble trumpet barrage, a knuckle-cracking statement by Wonsey, and fast-walking line by Karn that fold into a string of rapid chases. For the second, Magnarelli predictably affixes mute and puts the modal Milesean theme through a series of strong paces sans Wonsey’s support. Karn makes the most of the pianist’s absence, turning in his strongest improvisation of the date. The compensation for Wonsey comes with “Darn That Dream”, a feature for just him and the leader again on flugelhorn in its opening minutes. This is music that invites straightforward appreciation and while Magnarelli stays well within his comfort zone throughout the results are agreeably on par with what’s come prior under his name.

Derek Taylor

 

 

 

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Dan Bilawsky reviews Eric Wyatt “Borough of Kings” for AllAboutJazz.com

Eric Wyatt - Borough Of Kings cover

 

 

 

 

allaboutjazz.com

The borough of Kings (County)—a.k.a. Brooklyn, NY—has been saxophonist Eric Wyatt’s home base from birth. It was there that he was exposed to jazz, met some of the legends of the music, and began to forge his own voice on saxophone. Here, on his fifth album to date, he delivers an intense brew that speaks volumes about what he’s learned during his time in Brooklyn.

Wyatt is a no holds barred player with an edge to his work. Thankfully, he found some simpatico quartet mates that are willing and able to match his energy level on this outing. Pianist Benito Gonzalez delivers strong-hammered support, intriguing right hand lines tempered by a firm left hand, and spiky suggestions, playing the post-modern McCoy Tyner role to Wyatt’s John Coltrane. Drummer Shinnosuke Takahashipummels his drums and pushes the band on most occasions, but he’s able to adjust to climates that call for a little more restraint without much of a problem. BassistAmeen Saleem, the final piece of the puzzle, serves as the connective tissue of the band. He bounds along beneath it all, playing around and playing off of Gonzalez and Takahashi. There are a few places where he almost gets muscled out of the aural picture by his heavy-hitting band mates, but it’s usually not an issue.

Six of the eight tracks on Borough Of Kings are Wyatt originals, with Gonzalez’s “Quest” and a slamming-turned-settled take on Coltrane’s “Countdown” filling out the program. Wyatt’s writing, no surprise, can occasionally fall into the “Coltrane-ish” category—note the dark-lined, bluesy “One For Hakim” and the spiritual introduction to the up-tempo title track—but he has other tricks up his sleeve. “The Peoples Champ” is a focused and fiery number that balances darkness and light; “Can He Come Out,” which features trumpeterDuane Eubanks and has Kyle Poole taking over the drum chair, is pure funky fun; and everybody has a ball on the straightforward-and-swinging “What Would I Do Without You,” which brings trombonist Clifton Anderson into the picture.

The aforementioned guests help to add another dimension to the music, but this remains Wyatt’s show. His stentorian saxophone navigates the ship through some exciting twists and turns, making Borough Of Kings a high-energy thrill ride from start to finish.

 

 

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SomethingElse Reviews the new Eric Wyatt CD…

Eric Wyatt - Borough Of Kings cover

 

 

 

 

 

somethingelsereviews.com

A lot of musicians like to boast they live in Brooklyn; Eric Wyatt was born and raised there and as the son of a sax player, Wyatt grew up knowing his Dad’s friends, such of Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Gary Bartz and Sonny Rollins, who is Wyatt’s godfather. Wyatt started out as a trumpet player but switched to saxophone after his father passed, playing a gold-plated tenor Rollins had given Charles Wyatt, and Rollins got the younger Wyatt’s career off the ground.

Borough of Kings (due out July 22, 2014 from Posi-Tone Records) is Wyatt’s fifth LP since his 1997 God Son debut, and it reflects the work of a jazz cat who’s spent a lifetime absorbing the music’s rich history firsthand. No, Wyatt isn’t a Rollins clone, he sounds more akin to Kenny Garrett and early John Coltrane to my ears, straddling generations of styles.

His backing band for these sessions was Ameen Saleem (bass), Shinnosuke Takahashi (drums) and Garrett’s pianist, Benito Gonzalez. A lineup of eight tunes of which six are Wyatt’s, the composing style he reveals on Kings reflects that penchant for using tradition as a foundation for modernity, too. Take the song “The Peoples Champ,” for instance. It glides effortlessly between minor and major key. But what makes it stand out further is how it’s performed: Wyatt’s tenor rains down its own sheets of sound in drawn out notes, while Gonzalez’ piano pops. Takahashi is downright explosive on drums during minor part, breezily waltzing during major part.

Takahashi veritably explodes on a lot of songs, making other Wyatt originals such as “One For Hakim” and “Ancient Chinese Secrets” also crackle with energy. On the former, Saleem holds down the swing so securely that the drummer is free to stretch out. Nonetheless, it’s primarily Wyatt’s show and he puts on a nice one for the titular track. Beginning with a descending figure on the rubato opening, the song suddenly lurches into a rapid tempo where Wyatt stretches his notes to state the theme and then grooves with the rhythm, relying on reedy tone as much as note choice. Later on, Gonzalez solos and then trades fours with Wyatt.

Wyatt’s nimbleness in sharing the front line with other horn players is highlighted on “Can He Come Out,” which is acoustic funk, except for Wyatt’s electrified sax. Here, he trades licks with trumpet player Duane Eubanks. On “What Would I Do Without You,” Wyatt is blending in well with trombone player Clifton Anderson.

Gonzalez’s one contributed song might be the most soulful of the batch, and one that has a nice groove to it; “Quest” features Wyatt on soprano sax, and he adapts his style to the straight horn without any hitches. The only other track not penned by Wyatt was penned by the great John Coltrane. At first, you’re not aware that the funky number that Wyatt riffs over is “Countdown” until the band goes into swing mode about a minute in and the saxophonist plays those trademark lines. But in typical Wyatt fashion he doesn’t rush things, playing it smooth and in the pocket instead. Ultimately, it’s more satisfying that way.

Eric Wyatt makes good on his enviable upbringing by evoking the masters he’s met as a child while finding his own voice to do it. Borough of Kings is pure, Brooklyn-bred jazz at its finest.

 

 

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SomethingElse features an exclusive track from Michael Dease “Relentless”…

/somethingelsereviews.com/

Michael Dease - Relentless cover

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sometimes a cover song reveals a lot of the genius of the musician covering it. Michael Dease’s big band rendition of the Brecker Brothers’ “Roppongi” surely does that, but it also speaks loudly about the underappreciated ingenuity of the song’s composer, Randy Brecker.

The closing track from The Return of the Brecker Brothers (1990), it’s chock full of the dense Brecker Brothers’ funk and overflowing with chops from Randy and his tenor sax legend brother, Michael. It’s three or four discreet sections of different tempos and styles pasted together but somehow the song remain very coherent. Someone listening to the oroginal recording today might get a bit put off by the synth-laden late 80s production values that went along with all this inspired composing, arranging and performing, but not Dease.

Dease is well familiar with Randy Brecker and his music, having already covered his solo song “I Talk To The Trees” for 2010′s Grace and he goes to Brecker’s pen again with “Roppongi” for Dease’s first big band record, Relentless. The veteran of the Dizzy Gillespie Big Band, the Charles Tolliver Big Band and Christian McBride’s big band know his stuff when it comes to jazz orchestration and it shows with his own jazz orchestra. What Dease saw in “Roppongi” was a hard swinging, big-band tune masquerading as a contemporary modern fusion-jazz song.

The arrangement that Dease uses doesn’t stray from the basic structure or vision of the song, but simply putting it into the hands of a big band featuring young luminaries like Sharel Cassity, Tim Green, Etienne Charles and Linda Oh places it in a natural environment. Dease’s crew pilots it through funk, Cuban salsa, swing and even rock phases (thanks to Andrew Swift’s electric guitar). The highlight is the extensive trading of fours between Dease’s boss trombone and the lively trumpet of Alex Norris.

Truth is, Michael Dease adds freshness and imagination to the tried-and-true big band format all over Relentless across songs both original and standard. His big band’s take on “Roppongi” breathes new life into a little-noticed Randy Brecker gem, too.

Relentless, Michael Dease’s first for Posi-Tone Records, goes on sale July 8, 2014. It’s well worth checking out.

 

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Brent Black reviews Michael Dease “Relentless”…

 www.criticaljazz.com

Michael Dease - Relentless cover

 

 

If slow and steady does indeed win the race then watch out for Michael Dease as he is Relentless!
Brent Black / www.criticaljazz.com
I have to admit if I hear one more big band release this year then you can look for me at Home Depot in the length of rope and rickety stool department. The format is on the upswing yet the preconceived notion of predictability often has critics reviewing the release before they actually “listen.” Michael Dease makes his Posi-Tone debut with an all star big band that is straight ahead and swinging yet refreshingly original and inventive. When you have a large ensemble cast that includes such artists as Tim Green, Etienne Charles, Tom “Bones” Malone and Ulysses Owens Jr. then the bar has just been raised.
While Dease contributes four solid originals, the covers are deep catalog and slightly eclectic given the nature of the format. The Randy Brecker tune “Roppongi” includes rising star saxophonist Adam Rongo and guitarist Andrew Swift. The fabulous Wycliffe Gordon makes a cameo on “Autumn Leaves” and contributes some vocal flavor to the Dizzy Gillespie classic “Two Bass Hit.” The reharm on “Autumn Leaves” may be one of the better arrangements you might hear. “Two Bass Hit” is a foot to the floor battle with Dease, Benny Benack III, and Wycliffe Gordon. The winner? Too close to call! The Dease originals “Force” and “Webster Grooves” pop with individuality while never losing that accessible melodic bass line that makes Relentless such a solid outing. “Force” smolders with a more contemporary vibe while “Webster Grooves” goes full on hard bop.
This is a varied and slightly eclectic menu and that may be the key to success. The sound is the traditional straight ahead swing associated with the format and that is fine. The big band musical wheel does not need to be reinvented with arrangements this tight and a band this hot.
Simple as that.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Michael Dease “Relentless” is DownBeat editor’s pick…

www.downbeat.com

Michael Dease - Relentless cover

 

 

 

 

 

BY BOBBY REED
Michael Dease, Relentless
(Posi-Tone)
Trombonist Michael Dease applied his extensive knowledge of big bands when preparing to record his sixth leader album, Relentless. “My big band is inspired by the sophistication of Ellington, the pacing of Basie, the fervor of Dizzy and the tumult of McCoy Tyner’s and Charles Tolliver’s big bands,” Dease said. This straightahead program consists of 10 Dease arrangements: four of his own songs, four standards and a song apiece penned by Randy Brecker and Eric Alexander. Dease’s song “Force”—featuring solos by pianist Miki Hayama, alto saxophonist Todd Bashore, trumpeter Etienne Charles and Dease—nods to the tradition of elegance in the big band aesthetic while also avoiding any stuffiness. Superb solos are the norm here, and trumpeter Greg Gisbert’s muscular attack is impressive on the title track. An intricate arrangement of Jimmy Dorsey’s “I’m Glad There Is You” showcases Dease’s mastery of trombone balladry. The fun factor skyrockets with a lively reading of “Two Bass Hit” spiked with scatting by trumpeter Benny Benack III, Dease and one of his mentors, Wycliffe Gordon, who also adds slide trumpet to this track. Like Gordon, Dease is an esteemed jazz educator, and Relentless includes one of his most democratic compositions, “Webster Grooves.” The track—which spotlights 10 soloists, including the excellent bassist Linda Oh—originally was written as a commission for the big band at Missouri’s Webster Groves High School, and it reflects both Dease’s sense of humor and his democratic sensibility. Big band aficionados (or any fan of straightahead jazz) will find plenty to enjoy on this classy disc.

 

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Joe Magnarelli and Michael Dease are both featured in JazzWax “discoveries of the week”…

http://www.JazzWax.com/2014/07/ten-cd-discoveries-of-the-week.html

 

C1010Michael Dease - Relentless cover

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joe Magnarelli—Lookin’ Up! (Posi-Tone). I’ve always loved Mags’ round, fleshy sound on trumpet. Here, he turns up the heat on songs like Third Set, Suddenly It’s Spring and John Coltrane’s Miles’ Mode—soaring up the lines and swooping down with sizzling intensity. On ballads like Darn That Dream and his original Blue Key (using a mute), we hear Mags’s broad tones and fondness for hanging around pretty melodies. A trumpeter who keeps getting better with each album.

 

Michael Dease—Relentless (Posi-Tone). This engaging big-band release features top-notch section players and soloists on tunes ranging from Duke Pearson’s Is That So to John Lewis and Dizzy Gillespie’s Two Bass Hit. But the real star here is the pen of trombonist Dease, whose arrangements have grace and punch and build smartly. Dease also is a gorgeous soloist.