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Britt Robson’s eMusic review of “Flip the Script”…

www.emusic.com

As a pianist, Orrin Evans features a muscular attack with a meaty tonality and impatience with elongated or predictable phrasing. As an artist, he has emerged as a formidable, increasingly indispensable presence in jazz, whether leading the balls-to-the-wall Captain Black Big Band, the politically charged Tarbaby, or small ensemble recordings. Flip The Script is a trio outing with bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards, both necessarily sturdy, exceptionally sentient players when charged with accompanying Evans’s dynamic approach, which blends supple conception with bold, brawny execution. Like Faith In Action from 2010, it contains Evans originals that are often jagged and fragmented but ever-purposeful, brimming with rough-and-tumble rhythms and ruminations variously reminiscent of McCoy Tyner, Muhal Richard Abrams, Bud Powell and Art Tatum. They are gusty and assured, with apt titles like “Clean House,” “Flip The Script” and “The Answer.” On a slower note, “Big Small” is a steadily stalking, rough-hewn blues that cuts deep into the blues tradition without losing a jazz sensibility.

Evans’s choice of covers are generally revealing for their contrasts and/or message. The four here begin with “Question,” a chopped up bebop number by Tarbaby bassist Eric Revis; and a rendition of Luther Vandross’s “A Brand New Day” that finds Evans in full McCoy Tyner mode much of the time. But the final two inject poignant reflection into the mix. The standard “Someday My Prince Will Come” is performed with prolonged, lingering resonance, highlighting the wistful and sadder aspect of a song usually framed more hopefully. And the closer, Gamble and Huff’s “The Sound Of Philadelphia,” is a touching eulogy for Soul Train creator and emcee Don Cornelius, who died six days before this recording session. “TSOP” was the Soul Train theme song, and Philadelphia also happens to be Evans’s hometown and ongoing wellspring of musical inspiration. His soulful take carries that weight just right.

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Jazz Wax on Steve Davis “Gettin It Done”…

www.JazzWax.com

One of this year’s finest hard bop albums is trombonist Steve Davis’ Gettin’ It Done (Posi-tone). All of the songs and arrangements are his, and the sound is Blue Note, 61qxXR8It7L._SL500_AA280_circa 1962. Davis is joined by Josh Bruneau on trumpet and flugelhorn, Mike Dirubbo on alto sax, Larry Willis on piano, Nat Reeves on bass and Billy Williams on drums. The pacing and aggression are just right—powerful enough to get the message across but sufficiently spacious to allow the poetry to come through. Sample Village Blues, the title track and Wishes.

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Music and More on Steve Davis “Gettin It Done”…

jazzandblues.blogspot.com

Steve Davis – Gettin’ It Done (Posi-Tone, 2012)

Trombonist Steve Davis has many credits as both a leader and as a sideman in the modern mainstream jazz scene. On this album he channels the spirit of Art Blakey, Horace Silver and other hard bop masters to create a fine and swinging album. On this album, he is accompanied by Josh Bruneau on trumpet and flugelhorn, Mike DiRubbo on alto saxophone, Larry Willis on piano, Nat Reeves on bass and Billy Williams on drums. They achieve a full, rich sound when playing together and the music offers a wealth of solo space. Opening with “Village Blues” the group sounds lush and deep, playing at a medium tempo. Trombone over cymbal tapping and well paced trumpet make way for round-robin soloing over swinging drums. The title track has a strutting boppish melody featuring fast saxophone over pulsating bass and drums. Muscular hard bop is also the order of the day on “Sunny” with upbeat trombone and swinging drums setting the pace for a driving piano, bass and drums section. I enjoyed the uptempo tracks the most, but the group does add a couple of ballads to the program for flavor. “Alike” slows the tempo to a ballad feel with long tones of music luxuriously caressing the melody and setting up a fluid piano based interlude. Beginning at a slow tempo, “Longview” opens with slow piano and horns building to intuitive swing as the song gradually gathers pace.

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Dan Bilawsky on Steve Davis “Gettin It Done”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Trombonist Steve Davis has never had a problem getting things done. He instantly joined the slide-wielding elite when he graduated from the Hartt School’s Jackie McLeanInstitute in 1989 and joined up with drummer Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers. That gig jump-started his career and he’s never looked back. Stints with McLean and pianist Chick Corea followed, helping to raise his profile within the jazz community, and a steady stream of sideman work, leader offerings and dates with the collective super band known as One For All, along with teaching responsibilities at his alma mater, continue to keep him in constant motion.

While it’s exhausting just trying to keep up with Davis’ work and accomplishments, he doesn’t seem to have trouble taking it all in stride. Davis gets the job done every time he picks up his horn and this date is no exception. For the appropriately titled Gettin’ It Done, he put together a horns-plus-rhythm group that swings like mad and churns out solo after exciting solo.

Davis focuses on his own compositions on this date, but includes a pair of covers that come from vastly different sources. Saxophonist John Coltrane’s infrequently played “Village Blues” kicks things off and gets the solo juices flowing. Drummer Billy Williams has a little bit of Elvin Jones in his swing feel on this one, and pianist Larry Willis has a vague hint of McCoy Tyner in him, but nobody apes the original recording. Bobby Hebb’s covered-to-death “Sunny,” which pops up mid-album, still pleases after all these years and the band sounds like it’s having a blast with it.

The other six tunes put Davis the composer on equal footing with Davis the performer. “Gettin It Done'” is a thrilling burner, while “Steppin’ Easy” is a carefree number that lives up to its name, “Alike” is a pleasant ballad that puts Davis’ warm and focused tone on display, and “The Beacon” is a funky journey that proves to be an album highlight.

In this age of lengthy albums, it’s rare that an artist leaves you wanting more, but Davis does just that. Gettin’ It Done is another sterling date from one of today’s treasured figures of trombone.

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Some props for Posi-Tone at Gallery 41….

jazzfromgallery41.blogspot.com

FRIDAY, JULY 13, 2012

Just a few of the great new releases….

Focusing on just a few of the really terrific new releases, this time from Positone Records produced by Marc Free:Pianist Orrin Evans has a terific new trio date called “Flip The Script” with Ben Wolfe on bass and Donald Edwards playing the drums.

Flip The Script

Saxophonist Ralph Bowen’s new release is “Total Eclipse” and features Bowen in the company of organist Jared Gold, Rudy Royston on drums, and the marvelous guitar playing of Mike Moreno.

Total EclipseBrandon Wright on saxophone is joined by David Kikoski piano, Boris Kozlov bass, and Donald Edwards on drums on Brandon’s second recording as leader called “Journeyman”.

Journeyman

Come on by and share the music with us whenever you can!

POSTED BY RON P. / GALLERY 41 AT 3:51 PM
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Another review for Ralph Bowen “Total Eclipse”…

www.nippertown.com

RALPH BOWEN“Total Eclipse”
(Posi-Tone Records)
Blue Note Records gave Canadian saxman Ralph Bowen his big break in 1985 by putting him in Out of the Blue, a sextet of hard-bopping young lions that included Kenny Garrett, Ralph Peterson and Charles Fambrough. Now 27 years later, Bowen links up with another set of young lions, and the result is the most exciting release of Bowen’s four-year run with Pos-i-Tone, the successor to Blue Note as the No. 1 purveyor of straight-ahead jazz. Spurred on by Jared Gold’s ram-tough Hammond B3 and Mike Moreno’ssingular guitar sound, Bowen is blowing hard and nasty on the opening title track, and he keeps throwing fastballs throughout the date. Moreno and Gold strut their nasty solo stuff on “Behind the Curtain” and “On Green,” while Rudy Royston’sstatus as one of the genre’s best young drummers gets yet another boost. “Total Eclipse” has the combination of artistry and toughness trad jazz needs to stay relevant. Props to Bowen for not standing pat.

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The Jazz Word on “Journeyman”…

thejazzword.blogspot.com

For his sophomore release on Posi-Tone Records, saxophonist Brandon Wright delivers strong, assured soloing over a batch of standout original tunes and a few covers.Journeyman also features the first-rate rhythm section of pianist David Kikoski, bassist Boris Kozlov and drummer Donald Edwards, all colleagues of Wright from the Mingus Big Band.
Wright’s robust tenor sound highlights his uncanny sense of swing, busting down the door on the opening “Shapeshifter,” a twirling line based on “What is This Thing Called Love,” and the funky blues of “Walk of Shame.” The latter reveals stunning telepathic interplay between Edwards and Kikoski. A pseudo bossa version of Pearl Jam’s “Better Man” along with the feel good swing of “He’ll Make Me Happy,” from The Muppets songbook, work well with the quartet.

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Midwest Record on Steve Davis “Gettin’ It Done”…

STEVE DAVIS/Gettin’ It Done: This bone man puts his old man jazz hat on, serves a little Coltrane and pop, but mostly keeps it original and gets a groovy daddio vibe flowing in full force. Tasty, easy going stuff that can turn into an absolute burner when driving home from work on a summer Friday afternoon, this is the stuff. Nothing much to do here but sit back and enjoy.
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Midwest Record on “Cloud Nine”…

JACAM MANRICKS/Cloud Nine: Manricks makes you wish we were still living in a time when music was one of the main drivers of the culture and he would be celebrated rather than be another cat fighting for his piece of the pie. A stellar sax player that could spent the rest of his career on auto pilot and not draw any negative criticism for it, his writing and playing are so on the money that you know his next release will be more than just another one in the series. Spurred on by a certain timelessness that will always keep this set right in the moment, jazzbos looking for some good, solid music won’t be disappointed by anything on display here. Hot stuff that delivers.
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Greg Thomas on Orrin Evans “Flip the Script”…

articles.nydailynews.com

Orrin Evans returns to  NYC to ‘Flip the Script’

GREG THOMAS
Thursday, July 12, 2012

Orrin Evans is ready for his return to the East Coast.

Speaking from Japan via Skype, the pianist and composer reports that he’s been on the road a lot since February, performing and teaching. He misses his family in Philly, including his two sons, ages 14 and 19, and his wife of almost 20 years, Dawn Warren Evans.

Soon they’ll get to see him. And so will his fans in New York when Evans appears in “Three Shades of Orrin,” his three-night run at the Jazz Standard on East 27th St. next week.

 The gig will showcase the range of his artistic personality.

“It’s different bands, literally, each night, and different concepts,” he says. The first evening is a release party for “Flip the Script,” Evans’ most recent trio statement. Joining him will be Vicente Archer on bass and Obed Calvaire on drums.

Trumpeter Jack Walrath and tenor saxophonist Tim Warfield are special guests with the trio on Wednesday. Then on Thursday night, the Captain Black Big Band, a loosely structured, versatile group of cats in their 30s and above, will smoke the stage.

He views this career milestone as a “blessing,” a word that crosses his lips several times in our chat. He initiates a verbal jam session on topics like home and family, culture and the business side, with music as the consistent thread.

Evans walks with an attitude of gratitude. He has a serious demeanor, but he leaps and laughs with joy when playing music. He’s the kind of guy who will pause and look at you before cracking up at a joke.

His journey began in Trenton, N.J., when he was born in 1976 to Don and Frances Evans. “My father was a playwright,” he says, “and one of the members of the Black Arts Movement. He taught African-American history at Trenton State College for 25 years, and also at Princeton. My mother was a singer in Opera Ebony.”

Oscar Peterson and Phineas Newborn lit the piano flame early. Then teachers such as Kenny Barron, Joanne Brackeen, Ralph Bowen and Ted Dunbar at Rutgers University stoked the fire. Evans’ exciting piano flow owes debts to Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner, Joe Zawinul, Chick Corea, Mulgrew Miller, Kenny Kirkland and, perhaps, Marcus Roberts.

“I’m devoted to the history of this music,” he says, “to unadulterated swing, things that our elders saw as important.” That’s why a recent recording project was named Tar Baby, after the Uncle Remus character in the Brer Rabbit tales.

  Those cultural elements were “something that people didn’t want to hold onto for fear that they would get stuck to the history, or associated with something that they didn’t want to be.”

A shrinking violet he’s not. The CD “Flip the Script” bounds with exuberant agility. Bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards ride curves of sound with Evans in the driver’s seat. The title refers to a sudden shift or even a reversal in course.

The song itself is like a “road map and roller coaster with different time signatures,” Evans says. The words also refer to the need to start anew in relationships, but while “keeping true to the things that I believe about this music. And playing in ways that some might not expect.”

Like the ballad “When,” a reflective piece in which Evans wonders, in a slightly sad way, about trying to keep one’s head up. There’s an especially fine arrangement on “Brand New Day,” a pop song from “The Wiz” with Michael Jackson and Diana Ross, which also serves as a tribute to Luther Vandross. The optimistic, well-lit “Clean House” points to how “every once in a while, you’ve got to reboot and clean your cache.”

The somber mood of the last number, Gamble and Huff’s “The Sound of Philadelphia,” is like a silent prayer for the deceased. Evans flips the script on those who think it’s a tribute to Philly. It’s actually in honor of Don Cornelius, who died three weeks before the recording session. The song was the theme of the black American music and dance series “Soul Train.”

To Evans, the players are not just a leader with some sidemen. His experience playing in a musical conversation with Bobby Watson taught him to think of his closest musical associates as family.

“The shades of Orrin Evans are all about my associations with my friends and with my family,” he says. “Come on out and see how we party. You’re gonna have a good time and hear some great music.”

Then he refers to one of this jazz joint’s secret weapons: the food provided by Smoke barbecue upstairs.

“I want you to feel like you came to a barbeque,” he says, “that happened to be at the Jazz Standard.