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Lucid Culture reviews Orrin Evans – Captain Black Big Band….

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Orrin Evans’ Captain Black Big Band Is Everything You’d Expect

In some ways, what Pink Floyd, Nektar, Supertramp and all the rest of the orchestrated rock bands were to the “classic rock” era, new big band jazz is to the decade of the teens. It’s where you get your epic grandeur fix. Towering, intense angst; full-blown exhilaration. There’s a lot more of the latter than the former on pianist Orrin Evans’ brand-new Captain Black Big Band album, but there’s still gravitas and intensity as you would expect from him. Like the Mingus repertory bands, Evans employs a rotating cast for this group, in this case an A-list mostly from New York and Philadelphia, in a live concert recording. Also like Mingus, the compositions blend an impatient urban bustle with an irrepressible joie de vivre. The compositions are pretty oldschool, closer to Mingus or Ellington than, say, than Jim McNeely.

The album gets started on a trad note with Art of War, a brisk bluesy swing tune by drummer Ralph PetersonRob Landham’s alto solo goes squalling quickly and spirals out neatly with a blaze as the brass rises – it’s sort of a warmup for what’s to come.Here’s the Captain, by bassistGianluca Renzi opens with Evans’ murky distant piano grandeur – it’s a Cuban son montuno groove led by the trombone, an incisively simmering Victor North tenor solo followed by Evans who stays on course with a couple of cloudbursts thrown in for good measure. Inheritance, by bass clarinetist and big band leader Todd Marcus is swinging and exuberant with New Orleans tinges and a modified Diddleybeat. The first of Evans’ compositions, Big Jimmy is a soaring swing number with some deftly concealed rhythmic trickiness, trumpeterWalter White faking a start and then moving it up to some blissed-out glissandos, followed by tenor player Ralph Bowen who jumps in spinning out wild spirals – it’s adrenalizing to the extreme.

Buoyantly memorable in a late 50s Miles kind of way, Captain Black maxes out a long, fiery ensemble passage into solos by pianist Jim Holton(Evans has moved to the podium to conduct), Bowen shifting from shuffle to sustain followed by trombonist Stafford Hunter shadowboxing with the band. They save the best for last with the final two tunes. Easy Now is absolutely gorgeous, a study in dark/light contrasts with an ominous, dramatic low brass-driven intro lit up by drummer Anwar Marshall’s blazing cymbals. Trumpeter Tatum Greenblatt and then baritone saxophonist Mark Allen go from pensive to assured and playful over Evans’ wary, wounded gospel-tinged lines; it winds up on a roaring, powerful note. The album concludes with the rich sepia tones of Jena 6, a track that also appears on Evans’ superb Tarbaby albumfrom last year, referencing the Arkansas students persecuted in the wake of a 2007 attack by white racists. A lyrical Neil Podgurski piano intro begins the harrowing narrative with an ominous series of slow, portentous gospel-tinged crescendos. As Jaleel Shaw’s alto moves from genial swing to unhinged cadenzas and anguished overtones as the orchestra cooks behind him and then leaves him out to wail all alone, the effect is viscerally stunning. Count this among the most richly satisfying albums of 2010 so far. Evans will be interviewed on NPR’s A Blog Supreme this Friday the 25th; the album is just out on Posi-Tone.

 

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Jeff Krow’s Audiophile Audition review for Orrin Evans – Captain Black Big Band…

www.audaud.com

Orrin Evans/ Captain Black Big Band – Posi-Tone Records PR8078, 59:54  ****:

(Artists include: Orrin Evans – piano; Tatum Greenblatt, Brian Kilpatrick, Walter White, Jack Walrath – trumpets; Mark Allen, Ralph Bowen, Wayne Escoffery, Tia Fuller, Rob Landham, Victor North, Jaleel Shaw, Tim Warfield – saxophones; Stafford Hunter, Frank Lacy, Brent White – trombones; Todd Marcus – bass clarinet; Luques Curtis – doublebass; Anwar Marshall, Gene Jackson, Donald Edwards – drums; Musical Direction – Orrin Evans)

Orrin Evans, pianist extraordinaire, seems to be everywhere lately. Whether it is leading his own group on recordings (Faith in Action) or backing other artists including Posi-Tone’s own Ralph Bowen on Power Play, Evans has become a major player in contemporary jazz. Orrin’s piano skills have been recognized and now it is time to catch him as a big band leader on Captain Black Big Band. Captain Black was the title of his 1998 Criss Cross label CD, which introduced the composition of the same name.

In February and April 2010, Orrin took Captain Black on the road as a big band to Chris’ Jazz Café in Philadelphia as well as The Jazz Gallery in New York. They recorded seven compositions that highlight both his compositional skills and arranging talents. Orrin composed or arranged four out of the seven tracks. Bandmates in the sax section are well known, while the brass section includes Walter White, Brian Kilpatrick, Jack Walrath, Stafford Hunter and Frank Lacy.

What is most obvious on this live recording is the infectious joy that this band brings to the stage. You can sense the fun and camaraderie. I compare them in this sense to the present Mingus Big Band and that is quite a compliment as that group has been together for quite some time. The comparison is apt as Orrin and mates have a similar swagger, and while occasionally pushing the envelope towards open free playing they retain a sense of swing and the compositional melodies have memorable hooks that keep the listener along for the ride.

On “Here’s the Captain” Evans intro sets the stage for a heavily swinging vibrant musical stew. Victor North’s tenor solo drives the track while Gene Jackson on drums shows cymbal mastery.

Todd Marcus’ “Inheritance” is intriguing as Marcus on bass clarinet and trumpeter Walter White both shine. The bass clarinet adds a mysterious vibe with its Middle Eastern tone.

Walter White is again featured on “Big Jimmy” and his power and strut on trumpet is impressive. Orrin’s’ label mate and cohort Ralph Bowen gets ample solo time on both this track as well as on the title cut. The band’s ensemble talents shine on “Captain Black” and they can show a polished sheen that normally takes much longer to develop in a big band.

“Easy Now” belies its title as its majestic theme reaches crescendos that are orchestral in nature. It then changes mood as Tatum Greenblatt’s trumpet solo takes it in a lyrical direction, followed by some cacophony that turns into a blues. It was my favorite track on the CD.

“Jena 6” begins with a classical sounding piano solo by Neal Podgurski followed by a somber funereal stretch from the horns before Jaleel Shaw’s alto solo goes off for an extended stretch as the energy reaches a breaking point as Jaleel takes the track out frantically. What a wild ride…

TrackList: Art of War, Here’s the Captain, Inheritance, Big Jimmy, Captain black, Easy Now, Jena 6

— Jeff Krow

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Here’s the Lucid Culture write-up for Mike DiRubbo ” Chronos”….

<href=”http://lucidculture.wordpress.com/2011/03/17/mike/”>lucidculture.wordpress.com

Saxophonist Mike DiRubbo’s new album Chronos is a refreshingly different kind of B3 jazz album. Not that there’s anything wrong with funky organ shuffles, it’s just a lot of fun discovering something this different and rewarding. Here Brian Charette’s Hammond organ functions more like a piano or a guitar, comping chords, providing atmosphere rather than amping the funk factor to eleven. The way his chords are voiced is particularly cool – sometimes they evoke a guitar, other times they edge closer to soul music, more like Booker T. Jones than Jimmy Smith. Drummer Rudy Royston leaves a lot more space here than he usually does and keeps you wanting more – his signature rolls are there, but sometimes miles apart, or so it seems. It’s more of a challenge than a stretch for the rhythm section, an obviously enjoyable one and that translates for the listener. DiRubbo plays alto and soprano here, moving from matter-of-factly catch melodic excursions to the occasional wailing explosion: he doesn’t overemote or waste notes.

They don’t waste time getting going with the wryly titled, briskly scurrying Minor Progress, DiRubbo veering in and out of focus, Charette’s carbonated bursts evoking a late 60s/early 70s art-rock ambience and a little Royston break that only hints at what he’s capable of. The carefree, swinging title track has DiRubbo opening it using a pitch pedal for some simple chords and then choosing his spots judiciously, Charette following in the same vein until a rare squall from the sax over a hypnotically intensifying organ vamp. Another aptly titled one, Lilt, a jazz waltz, pairs off DiRubbo lyricism against Charette’s minimalist lines; the seriously catchy Rituals has the sax cleverly scraping the sidewalls of a circular organ lick, again hypnotically.

Charette has some songs here too. Nouveau, a cheerful ballad, pairs expansive sax against a velvety backdrop; another well-titled one, Excellent Taste has Charette matching DiRubbo’s fluid extrapolations, Royston unable to resist a jab or two on the toms here and there. And the absolutely gorgeous More Physical runs a catchy circular hook to a big, blustering, swirling soprano solo. The closest thing to a classic Jimmy Smith style B3 shuffle is Lucky 13, which benefits from DiRubbo holding it back from cliche territory, and Eight for Elvin, which they throw to Royston and he absolutely owns it – when DiRubbo goes insistent and wailing with the drums guarding the edges aggressively, it’s exquisite. Three guys on top of their game with some great songs. It’s out now on Posi-Tone; DiRubbo plays the cd release show for this one on March 24 at 9 at Smalls.

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Mike DiRubbo makes the hang on “The Scene”…

hardbopjazzjournal.wordpress.com

You can now hear episode 2 of “The Scene”, Hardbop’s monthly podcast. The podcast will feature a different jazz artist on the scene, either emerging or established and play excerpts from their latest release. This month we feature Mike DiRubbo a humble saxophonist from the New York/Connecticut area who came up in the late ’90s after graduating from the Hart School. We spoke about his time there, studying under the great Jackie McLean, and his decision to use organ and drums (sans guitar) for his latest record “Chronos”. Check out the podcast here:

Mike will be appearing at Smalls Jazz Club one week from today, thats March 24, 2011. If you are in the New York area, you wont want to miss this killer set. Stay tune next month for our next feature on “The Scene”. Thanks for listening.

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Bruce Lindsay’s AAJ review for Benjamin Drazen “Inner Flights”….

www.allaboutjazz.com

Track Listing: Mr Twilight; Monkish; Prayer for Brothers Gone; Jazz Heaven; Inner Flights; Neeney’s Waltz; This Is New; Kickin’ Up Dirt; Polka Dots and Moonbeams.

Personnel: Benjamin Drazen: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone; Jon Davis: piano; Carlo De Rosa: bass; Eric McPherson: drums.

Style: Modern Jazz

Read more reviews of
Inner Flights
Benjamin Drazen has been on the New York scene for over 15 years, working with established players including Lew Soloff, George Garzone and Rashied Ali. The saxophonist cannot be accused of being in a hurry to get his name on a CD cover: a 15-year wait to release a debut is a lifetime in today’s scene, where graduation can, all-too-often, take place after a young player’s CD launch party. Inner Flights has been, however, worth the wait. Drazen and his quartet are tight, stylish, swinging players with real power and drive.

This is an album of hard bop, post bop, cool and more. Drazen’s originals are combined with Ira Gershwin’s relatively unknown “This Is New,” driven by some terrific rhythm playing from drummer Eric McPherson and bassist Carlo De Rosa, as is Jimmy Van Heusen’s very well-known “Polka Dots and Moonbeams,” in a set that has depth as well as immediacy.

Drazen does ballads beautifully, as evidenced by a seductive late-night “Polka Dots and Moonbeams” and the slightly mystical “Prayer for Brothers Gone.” But he also excels at the up-tempo, hard-swinging, numbers like opener, “Mr Twilight,” or the title track, which starts up with some chunky piano from Jon Davis, before Drazen enters on alto. Fairly cool and measured at first, the tune builds its energy as Drazen switches to soprano and his playing becomes more intense and frenetic.

In between the ballads and the stormers comes “Monkish.” The tune begins with Davis’ piano which is, as expected, Thelonious Monk-ish. It’s also a little bit Fats Waller-ish, adding a little touch of humor to the piece before the rest of the players enter and the tune shifts into a more straight-ahead mode, centered on Drazen’s bop-ish alto.

The versatility that Drazen demonstrates on Inner Flights makes him a hard man to categorize. Best not to try. This is a stylish recording from a fine quartet, and Drazen is a hugely enjoyable player with energy and swing in abundance.

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Another review for “Inner Flights”….

andrewlienhard.com

Alto saxophonist Benjamin Drazen has been plying his trade around Manhattan’s network of small jazz bars — places like 55 Bar, Smalls, and The Garage — for over a decade. At long last, the New York native unveils his debut outing Inner Flights. In a program of mostly original music, Drazen consistently delivers strong post-Coltrane fire with a sound that lies somewhere between Jackie McLean and Gary Bartz. He’s joined by drummer Eric McPherson, pianist Jon Davis, and bassist Carlo De Rosa, all of whom have a frenetic, driving pulse destined to keep the music aloft. Paired with Drazen, the band is a juggernaut.

The session opens with an uptempo blues, “Mr. Twilight”. The melody skates through modal twists accented by a strong Tyner-ish left hand from Davis. Drazen’s opening guns a’ blazing drive is met with the full support of the trio behind him. A Monk tribute follows on “Monkish”, a nod to the legendary pianist’s more comedic side, a la “Raised Four”. True to the title, Davis begins this track with a jagged, Monkish piano intro.

The album’s apex arrives in the middle of the program on the title track. Here, Drazen switches to soprano and unleashes a dazzling Coltrane-esque solo. Should there have been more of this? Yes. But we’ll take what we can get. The energy is matched again on Jon Davis’s arrangement of the rarely-heard Weill standard “This Is New”.

Drazen closes the set with the ballad show tune “Polkadots and Moonbeams”, and in doing so, highlights his affinity for Cannonball Adderley. The slower pace can be a trap for less experienced soloists, but for Drazen it’s incentive to be lyrical and swinging at the same time. A relaxed Red Garland style solo from the pianist adds to the Adderley homage.

On Inner Flights, Drazen and his swinging cohorts deliver on all fronts. It’s a head-turning debut from a talented and extremely capable new voice.

Track Listing: Mr. Twilight; Monkish; Prayer For Brothers Gone; Jazz Heaven; Inner Flights; Neeney’s Waltz; This Is New; Kickin’ Up Dirt; Polka Dots And Moonbeams.

Personnel: Benjamin Drazen: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone; Jon Davis: piano; Carlo De Rosa: bass; Eric McPherson: drums.

Posi-Tone Records www.posi-tone.com

This article is now running on AllAboutJazz.com:

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=38952

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Brandon Wright talks with Anthony Cekay on the Page4Music podcast…Check it out!

http://page4music.wordpress.com

Today marks the launch of Page4Music’s saxophone podcast. Tune in each Friday as Anthony Cekay interviews various saxophonists, equipment manufactures, teachers and more saxophone specialists about everything saxophone related.

In this episode, saxophonist Brandon Wright joins Anthony to discuss their favorite Blue Note albums that feature the tenor saxophone.

Brandon regularly leads his own quintet around the New York City area, and has made leader appearances at Dizzy’s Club Coca Cola, The Kitano Hotel, Smalls Jazz Club, Smoke, Zinc Bar, The Tanglewood Jazz Festival, and the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. Brandon has been performing and touring as a member of Chuck Mangione’s working group and the Max Weinberg Big Band.

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Lucid Culture has this to say about Benjamin Drazen “Inner Flights”…

lucidculture.wordpress.com

Benjamin Drazen’s Inner Flights Delivers Understated Intensity

Intense but not overbearing, richly melodic, rhythmically surprising yet extremely accessible, saxophonist Benjamin Drazen’s new album Inner Flights is smartly titled. Beneath the surface calm, there’s an inner fire – he’s one of those guys like JD Allen who chooses his spots. Drazen likes a clear tone with a judicious vibrato to drive a point home occasionally. While he typically favors restraint in his phrasing, pianist Jon Davis gets to absolutely scorch here, blazing through one tricky, ferocious chart after another, alongside Carlo de Rosa on bass and Eric McPherson on drums. This isn’t just one of the most fascinating jazz albums of the year, it’s one of the most fascinating albums of the year, period.

They get off to a briskly tuneful start with a somewhat altered swing blues, Mr. Twilight – a Mr. Moonlight allusion, it seems – with Davis taking no time launching into a rapidfire solo, echoes of Kenny Barron, Drazen on alto. Monkish comes together slowly, hints at swing and then goes there. It’s an unselfconsciously fun, wry evocation of Monk in a more devious moment, Drazen in airy Phil Woods mode without totally ripping him off, Davis once again getting some delicious charts, including some neat tradeoffs with the drums, and makes the most of them. The requiem Prayer for Brothers Gone By opens with Drazen pensive and somewhat apprehensive over rippling piano and low bowed bass, moves further from the center as each instrument reflects a second time around, then becomes a tone poem of sorts, winding down gracefully with upper-register cascades from Davis. By contrast, Jazz Heaven is a crisp, deviously syncopated swing tune, Drazen buoyantly playful, Davis following in the same vein. Building off a dark, incisive staccato piano hook, the title track is where Drazen and Davis switch roles, the sax cutting loose more here than anywhere else – when Drazen spirals down into a gritty modal atmosphere, the effect is viscerally intense. As it winds out, Drazen overdubs a sax section that eventually flutters to an unexpectedly elegant landing.

The warmly nostalgic Neeney’s Waltz updates Willard Robison-style Americana for a new century, while Kickin’ Up Dirt, an absolute gem, shifts from rubato piano glimmer to relaxed syncopated sway, distantly mysteriouso modalities, hints of a jazz waltz and then a real one: it’s a clinic in how to write allusively. There are also two covers here, a staggered, scurrying version of Gershwin’s This Is New, Drazen kicking up some dust along the shoulder of the blues road, and an expansively deconstructed and then reconstructed version of Polka Dots and Moonbeams, everybody taking their time. Watch for this on our Best Albums of 2011 list. It’s out now on Posi-tone.

 

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Another nice write-up for Benjamin Drazen’s “Inner Flights” CD….

jazzwrap.blogspot.com

Benjamin Drazen: Inner Flights

Benjamin Drazen (sax)
Inner Flights (Posi-Tone Records; 2001)

Eric McPherson (drums)
Carlo De Rosa (bass)
Jon Davis (piano)
There is something warm and positive about Benjamin Drazen that keeps me coming back to Inner Flights(Posi-Tone Records). Drazen, a veteran of the New York scene has performed in various settings (funk, jazz and soul) as well as with some prestigious company (Rashied Ali, Dave Liebman, Lew Soloff and Gary Bartz to name a few). It is a surprise that Inner Flights is his first album as a leader.
Pretty much growing up in the New York scene, Benjamin Drazen shows wonderful penchant for strength in performance and melody. The opener, “Mr. Twilight” is a fast paced number with real intent. Drazen bring a muscle to his musicianship that I haven’t heard since early Branford Marsalis or Eric Alexander records. While the obvious compositional influences are there (Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk and Jackie McLean) Drazen makes his individual voice known very quickly and I think every lover of jazz will gravitate to him, no problem.
The follow up “Monkish”, a playful and appropriate tribute, delivers with great verve. The quartet, especially Jon Davis on piano will have you imagining Monk setting in the audience saying “This kid is pretty good” (Well, maybe Monk wouldn’t say it so nicely). The title track, “Inner Flights” and “Neeney’s Waltz” both add depth, intensity and intimacy to the sessions. The quartet shows a real richness and lovely craftsmanship that switches from a uptempo funky groove (in the case of “Inner Flights”) to delightful romanticism (“Neeney’s Waltz”).
“Kickin’ Up Dirt” highlights Benjamin Drazen’s more soulful side. It’s also an opportunity for DeRosa to standout as well, with some touching and fluid pace on the bass. The closing number is the standard, “Polka Dots And Moonbeams” which seems the perfect way to end this outing. Drazen makes it a lush, bluesy and beautiful affair. He doesn’t oversimplify the passages here. He just let’s the melody speak for itself but he ends up having the listen remember exactly who is performing.
Benjamin Drazen, after all these years on the scene gets to standout on his own and he delivers with a real diamond of a debut. Inner Flights features mainly all original material and will definitely impress even the non jazz fan. I really had to put listen to this a couple of times because I kept saying to myself, “this can’t be this good.” Man, I was so wrong. This is really impressive. So if you are reading this blog for the first time or if you’ve been reading it for awhile–Inner Flights is one of those classic, straight ahead jazz records that is rare nowadays and well worth your time. Enjoy listening…