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JazzTimes Review for Ralph Bowen “Power Play”…

jazztimes.com

Ralph Bowen
Power Play

By Carlo Wolff

Ralph Bowen is an assured saxophonist and versatile composer who clearly enjoys spontaneous conversation with his mates. Hear such chatter on “The Good Shepherd,” as Bowen and bassist Kenny Davis race one another, Bowen elongating the melody as Davis furiously fills beneath. Texture is important to the febrile Bowen and his empathetic band, which includes Donald Edwards on drums and Orrin Evans on piano.

A spell of originals broken only by a sinuous, leisurely cover of “My One and Only Love,” Power Play at first sounds conservative, but there’s a distinctive, modernist tension to it; pinning down that tension, which makes this album rich and dynamic, is tough. It’s in the bop tradition, it’s more pictorial than heraldic, and Bowen’s compositions stress contrast more than unity. Each player gets his head and, while no one showboats, there’s plenty of abundant, wiry power. Several tunes refer to actual places, like the exciting “Drumheller Valley,” which namechecks an archeologically fertile area in the badlands of Alberta, Canada (Bowen’s from Ontario), and “Bella Firenze,” a hard-swung, joyous paean to that Italian city and a fine opportunity for Bowen to express his tenor talents.

There’s no theme to this CD; it’s simply a collection of interesting tunes played by an empathetic quartet. The disc spans the rigorously mathematical “Two-Line Pass”; “Jessica,” a sweet tune featuring Bowen’s most expansive soprano; and the suspenseful “Walleye Jigging,” an entertaining musical portrayal of specialty fishing technique. In short, Power Play is an unpretentious delight.

 

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Here’s the first review for our latest release “Inner Flights” by saxophonist Benjamin Drazen…

saxshed.com

Benjamin Drazen – Inner Flights
Saxophonist Benjamin Drazen is proud to announce the release of Inner Flights, his first recording as a leader on Posi-Tone Records. The quartet features Drazen on alto and soprano saxophones, Jon Davis on piano, Carlo De Rosa on bass, and Eric McPherson on drums.Drazen who is a native of New York, studied at the prestigious New England Conservatory and returned to NYC in 1995.  In more recent years he has been playing around New York City with the likes of Rashied Ali, George Garzone, Gene Jackson, Steve Tyrell, Ron McClure, Lew Soloff, Santi Debriano, Marvin “Bugalu” Smith, and Ron Affif.

The opening cut on Inner Flights quickly reveals Benjamin Drazen to be a fine alto saxophonist with a sound and sense of time many will envy. His self-proclaimed cluster of influences include a predictable lot – that of Charlie Parker, Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins. Although one can hear shades of each of these players coming out of Benjamin Drazen’s saxophone, Drazen is his own player.

The up-tempo Mr. Twilight and more jovial Monkish squarely establish the rhythm section’s ability to swing behind Drazen’s definitive alto sound. The third cut entitled Prayer for Brothers Gone seems a conglomeration of influences – whether by coincidence or design. The influence of Trane on Drazen’s sound and approach is obvious, however the alto is sweet and the vibrato fast at times, almost classical in nature. Here Drazen sounds like no singular saxophonist except himself.

Jazz Heaven reveals a grittier side of Benjamin Drazen’s saxophone sound. His occasional growling is followed by Jon Davis’ energetic piano solo. The energy is carried over into the title track’s opening statement. Inner Flight showcases De Rosa’s percolating bass line along with McPherson’s cymbal work behind Drazen on soprano. It is easy to make comparisons to other great soprano saxophonists such as Dave Liebman – I trust this is not a comparison to which Drazen objects.

The sweet sound of Drazen’s alto is never more evident than in the tender introduction of Neeney’s Waltz. It is clear he has studied the saxophone seriously, yet his jazz playing maintains a flexible sense of pitch, time and tone color, which never sounds rigid. His use of bend and portamento is particularly apparent on the final standard Polkadots and Moonbeams.

This Is New and Kickin’ Up Dirt round out the selections for Benjamin Drazen’s inaugural cd as a leader on Posi-tone records. Jazz saxophone lovers looking for something traditional and new at the same time will likely enjoy checking out Benjamin Drazen live in New York or here on Inner Flight.

Inner Flights will be available on Cd as of March 1, 2011.

You can find out more about Benjamin Drazen at benjamindrazen.com

 

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Bruce Lindsay’s AAJ review for Ralph Bowen “Power Play”….

www.allaboutjazz.com

With over 20 years experience as a recording artist and composer, saxophonist Ralph Bowen has a mastery of straight-ahead jazz that is immediately apparent on Power Play, his third album for the Posi-Tone label. Bowen’s first two Posi-Tone releases, 2009’s Dedicated and 2010’sDue Reverence were quintet recordings. For Power Play, he trims down to an all-new quartet lineup, but it still swings.

On the album’s opener, “K. D.’s Blues,” Bowen jumps straight in with a hard-edged tenor riff that soon develops into a powerful and melodic solo. Drummer Donald Edwards and bassist Kenny Davis, who was Bowen’s band mate for a few years in the ’80s group Out Of The Blue, also impress from the off, creating a driving rhythm that characterizes much of the recording.

Pianist Orrin Evans matches Bowen solo for solo across Power Play. On the snaky “Drumheller Valley,” Evans delivers the opening riff with confidence, while his beautifully varied solo has a soulful vibe which contrasts well with Bowen’s more bop-ish approach. He’s equally stylish when he joins Davis and Edwards to underpin Bowen’s lead playing. It’s Bowen’s warm and lyrical playing that’s to the fore on Guy Wood’s standard, “My One And Only Love” but the performance is a genuine quartet affair, with the rhythm players’ relaxed, and relaxing, approach central to the mood of the song.

While Bowen’s tenor saxophone might be the most prominent instrument on the album—it’s also the instrument of choice for both of the CD’s cover photos—he delivers some of his finest playing, with soprano, on his lovely ballads “Jessica” and “A Solar Romance.”

Power Play is an apposite title: for saxophonist Ralph Bowen is certainly one of the most powerful players in contemporary jazz. But power alone is seldom, if ever, enough, and Bowen combines power with exceptional control, feeling and tone. The rest of the quartet shares Bowen’s characteristics, ensuring that this collection of tunes is constantly rewarding.

 

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Here’s a new All About Jazz feature article about Posi-Tone Records!!!

www.allaboutjazz.com

When Posi-Tone Records founder Marc Free was growing up, he looked forward to each new record purchase, cherishing the cover artwork, devouring the liner notes and most of all, feasting on the music. He came to love the music and albums issued by iconic labels such as Blue Note and Impulse!, knowing that even if he hadn’t heard of the artist, it was likely to be a quality recording by a great musician.

And when Free launched Posi-Tone in 1994, he made those remembrances his business plan.

“I hadn’t intended it; it wasn’t my dream,” says Free of the company’s founding. “It was kind of an outgrowth of other things.”

Technically, he started his record-producing career when he built a studio in his mother’s house, ala Rudy Van Gelder, the Blue Note engineering master whose work set the standard for sound and quality in the 1950s. Free had even hoped to make a documentary on Van Gelder at one point, conducting interviews and gathering research, but the project ultimately fell apart.

“He didn’t think a documentary was the right way to tell the story and he never gave me the permission to do it,” says Free.

A jazz guitarist, Free used his studio space to record friends and other musicians whose music he enjoyed. A chance to record multi-instrumentalist Sam Rivers performing at Los Angeles’ Jazz Bakery in 2002 led to a decision to turn the underground label into a “real business.”

“We try to make records we want to listen to,” he says.

At a time many labels struggle to find a niche, Posi-Tone has emerged with a solid lineup of well-crafted recordings, packaged in distinctive cardboard sleeves. Rather than focus on a particular genre of music, Posi-Tone’s stable of artists are picked by Free and partner/engineer Nick O’Toole.

“What we decided to do was go out to New York three or four times per year to scout for talent,” Free says. “That’s where the musicians who are more serious about making a career in jazz are.”

When a potential Posi-Tone artist is found, Free says the label will record them in a New York studio, such as Acoustic Recording Brooklyn or System 2 studios, also in Brooklyn. The masters are then taken to Los Angeles for post-production work.

This method has connected the label to a diverse collection of musicians, including saxophonist Sarah Manning, trombonist Alan Ferber and trumpeter Jim Rotondi. Free notes he doesn’t sign artists to long-term deals, and allows them to retain all of the publishing rights to their music.

“I can’t tell you how many people in the recording business told me I was crazy,” he says. “[One record company executive] said, ‘your roster of artists and publishing rights is what you build your business on.’ And I said, ‘No, my label’s reputation is what I’m building my business on.'”

Which, Free says, strikes at the biggest hurdle facing new artists and new labels in today’s marketplace: reissues. A quick look at the upcoming releases page on AAJ shows a deluge of reissued jazz recordings every month, with new CDs which repackage and reissue works by everyone from bandleader Artie Shaw to saxophonist Zoot Sims. This means a young artist doesn’t only have to compete with other musicians of today, but those from the last 80 years as well.

“I have a hard time competing with John Coltrane when he’s got 60 years of marketing behind him,” Free says.

The problem, as Free sees it, is the copyright act of 1978, which extended the time before the rights to musical compositions pass into public domain from 28 to 75 years. This meant the recording companies who owned the rights to music and recordings made in the 1950s and 1960s can continue to produce and sell the music for years. Hence the belief that building the back catalogue is the key to a label’s survival.

“All of us are struggling with these issues all the time,” says Free.

Another issue confronting labels concerns digital distribution: Free is sticking to emphasizing direct sales of physical CDs because he says the economics just don’t work with downloads. He says the average online customer won’t download a full CD, reducing the revenue to the label (and artist) to a fraction of what CDs net. Consequently, he says he would need to sell to 14 online customers to realize what he can earn for one CD sale.

“The music isn’t in any danger, but the record labels making recordings may well be,” Free says. He’s marketing the company’s releases through Amazon, the label’s website and with distributors outside the United States. “We’re seeing tremendous response to our efforts.”

Summing his philosophy up, Free says: “The answer is to make more and better records.

“We’re good for jazz, we’re good for business and we make good records.”

Selected Posi-Tone releases

Doug Webb
Midnight
2010

 

 

 

Hooking up with bassist Stanley Clarke and keyboard player Larry Goldings for a set of sweetly swinging chestnuts has saxophonist Webb playing in fine form. Although a session veteran, this is Webb’s first release as a headliner and it gives him a chance to stand out. Webb plays with smooth tone and uses the full range of his tenor, which works well on ballads such as “I’ll Be Around” and “Fly Me to the Moon.”

Webb builds his solos skillfully and is matched by the quality of Clarke’s and Goldings’ turns. Clarke offers a deep acoustic bass sound throughout, getting some amazingly legato notes that fill the quartet’s sound.

Sarah Manning
Dandelion Clock
2010

The demure face looking up from the cover of Dandelion Clock contrasts Manning’s often aggressive, experimental style, as she plays over a collection of original tunes and two covers, Michel Legrand‘s “The Windmills of Your Mind” and “The Peacocks” by Jimmy Rowles.

Her compositions offer enough harmonic room for Manning to craft exploring solos, often using long runs that seem to end in question marks. Never one to settle for an easy note choice when there’s a more interesting one available, her solos soar in such post-bop ballads as “Marbles” and “Habersham Street.”

Orrin Evans
Faith in Action
2010

Evans has been growing into a major figure in jazz piano, thanks to releases as strong as his 2010 release in tribute to saxophonist Bobby Watson. Combining his own compositions and five by Watson, Evans plays smoothly through oblique runs and blues turns on solos, and lets his accompanists—which include bassist Luques Curtis and drummers Nasheet Waits, Rocky Bryant and Gene Jackson—provide a solid base for his work.

Watson’s “Appointment in Milano” features a pounding bottom underneath Evans’ swift runs, which alternate between sweet scales and modal triplets. The delightful “Beattitudes,” another Watson gem, combines an airy intro with a gentle melody. Musicians know it takes more to keep a ballad moving than a burning up-tempo number, and Evans shows his real chops on this one.

Brandon Wright
Boiling Point
2010

Saxophonist Wright is clearly a student of the 1960s, and these eight tunes—including five original compositions—show he learned well. This is a disc fans of swinging, smoky jazz will favor. Wright never overplays and fits in pianist David Kikoski‘s playing marvelously. Case in point, the interplay on Jimmy Van Heusen’s “Here’s That Rainy Day.” With Kikoski comping sweetly, Wright gets just enough blues to keep his solo emotional without going saccharine. On the other side of the coin, the interplay between Wright, Kikoski and trumpeter Alex Sipiagin at the crescendo near the end of the samba-based “Castaway” is a real treat. All are playing hard but not over each other.

Jim Rotondi
1000 Rainbows
2010

Rotondi’s smooth chops and smart tune selection make this a delicious outing. Playing alongside a capable four-piece band, including Joe Locke on vibes, Danny Grissett on piano, bassist Barak Mori and Bill Stewart on drums, Rotondi shines on his compositions “Bizzaro World,” “One for Felix” and “Not Like This,” a beautiful ballad duet with Locke.

 

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Mark Corroto’s insightful AAJ review for Ralph Bowen “Power Play”….

www.allaboutjazz.com

The inscription on saxophonist Ralph Bowen’s business card probably should read “solid citizen,” because his post-bop jazz conception has always been steadfast and dependable. With Power Play, he only adds to his stalwart reputation.

Together with bassist Kenny Davis, Bowen was picked, in the mid-1980s, to spearhead the return of Blue Note Records in the all-star band Out Of The Blue. Along with the likes of Michael Philip MossmanKenny Garrett, andRalph Peterson, OTB revived the classic post-bop sound. Bowen continued that language with discs from Criss Cross and his previous releases, Due Reverence (2010) and Dedicated (2009), with this century’s keeper of the flame, Posi-Tone Records.

On this release Bowen tackles eight originals and one standard. With the choice not to share the frontline with another horn, he carries the session on some very broad shoulders. He opens with “K.D.’s Blues,” a spirited and animated groove vehicle that captures the essence of his experience playing with Horace Silver, or with bluesy organ bands in Philadelphia.

Spending the majority of the disc on tenor, he does switch to soprano for the balladic “Jessica” and “A Solar Romance.” Where his tenor challenges all comers, his soprano playing is much softer, and his sympathetic sound floats, with no hint of the twitchiness the straight horn is apt to have.

As the title notes, this disc is about the urge and compression of a connected quartet working through some muscular pieces. The band flexes its collective muscle on “The Good Shepherd,” and bends intricate patterns on “Two-Line Pass.” Bowen seems to want to pack this outing with pieces that warrant standing ovations. He certainly does with his tribute to the two Johns, covering “My One And Only Love” straight from John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman (Impulse!, 1963) , by playing both Johns’ parts with the sincerest and most flattering imitation.

 

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Another nice review for Mike DiRubbo “Chronos”….

jazzandblues.blogspot.com

Posi-Tone Records is carving out a nice niche for itself by developing a fine catalog of mainstream jazz by up and coming musicians. Mike DiRubbo is an alto saxophonist with a nice dark and burnished tone that is framed well on this album by Brian Charette on organ and Rudy Royston on drums. This is not your average bluesy organ and saxophone date, although the music does come up through the tradition and is very accessible. Particularly interesting is the storming “Rituals” where the music builds to a feverish pitch with the leader over-blowing like Kenny Garrett or Jackie McLean at their most intense in a very impressive performance. But straight-ahead jazz is the order of the day with songs like “Eight for Elvin” and the enjoyable set ending bossa nova Viva O Rio De Janeiro, which finds the group grooving along in a sultry manner and suggests new vistas waiting to be explored on future dates. This was a solid and well done mainstream jazz date, of particular interest to organ/sax devotees, but amenable to all who enjoy subtle well played music.

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Lucid Culture weighs in on Ralph Bowen “Power Play”….

lucidculture.wordpress.com

Ralph Bowen’s Power Play: A Clinic in Melody

It looks like we have our first classic of the year. On the cover of his new album Power Play, saxophonist Ralph Bowen stands in an alley, holding his sax more like a goalie than a winger. But the title is absolutely spot-on. This is one of those albums that musicians will hear and will immediately want to play along to. Yet ironically, non-musicians will probably enjoy this the most because they can just relax and enjoy it for what it is rather than having to figure out what Bowen is doing. Which actually isn’t all that difficult, most of the time, other than the most rapidfire passages (which will take lots of practice if you want to do them with the same kind of soul and style), because melody is simple. It lingers. As does this album.

If you play, this is a clinic in the kind of things you could be doing, and maybe should be doing. Bowen’s sense of melody is stunning, and yet completely unpredictable. He alternates effortlessly between scales and modes, shows off some wickedly blistering speed in places yet only when he really has to drive a point home. The closest comparison is probably Joshua Redman, but Bowen’s attack is lighter and more crystalline, and that contrasts, sometimes mightily, with the intensity of the tunes. He plays both tenor and alto here and is equally compelling either way. It’s hard-hitting, purposeful and tuneful beyond belief, and it elevates the crew behind him. Donald Edwards’ no-nonsense drums team up withKenny Davis’ crisp, propulsive bass, along with Orrin Evans’ piano. About Evans, what else is there to say – everything he touches lately turns into magic (have you heard his Tarbaby album from last year? Get the damn thing!), and this is yet another example.

They don’t waste time getting started with an aggressive, matter-of-fact swing blues, which sets up an immediate contrast with the gorgeous, richly countermelodic Drumheller Valley, its intro with echoes of Brubeck, Evans kicking in a majestically chordal solo followed by an artfully divergent passage into Bowen’s lusciously ominous spirals. Two-Line Pass – a highway reference, maybe? – is relentless, Evans again matching the understated overdrive of Bowen’s restless bustle. Evans goes into rippling Americana-via-Brubeck on The Good Shepherd, a wickedly catchy modal number; Bowen’s long, bumpy descent out of the clouds on the warmly thoughtful swing tune Bella Firenze is arguably the high point of the whole album. Although on second thought that could be his big crescendo out, on alto, on the almost deviously nonchalant blues ballad Jessica, which follows it.

Walleye Jigging is a tongue-in-cheek lazy afternoon tableau complete with an expansive cocktail piano solo and an extended interlude in three before reverting to relaxed, syncopated swing. The album ends with A Solar Romance, a gently optimistic ballad that turns dark in seconds and gives Bowen the chance to work the suspense for all it’s worth, all the way to a very uneasy resolution. The lone cover here is My One and Only Love, where the bass and piano give Bowen plenty of room for what’s basically an expansive (ok, eight-minute) solo that somehow manages not to be boring. It’s only February, but you’ll see this on our best albums of 2011 list. It’s out now on Posi-Tone.

 

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Richard Kamins Step Tempest review of Ralph Bowen “Power Play”….

steptempest.blogspot.com

Power Play – Ralph Bowen (Posi-Tone Records) -Tenor saxophonist/composer came out of Canada in the mid-1980s to study in the United States and first came to critical notice as a member of the Blue Note labels hand-picked ensemble of “young lions” known as Out of the Blue. That group featured, among others, alto saxophonist Kenny Garrett, bassist Bob Hurst and drummer Ralph Peterson.  Bowen went on to work with pianists Michel Camilo, Hank Jones and Horace Silver as well as vocalist Shirley Scott and bassist Charles Fambrough.
This release, his 3rd for Posi-Tone, features the fine piano work of long-time friend Orrin Evans, bassist Kenny Davis and drummerDonald Edwards.  Evans’ tolling McCoy Tyner-like chords give great power to “Drumheller Valley” as does Edwards’ powerful drumming.  Bowen starts his solo (after a fine one from Evans) quietly but soon rides the roiling rhythm section to impressive heights.  “Two-Line Pass” has the speed of a hockey game in the flying bass lines of Davis – Bowen blazes a mighty trail through the piano chords, having fun interacting with the ensemble.  Evans takes his own joy ride with Edwards supplying the high-octane percussive push.
Bowen wisely plays “My One and Only Love” as the pretty ballad it is, staying close to the melody and chord changes for his handsome solo.  There is a sense of joy in his solo, a happiness that carries through the entire piece.
Other highlights include the handsome uptempo ballad “Bella Firenze” with an Evans solo that is relaxed and “swinging” at the same time and an energetic give-and-take featuring Bowen and Edwards (which ends on a fadeout.)  “Walleye Jigging” has a pleasing melody played over shifting tempos that opens to an understated piano solo before Bowen and Edwards have more strong interaction. Bowen’s lithe and gentle soprano saxophone is featured on the final track, “A Solar Romance.”  Take the time to listen to Davis’s long tones on the bass and Edward’s exemplary work on the cymbals as well as Evans’ impressionistic piano (somewhat reminiscent of another, older, Evans – Bill.)
Power Play” does have its share of powerful playing but there is also a goodly amount of dynamic variation from track to track.  What does not change throughout the program is the fine musicianship and the excellent interplay.  Some might call Bowen’s approach “modern hard bop” – call “honest good music” that’s well played and you won’t go wrong.  For more information, go to www.ralphbowen.comor www.posi-tone.com.
Here’s the opening track, “K.D’s Blues” courtesy of Posi-Tone Records and IODA Promonet:
K.D.’s Blues (mp3)

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Dan Bilawsky’s AAJ review of Ralph Bowen “Power Play”…..

www.allaboutjazz.com

Saxophonist Ralph Bowen has always been an original, despite being tagged as one of the neo-traditionalist young lions of the ’80s. A quarter century has gone by since Bowen came to semi-prominence as a member of Out Of The Blue, yet this mega-talent still manages to fly just under the radar, despite impressive dates like this one.

Power Play is a sharp departure from Bowen’s previous Posi-Tone albums, which were built on an all-star guitar-bass-drums rhythm section, and placed trumpeter Sean Jones next to Bowen on the frontline. For this, his third record for the label, Bowen is the lone horn player and he enlists pianist (and label mate) Orrin Evans to take the role of harbinger of harmony previously held by guitarist Adam Rogers.

The program is all Bowen-based material, save for a classy take on “My One And Only Love,” and the saxophonist often shares the spotlight with Evans. Both men insert some chromatic lines into their soloing on “K.D.’s Blues,” but they take two very different approaches beyond that point. Bowen becomes more rhythmically frantic and fearsome after his brief, descending chromatic caper, while Evans uses his turn to launch into bluesy statements. “Drumheller Valley” shifts the focus to Evans at first, but Bowen delivers some playfully dancing work, atop bassist and former Out Of The Blue band mate Kenny Davis‘ lines, that deserves mention. The saxophonist then reclaims his position in the drivers’ seat, delivering swooping melody lines (“The Good Shepherd”) and sweet seduction (“Solar Romance”) with equal skill and measure.

Davis and drummer Donald Edwards serve as support crew, rather than soloists, on the majority of the album, but both make invaluable contributions to the music. Edwards provides solid swing of all stripes and colors, from fast and driving to slow and loose, and he drives “Walleye Jigging” with his choppy, shifting cymbal work. The drummer briefly gets an opportunity to cut loose over a vamping pattern on this track, but he proves to be more impressive when trading twelve-bar solos on “Two-Line Pass.” Davis demonstrates a plucky presence when it counts, but his lines are rounded out for maximum support on the softer material. While he’s clearly the most introverted artist on the album, his strong solo skills steal the show on “Jessica.”

Power Play, with its mixture of driving, thought-provoking material and gentler journeys, demonstrates that power manifests itself in different ways, and remains ever-present within the work of saxophonist Ralph Bowen.