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Here’s the first review for the new Doug Webb CD “Renovations”…..

www.allaboutjazz.com

Doug Webb, a seasoned saxophonist who is equally comfortable recording soundtracks in studios or swinging on a bandstand, teamed up with heavy hitters like bass legend Stanley Clarke and pianist Larry Goldings on Midnight (Posi-Tone, 2010). That collection was an expertly crafted, all-standards affair, and the eight classic tunes that make up Renovations were culled from the same session.

While it might be easy to assume that these are second-tier, inferior performances that didn’t make the cut for Midnight, that isn’t the case. Webb starts off the program with a version of “Satin Doll” that’s anything but a rote run-through. This arrangement shakes the very harmonic foundation of the song as it modulates upward while Webb works his way through the melody. “Then I’ll Be Tired Of You” is often associated with singers rather than instrumentalists, but Webb makes a good case for adding this one into the regular saxophone repertoire. Clarke controls the momentum on “I Can’t Get Started,” while “I’ve Never Been In Love Before” proves to be an album highlight. Goldings kicks this one off with a tumbling, semi-Thelonious Monk-ish distillation of the theme. Webb exhibits a velvety tone and Goldings delivers a solo that starts with simple, yet effective, single note lines in the upper reaches of the piano.

“You’ve Changed” is classy balladry that, while delivered with style, overstays its welcome a bit. Webb’s slithery saxophone work on the sans-drums performance of “They Can’t Take That Away From Me,” and his frantic soprano saxophone flights on the back end of “Bluesette” help to re-energize the album. By the time Webb arrives at the album closer, Henry Mancini’s “Slow Hot Wind,” he has nothing left to prove, and he spins out seductive, sleek saxophone lines that leave a sense of mystery and intrigue hovering in the air.

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Dan Bilawsky of AAJ weighs in on Mike DiRubbo “Chronos”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Piano has always been part of the package on saxophonist Mike DiRubbo’s albums. Still, when DiRubbo made his Posi-Tone debut with Repercussion in 2009, he left the piano behind, relying instead on some harmonic underpinnings from vibraphonist Steve Nelson. Now, on his follow-up disc for the label, he moves into different piano-less territory with his first organ trio record.

DiRubbo digs in on these nine original tracks, which shy away from organ group stereotypes. DiRubbo penned two-thirds of this material, with organist Brian Charette providing the other three tracks, and the majority of the songs lean heavily on their rhythmic foundations. The album opener, “Minor Progress,” contains all sorts of stop time breaks and unison hits from the rhythm duo, while DiRubbo works his craft on top. Charette’s organ works against the beat in certain places, obscuring the time a bit, but the up-tempo swing eventually takes over. Two Mike DiRubbo’s, through the magic of overdubbing, work together at the outset of the title track, and this piece deals with tension and release, as the rhythm section moves in and out of a swing groove.

DiRubbo’s agile mind and audacious ideas come to the fore on “Ritual,” an odd-metered funk tune in seven (with 6+8 subdivisions) that’s built off looping licks and grooves from Charette and drummer Rudy Royston. While the mid-album “Nouveau” and “Lucky 13” are the least memorable performances here, the last three tracks are all winners: Charette’s “Excellent Taste” lives up to its name and features some gorgeous saxophone work from DiRubbo, while “Eight For Elvin”—whether earning its name from its placement in the running order or from the eight-bar, polyrhythmic, Elvin Jones-like drum solo sandwiched in the middle of the head—never disappoints. Despite the fact that DiRubbo doesn’t wield a tenor saxophone, the drum-saxophone dialog on this one seems to be a clear nod toward the John Coltrane-Elvin Jones connection. Charette’s album closer, “More Physical,” is playful at first. A slight tropical tinge, light and frothy sounds and looping ideas that establish the 7/4 groove are all in play, but things eventually turn physical when Royston starts bashing away toward the back end of the track.

Chronos—viewed as the personification of time in Greek Mythology—is an apt reference point for this rhythmically vital set of music from saxophone scion Mike DiRubbo.

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With an early new year gift, Clifford Allen provides a ton of coverage for Posi-Tone on his amazing Ni Kantu blog….

cliffordallen.blogspot.com

Briefly Reviewed: Four on Posi-Tone Records
As the year draws to a close, with most holidays celebrated and top-ten lists submitted, the hope is that space has been left for tastes to grow and expand with new musical horizons and relationships to form over the coming twelve months. One challenge that I’ve had – and expressed here on a few occasions – is where dyed-in-the-wool jazz music fits into all of this. Despite an avowed love for historical jazz recordings as well as enjoying new music in the idiom, nevertheless the bug of challenge bites and I find myself questioning the current place of making refined statements within a timeworn linguistic structure (not that the same can’t be said for people working in the ‘free’ or avant-garde idioms).

Questioning, one must remember, doesn’t necessarily mean that a musical statement isn’t valid or engaging; rather, questioning something is a dynamic engagement with a thing or a concept. I can still find myself interested in and moved by music in the tradition while at the same time inquiring of that music’s function or value. Not coincidentally, the contemporary jazz that I find the most interesting is that which questions (in-) itself and for which expressive and structural boundaries are pushed at, even if only slightly.

Los Angeles’ Posi-Tone is one of the labels keeping close to a vision of modern, straight-ahead jazz that, while not particularly rough around the edges, remains full of surprises and engagement. Among their nearly fifty releases are discs by multi-instrumentalist and improvising composer Sam Rivers, trumpeter-composer Jim Rotondi, trombonist-composer Steve Davis (the New Jazz Composers Octet, etc.) and tenorman-composer Wayne Escoffery, alongside lesser-known or up-and-coming artists and ensembles. Not every title in their deep catalog is a winner, but in the several months that I’ve had to familiarize myself with a selection of their releases, there are a number which stick out.

Organist Jared Gold is one player whose work is impressive, drawing on the playing of such seminal figures as Larry Young and John Patton for his harmonic choices, which are often salty and slightly dissonant. On Out of Line, his third disc for Posi-Tone, Gold is joined by guitarist Dave Stryker, drummer Mark Ferber and tenorman Chris Cheek on six originals and three covers. It’s a fairly strong statement to open one’s set with a cover of a tune like Hank Mobley’s “An Aperitif” (which appeared on 1967’s Thinking of Home, first issued in 1980). Cheek’s flinty, cutting tone meshes well with Gold’s stopps-pulled jounce and steaming modal clamber, propelled by a loose stoke from guitar and drums.

Minus tenor, the trio settles into an easy lope for “Preachin’,” which despite missing hard-toned fire (and not that Cheek is particularly ‘out,’ but his phrasing and projection are unequivocally weighty), nevertheless sports fine grit and ebullience. Stevie Wonder’s “You Haven’t Done Nothin’” has openness to its groove, though one does get the feeling that Ferber’s drums could have an external push to them. His dustily tasteful propulsion/carpet is clearly part of the axis on which chunks of electric grease turn, so a little more recorded presence could balance the proceedings. There’s pregnant ballpark goo to Gold’s tone on “It Is Well,” mostly a vehicle for organ, tenor and barely-there brushes, with Cheek’s cottony minor explosions providing an interesting counter to the leader’s grinding evocations. In all, Out of Line is a solid disc with some fine grease and expansive playing, but could have been better served with a little more realization of its “in the red” qualities.

Tarbaby (winner of the “most charged band name award”) is a collective made up of drummer Nasheet Waits, bassist Eric Revis and pianist Orrin Evans, which formerly also included saxophonists Stacy Dillard and J.D. Allen. On the group’s second disc and first for Posi-Tone, The End of Fear, Allen is present as a “guest” along with altoist Oliver Lake and trumpeter Nicholas Payton. Evans has a kaleidoscopic approach to the tradition, heavily gospelized but also florid, ethereal and rhythmically crepuscular. The presence of Revis and Waits – along with the odd bits of studio chatter and samples – might seem to nod in the direction of Bandwagon redux, but there really isn’t much basis to compare Evans with Jason Moran. The trio moves deftly through “Brews,” a shifting array of reflections and expressions of the piano-trio, never losing its step or becoming overly flashy. That’s an island of pure form in a disc that does lean on conceptualism a bit – mostly clear in the use of sound-bites to shape the area around forays into dissonance like “Heads.” One would hope that they believe their music can stand on its own, free or inside, but attaching snatches of verbiage seems to unseat what otherwise is honest group playing.

“Jena 6” is pointillist, full of gradient shifts and subtle turns in its shortish length – like much of the music here, a wide range of colors and shapes are worked into and out of tracks that mostly hover around five minutes. This disc is one of the more adventurous recordings to feature Payton, and he gets a full seven minutes to stretch out around alternately lush and thrashing piano, bass, and percussion on “Hesitation.” Revis’ muscular arco, echoing an interest in players like Henry Grimes, Steve Tintweiss and William Parker, is quite well represented, and his throaty pluck helps to bolster the questing lilt at the heart of “Tough Love,” which compositionally (if not pianistically) recalls Andrew Hill. At times, one might wish that Tarbaby stretched the performances a bit lengthwise and shrunk their reliance on snatches of verbiage intended to shape our appreciation of the music’s aesthetic and social weight. Nevertheless, concision never really hurt expressive actualization.

Tenor saxophonist Brandon Wright and alto saxophonist Jacám Manricks lead two strong small-group dates recently waxed for Posi-Tone; the former with Boiling Point and the latter with Trigonometry. Wright’s session features venerable drummer Matt Wilson alongside pianist David Kikoski, bassist Hans Glawischning and trumpeter Alex Sipiagin. Wright has worked with the Mingus Big Band, Maria Schneider Orchestra and Chico O’Farrill, among others. A mix of originals and standards, Boiling Point opens strongly with “Free Man,” its bright head arrangement reminiscent of incisive Blue Note 1960s dates, and something about the tune and the front line nods toward the Freddie Hubbard/Wayne Shorter team. Wright himself is a rough-and-tumble hardbop tenorman, drawing from the school of tenor playing exemplified by Joe Henderson, Tyrone Washington, Sam Rivers, Alan Skidmore and their brethren, buoyed perfectly by a hard charging rhythm section. Though on the surface such a tune can easily fall into the “revivalist bag” (and it does), one forgets comparisons as “Free Man” rockets forward. Filmic lyricism imbues the following “Drift,” explored further in Kikoski’s opening, Wynton Kelly-like cadenza to “Odd Man Out,” which moves into odd-interval Shorterish lilt once the head comes around. Wright’s husky and sandblasted tone, coupled with turns of phrase that move well outside of cookie-cutter territory, mark him as one of those rare products of jazz education (U-Mich., U-Miami) willing to actually “search” within the idiom. One can’t say enough about the importance of that impulse, as well as the presence of inventive and dynamic sidemen, making Boiling Point feel like a “band” effort.

Already a busy figure on the New York scene, Manricks is going forward with young, semi-free innovators like drummer Tyshawn Sorey and pianist Jacob Sacks to support his larger-form compositional efforts (heard on Labyrinth, available here). Trigonometry is a quirky small-group date with pianist Gary Versace, drummer Obed Calvaire and bassist Joe Martin, with trombonist Alan Ferber and trumpeter Scott Wendholt guesting on three of the disc’s ten tracks (all are originals save for a cover of Eric Dolphy’s “Miss Ann”). On the latter track, Manricks is supported only by bass and drums, moving from the loquacious theme to a soft burble and gooey cry, with odd flurried warmth to his collected tones. Some of Manricks’ lines seem like those of a classical saxophonist, but their movement is bop-informed, like a weird update to Lee Konitz’ Motion. It’s no surprise that Dolphy would be an important influence – not necessarily because both are altoists, but because Manricks is also interested in broader concepts of organization, and has employed lush orchestral arrangements to his compositions in some intriguing ways. That lushness comes through on the sextet piece “Nucleus,” which if it nods in the direction of Gil Evans, does so in simpler knots, perhaps a little more on the Graham Collier side of things. The leader’s curlicues occupy a wholly immediate world, while chordal backing keeps Manricks’ arrangements hovering in the air. “Mood Swing” is a particularly fine feature for Versace’s darting classicism as a partial framework for the altoist’s lateral sketches, implications of dark grandeur from the composer’s horn. With two fine discs under his belt, as both a composer and improviser Jacám Manricks is a player to watch, questioning the nature of his art while still holding fast to tradition.

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Here’s the next review for Mike DiRubbo “Chronos”,,,,

www.jazzreview.com

Connecticut native Mike DiRubbo has made a name for himself as a featured saxophonist in New York-based groups led by trombonist Steve Davis, pianist David Hazeltine and many others. His sixth release as a leader, Chronos (Posi-Tone), is a hard-blowing, straight-ahead affair with organist Brian Charette and drummer Rudy Royston. The disc features nine original compositions by DiRubbo and Charette, ranging from up-tempo burners and bouncy waltzes, to modal workouts and Latin-inspired grooves.

Primarily an alto player, DiRubbo conveys a soulful edginess with a sound reminiscent of the late Jackie McLean, the legendary saxophonist with whom he studied under at the University of Hartford. An uncompromising bebop influence can be heard in DiRubbo’s soloing, especially on swinging numbers such as “Minor Adjustment” and “Lucky.” The dark funk of “Rituals” and swinging intensity of “Eight For Elvin”—presumably a tribute to drum legend Elvin Jones—gives way to explosive vamp sections with DiRubbo going for broke alongside Royston’s fiery drumming.

Charette provides solid support and contributes strong solos throughout the disc. The organist’s manipulation of the drawbars recalls the vibrato-laden greasiness of Don Patterson, especially on his odd-metered piece “More Physical,” with DiRubbo on soprano saxophone.

It’s refreshing to hear a group of first-rate players who know how to swing and aren’t the least bit bashful about letting a listener know it.

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First review for our latest release “Chronos” by saxophonist Mike DiRubbo…

www.somethingelsereviews.com

The beginning of the year is usually a quiet period for music releases. Coming on the heels of the frantic holiday shopping season and the various “best of (prior) year lists” that assist in yuletide purchasing decisions, you’d think there wouldn’t be anything worthwhile coming out between mid-December and, say, March. But one of my favorite jazz labels, Posi-Tone Records, defies those expectations. Last year, Orrin Evans’ superb Faith In Action hit the stores on Groundhog Day and it turned out to be one of the best Modern and Mainstream jazz records of the year. This time, Posi-Tone produces yet another early-year impressive CD on only this fourth day of January, called Chronos.

DiRubbo calls to mind another saxophonist Jimmy Greene, who like DiRubbo is a Gen X-er who grew up in Connecticut and got to study jazz saxophone under one of the all-time great sax players Jackie McLean. Both have mastered multiple kinds of saxes, though DiRubbo’s preference seems to be the alto sax. DiRubbo’s Connecticut connection also led him to a long association with noted trombonist Steve Davis and to this day remains a fixture on the front line of Davis-led bands and participating in Davis recording sessions. DiRubbo himself have led dates going back to the mid 90s, and Chronos marks his six release overall and second one for Posi-Tone.

Though DiRubbo has never really ventured outside the realm of neo-bop on his records, he does it very, very well, and if you like Jackie McLean’s approach to jazz, you’ll certainly enjoy DiRubbo, too. However, DiRubbo has shown that he’s not averse to trying out new instrumentations: last year’s Repercussion found him swapping out the pianist and trumpet player in a traditional jazz quintet for a vibes player in Steve Nelson. Chronos, on the other hand, is his first foray into organ jazz, employing B-3 player Brian Charette and drummer Rudy Royston in a lean, mean organ trio.

Charette is a very cool-toned organ player who prefers to swing than sizzle. That makes the perfect complement to DiRubbo’s style, who also possess an innate sense of swing, but also likes to sizzle on his solos. Charette’s soothing organ balances things out nicely. The nine tunes on Chronos were all written either by DiRubbo or Charette, and are all fine specimens of the post bop form. DiRubbo’s “Minor Progress” kicks it off right with a finger snapping, explosive tune where the sax player climbs the scales with passion and assurance. Royston ably shuffles through a variety of rhythms without ever losing the beat on “Chronos,” a track where DiRubbo swings authoritatively and Charette solos with a good rhythmic awareness. DiRubbo briefly goes all out wailing on “Rituals” in a fiery, urgent saxophone showcase that would surely make his old mentor McLean proud. Even where the atmosphere is tone downed as in the closer “More Physical,” DiRubbo invests a lot into shaping sax lines that are meaningful and soulful.

Mike DiRubbo takes on the organ trio format with Chronos without changing the character of his playing. The hot but controlled blowing by DiRubbo combined with the cool organ sounds of Brian Charette and the forceful drumming by Rudy Royston makes lively straight ahead jazz that sounds just right.

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A nice write up for Tarbaby The End of Fear by John Barron…

www.jazzreview.com

Exploring odd-meters, swirling melodic themes and rhythmically-charged free-form improvisations, the New York-based collective Tarbaby delivers an intriguing set of swing-based jazz with The End of Fear. Along with core members Orrin Evans on piano, bassist Eric Revis and Nasheet Watts on drums, the twelve-track set features the trumpeter Nicholas Payton and saxophonists Oliver Lake and JD Allen.

The use of speech sound bites cleverly enhances shorter, open-ended pieces such as “E-Math” and “Heads.” Such extra-musical add-ons can easily diminish the intent of spontaneous deposition. Fortunately, the overdubs here are used sparingly.

Lake, a legendary figure in avant jazz, perhaps best known for his work with the World Saxophone Quartet, performs with uncompromised creativity on Sam River’s “Unity,” Andrew Hill’s “Tough Love” and his own composition “November ’80.” The alto saxophonist soars with a hard-edged, seasoned lyricism (at times lacking in the bold, over-exuberance of Payton’s trumpet).

For all the spirited blowing from the guest soloists, it is the tunes with trio only that stand out as compelling. The supple, unhurried camaraderie between Evans, Revis and Waits on the Monk-inspired “Brews,” “Jena 6” and “Abacus” has an enticing allure.

The End of Fear is a strong, well-conceptualized release. A disc well worth repeated listening.

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The 100 Greatest Jazz Albums blog weighs in on “1000 Rainbows” by Trumpeter Jim Rotondi….

100greatestjazzalbums.blogspot.com

Jim Rotondi’s third Posi-Tone release presents the best of the label’s attempt to keep straight ahead mainstream jazz at the forefront. The band – Jim Rotondi (trumpet), Joe Locke (vibraphone), Danny Grissett (piano), Barak Mori (bass), Bill Stewart (drums) – is selected from the finest on the current New York scene and the result is as special as you would expect.

The four original compositions – three by Jim Rotondi and one from Joe Locke – are combined well with innovative takes on more standard fare on the nine-track album.

Vibes player Buddy Montgomery’s ‘1000 Rainbows’, the title track, is a clear stand out with unison trumpet/vibes singing out over unison bass/piano, probing vibes and trumpet solos and Bill Stewart’s drumming getting into those tempo-bending rhythms that he is so well known for.

Ditto, the take on trumpeter Bill Mobley’s ’49th Street’ with its Charlie Parker-like riffs and hustling ‘this is the big city in the sixties’ feel.

Jim Rotondi photo

British-born arranger Jeremy Lubbock’s ‘Not Like This’ is another highlight but for quite different reasons. It is a beautiful duet between trumpet and vibes; a cool, understated finale.

There is a big ballad – the Richard Wells / Mel Tormé composition ‘Born To Be Blue’ – that shows off Jim Rotondi’s fine technique as, minus vibes, the band shines as a quartet.

Of the original material, the pick is Joe Locke’s ‘Crescent Street’, said to be a reworking of the chord structure to Jerome Kern’s ‘Yesterdays’. It emerges as high octane, uptempo bop with attractive running bass lines and time no changes freedom for improvisation.

The Jim Rotondi originals are high tempo, full-blooded bop with the band at full stretch; a tempo too far, perhaps, on ‘Bizzaro World’ and ‘Gravitude’ but finding greater poise on ‘One For Felix’.

The remaining track, a take on Lennon and McCartney’s ‘We Can Work It Out’, develops from modest beginnings into an expansive vehicle for impressive soloing.

Overall, then, a mainstream bop album of great accomplishment.

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Doug Webb “Midnight” gets a write up from Lucid Culture….

lucidculture.blogspot.com

If we told you what character saxophonist Doug Webb plays on tv, that would be distracting. His new album Midnight is probably a lesser-paying situation but it’s just as fun (more about that later). Webb is pretty ubiquitous on the West Coast and has played with everybody: Freddie Hubbard, Quincy Jones, Horace Silver and many others. The setup behind him is interesting: Larry Goldings on piano rather than organ, Stanley Clarke on upright bass instead of electric and Gerry Gibbs adding counterintuitive, understated flash behind the kit. This is a fun session, pure and simple, a bunch of pros prowling familiar terrain: most of the time they achieve a nocturnal, oldschool West Coast cool, but when the good times spill over they ride the energy for all it’s worth.

Try a Little Tenderness breathes some fresh bubbles into a piece that gets flat quickly since everybody plays it. I’ll Be Around (the pop standard, not the Howlin’ Wolf classic) has a swing wide enough to get a Mack truck through and a genuinely gorgeous, starry Goldings solo. Gibbs works Fly Me to the Moon as a subtle shuffle beneath Webb’s mentholated, opening tenor solo and Goldings’ more expansive spotlight. And it’s cool hearing Clarke, probably the last person you’d expect to get a Ray Brown impression out of, do it with a grin.

You Go to My Head gets a gently pulsing alto-and-piano duo treatment with Joe Bagg on the 88s. The Boy Next Door, with Mahesh Balasooriya on piano, has Clarke seizing more territory as he typically does, Gibbs all too glad to jump in and go along for the ride. Webb’s warm, lyrical alto work sets the stage for another glistening gem of a solo from Goldings on Crazy She Calls Me. They take Charlie Parker’s Quasimodo and set it up straight, Goldings’ unselfconscious geniality giving way to Webb to take it into the shade and then joyously out again. They close with Emily, by Johnny Mandel (who has raved about Webb’s version), a clinic in nuance on the part of the whole quartet, poignancy through a late-evening mist, an apt way to close this very smartly titled album. It’s out now on Posi-Tone. Oh yeah – Doug Webb plays Lisa Simpson’s sax parts on tv. There is a slight resemblance.

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AAJ writer Dan Bilawsky’s write-up for the new Jared Gold CD….

www.allaboutjazz.com

Despite the implications that live within a title like Out Of Line, organist Jared Gold’s third Posi-Tone release is rather in tune with the history and vibe of organ groups and all that goes with them. Gold is joined by some top notch east coast talent, in the form of guitarist Dave Stryker, drummer Mark Ferber and saxophonist Chris Cheek, and all four musicians seem to gel well from the very start. Gold might have eclectic tastes, with covers ranging from Hank Mobley’s “An Aperitif” to Stevie Wonder’s “You Haven’t Done Nothin,'” but he covers nearly every style in the organ group playbook as he works his way through this nine-song program.

The Mobley tune, originally on the saxophonist’s lesser-known Third Season (Blue Note, 1967), starts things off with a bang. Gold and Cheek are as tight as can be, as they work their way through the head on this up-tempo number. Funk is a healthy part of any organ group’s diet and Gold delivers the goods with “The Stone Age” and “You Haven’t Done Nothin,'” the Wonder tune coming across as a looser, riff-based workout, while Gold’s original is a bit more substantial. Cheek leads the charge, while the rhythm section has some greasy groove-making going on beneath him; the overall sound like a less aggressive version of Joshua Redman’s Elastic Band.

“Preachin'” is a superb gospel-soul number which highlights Gold’s playing and writing, while “It Is Well” is churchy in a different, more reverent manner. This understated number sounds like a jazz take on a hymn, and it shows off a different side of Gold’s personality. While Ferber’s drums hint at bossa nova on the title track, nothing else on the disc really speaks of Brazil.

A soothing take on The Delfonics’ “La-La (Means I Love You),” and an odd-metered arrangement of “Skylark” close the album. Gold’s performance of The Delfonics’ megahit reflects the understated quality of their rendition; “Skylark,” on the other hand, is reshaped and molded to Gold’s liking. Cheek and Gold are both in fine form on this one, and Ferber even gets to solo over an energized vamp, as the album draws to a close.

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Jared Gold is served up hot and fresh at the jazzbreakfast blog…..

thejazzbreakfast.wordpress.comJared Gold: Out Of Line (Posi-Tone PR8067)
From the LA-based record label comes a warm and greasy Brooklyn session from organist Gold with Chris Cheek on tenor, Dave Stryker on guitar and Mark Ferber on drums.

They open with Hank Mobley’s An Aperitif, which includes strong solos from Gold and Cheek. Then it’s time for some Preachin’, a relaxed modern take on that mood exemplified by Billy Taylor’s I Wish I Knew (How It Feels To Be Free), otherwise known as the theme from Barry Norman’s TV film programme. Again Gold is in the groove with a high , singing solo over Stryker’s comped chords.

There are many pleasant moments all through this relaxed and easy to get on with recording. I’ve found it’s ideal music to cook by, and seems to make every dish a little tastier. The original tunes are interspersed with a particularly funky version of Stevie Wonder’s You Haven’t Done Nothin’, the old Delfonics hit La La (Means I Love You) with Gold giving full rein to a churchy sound from the Hammond, and, my favourite, Hoagy Carmichael’s Skylark.

Instead of taking this at its usual flowing ballad pace, Gold ups the tempo and fools with the timing, adding a little stutter to one line of the melody. It works wonderfully, and is a fine example of how the old tunes still work for modern players.