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Dan Bilawsky reviews Tom Tallitsch “Heads or Tales”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Jazz musicians are often lauded for how different they are from one another, but all of the most notable musicians who wear the jazz label actually have one thing in common: expertise in telling a story. When theory, technique and stylistic divisiveness are all removed from the equation, musicians are left with the not-so-simple task of creating aural narratives worth following, and plenty of them can be found on Heads Or Tales.

Tenor saxophonist Tom Tallitsch put together a program of original music that’s chock full of intriguing melodies and strong solo statements, highlighting his abilities as player, composer and sax-wielding storyteller. He zigzag’s his way through fast passages like an expert race car driver, delivers soothing streams of sound, and brings intensity and suspense into the picture. His tenor saxophone voice is neither too bright nor too dark, and his well-balanced sound draws attention at every turn.

Tallitsch, appropriately enough, went with a foursome for his fourth outing as a leader, and each musician brings something different to the date. Drummer Mark Ferber is in the driver’s seat for the majority of the program, acting as an accelerant (“Coming Around”), groove-maker (“Flat Stanley”), stylistic gear shifter (“Double Shot”), and suggestive painter. Organist and label mate Jared Gold is the ultimate colorist and sound sculptor, delivering brilliant musical non sequiturs, liquid lines and engaging solo statements. He’s a tonal chameleon who’s capable of altering his sound at will, and that skill serves the music well. Guitarist Dave Allen’s personality is often overshadowed when the ensemble is moving along at full steam together, but as a soloist, he proves to be a nimble-fingered wonder. Clarity is clearly a priority for Allen, whose lines are always clean and bright.

While the first eight tracks on the album highlight Tallitsch’s writing, he takes on the role of interpreter for an album-ending trip through Neil Young’s “Don’t Let It Bring You Down.” Plenty of musicians might have felt the need to dress this song up in complicated clothing, but Tallitsch keeps things simple, further demonstrating a firm understanding of the art of expression and communication that exists at the very core of this music.

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Britt Robson reviews Tom Tallitsch “Heads or Tales”…

www.emusic.com

Saxophonist Tom Tallitsch leads a quartet that includes organ, guitar and drums, a lineup that conjures the expectation of a grooving, soul-jazz-blues amalgam along the lines of Hank Crawford, Jimmy McGriff and Jimmy Ponder. But Tallitsch is a post-bopper at heart, who plays tenor with the pivoting angularity of Joe Henderson. He is also a fine composer, interested in creating interactions that are more harmonically sophisticated and melodically pliable than the groovy tropes of organ-laden “soul jazz.” Head or Tales benefits from the mating of these virtues.

The absence of a bassist puts some air beneath the ensemble, in part because organist Jared Gold, a mainstay on Posi-Tone label recordings, plays with admirable restraint while fleshing out the rhythm. He has abundant chops, as his hop-scotching solo on “Flat Stanley” demonstrates, but is less inclined than most of his peers to spray-paint songs with colorful blasts of sustained notes from his instrument. Guitarist Dave Allen is likewise attuned to texture — listen to the way he underscores Tallitsch on their unison passages during “Double Shot.”

 The band really brings it together on “Dunes,” a mid-tempo ballad that lives up to its title with subtle, shifting details inside a seemingly implacable framework. “Perry’s Place” is another worthy, contemplative, ballad, although the quartet is not averse to toe-tapping, as the lead tracks “Coming Around” and “Tenderfoot” demonstrate. In fact Tallitsch’s songs are strong enough that his lone cover — Neil Young’s “Don’t Let It Bring You Down,” a curiously mordant selection — might be the clunker in the bunch. Tallitsch is a longtime music educator, both for ambitious students and those who find music to be therapy for their disability. Although this is at least his fourth outing as a leader, it’s heartening to hear him in such a supportive environment for his skills, and that he uses the occasion to subvert the organ-jazz template for his more idiosyncratic skills.
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SomethingElse reviews Tom Tallitsch “Heads or Tales”…

somethingelsereviews.com

Saxophonist, composer, musical educator, and radio show host Tom Tallitsch keeps busy wearing a variety of hats all revolving around his love of music and the love of sharing his knowledge about it to others. Every couple of years since 2005, he’s been sharing music by making a record, and this week he does so again for the forth time with the issuance of his latest album, Heads Or Tales. His first with Posi-Tone Records, Tallitsch taps into the talents of Posi-Tone stalwarts Mark Ferber (drums) and Jared Gold (organ), as well as up and coming swing specialist Dave Allen (guitar). Don’t be fooled by the line-up, this isn’t a Jimmy Smith/Stanley Turrentine type greasy soul-jazz record; Tallitsch leads this quartet through his eight originals and one cover in a hard bop and advanced bop state of mind, and Gold is the right organist to bring in for such a session. Tunes like “Coming Around” (live video below) and “Double Shot” are uptempo burners that bring out the fire of the participants, while “Perry’s Place” is the best among the gentle numbers, a good spot for Tallitsch’s sensitive Henderson/Shorter sax dialect to express itself. Tallitsch also turns Neil Young’s “Don’t Let It Bring You Down” from a downbeat folk tune to a blues-inflected nocturnal ballad while keeping with the solemn mood of Young’s intent.

 

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Another review for Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

jazzandblues.blogspot.com 

The trio of organ, guitar and drums is one of the standard formation of trios in jazz and organist Jared Gold is a rising star on that competitive scene. On this album, he is accompanied by guitarist Ed Cherry and drummer Quincy Davis. Each of the musicians supports the other well, to make an interesting and varied program of musical selections from a wide range of styles, from the funky and familiar to the soulful and original. They are accountable for not only their own solo features abut for the interplay of the band as a whole. Gold has shown measurable growth in each of his albums and continues here with a confident group of performances including an unusual instrumental arrangement of the late 60’s pop-country hit “Wichita Lineman” which depends on the narrative of the song for its melodic content. In addition to the title track “Golden Child,” there are also solid covers of “In a Sentimental Mood” and “When It’s Sleepy Time Down South. Good group dynamics keeps the session in the pocket, and it is recommended for fans of organ trios.

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Dan Bilawsky reviews Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

A string of enjoyable leader dates and some high profile work in guitarist Dave Stryker’s organ-centric groups can be credited for the steady rise in organist Jared Gold’s profile. His ability to live within the tradition while simultaneously building upon it has made him one to watch, and his constant and steady growth as a musician/composer has been evident from album to album.

Golden Child, his fifth release for the Posi-Tone label since 2009, was actually recorded a good six months before its horn-driven predecessor, 2011’s All Wrapped Up, and on the whole it’s a looser date. Two like-minded musical partners—guitarist Ed Cherry and drummer Quincy Davis—join the organist on a covers-heavy program that gives nods to everybody from Sam Cooke and Johnny Nash to Jimmy Webb and Duke Ellington. While Gold’s selections are familiar ones, his interpretations are far from normal. Musicians including clarinetist Anat Cohen and guitarist Bill Frisell have treated Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” with due reverence, but Gold gives it a groovy make-over, and Ellington’s ballad-born “In A Sentimental Mood” is transformed into a mid-tempo swinger.

While the band catches fire on occasion, most notably with the back-to-back home runs of “In A Sentimental Mood” and “Times Up,” this is an album that’s more likely to singe than fully burn. Gold’s originals, from the title track which cooks on a low flame to the semi-swampy “14 Carat Gold” to the mellow and soulful “Pensa Em Mim” are inviting in their casualness. Cherry reads Gold’s temperature at every turn, meshing with the leader rather than providing great contrast in most places, and Davis moves the music along without pushing.

Golden Child isn’t an overly ambitious outing, but it’s welcome nonetheless, another opportunity to admire the unique organ perspective that Jared Gold has to offer.

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JazzWrap on Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

jazzwrap.blogspot.com

Rolling along in a funkier groove than his previous quartet outing, All Wrapped Up, Jared Gold returns right on time with another soul jazz gem–Golden Child. This time in a trio session with Ed Cherry (guitar) and Quincy Davis (drums). It’s like John Patton, Wes Montgomery and Billy Higgins been have locked in a room with a large chest of soul classics to get them through the night.

Opening with a charged up version of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come,” Gold keeps the soulful impact of the impassioned ballad but adds a fire and urgency that makes the piece his own. Cherry’s guitar provides the romantic element, while Davis applies the groove beat that makes for an uplifting opener to a journey that is about to sizzle.
At times this feels like a raw version of Medeski Martin Wood. It’s the grit and the groove without the dramatics. That’s a good thing on Golden Child. It leaves you squarely focused on the tune. “14 Carat Gold”  is the trio in a blues mood with a few twists and turns created through Gold’s unique and varied lens. His improvised lines about two thirds in are smokin’. He really has a way of turning the organ into more than just the funk/blues instrument it’s sometimes associated with. His lines feel like they were performed first on the piano (which I’m sure was not the case)–they are crisp, inventive and flowing.
With “Pensa Em Mim,” Gold projects a soft gospel tone that soothes and creates a jubilant Sunday morning vibe. Gold’s organ rises and falls while Cherry and Davis distribute colourful touches around the edges. It’s somber but with a joyous undertone. “Times Up” crackles with heavy rapid exchanges during the opener by Gold and Davis. Gold tears into the keys like it was the last performance ever. The intensity is fueled by the bebop spirit that came before but Gold projects his own vision that makes this a very dynamic piece.
Jared Gold has always been consistent on each of his sessions and Golden Child is no different. Here you get a the fire and chill but you also get a trio that sounds stellar through and through. This is not an artist that you have to start at the beginning to understand. Jared Gold is one of the exciting ones that allows you to dive in at whatever point you choose. Let’s hope you choose Golden Child as that primer.
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Richard Kamins reviews Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

steptempest.blogspot.com
There’s something about Hammond B-3 organ trios that reminds me of spring and summer, lounging on the back porch with a cool drink.  Perhaps, it’s the “burbling brook” sound some players get out of their speakers – whatever it is, the chemical reaction in my brain is quite positive.

For his 5th release on the Posi-Tone label, “Golden Child“, Jared Gold returns to the Trio setting that served him well on his 2009 CD, “Supersonic.”  Guitarist Ed Cherry is back from that date while  Quincy Davis (who appeared on Gold’s previous Posi-Tone release) mans the drum chair.The program ranges from “pop” tunes, such as “Wichita Lineman” and “I Can See Clearly Now” to jazz standards like “In A Sentimental Mood” and “When It’s Sleepy Time Down South” to 5 pieces from the leader. The disk opens with an ultra-funky version of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come“, a piece that sets the tone for the entire album.  Davis is a responsive and explosive drummer, doesn’t hold back reacting to the soloist.  Cherry, who has worked with a slew of great musicians (like Dizzy Gillespie, Henry Threadgill and Hamiett Bluiett), is an equal partner in the music, either doubling the song’s theme or stretching out on a solo.  His lines blend jazz licks (a touch of Wes Montgomery octaves show up on the title track) with a strong blues feel.  This is no “lounge” band; every one digs in and gives his all.  One can enjoy the subtle shadings of Gold’s “Pensa Em Mim“, groove on the “second-line” feel of “14 Carat Gold” or bask in the sweet glow of “…Sleepy Time...”  Excellent solos from both Gold and Cherry as well as simple-sounding yet masterful percussion.  The trio’s take on Jmmy Webb’s “..Lineman” is quite funky while remaining true to the melody and mood of the original.  Cherry’s rhythm guitar work is exemplary while Davis lets loose during the organ solo – then, the drummer gives the guitarist a real “fatback” feel beneath his short yet satisfying solo. “Times Up” moves (rather successfully) into Larry Young territory, with Davis’s fiery drumming pushing, urging, coaxing his cohorts forward.

Each one of Jared Gold’s Posi-Tone recordings has something to recommend it but “Golden Child” is, arguably the best.  Even in a trio setting, the program is his most varied. You’ll like the way the Trio communicates, how their solos are substantial (and not just space fillers) and, for these ears, Gold’s handsome “burbling” organ.  To find out more, go to www.jaredgoldb3.com.

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Mark F Turner on Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Jazz organist Jared Gold continues to make his presence known, both in name and sonically. Energizing and free yet possessed of a comprehensive knowledge of the Hammond B3 organ, he communicates with the language of giants such as Don Patterson and Chris Foreman of the Deep Blue Organ Trio. It’s been said that “either you have it or you don’t,” and Gold’s playing bears the truth of the groove onGolden Child. On his fifth recording as a leader, Gold delivers some insightful numbers. “I Wanna Walk”—a fine remake of the traditional “I Want Jesus to Walk with Me”—speaks volumes.

While the origins of the song are unclear, Gold’s trio takes the tone straight out of the black church, complete with Sunday morning baptismal fire. Its mid-tempo cadence is steady and works without breaking a sweat as Ed Cherry’s guitar pours out soulful riffs and Quincy Davis’ kit percolates the beat. Gold is also feeling the heat, his Hammond grinding into the bone marrow, pedals dropping a funky bass line and raspy keys singing notes that soar to the heavens. “I Wanna Walk” has a reverse sentiment to Marvin Gaye’s “Inner City Blues,” whose famous lyrics include “makes me wanna holler and throw up both my hands.” Gold’s B3 shouts are joyful.

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SaxShed review of Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

saxshed.com

Jazz organist Jared Gold just released his CD Golden Childfor Posi-Tone Records on March 27th, 2012. The energetic trio features Gold on organ, guitarist Ed Cherry and Quincy Davis on drums.

“Organist Jared Gold sets his standards high and arrives in style with his latest release “Golden Child.” Serious listeners will be delighted to simply sit back and dig the music when Jared brings all the right stuff to this groovy and hard-hitting date. While the focus and crux of “Golden Child” rests squarely upon the shoulders of Mr. Gold and his B-3 organ, the strong showings of guitarist Ed Cherry and drummer Quincy Davis also provide their melodic highlights and consistently exhibit the kind of strong rhythmic support that always keeps the session in the pocket. With an exciting program of musical selections from a wide range of styles, from the funky and familiar to the soulful and original, “Golden Child” certainly exceeds expectations as a swinging collection of performances that jazz enthusiasts can bank on with confidence.” – Posi-Tone Records

Although this recording does not feature or even include a saxophone, I still feel it worthy of mention. Jared Gold’s previous offering on Posi-Tone featured saxophonist extraordinaire Ralph Bowen. You can read that review here. The absence of Bowen on Golden Child may be conspicuous to saxophone lovers however the trio of Gold, Cherry and Davis is absolutely complete within itself.

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SomethingElse! reviews Jared Gold “Golden Child”…

somethingelsereviews.com

Coming off the magnificent All Wrapped Up, Jared Gold is back just under a year later with Golden Child. A program that alternates standards with his originals, Golden Child is another parade of Gold’s advanced B3 articulations. Whereas on Wrapped he delved more into knotty arrangements and modalisms atypical of organ jazz, he returns to the organ/guitar/drums attack used on the prior Out Of Line (2010). As on that record, Gold creatively reworks the covers which again mines both the pop (“A Change iIs Gonna Come,” “Wichita Lineman”) and the jazz (“When It’s Sleepy Time Down South,” “In A Sentimental Mood”) canons, plus a old spiritual (“I Wanna Walk”, Youtube below). Backed this time by Ed Cherry (guitar) and Quincy Davis (drums), the leader’s playing style still carries over some of the redolent approach he used so effectively on last year’s offering but remains a strong performer when he’s in the Dr. Lonnie Smith frame of mind, as he is for the Ellington tune. Though not as ambitious, there’s plenty good about Golden Child to make this a fine listening experience.