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Some props for Posi-Tone at Gallery 41….

jazzfromgallery41.blogspot.com

FRIDAY, JULY 13, 2012

Just a few of the great new releases….

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

Flip The Script

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

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

Journeyman

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

POSTED BY RON P. / GALLERY 41 AT 3:51 PM
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Greg Thomas on Orrin Evans “Flip the Script”…

articles.nydailynews.com

Orrin Evans returns to  NYC to ‘Flip the Script’

GREG THOMAS
Thursday, July 12, 2012

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

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

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

 The gig will showcase the range of his artistic personality.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Phil Freeman interviews Orrin Evans…

blogs.villagevoice.com

Q&A: Orrin Evans On The Economics Of Trio Albums, Jazz Musicians’ Constant Reinvention, And Records That Are Too Long

Pianist Orrin Evans is a busy man. With nearly 20 albums out under his own leadership and a slew of impressive sideman performances to his credit, he’s built a sterling reputation on the modern, straight-ahead jazz scene. His music has melody and swing, with a dash of groove here and there, and he frequently pays tribute to Philadelphia, the city where he was raised and educated. His 2011 album Freedom featured Philly-based musicians exclusively, including saxophonist Larry McKenna, well-known at home but not exactly a household name nationally.

Evans’ latest release, Flip The Script, is a trio disc featuring bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards. In addition to eight originals, the concise collection (10 tracks in 45 minutes) features the band’s interpretations of “Someday My Prince Will Come” and “The Sound of Philadelphia,” better known as the theme song to Soul Train. To celebrate its release, he’s playing three nights at the Jazz Standard starting Tuesday, July 17, with the band growing larger night by night. On Tuesday, he’ll play with a different trio, made up of bassist Vicente Archer and drummer Obed Calvaire. On Wednesday, that group will be augmented by trumpeter Jack Walrath and saxophonist Tim Warfield. On Thursday, the Captain Black Big Band, featuring four trumpets, four trombones and four saxophones in addition to the trio, will take over. This interview was conducted on July 9, while Evans was in Japan backing saxophonist Seamus Blake.

What gave you the idea to do three nights with three bands?

It’s basically an idea that stemmed a while ago, from wanting to do something consecutive at a club in New York, and since I’ve done all these different projects, if I had done it solely under [the auspices of] my own record label, the different records I’ve done on that label. But it ended up being based on my recent record, Flip The Script, which is on Posi-Tone, but I said, we can still do the same type of idea. Although I’ve never done a quintet record on Posi-Tone yet. So basically it was just an idea my wife and I had a few years ago, but I’d never been able to bring it to fruition, and we’re really excited to do it at the Jazz Standard.

How much overlap will there be in the set lists? Will people be able to hear three different versions of some tunes if they come every night?

Exactly. Probably about three or four tunes will overlap, but the majority of what the trio plays, I’m going to really stick to the present record. The quintet, we have some other tunes that we’ve been playing as a group, but there’s some overlap with the big band. And I know some people will actually think about that, and worry, “Well, I don’t want to go back and hear the same music,” but I think that’s kind of fun, actually, to see how it’s interpreted by a different ensemble. If it was another club, you’d go back and hear the same music and the exact same band. But now you get a chance to hear other cats interpret the same tunes, and that’s exciting to me and I hope it’s going to be exciting for the audience after Tuesday night, like, “Oh, let’s go back on Wednesday and see what they do.” So some overlap, but not completely. It won’t be the same exact set.

Is this trio—Vicente Archer and Obed Calvaire—is this a regular group for you, or a rhythm section you hired for this set of dates?

Well, I’ve always considered myself a little different than other leaders, because you tend to have what you described, a regular working trio. I’m blessed to have a family of people who I can call, and that could be five or six different people on bass, five or six different people on drums. We all are familiar with the same book of music, familiar with the same language, and when we get together we just see what happens with the tunes that might be different than the other bass player and drummer that had played it. So it’s not regular in the sense that we have always played together, but we have played together and we’ve played some of this music together. And they’re part of the family. In these times, unless you’re on the road at least 10 months out of the year, it’s pretty hard to have a regular working trio. So I try to just have people I’ve played with, and played this music with. So it’s regular in that they’re part of the family that I’ve been able to build over the past 17 years.

What’s the process of arranging a song for big band when it wasn’t originally composed for that size ensemble?

When I first put the [Captain Black Big Band] together, I actually hired two arrangers, one for the first record and another where I composed the tunes and a gentleman named Todd Bayshore did the majority of the arrangements. For the next record, we brought on Todd Marcus, another arranger, and David Gibson. And then I have a lot of conversations between them on ideas I have and they all come together, and they’re the main arrangers. But there are about three or four tunes that I’ve arranged [myself], and it’s no different than anything else. If you’re having a conversation with one or two people, hopefully the other person is listening and then they get their chance to talk. It’s just [showing] respect for when it’s your time to do something and your time not to do something. And that’s how I look at arranging, is it’s like building. You have your main theme and you just build on it to make it one big conversation. And we have a few tunes that I’ve arranged where that’s solely what I think about. How can we all participate in this conversation, but not talk over each other?

There are pianists whose style is immediately recognizable within a few bars—Thelonious Monk, Ahmad Jamal, McCoy Tyner, Cecil Taylor, Matthew Shipp. What do you think makes your playing immediately identifiable as yours?

The experiences I’ve had in my life, one of which is growing up in Philadelphia. There’s a certain type of approach that I’ve only heard coming out of Philadelphia pianists. I could be wrong, ’cause I know it’s me ’cause it’s me, but other people, I think they listen and hear what they think is my touch, that is similar to what some other pianists might play. And also how you interpret time. I think I have a really different approach to time, touch and feel. And I base a lot of that on my life experience—the music I grew up listening to, the people I checked out like Shirley Scott, Trudy Pitts, McCoy Tyner, Sid Simmons, all these people who are from Philadelphia. Sid Simmons was a great pianist from Philly who didn’t blow up to international fame but still recorded a lot, and in two notes I could tell it was him, and that’s because of that Philly sound that I heard resonating from the piano. So although I was born in New Jersey, I was raised in Philadelphia, and I think people can really tell where I’m from in how I play.

You’ve made a lot of trio albums. What draws you to that format?

I can’t stand the trio format. Economics have drawn me to that format, where this is what the record producer wants. The first couple of times I did trio, I just went, aw, man, I can’t wait to bring some horn players in, and Meant to Shine, which I did on Palmetto, was an all-quintet record, but economically it seems like I can keep a trio performing a little easier, because you can all fit in a Honda Accord and get to the gig. [laughs] But with a quartet or a quintet, sometimes economically it’s not always easy to keep it going. But the one thing I do like about doing trio is that I’m in full control of the direction of where the band is going. I don’t have to communicate to one more person, “OK, we’re gonna play the melody right here.” There’s a sense of freedom that I do enjoy about playing trio, but there’s also a sense of vulnerability that is extremely intimidating. And that’s something I’ve always shied away from in performing and recording with just a trio. It’s intimidating. You’re out there, and you have to pull the cats along. But the same thing that intimidates me also intrigues me.

Have you ever considered making a solo album?

You know what? It’s probably the next thing I do, in the next three or four years. I just—that’s another thing that’s even more intimidating. But when I do it live—and I’ve done two or three—it’s so much fun. Or when I do an intro to a tune. The possibilities are limitless, harmonically, lyrically, and it took me this many years to be comfortable playing solo, because you go through this thing where you’re like, “All right, is this what So-and-so would have done? Are they going to like it?” It takes a while to truly become comfortable with how you play. Always striving to get better, but just to feel comfortable with, OK, this is where I’m coming from. I’m a lot closer to that now, and I think now is the time to do a solo record. But for years, that was extremely intimidating for me.

Tell me about your relationship with Posi-Tone. You’re one of the few African-American artists on the label—what are your feelings about what they’re doing, and what it says about or does for jazz in 2012?

Well, first of all, I admire you for even realizing that. It’s something I’ve had a conversation with them about, and it’s not the first time. When I was on Palmetto, I was one of a very few African-American artists on that label. Then Bobby Watson came in—or was it the other way around? And then Javon Jackson. Now to be honest, this is probably the last project I’m doing on Posi-Tone, and that’s because we’ve reached a point where I’m seeing things [in terms of] the next step, and they’re comfortable with where they are now as a label. And they’ve done some great things for me. Great things. As far as [label owner] Marc Free and his ability to really get the word out and promote the records, he’s done a great job. Their radio campaigns have been great. But moving projects to the next level is where I’m at. And by that I mean the musicians you perform with on your projects, the budget, taking the label to like what Blue Note was—the Blue Note of Wayne Shorter and all those guys, back in the day. Or even the Blue Note of now, but just taking things to the next level. A lot of things that have happened since I’ve been on that label, things I’ve done as a financial investment.

What’s going on at the Standard, we’re doing a meet and greet happy hour before the gig, and that’s out of my pocket, putting that together. And I guess where I’m at now is, if a label doesn’t see that as important, communicating with the outside world, communicating with the press on another level, not just the level of “Hey, I’ve done a record, would you review it?” or “Hey, I’ve done a record, do you like it?” but “Hey, I’ve done a record, come on out, thank you for your support”… My wife was a realtor for years, and one of the things we talked about was an appreciation party. “Thank you for suggesting me to your friends as a realtor.” And you do happy hour, or whatever. And that’s how I feel we should get back to with the music. But a lot of labels don’t go that extra step anymore. I remember when Eric Reed had his record on Impulse!, and he had a listening event at some penthouse in New York, where he invited press and just made people feel good for supporting him. And those are the kinds of things I have in mind, and that’s probably why I want to do the next project on Imani Records, which is my label. Because if I’m going to invest anything other than my time in a label, I want to see a return. Not so much financially, but in terms of respect. I appreciate and really enjoyed the time I did spend on Posi-Tone, but I see Flip The Script, ironically, as a time to flip the script all across the board.

Flip The Script is your 13th album as a leader, right?

Nineteenth. There’s two or three of them, four of them, that are collectives. You’re right, but I’m including Captain Black Big Band and Tarbaby and another ensemble called Luvpark, an electric band that I put out a few years ago, back in 2006. And those are collectives, but I was on those records.

Do you ever worry about the fact that jazz artists have such deep discographies compared to rock artists, that it makes it difficult for a new person to begin listening?

No, because the one thing that’s different between jazz and other genres is, you’re not doing a year-long campaign to support that one record. There was a time when it was like that, but you almost have to be reinventing yourself every three or four months. So it doesn’t matter where you enter, as long as you go back and do your history. When I first got into this music, I got into jazz through Steely Dan. My brother listened to Steely Dan, and I was like “Who’s that saxophonist? Oh wow, that’s Wayne Shorter. Oh, that’s Michael Brecker.” So I got into it like that, but then it’s on you as an audience member, if you’re really into this music, to do the research and go back and connect the dots. I do that with acting too. My wife laughs, because I can’t watch a movie without going to IMDB in the middle, to see what other movies the actors were in. “Hey, maybe I’ll like them in this other movie. What was their first movie?” So that’s me, and I just hope and pray that other audience members do the same type of research, and go back. “Oh, wait a minute, I’ve got Orrin’s fifth record—he did some others before this?” It keeps you fresh in their minds, and I think that’s something important, because these are the times.

It’s not like the Flip The Script band is gonna go on the road and tour for an entire year, and then take a couple of months off and do the next project. It’s different in jazz. It would be great if we were on the Beyonce budget, to go promote the record and then have everyone anticipating the next Orrin Evans record, which I hope will come around one day, but we’re not there now. So not oversaturating, but making sure you’re on people’s minds and the tip of their tongues.

Do you think it’s up to jazz musicians to reach out and actively seek new audiences—not just through social media, but even through the way they compose? I’ll give you a specific example—JD Allen, who writes these very short tunes which he says reflect modern, short attention spans. How do you feel about that attempt to meet people on a middle ground?

I think as long as you don’t dumb down or bastardize your music, it’s a great idea. And knowing JD like I know him, that’s something he’ll never do. But he will make it accessible, and that’s great. Sometimes you gotta fool ’em—it’s almost like when you want to get a baby to eat something. Some parents will just leave the peas right there, like, you gotta eat these peas. But another parent will mash ’em up and mix ’em in with some mashed potatoes, so they’re still eating the peas, but they’ve put them in with something else to make it more desirable to that baby. And as long as you don’t put things in it that dumb it down, I am for finding new ways to find new audiences, and I definitely agree with making not only the tunes shorter, but making the albums shorter. We’re a very excessive culture—like, if you can make more, then I want more. If you can supersize it, we want it supersized. So the minute CDs came out and you could get 75 minutes on this CD, everybody did that, and to be honest, I can’t stand listening to records now. I’m so bored by the end. Because you’ve had my attention for an hour and 15 minutes, and you really only had 40 minutes worth of shit to say. So that’s where I’m at as far as—Tarbaby got me into that. Yeah, we can do a 75 minute long record, but man, why? Look at those early Blue Note records; none of ’em were over 40 or 45 minutes. So that’s one way of getting new audiences, is just keeping their attention. Here, check it out. Because we are in an ADD culture, so why give them too much when they can’t focus in on it? And I’m always about trying to find new audiences, and the main reason is if you go check out most jazz, you don’t see a future in the audience. You’re seeing it more and more, but I’m really interested in seeing the future in the audience. Seeing grandparents bringing their grandsons and granddaughters out to the gig, seeing parents bringing their sons and daughters, so they can be the new audience. That happens in Europe and Japan all the time, but we don’t do it that much in the States, because our culture’s different. We’re afraid that our kids might not behave and blah blah blah. But we really need to get back to bringing kids out so this music will continue.

I interviewed Matthew Shipp a while ago, and he said at that time that he’d never played before a majority black audience. Have you?

Well, growing up in Philadelphia, yes, and that’s probably why I’m so confused right now, because I thought they existed. [laughs] And then when I first moved to New York, I moved to Brooklyn and was playing sessions for the first year or so I was in New York [that were] full of young African-Americans. And then going up to Harlem. But then, when I really started touring and performing, I realized that that’s a rare thing. And that’s something I’m really trying to figure out how to crack. Whatever that code is to get ’em to come out. So many things have circulated on Facebook—economics keep ’em out, which I would agree, but I look at it like, people will spend money on what they want, no matter how expensive it is. Black and white.

So although the clubs are expensive, I think the question is how do we get them to want to spend their money on that? Because let’s say you wake up, and you’ve got a taste for some crab legs. Now I know some people that will run to the grocery store and get seven, eight, nine pounds of crab legs and steam them up. Seven, eight, nine pounds of crab legs at $9.99 a pound if they’re not on sale, you just dropped about a hundred dollars. Then you get a case of beer—so how do you get them to want to spend that same hundred dollars on an evening of entertainment and cultural enrichment? That’s hard. I’m really trying to figure out how to get African-Americans and the black audience to want to do that. Even if you think about people going out to a club, the reality is that most of the clubs, to get guys coming in, women get in free from 10 to 12. And I’ve talked about that happening in jazz. ‘Cause where do guys go? Guys go where the women are. I don’t have solutions or answers, but I definitely have a bunch of different ideas on how to get more African-Americans out to check out this music, and a lot of them are based on marketing. Open Ebony or Jet or Essence, and it’s rare. You see it more now, but how can you get your face on the cover of those magazines, and still swing? And not feel like you have to play a different type of music to gain the audience? To do it while playing the music you’re playing now?

One of the big problems I see with the marketing of jazz is that nobody likes broccoli. And jazz is sold as something that’s good for you, not something that’s entertaining and fun. I feel like jazz musicians need to embrace the idea of being entertainers.

Right. I hear you. That’s a good point. My father was a playwright, my mother was an opera singer, so I grew up in a very performance-oriented family. Jazz musicians are sometimes in my opinion—some of them really don’t get it. “Yeah, I think the audience is really gonna like this song.” There are people, and I love these people, who sit in the audience and really listen to your tune. And they hear that bar of 5/4, and that harmonic progression. But there are some other people that really just want to know you. When you think about Facebook or any other social media… let’s say you do a gig and one of your old friends that you went to college with comes out, and they’re really not into the music—they’re into you. They want to leave feeling that they connected with you, not just your music. So how can you do that? And you don’t have to be on the mic, talking all the time. But there’s a way you can entertain and play your music without feeling like you’re, for lack of a better word, Sambo-ing it. [laughs] “This is who I am. Hi, my name is Orrin Evans. This is who I am as a person, this is who I am as a musician. Welcome to my world.” This is how I see it—they’re coming to your gig, and they come into your living room. And so many jazz musicians are horrible hosts.

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Angelika Beener on “Flip the Script”…

alternate-takes.com

 

Orrin Evans ‘Flips the Script’ With 19th Release As Leader

Posted on by Angelika Beener

At an impressive nineteen albums in, pianist Orrin Evans sets out to do exactly as the title of his latest suggests.  Flip The Script (Posi-Tone), out this month, refers not only to a last-minute repertoire overhaul just before the recording date, but the turning of a new leaf in his career and personal life.Orrin EvansOne of the boldest voices in the BAM (Black American Music) discussion, Evans is helping transform what he describes as, “this vision that certain people have in terms of what this music is supposed to be or who I’m supposed to be.”  It’s hard enough keeping up with the Philly-bred pianist, let alone pegging him, which I wouldn’t recommend.  Evans is a hard working composer and band leader — of both his trio and distinguished big band, Captain Black — a teacher, and a member of the group Tarbaby with bassist Eric Revis and drummer Nasheet Waits.  The husband and father of two, Evans is also reveling in the next phase of life with his wife, Dawn, as their children approach nest-leaving age. “Dawn and I are finally like, ‘Hi, hey what’s your name?’” Evans jokes of their increased freedom, “because we spent the first seventeen years of our lives raising kids, and it’s now like wow, let’s go out!  Let’s hang!  I’m ‘flipping the script’ in all aspects of life.”On his sixth trio record, Evans, with bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards, puts forth a gutty, undaunted project.  Flip The Script comes out swinging — both literally and figuratively — with a refreshing collective intensity, which Evans contends is a lacking component in some of today’s piano trios.

“I’ve always ran from trio records,” admits Evans, “and my goal is never to sound like all these other trio records.  They can be a little boring.  So my goal is to basically figure out how to do it and get a different vibe from it.  I used to listen to Keith Jarrett’s trio all the time, then I started checking out Jaki Byard, and Herbie and McCoy… all of them sound different, and my goal was to sound more like that versus some of these newer trios that can sound like background music. They can be very contrived.”

Edwards and Wolfe are beyond formidable on this record, and despite never recording together, their sound is as tight-knit as a most established group.  “Donald, I met almost 13 years ago, and he was a recommendation from Tim Warfield,” explains Evans.  “Ever since then, we have been playing together.  He ended up playing with the Mingus Big Band, and we just ended up playing in many different surroundings together.  The thing is, we’d never had the opportunity to document together; the opportunity never presented itself.  We played together on other people’s records, but this is the first time we’ve done a project together as a group.  With Ben, I played a gig at [the jazz club] Smoke and I called Donald for it, and I said, you know what, I am going to use Ben Wolfe, who I had never played with.  We knew each other but I never played with him.  Through the wonderful world of Facebook, I said, ‘We should do something.’  Not only has he become someone I really enjoy playing with, but he’s become a very good friend.”  Wolfe has also positioned himself as one of the prominent pro-BAM movement voices, and sat alongside Evans on a panel at Birdland earlier this year.

The range of music in this collection is a window into the various driving forces behind the passionate pianist.  “All these songs are pretty much about starting over,” he says.  Evans contributes six standout originals, with “Flip the Script” being among those written just days before recording.  “The Answer” is a gorgeous waltz which shows a more tender side of Evans’ compositional spectrum.  The Luther Vandross-penned “Brand New Day” from the 1978 movie classic The Wiz, is an example of Evans’ exploration of the R&B songbook and an aptly titled declaration, which is reconstructed into a modal exaltation, as inspiring as the original.

Among many impressive moments, Evans also performs a solo piano “homegoing” take on the Gamble & Huff R&B anthem “The Sound of Philadelphia”, otherwise known as the Soul Train theme song.  Slow, somber and haunting, Evans closes the album with a powerful reminder of the indelible influence of Don Cornelius on Black music.  “It was ironic that both Dick Clark and Don Cornelius passed right next to each other,” says Evans, “and then also how Don checked out and there was nothing really being said to me about it…there wasn’t enough. I mean, how many magazine covers do you remember with Don Cornelius’ face on it when he passed?  How many featured articles can you remember?  But the real deal is, without Don Cornelius, none of this other shit would have happened.  Like, you really want to get into BAM?  We wouldn’t even be having an argument about BAM without Don Cornelius, and we kind of just swept him under the rug, in my opinion.  It’s like, that’s all you’re going to say?  Oh, ya’ll are done?  And so basically I just wanted to do my little tribute to him.”

Increasingly, Evans’ statements away from his instrument are proving just as illuminative as those across the span of his fifteen year recording career, and after nineteen releases, he seems more assured than ever — both in his music and his individuality.

“Thank God, honestly, that all the gigs I’ve had have been gigs where I’m not on the road for two years straight or something,” Evans reflects.  “I’ve had the weird blessing of not working at times, which has given me time to focus on Orrin Evans.”

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Jazzhistoryonline.com reviews “Flip the Script”…

www.jazzhistoryonline.com

Orrin Evans is a complete musician. He has worked with Bobby Watson, Ravi Coltrane, and Wallace Roney, and he composes for and leads the Captain Black Big Band. As a pianist, Evans is a poised player with a deft technique,with roots in McCoy Tyner and Chick Corea. Evans’ new recording “Flip the Script” is an exceptional example of jazz piano in the modern setting. There’s a sort of nostalgic Blue Note vibe about this recording, which has a natural unprocessed quality. The powerhouse trio, with bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards plays with an aggressive tenor on Evans’ up-tempo tunes like “Flip the Script,” “Question,” and  “TC’s Blues”. “Clean House” is a powerful modal composition in 3/4 time. Evans crafts an authoritative solo that balances his raw power and technical prowess. The two ballads on the record starkly contrast the fireworks of the uptempo tunes. Here, Evans allows the music to breathe. The harmonic movement is slow and allows melody to standout. “The Sound of Philadelphia” is gorgeous melody that sounds like it comes from a movie soundtrack. Highly recommended!

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JazzWax weighs in on “Flip the Script”…

www.jazzwax.com

Pianist Orrin Evans digs-in on Flip the Script (Posi-Tone). For those unfamiliar with Evans, he has a commanding, McCoy Tyner-ish percussive attack that badgers you into an emotional corner. But Evans can be highly introspective, too. It’s truly impossible not to be moved by his piano’s snorting, charging and cajoling. Evans is joined here by bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards. Sample Clean House and TC’s Blues. And dig what he does with Luther Vandross’ A Brand New Day and Gamble and Huff’s TSOP. Huge heat, sizzling technique and solid choices from the Great American Soulbook.

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irockjazz.com piece on Orrin Evans…

irockjazz.com

It can be quite risky admitting to a well-known musician that you’ve never heard of them. One, that revelation could be result in a tongue lashing by the artist. Two, the interview could come to an abrupt end, and three, my music journalistic credentials could be damaged all in the name of honesty. Thankfully, none of these has happened…yet. Though the response I did receive (after offering a follow up statement something to the extent of “the essence of music is often in the discovery of new music and artists”), was a gracious, “thank you”. As much as I was surprised by the response, I felt a forgiving ease, almost a welcoming or better yet an invitation to experience something new.

For Trenton, New Jersey born, Philadelphia bred pianist and composer, Orrin Evans, who offered the gratitude, the opportunity for more African American’s to discover, experience, and embrace their heritage in the music called “jazz” has become sort of a mission for Evans. Earlier this year, a publication questioned if Evans was going too far in his campaign to bring jazz back to black audiences. While not privy to all of his methods, he never came off as the overzealous proselytizer, as some would suggest bearing his connection to Nicholas Payton and the BAM movement, but more like a passionate preacher of the gospel hopeful his musical message can connect audiences to a time when it was cool to be a fan of jazz.

Fortunate to grow up in the musically rich soil of Philadelphia, Evans was exposed to and inspired by a expansive cross section of revered, old school, Philly musicians such as Trudy Pitts, Bobby Durham, and Charles Pettaway as well as modern peers like Bilal, The Roots, Jill Scott, and Jaguar Wright. Evans did not have to look far for a great heritage of music to uphold and opportunities to be work with a group of musicians responsible for ushering in the neo-soul movement. Under the tutelage of venerable pianist, Kenny Barron at Rutgers University, who Evan’s mentions is the main reason he went to Rutgers, Evan’s began to hew out his unique style born out of the Philly soul of his upbringing and the bop absorbed during his time navigating the New York jazz scene. Eventually he connected with mentor, Bobby Watson’s Horizon band further developing his chops on tour in Europe. Since 1994, he has recorded and performed prolifically, dropping over nearly 20 projects, appearing on tons of recordings as sideman for everyone from Pharaoh Saunders to Common, Sean Jones to Mos Def. Leader of an independent label, Imani Records, Evans splits time co-leading the critically acclaimed, Grammy nominated outfit, Tarbaby, with drummer, Nasheet Waits, and bassist, Eric Revis, leading his stellar, Captain Black Big Band and groove jazz group, Luvpark.

On the verge of releasing his new project, Flip The Script, his nineteenth recording as a leader since 1994, the 2010 Pew Arts Fellow seems unfazed by the lack of familiar faces enjoying the fruit of his labor. Judging by his extensive discography, the best way to fulfill his mission is to keep making music and performing for all those that will hear. However, Evans’, unlike many artist whose only concern is ticket sales, drive to succeed in his quest attract more black audiences stems from of a sense of responsibility instilled in him. “There is a responsibility to carry on the tradition of those who came before and a responsibility to the Evan’s family,” Evans said. I gather that for Evans, the BAM movement could not have come at a better time to validate his audience building efforts and reinforcing the responsibility to uphold the heritage of the music. “There is also a deeper responsibility that I have to come forward with some Black American music.” Evans stated.  Unapologetic about his push to see more African American’s in jazz audiences, Evans joined the list of panelist, including trumpeter, Nicholas Payton, bassist, Ben Wolfe, and saxophonists, Gary Bartz and Marcus Strickland for the now famous BAM Conference at Birdland in New York. It is clear that the BAM movement has helped him bring emphasis to his work. He asserts that BAM is essential because it gives him something for which to fight–connecting African American’s to the music of their creation. “BAM is giving jazz music new life,” he proudly states. It is apparent that BAM is now has an impact on him, not solely for the renaming purposes, which is one of Payton’s goals, but to see the thread of recognition tied back to the origins of the music. He is hopeful that more younger and African American audiences will take notice.

 

Evans’ is clear to state he is not abandoning his current audience; in fact, he will be touring Australia, Japan, and Italy this summer, or does he suggest that he has a scarce African American audience. Yet, Evans’ is resolute in his efforts to expose the music to newer audiences. He teaches classes to youth on the origins and cultural importance of the music called jazz. Though he is aware that a mission without a strategy can prove fruitless, Evan’s is not totally certain of the solution, but he does have ideas. “I don’t know the real answer; the present model is not really working,” he stated bluntly before engaging me in a story that provided insight into the weight of the issue. He told a story of when his Captain Black Big Band played to a packed audience and did a free CD giveaway to the first African American’s to come and no one came. Reminiscent of Robert Glasper’s appeal to have an opportunity for people to “not” like his music, Evans is of a similar mindset in his estimation that jazz must become cool again in order to recapture African American audiences. He suggest possibly a “superstar” artist or entertainer that will say that jazz is cool and more branded efforts, similar to Russell Simmons’ Def Comedy Jam and Def Poetry Jam. One thing is for sure, Orrin Evans will not rest until he has fulfilled his goal. So, when I was faced with the opportunity to “not” like Evans’ music, there is no doubt he gained at least one more audience member.

Orrin Evans latest project, Flip The Script, is set to release June 12, 2012 on Posi-Tone Records. Click here to pre-order your copy.

By Johnathan Eaglin

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Shaun Brady reviews “Flip the Script”…

www.citypaper.net

After a series of releases paying tribute to his mentors, keyboard player Orrin Evans reasserts his own bold identity on Flip the Script (Posi-Tone). His new trio features bassist Ben Wolfe and drummer Donald Edwards, both matches for Evans in sensitivity and strength. The disc features a half-dozen originals, from the strident blues of “Big Small” to the tender melancholy of “When,” alongside four covers. Evans gives his regular nod to his hometown, as well as the late Don Cornelius, on Gamble & Huff’s Soul Train theme, and gets downright celebratory on Luther Vandross’ “A Brand New Day” from The Wiz. —Shaun Brady

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Dan Bilawsky reviews “Flip the Script”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Pianist Orrin Evans’ last three outings for the Posi-Tone label have been vastly different from one another. He forged new, edgy frontiers as part of the collectively formulated Tarbaby on The End Of Fear (Posi-Tone, 2010), put his own unique stamp on the big band format with the bold Captain Black Big Band (Posi-Tone, 2011), and gave a nod to Philadelphia, the city that formed and nurtured him, on the mostly trio-based Freedom (Posi-Tone, 2011).

Flip The Script finds Evans working in trio mode again, but it’s not more of the same. Freedom had a mainstream appeal to it, at least on a modern jazz measuring stick, but this album goes further afield. Morphing grooves and probing proclamations come into play as Evans explores the inner workings of this particular trio and the music it chooses to make. While it may be paradoxical to call this group a tight unit that thrives on loose maneuvers, the shoe fits. All three men are expert navigators and simpatico allies who make all the sharp turns necessary, but they never sound rigid. Flexibility may seem at odds with precision, but this group knows how to reconcile those two ideals.

“The Question” opens the album with uncertain sentiments. Quirky and perplexed pianism, stormy drums, avant swing and thorny statements characterize this piece, but not the greater whole. The following “Clean House” is a more stable venture, highlighting Evans’ soloing, and the band continues to branch out from there. The title track is marked by intricate directional shifts and hits, the slow-moving “When” contains a brief drizzle of abstract piano rain drops, and bassist Ben Wolfe shares the spotlight with Evans on a snail-slow swinger dubbed “Big Small.”

Evans slows things down with two late-in-the-game covers that touch on different moods. “Someday My Prince Will Come” is a classy, floating jewel built around reflective beauty, while “The Sound Of Philadelphia,” from the famed team of Gamble and Huff, gives Evans the opportunity to go it alone, finding a more soulful vein to tap into.

While Evans always plays at an extremely high level, he’s in rare form on Flip The Script, an album of potent piano trio music that invites and rewards repeated listening.

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Brent Black has more to say about “Flip the Script”…

www.criticaljazz.com

Passions run deep today. From the failure of the Obama economic recovery to the terrorism of Hamas the world is a dangerous place and not always easy to understand. Jazz should be our “easy button.” I have to admit that I originally did not understand Orrin Evans and his passion and for that I am certainly sorry. Evans and his passion are one and simple. To make the jazz world a better place. I wanted to single out the latest Evans release Flip The Script as a perfect example…One of the finer releases of the year and I would hope that the music alone would allow this release to get the just attention deserved. Passion can be easily misunderstood. I recently found that out myself on a first hand basis. Evans passion for jazz education, his deep love of the history of jazz, and his desire to reach a younger traditional jazz artist following are more than just honorable – they are rare! At one point I may have been too hard on Evans and that bothers me but over time I do believe a good critic should have the same flexibility and adaptability as any good jazz musician. No critic, if they are a simple independent writer or a featured columnist has the final say. The final say on any artist comes from those that listen to the music and interpret the work and allow it to stand on it’s own merit. Simple shades of musical gray. While I will continue to voice certain passions despite misinterpretation, plagerism or down right libel from others, I will be reminded of the example that Evans sets. Stick to what you believe to be true. I will let my work stand on it’s own as well. There are a great many “good” piano trios in the naked city.

 

Flip The Script just happens to be a great one!


You can catch my review here:
I simply felt the desire to acknowledge a talent more than deserving and would hope you would as well! 
I like to pick one release per year that may just fly under the radar but can certainly stand on it’s own merit as one of the best of the bunch and without question Flip The Script certainly qualifies!