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Audiophile Audition reviews Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

www.audaud.com 

There is no shortage of piano trios. A wide variety of seminal pianists have established a reputation in this venue. At times, it is challenging to differentiate from the template of being the next McCoy Tyner or Bill Evans. Orrin Evans has pushed the envelope. His recent catalogue at Posi-Tone boasts a diverse and eclectic prerogative. Straight trio (Faith In Action), frenetic socio-political dialectic (Tarbaby’s End Of Fear) and dynamic large sound (Captain Black Big Band) have defined a jazz practitioner who is pursuing his own vision.

Freedom is a textured, stylish piano trio project. Philadelphia (Evans’ hometown) is the central element to the recording. Most of the compositions and musicians emanate from the rich traditions of jazz from this gritty urban community. From the opening, rhythmic undercurrents of Charles Fambrough’s “One For Honor”, it is evident that there is a significant cohesive dynamic within the trio. Evans sets up his fast-paced runs with chords, and it just swings. The tempo is sustained and fades into a delicate finish. A cover of Shirley Scott’s “Oasis” is imbued with strong percussion, thanks to the tandem of Byron Landham and Anwar Marshall. This seems to launch several flashy, syncopated piano riffs. “Shades Of Green” keeps the momentum, but in a more relaxed bop arrangement. Landham drumming and cymbal strokes mesh effortlessly with the different piano expressions.

Bassist Dwayne Burno contributes a “cool” jazz piece, “Gray’s Ferry” (those familiar with West Philadelphia should recognize the suggestion). The ensemble morphs to quartet as Larry McKenna offers a smooth lead on tenor saxophone. This bluesy jam evokes some of the imagery of the early sixties jazz combos. Evans’ solo is graceful and soulful. McKenna surfaces again on the cover of the 1947 Jule Styne standard, “Time After Time”.  Evans’ own “Dita” is a distinctive change of pace. The ethereal haunting ballad draws on the almost hypnotic subtlety of the piano lead. Burno injects a supple nuanced bass riff. With the unique drum work of Landham, the spacey effect is organic and unconventional. A lyrical elegant rendition of Herbie Hancock’s “Just Enough” is an appropriate finale to this native homage.

For those who favor piano trios, (or have grown tired of them), Freedom will be invigorating.

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Phil Freeman reviews Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

burningambulance.com

Though this review is being published on Independence Day, the title of pianist Orrin Evans‘ latest release has nothing to do with sociopolitical freedom. It’s not about musical freedom, either, at least not if your definition of that idea tilts in the direction of Matthew Shipp,Cecil Taylor, or any other practitioners of hard-line keyboard pyrotechnics.

By titling his album Freedom, Evans is paying tribute to his hometown of Philadelphia. That’s the album’s theme, in a nutshell. The compositions are almost all by Philadelphia natives, including Evans himself; the bassist on the date, Dwayne BurnoShirley ScottCharles Fambrough, one of three people to whom the disc is dedicated; and Eddie Green. He also tackles the standard “Time After Time,” written by Jule Styne, and Herbie Hancock‘s “Just Enough.”

The majority of the music is straight trio work, featuring Evans, Burno and drummerByron Landham. On three tracks, though, the pianist lets a younger drummer,Anwar Marshall, take over, and on two tracks (“Gray’s Ferry” and “Time After Time”) saxophonist Larry McKenna, a figure of some renown in Philadelphia but not really a nationally known player, guests.

Here’s the thing: I like Evans’ playing. Just in the last couple of weeks, I’ve been listening to his work as an accompanist on Ralph Bowen‘s Power Play and Stacy Dillard‘s Good and Bad Memories, and in each case, he adds a lot to the ensemble and to the music. But piano trios are a major sticking point for me. I just have a hard time convincing myself to listen to them. Another example: Art Hirahara. His work on Nick Hempton‘s The Business (coming out July 5) is great, but his recent trio disc, The Noble Path, did almost nothing for me. Piano, bass and drums aren’t enough. I need more. (Weirdly, I can listen to solo piano all day when I’m in the mood. It’s just piano trios that turn me off.) So I was a little concerned that Freedom would bore me. But it didn’t.

It’s tough to pinpoint exactly why, though. I’m finding Evans’ music is resistant to analysis. He’s provided conceptual clues on this record, but there are few, if any, stylistic hallmarks I can pinpoint that make an Orrin Evans record an Orrin Evans record. He doesn’t hammer the low end the way Matt Shipp does, or focus as fiercely as Craig Taborn. He’s not a purveyor of misty nothingness like Brad Mehldau. He’s just a solid, swinging player, and that’s maybe more difficult to discuss than any of the other styles of jazz piano. I like Evans, but can’t say exactly why. I guess that’ll have to be enough, unless and until I can set up an interview with him.

Freedom is a hard-swinging record; “Oasis” gets into some rhythmic territory that verges on salsa or boogaloo. But Evans and company keep tempos and moods changing, switching from ballads to blues to a deceptively simple vamp that gives “Shades of Green” its endlessly captivating structure. His piano style is hard to pin down; it’s not as overtly churchy as some others of his generation (Cyrus Chestnut, say), but neither does it have the phony delicacy of players still in thrall to that other Evans. He’s his own man, finding new things to say in a very mainstream/classicist context. And yes, he manages to hold the listener’s attention all the way through, with Larry McKenna’s two appearances on saxophone serving as a bonus, not a respite from tedium. So yeah, this album is highly recommended. Check it out.

 

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SaxShed reviews Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

saxshed.com

Orrin Evans (Featuring Larry McKenna) – Freedom
Pianist Orrin Evans’ latest release entitled “Freedom,” is now available from Posi-Tone Records. According to his current press kit, (this recording) “is an interpretive exploration of the music of his Philadelphia friends and mentors. This trio date features a hometown crew of sideman including the solid playing of bassist Dwayne Burno, the precise metrics of drummer Byron Landham, and the tenor saxophone stylings of special guest Larry McKenna. Also guesting on the record is up-and-coming Philly drummer Anwar Marshall.As with all of the press releases here on saxshed.com we will focus on the saxophone playing. The very capable Larry McKenna and former mentor of Evans only appears briefly on two cuts, Gray’s Ferry and the Jules Styne classic Time After Time.

The somber and brooding Gray’s Ferry appears as the second track following the up-tempo piano feature One For Honor. The Larry McKenna states the opening melody in a husky low register on tenor sax who then launches into his first solo. McKenna’s tone and demeanor which can be so sweet and understated is more forward here. It’s interesting to hear Larry in this somewhat uncharacteristic setting. Uncharacteristic or not, every solo I have heard Larry McKenna construct comes out as a lesson in the history of jazz improvisation. His solos are not made of chords, scales or licks but rather through-composed little gems.

Much more in keeping with the Larry McKenna many of us know and love is his rendering of Jules Styne’s Time After Time. His happy-go-lucky swinging tenor sax spins out line after line, chorus after chorus – seldom (if never) repeating himself. Once again Larry has schooled this listener in the art of jazz improvisation. As with McKenna’s first appearance here, Orrin Evans solos second and with complete command and confidence at the piano. Dwayne Burno and Byron Lanham trade on bass and drums, which then lead into the final out-chorus.

Although the focus here may be upon saxophonist Larry McKenna’s contribution to Orrin Evan’s“Freedom,” the remainder of the recording is worth a listen as well. The final track Just Enoughbeautifully showcases Orrin Evans on solo piano.

You can find out more about Orrin Evans and other innovative recordings at www.posi-tone.com

 

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Dan Bilawsky’s AAJ review of Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

www.allaboutjazz.com

Philadelphia was a symbol of freedom long before Elton Johnever penned his well-known tribute to tennis legend Billy Jean King. The city was a hotspot for American revolutionaries when the British were running the show, and Philadelphia played host to the First Continental Congress and the Second Continental Congress, which signed the Declaration of Independence. This city has come to represent the ideals of freedom within American society, and its rich jazz history is a reflection of the city’s past, pointing to all that is right and good with the City of Brotherly Love.

Pianist Orrin Evans was a first-hand recipient of all that the city had to offer in the form of on-the-bandstand education and mentorship. Philly legends like organists Trudy Pitts and Shirley Scott, drummer Mickey Roker and pianist Sid Simmons imparted their hard-earned wisdom into Evans’ hands and head, and the pianist’s formal studies with William Whitaker, Charles Pettaway and Jack Carr helped to round out his hometown musical upbringing. While subsequent studies at Rutgers University and the lure of New York in the ’90s eventually drew Evans eastward, he never forgot where he came from.

With Freedom, Orrin Evans comes full circle, paying tribute to the mentors and friends that helped to set him on his path in jazz. While the music was recorded in New York, the roster of musicians on the date is all friends from Philadelphia. Bassist Dwayne Burno and drummer Byron Landham—with drummer Anwar Marshall replacing Landham on a few tracks—are on hand to provide crisp rhythm work, and the trio is expanded into a quartet on two numbers, allowing for the addition of tenor saxophonist Larry McKenna’s full-bodied horn work.

The music itself, despite a title that might indicate otherwise, is actually Evans most conventional output in quite some time. The spiky intensity of The Captain Black Big Band and the left-leaning, in-and-out esthetic of Tarbaby’s work is nowhere to be found on this date. While Evans still injects his own personality into these pieces, his mission here is to honor others. Swing is a central element on a large number of the tracks, but it isn’t all that Evans has to offer. Dewy balladry built with glacial grace (Evans’ “Dita”), a rhythmically engaging workout on Shirley Scott’s “Oasis,” and an album-closing, solo piano take on Herbie Hancock’s “Just Enough” all exhibit different sides of the indefatigable Orrin Evans.

 

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Bruce Lindsay’s AAJ review for Orrin Evans “Freedom”….

www.allaboutjazz.com

Orrin Evans’ first three Posi-Tone releases formed a diverse but high-quality trilogy: the piano trio (Faith In Action, 2010); the freer, more left-field small band (Tarbaby’s End Of Fear, 2010); and the hard-blowing and exciting big band (Captain Black Big Band, 2011). Hot on their heels comes Freedom, Evans’ fourth album in less than two years. The quality remains high.

Freedom harks back to the lineup and style of Faith In Action. Evans’ home town of Philadelphia looms large, with all of the band and most of the composers hailing from the city. If anything, the album’s accent is more strongly on melody, its emotional tone more romantic and less frenetic than Faith In Action, although the trio’s take on Chris Beck’s “Hodge Podge” shows that it can crank up the tempo and the tension whenever it wants.

Charles Fambrough’s “One For Honor” showcases bassist Dwayne Burno’s rich, fat-toned sound and the skittering, dynamic percussion of the impressive young drummer Anwar Marshall. Burno’s own “Gray’s Ferry” is a slinky blues, with a gently seductive swing courtesy of Byron Landham, who was also featured on Evans’ first recording, 1994’s self produced The Trio. Veteran saxophonist Larry McKenna adds a confident solo to this tune, while on Jule Styne’s “Time After Time” he takes the lead role, playing the melody line with warmth before kicking things into a higher tempo.

Evan’s own “Dita,” is a slow ballad characterized by his spacious and considered piano and Landham’s inventive percussion. Evans’ solo performance of Herbie Hancock’s “Just Enough” is a beautiful valediction, a delicate and controlled approach that draws out the tune’s romance and lyricism.

Evans’ body of recorded work is both extensive and impressive. His previous three Posi-Tone albums are among his most mature and rewarding works, with a breadth of imagination that few other contemporary jazz musicians can muster. Freedom is a beautiful creation, a work of great strength and musical perception.

Track Listing: One for Honor; Gray’s Ferry; Shades of Green; Dita; Time After Time; Hodge Podge; Oasis; As Is; Just Enough.

Personnel: Orrin Evans: piano; Dwayne Burno: bass; Byron Landham: drums, percussion; Anwar Marshall: drums (1, 6, 7); Larry McKenna: tenor saxophone (2, 5).

 

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Richard Kamins Step Tempest review of Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

http://steptempest.blogspot.com

The past year has been quite a musical ride for pianist/composer Orrin Evans, especially when it comes to his relationship to Posi-Tone Records.   Early in 2010, the Los Angeles-based label released the pianist’s tribute to saxophonist Bobby Watson, “Faith in Action” followed in late October by “The End of Fear” from Tarbaby, the “trio collective” with Evans, bassist Eric Revis and drummer Nasheet Waits (plus some fine guests.)  2011 has already seen the release of the Captain Black Big Band, arguably one of the 5 best CDs of this year.

Now, we have “Freedom“, basically a trio date released under Evans’ name, featuring bassist Dwayne Burno and drummer Byron Landham with Anwar Marshall taking over the drum chair on 3 cuts (1 of which features Landham on persussion) and tenor saxophonist Larry McKenna on 2 tracks.  While not as dramatic and forceful as the Big Band recording, this CD contains a multitude of pleasures.  The project is dedicated to the memories of Trudy Pitts, Sid Simmons and Charles Fambrough, all who passed near the end of 2010 (Fambrough on New Years’ Day 2011.)  The first track on the CD is Fambrough’s “One for Honor“, a delightful romp that gives the musicians plenty of space to let loose – and they do play with fire.  Burno is one of the more melodic contemporary bassists as well as being a strong foundation.  He supplies “Gray’s Ferry” ( a neighborhood in South Philadelphia), a medium tempo blues featuring a bluesy solo from McKenna, a veteran of the “Philly” jazz scene who has worked with Clark Terry, Tony Bennett and many others in his long career.

Other highlights include “Shades of Green” from the pen of the late Philadelphia-based pianist, Eddie Green (he passed in 2004) and the classy, poly-rhythmic, “Hodge Podge“, composed by Chris Beck, a drummer from Philly and featuring Marshall in the drum chair.  Marshall and Landham lead the way into “Oasis“, an atmospheric work from Shirley Scott. The only tune without an overt Philadelphia connection is Herbie Hancock’s “Just Enough” that Evans plays sans accompaniment to close the CD. Filled with rich, resonant, chords, the pianist creates a fine musical tour-de-force as he works through the melody line into his excellent solo.

In the shadow of the Big Band recording, “Freedom” may seem a bit low-key but pay attention.  Like much of what Orrin Evans has been giving to the world lately, this CD pays tribute to his city, his influences and his contemporaries.  It’s mature music yet never loses its spirit and the joy of playing. It’s yet another “winner’ in a streak that stretches back to Evans’ fine sextet of recordings for Criss Cross.  For more information, go to www.posi-tone.com/orrinevans/freedom.html.

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The Revivalist reviews Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

revivalist.okayplayer.com

While it is common to take for granted the ease with which we find forever in our favorite tunes, the human experience dictates that the musicians creating those songs be regarded with equal parts admiration and immortality.  Everyone expects to lose a grandparent, but people rarely anticipate the eventual loss of a musical hero.  When people lose loved ones, they return to items and places specific enough to the deceased to placate their grief.  Music is often employed as the great salve in everyday life, the creative medium employed as both memorial and marker of fond memory.  What then, do musicians do with the loss of their forebears, mentors, teachers, and favorite players?  While grief could be carefully woven into some magnum opus of influence and woe made to crest at a fever pitch, the more likely outcome is that the grieving pianist will do the same as the grieving rock enthusiast; electing to play the songs that initially made him a fan instead of observing that personal void with an equally empty moment of silence – one that would not be of service to the memory of anyone who has spent their life in tireless service to the idea of making a joyful noise.  Returning to the legacies, fond memories, and teeming catalogs of recently deceased Philadelphia jazz legends, Charles Fambrough, Sid Simmons, and Trudy Pitts, Orrin Evans attempts to do the same.

Continuing up the mountain he has built from a multitude of projects, conceptual outfits, and critical acclaim, pianist Orrin Evans returns to front a trio including Dwayne Burno on bass, and Anwar Marshall and Byron Landham splitting time on drums, for the nine track Freedom.  He opens with “One For Honor,” a tune by bassist Charles Fambrough, who died before Evans’ project was released.  The track, much like many of the jazz tunes that have originated in Philadelphia, feels like it was born to score the city itself in movement and timing – the individual and very distinct voices of each musician providing a balance of grit and class that lend to the abundant charm of the piece.  Every series of notes and chords seems well placed by Evans and expertly orchestrated by the band as a collective.  If this piece were meant to honor Fambrough in life, it has given his sound and composition new life in light of his absence.

Saxophonist Larry McKenna guests on “Grays Ferry,” a song that is just close enough to the cigarettes, sex, and cool aesthetic of once-legendary Ortlieb’s Jazzhaus to accurately represent the rough hewn beauty of the Philadelphia neighborhood the title references.  McKenna provides a very raw star power on the tune, which may be heightened immensely on the off chance his instrument was miked well enough that the sound of his fingers pressing the keys of the saxophone is as audible as the sound of his breath forcing energy through the brass.

The second track on the last release of Philadelphia pianist, Eddie Green, “Shades of Green” is strikingly beautiful.  The synchronicity and peaceful force with which the bass and piano operate, is subtly impressive as the otherwise dulcet piano melds with the rich vibrato of the bass to bring a somber tone to an otherwise joyful but very soul stirring piece.  The ultimate victory is found in the band’s ability to allow Burno to shine; the piano acting as the massive delicate landscape the bass has been charged to illuminate.  It is a song that reaches back to reference the tone and thematic emotion present in Bill Evans’ interpretation of Miles Davis’ classic, “Nardis” – especially as it pertains to the relationship between the two foremost melodic voices, as the pianist and bassist share space.

“Dita” is Evans’ only original track on the release and is an interesting utilization of the bass, at a barely detectable whisper of an introduction, as piano draws upon the ethos of songs like “Blue In Green” and “Mood Indigo” to produce a short piece that is uniquely spare and overflowing with suggestions of pain against a fanfare of brushes and cymbals.  This could be Evans’ way of saying goodbye or maybe even posing a very deliberate word of thanks, but whether his exact intent is ever made clear, Evans’ sentiment is absolutely obvious.

The album continues with several more up-tempo pieces, including “Time After Time” and “Hodge Podge”, both exercises in playful fingering and syncopation.  The rhythmic execution on Evans’ cover of Herbie Hancock’s “Oasis” is not to be missed.  It is not obnoxiously loud or overpopulated with textures, but it harbors a diversity of sound and movement that make it one of the standout pieces on the release.  This may very well be Evans’ effort to give Hancock his flowers while he is still living.  Obviously impressed and influenced by Herbie Hancock, as most modern pianists seem to be, Evans and company do a fantastic job of providing the musical traction that allows the entire band complete deference to the composition and each other.

By the last two tracks, Evans has managed to display a range of skill and technical knowledge without ever making his efforts seem even remotely self-serving.  “As Is” is the type of crowd starter known to warm a jazz club up after a few somber numbers or remarkably slow hours.  Playing trio for anyone who plays in or patronizes a working Jazz trio, the band make good use of the classic elements of group style and creative exchange, maneuvering in and out of a theme that quiets rather suddenly on the repetition of a very simple but memorable theme.  “Just Enough” is solo piano working in its most overlooked capacity, as melody and rhythm section for itself – Evans playing on the sporadic virtuosity and dissonant chord changes that have come to typify much of fellow Philadelphian, McCoy Tyner’s style – an ode that is as beautiful and brash as it is an exercise in humility.  A fitting end to an album concerned with preserving and honoring the works and careers of past musicians, by doing nothing more than continuing to play their songs with the same dedication to the music and passion for the art that they once did.

 

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Another write-up for Orrin Evans “Freedom”…

blogs.philadelphiaweekly.com

Orrin Evans – Freedom (Posi-Tone): It’s been a good year for Philly jazz pianist and composer-performer Orrin Evans. Back in March, Evans’s Captain Black Big Band – an ensemble sometimes boasting up to 38 musicians from New York City and Philly – released their self-titled album of recordings from live dates in NYC and Chris’s Jazz Cafe in Philly, and without wasting any time, in marches Freedom. Evans’s resume features many famed and diverse collaborators – Mos Def, Common, Pharoah Sanders, Branford Marsalis – but on Freedom, his goal’s to reflect on his development specifically within Philly’s jazz tradition. During informal encounters and his years as a student at Girard Music Academy and the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University, he has studied and worked with local musicians like Trudy Pitts, Sid Simmons, Bobby Durham, Kenny Barone, Robin and Duane Eubanks, Mickey Roker, and a long list of others whose impact has shaped his sound and perspective. His core trio for theFreedom sessions is bassist Dwayne Burno and drummer Byron Landham, with saxophonist Larry McKenna sitting in on two tracks and drummer Anwar Marshall on three. Among compositions by Philly jazz artists like Charles Fambrough and Eddie Green, the trio bangs out pieces written by Evans and Burno, thus articulating the perpetual expansion of the local jazz canon. Highlights include the rollicking piano phrases and drummer Marshall’s lively shifts and breaks on “Hodge Podge,” a piece composed by Chris Beck, and the hard-hitting swing of Duane Eubanks’ “As Is.”

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NPR makes nice mention of Captain Black Big Band…

www.npr.org

We’re pretty obsessive fans here at NPR Music. We make lists. And because the Internet periodically demands these sorts of things, we’ve put together a multi-genre listening list of our favorite 25 records of the year to date. Plus, here’s our listeners poll — it’s massive — where you can vote and tell us how wrong we were.

Our group consensus worked out such that new albums from Gretchen Parlato (The Lost and Found) and Ben Allison (Action-Refraction) made the top 25. I was happy to contribute short blurbs about both — both albums are definitely among my favorite of this year so far. Additionally, my colleague Tom Huizenga, who’s on the classical beat, informs me that the top-25-ed release from France’s Ebene Quartet, Fiction, is practically a jazz release too.

But there are plenty of other great jazz records from the first half of 2011. What are yours? Do tell us in the comments.

To get you started, here’s a quick brainstorm of 25 other, well-received jazz/-ish records from the first half of this year. Some have been featured at NPR Music; others are on the tips of critics’ tongues or radio airplay charts. What else would you add?

We’re pretty obsessive fans here at NPR Music. We make lists. And because the Internet periodically demands these sorts of things, we’ve put together a multi-genre listening list of our favorite 25 records of the year to date. Plus, here’s our listeners poll — it’s massive — where you can vote and tell us how wrong we were.

Our group consensus worked out such that new albums from Gretchen Parlato (The Lost and Found) and Ben Allison (Action-Refraction) made the top 25. I was happy to contribute short blurbs about both — both albums are definitely among my favorite of this year so far. Additionally, my colleague Tom Huizenga, who’s on the classical beat, informs me that the top-25-ed release from France’s Ebene Quartet, Fiction, is practically a jazz release too.

But there are plenty of other great jazz records from the first half of 2011. What are yours? Do tell us in the comments.

To get you started, here’s a quick brainstorm of 25 other, well-received jazz/-ish records from the first half of this year. Some have been featured at NPR Music; others are on the tips of critics’ tongues or radio airplay charts. What else would you add?

  • Ambrose Akinmusire, When The Heart Emerges Glistening
  • Bobby Sanabria & Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra, Tito Puente Masterworks Live!!!
  • Captain Black Big Band, Captain Black Big Band
  • The Cookers, Cast The First Stone
  • David S. Ware/Cooper-Moore/William Parker/Muhammed Ali, Planetary Unknown
  • Eric Reed, The Dancing Monk
  • Erik Friedlander, Bonebridge
  • Fred Hersch, Alone At The Vanguard
  • The New Gary Burton Quartet, Common Ground
  • Gerald Clayton, Bond: The Paris Sessions
  • Gordon Goodwin’s Big Phat Band, That’s How We Roll
  • James Farm, JAMES FARM
  • JD Allen Trio, Victory!
  • Joe Lovano Us Five, Bird Songs
  • Julian Lage, Gladwell
  • Kurt Elling, The Gate
  • Lee Konitz/Brad Mehldau/Charlie Haden/Paul Motian,Live At Birdland
  • Matana Roberts, COIN COIN Chapter One: Gens de couleur libres
  • Matthew Shipp, Art Of The Improviser
  • Terell Stafford, This Side Of Strayhorn
  • Rene Marie, Voice of My Beautiful Country
  • Starlicker, Double Demon
  • Stefon Harris/David Sanchez/Christian Scott, Ninety Miles
  • Vijay Iyer, Tirtha
  • World Saxophone Quartet, Yes We Can

I have my own sleeper records I’ve been waiting to spring on folks … but you first. Comment, you!

 

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New interview with Orrin Evans….

philly.com

Orrin Evans: Jazz cat with a plan – and deep Philly roots

By A.D. Amorosi
For The Inquirer
‘My plan is always to be playing,” says Philly pianist, composer, and arranger Orrin Evans.Judging from the last 18 months, the plan is working. He and his quartet play two shows Saturday night at Chris’ Jazz Cafe, but that’s just the latest in a very busy year and a half.

In January 2010, he put out, under his own name, a celebration of saxophonist Bobby Watson titled Faith in Action. In September, he cut an album titled The End of Fear with his avant-funk collective Tarbaby. In March, his large ensemble released the eponymous album Captain Black Big Band. Another one under his own name, Freedom, dedicated to Philly’s jazz giants, comes out Tuesday. This summer, he’ll record another Tarbaby album, which may be released before year’s end, then he’ll go to work on an album of his solo compositions. Factor in a constant touring slate for all of those bands, plus occasional teaching gigs, and you get an idea of his schedule.

That schedule is even tighter when you consider that Evans, 36, is married to singer Dawn Warren, with two children (Miles, 18, and Matthew, 13). They live in Mount Airy.

Neighborhood, Philly, family: These things are crucial to Evans and his music. “This city is everything to me,” he says. “Has been since I moved here from Trenton as a kid.” He loves the “simple things,” like being able to hit the post office and the grocery store with ease as well as play music with the extended jazz family he first met at age 12, when his father took him to Ortlieb’s Jazzhaus in Northern Liberties.

But changes are happening. “Moving to New York is inevitable,” Evans says. His Captain Black Big Band has been expanding to include as many New Yorkers as it does Philly jazz cats. And there are fewer and fewer places in Philly to make a living playing jazz. But with characteristic loyalty, he says, “I will always find a way back to Philly.”

The hard-bop acolyte has always been restless, always productive. Since arriving on the jazz scene in the mid-’90s, he has steadily made albums such as Justin Time and Grown Folk Bizness on labels such as Criss Cross. So his recent productivity simply continues a work ethic shown when he started recording as a leader or playing gigs with artists such as his mentor, Bobby Watson, and the Mingus Big Band, among many others.

All players who work with him must be members of his extended family, people he’d like to break bread with. The word has long gone around about Evans: If you’re not his friend, you’re not his collaborator. “That’s exactly it,” he laughs. He readily acknowledges the hugeness of the Captain Black Big Band – 18, or 36 when you consider he requires a second string. Still, he says, the rule remains: “I have to play with cats I have a bond with – spiritually, personally, something.”

Then there are the bonds of blood. His uncle is sax great Ellsworth Gooding, his mother is local opera singer Frances Juanita Gooding Evans, and his father was Don Evans, an educator, director, and playwright who died in 2003. The elder Evans staged plays such as August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and wrote theater works that included Mahalia and One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show.

“When The Cosby Show came out, I remembered that’s how I grew up,” says Evans, who went to Settlement Music School and Martin Luther King High. “Except my folks and their friends weren’t lawyers and doctors. They were artists. We always had people reciting in my house, discussions about books, or mini-concerts where people got up, played and sang.”

He was all about jazz from childhood. Evans started on the household piano. Then he changed to clarinet and bass clarinet when the classically oriented Girard Academic Music Program he attended didn’t suit his needs (“They didn’t get my ‘Giant Steps’ stuff,” Evans says with a laugh, regarding his love of John Coltrane), going back to piano when he hit MLK High. His influences included anyone who could “translate those dots on paper” – jazz piano greats such as Lennie Tristano and McCoy Tyner, men who accompanied his mother during recitals. Soon, that would include the cast and characters of Ortlieb’s and the Clef Club.

After his parents were divorced, his father picked him up every Tuesday from Orrin’s job at Au Bon Pain in Liberty Place. They’d buy a scratch-off Lotto ticket and head to Ortlieb’s, where Orrin fell in love with roost-rulers such as fellow keyboardists Trudy Pitts and Shirley Scott.

“I don’t remember a time when I wasn’t around Trudy and Shirley,” says Evans. At 13 he showed up with skills and a look-at-me attitude. “But there was no point looking at me because Joey DeFrancesco was making the rounds,” says Evans, recalling the prodigious talents of the young Philly organ great.

Evans would come to lead the Tuesday jam sessions at Ortlieb’s before the club closed. Pitts, Scott, and all the legends of Ortlieb’s became his family. “What they did will always be the constant,” he says. “Whenever I teach, I tell the young ones over and over that they have to know the constants, the past, of what Miles and Trane and Shirley and Sid Simmons did.”

His new CD, the sometimes meditative, always spirited Freedom, is dedicated to Pitts, Simmons, and Charles Fambrough. It is also about the heart and soul of Philadelphia jazz. All its songs have some local connection, with several written by local giants including Scott, Fambrough, and Eddie Green, and featuring legends such as tenor saxophonist Larry McKenna.

“This record says a lot,” says Evans. “There is history here about black people and music.”

But there is more than history and dedication to this new album. It is an emotional farewell of sorts. “It is about my freedom from Philly, as well as knowing that I will always be connected to it. I can’t deny it. I want to always do records with Philly cats as well as celebrate this city. But I already have an apartment in New York City that I use when I work there. As soon as my kids grow up, I wouldn’t mind moving there full-time. It is not too late for me. As long as there is a New Jersey Turnpike and planes, there will always be a scene for me somewhere.”

Freedom, then, is not necessarily a Philly swan song, but it is a look at this city in a rearview mirror. Mention that to Kevin Eubanks, another local who got out – first as a renowned guitarist and later as bandleader for Jay Leno’s Tonight Show – and he laughs. “Orrin is a close friend of mine and a good friend to my family,” says Eubanks. “He’s great enough to call his own shots. He should be where he’s happiest.”

What makes Orrin Evans happiest, no matter where he plays or lives, is having a plan. “Hannibal on The A-Team always said, ‘I love it when a plan comes together,’ ” says Evans. “I may dig going to the bandstand and not knowing what is going to happen, but I thrive on knowing what the possibilities are.”