Wednesday, February 1, 2012

SHM-CD of the Month - "João Gilberto: Brasil"

SHM-CD of the Month
João Gilberto: "Brasil" (Universal) 1981/2011

Produced by João Gilberto
Arranged & Conducted by Johnny Mandel
Featuring: João Gilberto (acoustic guitar & vocals), Maria Bethania, Caetano Veloso & Gilberto Gil (vocals), Clare Fischer, Milcho Leviev & Michael Boddicker (keyboards), Jim Hughart (acoustic bass), Joe Correro (drums), Paulinho da Costa (percussion), Bud Shank (flute), Stella Castellucci (harp) et al.

DVD of the Month - "Copernicus: Live!"

DVD of the Month
Copernicus: "Live! In Prague" (MoonJune) 2012

Featuring: Copernicus (lead vocals & lyrics), Larry Kirwan (keyboards, guitar, vocals), Dave Conrad (electric bass), Thomas Hamlin (drums) & Mike Fazio (electric guitar)
Copernicus is a conceptual creation of Joseph Smalkowski

Filmed in 1989 by Corbett Santana (left camera) and the crew of Ceskoslovenská Televízia Praha/Czechoslovakian TV Prague (right camera).
Sound engineer: Michael Ford
Post-production by Fernando Natalici, Mourrice Papi & Adnor Pitanga, XT Studio, New York (Summer 2011)
Graphics by Leonardo Pavkovic
Liner Notes: Fernando Natalici

In 1989, after the release of the album "Deeper", Copernicus received many requests to appear live in a number of cities in Europe -- including Moscow, Sopot, Prague, Vilnius and Berlin. "Deeper" had received a lot of attention from the press and got tremendous radio airplay. This was a time of heightened tension in many countries, separated from the rest of the world by their mostly totalitarian regimes.

This concert footage documents the entire experience at Prague's Slavia Stadium. For the nine thousand fans, it was a rewarding experience. Copernicus and the audience interacted in an extraordinary manner. The effects of Copernicus' songs such as "The Authorities" and "White from Black" and others were visibly a big blow to the audience eager to absorb more of Copernicus' lyrics and the gripping original music performed by those musicians which included Larry Kirwan of Black 47 on keyboards, guitar and vocals, Mike Fazio on guitar, Thomas Hamlin on drums, and Dave Conrad on bass along with their American soundman, Michael Ford.

The use of split screen technology with footage from two separate sources heightens the experience that one almost feels that he is right there at the mixing board watching every move from the stage and from the audience's point of view. This video certainly is a document from the time when bands would go out and venture into these far away places. It is worth its price in gold.

Vocal CD of the Month - "Tania Maria: Tempo"

Vocal CD of the Month
Tania Maria: "Tempo" (Naive) 2011

Produced by Eric Kressman & Tania Maria for Bel Horizon-Tanoca Music
Arranged by Tania Maria
Featuring: Tania Maria (acoustic piano & vocals) and Eddie Gomez (acoustic bass)
Photos: Thomas Dorn

An intimate duo set by Tania Maria and her long time associate, bassist extraordinaire, Eddie Gomez. Besides several Tania's originals --"Dear Vee Vee," "Senso Único" and the title tracks are my favourites --, also includes surprising renditions of Luiz Bonfa/Antonio Carlos Jobim's long-forgotten toada "A Chuva Caiu," Alcyr Pires Vermelho/Nazareno de Brito's gem "Bronzes e Cristais" and Roberto Carlos/Erasmo Carlo's "Sentado à Beira do Caminho."

Instrumental CD of the Month - "Mike Longo Trio + 2: To My Surprise"

Instrumental CD of the Month
Mike Longo Trio + 2: "To My Surprise" (CAP) 2011

Produced by Bob Magnuson for Consolidated Artists Productions
Arranged by Mike Longo
Featuring: Mike Longo (acoustic piano), Bob Cranshaw (acoustic bass), Lewis Nash (drums), Jimmy Owens (trumpet & flugelhorn) and Lance Bryant (tenor sax)
Recorded August 1, 2011 @ Bennett Studios (Englewood, NJ)
Recorded, Mixed & Mastered by Alessandro V. Perrotta
Photos: Angelo Sandy
Art Direction/Graphic Design: Cristopher Drukker

With every new recording, jazz pianist Mike Longo digs a little deeper into the chemistry of the music, pushing himself and his band to more fully explore the intricacies of the rhythmic nature of jazz, attempting to go to new places where surprising results await. Longo named his new album "To My Surprise" in honor of those special musical moments that unfold.

"To My Surprise," produced by saxophonist Bob Magnuson, features The Mike Longo Trio (with jazz stalwarts Bob Cranshaw on bass and Lewis Nash on drums) on a half-dozen tunes, and on the other six numbers the trio is supplemented with two special guests who are renowned horn players -- Jimmy Owens on trumpet and flugelhorn, and Lance Bryant on tenor saxophone. The music features Longo’s tight-arrangements of both his original compositions and several surprising selections of outside material, brought to a flowering fruition by the band’s inspired and deep improvisational exploration. The results are a stunning collection of acoustic modern jazz at its finest, rooted in the be-bop traditions of the past, but pushing into new territory, lessons Longo learned from studying with Oscar Peterson 45 years ago and playing with Dizzy Gillespie extensively for a quarter-century.

"To My Surprise" and many of Longo’s other recordings are available online at Jazzbeat.com and CDbaby.com as well as digital download sites such as iTunes, Rhapsody, eMusic, Amazon-downloads and many other online locations. In addition, Longo is revered as a master jazz teacher (he has written numerous textbooks) and he is just releasing his second instructional DVD (The Fundamentals) of an eventual four-disc series titled The Rhythmic Nature of Jazz. The first two DVDs are available at Jazzbeat.com.

“Sometimes you have to walk through a musical door just to see what happens, ” Longo explains. “Quite often when I try something completely new to me, it seems a bit strange at first, but then I am pleasantly surprised when it works. I hope the listener feels the same way, even if it is on a subconscious level. Sometimes the surprise is an unusual chord progression, or an unlikely layering of the melody line, or complex polyrhythms. With my original compositions, it starts with a germ of an idea, a motif loaded with energy ready to move forward. I build a structure around it. Then I give it to the band, and in the studio the energy and excitement are added. During the improvisational sections, it is just like each musician is composing as they go along. If the structure is sturdy enough, the music can be performed live again and again changing with each performance.”

This new album showcases Longo’s always-evolutionary playing on a dozen tunes recorded “live in the studio, mostly first takes with the absolute minimum of editing” to capture the most spontaneous, rapturous, improvisational jazz possible (“We only had one rehearsal the day before to check song structure.”). Longo worked with this same trio on his highly-successful last album (Sting Like a Bee went to #3 on the international Jazz Week airplay chart). “Bob and Lewis are both from the same ‘polymetric school’ of playing where you can have more than one meter going on at the same time, ” Longo states. “With them and with the quintet there is a contrapuntal perfection between the musicians, plus a great action-reaction thing, a lot of spontaneous combustion with surprises going on.” Longo has performed with Cranshaw, Nash and Owens numerous times in various settings over the years. “Jimmy Owens and I first played together in 1968 in Dizzy Gillespie’s All-Star Band, ” Mike recalls. This latest CD is Longo’s first opportunity to play with Bryant.

On "To My Surprise," the quintet tunes are original Longo compositions penned in the past year plus “Magic Bluze” which Jimmy Owens contributed. “When I was writing the material, ” says Longo, “I could hear the horns, so I scored some specific horn parts and also on each tune left sections for improvisational soloing.” The recording kicks off with the highly-energetic (and tongue-in-cheek-titled) “A Picture of Dorian Mode” followed by the slow “Still Water” with the piano echoing the horn melody line. On the title tune Longo took a left-turn by inserting a G-major-seventh chord (“that’s the surprise”), and it leads to Owens’ smooth trumpet solo followed by a rich-and-creamy sax solo by Bryant with the two horns playing different lines simultaneously near the end.

Not surprising to Longo fans, the six tunes the trio covers get completely revamped. Longo enjoys taking challenging material, such as music originally written for horn bands, and coming up with a piano arrangement. As usual, he selected pieces by two of his favorite composers -- Wayne Shorter (“Limbo”) and Herbie Hancock (“Eye of the Hurricane,” a VSOP tour-de-force). “I turned ‘Limbo’ into a waltz. ‘Hurricane’ is so intricate it was extremely challenging to work out the piano part, especially to be played at such a fast pace, but we nailed it in one take.” Similarly Longo makes piano-trio music out of classic vocal numbers such as “I Hadn’t Anyone ‘Til You, ” “Old Devil Moon” (“entirely reharmonized in a modern style with fourths in inversions”), “You’ve Changed” and “In The Wee Small Hours.”

Mike began playing piano at age three. He was performing professionally in Florida as a teenager when Cannonball Adderley heard him and soon they were playing the Southern “chittlin’ circuit” together. Longo earned his Bachelor of Music degree in classical piano at Western Kentucky State University while also playing with the Hal McIntyre Orchestra, Hank Garland and the Salt City Six. In Chicago in the early Sixties, Oscar Peterson invited Longo to study with him at the Advanced School of Contemporary Music for jazz musicians. Longo spent the next six months in what he calls “the most intense period of study in my life, ” often with private lessons from Peterson. “I learned all the T’s from him – touch, time, tone, technique, taste, textures and temperature. That last one has to do with intensity, how hot you play. What I learned about jazz piano playing from him was profound.”

Mike moved to New York and became a house pianist at the Metropole Cafe where he played with Coleman Hawkins, Henry Red Allen, George Wettling, Gene Krupa and other jazz notables. Eventually Longo also got to work with many great singers -- Nancy Wilson, Gloria Lynn, Astrud Gilberto, Jimmy Witherspoon, Joe Williams, Jimmy Rushing, to name a few. Longo did an extended stay at Embers West with bassist Paul Chambers accompanying acts such as Frank Foster, Frank Wess, Clark Terry, Zoot Sims and Roy Eldridge. In addition, over the years Mike has performed on albums by Dizzy Gillespie, Astrud Gilberto, James Moody, Buddy Rich, Lee Konitiz and many others.

Dizzy Gillespie hired Mike as the pianist for the Dizzy Gillespie Quintet in 1966, a position Mike held through nine years of non-stop touring and recording, and for several years he also was the musical director for the band before striking out on his own. But even then, he worked frequently with Dizzy for another 16 years. “I was always learning from Dizzy. He had the greatest depth of understanding of rhythm of any musician I ever met.” While Mike was with Dizzy, the band recorded many tunes penned by Longo such as “Frisco, ” “Let Me Out, ” “Soul Kiss” and “The Truth.” Longo started his own recording career in the early Sixties and now has nearly two-dozen solo albums to his credit (three of them with his big band, the New York State of the Art Jazz Ensemble).

Among his rhythm section’s multitudinous credits, Bob Cranshaw has played with Sonny Rollins, McCoy Tyner, Wes Montgomery, Thelonious Monk, Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald, Luiz Bonfá, Wayne Shorter and Joe Zawinul; and Lewis Nash has performed with Dizzy Gillespie, the Tommy Flanagan Trio, Betty Carter, Sonny Rollins, Oscar Peterson, Wynton Marsalis, Joe Lovano, Ron Carter, Danilo Perez and Claus Ogerman. Jimmy Owens has worked with Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Duke Ellington, Maynard Ferguson, Thad Jones and countless others. Lance Bryant’s credits include Lionel Hampton, Abdulah Ibrahim, Jon Hendricks, Phyllis Hyman and George Gee.

Mike Longo has never stopped studying music, constantly searching for new ideas, and freely exploring deeply into the subtleties and nuances found in jazz. “On this session, ” Longo explains, “I gently steered the group, and as we went along I tried to communicate to them key directions such as intensity, temperature, type of tone, and depth of swing.”

"DownBeat" - February 2012

COVER STORY
Phil Woods -- In celebration of Phil Woods' 80th birthday, DownBeat presents an exclusive excerpt from the legendary alto saxophonist's memoir. Woods won the Alto Saxophone category in the 2011 DownBeat Readers Poll.

FEATURES
Dafnis Prieto -- This 2011 MacArthur Fellow is one of the most exciting percussionists on today's jazz scene. He's also an influential composer and educator.

Gary Smulyan -- DB catches up with the unique artist who has won the Baritone Saxophone category for five consecutive years in the DownBeat Critics Poll.

Stanley Jordan -- The virtuoso guitarist has a new Mack Avenue album titled Friends. His amazing list of collaborators for this CD includes Regina Carter, Kenny Garrett, Charlie Hunter, Christian McBride, Nicholas Payton, Mike Stern, Russell Malone and others.

Special Section: Great Places To See Jazz -- Returning for its second year, Great Jazz Rooms 2012 is our detailed guide to over 150 music venues where you can experience jazz, blues and beyond.

PLAYERS
Rick Drumm (drums)
Dimitri Vassilakis (vocals/saxophone)
Franco D'Andrea (piano)
Darius Jones (saxophone)

BLINDFOLD TEST -- Jeff 'Tain' Watts live at the Detroit Jazz Festival

THE BEAT
* WBGO Champions of Jazz Benefit Concert
* Q&A with Pablo Aslan
* European Scene
* MCG Jazz label profile
* Caught: Wadada Leo Smith, Berlin Jazz Festival, Barcelona Jazz Festival

WOODSHED
* Master Class: "Sax Solos Over Standards," by Toni Dagradi
* Transcription: Dave Liebman's saxophone solo on "Port Ligat" from the 2010 CD Quest For Freedom

REVIEWS - Hot Box
* Keith Jarrett, Rio (ECM)
* Curtis Brothers, Completion Of Proof (Truth Revelation)
* Joel Frahm Quartet, Live At Smalls (SmallsLive)
* Bill McHenry, Ghosts Of The Sun (Sunnyside)

CD Reviews
* Christian McBride, Conversations With Christian (Mack Avenue)
* The Nick Mazzarella Trio, This Is Only A Test (self release)
* Mike Longo Trio +2, To My Surprise (Consolidated Artists)
* Pablo Aslan Quintet, Piazzolla In Brooklyn (Soundbrush)
* Us3, Lie, Cheat & Steal (The Orchard)
* John Escreet, Exception To The Rule (Criss Cross)
* David Binney, Barefooted Town (Criss Cross)
* Chris Thomas King, Antebellum Postcards (21st Century Blues)
* Motian Sickness, For The Love Of Sarah (Grizzley Music)
* Eddie Daniels/Roger Kellaway, Live At The Library Of Congress (IPO)
* Bob James & Keiko Matsui, Altair & Vega (EOne)
* Dead Cat Bounce, Chance Episodes (Cuneiform)
* Dan Tepfer, Goldberg Variations (Sunnyside)
* Jacques Loussier Trio, Schuman:Kinderszenen Scenes From Childhood (Telarc)
* Andy Statman, Old Brooklyn (Shefa)
* Lalah Hathaway, Where It All Begins (Stax)
* Michael Cain, Solo (Native Drum)
* Dan Blake, The Aquarian Suite (Brooklyn Jazz Underground)
* Lauren Henderson, Lauren Henderson (self-release)
* Stefano Battaglia Trio, The River of Anyder (ECM)
* Neil Cowley Trio, Radio Silence (Naim)
* Oz Noy, Twisted Blues (Abstract Logix)
* Ran Blake & Dominique Eade, Whirlpool (Jazz Project)
* Allan Harris, Open Up Your Mind (LPR)
* Gilson Schachnik/Maurico Zottarelli, Mozik (self release)
* Tigran Hamasyan, A Fable (Verve/Universal)
* Paul Motian, The Windmills Of Your Mind (Winter & Winter)
* Kate Bush, 50 Words For Snow (Anti-)
* Jason Adasiewicz's Sun Rooms, Spacer (Delmark)

Jazz Column
* Dave Douglas, Bad Mango (Greenleaf)
* Carol Morgan Quartet, Blue Glass Music (Blue Bamboo)
* Dan Jacobs Quartet, Play Song (Metro Jazz)
* Mike Cottone, Just Remember (self release)
* Peter Evans and Nate Wooley, Amplified Trumpets (Carrier)
* Poncho Sanchez and Terence Blanchard, Chano Y Dizzy! (Concord Picante)
* Hayden Powell, The Attic (Inner Ear)

Blues Column
* Samba Toure, Crocodile Blues (World Music Network)
* Fiona Boyes, Blues For Hard Times (Vizztone)
* Paul Geremia, Love My Stuff (Red House)
* John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Crusade (Sundazed)
* Duke Robillard, Low Down & Tore Up (Stony Plain)
* Mary Flower, Misery Loves Company (Yellow Dog)
* Morgan Davis, Drive My Blues Away (Electro-Fi)

Beyond Column
* Various Artists, This May Be My Last Time Singing (Tompkins Square)
* Alexis P. Suter Band, Two Sides (Hipbone)
* Staple Singers, Be Altitude-Respect Yourself (Stax)
* Black Academy Concert Choir, Medicine (MCG)
* Eddie Robinson, This Is My Story (Sirens)
* Rance Allen Group, The Live Experience II (Tyscot)
* McCrary Sisters, Our Journey (McCrary Sisters Productions)

Historical Column
* Ray Charles, Singular Genius: The Complete ABC Singles (Concord)
* Ray Charles, Live In France 1961 (Eagle Rock/Reelin' In The Years)

Book Review Column
* Preston Lauterbach, The Chitlin' Circuit And The Road To Rock 'N' Roll (Norton)

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Diana Krall: "Summer Nights Tour 2012"

Ticket Pre-Sale & VIP Offer Alert!
The following performances have just been announced as part of Diana Krall's Summer Nights US Tour 2012:

June 26, 2012
State Theatre
New Brunswick, NJ

August 5, 2012
Vilar Performing Arts Center
Beaver Creek, CO

We are glad to announce brand new Pre-Sale VIP offers for both dates!

Diana Krall Premium Ticket Bundle
Package includes:
One Premium Reserved Seat Ticket
One Limited Edition Signed Diana Krall Poster
One Exclusive Diana Krall T-Shirt
One Diana Krall Cork Screw
One Commemorative VIP Laminate

Regular pre-sale tickets will also be available.

Pre-Sale tickets for the shows in New Brunswick, NJ & Beaver Creek, CO will be available Tuesday, February 7 at 12pm local time:
http://tixx1.artistarena.com/dianakrall

username: diana
password: krall

CD of the Day - "Clare Fischer & Helio Delmiro: Symbiosis"

CD of the Day
Clare Fischer & Helio Delmiro: "Symbiosis" (CFP) 1999

Although very sad with the passing of my dear friend Clare Fischer, I've been re-listening to all his albums in my collection. One of my personal favorites is "Symbiosis," a marvelous duo date with Helio Delmiro recorded in the living room of Clare's house in Studio City, California. The maestro on a Roland digital keyboard (I would have preferred if he had used a Fender Rhodes, I must confess) and the Brazilian virtuoso on an unamplified acoustic guitar.

Produced by Clare Fischer, engineered by Larry Mah, with cover art by Donna Fischer (Clare's widow) and liner notes by Daniel Cytrynowicz, it's also one of the most underrated albums in Clare's entire discography.

Highlights: the standards "My Old Flame" (in an 8-minute haunting rendition), "Autumn Leaves" (I know, I know it's a French song, but it became a jazz standard), Clare's own bossa classic "Pensativa," two Jobim's masterpieces ("Once I Loved" and "One Note Samba," the latter co-written by Newton Mendonça, omitted on the credits), and such Delmiro's gems as "Carrousel", "Pro Baden" and the lovely samba "Dois Por Quatro." Essential.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Michel Delville interviewed by Dennis Rea

Serendipitous Sojourn of Michel Delville
Interviewed by Dennis Rea (Foreword below by John M.)

MoonJune's boss Leonardo Pavkovic came up with a truly great concept for marketing the two current newest MoonJune releases -- Machine Mass Trio's "As Real As Thinking" (MJR041) and Moraine's "Metamorphic Rock: Live at NEARfest" (MJR040) -- by having the band's gifted guitarists interview one another.

Since Machine Mass Trio's Michel Delville and Moraine's Dennis Rea are both published authors, accomplished musicians, and brilliant, scholarly individuals, the idea of having them conduct interviews with one another was an innovative twist on the traditional "musician interview". (... After all, who could possibly be more better suited to conduct such an interview than a fellow guitarist / author / international musician?) As also previously mentioned, having had the privilege and honor of becoming the acquainted with both of these fine gentlemen, I was looking forward to reading both interviews.

Since taking the reins of moonjune.com, I have listened -- on numerous occasions -- to the unpredictable musings of Michel Delville. ZNR Progressive Music Newsletter had this to say: "Michel Delville's guitar playing seems influenced more by the atmospheric explorations of players like Bill Frisell, David Torn and, certainly, Robert Fripp but his technical ability is never in question. There are hints of Zappa & Holdsworth in his sound, too. However the approach is all his own and never seems derivative. Like Frisell & Torn, Delville can play all around an idea and look at it from many different angles."

Knowing what articulate, intellectual, yet humble-spirited men both Michel and Dennis are and having thoroughly enjoyed the insightful Q&A of the Dennis Rea interview, I knew that this would provide plenty of interesting tidbits to sink my teeth into, also. Given Michel's extensive-yet-diverse performance resume over the last decade, there was little douBt that what follows would be comparable on the entertainment scale.

Like so many of his musical endeavors, this interview enthralls, engulfs and ultimately leaves you hungry for more. But enough of my banter -- on with the show!
***************
Q: ‘Serendipity’ is a word that comes to mind when I hear people’s stories about how they linked up with Leonardo Pavkovic and MoonJune Records. How did your own relationship with MoonJune come about?

“Serendipity”, yes! I think you’ve put your finger on a crucial aspect of the development of my relationship with MoonJune. What turns out to be a very happy accident was actually the result of tragic circumstances. My first serious contact with Leonardo Pavkovic came shortly after Elton Dean passed away. At the time, Elton and The Wrong Object had just started a collaboration and had booked some European gigs (some early dates had to be canceled due to Elton’s poor health). We were supposed to go into the studio and record some new material. At some stage though Elton called me and said something along the lines of “Michel, save your money - let’s play some gigs first. We’ll get a good a live recording and we’ll take it from there“. We played the Glaz’art in Paris in late 2005 but the venue had no multi-track facilities and we left with a stereo live mix which was subsequently mastered in Brussels. Fortunately the balance was right and it didn’t need any serious tweaking to get it to what we wanted: a document of the musicians’ ability to communicate and collaborate with each other … and a tribute to Elton’s extraordinary improvising skills, even in the direst of situations. We listened to it in the car while driving back to Elton’s and Marino’s flat, and I still remember the glee in Elton’s eyes. He was pretty happy with the performance - he had played extremely well and he knew it. Elton was instrumental in establishing a connection between the band and MoonJune. Sadly, he passed away about three months later and Leo, who had already heard the unmastered recording, said he liked it and decided to release it.

Q: Please fill us in on your latest MoonJune release, Machine Mass Trio. Who are your collaborators on this project, and how does it differ from your previous MoonJune releases? Also, what’s the story behind the unusual name?

Machine Mass started as a duo record project Tony Bianco and I decided to do during one of his trips to Belgium. After comparing notes and reading each other’s charts we decided to involve a guest musician and quickly hired Jordi Grognard, whose contributions immediately earned him the status of a full band member. The day after the recording, Tony came up with the name and it sounded good to us. I suggested adding the word “trio” because I thought that some people might get the wrong idea and mistake us for a heavy-metal band! I don’t think it was a conscious reference to the Soft Machine, although reviewers will probably find points of comparison with the Softs. I like to think of “Machine Mass” as a metaphor conveying the physical volume and sheer density of the sounds produced by the trio, the ratio of force and acceleration of its “musical objects” as it manifests itself through the use of computer-generated loops and live electronics. But then again I may be wrong and the name may connect the band to a more spiritual source. As we know, the pun is more important than the meaning ...

Making this record was a very liberating experience for me, not least because it made me want to experiment further with computer-generated sounds and samples, which is something that is going to be central to my future projects. It also veers in the direction of a “world” sound (for want of a better word), especially with the use of instruments such as the bouzouki, the bansuri and the tempura.

Q: douBt’s Never Pet a Burning Dog (great title!) includes what is probably the first cover version of a Terje Rypdal composition (“Over Birkerot”) that I’ve ever encountered. Rypdal seems to be something of a patron saint for many MoonJune Records artists – he certainly is for me, and for Leonardo. Can you talk about your impressions of Rypdal’s music? Do you consider him a direct influence on your approach to playing the guitar?

I don’t know if “Over Birkerot” is the first Rypdal cover. If it is, it would be amazing and, to some extent, unfair given Rypdal’s impact on a wide range of jazz and rock musicians. He certainly is a major direct influence on my guitar playing style, perhaps more than any other guitarist besides Zappa. This being said, I have always been more influenced by non-guitaristic models (sax players, especially, but also Messiaen and other contemporary orchestral composers), especially as far as my solos are concerned. Rypdal’s attention to sound textures was extremely formative for me. He was initially a self-taught guitar-player whose first instruments were the piano and the trumpet. Maybe this accounts for his idiosyncratic phrasings, which resemble no one else’s. His style is alternately fierce and spacy, dense and spare, and never shows the slightest sign of self-indulgence.

Q: What a privilege it must have been to collaborate with the inimitable Elton Dean in your group The Wrong Object. How did you first come into contact with Elton, and what was it like working with him?

As I said before, without Elton, The Wrong Object, for all its merits, may never have gotten a record deal with MoonJune and would definitely not have received the same attention from the press, at least during that period. Also, our collaboration with Elton made us confident and visible enough to create other forms of collaborations with other extraordinary guests such as Harry Beckett, Annie Whitehead and Alex Maguire, all of whom had already toured and recorded with Elton in the past. I have to admit that I was a bit nervous when I first met Elton because he is one of my great musical heroes and I did not want to disappoint him. I soon discovered that he was very easy to work with and that he liked the idea of working with a rock-oriented band. Perhaps more than anything else, his determination to do his own thing, regardless of any outside pressure or commercial imperatives, and his apparent fearlessness towards life and music was a vehicle that sent a message which continues to inspire me to this day.

Q: Some reviewers have likened your work to the so-called ‘Canterbury School’ of progressive rock, no doubt owing to your association with Elton Dean. Others have linked you to fellow Belgians Univers Zero, Present, and other members of the Rock in Opposition (RIO) movement. Are the comparisons apt? Do you feel you have anything in common with either camp, musically or philosophically?

My main Canterbury School models are The Soft Machine and Hatfield and the North, an association which continues to this day since douBt toured and recorded with Richard Sinclair in 2009 and 2010. My only official collaborative connection to the Belgian RIO scene is Guy Segers, with whom I have worked in a band called The Moving Tones. Guy also introduced me to Geoff Leigh - another MoonJune artist - with whom we played an incendiary gig in Brussels a couple of years ago! I also own the whole Henry Cow catalogue and several Univers Zero CDs. Since 2010 I have been playing with Comicoperando, a band which performs the music of Robert Wyatt and comprises former Henry Cow members Chris Cutler and Dagmar Krause. I don’t think avant-rock or chamber rock in general have significantly affected my musical production but I’ve been exposed to it from an early age and influences can sometimes work in very oblique and mysterious ways. Like most experimental artists I am constantly reminded of the now famous RIO motto “music the record companies don’t want you to hear” … with the exception of MoonJune Records, of course!

Q: Please tell us a bit about the music scene in your native Belgium. Are you a part of a community of like-minded musicians, or are you working in relative isolation? Is there an audience in Belgium for the type of music you make?

I have struggled a lot to find musicians who were willing and able to play the kind of music I have had in my head since I was a teenager but I’ve feel much less isolated in the last 10 years or so. In fact, I have had to decline many invitations to take part in worthwhile projects initiated in Belgium or elsewhere and now feel to need to focus on a more limited number of musical ventures at a time. There is an audience for the kind of music we make but, hey, Belgium is a small country and we’ve played more often abroad than in these here parts. The Wrong Object alone has performed in more than fifteen different countries, and I’m hoping that douBt and MMT will also appeal to foreign audiences.

Q: If you could choose three adjectives to characterize the qualities you strive to achieve in your playing, what would they be?

That’s a tough one – I suppose I could settle for “hypnotic” , “whimsical”, and “constructivist“.

Q: I suppose that a question about your musical influences is inescapable. Who are your primary inspirations as a musician in general, and as a guitarist specifically?

I have been associated with Zappa’s music for so long that I suppose that I should start from there. I am flattered when critics compare me with the likes of Robert Fripp, Phil Miller, David Torn and Terje Rypdal – they have been as influential as Stravinsky, Trane, Mingus, Threadgill, Pärt or Squarepusher in teaching me how a musical piece or solo can manage to “tell an interesting story” and capture an audience’s imagination.

Q: What was your earliest music project?

There are many unknown and undocumented projects I could cite. Most of them were short-lived. As far as I can remember my first structured combo was called the “Mad Queen Simulated Trauma” and it involved Andrew Norris as a guitar player and Poet-in-Residence, a long time before he joined the very first avatar of the Wrong Object in 2001.

Q: Looking at your discography over the years, I see that you’re one of the relatively few musicians who are equally comfortable working in the context of both free improvisation and highly structured jazz-rock. Can you comment about how you approach each of these very different playing situations?

I like to combine both approaches within the same band, sometimes even within the same musical piece. I mean, I do not think of myself as a free improviser in certain contexts and a structured composer in other situations, although sometimes circumstances dictate one or the other, especially when I’m playing other people’s music. My compositional methods often consist in working with pre-written modules or fragments towards a final composition which eventually emerges after several stages of testing, readjustments, combinations and permutations. Sometimes it happens at home, sometimes the decisions are made during rehearsals. It’s very close to collage, really – maybe because Belgium has been one of the mainstays of surrealism since the early 1920s. Anyway, I don’t think a composition is ever really “finished”, right?

Q: Between Machine Mass Trio, douBt, and The Wrong Object, your project menu appears to be very full indeed. Are you engaged in other musical involvements as well? What do you have planned for the near future?

I am very excited by the new douBt album, which we will mix this Fall, and Tony Bianco and I will soon finalize a new, electronically inclined and equally exciting recording featuring Saba Tewelde, an incredibly gifted singer whose styles range from soul to funk, jazz and world music.

Q: What type of gear are you using?

The typical gear I am using both live and in the studio is a Brunetti Overtone2, a Vox wah-wah, a Boss loop station, a Line6 Echo Park, and my old Roland GR-09. My main guitar is a fully refurbished Ibanez Raodstar Series II fitted with three mini Seymour Duncan humbuckers.

Thanks for your time and thoughtful questions, Dennis!

CD of the Week - "Machine Mass Trio: As Real As Thinking"

CD of the Week
Machine Mass Trio: "As Real As Thinking" (MoonJune) 2011

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
**** (sound quality)

Featuring:
TONY BIANCO - drums, percussion, loops
MICHEL DELVILLE - guitar, synth guitar, bouzouki, electronics
JORDI GROGNARD - tenor sax, flute, bass clarinet, electronic tempura

Recorded October 18, 2010 by Sacha Symon at Dans Ma Cabane Studios, Liège, Belgium.
Mixed and mastered by David Minjauw at Studio Simonne, Brussels, in the Summer of 2011.

All tracks recorded live in the studio with no overdubs. All music performed by MMT except “Falling Up”, which is a joint improvisation by Bianco and Delville.
Produced by Mass Machine Trio. Executive Producer: Leonardo Pavkovic.
This release was made possible by the support of the Communauté Française de Belgique – Direction Générale de la Culture – Service de la Musique.

Tracklist:
1. Cuckoo (9:26)
2. Knowledge (6:11)
3. Let Go (4:56)
4. Khajuaro (5:23)
5. Hero (10:16)
6. UFO-RA (6:46)
7. Falling Up Nº9 (18:03)
8. Palitana Mood (3:06)

Originally born as a side-project of douBt, this new trio led by Tony Bianco (on drums and loops) and Michel Delville (on guitar, bouzouki and live effects) also includes emerging Belgian talent Jordi Grognard on saxophones, bass clarinet and flute. “As Real as Thinking” is an amazing mix of fiery licks, catchy themes, telepathic rhythms, shamanic soundscapes and processed loops -- testifying to the band’s compositional flair and extraordinary musicianship.

The music is meaningfully condensed -- consistently powerful without being overwhelming -- and will appeal to fans of progressive jazz, world music and rock audiences with an ear for the unusual. The CD sounds alternately groovy and meditative, trancy and punkish, modern and ethnic, cloudy and clear. It also features an explosive 18-minute duet between Bianco and Delville (guitarist also with MoonJune Recording artists' The Wrong Object) -- showcasing the musicians’ seemingly boundless energy, and extraordinary capacity to listen to each other and improvise over insane chord, rhythm and time changes while handling live electronics.

A session of bold, risk-taking improvisation. "This record was recorded as my beloved wife, Mary, was fighting for her life. She has thus passed away and my playing is a tribute to her beautiful soul," Tony Bianco reveals.

CD of the Day - "Clare Fischer Plays Antonio C. Jobim & C. Fischer - Só Danço Samba"

CD of the Day
Clare Fischer: "Plays Antonio Carlos Jobim & Clare Fischer - Só Danço Samba" (World Pacific) 1964/2010

Reissued in Japan as part of the "EMI Music Japan 50th Anniversary" series, this session produced by Richard Bock at World-Pacific Studios in Hollywood, California, features jazz arranger Clare Fischer (acoustic piano & organ) leading a quartet with Bob West (acoustic bass), Colin Bailey (drums) & Dennis Budimir (acoustic guitar).

The program includes seven of Jobim's bossa nova anthems -- like "Desafinado," "One Note Samba," "Quiet Nights" and "Girl from Ipanema" -- plus three bossas written by Fischer himself: "Pensativa" (the first tune by a non-Brazilian composer that became a bossa standard), "Carnaval" (aka "João," in tribute to João Gilberto, originally recorded by The Hi-Lo's) and "Ornithardy."

The CD issue reproduces the original cover art, including John William Hardy's liner notes. Top quality remastering.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Anna Mjöll & The Pat Senatore Trio live @ Vibrato, tomorrow night

R.I.P.: Clare Fischer

(born October 22, 1928, in Durand, MI, USA;
died January 26, 2012, in Burbank, CA, USA)

A couple of weeks since Phil Kraus passed away, more sad news. Clare Fischer died Thursday, January 26. We used to hang out in LA back in 1990/1991 when he was working on Joao Gilberto's album simply titled "João." In January 1992, we went together to the IAJE Conference in Miami, where he attended my clinic about "Jazz & Brazilian Music: Interaction Along The Years" and I attended his fabulous concert leading a nonet (with a vocal choir that sounded like a horn section!) as well as his clinic on "Harmonic Concepts & Improvisation." The obituary printed today in The LA Times follows.

I only would like to add that Fischer loved bossa nova, specially João Gilberto, to whom he composed in 1961 the song "João" a.k.a. "Carnaval," the opening track on "The Hi-Lo's Happen To Bossa Nova." He also wrote "Pensativa," the best bossa song ever composed by a non-Brazilian artist. Oh, and "Morning" is one of my favorite tunes. Fischer also recorded an extremely underrated duo album with Helio Delmiro ("Symbiosis"), worked with Cal Tjader, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Shank, Hubert Laws and other jazz giants, arranged for Santana, Prince, Natalie Cole, Michael Jackson...And a track, "In The Beginning" (yes, the tune he composed for Hubert Laws' CTI album in 1974), re-recorded last year for a new Clare Fischer Big Band album, "Continuum" -- directed and produced by Brent Fischer for Clavo Records -- is nominated for a Grammy award in 2012 in the Best Instrumental Arrangement category. Rest In Peace.Although Clare Fischer, shown in 1987, entered professional music through jazz, his expansive creative perspective quickly grew to embrace many other musical areas. (Los Angeles Times)

Clare Fischer dies at 83; versatile pianist, composer, arranger
The Grammy-winning musician's interests included jazz, Latin and pop music, and he released more than 50 albums under his name.
By Don Heckman, Special to The Los Angeles Times
January 28, 2012

Clare Fischer, a Grammy-winning pianist, composer and arranger who crossed freely from jazz to Latin and pop music, working with such names as Dizzy Gillespie, George Shearing and Natalie Cole as well as Paul McCartney, Prince and Michael Jackson, has died. He was 83.

Fischer died Thursday at Providence St. Joseph's Medical Center in Burbank of complications from a heart attack he had two weeks ago, said family spokeswoman Claris Dodge.

Although he entered professional music through jazz, his expansive creative perspective quickly grew to embrace many other musical areas.

"I relate to everything," he explained in 1987 in The Times. "I'm not just jazz, Latin or classical. I really am a fusion of all of those." He went on to describe his fascination with Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Bartok, as well as Duke Ellington, Bud Powell, Lee Konitz, Tito Puente and boogie-woogie pianist Meade Lux Lewis.

Regardless of genre, Fischer's arranging and composing invariably possessed a rich harmonic palette, one that attracted and influenced other musicians.

"Clare Fischer was a major influence on my harmonic concept," Herbie Hancock said in a statement on Fischer's website. Hancock credited Fischer's arrangements for the 1950s vocal group the Hi-Lo's with significantly influencing his 1968 recording "Speak Like a Child."

Pop and rock artists especially valued Fischer's arranging for the lush, classical qualities of the textures he created, particularly for string ensembles. He worked closely with his son, Brent Fischer, also an arranger and conductor, to provide arrangements and orchestrations for McCartney, Chaka Khan, Carlos Santana, Rufus, Brandy and many others. Fischer's first music credit in film was for Prince's "Under the Cherry Moon."

Fischer was also in demand as a studio keyboardist, performing, composing or arranging for commercials, film and television scores, and for more than 100 albums for other artists.

He released more than 50 albums under his own name in a recording career that began in 1962 with the album "First Time Out." His diverse ensembles included the Latin group Salsa Picante; the vocal group 2 + 2; his Clarinet Choir; and the 30-piece band Clare Fischer's Jazz Corps. He also performed solo on piano and paired with Donald Byrd, Gary Foster, Jerry Coker and others.

Fischer's first classical recording, 2001's "After the Rain," was a collection of his symphonic works.

He won two Grammy awards, in 1981 for "Clare Fischer and Salsa Picante Present 2+2" and in 1986 for "Freefall."

Douglas Clare Fischer was born Oct. 22, 1928, in Durand, Mich., the third of four children. His first instruments were violin and piano; but during high school he added cello, clarinet and saxophone. As a teenager in Grand Rapids, he composed and arranged for big bands.

At Michigan State University, he majored in composition and theory, earning a bachelor's degree in music in 1951. After serving in the Army, Fischer received a master's in music from the school in 1955.

His professional career escalated in the late 1950s during his five-year association as pianist/arranger/conductor with the musically adventurous Hi-Lo's. But his arrangements for Dizzy Gillespie's 1960 album, "A Portrait of Duke Ellington," brought him the full attention of the jazz community. Albums for pianist George Shearing, vibraphonist Cal Tjader, alto saxophonist Bud Shank and guitarist Joe Pass followed.

A mid-1970s reunion with Tjader revived Fischer's fascination with Latin music, via his Salsa Picante group. He was fond of Brazilian music in general and bossa nova in particular.

In 1988, Fischer had a freeway encounter with another driver that escalated into a roadside physical confrontation. Fischer, then 60, was assaulted, suffering a hairline skull fracture and a concussion. It took nearly a year for him to recover and return to music.

"If I discovered anything in that strange, 10-month period of recovery," Fischer later told The Times, "it's that music is the one thing that makes me sane."

He is survived by his wife, Donna; his children, Lee, Brent and Tahlia; two stepchildren, Lisa and Bill Bachman; three grandchildren; and a brother, Stewart.(Mark Murphy, Arnaldo DeSouteiro and Clare Fischer during the IAJE Conference in Miami, January 1992)

From www.clarefischer.com:
Born on October 22, 1928 in Durand, Michigan, Clare Fischer is an uncommonly versatile musician, a master with many muses. Trained in the classics, inspired by jazz artists, healed by the rhythms of Latin and Brazilian music, his eclectic sound finds expression in every chart and instrument he touches.

A veteran studio musician and a composer of rare quality, Fischer began his studies in Grand Rapids, Michigan, at South High School with director of music, Glenn Litton. After receiving his master’s degree in composition from Michigan State University, where he studied with Dr. H. Owen Reed, he traveled extensively with “The Hi-Lo’s” as pianist-conductor for 5 years. About the same time, his musical ascension began with his critically acclaimed arrangements for Dizzy Gillespie’s “A Portrait of Duke Ellington.”

Fischer’s influences, absorbed along the way, are as distinct as his music: Stravinsky and Shostakovich, Bartok and Berg, Dutilleux, boogie-woogie pianist Meade Lux Lewis, Nat “King” Cole, Duke Ellington, Bud Powell and early Lee Konitz – Fischer’s self-expression knows no boundaries.“I relate to everything,” he explains. “I’m not just jazz, Latin, or classical. I really am a fusion of all of those, not today’s fusion, but my fusion.”

In 1983 classical concert artist Richard Stoltzman commissioned Fischer to write a symphonic work using Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn themes. The resulting composition, “The Duke, Swee’pea and Me,” features Stoltzman on clarinet, and is performed with symphony orchestras around the world. More recently Fischer was commissioned by Stoltzman to write a “Sonatine for Clarinet and Piano” in three movements, which he has recorded with RCA on his album, “American Clarinet” and is being published by Advance Music in Germany.

In 1986 Clare won his second Grammy Award – this one for his album, “Free Fall,” the first having been won in 1981 for his album, “Salsa Picante plus 2 + 2.” Since that time he has spent more time as a jazz educator, performing solo piano concerts and conducting clinics and master classes in universities and music conservatories in Scandinavia, Europe and throughout the United States.

In the last few years Clare has appeared in Paris, Finland, Norway, Germany with the WDR Big Band, Holland with the Metropole Orchestra, Austria at the Vienna Konzerthaus and in Mexico City at the Ollin Yolítzli Concert Hall in a concert commemorating the music of Antonio Carlos Jobim on the anniversary of his death in December, 1996. In October of 1998 he performed at the Choro Festival with Hélio Delmiro in Sáo Paulo, Brazil and returned in July, 2000 for a three-city tour in that country with Delmiro. In May 2001 Clare completed a European tour teaching master classes and performing solo piano concerts in four countries.

In addition to Dizzie Gillespie, Fischer has written for Cal Tjader, George Shearing, Diane Schuur, Natalie Cole, Chaka Khan and Rufus, The Jacksons, Earl Klugh, Prince, Robert Palmer, Paul McCartney, Michael Jackson, Spike Lee, João Gilberto, Paula Abdul, and most recently Brian McKnight, Regina Belle, J. Spencer, Norman Whitfield, Branford Marsalis, Tori Amos, Terry Trotter, a French group – “Charts,” a Japanese group – “Sing Like Talking,” Vanessa Williams, Brandy, Tony! Toni! Toné! and many others. His arrangements for strings are truly a revelation.

Since beginning his professional career, Fischer has recorded over 45 albums as leader and has arranged, composed and/or played on another 100 plus albums for other recording artists. His discography reads like a “Who’s Who” of the recording industry. Recent releases include “Clare Fischer’s Jazz Corps,” a big band album made up of 20 brass, 6 woodwinds plus rhythm; and “Symbiosis,” recorded with Hélio Delmiro on unamplified Brazilian guitar and Clare on digital piano. In January 2001 Fischer produced his first classical CD, “After the Rain,” made up entirely of his own symphonic works.

In December, 1999, Michigan State University School of Music conferred an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts Degree on Clare in recognition of his “.creativity and excellence as a jazz composer, arranger and performer..”

Clare has three grown children; Lee, Brent and Tahlia; and two stepchildren, Lisa and Bill Bachman. He is married to his high school sweetheart, Donna, who he lost when he was 20 and she was 18 because her mother didn’t approve of “jazzers.” After being apart for 43 years, they are enjoying their storybook marriage of unbelievable happiness, now in its eighteenth year.

CD of the Day - "Clare Fischer: Latin Patterns"

CD of the Day
Clare Fischer: "Latin Patterns - The Legendary MPS Sessions" (MPS/Motor Music) 1999

Arranged by Clare Fischer
Compilation produced by Matthias Künnecke
Original sessions produced by Clare Fischer & Baldhard G. Falk, and engineered by John Lemay, Angel Balestier & Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer
Remastered by Willem Makkee at Emil-Berliner-Haus (Langenhagen)
Design & front cover art: Stefan Kassel
Back cover photo: German Hasenfratz
Liner Notes: Douglas Payne
Special thanks to Clare and Donna Fischer

Tracks selected from the albums "Salsa Picante" (1979), "Machaca" (1980), "Clare Fischer and EX-42" (1980) and "Foreign Echange" (1981). Highlights: "Morning" (heard in both vocal and instrumental versions), "Minor Sights," "Suddenly," "Gaviota," "Funquiado," "Crystal Sunrise," Monk's jazz classic "'Round Midnight" and a surprisingly slow version of Ary Barroso's "Inquietação."

Featuring: Clare Fischer (Fender Rhodes electric piano, EX-42 electronic organ, YC-30 combo organ, bass recorder), David Troncoso & Brent Fischer (electric bass), Andy Simpkins (acoustic bass), Pete Riso, Andre Fischer & Larry Bunker (drums), Alex Acuña, Ildefonso Sanchez, Luis Conte, Hector Andrade & Aaron Ballesteros (percussion), Rick Zunigar & John Chiodini (guitars), David Acuña (flute), Gary Foster (saxophones & flutes), Foreign Exchange - Mary Hilan, Darlene Koldenhoven, Amick Bryam & John Laird (vocals)

Douglas Payne's liner notes follow:
http://www.dougpayne.com/clare.htm

Fire and ice. Pulsating latin percussion and cool, abstract fender rhodes. Clare Fischer is a sorcerer of sounds. More than merely a talented musician, he is a gifted painter of notes and an ever-rare orchestrator of colors. Whatever he plays, composes or arranges has the unique distinction of a breathtaking fusion.

Consider this while listening to Clare Fischer’s electric musings, a generous selection of which is collected here. Recorded between 1978 and 1980 for Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer’s innovative MPS Records, these fourteen songs – many of them Fischer originals -- are some of the richest sounds conjured in a long career sparkling with unique and memorable music.

Born on October 22, 1928, in Durand, Michigan, Clare Fischer began his musical life playing tuba and violin in grade school. He started studying the piano when he was nine and by high school, he’d taken up the cello, clarinet and saxophone too. A high school instructor recognized his budding talent and provided free lessons in theory, harmony and orchestration. By 15, Clare had his own band and was writing all the arrangements too.

After he graduated cum laude with a B.M. in Composition and Theory from Michigan State University, the Army interrupted Fischer's graduate studies. He played alto sax in a local band and later wrote arrangements for the U.S. Military Academy Band at West Point. In 1955 he returned to Michigan State and received his Masters in Music.

While in school, he had studied everyone but clearly developed his own personal style and approach. Such diverse masters as Stravinsky, Shostakovich and Duke Ellington influenced him, but he also took in the palettes of Earl Hines, Art Tatum, Meade Lux Lewis, Bud Powell, Nat King Cole and Lee Konitz. "My music," Fischer says today, "is a manifestation of my training, which is equal parts academic and street training." Through Latin roommates at school, he learned to speak Spanish and became fascinated by Cuban music. Later he became interested in Brazilian music, long before the arrival of Bossa Nova in the United States.

Heading to Los Angeles in 1957, Fischer found work crafting arrangements for the Hi-Lo’s, Gene Puerling's highly popular and influential singing group. Fischer became the Hi-Lo's musical director for five years, arranged for some of their Columbia and Reprise albums, and toured the world as the group's pianist. During this time, he also arranged Donald Byrd’s SEPTEMBER AFTERNOON (Discovery, 1957) and came to prominence as the arranger of Dizzy Gillespie’s A PORTRAIT OF DUKE ELLINGTON (Verve, 1960). In his liner notes for one of Fischer's MPS albums, the noted jazz critic and lyricist Gene Lees recounts his initial reaction upon hearing that Dizzy Gillespie album: "Once during my tenure as editor of Down Beat Magazine, Dizzy Gillespie told me he was going to make an album with a superb young arranger he'd encountered. He continued at some length about the scope and the depth of the young man's abilities. Some years later, Verve released an album titled A PORTRAIT OF DUKE ELLINGTON. The orchestral writing was nothing less than brilliant, but, alas, the album gave no arranger's credit. The writing sounded like Ellington, yet not like Ellington; like Gil Evans but not like Gil Evans. It was in fact apparent that the arranger had studied everything and everyone and then developed his own highly personal approach to writing. Unable to reach Dizzy by telephone, I set out to find out who had done this remarkable writing. It turned out to be the young man about whom Dizzy was so wildly enthusiastic, and this time I did not forget his name: Clare Fischer."

Fischer quickly became one of the busiest jazz and studio musicians in Los Angelese and arranged and recorded for Pacific Jazz with such West Coast luminaries as Bud Shank, Joe Pass and the Jazz Crusaders. He joined Cal Tjader in the early 1960s, recording often with the great vibes player and Latin jazz’s first great populist. As a leader Fischer recorded prolifically throughout the 1960s and 1970s for such prominent labels as Columbia, Atlantic and Revelation Records.

In the early 1970s, former Hi-Lo’s Gene Puerling and Don Shelton had found new success with the Singers Unlimited, four singers who made complex harmonies sound like an elegant breeze. The vocal quartet, originally founded for radio and TV advertising jingles, recorded regularly for the German MPS label in Villingen, Black Forest. Fischer was invited to arrange the fabulously swinging orchestra that backed the quartet on their funky album, A SPECIAL BLEND, in 1975.

After recording the instrumental backing tracks in Hollywood, Fischer travelled to Villingen to take part in the recording of the vocal overdubs. MPS owner Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer struck an immediate relationship with Fischer and, on the spot, decided to record the pianist's solo album, ALON TOGETHER, on the Brunner-Schwer Steinway, a legendary piano in the producer's living room which also produced exceptional sounds from Oscar Peterson, Monty Alexander and other pianists. During Fischer's six day stay in the Black Forest, he and Brunner-Schwer also recorded yet another solo album, CLARE DECLARES, a jazz album with a daring concept, recorded on an historic pipe organ located at Brunner-Schwer's summer residence at the lake of Konstanz.

Brunner-Schwer and Fischer kept in touch and formed an ongoing relationship (a very common thing for people who work with Clare Fischer). Four albums ensued: SALSA PICANTE (1979), MACHACA (1980), both recorded with a group of native Latin American musicians headed by Fischer and named Salso Picante; CLARE FISCHER AND EX-42 (1980), a quartet recording with Fischer on the electronic organ of the same name; and FOREIGN EXCHANGE (1981), , an album which added an ethereal quartet of vocalists to the Salsa Picante concept. This compilation features tracks from these four MPS albums.

"Minor Sights," Clare tells me, "is an English abomination of the German ‘Auf meiner zeits,’ which means ‘on my behalf’." "Morning," is a Fischer original that has evolved into a classic of the jazz standard repertoire. It’s heard here as an instrumental and with the vocals of Foreign Exchange. Not surprisingly, Clare crafts his singers within the tonality of his group on these recordings, blending the beauty of sounds each brings to the other. It’s not singer and backup. In his linernotes for the album FOREIGN EXHCANGE, Fischer describes his approach towards recording with these singers: "When I first organized Salsa Picante, I had been thinking about the use of four singers to appear with the group. The opportunity was now given to me and I set out to audition singers. What I needed were vocalists with good ears, some linguistic ability and interest, some extra vocal range to sing with the Latin Jazz concepts. My choice were Darlene Koldenhoven, Mary Hylan, Amick Byram and John Laird. About the time of the third rehearsal I noticed a special spirit developing and at the same time the beginning of a blend. The heaviest of the load fell on my two sopranos and especially Darleen. What I needed was akin to splitting two trumpet players in a shouting brass section, one able to spell the other if needed. However, every time the lead changed, the need to readjust the blend varied. Darlene had been singing solo and mostly in her lower range so the demands made on her range were severe. Little by little strength and endurance grew until the upper ranges solidified. When, after a private rehearsal, they sang the end of 'Leavin' and the hair on the back of my neck stood at attention, I knew they had arrived."

Foreign Exchange is also heard on "Du, du liegst mir im herzen," which according to the Germanic Mr. Fischer, "is a German song my father sang to me when I was a child. I welcomed the opportunity to perform it here in German." A touching rendition of the same song is included on Fischer's solo piano album, ALONE TOGETHER.

"Clavo," is a bossa that rocks in a most unusual 3/2 time. The title comes from the word ‘clavichord’ and is the name Clare Fischer was given by members of his band. "Bachi," is, according to Clare, "named after a wonderful black poodle who shared my children's and my life for 15 years." Check out Clare’s cover of this lively piece (and "Funquido" and "Novios" too) with Cal Tjader on HURACAN (LaserLight). For that matter, hear Fischer fire Tjader’s remarkable HERE AND NOW (Fantasy) too.

"Round Midnight" is a nice contrast to the feel of dawn Clare conjures in "Morning." The haunting Thelonius Monk canvas finds Fischer superbly crafting the romantic colors and dark moods of nightshade using his electronic organ and his EX-42. "Crystal Sunrise," a composition by saxophonist Tom Scott, is highlighted by Fischer's fierce organ solo.

"Suddenly," according to Clare, was written after the sudden death of a friend. "Novios" is a romantic, lyrical piece that comes out of Fischer’s Stravinsky influence. Barbara Ransom later added English and Spanish lyrics (for the album FREE FALL, Discovery, 1985) to tell the story of a boy and a girl who do not speak the same language, so fascinated by each other that they find something similar to express to one another. "Gaviota," (Sea Gull) ascends with the poetic imagery of a sea gull gliding along oceanic currents of air. Fischer expertly suggests this by mixing a "quasi bolero" with a Guarija like rhythm.

Since his MPS recordings, Clare Fischer has established lasting, rewarding recording relationships with the Trend/Discovery and Concord Picante labels. Most recently, he was captured with the Dutch Metropole Orchestra for the magnificent THE LATIN SIDE (Koch). As a busy arranger he has added the lovely orchestral colors to Prince's black and white movie extravaganza UNDER THE CHERRY MOON (remaining an ongoing collaborator with his purple badness on BATMAN, GRAFITTI BRIDGE and GIRL 6 too). He has also arranged for a variety of pop artists such as Rufus & Chaka Khan, Switch, The Jacksons, Earl Klugh, Santana, DeBarge, Celine Dion, Natalie Cole, Tony! Toni! Tone!, Brian McKnight, Amy Grant, Vanessa Williams and, most recently, the soundtrack to THE PRINCE OF EGYPT. Fischer's sophisticated orchestrations can also be witnessed on Joao Gilberto's luch Bossa Nova masterpiece JOAO (Phillips, 1990), and rock singer Robert Palmer's highly underrate trip to Big Band land, RIDIN' HIGH (EMI, 1992)

Clearly, there are very few boundaries for Clare Fischer. But, after all, music is a universal language. "My interest in music," Clare explains, "actually reflects my interest in foreign languages. To me, improvising music and speaking foreign languages are related in that they are both done or thought of in real time. Sounds fascinate me whether they be orchestral, vocal or instrumental."

Listening to LATIN PATTERNS confirms Clare Fischer’s mastery of the language of sounds. His is an alchemy of the natural and the creative: truly the sound of life and the life of sounds. A beautiful sound.

- Douglas Payne

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Warren Chiasson's "Tribute to George Shearing" @ Gillespie Auditorium, Jan. 31

Treat yourself to an exciting and uplifting musical experience at " Jazz Tuesdays" when vibraphone master Warren Chiasson returns with his Trio featuring Warren Chiasson (vibes & piano), Ed MacEachen (guitar) and Ralph Hamperian (bass) on Tuesday, January 31. The Trio will present “A Tribute to George Shearing” in the John Birks Gillespie Auditorium at the New York City Bahá'í Center, located at 53 East 11th Street (between University Place & Broadway). There will be two shows at 8:00 and 9:30 p.m.

Warren Chiasson has been called "one of the six top vibraphonists of the last half century" by the New York Times and a “musician’s musician” by Jazzbeat. Originally a member of the George Shearing Quintet, he has emerged as his own man with a distinctive four-mallet technique that he weaves into a percussive, melodic style. Prior to forming his own group, Chiasson was for many years best known for his creative contributions to the Chet Baker Quartet, the Tal Farlow Trio, and jazz-pop diva Roberta Flack . In addition to recording his own albums, he has played on over 100 recordings with such artists as Eric Dolphy, Bill Dixon, Hank Crawford and was featured on a Grammy Award winning album with B.B. King. Chiasson has collaborated with some of the finest musicians in jazz including Paul Bley, Ron Carter, Roland Hanna and the late Jimmy Garrison from the original John Coltrane Quintet. In the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, the Warren Chiasson/Jimmy Garrison Duo played regularly at Gregory's in New York City, while Chiasson also hosted a weekly jam session at the Signs of the Zodiac in Harlem. Regulars guests included Charlie Haden, Lee Konitz, Joe Farrell, Wilbur Ware and Joe Chambers.

His own albums include "Quartessence", " Good Vibes for Kurt Weill " (which was selected as a Billboard Pick of the Week), and "Point Counterpoint" with guitarist Chuck Wayne. He is particularly known for his elegant and often electrifying live performances, as evidenced by the 50th anniversary re-creation of the historic 1938 Benny Goodman concert. When Lionel Hampton was unable to appear due to a previous touring commitment, Chiasson was asked to take his place at Carnegie Hall. The result was a standing ovation performance before this knowledgeable, sold-out audience. Luminaries at this event included Isaac Stern, Doc Cheatham, Panama Francis, and Benny Goodman's daughter, who presented Goodman's clarinet to the hall museum.

Admission is 15.00, $10.00 for students.
Tickets will be sold at the door, or call 212-222-5159 for reservations and information.

Jazz Tuesdays in the John Birks Gillespie Auditorium
The New York Baha'i Center
53 East 11th Street (between University Place & Broadway)

The John Birks Gillespie Auditorium, dedicated to the late jazz great Dizzy Gillespie, who was a Bahá'í, is located in the heart of Greenwich Village, within the New York City Bahá'í Center. Beginning on January 6, 2004, the anniversary of Dizzy’s death, his former pianist and musical director, Mike Longo, began presenting weekly jazz concerts every Tuesday evening at 8:00 and 9:30 PM.

Vinyl releases in January

All available from www.jazzloft.com

Anthony Braxton - Ensemble (Pittsburgh) 2008 (LP + CDR)
Alice Cooper - Billion Dollar Babies (180g)
Deep Purple - Machine Head (180g)
Delaney & Bonnie & Friends - On Tour with Eric Clapton (180g)
Captain Beefheart - Doc at the Radar Station (180g)
Miles Davis - Dark Magus (2-LP 180g)
John Zorn - Dreamers Christmas 7" Single
Mats Gustafsson - Live at the South Bank (STSJ)
Peter Brotzmann: Sonore - Cafe OTO/London (Trost)
The Jam - The Gift (180g) (Music on Vinyl)
The Monkees - Greatest Hits (180g Analog Master) (Friday Music)
King Crimson - In The Wake of the Poseidon (200g) (Discipline)
Grateful Dead - Live Dead (2-LP 180g) (Mobile Fidelity)
Brian Eno - Small Craft On A Milk Sea (180g) (Warp)
Grateful Dead - Wake of the Flood (180g) (Mobile Fidelity)
Scorch Trio with Mars Williams - Made in Norway (Rune Grammofon)
Mats Gustafsson's Fire! w/ Jim O'Rourke - Released (10" Rune Grammofon)
Bill Evans - Sunday at the Village Vanguard (180g Wax Time)
Count Basie - April in Paris (180g Wax Time)
Leonard Cohen - Old Ideas (180g + CD Sony)
Diana Krall - The Very Best of Diana Krall (2-LP Verve Import)
Bob Marley - Rastaman Vibrations (180g Music On Vinyl)
Billy Holiday - Solitude (180g Speakers Corner)
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Survivor (Mobile Fidelity)
Johnny Hartman - I Just Dropped By To Say Hello (45rpm 2-LP 180g Analog Productions)
Johnny Hartman/John Coltrane (45rpm 2-LP 180g Analog Productions)
Herbie Hancock - Maiden Voyage (Blue Note)
Zoot Sims - The Art of Jazz (CELP)

Jeff Lorber reunites old friends on a new CD

Trailblazing keyboardist/composer/producer Jeff Lorber revisits a sound he helped pioneer on his latest recording, "Galaxy." Following up on his GRAMMY®-nominated 2010 release, "Now Is The Time," Lorber again culls from his early catalog but gives a fresh approach to some of his most highly requested compositions, including "Wizard Island," "City," "The Samba" and "The Underground." I only miss a new rendition of my favorite Lorber tune, "Katherine," the opening song from Joe Farrell's "Night Dancing" (Warner, 1978) album.

"Essentially this album is a part two," Lorber says. "It features the same rhythm section, but it's even more into the jazz fusion direction. It's more energetic and the performances are tighter."

"Galaxy" spotlights 11 originals - all instrumentals - that cover the scope of electrified jazz. The disc opens with "Live Wire" "At over seven minutes long, it's a real powerful, up-tempo song," says Lorber. "It's fun to play and hopefully just as fun to listen to. Yellowjackets' bassist Jimmy Haslip joins him in this 21st century version of the Jeff Lorber Fusion along with saxophonist Eric Marienthal, trumpeter Randy Brecker, percussionist Lenny Castro, guitarists Paul Jackson Jr. and Larry Koonse, and drummers Vinnie Colaiuta and Dave Weckl.

Haslip also co-produced the album and co-wrote five tunes with Lorber."Live Wire," like most of "Galaxy," is a showcase for the work of renowned drummer Vinnie Colaiuta. "We had three days with Vinnie to cut basic tracks," Lorber says. "Basically, he's the best drummer on the planet, so once he lays down his drum parts - which are like the foundation - you're ready to go. His work really inspired the rest of us."

That inspiration also lives on "Big Brother," a tune that recaptures the essence of contemporary jazz, while the soulful and funky "Montserrat" works a groove loosely based on the Police's 1980 hit "When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around." While Colaiuta handles most of the drumming on Galaxy, Lorber recruited Dave Weckl to perform on the title track. "Weckl has been on my last three records," Lorber says. "And I love the way he plays."

Lorber's look back at jazz fusion is also a look at the present, and to the future, including vibrant reinterpretations of "City," from the Jeff Lorber Fusion's 1980 LP "Wizard Island," and "The Underground" featuring trumpeter Randy Brecker, from Lorber's 1993 album, "Worth Waiting For." The fresh sounds on "Galaxy" expand the possibilities of where technology is taking music - the old becoming new, the modern becoming post modern.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

State of the Union

"Dear Mr. Arnaldo De Souteiro --

According to our records, you are currently registered and living in California's 30th Congressional District.

Last night, the President went to Congress and defined in clear terms what we're going to be fighting for in the months ahead.

That means that right now, it's on us to get his back and work like hell to build this campaign. If we want to see this President re-elected, it's time:

Add your name and say you're standing with the President -- and our shared vision for this country.

We don't know which Republican is going to be our opponent yet, but here's what we do know: Whoever wins the Republican nomination will have done so by adopting the extreme Tea Party agenda.

The President will be busy doing everything he can to demand action from a Congress that cares more about making a political point than governing. And when they refuse to act, he will. Election year or not, that is his job, and he is going to be getting things done these next couple months.

The campaigning is left up to us.

And if we don't do what we need to, last night will have been Barack Obama's last State of the Union.

Do something now:
http://my.barackobama.com/State-of-the-Union

Thanks,
Jim Messina
Campaign Manager - Obama for America

P.S. -- Miss last night's speech? You can watch it all here, enhanced with stats and graphics to back up the President's words.

Contributions or gifts to Obama for America are not tax deductible.

Amanda Carr - Jazz On A Sunday Afternoon

January 29th, 2012:
"Jazz on a Sunday Afternoon" (4-7pm) with one of Jazz Station's favorite jazz vocalists: Amanda Carr!
BISTRO NOUVEU
Located @ Center at Eastman
6 Clubhouse Lane, Grantham, NH
For more information visit www.JosaJazz.com
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 603-863-8000

Contemplative Instrumental Tune Needed for Hit TV Show

Below is a special opportunity that we wanted to give you a heads up about. Just got the word about this project today, and they need the music by 10 AM (PST) Monday, January 30th, 2012. You can find this listing under the Instrumental (Film & TV) genre in the Submit Music section of your TAXImusic.com hosting site.

Hollywood Music Supervisor needs "CONTEMPORARY CONTEMPLATIVE INSTRUMENTALS" for a HIT TV Series a la:

Intro - The XX - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L73OLaG4_kA

Blank Pages - The Album Leaf - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SXy88Ai99E

Love Like a Sunset, Pt. I - Phoenix - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZ8eboLWk7I

As always, DO NOT rip-off or copy the referenced artists in any way, shape or form. Use them ONLY as a guide for tempo, texture, and vibe. Your TRACKS should be at LEAST 2 Minutes in length and most definitely need to evoke an emotional feeling in the TV viewers. All submissions need to be Broadcast Quality (excellent home recordings are fine). NO samples of other artists allowed for this pitch.

ESTIMATED FEES should be in the $1,500 - $2,500 range. You MUST own or control 100% of the Master and Composition rights. THIS IS DIRECT TO THE MUSIC SUPERVISOR, so you will KEEP 100% of the income should you get a placement. NO PUBLISHING SPLITS! Please submit one to three TRACKS online or per CD. ALL submissions will be screened on a YES/NO basis by TAXI. Submissions must be received no later than 10am (PST) MONDAY, January 30th, 2012. TAXI # Y120130CI
TAXI, 5010 N. Parkway Calabasas, Suite 200, Calabasas, CA 91302, USA

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

CD of the Week - "Regra de Três: III"

CD of the Week
Regra de Três: "III" (Kyrios/Tratore) 2011

Rating: **** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Featuring: Bob Wyatt (drums), Lupa Santiago (electric guitar) & Sizão Machado (acoustic bass)
Produced & Arranged by Regra de Três
Recorded live @ SESC Pinheiros (July 30, 2010) by Bernardo Godoy
Mastered by Alberto Ranelucci
Photos: Rita Menezes
Artwork: Luciano Murino
All tunes composed by Lupa Santiago, except "Previsão de Preguiça Para o Sudeste," written by Bob Wyatt

Scot Albertson & Keith Ingham @ Tomi Jazz, NYC, tonight

Vocalist Scot Albertson appears at Tomi Jazz tonight, Tuesday January 24, in a duo performance with pianist Keith Ingham. This is the first of three performances by Scot at Tomi Jazz through February – with upcoming performances on February 7 and February 28.

Tomi Jazz is located at 239 East 53rd Street (between 2nd and 3rd Avenues), NYC.
www.tomijazz.com
Ph: (646)497-1254.
Dates: $10.00 Cover & $10.00 Food & Drink Minimum please.

"Tomi Jazz celebrated their One Year Anniversary last November," Scot says. "I’ve been there now 15 months monthly along with other artists & musicians who perform there regularly. It was originally a private Club with Owners Ken & Mutsuki opening it up to a public venue providing Jazz 6 (six) days a week (not on Sundays at this point in time). I’m performing there twice a month sculpting the performances with different musicians each time to develop growth and an opportunity for a venue for other musicians to promote and share their music. We simply come together to have fun and make music. Guests are always welcome to sit in when we’re performing. The relationship between Ken & Mutsuki and myself is based on trust & mutual respect which is refreshing in these trying times."

Guest musicians have been: Arthur Lipner – Vibes, Sedric Choukroun – Sax & Flute, Mayu Saeki – Flute, Nick Demopolous – Guitar, Freddie Bryant – Guitar, Daryl Kojak – Pianist, Dr. Joe Utterback – Pianist, Keith Ingham - Pianist & Kyoko Oyobe – Pianist.

February:
Tues. Feb. 7th – Scot Albertson Trio featuring: Keith Ingham (Pianist) & Carol Sudhalter (Sax & Flute – www.sudhalter.com) &

Feb. 28th Tues. – Scot Albertson & David Pearl Duo – Piano / Vocal Duo Evening.

All dates are 9:00 PM thru 11:30 PM time slots which usually go beyond 11:30 PM. "Although the time slot is structured as 2 sets in that time frame indicating a break between sets, I don’t break meaning once we start, we go until we finish @ 11:30 PM or later accommodating all who attend to sit in with us," Scot states.

UPCOMING: Baruch Performing Arts Center – Friday May 11th @ 7:30p.m.

The 15 month run In Tomi Jazz started after a 3 year run of multiple performances in the Laurie Beechman Dinner Theatre (West 42nd St. & 9th Avenue – NYC) & multiple performances in The Kitano after Scot’s debut there June 17, 2009.

Scot’s most recent CD "Vibination" – his fifth - was released on June 17, 2010. Scot’s new CD will be recorded later in 2012.