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THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER NEW RELEASES: MASS PRODUCTION - WELCOME TO OUR WORLD / BELIEVE; CANVAS DO BRASIL; LOOSE JOINTS - POP YOUR FUNK | Musique Non Stop

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Wednesday, February 5, 2014

THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER NEW RELEASES: MASS PRODUCTION - WELCOME TO OUR WORLD / BELIEVE; CANVAS DO BRASIL; LOOSE JOINTS - POP YOUR FUNK


THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER NEW RELEASES: MASS PRODUCTION - WELCOME TO OUR WORLD / BELIEVE; CANVAS DO BRASIL; LOOSE JOINTS - POP YOUR FUNK

Link to THE JAZZ CHILL CORNER


    1. NEW RELEASES: MASS PRODUCTION - WELCOME TO OUR WORLD / BELIEVE; CANVAS DO BRASIL; LOOSE JOINTS - POP YOUR FUNK
    2. NEW RELEASES: ERIC ROBERSON - B-SIDES, FEATURES & HEARTACHES; JAMES BRANDON LEWIS - DIVINE TRAVELS; STEVE FIDYK - HEADS UP!
    3. NOAH BAERMAN - RIPPLES
    4. FREE NELSON MANDOOMJAZZ - THE SHAPE OF DOOMJAZZ TO COME / SAXOPHONE GIGANTICUS
    5. COLIN EDWIN / LORENZO FELICIATI - TWINSCAPES
      Posted: 04 Feb 2014 09:02 AM PST
      MASS PRODUCTION - WELCOME TO OUR WORLD / BELIEVE

      A pair of gems from this great 70s funk ensemble! The group may be named Mass Production, but on Welcome To Our World, their sound is anything but – a really special fusion of key instrumental talents and vocal elements – all brought together in one of the tightest ensemble funk grooves of the time! Mass Production draw a bit from an Earth Wind & Fire tradition – especially some spiritual undercurrents to hold themselves together – but they've also got some of the fuller funk elements of the best dancefloor combos of the time – like Fatback, Cameo, or Con Funk Shun – all of whom would be a great comparison with this smoking debut. The instrumentation is razor-sharp, and never dips into any disco cliches at all – and at times, the guitars alone leave us breathless – as they chug forcefully over the rhythms, and really propel the tunes into the skies. Two of the best groovers include "I Like To Dance" and "Fun In The Sun" – and other titles include "Magic", "Wine-flow Disco", "Our Thought (To The World)", and "Just A Song". Believe is a massive stormer from Mass Production – a set that has the group's full, funky sound hitting right on the money for most of the cuts – then stepping back to let in a few mellower moments too! These guys were definitely at the top of their game at this point – moving in territory that rivals the tightness of other big funk groups, like Brass Construction or T-Connection – but with some occasional deeper soul sides that show up nicely on the slower cuts. Titles include the sweet moogy number "Cosmic Lust", which we really love – plus "Free & Happy", "I Believe In Music", "We Love You", "Superlative" and "People Get Up". ~ Dusty Groove

      CANVAS DO BRASIL (VARIOUS ARTISTS)

      An insanely big collection of tracks from Brazil – a 4CD collection that features a wonderful run of tracks from the key bossa years of the 60s to the explosion of MPB, samba soul, and other styles in the 70s! The format's is very wide-ranging – no real structure or order to the tracks – but we can say that the 81-track collection is filled with grooves we've loved for years, including a fair bit of the kinds of Brazilian music that first got us started digging many years ago! If you're new to Brazilian music, the set's a great place to start – especially if you want to get past the hits – and if you already have some bossa or samba at home, there's probably other cuts here you haven't heard at all. Titles include "Glorioso Santo Antonio" by Antonio Carlos E Jocafi, "Vento Bravo" by Edu Lobo, "Comanche" by Jorge Ben, "Vatapa" by Gal Costa, "Melo Da Cuica" by Azymuth, "Garra" by Marcos Valle, "Me Libertei" by Toni Tornado, "Nem Vem Que Nao Tem" by Wilson Simonal, "Escadas Da Penha" by Joao Bosco, "Fibra" by Paulo Moura, "Mas Que Nada" by Elza Soares, "Primitivo" by Milton Banana Trio, "Feminina" by Joyce, "Preta Pretinha" by Novos Baianos, "Black Soul Brothers" by Miguel De Deus, "Reza Brava" by Piri, "Roda" by Elis Regina, "Na Baixa Do Sapateiro" by Band Black Rio, and "Samblues" by Sambalanco Trio. ~ Dusty Groove.


      LOOSE JOINTS - POP YOUR FUNK

      The complete West End singles of Loose Joints – one of the funkiest projects to ever come from the legendary Arthur Russell – and a set of tracks that also features a fair bit of work from the funky Ingram Family too! The grooves are definitely some of the most offbeat to ever come from the mostly-disco West End label – and do a great job of crossing the space between the NYC downtown art world and club worlds of the early 80s – thanks to Russell's inventive leadership, and his wicked sounds on electric cello and keyboards too! There was never a full album issued under the Loose Joints name, but this set nicely corrects that fact by bringing together a host of different singles and lots of great remixes too – most of which get really weird and play with the original tracks a lot. Titles include "Is It All Over My Face (orig 12" mix)", "Is It All Over My Face (orig 12" Larry Levan female)", "Is It All Over My Face (Masters At Work rmx)", "Is It All Over My Face (unreleased orig full length)", "Pop Your Funk (orig 12")", "Pop Your Funk (orig single voc)", "Tell You (orig 12")", "Tell You (orig 12" new shoes edit)", and "Tell You (orig 12" inst)". ~ Dusty Groove

      Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:52 AM PST

      ERIC ROBERSON - B-SIDES, FEATURES & HEARTACHES

      A range of special projects, guest appearances, and b-sides from Eric Roberson – and music that's mostly still better than the top-shelf recordings from most other artists! Eric's a singer we've loved for years, no matter what the setting – and he's got a richly collaborative spirit that's had him working with lots of the best of the underground for the past decade or so – lending his sublime vocals, songwriting skills, and even production talents to a range of really wonderful projects. This overdue collection pulls together all the best of those moments, and throws in a few special Roberson recordings too – all to make for one hell of a great record that's bursting with some of the best ideas going in contemporary soul. Titles include "Touch" with Collette, "Butterfly Girl" with DJ Spinna, "Let Me Know" with Angela Johnson, "Games" with M-Swift, "This Could Be The Night" with Zo, "She Was Fly" by Full Crate & Mar, "Far Away Girl" by Aaron Camper, "Fortune Teller" by DJ Kemit, "Deja Vous" with Les Nubians, and "Postcards From The Edge" with Wes Felton – plus the tracks "Fantasy" and "Anymore". ~ Dusty Groove.

      JAMES BRANDON LEWIS - DIVINE TRAVELS

      A wonderful showcase for the tenor talents of James Brandon Lewis – a player who's just starting out on what will most likely be a rich career – but who's already able here to match his energy with the great William Parker on bass and Gerald Cleaver on drums! The album's got this loose trio format that really hearkens back not just to older avant eras – especially the New York scene of the 60s and 70s – but also the Sonny Rollins trio mode of the late 50s, heard most famously on his Blue Note recordings with Wilbur Ware. Like Rollins, Lewis has a great way of respecting the bassist in this format – often working with Parker's energy to find this deep soul which serves as a platform to then step out and soar – relatively free at times, but never too far outside to lose the sense of spirituality that drives the record. At some level, the set's almost got a vibe that's like the best David S Ware/William Parker collaborations – and titles include "Tradition", "Desensitized", "Divine", "A Gathering Of Souls", "Enclosed", and "No Wooden Nickels". ~ Dusty Groove
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      STEVE FIDYK - HEADS UP!

      Drummer Steve Fidyk is a hell of a sharp talent on the kit – and he's working here with a mighty tight group that features Terell Stafford on trumpet and Tim Warfield on tenor! Fidyk's got a way of propelling things forcefully one minute, then stepping back and providing this carefully compelling rhythm the next – a quality that really makes him a well-balanced player, but also one with an inherently rhythmic focus even in the mellower moments. All players really seem to catch the fire of his leadership – including guitarist Shawn Purcell, who rings out with some beautiful tones at times, in a group that also features Regan Brough on bass. Titles include the originals "Untimely", "Might This Be Bop", "TTJ", and "The Bender" – plus versions of "Make Someone Happy" and "Love For Sale". ~ Dusty Groove


      Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:35 AM PST
      For some of the most committed artists, music is a pursuit of transcendence, and thus an end to itself. But for composer/pianist Noah Baerman, that pursuit is not only transcendence, but a means to societal and humanistic advancement. Ripples, his upcoming Lemel Music release, is a stirring reflection upon some of the important issues that he confronts as an artist, educator, father and humanitarian.

      Ripples is the first release produced in conjunction with Resonant Motion, Inc. (RMI), a not-for-profit organization founded in 2012 by Baerman and some equally committed individuals. Viewing music as a healing force and artistic expression as a means to both expand awareness and promote action, RMI seeks to inspire, not preach; to uplift, not depress. Ripples is a perfect example of that outlook. Soulfulness and musicality are front and center on this remarkable album, Noah's ninth as a leader.

      "To me, 'soul' can have multiple definitions - a trait of music rooted in the African-American continuum, a quality of genuine, uninhibited emotion, or basic human depth and goodness," says Baerman. "I strive to make every note I play or compose soulful by all of these definitions."

      The music is presented by two distinct ensembles. The Jazz Samaritan Alliance, comprised of Baerman, vibraphonist Chris Dingman, saxophonists Jimmy Greene and Kris Allen, and drummer Johnathan Blake, was formed with similar goals as those of RMI. They perform on three pieces here joined by special guests Linda Oh on bass for two tracks, and Kenny Barron on piano for one tune.

      Four other pieces feature Baerman's trio of 10 years - with bassist Henry Lugo and drummer Vinnie Sperrazza - augmented by a chamber ensemble of cellist Dave Eggar, violinists Meg Okura and Zach Brock, Erica Von Kleist on flutes and Benjamin Fingland on clarinet. They are also joined by a vocal choir of Claire Randall, Garth Taylor, Jessica Best and Erica Bryan on the opening track, "Time is Now" - a celebratory call-to-action. Fittingly the four vocalists who center this energetic and inspirational piece are all under 25, exhorting their peers to stand up and speak out for their future.

      The chamber pieces all celebrate courageous ongoing battles against adversity and the power of the human spirit to overcome the challenges that are a fundamental part of life. "The Outer Circle" (dedicated to cancer survivor Karen Walson) is a beautiful ballad with a delightfully suspended structure, featuring a haunting cello solo by Eggar and a tender, melodic piano solo floating on a warm mist of swirling strings. This piece is part of a multi-media tribute called "Survivor Stories," the brainchild of photographer Carla Ten Eyck, and an RMI project in development.

      Baerman previously recorded "The Healer" in a trio with Ron Carter and Ben Riley, expressing his ongoing struggles with the connective tissue disorder Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS). In the octet setting, the lovely melody, Baerman's lyrical but rhythmically insistent solo, and the trio's near-telepathic interplay are illuminated by the chamber ensemble like vivid stage lighting on a company of dancers.

      The final chamber piece concludes the album - "Ripples" (for Margie) is a stunning paean to Baerman's aunt, Margie Pozefsky, who passed in 2012. Opening with a brief statement of filigree beauty, it becomes a rollicking, jubilant celebration of a life marked by continuous acts of kindness, creating a ripple effect of positive human experience. Noah's explosive McCoy Tyner-esque solo, brilliant ensemble composing, and highly emotional playing by the entire ensemble bring the piece - and the album - to a dramatic finale.

      Three short preludes to the final piece are placed effectively among the earlier tracks. Immediately preceding is "Ripple: L'Amour Gagne (Love Wins)," a gorgeous hymnal chant by the choir a cappella, featuring Claire Randall's haunting solo voice. "Ripple: Persistence" is a duet for Baerman and alto saxophonist Allen. A sparkling pas de deux, they play off each other in powerful empathy and rapport, feeding and prodding each other on this smoldering item. "Ripple: Brotherhood" features Baerman on organ, with Greene on soprano and Blake's drums. Highly evocative, a bit reminiscent of early Weather Report, richly textured organ and shimmering cymbals surround the crying soprano.

      Dingman's crystalline unaccompanied solo opens "Motherless," the first of three Jazz Samaritan performances. Adapting the melodic line of the spiritual, "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child," and buoyed by Baerman's gospel-ish organ, this extended piece moves between plaintive yearning, soulful grooving and boisterous swinging. Allen's passionate, unaccompanied alto plea introduces Greene's urgent, blistering tenor solo. And Baerman explores the hard bop and beyond organ vernacular forged by Don Patterson and Larry Young, culminating in his heartfelt and dulcet singing of the original spiritual. Reflecting Baerman's deep devotion to the cause of foster care and adoption (Baerman and his wife Kate Ten Eyck - the creator of the album's cover painting - are the adoptive parents of three grown children), "Motherless" depicts the issue with disarming emotional directness.

      Another perspective on the same issue is at the core of "Lester," a story with an unfortunately tragic conclusion. But Baerman has created a highly emotional, stimulating and hope-filled tribute. "Lester" is a warmly textured, funkily-syncopated piece built on nasty suspended rhythms. Greene takes a fierce, gutty tenor solo, while guest and NEA Jazz Master Kenny Barron delivers the kind of vividly elegant solo that has made him a legend while stoking the piece throughout with driving block chords. Noah's organ provides an exciting, dervish-like pastiche and solos to a scintillating climax.

      "Peeling the Onion," a multi-layered, ever-evolving composition in the soul jazz style is driven by Linda Oh's deeply grooved bass and features a Bobby Hutcherson-tinged vibes solo by Dingman and an edgy turn on slide guitar by Baerman. This piece is dedicated to Kate's aunt Dottie Ten Eyck, who is overcoming the adversity of incurable lung cancer by continuing her never-ending journey of love and self-reflection - one layer at a time.

      Regardless of the inspiration and intent behind all of these original compositions, the results are precisely what an artist of Baerman's focus and intent seeks - profundity and transcendence. The music is dynamic, telling enthralling stories and in a most aesthetic and compelling manner.

      "I feel a responsibility to use my music in service of the issues that matter to me, while those issues add an important layer of substance to the music itself. At this point I scarcely know how to separate my art from my commitment to love, understanding and healing," concludes Baerman. 

      Upcoming Noah Baerman Tour Dates:
      * March 13 / Jazz Gallery / New York, NY
      ** March 28 / Benefit Concert, First Congregational Church / Bristol, RI
      ** March 29 / The Side Door Jazz Club / Old Lyme, CT
      *** March 30 / The Lily Pad (duo) / Cambridge, MA
      April 10 / Rutgers University (guest lecture) / New Brunswick, NJ
      ** April 10 / Settlement Music School (performance/clinic) / Philadelphia, PA
      ** April 11 / Columbia Heights Concert Series (Private House Concert) / Washington, DC
      ** April 12 / Germano's Cabaret / Baltimore, MA
      *** April 26 / Flushing Town Hall (feat. Victor Lewis) / Flushing, Queens, NY
      * May 9 / Firehouse 12 / New Haven, CT

      * - Jazz Samaritan Alliance w/ Jimmy Greene,
      Kris Allen, Chris Dingman, Johnathan Blake
      ** - Noah Baerman Trio w/ Henry Lugo, Vinnie Sperrazza
      *** - Noah Baerman with Amanda Monaco



      Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:32 AM PST
      With a crunching sound that is as teeth-chatteringly heavy as metal icons like Slayer and Megadeth or ferocious grindcore groups like Napalm Death and Brutal Truth, yet is imbued with the freedom principle of such avant garde jazz icons as saxophonists Marshall Allen, Albert Ayler and Peter Brötzman, the formidable instrumental power trio from Scotland known as Free Nelson Mandoom Jazz debuts on the London-based RareNoise label with a provocative double EP that will confound jazz critics as it challenges the thrashmetal-grindcore community. Jointly named for the late South African freedom fighter Nelson Mandela and the genre of fuzz-bass-inflected heavy-duty improvisation dubbed 'doomjazz', this renegade trio of bassist Colin Stewart, drummer Archibald and alto saxophonist Rebecca Sneddon rattles the very grey matter of your brain on their imposing Shape of Doomjazz to Come/Saxophone Giganticus.
        
      With a throbbing, slow-grooving undercurrent created by bassist Stewart and drummer Archibald, freewheeling saxophonist Sneddon wails with impunity in the altissimo register of her horn on doomjazz anthems like "Where My Soul Can Be Free," "The Mask of the Red Death" and "Black Sabbath." Their atmospheric "Nobody Fucking Posts to the UAE" takes a more deliberately melodic approach with Stewart's unaffected basslines doubling with Sneddon's alto sax on the head before she embarks on a searching solo. Midway through this more introspective piece, Stewart kicks on his fuzzbox and Archibald slams more emphatically as Sneddon builds to some cathartic blowing on her horn. "K54", inspired by Domenico Scarlatti's K54 sonata, introduces a swing element into the proceedings with Stewart's up-tempo walking basslines and Archibald's insistent ride cymbal work. 

      The trio navigates through some intricate stop-time passages before Stewart once again stomps on his distortion pedal, a cue for Sneddon to head for the stratosphere with her emphatic overblowing on the alto sax. "Saxophone Giganticus" (the title a playful mutation of Sonny Rollin's "Saxophone Colossus") finds the trio in a more relaxed mode with Stewart's clean bass lines and didgeridoo combining to create a darkly insinuating undercurrent for Sneddon's sinewy sax lines. A little less than midway through, this kinder, gentler approach evaporates in the face of another formidable doomjazz excursion. And the closing track, "Black Sabbath," carries all the heavyweight underpinnings that name would imply while including some of Sneddon's most ferocious, take-no-prisoners approach to overblowing on the recording. These brand new recordings were mixed by renowned Italian sound sculptor Eraldo Bernocchi. A brand new album is currently being worked on and will be released later this year. 

       

      Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:33 AM PST
      Two bassists from two different continents -- Italian Lorenzo Feliciati of the adventurous jazz-rock band Naked Truth and the intensely searching nu jazz group Berserk! and Australian Colin Edwin of the longstanding prog-rock band Porcupine Tree and the heavy-duty, experimental Metallic Taste of Blood as well as Ex-Wise Heads and Burnt Belief -- come together to make one potent statement on Twinscapes. 

      With special guest appearances by acclaimed trumpeter Nils Petter Molvaer, saxophonist David Jackson (of Van der Graaf Generator), Swiss percussionist Andi Pupato (of Andreas Vollenweider and Nik Bartschʼs Ronin) and drummer Roberto Gualdi (of the Italian prog-rock band PFM), this bass-dominant project, which was mixed by renowned bassist-producer Bill Laswell, travels from ambient soundscapes to slamming funk workouts and kinetic grooves to cinematic-sounding pieces that defy easy categorization. And there are plenty of virtuosic fireworks along the way by all the principal soloists on this outstanding RareNoise release which is released on March 3rd on CD /vinyl and Hi- Res digital download.

      Feliciati and Edwin first got together for an impromptu one-off gig in London early in 2013, and they discovered an instant chemistry on the bandstand. As Colin recalls, "I was familiar with Lorenzoʼs band Naked Truth and also his solo album Frequent Flyer, and coincidentally had been toying with the idea of a dual-bass project with a bass player friend of mine. So I immediately thought it was something worth doing as an experiment, at least. And I knew that this project would lead us to explore other things you tend to do a lot less of in a regular band set-up, like using different effects, E-bows, have the bass playing melodies and so forth." 
      In preparing for their session together, Feliciati and Edwin spent a few productive days in a studio in the English countryside, fleshing out compositions from the bones of each otherʼs sketches. 

      Playing both fretted and fretless basses, the two kindred low-end spirits create a formidable undercurrent on the 11 powerful tracks from Twinscape while embellishing the open-ended pieces with freewheeling improvisation. "We had a very short time to plan what to do and only a small amount of rehearsal," says Edwin, "but even from our brief rehearsal, it certainly felt like we had a natural way of playing together. Without any real discussion we managed to find a way of fitting around each other, despite occupying the same frequency area. It requires a certain amount of intuition and sensitivity just to be able to do that, without stepping on each others toes and filling up the same space." 

      That kind of complementary attitude permeates Twinscapes, though each of the bassists do step out with stunning solos from track to track. They kick off the proceedings with "Shaken," which begins with a calming, ambient drone before developing a thickly textured undercurrent from multiple overdubs laid down by the two bassists. As drummer Gualdi fuels the track with powerhouse backbeats, Edwin plays the fretless solo, the harmonic delays and the picked bass parts while they combine on the tight unison riffs. Feliciati adds false harmonics and octave bass lines on this dynamic opener. On the more lyrical "Alice," a piece written by Feliciati for his daughter and which appeared on his first-ever solo release in 2003, he plays the main bass part and the chordal part while Edwin covers the melody, the harmonic slides and the beautiful fretless bass work. Lorenzo provides the ambient wash with his bass pedals on "In Dreamland" and Colin contributes to that ethereal vibe by using the E-bow in conjunction with his bass.

      With Andi Pupato, Nils Petter Molvaer, David Jackson and Roberto Gualdi, Feliciati and Edwin have gathered a group of world-class musicians who bring this release to new creative heights.


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