Feb 21 2019
Album of the Day: Lionel Loueke – “The Journey”
Artist: Lionel Loueke
Album: The Journey
Label: Aparte Music
Style: Folk Jazz
Favorite Track: “Hope”
Music from: Brooklyn, NY
What I like about it: I’m curious if Lionel Loueke can record something I wouldn’t like. I’m not sure it’s possible. His guitar and voice are mirror images of one another, eternally connected to the same entity, 180 degree opposite visions of a singular beauty. I like how Loueke’s music always comes with roots attached, a sense that even the newest songs are just a fresh voice put to timeless tales. I like how his music can fill any room and snap into place no matter the time or tenor of the day.
Your album personnel: Lionel Loueke (guitars, vocals, percussion), Pino Palladino (bass), Cyro Baptista (percussion), John Ellis (soprano saxophone), Christi Joza Orisha (percussion), Robert Sadin (keyboards), Dramane Dembélé (peul flute), Mark Feldman (violin), Patrick Messina (clarinet), Vincent Ségal (cello), Étienne Charles (trumpet), Massimo Biolcati (bass) and Ferenc Nemeth (percussion).
Available at: Amazon
Check out the EPK on YouTube to learn more about the album.
Be sure to check out the artist’s site.
Mar 1 2019
The Round-up: It threatens to scatter me everywhere and nowhere at all
Here is some very good new music.
Richard Sears – Iron Year (Slow & Steady Records)
The melancholy quality to the melodies of Iron Year make this music smoulder like mad, like a fireplace that is mostly embers but still kicks out enough heat to fill up the room. It’s an effect that holds tight when Richard Sears‘ sextet picks up a headwind, but it’s especially true when they settle into a patient hard bop cadence. The combination of melancholy and propulsion is a potent one, and it makes for the perfect kind of album for standing in a window and watching the rain fall… just before deciding, screw it, I’m going to the bar to have a drink… and these melodies stick with you the entire time. Music from Brooklyn, NY.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
Tenderlonious – The Shakedown, featuring the 22arkestra (22a Music)
Of the many tedious bullet points offered up by the knuckleheads stating Jazz is dead is that jazz used to be dance music, but no more. Well, The Shakedown is Ed “Tenderlonious” Cawthorne‘s deafening fuck you to those jackasses… because this is music for the clubs and it’s music made to get people moving and it’s music for kicking back with friends on an electric Friday night, some whiskey and good laughs. Jazz is life and life is a groove, and The Shakedown provides all kinds of ways to move on through it. Music from London, UK.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
Muze Jazz Orchestra – New Horizons (Self-Produced)
It’d take a real black heart not to fall for this mix of folksy charm and boisterous grooves from the Muze Jazz Orchestra. The way the large ensemble begins with some laid-back playfulness of melody and suddenly shifts gears into a hard charging cadence gets increasingly addictive with each successive revolution of the cycle. That they bind it all together with some lovely harmonic voicing puts it over the top. Music from Heusden Zolder, Belgium.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Tal Arditi Trio – Portrait (Ancor Records)
There’s a dreamy melodicism that boosts the enjoyment potential on this straight-ahead session from Tal Arditi. There’s something about the way the guitarist lets a melody breathe that makes it resonate with just a little more strength than what might otherwise be expected. The result is a shimmering effect, a subtle motion that makes a bright tone shine with a softer, but more brilliant tone… like in that way a fireflies light attracts the eye’s attention more than a nighttime sky full of stars. A solid debut. Music from Berlin, Germany.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
Michael Brenneis – Plutonium (Rattle Tick Buzz Records)
This album doesn’t advance one foot after the other. This octet session led out by Michael Brenneis isn’t shy about taking detours and shifting the pace of action. Sometimes there’s a lot of parts in motion, and sometimes this spreads things out to where the center of the music loses its focus. I’m not sure that’s even a criticism, really, because it’s during those passages when the ensemble seems to abandon the idea of moving in a singular direction that leads to some of the more exciting moments. Six woodwinds, bass, and drums. Music from Madison, Wisconsin.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations - 2018 • 0 • Tags: 22a Music, Ancor Records, Berlin, Brooklyn (NY), Heusden Zolder (BE), London, Madison (WI), Michael Brenneis, Muze Jazz Orchestra, Rattle Tick Buzz Records, Richard Sears, Self-Produced, Slow and Steady Records, Tal Arditi, Tenderlonious, The Round-Up