Monday, October 30, 2006

Carla Bley - Big Band Theory (1993)



Trumpets: Lew Soloff, Guy Barker, Claude Deppa, Steve Waterman
Trombones: Gary Valente, Richard Edwards, Annie Whitehead, Ashley Slayter
Winds: Roger Jannotta, Wolfgang Puschnig, Andy Sheppard, Pete Hurt, Julian Arguelles
Rhythm: Steve Swallow (bass), Carla Bley (piano), Karen Mantler (organ), Dennis Mackrel(drums), Don Alias (percusson)

1. On the Stages in Cages
2. Birds of Parardise
3. Goodbye Porkpie Hat
4. Fresh Impression

"Carla Bley's big-band theory is put into fine practice on this recording with her characteristically stacked and tight lineup of British, European, and American players. English saxophonist Andy Sheppard, also a member of George Russell's idiosyncratic large ensemble, is the most prominent soloist. He teases, flips, and warps the tunes with vigor and feeling. He has chops to burn but a delicate touch, too. Also featured are trombonist Gary Valente, trumpeter Lew Soloff, and altoist-flutist Wolfgang Puschnig. A special, surprising guest is violinist Alex Balanescu, whose hip new-music quartet was, at this time (1993), winning notice. The whole band sparkles and lends just the right dosage of swagger and cheek where needed. The cover of Charles Mingus's "Goodbye, Pork Pie Hat" does honor to the tune. The album is, overall, among the Bley big band's finest."

Carla Bley - The Very Big Carla Bley Band (1991)



Trumpets: Lew Soloff, Guy Barker, Claude Deppa, Steven Bernstein
Trombones: Gary Valente, Richard Edwards, Fayyaz Virji, Ashley Slayter
Winds: Roger Jannotta, Wolfgang Puschnig, Andy Sheppard, Pete Hurt, Pablo Calogero
Rhythm: Steve Swallow (bass), Carla Bley (piano), Karen Mantler (organ), Victor Lewis (drums), Don Alias (percusson)

1. United States
2. Strange Arrangement
3. All Fall Down
4. Who Will Rescue You?
5. Lo Ultimo

Five striking Bley compositions are featured here, including two extended works, "United States" and "All Fall Down". The lasting impression is one of unusual voicings, adventurous soloists, unconventional arranging touches, and dissonant shadings. "Delightfully quirky, chaotically dynamic, delicately impressionistic, buoyantly upbeat, and brashly bold." - Downbeat

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Ken Schaphorst Big Band - Purple (1998)



Woodwinds: Doug Yates, Jay Brandford, Donny McCaslin, Seamus Blake, Andy Laster
Trumpets: Dave Ballou, John Carlson, Andy Gravish, Cuong Vu
Trombones: Josh Roseman, Curtis Hasselbring, Dave Taylor, Chris Creswell
Rhythm: Uri Caine (piano), John Bedeski (electric keyboards), Brad Shepik (guitar), Drew Gress (bass), Jamey Haddad (drums), Dane Richeson (drums)

1. Uprising
2. With You, Then Without
3. Blue Almighty
4. Jobim
5. Subterranean
6. Purple
7. Bats
8. My Island
9. Bounce

From Jazziz:
Purple is experimental in the best sense of the word, as conductor/leader Schaphorst uses unusual shadings and combinations of instruments not to prove his adventurousness, but as another color on his palette. His vision is epic in scope - many of the tunes move through several ambitious sections rather than settling into a verse-chorus-verse format, and the sounds Schaphorst wrings from the band are wonderfully varied.
For example, "Uprising" starts by building waves of sound, then gives way to Donny McCaslin's eloquent tenor solo. McCaslin soon rides an intricate Latin groove courtesy of the band's two drummers, Dane Richeson and Jamey Haddad. The piece ends 12 minutes later pretty much as it began.
Schaphorst continually confounds expectations. On "Blues Almighty," the band settles into a deep, Count Basie-like shuffle only to be broken up first by John Medeski's wailing, unaccompanied organ solo and then by Brad Shepik's screeching distorted guitar. On "Subterranean," Dave Taylor's contemplative bass-trombone solo gives way to rich and bombastic horns.
The impressive playing (tenor saxophonist Seamus Blake and pianist Uri Caine are also standouts) and the ambitious composing and arranging are good signs for Naxos' new jazz imprint and are evidence that big-band jazz is alive and kicking.

Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra - Coming About (1996)



Composer, Arranger, Conductor: Maria Schneider
Woodwinds: Mark Vinci, Tim Ries, Rich Perry, Rick Margitza, Scott Robinson, Charles Pillow
Trumpets: Tony Kadleck, Greg Gisbert, Laurie Frink, Tim Hagans
Trombones: Keith O'Quinn, rock Ciccarone, Larry Farrell, George Flynn
Rhythm: Ben Monder (guitar), Frank Kimbrogh (piano), Tony Scherr (bass), Tim Horner (drums)

1. El Viento
2. Love Theme from "Spartacus"
Scenes from Childhood
3. Part 1: Bombshelter Beast
4. Part 2: Night Watchman
5. Part 3: Coming About
6. Giant Steps
7. Waxwing

Partial Liner Notes:

Duke Ellington and Fletcher Henderson made their first important big-band recordings seventy years ago, back when Calvin Coolidge was in the White House and Charlie Parker was in short pants. A lot of water has gone under the bridge since then. Big bands are still around, and still as musically vital as they were in 1926 - but they don't sound the same. The dance-oriented bands of the '30s and '40s are now a thing of the distant past. Today's big bands perform in clubs and concert halls, and their music is for listening, not dancing, so much so that a growing number of musicians prefer to call them "jazz orchestras." No matter what you call them, though, there's something about the sound of large jazz bands that continues to make audiences sit up and take notice, and causes composers to grab for their pens. That's why seventeen of New York's top jazz musicians get together every Monday night at Visiones, a New York nightclub, to play the music of Maria Schneider. They could be making better money doing almost anything else, from recording jingles to doing clinics. But Monday nights at Visiones aren't about money: they're about music. So is this CD.

If you've been to Visiones to hear the Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra - or if you've heard Evanescence, the band's 1994 debut album for ENJA - you won't be surprised to learn that Coming About is no ordinary big-band record. You won't hear any blues in D flat, or standard-issue flagwavers with a shot chorus tacked on at the end. The centerpiece, 'Scenes from Childhood,' is a suite in three movements that begins with the angry howl of air-raid sirens (simulated on a theremin by baritone saxophonist Scott Robinson) and ends, half an hour later, with iridescent clouds of sound that shimmer into silence. It is one of the most ambitious jazz compositions heard on record in years, and it makes perfect sense when you look at Maria's resumé: she studied composition with Bob Brookmeyer, and spent three years as Gil Evans' musical assistant. From Brookmeyer, she learned how to create large-scale musical structures that add up to more than just a string of solos; from Evans, she learned how to blend instrumental colors with a Ravel-like precision and clarity.

Friday, October 20, 2006

Bobby Watson - Tailor Made (1993)



Collective Personnel:
Saxes: Bobby Porcelli, Ed Jackson, Craig Bailey, Rich Rothenberg, Bill Saxton, Patience Higgins, Jim Hartog
Trumpets: Jon Faddis, Melton Mustafa, Ryan Kisor
Trombones: Steve Turre, Robin Eubanks, Frank Lacy, Doug Purviance
Piano: James Williams, Danilo Perez, Eddie Martinez
Rhythm: Paul Socolow (bass), Steve Berrios (drums)

1. Ms. B.C. (For Betty Carter)
2. Old Time Ways
3. Catch Me If You Can (Jazz Mambo)
4. Lafiya
5. Tudo Bem (All Is Okay)
6. Conservation
7. T.P. Call Home (Afro Brazilian)
8. Like It Was Before
9. Free Yourself
10. To See Her Face
11. Thing's You Do (Jazz Mambo)
12. What's Next

CD Review:
"This CD was altoist Bobby Watson's first as the leader of a big band. He leads the orchestra through a dozen of his compositions, none of which they had performed together before meeting up in the studio. But due to the high caliber of the players, the music came together smoothly. In performances ranging from modern hard bop to Latin with subtle hints of freer styles of jazz, Watson is the main soloist (although there are a few short spots for trumpeter Terell Stafford), making the album a sort of "concerto for alto and orchestra." Even if the backup musicians have little opportunity to star, the music is consistently enjoyable and recommended to fans of modern mainstream jazz."

North Texas State University - LAB '75! (1975)



Winds: Roger Dismore, Bill Keil, Peter L. Brewer, Richard Kent, Jim Prichard
Trumpets: Richard Steffen, James Linahon, Wayne George, Robert Kase, Raymond Sasaki
Trombones: Bill Yeager, Gerard Carelli, Ray Ross, Mack McGrannahan, Bill Guthrie
Rhythm: Lyle Mays (piano), Steve Houghton (drums), Marc Johnson (bass), Jeff Davang (guitar), Pat Coil (Fender Rhodes)

1. F.M.
2. Overture to the Royal Mongolian Suma Foosball Festival
3. What Was
The Continuing Adventures of Supertonic
4. Movement I
5. Movement II
6. Movement V

"All selections on this album were composed and arranged by Lyle Mays with the exception of "What Was" which was composed by Chick Corea and arranged by Mays. The selections were determined by a vote of the entire band."

Thursday, October 19, 2006

(Repost) Maynard Ferguson - Live at the Blue Note (2003)



Recorded live February 27, 2003

1. Blue Birdland
2. It' Don't Mean a Thing
3. Ain't No Sunshine
4. Girl from Impanema
5. Milestones
6. MF Hit Medley / Blue Birdland

J. J. Johnson - The Brass Orchestra (1997)



Trumpets: Jon Faddis, Eddie Henderson, Joe Wilder, Lew Soloff, Earl Gardner, Byron Stripling, Danny Cahn, Joe Shepley
Trombones: J. J. Johnson, Robin Eubanks, Jim Pugh, Steve Turre, Dave Taylor, Douglas Purviance, Joe Alessi
Euphoniums: Bruce Bonvissuto, Alan Ralph
Tubas: Howard Johnson, Andy Rodgers
Tenor and Soprano Sax: Dan Faulk
Rhythm: Renee Rosnes (piano), Rufus Reid (bass), Victor Lewis (drums), Francesca Corsi (harp), Freddie Santiago, Milton cardona, Kevin Johnson (percussion)

1. El Camino Real
2. Enigma
3. Gingerbread Boy
4. Canonn For Bela
5. Comfort Zone
6. Wild Is The Wind
7. If I Hit The Lottery
8. Cross Currents
9. Ballad For Joe
10. Cadenza
11. Why Indianapolis, Why Not Indianapolis?
12. Horn Of Plenty (From 'Perceptions')
13. Ballade (From 'Perceptions')
14. Swing Spring

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

(Repost) Maynard Ferguson - Si! Si! MF (1962)



Maynard Ferguson, bandleader, trumpet
Trumpets: Don Rader, Gene Goe, Nat Pavone
Trombones: John Gale, Ken Rupp
Winds: Lanny Morgan, Willie Maiden, Don Menza, Frank Hittner
Rhythm: Rufus Jones (drums), Michael Abene (piano), Lincoln Milliman (bass)

1. What'll I Do
2. Early Hours
3. Morganpoint
4. Si! Si! MF
5. Great Guns
6. Almost Like Being In Love
7. Mimi
8. Morgan's Organ
9. Born To Be Blue
10. Straight Out

Liner Notes:

     Maynard Ferguson has become one of the most important leaders in big band jazz. He has put together a group of musicians that have the unique success of being truly great individual performers who function with unique success as a band. It is a strong cohesive unit that is drawn together by Ferguson's own forecful leadership as well as his own individual greatness as a trumpeter.
     The Maynard Ferguson band has developed to such an extent that it is today the most sought after big band jazz aggregation on the college circuit. With equal facility and adaptness, the Ferguson band perform on a theatre stage or in such famed jazz havens as Birdland. Whereever the band plays they draw a vast follwing of big band worshippers and ardent admirers of Ferguson's amazing facility and technique on the trumpet.
     In a stunning performance of special arrangements by Willie Maiden, Maynard Ferguson brings to bear all the amazing qualities of this superb band of musicians who have made big band jazz such a popular expression.

The Matthew Herbert Big Band – Goodbye Swingtime (2003)



1. Turning Pages
2. Everything's Changed
3. Fiction
4. Three W's
5. Chromoshop
6. Battle
7. Misprints
8. Many and the Few
9. Simple Mind
10. Stationary

Album Review:
"Likened to a modern day Thelonious Monk, British producer Matthew Herbert delivers in ‘Goodbye Swingtime’ his own futuristic take on big band jazz, fusing this with some deep political statements to spellbinding effect; the result is one of the most important albums of the year. It features some of the UK’s finest jazz musicians, such Dave O’Higgins on sax and an array of vocalists such as US-born, Brazilian-raised Arto Lindsay, who bring their own magic to the haunting, dreamlike properties of the album.

Every sound on the album originated as a unique recording made by Herbert and as he proudly states: “they have never existed before and will never be used again. In a western consumer-based democracy where our choices are constantly compromised by corporate principles, local distribution or aggressive marketing, it is of some importance to me that I have been able to take complete responsibility for the content and its authenticity". Herbert goes on, and as he eloquently puts it: “At a time of war, it is a difficult task to know where to place music. Contemporary music, like much of Western culture, is again at a crossroads. Does it describe, critique, and contribute to the urgent political questions of the day, or provide an alternative, prescribing different rules and espousing its own values?” ‘Goodbye Swingtime’ manages to successfully fulfill both, and in Mathhew Herbert, Britain has found both a fine artist and one of the nation’s most important dissenting voices."

Thursday, October 12, 2006

(Repost) Maynard Ferguson - Live at Peacock Lane (1957)



1. Blue Birdland
2. Great Guns
3. Lady Bug
4. My Funny Valentine
5. Dancing Nightly
6. Geller's Celler
7. More West
8. Stand Up And Preach
9. Maynard The Fox
10. Christmas For Moderns
11. Early Hours
12. Little Girl Kimbi
13. Rosebud

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

(Repost) Maynard Ferguson - Footpath Café (1992)



1. Get It To Go
2. Footpath Café
3. Brazil
4. That's My Desire
5. Crusin' for a Bluesin'
6. Poison Ya Blues
7. Break the Ice
8. Hit and Run

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Maynard Ferguson - Various Live Tracks



After Maynard's passing, a gent posted these on the Maynard Ferguson Forum, however I beleive the post was removed shortly after it was posted (bootlegs don't last long there). The tracks below are from a variety of live performances from the 1970's and early 1980's.

Live at Ball State (1979)
- Rocky 2
- Star Trek - The Motion Picture

British Band East Coast Tour 1972
- Give it One

Live in Nogoya, Japan 1976
- Gospel John
- The Tommy Medley

Unknown Performance, Unknown Year
- Fireshaker
- La Fiesta
- Superbone Meets The Bad Man

Live 1981
- Star Trek

Friday, October 06, 2006

Maynard Ferguson - The Best of Maynard Ferguson (1980)



1. Gonna Fly Now (Theme From "Rocky")
2. MacArthur Park
3. Theme From Star Trek
4. Birdland
5. Give It One
6. Stella By Starlight
7. Theme From "Battlestar Galactica"
8. Pagliacci
9. Main Title From the 20th Century-Fox Film "Star Wars"
10. Airegin

McCoy Tyner Big Band - The Turning Point (1992)



Kamau Adilifu, Earl Gardner, Virgil Jones - trumpets, Steve Turre, Frank Lacy - trombones, John Clark - French horn & hornette, Howard Johnson - tuba, Doug Harris, Joe Ford, John Stubblefield, Junior Cook - winds, McCoy Tyner - piano, Avery Sharpe - bass, Aaron Scott - drums, Jerry Gonzales - percussion.

1. Passion Dance
2. Let It Go
3. High Priest
4. Angel Eyes
5. Fly With The Wind
6. Update
7. In A Sentimental Mood

"This recording may not have been an actual "turning point" in pianist McCoy Tyner's productive career but its success gave momentum to his big band. Although only a part-time affair, Tyner's orchestra (seven brass, four reeds and a four-piece rhythm section) is considered one of the major jazz big bands of the 1990s, a perfect outlet for the leader's percussive and modal-oriented piano. With arrangements by Tyner, Dennis Mackrel, Slide Hampton, Steve Turre and Howard Johnson, many of these performances are quite powerful."

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Dead Links

I've found a few dead links from some earlier posts that I will be reparing over the next few days. If there is nothing new, that is the reason why. Those affected are:

Si Si MF
LA Jazz Workshop
Bob Curnow's LA Jazz Big Band
Footpath Cafe
Live At Peacock Lane 1957
Live at the Bluenote (2003)
Newport Suite
MF Horn 4&5 (soon to be released on CD!)

Speaking of older posts, don't forget to go through the archives.

I am slowly running out of MF stuff. I have some others, but my turntable is on the fritz, so I may have to slow down until I get it fixed. There'll be posts, they may not be MF though.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Maynard Ferguson - The New Sounds of Maynard Ferguson (1964)



Cameo C-1046

Maynard Ferguson - Trumpet/Valve Trombone/French Horn
Trumpets: Dusan Goykovitch, Rick Kiefer, Nat Pavone
Trombones: Don Doane, Kenny Rupp
Saxes: Lanny Morgan, Willie Maiden, Frank Vicari, Ronnie Cuber
Rhythm: Mike Abene (piano), Linc Milliman (bass), Rufus Jones (drums)

1. Take The "A" Train
2. Bossa Nova De Funk
3. Gravy Waltz
4. Cherokee
5. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
6. One O'Clock Jump
7. At The Sound Of The Trumpet
8. Maine Bone
9. Watermelon Man
10. Danny Boy

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

North Texas State University Lab Band - Lab '74 (1974)

Reeds: Jim Clouse, Sam Riney, Jeff Richey, Phil Garonzik, Greg Smith
Trumpets: Dave Zeagler, Gene Dutkin, Mark Van Sickle, Clay Jenkins, Ray Sasaki
Trombones: Bill Yeager, Dave Glenn, Gerard Carelli, Fred Strum, Bill Guthrie
Rhythm: Pat Coil (piano), Mike Ross (bass), Steve Houghton (drums), Jeff Davang (guitar), Rudi Fox (percussion), Pete Aan (percussion)

1. Fash, Fash, Fash
2. Turquoise
3. Warp Factor
4. Sun Catchers
5. R.F. Blues
6. Love Walked In
7. Sir Gawain & the Green Knight

North Texas State University Lab Band - Lab '71 (1971)



Reeds: Lee Pulliam, Hubert Knight, Ron Helvie, Frank Battaglia, Jon Stone
Trumpets: John Thomas, Steve Blocher, Rob Nebe, Jack Evans, Bill Stapleton
Trombones: John Osborne, Ken George, Mike Smukal, Harold Garrett, Dave Robertson
Rhythm: Butch Nordal (piano), Ed Garcia (bass), Jim Hall (drums), Sterling Procter (guitar), Craig Whatley (percussion)

1. B'Deet
2. Badi': A Martyr
3. Ekhoes
4. Kenston
5. Liferaft Earth