Oct 27 2014
Recommended: Mitch Shiner and the BloomingTones Big Band – “Fly!”
A solid big band session from Mitch Shiner and the BloomingTones Big Band. The album’s strongest quality is that the ensemble insinuates a Big Sound more often than they show it. It’s that show of restraint that creates tension while allowing room for strong melodies and delicate solos to hover at the forefront of the compositions. The arrangements on Fly! provide an essential quality of differentiation between tracks, which gives the album an expansive range of expressions totaling to something much much more than here’s-another-big-band-album.
Exhibit A is the way vibes lead out on the classic “When You Wish Upon a Star.” It gives the impression that this will be a track that tamps down on the enthusiasm and sticks to a moodier expression. But the ensemble builds off the vibraphones’ rhythmic chatter rather than its melancholy tone, and it’s why the quick ascents and drops of intensity are secondary in enjoyability to the ensemble’s nifty playfulness with cadence. This is the kind of sleight-of-hand that Shiner utilizes to great success on the recording.
Perhaps even better evidence of this is his Afro-Latin treatment of a Miley Cyrus tune. “Wrecking Ball – Oggun” switches between a relaxed Latin groove and wild eruptions of the pop song’s splashy chorus. The sudden changes makes sense as they happen, but their effect is no less surprising with each occurrence, and that’s why the song ends up being more than just charmingly kitschy.
Speaking of surprises and kitschy, Shiner’s down-the-center approach to Burt Bacharach’s “Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head” is far more successful than it has any right to expect. A syrupy melody in the grasp of a big band can easily go saccharine on the turn of a dime, but the ensemble’s slow exhalation of the melody actually highlights some of its sweeter aspects.
“6:20 Shuffle” has a solid traditional sound, with a thick blues streak that swings wide, swings hard. Taking a different angle on the title-track, “Fly” works the melody more like a pop song and uses it to shift from a conventional big band sound to something far more modern and far more intricate than a song for the masses… and all the while, maintaining a supreme tunefulness.
A very promising debut. Also, a nice glimpse of the University of Indiana music scene.
Your album personnel: Mitch Shiner (vibes, drums, congas, maracas, shekere, shakers, triangle), Amanda Gardier (alto & soprano saxes, flute, alto flute), Adam Carrillo (alto & soprano saxes, clarinet), Matt Roehrich (tenor sax, alto flute, clarinet), Alex Young (tenor sax, clarinet), Steven Banks (baritone sax, bass clarinet), Dan Coffman, John Sorsen, Stewart Rhodes (trombones), Brennan Johns (bass trombone), Wayne Wallace (trombone), Matt Johnson (tuba), Eric Dumouchelle, Torrey D’Angelo (French horns), Jordan Ghaim, Josiah Lamb, Joe Anderson, Lexie Signor, Pat Harbison (trumpets, flugelhorns), John Weisiger (piano), Matt MacDougall (guitar), Richard Baskin (vocal), Anna Butterss, Rob Walker, Jeremy Allen (electric, upright and baby basses), Joe Galvin (batá, guiro), Kristin Olson (vibes, batá, congas, timbales, shakers), Michael Spiro (vocal, batá), and Ben Lumsdaine, Josh Roberts (drums).
Released on Patois Records.
Jazz from the Bloomington, Indiana scene.
Available at: eMusic | CDBaby | Amazon CD/MP3
*****
Some of the opening paragraph was used originally in the weekly new jazz releases column I write for eMusic’s Wondering Sound, so here’s some language protecting their rights to the reprinted material as the one to hire me to write about new jazz arrivals to their site…
“New Arrivals Jazz Picks” reprints courtesy of eMusic.com, Inc.
© 2014 eMusic.com, Inc.
As always, my sincere thanks to eMusic for the gig.
Oct 28 2014
Recommended: Torben Westergaard – “Tangofied II”
“Waltz Me” leads right out with the ensemble’s blending formula of the two, disparate influences. The fluid grace of tango meshes nicely with a Nordic sensibility, as spurts of motion twist around the calm heart of the song, each leaving the other undisturbed while sounding perpetually in synch. “Don’t Leave Any Thoughts Behind” doesn’t shake the developing trend, shifting between sharp bursts of propulsion and long effortless glides with the same fluid grace as the opening track.
It’s interesting to hear how the Nordic and Argentinean influences adapt to those times when their opposite takes on a stronger role for a particular song. The moody, drifting piece “Minor Me” speaks from the streets of Copenhagen, but guitarist Ernesto Snajer’s guitar works in some sounds of the Rio de la Plata, providing a valuable, intermittent shift in perspective. “Dinamargentina” dishes out the tango cadences, and while the song is dominated by an unqualified exuberance, Westergard slips in passages of a deeper serenity informed by the Nordic influence.
“Chacarera” and “Huayno” illustrate the diversity of Argentinean folk and tango musics. Westergaard’s ensemble embraces the regional traits corresponding to both chacerera and huayno while sticking to the album’s winning formula. The guest vocal on “Året Rundt” allows Westergaard to mute the predominant influences on this album and simply craft a pretty song for the ensemble members, comprised of both Danish and Argentinean musicians, to just let their musicianship flow.
A curious album with a curious sound that reveals the facets to its beauty slowly, patiently, and fully over time.
Your album personnel: Torben Westergaard (bass), Ida Nørholm (cello), Anders Banke (bass clarinet), Alejandro Sancho (guitar), Ernesto Snajer (guitar), and guests: Mariano “Tiki” Cantero (percussion, voice), Victor Carrion (quena, sikus), Jacob Andersen (percussion), Adi Zukanovic (sonics), and Andrea Pellegrini (vocal).
The album is Self-Produced.
Jazz from the Copenhagen scene.
It appears that the only traditional retail outlet is iTunes, but the download is available at 7Digital for those of you who shop there. The CD is available at Gateway Music and directly from the artist’s site. Westergaard offers to sign the CD if you buy direct.
*****
Some other stuff you should probably know:
Like this:
By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2014 Releases • 2