Sep 28 2012
Tiny Reviews: Brooklyn Jazz Underground, Benjamin Herman, & Miho Wada
Tiny Reviews, featuring: Brooklyn Jazz Underground A Portrait of Brooklyn, Benjamin Herman Deal, and Miho Wada Wanderland.
*****
Brooklyn Jazz Underground – A Portrait of Brooklyn
An ensemble recording comprised of artists involved with the Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records label, an artist-run organization.  Each of the ensemble members present a nice pastiche of modern jazz compositions of their own making.  Melodies misshapen and warped, yet retain their beauty.  Rhythms shimmer like on the surface of displaced water.  Emotional shifts that enhance the album’s cohesiveness, rather than detract from it.  Track “The Hill” has a bandstand groove for Friday night dancing.  “The Cherry Bees” has a shimmering melody so intoxicating as to be addictive and so delicate as to threaten to drift away forever.  “Starr St.” has a heart-of-the-city presence, of an entire world of possibilities and stimuli all close enough to reach out and touch.  Just a very strong effort.
Your album personnel: David Smith (trumpet), Adam Kolker (tenor & alto saxes, clarinet, bass clarinet, flute), Dan Pratt (tenor sax, clarinet, flute), Anne Mette Iversen (bass) and Rob Garcia (drums).
Released on the Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records label.
You can stream the album on the BJU’s bandcamp page.
Available at eMusic.
Benjamin Herman – Deal
Dutch saxophonist Benjamin Herman has been remarkably consistent over the years.  His sound is very reminiscent of the early 70s when jazz was getting strong infusions of soul, funk, and trip rock.  Herman has a cool jazz sound, amped way up, and his music would be just as comfortable as a soundtrack to a Motown themed movie as it would a hippie freak out flick.  On this album, his quintet is joined by the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra for a set of high voltage, swinging tunes, carried along with lush strings and an army of woodwinds.
Your album personnel: Benjamin Herman (sax), Joost Kroon (drums), Manuel Hugas (bass guitar), Carlo de Wijs (Hammond B3), Jesse van Ruller (guitar), and the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra.
Released on the Dox Records label.
Download a free album track at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist and label.
It appears you can purchase a Vinyl edition of the album direct from Dox Records.
Available at eMusic.  Available at Amazon: CD
Miho Wada – Wanderland
Flautist Miho Wada just does her own thing.  Not sounding like anyone else on the scene, she’s developing a very likable approach to jazz flute.  After immersing herself in Cuban music on her previous recording Para Ti (reviewed here), she returns with a new release that has more of an Indie pop flavor.  Catchy as hell, rapid tempos even when the melody is taking its time, and shifts between swinging and brooding.  The music sounds influenced by Wada’s New Zealand locale.  On this release, as with past Wada recordings, there is a palpable element of Fun inherent in the music.  It’s easy to imagine the musicians genuinely enjoying themselves as they record these tunes.  Song “Bears and Bamboos,” with its bittersweet violin and rock tempo, should appeal to lots and lots of you Indie fans.  Wada also doubles on sax for this recording.  Too pretty.
Your album personnel: Miho Wada (flute & sax), Pascal Roggen (violin & electric violin), James Donaldson (cello), Andrew Rudolph (guitar), Takumi Motokawa (piano & organ), Leo Corso (bass), Alistair Deverick (drums), and Jane Chen (taiko drums).
The album is Self-Produced, released on Wada’s Florestar label.
Download a free album track at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist.
You can stream the album on Wada’s bandcamp page.
Available at eMusic.
*****
Portions of these reviews were originally used in my Jazz Picks weekly article for eMusic, so here’s some language protecting their rights to that 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.
© 2012  eMusic.com, Inc.
As always, my sincere thanks to eMusic for the gig. Cheers.





Sep 29 2012
Two For the End of the Night: Gabriela – “El Viaje” and “Detras del Sol”
I first discovered the music of Gabriela (who forgoes her last name of Marrone) via guitarist Bill Frisell. Looking through his site, I checked out music for albums he collaborated on but didn’t have his name in the big typeface. It was one of those internet wandering sessions, just following trails of breadcrumbs from one musician site to the next, listening to music, writing down names of albums and artists on lists, with ESPN on mute and the cats dozing nearby. I’ve discovered a wonderful amount of wonderful music on nights like that. The best finds, I’ve discovered, are the albums that not only pique my interest, but also fit the mood of the exact moment I’m in.
The atmospheric, lullaby sound of Gabriela’s music was the perfect fit for late at night. Let’s talk about two of her albums…
Gabriela – El Viaje
Collaborating with Bill Frisell, Tucker Martine, and Lee Townsend couldn’t have hurt either.
Your album personnel: Gabriela (vocals, guitar), Bill Frisell (electric & acoustic guitars, loops), Viktor Krauss (bass), Eyvind Kang (viola, violin), Steve Moore (keyboards), and Tucker Martine (percussion).
The melting pot of electric and acoustic guitars and loops, with additional strings via viola, violin, and bass, afford this music, atmospheric at heart, a thickness, like fog over the harbor, and that corporeality makes this music as much of the earth as the air. It means that this will get felt in the gut, even as its beauty lifts hearts up to the sky.
Gabriela has a vocal approach that isn’t afraid to accentuate words with a theatrical flair without it ever getting hammy. Opening track “La Furia” has a waltz sway to it, and it’s not an uncommon sensation throughout the album. Some tracks, like “Quedate,” float on a sea of guitar loops, words only buoys rocking back and forth against the ebb and flow. The stronger tunes, however, have an insistent tempo on guitar and a quivering tension, like “Alguien Grita, Nadie Escucha” with its ominous undercurrent that inspires wariness and “Romance,” which is far slower in tempo, but even the thick blanket of violin can’t usher away the chillier guitar tone.
But in the ways that matter most, the tension is an attractive feature, and the prevailing trait is one of ethereal beauty. And it’s perfect for sitting up late at night, when it’s just the music and the listener, with no distractions to get between the two.
As far as I can tell, this is Gabriela’s latest recording.
Released in 2006 on the Songline / Tonefield label. Released in Europe on the Intuition Music label.
You can stream three album tracks HERE, on the Songline site.
Available at eMusic. Available at Amazon: CD
Gabriela – Detras del Sol
While possessing many of the ethereal qualities that made El Viaje so delectable, Detras del Sol has an earthier sound to it. More akin to Gabriela’s take on folk music and channeled through her unique sound. Frisell’s guitar doesn’t take flight nearly as much as on El Viaje, instead keeping close to the soil a la his own recording This Land (which was released just a couple years earlier), an album that had him delving heavily into an Americana dialect of Jazz music. Another difference in sound should be attributed to Rob Burger‘s inclusion of accordion and harmonium, which both have a from-the-dirt demeanor to their sound. Also, Bill Douglass is on bass for this recording. Viktor Krauss, the bassist on El Viaje, has a sound far more suited to taking to the air. Now, from a big picture perspective, both Krauss and Douglass have cut their teeth in the World/Folk-Jazz subgenre, with Krauss’s sound a bit more modern and Douglass’s a bit more old-school (think: ECM). But on this recording, Douglass’s bass lines sound like they’re rolling over hills, and the addition of his ocarina, this was the right choice to have him on this recording.
Actually, speaking of personnel, here you go…
Your album personnel: Gabriela (vocals, acoustic guitar), Bill Frisell (guitars), Rob Burger (accordion, harmonium), Bill Douglass (bass, ocarina), Alex Acuna (drums, percussion), and Eyvind Kang (violin).
On Detras del Sol, Gabriela’s vocals are more song-like, and constructed as straight-ahead tunes (as opposed to El Viaje, where she was more inclined to expressions of words). It works better for the music on this album, and the use of a bit of restraint with the inflections doesn’t make her voice any less compelling. The match between her deeper voice and accordion is a delight. Alex Acuna‘s percussion fits the album’s sound to a tee, with no better example of this than the chipper “Hermana Maria.” Eyvind Kang‘s violin isn’t as prominent here as it is on El Viaje, but tracks like “Duerme” will give the listener their necessary fix.
Speaking of “Duerme,” it closes out the album, and, perhaps not coincidentally, it has much of the hazy atmosphere of El Viaje. A hint of things that were to come.
Released in 1997 on the Songline / Tonefield label. Released in Europe on the Intuition Music label.
You can stream two album tracks HERE, on the Songline site.
Available at eMusic. Available at Amazon: CD
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, The Two-Fer Review series • 1 • Tags: Best Jazz of the 90s, Jazz - Best of 2006