Showing posts with label Doug Weiss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doug Weiss. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2022

Marc Copland - Crosstalk (2011)

Crosstalk reunites Copland with alto saxophonist Greg Osby, but this time for a full-fledged quartet that brings a different complexion to a clearly simpatico relationship explored on their two duo recordings. It's not just a first-time quartet record for the pair, it's the first time that Copland has recorded (at least under his own name), with bassist Doug Weiss, while it's been five years since he last recorded with drummer Victor Lewis. They're both inspired choices, working empathically with Copland's signature impressionism and delicacy, but adding more punch and fire than has been heard from the pianist since his quartet date with trumpeter Randy Brecker, which, not coincidentally, also featured Lewis. With Copland sharing compositional duties amongst the group, in addition to a couple of well-chosen standards, the drummer's "Hey, It's Me You're Talkin' To" swings with a firm but elegant hand, Copland's harmonic ambiguity funneled through its light bop melody, his soft touch and motivic approach to solo development intact, but with more grounded pointillism than usual. Ditto Osby, a saxophonist who always combining heady intellectualism with a deeper resonance, as here he builds his own solo of focused construction, working melodic fragments into lengthier, serpentine phrases. Copland revisits "Talkin' Blues," first heard on another duet disc with Peacock, but this time this heavily reharmonized blues - another Copland signature - simmers and, occasionally boils over, with Weiss and Lewis pushing and pulling Osby during an incendiary opening solo. Copland's other two tunes appear here for the first time: the surprisingly driving and direct title track, grooves more viscerally than anything Copland's written in some time; and the more characteristically ethereal "Slow Hand," a brooding ballad that's a dark contrast to the free-bop of Weiss' angular but unfailingly swinging “Ozz-Thetic,” where Osby and Copland work off each other, proving that time needn't dilute the strength of relationship. “Tenderly,” skirts the mainstream, but Copland's voicings keep Walter Gross' standard just the slightest bit off-kilter, as does the pianist's prismatic approach to the more bristling intensity of Gigi Gryce's hard-swinging “Minority.” Crosstalk speaks to the power of enduring friendships and the sound of surprise that happens when fresh blood is brought into the mix. ~ Extract by John Kelman, AAJ. 

Pirouet Records, PIT3054, 2011
Recorded 4th & 5th December, 2010 Live To Two-Track at Bennett Studios, New Jersey 

Musicians:
Marc Copland - Piano
Greg Osby - Alto Saxophone
Doug Weiss - Bass
Victor Lewis - Drums 

Tracks:
1. Talkin' Blues {Marc Copland} (6:53)
2. Diary Of The Same Dream {Greg Osby} (4:22)
3. Ozz-Thetic {Doug Weiss} (4:11)
4. Tenderly {Walter Gross} (7:45)
5. Crosstalk {Marc Copland} (8:12)
6. Slow Hand {Marc Copland} (7:15)
7. Hey, It's Me You're Talkin' To {Victor Lewis} (4:51)
8. Three Four Civility {Greg Osby} (3:46)
9. Minority {Gigi Gryce} (6:33) 

Total Time: 53:53 

Credits:
Producer, Recording - Jason Seizer
Mastering - Christopher Stickel [MSM Studios]
Cover Design, Photography - Konstantin Kern, Munich
Liner Notes - Bill Zavatsky 

Talkin' Blues

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Kevin Hays Trio - What Survives (2001)

For the uninitiated What Survives is a strong entry point, highlighting Hays' abstract yet appealing writing, and a playing style that is filled with impressionistically out-of-the-box yet eminently lyrical musical thinking. It also demonstrates Hays' ability to innovatively adapt classical material that's as reverential yet improvisational. The album opens with three Hays originals, ranging from Stellar, whose dark and introspective solo piano introduction evolves into lithely swinging vehicle for understated interplay between Hays, Weiss and Stewart. The title track revolves around a repeated 11/8 bass figure doubled by Weiss and Hays' left hand - the piano treated to lend it a buzzing quality. Hays gradually builds a vivid yet economical solo while Stewart plays liberally with time placement. Hays applies a delicate electronic tremolo on the brooding Black Elk full of the subtle processing but not pop-inflected. Four adaptations of classical pieces follow, with Anniversary Waltz being the most well-known. Hays retains its familiar theme intact over Weiss and Stewart's vivid swing, but reharmonizations lend a more modernistic edge.  J.B. is the clear highlight of the album, demonstrating just how forward-thinking Hays' musical aesthetic is. Based on Brahms' Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, it opens with reverse-attack processed piano, but ultimately moves into an organic middle section that progressively narrows the 200-year gap between its composition and Hays' performance. An ambient reading of the classic You are My Sunshine ends the disc on an ambiguous note that proves beauty can be found in the most somber of places. The long break between albums may have cost Hays some momentum, but also works to his advantage in allowing him to reinvent himself. What Survives is hopefully just the beginning of a renewed career that will finally appeal to the larger jazz-buying public. ~ Extract by John Kelman, AAJ. 

PinonDisk Records, 001, 2005
NDS Records, NDS001, 2010
Recorded 13th March (#1,4) & 3rd December (#2-3,5-8), 2001
At Acoustic Recording, Brooklyn, New York 

Musicians:
Kevin Hays - Piano
Doug Weiss - Bass
Bill Stewart - Drums 

Tracks:
1. Stellar {Kevin Hays} (7:23)
2. What Survives {Kevin Hays} (3:41)
3. Black Elk {Kevin Hays} (4:33)
4. Anniversary Waltz {Josef Ivanovichi, Adpt. Kevin Hays} (7:25)
5. J.B. {Adaption Kevin Hays} (9:52)
6. Anton {Adaption Kevin Hays} (7:02)
7. Du Pre {Adaption Kevin Hays} (5:57)
8. You Are My Sunshine {Jimmie Davis} (5:58) 

Total Time: 51:51 

Credits:
Producer, Cover Painting - Kevin Hays
Engineer - Michael Brorby
Mastering - Katsuhiko Naito
Photography - Jimmy Katz, Onno de Jong, Lea Rubin, David Johnson 

"A beautiful record. Kevin Hays is a true original. Everything he plays has a deep intelligence and swing. This record showcases his own compositions. Doug Weiss and Bill Stewart on bass and drums are in top form. Highly recommended."  ~ Brad Mehldau.