Showing posts with label Erica Lindsay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erica Lindsay. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Erica Lindsay, Sumi Tonooka - Initiation (2004)

Recorded back in 2004, this is a brand-new release on the cusp of becoming a welcome rediscovery. A quartet jazz session featuring compositions by tenor saxophonist/Bard College professor Erica Lindsay and pianist Sumi Tonooka along with an absolutely killer rhythm section of Rufus Reid on bass and Bob Braye on drums, most of this dexterously walks the line between purism and accessibility. Lindsay plays with a confident, smoky tone and a keen sense of melody; likewise, Tonooka’s style is comfortably bluesy and assured. Reid is his usual fluid, smartly melodic self and Braye - who sadly did not live to see this album released – turns in a powerful, memorable performance. If this was his swan song, he picked a hell of a note to go out on, whether getting the cymbals shimmering on a turnaround or elevating the third track above the level of So What homage with an aggressive, full-scale, Elvin Jones-style charge. The opening track, Mari is a catchy, hook-based swing number; Lindsay evokes Joe Henderson with her casually tuneful, wee hours vibe reasserted by Sunooka and then Reid, cleverly foreshadowing Lindsay’s return from the bar. Mingus Mood, a thoughtful ballad, is less Mingus than Grover Washington Jr. (don’t laugh!!!) in purist mode, i.e., circa All My Tomorrows, almost minimalist as Lindsay and then Reid carries the tune over Tonooka’s tersely precise chords. The title track playful shifts from tricky, winking intro to a casual Lindsay solo that she builds smartly and casually around a series of rapid-fire clusters; Tonooka deftly works her solo rhythmically with Latin flourishes. The somewhat hypnotic Serpent’s Tail plays an understated rhumba rhythm off a repetitive Reid riff that both sax and piano use as a springboard for expansively tasteful excursions. The late 50s riff-driven swing vibe returns pleasantly with In the Void, followed by the ballad Somewhere Near Heaven which powerfully contrasts brooding, sometimes ominous, Bill Mays-ish piano with pensively optimistic sax. Black Urgency shuffles with a tunefulness and sense of direction worthy of JD Allen and features Braye at his most counterintuitive and incisive. The album closes with arguably its strongest (and most rhythmically challenging) number, simply titled Yes, Lindsay and then Tonooka at their most forceful and memorable, whether pulsing on the beat or swirling with rivulets of glissandos. There’s a lot to enjoy here, more than an hour’s worth of tunes. ~ LucidCulture. 

Artists Recording Collective, ARC2000, 2009
Recorded 19th-23rd October, 2004 At John Hodians Studio, Woodstock, New York 

Musicians:
Erica Lindsay - Tenor Saxophone
Sumi Tonooka - Piano
Rufus Reid - Bass
Bob Braye - Drums 

Tracks:
01. Mari {Erica Lindsay} (5:26)
02. Mingus Mood {Sumi Tonooka} (7:50)
03. South Street {Sumi Tonooka} (7:41)
04. Initiation {Sumi Tonooka} (5:37)
05. Serpent's Tale {Erica Lindsay} (8:16)
06. In The Void {Sumi Tonooka} (8:34)
07. Somewhere Near Heaven {Erica Lindsay} (5:39)
08. Black Urgency {Erica Lindsay} (6:19)
09. The Gift {Sumi Tonooka} (8:17)
10. Yes {Erica Lindsay} (6:06) 

Total Time: 69:45

Credits:
Producer, Mixing & Mastering - Erica Lindsay
Producer - Sumi Tonooka
Recording Engineer - Bob Beleicki
Design, Photography - Paul Tsang

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Erica Lindsay Quartet - Yes- Live At The Rosendale Café (2001)

Recorded live at our very own Rosendale Café, the Erica Lindsay Quartet checks in with a superb new release, "Yes." Lindsay (saxophone) along with Francesca Tanksley on piano, Otto Gardner bass and Bob Braye drums, explodes with the title track her Coltrane influences every-where. The dark "Dusk-Fall" has a sneaky, slinky almost espionage feel. "Gently" also has dark alley implications, while "Blues Up" simplifies things to three chords, without being simple. The prolonged excursion of "Gotta Get To It" is a highlight, as Lindsay searches and reaches for that special place. "Seriously" is hopeful and optimistic and everyone excels here. An inventive, emotional player with technique to die for, Lindsay and her quartet prove once again, live music is where the magic hap-pens. ~ David Malachowski, DailyFreeman.com.

Artists Recording Collective, ARC-2215, 2008
Recorded 29th September, 2001 Live At The Rosendale Café, Rosendale, NY 

Musicians:
Erica Lindsay - Tenor Saxophone, Arranger
Francesca Tanksley - Piano
Otto Gardner - Bass
Bob Braye - Drums 

Tracks:
1. Yes {Erica Lindsay} (9:09)
2. Dusk/Fall {Mikhail Horowitz/Erica Lindsay} (9:36)
3. Dance Of The Elves {Erica Lindsay} (9:16)
4. Gently {Erica Lindsay} (6:45)
5. Blues Up {Erica Lindsay} (7:59)
6. Gotta Get To It {Erica Lindsay} (11:06)
7. Night Of Roses {Erica Lindsay} (6:52)
8. Seriously {Erica Lindsay} (8:51) 

Total Time: 69:36

Note:
Applause including crowd noises carefully removed for better listening.

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Erica Lindsay - Dreamer (1989)

This is the debut album by the talented tenorist Erica Lindsay. Erica handpicked the musicians for this session: Howard Johnson on tuba, baritone sax, flugelhorn and pennywhistle; Robin Eubanks on trombone; Francesca Tanksley on piano; Anthony Cox on bass and Newman Baker on drums. She composes five of the six tunes, and arranges those with Howard Johnson stepping in on "Day Dream". 

Erica Lindsay's tenor sax is laid back and breathy, and it suits her compositions-which account for five of the cuts on this, her first recording under her own name. The drive of the piece though, comes from Howard Johnson, who plays from the bottom (tuba and baritone sax) to the top (penny whistle). Robin Eubanks makes a trombone appearance on one cut, too. The album as a whole is satisfying and fresh. ~ Jack Fuller, Chicago Tribune.  

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Candid Records, CS 9040, 1992
Recorded 3rd-5th March 1989 At Clinton Studios, New York City

Musicians:
Erica Lindsay - Tenor Saxophone
Howard Johnson - Tuba, Baritone Saxophone, Flugelhorn, Pennywhistle
Robin Eubanks - Trombone
Francesca Tanksley - Piano
Anthony Cox - Bass
Newman Baker - Drums 

Tracks:
A1. First Moment {Erica Lindsay} (8:55)
A2. Day Dream {Billy Strayhorn, Duke Ellington, John LaTouche} (6:21)
A3. Walking Together {Erica Lindsay} (7:15)
B1. Dreamer {Erica Lindsay} (6:57)
B2. At The Last Moment {Erica Lindsay} (6:48)
B3. Gratitude {Erica Lindsay} (7:58)

Total Time: 44:14

Credits:
Executive-Producer - Alan Bates
Recording Engineer, Producer - David Baker
Producer - Kenny Inaoka
Design - Eliko Yamanaka, Takeshi Masuda
Photography - Shunsuke Yamamoto
Liner Notes - Nat Hentoff 

Also released as Candid Records [CCD 79040]

Magnificent !!!
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Certainly, one of our most Unsung Current Reed Players! Erica Lindsay plays w/ passion, flexibility and originality. All of her recordings are must haves, but this one, her first remains my personal favorite. A great cast of supporting, innovative musicians as well - Robin Eubanks, Francesca Tanksley, Howard Johnson, Anthony Cox, Newman Baker. An Absolute Gem! ~ Robert Ricketts, 5 Stars, Amazon.com
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