Showing posts with label Tom Guarna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Guarna. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 6, 2021

Manuel Valera And New Cuban Express - In Motion (2014)

What’s new in the idiom of jazz? The next generation of Cuban musicians have arrived. Look no further than what they have brought with them. They have infused the Blues and Jazz with Blues and Jazz of their own. Their music is tempestuous, beguiling and always exciting. Like making that left turn unexpectedly to find something so inviting that the listener is stopped in his or her tracks. This new album by Manuel Valera and the New Cuban Express In Motion is the third release since Mr. Valera formed the band. The new cast of characters includes the terrific bassist, Hans Glawischnig and awesome trumpeter Alex Sipiagin. This incarnation makes them somewhat stronger than they have ever been, their sound has become rounder and fuller with the addition of a trumpet and the more voluptuous acoustic bass. Manuel Valera has taken musical meter and stretched it as far as it possibly can. His writing plays on the innermost ear like a very fast game of hopscotch, swinging, skittering and chasing the stone. Of all of the Cuban pianists playing today Mr. Valera’s pianism is most strongly aligned to classic melodicism. The rhythmic element of his left hand exists in the dance-like structure that holds up the melody like an edifice that is suddenly built before the wonderstruck listener. His statements are elaborate as he expands on the geometry of the melody making wondrous structures in a high-wire act that is breathtaking to behold. Here, on In Motion his music unfolds best in the collaborative effort that he has forged with this ensemble. His ability to arrive in the limelight and withdraw from it is generous. This is evident in most of the music here, but is especially gracious on "Descargando," the profoundly beautiful "Bantu" and the epic "Storyteller," which are just three of the defining tracks on this exquisite album. ~ Extract by Raul Da Gama, LatinJazzNet.com. 

Criss Cross Jazz, Criss 1372 CD, 2014
Recorded 29th January, 2014 at Systems Two Recording Studios, Brooklyn, New York 

Musicians:
Manuel Valera - Piano, Fender Rhodes
Alex Sipiagin - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Yosvany Terry - Alto & Soprano Saxophones, Chekeré
Tom Guarna - Guitar
Hans Glawischnig - Bass
Ludwig Alfonso - Drums
Mauricio Herrera - Percussion 

Tracks:
1. Descargando {Manuel Valera} (6:24)
2. Preamble {Manuel Valera} (8:55)
3. Bantu {Manuel Valera} (6:48)
4. No Puedo Ser Felix {José Arturo Méndez} (5:42)
5. Storyteller {Manuel Valera} (8:45)
6. Mirrors {Manuel Valera} (7:19)
7. Para Emiliano {Manuel Valera} (6:23)
8. NYC {Manuel Valera} (6:37)
9. Factors {Manuel Valera} (6:22) 

Total Time: 63:23

Credits:
Producer - Gerry Teekens
Recording & Mixing Engineer - Michael Marciano
Mastering - Max Ross
Photography - Jimmy Katz
Design - Gerry Teekens/Bloemendaal In Vorm

Friday, January 3, 2020

George Colligan's Mad Science - Realization (2005)

George Colligan seems to have all the ingredients for a funky good time on his Mad Science trio’s new disc Realization: his trusty Hammond B3 organ, augmented by various synths and samples; guitarist Tom Guarna and drummer Rodney Holmes, both veterans of combining funk and jazz; nine Colligan originals written for the trio; and a band name that indicates that he’s up to something wacky. The problem lies in those nine originals-most of them don’t have melodies memorable enough to make a listener want to follow them as they are transformed through the standard head-solos-head format.

The title “Human Need” overstates the case for a wanly wistful theme, “Snidely Whiplash” begins with a promising snarl but spools on too long in a way no Dudley Do-Right cartoon ever would and the predictable lurches of “Reminder” make its melody more nagging than evocative. Mad Science fares better the funkier it gets, with the sticky groove of “Goblet of Rock” providing some traction and the headlong rush of “Oblivion” making its melodic material work by not paying much attention to it. ~ Andrew Lindemann Malone, JazzTimes.

Sirocco Jazz Ltd., SJL 1030, 2005
Recorded September, 2004 At Astoria Soundworks, New York, NY

Musicians:
George Colligan - Electric Organ [Hammond B-3], Synthesizer
Tom Guarna - Guitar
Rodney Holmes - Drums

Tracks:
01. Grounded {George Colligan} (6:36)
02. Snidely Whiplash {George Colligan} (6:36)
03. Realization {George Colligan} (5:47)
04. Oblivion {George Colligan} (5:39)
05. Blue Box {Tom Guarna} (0:48)
06. Human Need {George Colligan} (7:07)
07. Utopian Struggle {George Colligan} (7:09)
08. Muse {George Colligan} (2:13)
09. Reminder {George Colligan} (4:51)
10. Goblet Of Rock {George Colligan} (7:11)
11. Stockholm Street Breakdown {Rodney Holmes} (1:51)

Credits:
Producer - George Colligan
Assistant Producer - Tom Guarna, Rodney Holmes
Executive Producer - John Priestley
Recording Engineer - Tim Moes
Mixing & Mastering Engineer - Kamilo Kratc
Studio Supervisor - Sal Amato
Photography [Band] - Jerry Ciotola
Cover Artwork [Grey Fox] - Liza Phoenix

Total Time: 55:48