Vozes Brasileiras

Vozes Brasileiras

Fall in New York means spring in Brazil, where soft breezes carry even softer voices, engaged in song. Singer/composer Ivan Lins is responsible for a great number of these songs.

Darcy James Argue’s Walk Through History

Darcy James Argue’s Walk Through History

In 2010, when Darcy James Argue wrote “Dymaxion,” a masterstroke for large ensemble, he knew it was the beginning of something bigger—a series of musical portraits, each celebrating a forward-looking, 20th-century thinker.

Living Legends

Living Legends

Built in 1770, the Ear Inn has been in constant service to the drinking public for more than 250 years. This colonial-era space also serves the listening public, though this history is less readily available, which is why Live at the Ear Inn (Arbor Records) by trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso and his octet The EarRegulars deserves attention.

Collaborations

Collaborations

Vocalist Kurt Elling and guitarist Charlie Hunter first started working together in 1995—their respective inclinations toward blues and funk expression must have generated an instant artistic rapport. But it would be about 25 years before they documented this musical relationship in the studio.

jaimie branch: Fly or Die

jaimie branch: Fly or Die

During jaimie branch’s too-short life—she died in August 2022 at age 39—the forward-leaning trumpeter challenged many a status quo. You can hear her tearing down walls on Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((world war)), her posthumous release for Chicago’s International Anthem label.

Defiance

Defiance

This month, several new albums defy the usual vocal jazz classifications.

Alice Coltrane Enters the Hall of Fame

Alice Coltrane Enters the Hall of Fame

Alice McLeod Coltrane Turiyasangitananda spent just four years of her life with tenor saxophonist John Coltrane. Momentous as those years were for them both, Alice’s influence as a musician extended beyond her towering relationship with John.

Globe Unity: Xénos / Melange / Creality

Globe Unity: Xénos / Melange / Creality

Drummer Srdjan Ivanovic has led a peripatetic musical life. Born in Bosnia, he spent part of his childhood in Greece before going on to earn two music degrees in the Netherlands and study on scholarship in New York—ultimately to land in Paris, his base of operation today. These diverse influences coalesce on Xénos (Rue des Balkans/Absilone/Socadisc), the debut album from his quintet by the same name. 

Saratoga Jazz Fest Presents a Tide of Musical Cross-Currents

Saratoga Jazz Fest Presents a Tide of Musical Cross-Currents

The Freihofer’s Saratoga Jazz Festival, now in its 46th year, hosted 21 topline acts at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center the weekend of June 24-25.  From any of the SPAC’s many concert stages, one could readily absorb the festival’s many musical cross-currents.

New Contexts

New Contexts

The appeal of José James’ music derives from his naturally resonant voice, so finely suited for soulful expressiveness. On his latest record, On & On: José James Sings Badu, the award-winning jazz singer uses this refined instrument to re-contextualize seven titles from singer/songwriter Erykah Badu’s impressive oeuvre.

Fleck/Hussain/Meyer: As We Speak

Fleck/Hussain/Meyer: As We Speak

Indian classical music has survived for millennia as a largely oral tradition passed on through musical family lines. Tabla player Zakir Hussein and bansuri player Rakesh Chaurasia both come from such lineages; throughout the world they are honored as keepers of this sacred, ancient art form. At the core of the musicians’ artistry lies an improvisational ability so virtuosic as to make Westerners’ ears spin—so it takes a unique musician to collaborate on equal footing with these two. On As We Speak (Thirty Tigers), banjoist Béla Fleck meets this challenge, with ready assist from double bassist Edgar Meyer.

2023 American PIanist Awards

2023 American PIanist Awards

On the second evening of this year’s American Pianists Association (APA) jazz competition in Indianapolis, contender Isaiah J. Thompson announced his final piece from the stage—it wasn’t listed in the program. “I’ll play one more, if that’s alright,” the 25-year-old said, as he introduced “Thank You, Betsy”, from his latest album, The Power of the Spirit (Blue Engine Records).

Arturo O'Farrill: The Trio as Jazz Orchestra

Arturo O'Farrill: The Trio as Jazz Orchestra

The cover of Arturo O’Farrill’s new trio album, Legacies (Blue Note), shows a 12-year-old O’Farrill sitting on his father’s knee. His legendary father, bandleader Chico O’Farrill, liked to spend hours listening to music of all sorts, often with his son by his side. This is how the younger O’Farrill absorbed his cultural inheritance—one vinyl spin at a time.

Voces Latinas

Voces Latinas

Bandleader/drummer Bobby Sanabria usually uses vocals on his recordings with Multiverse, his Grammy-nominated Afro-Cuban big band. He’ll sing himself, and the band will provide backup, and sometimes he’ll invite a dynamic singer like Charaneè Wade to front the group. On Vox Humana (Jazzheads), Sanabria continues to build on his interest in arranging for voices.

Rachel Eckroth Explores Her Jazz Predilections

Rachel Eckroth Explores Her Jazz Predilections

This arresting collection of solo pieces for acoustic piano—entirely improvised—reveals the powerful musical mind that feeds all of Rachel Eckroth’s ensemble projects.

Chico Pinheiro & Romero Lubambo: Two Brothers

Chico Pinheiro & Romero Lubambo: Two Brothers

A pair of mountains along the Ipanema coastline serves as inspiration for Two Brothers, the latest offering from Brazilian guitarists Chico Pinheiro and Romero Lubambo. The 12 duets on this Sunnyside release give expression to the breadth of the instrumentalists’ musical passions, from classic sambas to jazz standards to contemporary pop.

Special Guests

Special Guests

In the liner notes of the April release, Blue Room: The 1979 Vara Studio Sessions In Holland, Dutch journalist and Chet Baker biographer Jeroen de Valk challenges a myth about the last years of the trumpeter’s life. The myth—that Baker wandered aimlessly around Europe, idle and washed up—is easily disabused with one listen to this 2-disc set.

The Baylor Project’s Storefront Church Jazz

The Baylor Project’s Storefront Church Jazz

Hundreds of chrysanthemums filled the dim-lit room at Apparatus, a midtown Manhattan design studio where the Baylor Project performed for three nights last May. On a whim, the husband-wife duo decided to record the event. The pursuant album, The Evening: Live at Apparatus, would earn them their fifth and sixth Grammy nominations.   

Kurt Elling & Charlie Hunter, Superblue: Guilty Pleasures

Kurt Elling & Charlie Hunter, Superblue: Guilty Pleasures

Each track on singer Kurt Elling’s newest release with guitarist Charlie Hunter, Superblue: Guilty Pleasures, opens with a rhythmic signal: a rap on the rim, a kick against the skin, a thwack on a string. These salvos ignite the momentum of each tune—no question that what comes next is going to be decisive, powerful, and groove-heavy.

Epic Tales

Epic Tales

Forty years ago guitarist/singer John Pizzarelli released his debut album, I'm Hip (Please Don't Tell My Father). The father in this scenario is famed guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, who passed in 2020—just one of the jazz world’s many profound losses to Covid. John, like his other siblings, follows in his father’s outsized footsteps; to date, he’s recorded more than 20 solo albums and contributed to scores more as a guest. This month he adds another title to this impressive body of work: Stage & Screen, a carefully parsed collection of 12 songs from mainstream musicals and films.