CD review: a few in brief

Madeleine Peyroux: Standing On The Rooftop (Emarcy)
The singer continues to mix increasingly strong original writing into her recordings, but here we also get some old classics covered.

She opens with the Beatles’ Martha My Dear, which shows off her peerless ability to laze behind the beat (though not taking quite the jaw-dropping risks with phrasing that she does in concert), and also includes personal interpretations of Bob Dylan’s I Threw It All Away and Robert Johnson’s Love In Vain. For many, that last named will be a reminder of the Stones’ version, and there is another Stones’ connection on this disc: Bill Wyman is credited as co-writer of two songs. Other co-writers of the richly mood-varied originals include the superb Brooklyn violinist/singer and Bill Frisell collaborator, Jenny Scheinman.

Another charming, laid-back and gorgeously sung and played disc (producer is Craig Street) from the classiest of the jazz-linked, best-selling younger singers.

Linley Hamilton: Taylor Made (Lyte Records)
The Belfast-based trumpeter acknowledges the considerable contribution of pianist Johnny Taylor in the title of his album. Taylor’s playing and help with the arrangements, the grooves of bassist Dan Bodwell and drummer Dominic Mullan, and especially the distinctive breathy, sometimes almost trombone-like tone and fluency of the leader make this a jolly enjoyable hour.

The tunes are all from other sources, some from the great American songbook (Without A Song, This Can’t Be Love), some more modern jazz classics (Kenny Garrett’s Happy People and Woody Shaw’s Rosewood) and some from more poppy sources (Carole King and Gerry Goffin’s Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow and Paul Simon’s Have A Good Time).

Hamilton’s warm, Woody (Shaw) sound suits ballads like My Heart’s Desire very well (Taylor brings a nice Ramsey Lewis soul-jazz greasiness to his fills on this tune), but he can push hard at speed, too, as he does on This Can’t Be Love and Without A Song. He never loses sight of melodic playing, whatever the pace.

Hamilton has paid his dues in the bands of Van Morrison and Paul Brady, has his own show on BBC Radio Ulster and is currently studying for a PhD in jazz. Now he has a good. solid CD release to add to his CV.

The New Gary Burton Quartet: Common Ground (Mack Avenue)
The four-mallet vibraharpist has always shown an ear for a young guitarist with potential. After all, Burton band alumni include Pat Metheny, John Scofield and Kurt Rosenwinkel. But his earliest guitar signing has to be the teenage Julian Lage.

After a spell away working on his own material as leader, and while Burton was reuniting with Chick Corea to explore once again the duo material they developed on their ECM album Crystal Silence, Lage is now back in the band, alongside Scott Colley on bass and Antonio Sanchez on drums.

It’s a classy programme of band originals, plus some from previous band pianist Vadim Neselovskyi, one tune by Keith Jarrett and the Rodgers and Hart classic, My Funny Valentine. And the playing is classy, too. The interlinking of all four instruments is fascinating, and even when one of them is soloing, one never feels they are stepping out from the quartet, merely leading the mood for a while.

Burton has always had this lovely countryish (though not country & western), wide open spaces feel to his music, and Lage, Colley and Sanchez understand that fully. It was there in his recordings of 40 years ago, that jazz meets the rolling wheat fields feel. I think it was what prompted Metheny to take the route he did. And I’m pleased Burton has stayed true to it.

Miles Davis: Tutu (Warner Jazz)
A reissue of the Miles Davis album – or should that be the Marcus Miller album? – which was the 1986 first release on Davis’s new record company, after his near life-time stay with Columbia. All those who liked it then will like it now, even while reflecting that the sound and style hasn’t travelled all that well. It’s lush and rounded but the production sound and Miller’s influence so strong that it seems now rather too rooted in the ’80s.

But there are still some great grooves and great tunes here, and Davis will always sound timeless, no matter what surrounds him. The sound has been remastered, too, which is good as I suspect earlier CD versions fell foul of that late ’80s straight from LP to CD mix that always made the latter sound rather harsh.

To celebrate the re-release, and marking what would have been Davis’s 85th birthday, there is a second disc in this posh cardboard package, containing a previously unreleased live performance from the Nice Festival in July 1986. No Miller on this, with a band that includes Bob Berg on saxophone, Robben Ford on guitar, and Robert Irving and Adam Holzman on synths, but some of the music is from Tutu.

Thorough cover notes from Ashley Kahn and those gorgeous Irving Penn photographs complete the package.

Huntsville: For Flowers, Cars And Merry Wars (Hubro)
The Norwegian trio made two interesting albums for the Rune Grammofon label, but this is probably their most compelling yet, as they move even further into a kind of Americana trance territory. Interestingly, they were in this area long before Dan Berglund’s Tonbruket moved into town.

Ivar Grydeland plays stringed things of all kinds, guitar, banjo, pedal steel, whatever; Tonny Kluften plays all kinds of basses, electric, double, bass pedals, etc; Ingar Zach plays all kinds of hit things, from sarangi box to tabla machine to percussion. What they never sound like is a guitar trio.

The highlight of the album is the nearly 19 minute title track. It flows from mood to mood, coming and going with something of a Necks momentum, though with more chopping and changing. Hanne Hukkelberg is a guest and adds cool, slightly disconcerting vocals.

The other major track, Ear/Eye Connector, is an even more minimalist, electronic sound picture with a mesmerising rhythm that resembles a particularly unhappy fridge motor.

This recording has also been released on limited edition white vinyl. Look at www.hubromusic.com for more information.

Eddie Mendenhall: Cosine Meets Tangent (Miles High Records)
The pianist leader has written nearly all the songs, and their strong character, full of never quite obvious harmonic moves, and plenty of rhythmic push and pull, gives this disc and the band a strong character.

Mendenhall is a composerly, rooted and fairly low-key improviser, while vibes player Mark Sherman provides the sparks and flashes above. Drummer Akira Tana and bassist John Schifflett keep things tight.

Schiffllett articulates his solo on Spring Waltz beautifully, and vibes and piano weave in and out of each other in the bossa-tinged Rain Hike, while the title track has Mendenhall breaking out with a solo full of bounce and flair.

Score and film from ECM

Aside

Lots of goodies available from ECM either now or shortly, including the score of Llyria, the third disc from Nik Bartsch’s Ronin, so you can read along while listening; and a fab new DVD of a film called Sounds And Silence: Travels With Manfred Eicher, including music from Arvo Part, Jan Garbarek, Dino Saluzzi and Nik Bartsch. There’s also a CD available of music from the film. Reviews of those up here soon.

You can find out all about these at www.ecmrecords.com

Without Esbjorn

An image which is just as important for the absence at its heart as for the presence of the two musicians. Double bassist Dan Berglund and drummer Magnus Ostrom. It was taken by Garry Corbett when the pair made up E.S.T. with the late pianist Esbjorn Svensson. Dan Berglund’s band Tonbruket has released its second CD recently (you can read a review of the first one here, and of a live performance here), and Magnus Ostrom also released a CD earlier this year (reviewed here). For more of Garry Corbett’s rich and insightful photographs, not only with a jazz theme but a whole lot more, go to his flickr site here.

Picture © Garry Corbett

The week ahead in gigs

One of the most compulsively funky sounds of the 1970s, for those of us who can think that far back, was that of Tower Of Power.

TOP, as they were known for short, was an example of the background guys taking the spotlight, an instrumental version of the backing singers stepping into the spotlight. Here was a band where there might still be singers but the saxophonists and trumpeters were really calling the shots.

They certainly weren’t around when TOP were in their prime, but thanks to the evergreen nature of their greasy, brassy R & B/funk, a bunch of young jazz players show themselves not only to be fans, but prepared to rework their classic tunes for a new audience.

Rotunda Of Wonder

Given where they work, there was really only one name for this band of Brummies: Rotunda Of Wonder.

The horn men include some familiar names from the Conservatoire-spawned scene, and there is a strong contingent of Sub Ensemble members as well. Mike Adlington is on trumpet, along with Kevin Johnson, Lluis Mather and Colin Mills are on saxophones alongside Andy Isherwood, Tom Robins is on guitar, Matt Ratcliffe on organ, Chris Mapp on bass and Carl Hemingsley on drums. And doing the singing is Gaz Twist.

You can hear how all this goes together on TOP classics like Diggin’ On James Brown and It’s Not A Crime at the Rush Hour Blues session tomorrow night in Oozels Square, Brindleyplace. The funk starts at 5.30pm and goes till 7pm. And, of course, all you pay for are your drinks.

Much of the Midland jazz world seems to be taking a late summer break, but the Cobweb Collective keeps spinning, with the Barry Edwards Ensemble playing the Spotted Dog in Digbeth on Tuesday evening. The gig starts at 8.30pm, and there is an “audience donations” policy, which strikes me as a sensible compromise between free and door charge. More info at cobwebcollective.com

And before all that, there is the Steve Tromans/JJ Wheeler duo playing at The Yardbird this evening.

This is an exciting new collaboration between two performing & composing musicians. The project aims to manipulate well-trodden standards in an unfamiliar light, stretching the boundaries of form, harmony and rhythm to create open landscapes on which the intricacies of composition can be exposed and expanded upon.
This exciting and largely improvised approach to music often leads to spur-of-the-moment freely improvised composition by the duo as they create a dialogue that can be subtle and beautiful, or equally powerful and explosive.
Both musicians graduated from Birmingham Conservatoire with first class honours and this project continues throughout Steve’s PhD study (Middlesex University) and JJ’s Master of Arts (Royal Academy of Music, London). You can get a taste of the music via some clips of recordings Steve has added to this Aside.

The music starts around 9pm and entry is free.

Finally, a reminder that the second Harmonic Festival is not far away, and tickets are now on sale.

The first event is on Thursday, 29 September, with a Launch Party at The Yardbird in Paradise Forum.

The Norwegian theme kicks in big time on Friday with the amazing trumpeter Arve Henriksen, performing with soundscapers Dreams Of Tall Buildings, and continues on Saturday with the drummer/saxophonist partnership of Thomas Stronen and Iain Ballamy, called Food. (Henriksen was actually once a member of Food.)

Other bands on the bills include Percy Pursglove’s new project, Enchanted Heart; Mike Hurley’s Tasting Notes; Splice from London’s Loop Collective; Noose from Birmingham’s Cobweb Collective; and a solo marathon session from Steve Tromans.

It all happens at the MAC in Cannon Hill Park, and you can find out lots more at www.harmonicfestival.co.uk – there are links there to booking, or go straight to the MAC’s website: www.macarts.co.uk