martes, 23 de septiembre de 2014

The Elvin Jones Project Michael Feinberg goes to the scene of Greenwich House Music, NY, October 4 next

Michael Feinberg and Billy Hart
“Feinberg follows in the tradition of bassist-leaders like Charles Mingus and Dave Holland creating demanding challenges for his sideman.” NYC Jazz Record


Electronic boops and beeps are the first thing you hear on bassist Michael Feinberg's The Elvin Jones Project. This could either be a good sign or a bad one. Fortunately it's the former, and it acts as an effective reminder that drummer Elvin Jones was a pioneering and exploratory musician whose legacy extends well beyond his years with the legendary John Coltrane Quartet. If he had, say, quit drumming after leaving Coltrane's band, Jones would still be recognized as a towering and innovative force in jazz. Though the value of his subsequent recordings for Blue Note, Vanguard, Enja, PM, and various other small labels seems to be a matter of some controversy, a cursory survey will turn up abundant musical gold. Moreover, Jones' playing continued to evolve and change right up to his death in 2004. Sadly, it seems that many have already forgotten how fresh, distinctive and revolutionary his music really is. Feinberg, obviously, has not forgotten and this CD—easily one of the best tribute CDs of the past few years—is well-researched, soulfully executed, and comes across as thoroughly contemporary.
Feinberg is a talented young bassist who noticed early on that many of his favorite bassists—Jimmy GarrisonGene PerlaGeorge Mraz, and Richard Davis to name a few—had longstanding musical relationships with the great drummer. Clearly The Elvin Jones Projectis Feinberg's labor of love. The band he's assembled for this recording is nothing short of amazing, though its instrumentation is a bit unexpected. Jones, it seems, rarely worked with trumpeters, aside from his brother Thad Jones, who appears on several early recordings. Instead, Jones preferred two, or even three, saxophones in his front lines.
Yet,Tim Hagans sounds pitch perfect right down to his very Thad Jones-like velvety tone. Veteran tenor titan George Garzone is the sole reedman, and seems a natural choice given his deep knowledge of post-Coltrane saxophone artistry. Garzone has also worked with the Argentinian keyboardist Leo Genovese. Genovese—a longstanding member of Esperanza Spalding's band—like Feinberg seems to have an innate knowledge of the style and demands of this music despite his youth. Billy Hart is a perfect choice for the drum chair; he's a player who's been around long enough to soak up the essential characteristics of Jones' sound and phrasing, yet authoritative enough to play from his own point of view. Hart's profound understanding of Jones' drumming crystallizes during his lengthy solo on "The Unknighted Nations."
Michael Feinberg, bass, composer, arranger, educator and bandleader, is thrilled by the special performance that will take place next October 4 this year at the Greenwich House Music in New York, where the new arrangements would provide its Project Elvin Jones company as favorite musicians: Jean Michel Pilc, Noah Preminger and Ian Froman. 
The appointment is double at 8 and 10 pm
Here are Michael and his Band Live at Churchill Grounds in Atlanta, GA:



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