Mostrando postagens com marcador Maisha. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Maisha. Mostrar todas as postagens

9.11.22

GARY BARTZ AND MAISHA - Night Dreamer Direct-to-Disc Sessions (2020) lp | FLAC (tracks), lossless

In the aftermath of Maisha's successful Brownswood debut There Is a Place, label boss Gilles Peterson selected them to back American alto legend Gary Bartz's headline appearance at the inaugural We Out Here Festival in 2019. The gig went off so well that Bartz took them on tour, and to play a We Out Here gig at London's Royal Albert Hall during the EFG London Jazz Festival. During the European tour they spent two days at Night Dreamer studios where they committed this session to tape. Maisha's personnel changed after their album: Nubya Garcia left (temporarily) to attend to her own band's projects. Session trumpeter Axel Kaner-Lidstrom became a full-time member, while original keyboardist Amané Suganami was replaced by Al MacSween and percussionist Tim Doyle took Yahael Camara-Onono's spot.

These tracks are kinetic exercises in musical joy. The material includes three original tunes developed during the tour, plus re-worked versions of two Bartz tunes from the '70s: "Uhuru Sasa" and "Doctor Follows Dance." Hard-grooving jazz-funk is the M.O. achieved via monstrous vamps, fingerpopping melodies, and interlocking rhythms. The killer interplay between the massively funky drum kit and percussion that introduce "Harlem to Haarlem" lets frontline horns work off rising star Shirley Tetteh's chunky guitar. Twm Dylan's roiling bass and fretless bass, and MacSween's Rhodes and organ vamps offer an indestructible frame for in-the- cut solos by alto sax and trumpet. "The Stank" is a dancefloor earworm. Aesthetically, this single recalls Herbie Hancock's themes from Fat Albert Rotunda, but is more intricate. Bartz's phrasing and soloing register his long-established trademark even as he outlines the rhythm section's tough play. The knotty head comes directly from hard bop while the dirty funk recalls the Meters. Tetteh's guitar break matches the saxophonist's solo in imagination and taste. Hinge track “Leta’s Dance” commences as a spacy, summery ballad, but morphs first into a steamy samba before shapeshifting again into a loping spiritual homage to Pharoah Sanders' "The Creator Has a Master Plan." Twm Dylan's compelling bass leads both "Uhuru Sasa" and “Dr Follows Dance." Jake Long doles out layers of molten breaks in both without sacrificing the beat. Bartz's modal soloing meets Tetteh's punchy chords and white-hot solo while MacSween's dirty comping creates an expansive yet ever-soulful collision of harmony and rhythm. Cut live to disc without the possibility for edits or overdubs, mistakes get made, but none get in the way. Make no assumptions, though: Night Dreamer is not a free-for-all jam; the music and charts here may be uncomplicated but are also tightly arranged and sophisticated -- everything is in its proper place, including the grit and grease -- placed in service to the almighty groove, with no room for overplaying or peacocking. Issued in time for Bartz's 80th birthday, this set is a zenith for 21st century jazz-funk.
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SIDE A
1    Harlem - Haarlem 8:25
Written-By – Gary Bartz, Maisha
2    The Stank 7:35
Written-By – Gary Bartz, Maisha
SIDE B
1    Leta's Dance 8:44
Written-By – Gary Bartz, Maisha
2    Uhuru Sasa 3:24
Written-By – Gary Bartz
3    Dr Follows Dance 7:13
Written-By – Gary Bartz
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Gary Bartz
Double Bass, Electric Bass – Twm Dylan
Drums – Jake Long
Electric Guitar – Shirley Tetteh
Keyboards – Al MacSween
Percussion – Tim Doyle
Performer, Producer – Gary Bartz, Maisha
Trumpet – Axel Kaner-Lindstrom

e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...