Posts Tagged ‘Sunnyside Records’

Composer/Guitarist Joel Harrison Negotiates Contrasting Textures and Genres on His Stunning New All-Star Septet Album, SEARCH

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

March 27, 2012 on Sunnyside Records

Featuring Donny McCaslin, Gary Versace, Christian Howes, Dana Leong, Stephan Crump & Clarence Penn

Joel Harrison’s latest CD, Search, finds the critically acclaimed composer/guitarist challenging himself compositionally, using extended forms and techniques borrowed from many of his favorite classical composers. The end result transcends style and genre – the writing is stunning, and cements Harrison as one of the most important contemporary composers of the day.

The compositions flow seamlessly, instantly immersing the listener in a coherent, rich, dynamic sound world.  Pieces such as “Grass Valley and Beyond” and “The Beauty of Failure” have rich, memorable melodies that stick with the listener long after the album ends.  Complex rhythmic motion is a hallmark of the multi-layered, emotionally wrenching “A Magnificent Death,” which Harrison describes as the centerpiece of the record. This 15-minute mini-epic tells the story of a close friend who died in 2009. The piece opens with an austere repeated arpeggio in the strings and piano, then transitions to a melody layered over a circular 5/4 groove. Saxophonist Donny McCaslin plays a spell-binding solo. From there the band dissolves into a compelling solo piano interlude from Gary Versace, that could easily stand on its own as a fully-notated keyboard piece. By the end all the various threads of the piece come together in a moving finale as virtuosic as it is cathartic.

Harrison is known for seeking unusual sources for cover tunes amidst his own composing, as on his George Harrison project Harrison on Harrison and his truly “alt-country” project Free Country featuring Norah Jones, Uri Caine and longtime Paul Simon keyboardist/accordionist Tony Cedras. Few others could convincingly juxtapose The Allman Brothers’ “Whipping Post” with a little-known 1937 choral motet, “O Sacrum Convivium” by 20th century classical giant Olivier Messiaen. Harrison claims he is not attempting any sort of grandiose statement by this apparent collision. “I simply love both pieces of music, and felt that their addition to the project balanced the four tunes I penned and added to the flow of the album.”

In fact, Harrison is deeply rooted in the music of The Allman Brothers, among others. “Live at the Fillmore East has been one of the most important records of my life,” he says.  ”At heart I may be more a blues than a jazz player. The Messiaen piece is an astonishingly lovely melody with chords that sound like they might have come out of jazz harmony. It seemed like a piece Paul Motian might have written.” The influence of Motian is not surprising, as Harrison’s previous Sunnyside release The Music of Paul Motian sought to re-contextualize the great drummer’s oeuvre with the Joel Harrison String Choir, made up entirely of string instruments and devoid of drums.

The stellar cast of players that Harrison has assembled here shows his deep immersion in the New York jazz scene, while demonstrating a sensitive ear for what types of players would work well for the music. Each band member contributes a singular sound and wide-ranging ability. Violinist Christian Howes and cellist Dana Leong, both classically trained and longtime Harrison collaborators are considered by many to be two of the top improvisers in the world on their respective instruments (Leong takes a ripping solo on “Whipping Post”). Donny McCaslin, the towering tenor saxophonist of immense technique and grace is used by everyone from trumpeter Dave Douglas to saxophonist Dave Binney to composers Maria Schneider and George Gruntz. Gary Versace, a multi-instrumentalist equally versatile on piano, organ and Fender Rhodes (among many other keyboard variants), is frequently called upon by everyone from jazzy pop chanteuse Madeleine Peyroux to drummer-composer John Hollenbeck. Stephan Crump, a sensitive and unique accompanist and bandleader also supports the likes of pianist Vijay Iyer, guitarists Jim Campilongo and Liberty Ellman and singer-songwriter Jen Chapin. Clarence Penn is the drummer of choice for multiple Grammy-winning composer Maria Schneider and celebrated trumpeter-composer Douglas. All are bandleaders in their own right. What all of these players share in common is an ability to give voice to the composer’s intentions, no matter what the style, and to get to the heart of the compositions. They are all extremely technically adept, yet their chops are secondary to the finesse and soul that they bring to this gripping new project.

The title illustrates Harrison’s philosophy for life. “Search”, he explains “is what I do everyday as an artist and human being. The older I get, the more I realize how much I have to learn, and how little time there is to do so. Keeping open, inquisitive, finding new possibilities is what art and life are all about.”

OUT TODAY: “Goldberg Variations / Variations” by Acclaimed Jazz Pianist Dan Tepfer

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

The Jazz Pianist’s Recording of J.S. Bach’s Iconic “Goldbergs”

Along With Tepfer’s Own Improvised Variations to Bach’s

OUT TODAY VIA SUNNYSIDE RECORDS

Dan Tepfer has created a kaleidoscopic experience with his solo album Goldberg Variations / Variations, the jazz pianist approaching J.S. Bach’s masterpiece – one of the classical canon’s most totemic works – as an inspiring font for creativity. Interspersed with his affectionate interpretation of the complete “Goldbergs” are his own improvised variations on Bach’s variations. No Jacques Loussier-style swinging of the classics, Tepfer’s variations are marked by a ruminative joy, spiced with contemporary dissonances and a deep feel for the source as timeless music beyond category. Goldberg Variations / Variations will be released on CD and digitally by Sunnyside Records in the U.S. on November 8th, 2011. In Europe, the album will be issued via Sunnyside/Naïve on November 10th.

Although the Goldberg Variations are beloved now as an entrancing, virtually sacred work of art, Johann Sebastian Bach published the score – consisting of an “aria” and a set of 30 variations – in 1741 as a keyboard study, with the piece later nicknamed for the harpsichordist who might have been its first performer. From Glenn Gould to Pierre Hantaï, the modern world’s greatest classical artists have performed and recorded the “Goldbergs.” Investing himself totally in music he has known since childhood, Dan Tepfer recorded his completely solo, even engineering the late-night sessions himself for total immersion in the process. The result is both utterly individual and genuinely moving.

Goldberg Variations / Variations is the 29-year-old, New York-based Tepfer’s sixth album as leader or co-leader, following three heading a trio, one of solo piano improvisations, and another featuring duets with veteran saxophone luminary Lee Konitz. Known for his rare improvisational gift and a complex yet melodic approach to music-making, the prize-winning pianist has been hailed as “a player of exceptional poise” by The New York Times, while DownBeat extolled his “ability to disappear into the music as he’s making it.”

For those who deem Bach’s music untouchable, they should remember Stravinsky’s rejoinder to those who criticized his transformation of Baroque compositions in Pulcinella as disrespectful: “You ‘respect,’ but I love,” he said. As for Tepfer, he says: “What I’m doing is definitely loving. But instead of recording the Goldberg Variations and then writing lengthy liner notes about how I feel about them, I’m expressing how I feel about them in music, with my improvisations on Bach’s variations. One challenge was switching gears – playing this classical music that’s a real test for me and for so many pianists, then the next minute really improvising and being free.”

With Bach using the same chord progression throughout the Goldberg Variations, his musical process wasn’t as different from jazz as it might seem. “That is really what we do in jazz, particularly when playing standards,” Tepfer explains. “We take the chord progression of a tune, and it’s often as simple as Bach’s Aria, and we make variations on it. Lee Konitz has been playing the same tunes his whole life. One of the amazing things about him is you’ll play the same song with him on tour night after night – say, ‘All the Things You Are’ – and it will be really different every night. So if you recorded all of those and put them end to end, it might sound like what Bach had done with the ‘Goldbergs,’ taking one simple piece of material and weaving all these different emotional states into it. With my improvisations, it was a case of, how much more diversity can I get out of this chord progression? And what’s really important to me as an improviser is to have a voice. So I’m reacting to Bach with my own tone, my own vocabulary.”

Tepfer recorded the album alone – producing the sessions himself in the middle of the night – in the Yamaha Artist Services Salon in Manhattan, playing one of Yamaha’s new CFX hand-built concert grand pianos. “I think if Glenn Gould were recording the ‘Goldbergs’ with our technology today, he would’ve wanted to do it just as I did,” Tepfer says. “He loved to work late at night, basically alone in the studio with just the engineers in the booth that he had to have. In the situation that I had, I could work alone all night long if I wanted. I wasn’t trying to impress anyone, there wasn’t any pressure. There was just me, the piano and me listening to myself. I could take my time figuring things out. It was ideal.”

Goldberg Variations / Variations will elicit surprise in many listeners that what might seem like a crazy idea works so beautifully. It might even help prompt some to reconsider concepts of genre – that music doesn’t necessarily have to be classical or jazz, that sometimes it can be just music. Mostly, Tepfer hopes listeners are moved by the album, “because I think the Goldberg Variations are one of the most profoundly affecting masterpieces,” he says. “From this tiny piece of material, Bach was able to express this incredible range of feeling, from a visceral delight to the most introspective sadness. And the fact that all the variations flow together and make this complete whole is a way for Bach to convey how all these different emotions are part of life and that they belong together. The contrast is what makes a complete life, and a complete work of art.”

Pianist/Composer Dan Tepfer Releases Trio Album “Five Pedals Deep” on Sunnyside Records – October 26, 2010

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Album features Dan Tepfer (piano),  Thomas Morgan (bass)
and Ted Poor (drums)



CD RELEASE PERFORMANCE
@ Jazz Standard
October 26, 2010
(7:30 & 9:30pm)

Exclusive Album Preview & Online Press Kit:
Dan Tepfer Trio — Five Pedals Deep
(contact us for password)

Photo: Vincent Soyez

In his forthcoming trio release, Five Pedals Deep on Sunnyside Records, wildly inventive pianist Dan Tepfer plumbs the depths of conventional harmony, engaging pop modalities, minimalism, and jazz tradition with the audacity and irreverence of a deep-sea explorer. The 28-year-old, Brooklyn-based pianist has forged a richly layered collection of lyrical, immediately accessible compositions that upon repeated listenings reveal a nuanced scaffolding of atmospheric soundscapes beneath the surface.

Beyond the eclectic influence of such vanguard groups as indie rockers Dirty Projectors and electronica maven Aphex Twin, Tepfer drew much of his inspiration for the album from Thelonious Monk. “When you listen to Monk’s music, you can put it on for anybody, it doesn’t matter if they’re into jazz, and they love it,” says Tepfer. “The reason for that is that it’s got really strong melodies, there’s a real coherence to the sound, it grooves, and there’s a strong feeling of fun that comes through in the music. I think in many ways I’m trying to do a contemporary version of that.”

The album title originates from a bibulous evening Tepfer spent with a cousin. “We were at a party, and we’d drunk five bottles of wine, and she said something like, ‘You get pretty happy when you’re five bottles deep.’ What I heard was ‘five pedals deep,’ and I thought that was a beautiful way of expressing the feeling I often get when I’m playing, a feeling of being drunk on music,” says Tepfer. “A pedal is a long bass note that ties different harmonies together, and it’s one of my favorite musical devices.”

Tepfer features the deft interplay of two eminent musical contemporaries, bassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Ted Poor, a departure from his longtime collaboration with bassist Jorge Roeder and drummer Richie Barshay, his touring trio for the past six years.

“It’s like when you’ve been married for a long time,” says Tepfer. “You just know someone so well that even if you are completely improvising, you can still hear in your head how he’s going to react. With Thomas and Ted, there was none of that. I had no idea.”

The “sound of surprise” is evident throughout, the players never relying on reflexive facility as they navigate the varied terrains of Tepfer’s original compositions, mostly written over the past two years. This ranges from the minimalist ostinato of “All I Heard Was Nothing,” to the dense drum ’n bass-inspired rhythms of “Peal Repeal,” to the languorously dissonant beauty of “The Distance,” with four minute-long interludes serving as connective tissue. Tepfer’s visceral tie to the music cuts through in the wistfully nostalgic “Le Plat Pays,” Belgian troubadour Jacques Brel’s stirring homage to his homeland.

“Growing up in Paris, my first girlfriend was a huge Jacques Brel fan,” Tepfer says. “I just remember learning the lyrics and being so captivated by that tune in particular. There’s so much meaning contained in this appearance of simplicity.”

In his solo rendition of “Body and Soul,” Tepfer includes a subtle nod to mentor Lee Konitz, conspicuous by his absence, although Konitz’s influence is deeply felt. “Nobody plays ‘Body and Soul’ like Lee does,” Tepfer says. In 2009, he released a duo album with Konitz called Duos with Lee. “One thing that’s really come up for me in the last four years now, playing with Lee pretty regularly, is the integrity of melody. I feel sinful if a phrase doesn’t get resolved.”

Born to American parents, Tepfer spent his first 18 years in Paris, beginning classical piano studies at the Paris Conservatoire Paul Dukas at the age of six. He had improvisation in his blood, though, inherited from his grandfather, West Coast jazz pianist Chuck Ruff. With a fecund intellect that extends far beyond music theory, Tepfer went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in astrophysics from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, writing his undergraduate thesis on “Numerical Simulations of Galactic Superwinds.”

While in Scotland, he also played in the Edinburgh Jazz Festival and the International Fringe Festival, even conducting a production of Gian Carlo Menotti’s The Telphone. He later earned a master’s degree from the New England Conservatory in Boston, and has performed alongside legendary jazz musicians Steve Lacy, Paul Motian, Ralph Towner, and Billy Hart, among others.

Though at this point his passion for cosmology has taken a back seat to his musical career, it continues to inform his worldview. “I think the tone of my music reflects who I am, and who I am is somebody who is fascinated by the huge scale of the universe,” Tepfer says. “I love seeing myself on the earth from really far away, and I’m sure that comes out in the music somehow.”

Website:  http://www.dantepfer.com/
Twitter:  http://twitter.com/tepferdan

RELEASE DATE: OCTOBER 26, 2010

For more information, please contact
Matt Merewitz at Fully Altered Media
matt@fullyaltered.com
(215) 629-6155

Designed by Doctor Sandwich.