Posts Tagged ‘trio’

Marco Cappelli Acoustic Trio Releases “Les Nuages En France” on Mode Records; NYC Release Party May 1st

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Guitarist Marco Cappelli Releases Les Nuages En France,
With His Acoustic Trio Featuring Ken Filiano & Satoshi Takeishi
On Mode Records’ Avant Series


With Music Inspired By The Crime Novels of Fred Vargas

New York City CD Release Party
May 1, 2011 – 7:30 PM
at DROM
85 Avenue A (between 5th & 6th Streets)
New York, NY 10019
(212) 777-1157

If the evocative atmospheres and skewed, sinuous grooves of Les Nuages En France, the debut CD by the Marco Cappelli Acoustic Trio, conjure an air of mystery and suspense, credit their inspiration to the crime novels of author Fred Vargas.

A uniquely gifted guitarist who blends influences from the contemporary classical and avant-jazz/improv realms, Cappelli discovered the work of Vargas (the pseudonym of French historian Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau) through a friend and was instantly drawn in by the writer’s unusual approach to the thriller.

“I found her books interesting because they’re not just suspense stories. I was touched by her psychological analysis of the characters, the way she used the pretext of a thriller story to analyze relationships between characters.”

Each piece on Les Nuages En France is named in reference to characters from Vargas’ novels, written in conjunction with similarly-inspired poems by Italian poet Barbara Raggi. Cappelli explains that his attraction to these novels stems from his father, a judge who instilled his humane philosophies into his son.

Photo Credit: Peter Gannushkin

“My father never treated the matter of being a judge like a mathematical thing: you murder somebody, you get this many years of jail,” Cappelli explains. “I grew up with the idea that you always have to consider the human aspect of judiciary cases; you always have to see the other side of the story.”

The album’s liner notes include a quote from the author explaining her distaste for the complex, extremely violent thrillers that make up most of the genre these days, from books to movies. Cappelli sympathized with that from his father’s personal experiences, and found Vargas’ comments similar to his own approach to music.

“The expression in music is something you have to make very simple,” he says. “That’s what I tried to do with these pieces, to have a very direct relation to the sound that I was working on with my partners in the trio. There’s no deep, intellectual thinking behind the playing. It’s pretty direct and based in the everyday musical experience I share with these musicians, but it has a deep feeling in it.”

Conservatory-trained in Rome and Basel, Cappelli became one of Europe’s leading contemporary classical guitarists. Since moving to New York, he has complemented his work in the classical world with extensive experience on the avant-garde and improv scenes. In addition to the Acoustic Trio, Cappelli leads or is a member of the Naples-based chamber group Ensemble Dissonanzen; Syntax Error, which performs music in accompaniment to films and images; and the NYC-based quintet Italian Doc Remix (IDR), which blends jazz and Italian folk music.

Cappelli assembled the Acoustic Trio as a showcase for his unusual custom-built instrument, an amplified classical guitar modified by the addition of eight sympathetic strings underneath the standard six. “You don’t have to talk with these guys,” Cappelli enthuses about his bandmates, bassist Ken Filiano and percussionist Satoshi Takeishi. “They play what you didn’t know you had in mind.”

Ken Filiano is a remarkably diverse bassist who has worked with artists including Nels Cline, Bobby Bradford, John Carter, Warne Marsh, Roswell Rudd, and Don Preston. He leads and composes for his quartet with Michael Attias, Tony Malaby, and Michael T.A. Thompson. Filiano and Cappelli first met while recording with pianist Anthony Coleman for John Zorn’s Tzadik label. “Ken is the king of acoustic bass,” Cappelli says. “His sound and his groove are amazing and his improvisational skill is just perfect.”

Japanese-born percussionist Satoshi Takeishi studied at Berklee College of Music in Boston and has developed a highly individual approach to rhythm and color, influenced by his studies in Colombia and the Middle East. He has worked with a wide array of musicians such as such as Eliane Elias, Eddie Gomez, Randy Brecker, Dave Liebman, Anthony Braxton, Mark Murphy, Herbie Mann, and the Paul Winter Consort. “Satoshi has a very special sound,” Cappelli says.

Release Date: March , 2011

Marco’s Website
Marco’s Facebook Page
Mode Records

For more information on Marco Cappelli, please contact: Matt Merewitz / matt@fullyaltered.com or 347-384-2839.

Joe Fiedler Trio’s Sacred Chrome Orb Out Now; NYC & East Coast Tour Dates

Friday, April 8th, 2011

Versatile Trombonist JOE FIEDLER Releases SACRED CHROME ORB, March 29 on Yellow Sound Records


Tour Dates Around NYC & East Coast Following CD Release

Anyone who’s ever puzzled over the oddly altar-like mirrored globes that serve as the centerpiece of many a suburban garden will instantly be in on the joke that provided the title for trombonist Joe Fiedler’s Sacred Chrome Orb (Yellow Sound Records, release date March 29). While Fiedler attaches no particular significance to the name, it does represent a delight in the incongruous, a refreshingly skewed perspective, and an off-kilter sense of humor, all qualities that pervade the music of his unique, intensely expressive trio.

On their third CD, the Joe Fiedler Trio has developed an expansive language all their own. Fiedler is an inventive trombonist whose talents have found him founding the eccentric brass band Big Sackbut, working with visionary leaders Andrew Hill, Lee Konitz and Maria Schneider and avant-garde giants Anthony Braxton and Cecil Taylor; in big bands led by Satoko Fujii and Charles Tolliver; a member of the Captain Beefheart tribute band Fast and Bulbous; or accompanying pop stars like Jennifer Lopez and Wyclef Jean.

His compositions thus draw on a wealth of diverse sources and experiences, but nothing has been more inspiring, he insists, than his bandmates themselves. In bassist John Hebert and drummer Michael Sarin, he has found two highly individual voices who meld into a chameleonic unit, able to morph from the airy to the explosive with supple, surprising grace.

The uncommon trombone/bass/drums line-up was inspired by similar trios led by Albert Mangelsdorff (to whom Fiedler paid tribute on the trio’s 2006 debut) and Ray Anderson. But despite surface similarities, Fiedler, Hebert and Sarin have evolved their own unmistakable slant on that tradition, which the leader was keen to showcase on this new release. “The trio has matured nicely,” Fiedler says, “and has something strong to say.”

Nowhere is the group’s cohesive strength more evident than on the title track. A tightly-woven mesh of angular lines and stop-time rhythms, the tune’s urgent vitality demonstrates the trio’s ability to wrest emotion from complexity, each sharp turn and sudden lurch striking sparks.

The piece was in part inspired by the use of similar dynamics by saxophonist/composer Bennie Wallace, Fiedler says. Many of the compositions on the album, in fact, took other musicians or styles as the leaping-off point for creation, though the links between inspiration and outcome are rendered virtually invisible by Fiedler’s original approach.

“I get into these listening phases and tunes come out of them,” Fiedler explains. “I’ll hear or feel something that just gives me a little nudge. If I played you the records, they wouldn’t sound anything alike, but one rhythm or shape or vibe will push me to sit down and write something weirdly related.”

Both “Ging Gong” and “Ethiopia” came from one such period, which Fiedler spent intently listening to Ethiopian pop singers. The stream of Fiedler’s creative consciousness can be traced to a high bass line that Hebert plays on the bridge of his instrument in “Ging Gong,” which Fiedler intended to approximate African thumb piano – an instrument not present on the pop records he was listening to at the time.

Similarly, the buoyant lyricism of “#11” was sparked by a recording of a Rachmaninoff cello sonata performed by Vladimir Horowitz and Mstislav Rostropovich at Carnegie Hall’s 85th anniversary; the ebullient “Priestish” by a Billy Harper tune that Fiedler performed while on tour with tuba player Bob Stewart’s quintet; and the shadow-tinged “Next Phase” was written mid-flight after listening to Andrew Hill.
The latter is also a showcase for Fiedler’s dramatic use of multiphonics. His approach advances the technique used by players from Mangelsdorff to Coltrane, freeing him to use harmonics and overtones pianistically. “I used a much more sophisticated use approach to multiphonics this time around,” Fiedler says. “I see it as a major departure; it reminds me of the difference between Dixieland versus more modern jazz.”

Fiedler announces his bold take on multiphonics from the outset, entering the opening track, “Occult”, with a sound like a train whistle. The atmosphere that this striking sound creates is sustained throughout the ensuing six minutes, with both the leader and Hebert stretching out over Sarin’s simmering intensity.

As its title implies, the groove-heavy “Two Kooks” is an opportunity for the trio to embark on a more light-hearted excursion. “I felt like we needed to just swing and get funky on something,” Fiedler says, “to do something fun and not as serious.”

On a more personal note, “Chicken” was named for the composer’s six-year-old daughter, though, as Fiedler admits, “it’s not really a kid tune. When I played it for her, she ran out of the room and buried her head in the sofa. I’m not sure what that means.”

Whatever it means for Fiedler’s young daughter, Sacred Chrome Orb is likely to provoke strong reactions in any listener, even if it doesn’t send them scrambling for the couch cushions.

Joe Fiedler Trio Tour Dates:

April 10Saint Peters/Jazz Vespers, NYC (with Kozlov, Sarin)

April 19University of the Streets, NYC (with John Hébert-bass, Michael Sarin-drums)

April 21The Local 269, NYC (with John Hébert, Michael Sarin)

May 1The WindUp Space, Baltimore, MD (with John Hébert, Michael Sarin)

May 16The Lily Pad, Boston, MA (tbd)

May 27 – Muddy Waters, Burlington, VT (with Rob Morse-bass, Dan Ryan-drums)

May 29On The Rise, Richmond, VT (with Morse, Ryan)

Joe Fiedler Website

Joe Fiedler on Facebook

Joe Fiedler on Myspace

For more information on the Joe Fiedler Trio, please contact Matt Merewitz

Fully Altered Media / matt@fullyaltered.com or 347-384-2839.


Fully Altered Media Client Release Schedule **Fall 2010**

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

August


Vijay Iyer – Solo (ACT Music) – August 31
Iyer’s 1st solo piano recording

September

Blue Cranes - Observatories (self-released) – Sept. 14
Portland, OR chamber jazz group w/ Reed Wallsmith (saxes), Sly Pig (saxes), Rebecca Sanborn (keyboards), Keith Brush (bass), Ji Tanzer (drums)

Eddie Gomez & Cesarius Alvim – Forever (Plus Loin Music) – Sept. 14
Bass/Piano Duo w/ Eddie Gomez (bass), Cesarius Alvim (piano)

Rudresh Mahanthappa & Bunky Green – Apex (Pi Recordings) – Sept. 28
w/ Mahanthappa (alto sax), Bunky Green (alto sax), Jack DeJohnette (drums on half), Jason Moran (piano), Francois Moutin (bass), Damion Reid (drums on half)

October

Kellylee Evans – Nina (Plus Loin Music) – October 12
w/ Evans (vocals( Francois Moutin (bass), Andre Ceccarelli (drums)

Ed Ruscha / Nels Cline / David Breskin – DIRTY BABY CD Box Set (Cryptogramophone Records) – October 12
an interdisciplinary art-music-poetry collaboration between visual artist Ed Ruscha, guitarist/composer Nels Cline + 16 musicians & poet/producer David Breskin

Scott Amendola Trio – Lift (Sazi Music) – Oct. 19
w/ Amendola (drums, electronics), Jeff Parker (guitar), John Shifflett (bass)

Dan Tepfer – Five Pedals Deep (Sunnyside Records) – October 26
Trio w/ Tepfer (piano), Thomas Morgan (bass), Ted Poor (drums)

November


The Dymaxion Quartet – Sympathetic Vibrations (self-released) – DIGITAL ONLY- October 9

w/ Gabriel Gloege (drums, leader), Mike Shobe (trumpet), Mark Small (tenor sax), Dan Fabricatore (bass)
Jason Stein’s Locksmith Isidore – Three Kinds of Happiness (Not Two Records) – NEW RELEASE DATE: November 30
Trio w/ Jason Stein (bass clarinet), Jason Roebke (bass), Mike Pride (drums)

December
Jerome Sabbagh – I Will Follow You (Bee Jazz) – December 7
w/ Jerome Sabbagh – tenor & soprano saxophones, Ben Monder – guitar, Daniel Humair – drums

Designed by Doctor Sandwich.
alavert 10 mg zestril 10 mg 5 mg medrol 16 mg 4 mg accutane 20 mg