quarta-feira, 25 de maio de 2022

Caribbean Jazz Project - Mosaic

Mosaic Review

 

by Steve Leggett

 
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Working a bright, innovative corner of Latin jazz and drawing on Jamaican, Afro-Cuban, Venezuelan, and Peruvian rhythms to create a hybrid mosaic (as the title suggests), the loose, rotating collective that is the Caribbean Jazz Project manages to be many things at once, including a dance band with a hard bop sensibility, and at times the ensemble comes close to being a new age chillout orchestra. Whatever label they wear, CJP have a bright, infectious sound, led by vibraphonist Dave Samuels' bubbling and watery tones and, on three tracks here, the amazing talking steel drums of Andy Narell. Violinist Christian Howes guests on Samuels' "Slow Dance," giving it a wonderfully eerie and wheezing feel. Other highlights in what is truly a compellingly bright mosaic are the angular "Spinnaker," the ever-expanding "Portraits of Cuba," and the interesting version of Miles Davis' "Nardis" that starts off the sequence. CJP, in whatever incarnation (and players vary here almost from track to track with Samuels as the main constant), manage to sound new and fresh, experimental and atmospheric, and yet still familiar and traditional, and often all of these things at once, resulting in music that is as fluid as a wave in the sun.


Caribbean Jazz Project Mosaic
01 - Nardis 00:00 02 - St. Ogredol 06:59 03 - Portraits Of Cuba 12:01 04 - Afro Green 19:52 05 - Wazo Dayzeel 25:33 06 - Slow Dance 34:24 07 - Spinnaker 39:08 08 - Mambo De Luna (Para Cachao) 43:49 09 - Dusk 50:46 Dave Samuels - vibraphone, marimba Paquito d'Rivera - Alto Saxophone, Clarinet Andy Narell - drums, steel pan Christian Howes - violin Alain Mallet - piano, organ Alon Yavnai - piano Boris Kozlov - acoustic bass Oscar Stagnaro - bass guitar Mark Walker, Dafnis Prieto - drums Pernell Saturnino - percussion Robert Quintero - percussion Recorded at Bennett Studios, Englewood, NJ, March 19-20 2006: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8. Recorded at Manchester Craftsman's Guild March 27, 2006: 3, 5, 9.
 

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