Woman Child Cecile McLorin Salvant (Mack Avenue
Records)
I doubted jazz vocalist
Cecile McLorin Salvant was great as many music industry people claimed she was.
I figured it was overpraise comparing her to greats like Billie Holiday and
Ethel Waters. But I became a believer after listening to her debut “Woman Child”.
The comparisons and the praise was correct. Her voice and every song on the
album were flawless. I begged anybody that would listen to buy it.
Liquid Spirit Gregory Porter (Blue Note
Records)
Gregory Porter can sing jazz, R&B and classic soul, pop,
and blues. Porter debut for Blue Note Record “Liquid Spirit” proved he’s
foremost a jazz man. I listen to a lot of albums in a given year. I rarely fall for an album like I fell for “Liquid
Spirits”. Porter’s mixed genres without
losing his grassroots style. I’ve listened to “Liquid Spirit” every day since he
released it in June. “Brown Grass,” “Hey Laura,” “Wind Song” and “Water Under
Bridges” were the cuts that stuck to my ribs.
For the Love of Abbey Marc Cary (Motema Record)
The late jazz vocalist
Abbey Lincoln was jazz pianist Marc Cary’s biggest musical mentor and I suspect
given the care he put into this solo album honoring her, his life coach. In my
book, Cary is the finest jazz pianist of his generation, which includes Cyrus
Chestnut, Jason Moran, Jacky Terrasson, and Craig Taborn. Cary has made some remarkable
music with his Focus Trio. “For the Love of Abbey” was the most personal album
Cary has ever put out. Listening to it I wondered if Lincoln’s spirit was in Cary’s
piano.
Out Here Christian McBride (Mack Avenue
Records)
Is Christian McBride the greatest jazz bassist
of his generation? His body of work may answer that question; particularly the
music he’s made for Mack Avenue has been remarkable. In 2011, “The Good Feeling”
won a Grammy. The album was his first big band recording. He returns to a trio
format on “Out Here”. I’m not sure it’ll get a Grammy nomination although it’s
worthy of one. On the album, McBride, drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr. and pianist
Christian Sands poured their imaginations all over standards such as “My
Favorite Things,” “East Of the Sun (And West of the Moon) and “Cherokee”. The
latter is the album’s best bet. Though the album is McBride’s brainchild, he’s
not the star attraction. Sands is, and the album comes off as if McBride
designed it as a showcase for the pianist.
Magic Beans Benny Green (Sunnyside Records)
This album won me over
because it resembled that Blue Note sound during its heyday. In fact, Green wanted
the music on “Magic Beans” to have that hard, soulful, and swinging vintage
Blue Note feel. I believe he nailed it, particularly with the cuts “Kenny Drew”
and “Jackie McLean”. They were two jazz musicians who made classics for Blue
Note. Of course, there’re other awesome cuts on “Magic Beans”. But “Kenny Drew
and “Jackie McLean” were the ones that spoke to Green’s vision for the album.
Without A Net Wayne Shorter Quartet
(Blue Note Records)
This jazz quartet has been
together for nearly 15 years now. And it’s revered as one of the tightest jazz quartets
of all-times. It has star power namely pianist Danilo Perez and drummer Brian
Blade. The quartet’s albums are stellar. For my money, “Without A Net” is the
quartet’s best work. It marked Shorter’s return to Blue Note Records. Most of
the album is from a live performance. The quartet concerts can be iffy. But it
killed this time around. Shorter wrote all the music, which was heady as a
graduate dissertation but it swung. The title “Without A Net” speaks to how
fearless the quartet has been since day one.
Bob a palindrome Robert Hurst (Bebob Music)
Robert Hurst is a jazz
bassist with a solid body of work. The albums he's put out on his label, Bebob
Music, “Bob Ya Head,” Unrehursted Volume 1-2, and “BoB a palindrome,” which he
release nationwide in early 2013 represents a golden period in his studio
work. “BoB a palindrome” is star-studded. Branford Marsalis, Jeff “Tain” Watts,
Bennie Maupin, Adam Rudolph, Marcus Belgrave and Robert Glasper are on the
album. That’s enough horsepower to guarantee a hit. What made this album ultra-special were the 10
great compositions Hurst gave to the fellows to feast on. The “Middle Passage
Suites” are the most engaging. “BoB a palindrome” was one of the first jazz
albums I listened to in 2013 and it hasn’t worked its way out of my system yet.
Eye Of The Beholder Tim Warfield (Criss Cross
Jazz)
A musician asked me
recently if I was kidding around when I said saxophonist Tim Warfield has never
cut a bad album. I meant what I said. I have sufficient proof to support my belief
Warfield’s album “Eye Of The Beholder”. This is my favorite. He staffed it with
four jazz musicians he came of age with pianist Cyrus Chestnut, bassist Rodney
Whitaker, drummer Clarence Penn and trumpeter Nicholas Payton. Neither has lost
their boyhood enthusiasm for the music. “Eye of the Beholder” feels like a big class reunion.
pushing the world away Kenny Garrett (Mack Avenue
Records)
Yes, this is another album
where alto saxophonist Kenny Garrett honored some of the musicians who
influenced him. It’s even better than his 1996 tribute to saxophonist John Coltrane
“Pursuance: Music of John Coltrane”. Garrett wrote all the music for “pushing
the world away”. There’re shout-outs to Mulgrew Miller, Donald Brown, Chick
Corea and others who Garrett admire. “pushing the world away” showed Garrett orbiting
around another plateau in his playing.
The Roots of the Blues Randy Weston & Billy
Harper (Sunnyside) One of the oddest collaborations
in jazz pianist Randy Weston and tenor saxophonist Billy Harper. Their styles
and approaches to the music is different as night and day, Weston with deep
roots in music from the motherland and Harper with a sound on tenor that’s wider
than his native Texas. On the surface, Weston and Harper seem like as odd pairing.
But the jazz giants pull it off. They
jam on blues with an African themes written by Weston such as “Blues to Senegal,”
“Blues to Africa,” and “African Lady”. There are a few standards “Take the A
Train,” and “Body and Soul” that serve as space fillers. On “If One Could Only See,” Harper let Weston play
solo. Weston returned the favor on “Roots
of the Nile”. The solo performances are the album’s strongest.
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