
| Sign up for our Email Newsletter & Subscriber Only Specials |
 |
|
Phone Orders Welcome 425-336-4830
Payment Options Checks & Money Orders By Mail Accepted

|
Davey Blue
|
|
|
|
Quantity:
E-mail this product to a friend
|
 |
Davey Blue is an excellent album that focuses on one thing and one thing only—pure, unremitting clear-cut jazz. There are no vocals and no fancy avant-garde experimentations that make this album seem a work of abstraction, nor are there any frenzied free jazz solos or quirky fusions of various styles. Instead, David Newman and his band rely solely on classic jazz elements to carry this record. After hearing just a few of these songs, you realize that straightforward jazz is all that Newman and crew really need in order to create a stirring and highly respectable recording. Whether the compositions are led by Newman’s elegant saxophone or Bryan Carrott’s pristine vibraphone, you get the feeling that this record speaks much more clearly with music alone than many other records do with layers and layers of vocals.
Opening track, “Cellar Groove” begins right away with Newman’s soulful sax playing a lively tune that is highlighted by Kenny Washington’s sporadic drumming and Bryan Carrott’s vibraphone ghosting in between. “Cristo Redentor” is a much slower tune that finds David Newman’s sax adding a fitting romantic atmosphere to the laid-back groove, while “For Stanley” is a funkier composition with some beautifully phrased sax playing and impeccably timed vibraphone accompaniment. Cedar Walton’s piano subtly introduces “A Child Is Born,” which finds Newman trading his sax for the flute, making for a delicate and charming piece, and “Black” is a great track with a straightforward swinging sound and a creative forefront usage of percussion. The eerie vibraphones that begin “Amandla” belie the bright sound that follows, as Newman once again picks up the flute to deliver a graceful and vivacious performance, and the title track, “Davey Blue” is easily the darkest piece on the record, with its gently plodding piano chords and sensual sax leads. Closing out the album is “Freedom Jazz Dance” with its choppy rhythm providing an unlikely backbone for a number of dazzling instrumental solos. Though there is nothing truly ‘revolutionary’ on Davey Blue, it is an excellently played and highly commendable representation of jazz music in general. |
|
ARTISTS David Fathead Newman (flute, alto and tenor saxophones); Cedar Walton (piano); Bryan Carrott (vibes); David Williams (bass); Kenny Washington (drums) |
| See all titles featuring David 'Fathead' Newman |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

Product Rating:     (0.00) # of Ratings: 0 (Only registered customers can rate)
There are no comments for this product.
|
|
|
|