Jazz The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/jazz/1919.html Fri, 19 Apr 2024 02:01:28 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management pl-pl Marc Johnson – Sound of Summer Running (1997) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/jazz/1919-marc-johnson/6863-marc-johnson-sound-of-summer-running-1997.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/jazz/1919-marc-johnson/6863-marc-johnson-sound-of-summer-running-1997.html Marc Johnson – Sound of Summer Running (1997)

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1. Faith in You
2. Ghost Town
3. Summer Running
4. With My Boots On
5. Union Pacific
6. Porch Swing
7. Dingy-Dong Day       play
8. The Adventures of Max and Ben
9. In a Quiet Place       play
10. For a Thousand Years .

Personnel :
Marc Johnson - Bass
Bill Frisell - Guitar acoustic and electric
Pat Metheny - Guitar acoustic, electric and 42 strings
Joey Baron - Drums, pandereta .

 

With THE SOUND OF SUMMER RUNNING, bassist Marc Johnson has assembled a landmark quartet of such magnitude as to rival his legendary Bass Desires group of the mid '80s. Returning from that group is crafty guitar pioneer Bill Frisell. The two new additions are contemporary jazz guitar master Pat Metheny and the always adventurous percussionist Joey Baron. This list of musicians constitutes a "dream band" if there ever was one. Metheny and Frisell are locked in a beautiful dance as their signature sounds bob and weave around Johnson's deep foundation. Baron's stark percussive stabs and shimmering colors add just the right turmoil to the mix.

The music is nothing short of mesmerizing in it's exploration of tonal colors and depth of creativity. The breezy freshness of "Faith In You" sets the tone, as the two guitarists alternately fly and support each other. A myriad of directions are explored from here: western-flavored folk ("Ghost Town," "With My Boots On"), a bluesy Chicago shuffle ("Union Pacific"), a sleepy mid-western groove ("Porch Swing") and colorful avant-garde explorations ("The Adventures Of Max And Ben"). Fans of Metheny's ECM days will enjoy the soaring "Summer Running." All of this with the quirky slant you would expect from this cast of magical sound-smiths.

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Marc Johnson Fri, 17 Sep 2010 14:45:52 +0000
Marc Johnson, Eliane Elias - Swept Away (2012) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/jazz/1919-marc-johnson/17281-marc-johnson-eliane-elias-swept-away-2012.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/jazz/1919-marc-johnson/17281-marc-johnson-eliane-elias-swept-away-2012.html Marc Johnson, Eliane Elias - Swept Away (2012)

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01. Swept Away (Elias) 6:18
02. It's Time (Elias) 5:50
03. One Thousand And One Nights (Elias) 8:16
04. When The Sun Comes Up (Johnson) 6:35
05. B Is For Butterfly (Elias) 8:05
06. Midnight Blue (Johnson) 6:01
07. Moments (Elias) 5:49
08. Sirens Of Titan (Johnson/Elias) 5:53
09. Foujita (Johnson) 5:35
10. Inside Her Old Music Box (Johnson/Elias) 5:29
11. Shenandoah (American Folk Song) 4:35

Eliane Elias - piano
Marc Johnson - double-bass
Joe Lovano - tenor saxophone
Joey Baron – drums

 

It's a relatively rare occasion when Marc Johnson releases an album under his own name, but based on the bassist's track record—from Bass Desires (ECM, 1985) through to Shades of Jade (ECM, 2005)—it's always one to celebrate. As Johnson fast approaches 60, it seems like only yesterday that he emerged as the bassist in Bill Evans final trio in the late 1970s, before the piano legend's passing in 1980. But if time has passed, one thing that has remained constant is Johnson's ability (not unlike Evans) to balance power and elegance, yin and yang. Shades of Jade was, for some, the sleeper hit of 2005 and so it's great to find Johnson bringing back the core trio and saxophonist Joe Lovano (who also appeared on select tracks), though this time around he acknowledges the greater significance of pianist (and wife) Eliane Elias by putting her name up on the marquee, beside his own.

Elias assumes an even greater role this time around, with five compositional credits to Johnson's three, alongside two additional tracks co-composed by the couple and one traditional tune. Equally significant is a greater emphasis on Johnson and Elias, with just five tracks fleshed out to a quartet with Lovano, making Swept Away an inevitable successor to Shades while, at the same time, delivering something different. Like Shades, Swept Away takes its time to kick into higher gear, but when it does, the trio delivers on an energy only intimated on the previous recording's brighter numbers. Elias' opening title track is a lyrical ballad for the core trio, with Lovano joining for the subsequent "It's Time," a smoky, late night tune that capitalizes on the saxophonist's ability to get deep inside the pianist's soft yet supple changes, with Johnson and drummer Joey Baron providing similarly pliant but delicate support.

Things change, however, with Elias' modal "One Thousand and One Nights," another trio track that ramps up the tempo and the dynamic, with Johnson's deep, visceral tone and Baron's more vibrant pulse creating an unshakable foundation for Elias, whose extended solo hints at Middle Eastern tonalities while being equally suggestive of a Midwestern vibe that feels closer to Johnson's Nebraska roots than it does the pianist's Brazilian upbringing.

Johnson's first composition of the date, the indigo-tinged "When the Sun Comes Up," brings Lovano back, mirroring its title as the bassist slowly moves from dark-hued whole tones to more fervent swing with a stronger, quarter-note pulse. As the quartet picks up steam, Baron manages to combine responsive foil—first to Lovano and then to Elias—with a magical ability to suggest rather than actually play time, aligning with the more anchor-like Johnson.

The co-written tunes range from the gradually building, ultimately effervescent "Sirens of Titan" (another Lovano feature) to the penultimate tone poem, "Inside Her Shoe Box," featuring Johnson's evocative arco. Swept Away closes with Johnson delivering an a cappella version of "Shenandoah" that brings the album full circle. It's a masterful close to a recording that, with its references to both tradition and more spacious, open landscapes, should position Swept Away, like its predecessor, as this year's sleeper hit. ---John Kelman, allaboutjazz.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Marc Johnson Wed, 04 Feb 2015 23:02:27 +0000