Genre | Jazz |
---|---|
Date (CEST) | 2019-01-18 04:04:17 |
Group | MTD |
Size | 166 MB |
Files | 9 |
M3U / SFV / NFO |
Christian_McBride-Christian_McBrides_New_Jawn-2018-MTD
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
# | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 01-christian_mcbride-walkin_funny.mp3 | Christian McBride | Walkin' Funny | 260 | Unknown |
2 | 02-christian_mcbride-ke-kelli_sketch.mp3 | Christian McBride | Ke-Kelli Sketch | 248 | Unknown |
3 | 03-christian_mcbride-ballad_of_ernie_washington.mp3 | Christian McBride | Ballad Of Ernie Washington | 234 | Unknown |
4 | 04-christian_mcbride-the_middle_man.mp3 | Christian McBride | The Middle Man | 268 | Unknown |
5 | 05-christian_mcbride-pier_one_import.mp3 | Christian McBride | Pier One Import | 255 | Unknown |
6 | 06-christian_mcbride-kush.mp3 | Christian McBride | Kush | 229 | Unknown |
7 | 07-christian_mcbride-seek_the_source.mp3 | Christian McBride | Seek The Source | 252 | Unknown |
8 | 08-christian_mcbride-john_day.mp3 | Christian McBride | John Day | 243 | Unknown |
9 | 09-christian_mcbride-sightseeing.mp3 | Christian McBride | Sightseeing | 253 | Unknown |
NFO
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▀█████▓▌ MTD Proudly Presents ▐▓█████▀
[Info]
Artist : Christian McBride
Album : Christian McBride's New Jawn
Label : Mack Avenue Records
Genre : Jazz
Street Date : 2018-10-26
Quality : 249 kbps / 44.1kHz / Joint Stereo
Encoder : Lame 3.98.4 -V0
Size : 107.98MB
Time : 57:41 min
Url : http://tinyurl.com/y92wvkzh
[Tracks]
1. Walkin' Funny 2:49
2. Ke-Kelli Sketch 9:55
3. Ballad Of Ernie Washington 5:34
4. The Middle Man 5:00
5. Pier One Import 7:44
6. Kush 5:35
7. Seek The Source 7:21
8. John Day 5:19
9. Sightseeing 8:24
[Notes]
What's a jawn? Well, it's Philly slang for something that you cannot name
yet, or do not see the need to name. In Christian McBride's case, jawn
refers to his immensely talented ensemble of fellow jazz musicians on his
engaging 2018 album, Christian McBride's New Jawn. A titanic presence on the
jazz scene since arriving in the '90s, McBride spent his early years playing
propulsive neo-bop before re-engaging with his hip-hop, funk, and R&B roots
on a series of genre-bending fusion albums. He then delivered two knockout
big-band recordings, while concurrently stripping his ideas down to the
essentials with a handful of sophisticated trio albums. With New Jawn, he
interpolates that stripped-down vibe once again with a daring pianoless
quartet featuring trumpeter Josh Evans, tenor saxophonist Marcus Strickland,
and drummer Nasheet Waits. The lineup (all serious players with a wealth of
improvisational ideas) brings to mind both the Chet Baker/Gerry Mulligan
group of the early '50s and Ornette Coleman's classic quartet of the late
'50s and early '60s -- though New Jawn leans more heavily toward Coleman's
mutative, confrontational free jazz group than Mulligan's cool chamber
swing. That said, it's the rub between lyrical accessibility and atonal
adventurousness on display throughout New Jawn that makes it so compelling.
Cuts like the aptly titled "Walkin' Funny," with its off-kilter walking
bassline, and "Ke-Kelli Sketch," with its scratchy opening volley of bowed
bass and drum, speak to McBride's deft ability to balance cheeky humor with
commanding group leadership. He remains a magnanimous maverick, jovially
sparring with his bandmates and pushing them toward the less obvious choice
at any given moment. The main theme to the Latin-infused "Pier One Import"
threatens to explode with hard bop dynamism just as Waits pulls the band
back from the brink with his impressionistic drum solo. Conversely, McBride
and Waits' pulsing minor groove on "Seek the Source" leads to extended solos
from Strickland and Evans, as they both dance and crash against the rhythmic
caravan swell. Yet there are still languorous, thoughtfully composed moments
here, like the noir-ish "Ballad of Ernie Washington," where Evans sinks into
the melody with closed-eye warmth. Similarly, on the cinematically
hard-boiled "John Day," Strickland's woody bass clarinet works to magnify
the tune's dusky mystery. With New Jawn, McBride has put together a band
with a well-defined artistic aesthetic that still sounds fresh. If, as
"jawn" implies, he can't exactly name his band, the vibrant music and
virtuosic playing certainly speak for themselves.