Mike Drop 8 – more from the shed

So here are 3 shed tunes done in the past week that I hope you will enjoy.  A duo each with Jeff Marrs on drums and Peter Barshay on bass as well as a trio tune with the two of them. As always, first take, no edits, no surgery, no compression, no gating, just live in the room as we did it.  I always dig playing with these characters, going on 28 years now!

Sax and Bass:  Black Orpheus

 

Sax and Drums: Romburn (loosely inspired by Softly as in a…)

 

Sax, Bass and Drums:  Never Let Me Go

 

And with love and gratitude to Chick Corea for six decades of beautiful music and amazing compositions.  You changed the music we love for the better.

Chick Corea (Photo by Giorgio Perottino/Getty Images for OGR )

Mike Drop 7 – something from Jason Lewis

One of the prerogatives of the Mike Drop is it can be whatever strikes me that day.  Today, I want to feature a beautiful bit of music from a friend of mine. So Jason Lewis is a wonderful drummer and a criminally under-acclaimed musician, even though he is beloved in the Bay.  Under-acclaimed due to his genuine lack of interest in being involved in any part of the hype game, even to the point of having no Facebook, Instagram or even a dusty old Myspace as far as I know.  Truly humble and also funny and insightful. Anyway, Jason sent me this lovely and heartfelt piece he wrote many years ago, and has gotten around to recording this past few months, a piece entitled Gone – but not forgotten, an elegy for some of our cherished friends and colleagues in jazz, including I am sure, the redoubtable and much missed bassist John Shifflett, Jason’s partner in crime on so many projects, including 3 CDs co-led by John Stowell and me., as well as my Billy Collins Project, among a number of other excellent playing situations, stretching back 25 years  Jason is the essence of musicality, always playing the right thing for the right situation… and on this video, he plays drums, bass and piano, a video that also has his brother  on flugelhorn and his son on cello – almost like it runs in the family.  And he is also a mensch and fellow Warriors fanatic, so there is that.   I asked Jason if I could Mike Drop his piece, and he agreed.  Please enjoy Gone, written and performed by Jason and his family.

 

ANDREW GILBERT ON EAST WEST – MUSIC FOR BIG BANDS “East West – Music for Big Bands embraces multiplicity. It’s not either/or, it’s and/also. It’s beauty AND burn, intense swing AND sweet balladry, all united under Zilber’s commanding and ever expanding creative purview.”

A Los Angeles native based in the Berkeley area since 1996, Andrew Gilbert is the preeminent jazz journalist and critic in the Bay Area, and he covers jazz, international music and dance for KQED’s California Report, The Mercury News, San Francisco Chronicle, Berkeleyside and other publications.  The following is his piece on Michael Zilber East West – Music for Big Bands, the Origin Records Double CD release which was released on November 5th, 2019. 

The truth is that Michael Zilber can’t be defined by a simple geographic duality. The saxophonist contains multitudes as a composer, player, arranger, educator, bandleader and collaborator who’s created a far-flung discography featuring some of jazz’s greatest improvisers. But the power of proximity can’t be denied, and his aesthetic has been shaped by the company he keeps, from his British Columbia upbringing to his formative years in the cauldron of New York City to his longtime California residence in the East Bay. His consistently captivating two-disc album East West – Music for Big Bands, slated for release by Origin Records on November 5, 2019, features two distinct orchestras recorded in New York City and San Francisco. His first big band project after 11 previous albums as a leader or co-leader (with NEA Jazz Master Dave Liebman, drum maestro Steve Smith, and guitar great John Stowell), East West is a project designed to explore the contrasting sonic modalities that Zilber has experienced on the two coasts. 

 

“There’s more of a sense of urgency with the New York band and more of a feeling of contemplation and space with the Bay Area band,” he says. “I wanted to make an album that reflected both of those feelings. I wanted to represent the two sides of myself.”

 

A post-Coltrane master who’s been a creative catalyst on the Bay Area jazz scene for nearly three decades, Zilber conjures an expansive array of moods and textures with the two ensembles. Whether dexterously tearing through a thicket of Coltrane changes or taking the requisite time to caress a haunting melody he’s always telling a story, playing with a narrative drive that’s shaped by his luminous bronze tone, rhythmic prowess and harmonic insight. 

 

While fully acknowledging the somewhat self-fulfilling nature of the project (“I picked the tunes for each band that lent themselves to the East Coast and West Coast approaches,” he says), Zilber is less concerned about coastal clichés than with revealing different facets of his multifarious musical persona. Often typecast as a post-bop burner, he may embrace the hard-swinging approach with his New York confederates, while reveling in ravishing lyricism with his Bay Area comrades, but he and his mates from the two coasts show they are equally at home with beauty and burn. Both ensembles feature some of jazz’s most exciting and accomplished players. 

 

Working closely with Dave Liebman drummer Marko Marcinko, trombonist Doug Beavers, and pianist Mike Holober, a close associate from his years in New York, Zilber assembled a 16-piece New York ensemble that includes heavyweights like altoist Todd Bashore (Christian McBride), trumpeter Freddie Hendrix (Village Vanguard Jazz Orchestra), Grammy-nominated trombonist Alan Ferber, and Grammy-winning bassist John Benitez. The similarly bi-coastal (and Grammy-winning) Beavers is also part of the 17-piece San Francisco band, which bristles with world class improvisers such as saxophonists Dann Zinn and Sheldon Brown, trumpeters Mike Olmos and Erik Jekabson, pianist John R. Burr, and guitarist Jeff Massanari. 

 

Both bands focus on Zilber’s original compositions, pieces often conceived as tributes to his musical heroes inspired by particular recordings or tunes. The New York session opens with his “Fantasia on Trane Changes,” a piece that takes a kaleidoscopic ride through the tenor saxophonist’s famous harmonic progression (a search that culminated with “Giant Steps” and “Countdown”) with six modulations over the course of 96 corruscating measures. Borrowing the form of “Inner Urge” while reversing the chord changes, “Hen House” crackles with the sly wit and surging soul of Joe Henderson. And “Breakfast Club,” based on a fragment from one of Chick Corea’s Three Quartets, offers a potent reminder of Michael Brecker’s preternatural prowess. 

 

“It’s based on the first two lines of a Brecker lick that’s almost impossible to play on tenor, a rapid-fire line he takes up way into the stratosphere,” Zilber says. “I figured the only way I’m going to learn it is to write a tune that uses it. The melody is based on fragments from Brecker solos. It feels like something that he might have played on harmonically, and it’s my tribute to Mike. We all love him and miss him so much.”

 

Like several of the pieces on the San Francisco session, these tributes are expanded versions of tunes Zilber recorded on his acclaimed 2017 Origin album Originals For the Originals. But he’s just as effective putting his own stamp on seminal jazz standards, like the arrangement of Wayne Shorter’s “Fall.” The piece uses the original melody and harmonies as a point of departure before an Afro-Cuban-tinged passage featuring some torrid trombone work by Beavers and a series of spiraling counter lines framed by a lovely undulating chorale featuring Zilber and brass at the start and and trumpeter Chris Rogers and brass at the coda (a lyrical passage that would have fit neatly on the SF session). Victor Feldman’s “Joshua” has never sounded quite so funky as Zilber’s hip-hop inflected groove gives way to a riveting drum and bass interlude between Benitez and Marcinko. 

 

Zilber leaves no doubt that we’ve entered a very different realm on the San Francisco session, which opens with“Weather Wayne” (which was also the name of a band Zilber led for several years). The piece evokes the sound and vibe of Wayne Shorter’s genius filtered through Weather Report. Zilber’s soprano sax on this and Fall remind us of his unabashed affinity for Shorter, one that earned him the nickname “Wayne Boy” from jazz great Liebman in the mid-1980s.  There is some particularly supple drum and bass work by Jeff Marrs and Dan Feiszli, the latter also having mixed the New York session. From the Shorterverse Zilber summons a different realm with Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg’s immortal theme “Over the Rainbow.” Featuring a soul-powered vocal by Joe Bagale (aka the billion-streaming YouTube sensation Otis McDonald), the track sounds as if Dorothy longed for Muscle Shoals rather than Kansas. 

 

The exquisite ballad “Another Prayer” conjures the numinous spirit of John Coltrane, departing from “I’ll Wait and Pray” by way of a very tender tenor stating of the melody by Zilber and the rhythm section and gradually descending on a sumptuous Mike Olmos flugelhorn solo by way of an orchestration reminiscent of Nelson Riddle’s orchestration from Sinatra’s “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” Speaking of sublime balladry, Zilber’s arrangement of Hoagy Carmichael’s “Skylark” is a journey to remember. The beloved melody is untouched, but propelled by a gentle marching groove and recalibrated harmonies the tune turns into an epic migration, hither and thither chase that turns into a trombone chorale. This is a bird of a different feather. 

 

“If you’re going to do a tune like ‘Skylark,’ you need to find a way to make it your own,” Zilber says. “You need to find your own turf. Honor the original but put your own stamp on it, your own flavor.”

 

If the album has an emotional core it’s “Shiva For Shifflett,” a quiet meditation on the life and spirit of South Bay bassist John Shifflett based on his burning tune “Quantum Theory.” An invaluable Zilber bandmate and ubiquitous Bay Area sideman who died in 2017, Shifflett possessed an extra dry sense of humor, and he’d surely appreciate Zilber transforming his turbo-charged piece into a spacious, becalmed ballad featuring some poised and lustrous Feiszli bass work. 

 

“John was in my group Steve Smith for five years and the group with John Stowell with Jason Lewis for 10 years, on several of my tours and on half of my 12 CDs” Zilber says, while also noting that Shifflett anchored four of six previous Origin releases, three co-led with John Stowell and Eleven On Turning Ten, a project setting the poetry of Billy Collins to music. “His playing was strong, empathic, solid, creative and musically appropriate, and he sounded great with anybody. His passing was a huge loss to the SF jazz scene.”

 

The album closes on another unapologetic blast of beauty with “St. Paul,” a loving hat tip to altoist Paul Desmond based on the opening phrase of Johnny Mandel’s “Emily.” He designed the piece to feature his Electric Squeezebox Orchestra sectionmate Larry de la Cruz, a stalwart Bay Area saxophonist who should be better known. In many ways Zilber would never have undertaken East West without his involvement in ESO, a stellar Bay Area band led by trumpeter Erik Jekabson (with two acclaimed releases on Origin). 

 

As a founding member of the orchestra, Zilber suddenly found himself with a growing body of material written or arranged for a big band. Though he’s a dauntingly prolific composer with some 3,000 pieces to his credit, this was a new situation. “I was never a guy who woke up in the morning thinking I want to write for big bands,” he says. “Early on we had a regular gig at Doc’s Lab in North Beach and Erik encouraged everyone to write. It was a great way to develop material. If I work on this I know there’s a good band that’s going to play it. Some of the current big band writing for me is like wrapping things up in this lush frosting, and it turns out there is no cake beneath the frosting. For me, the big band composers I loved always started with a strong tune, folks like Duke, Quincy, and Gil Evans.  In that spirit, these are all small group pieces I expanded and had test-driven by the ESO.”

 

Born and raised in Vancouver, Zilber grew up in an art-steeped family. His father was a playwright and longtime professor of creative writing at the University of British Columbia and his mother had been a ballet dancer in New York City, where the two met and fell in love before moving to Canada. He got his start on the thriving British Columbia jazz scene, and at 18 lit out for Boston to study at New England Conservatory. He eventually earned a PhD in composition from NYU, but a good deal of his “post-graduate” musical studies took place on the bandstand playing alongside masters such as Dave Liebman, Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Miroslav Vitous, and Mick Goodrick, as well as contemporary peers like Rachel Z, James Genus, Dave Kikoski, Jimmy Earl and others. By the early 1990s, burnt out on what was then a rough and dangerous New York City, Zilber and his wife moved with their infant son to the East Bay, where he’s played a central role in the region’s jazz education scene as a founding faculty member of the California Jazz Conservatory (formerly known as the Jazzschool). Zilber’s Advanced Jazz Workshop ensemble has won 14 Downbeat awards. 

 

While building a creative life in the Bay Area, Zilber has maintained his New York roots, never seeking to hide his divided allegiances. His 1999 album Two Coasts featured his two working bands, with the majority of the tracks by his New York quartet with pianist Rachel Z, bassist James Genus and drummer Rodney Holmes. His Bay Area quartet featured pianist John R Burr,  bassist Peter Barshay and co-leader drummer Steve Smith. “For me it’s always been a negotiation,” Zilber says. “I’ve always had both coasts in my heart. Both sides are me.” 

 

Rather than resolving the coastal “conflict”, East West – Music for Big Bands embraces multiplicity. It’s not either/or, it’s and/also. It’s beauty AND burn, intense swing AND sweet balladry, all united under Zilber’s commanding and ever expanding creative purview. 

 

Andrew Gilbert, Berkeley California

 

(A Los Angeles native based in the Berkeley area since 1996, Andrew Gilbert covers jazz, international music and dance for KQED’s California Report, The Mercury News, San Francisco Chronicle, Berkeleyside and other publications).

 

 

 

John and Paul Reimagined

Very happy and grateful for Andrew Gilbert’s piece on my newest project. Andy captures it better than I could!

https://www.berkeleyside.com/2019/03/14/getting-better-all-the-time-with-michael-zilbers-beatles-project

All About Jazz Review of Originals – “Zilber is one of the true masters of modern jazz saxophone, his prodigious talents evidenced by his recordings and live performances are truth. Originals For the Originals is a top 10 of 2017 candidate without a doubt, and a must listen for any jazz fan that pays homage to the masters of the past, and moves ever forward with the inspired works of the present.”

Michael Zilber: Originals For The Originals

Paul RauchBy PAUL RAUCH

 

On his latest release on Origin Records, Originals For the Originals (Origin, 2017), his eleventh as a leader/co-leader, he offers an homage to seven titans of the saxophone which features a top-shelf New York rhythm section with pianist Dave Kikoski, bassist James Genus, and drummer Clarence Penn. “I knew Kikoski from New York and James Genus was the bassist in my band for the last three years there. I love the way they play. I really think Kikoski is one of the ten greatest living jazz piano players. I always wanted to do a record with him and I thought this material was ideal,” says Zilber. West Coast mates Matt Clark (piano), Peter Barshay (bass), and Akira Tana (drums) join for Zilber’s tribute to Joe Henderson, “Hen House.”

Summoning the spirits of transcendent masters such as John ColtraneMichael BreckerWayne ShorterSonny Rollins and Paul Desmond, Zilber takes a very personal approach to channel the essence of his relationships with their collective sound. Rather than trying to evoke the unmistakable sounds of these iconic players, he bases each piece on a melodic phrase or harmonic passage extracted from their music. “It’s an homage, but I’m not trying to be a copycat,” says Zilber.

The opening salvo “Breckerfast Club,” is an up-tempo rant featuring dynamic play from Zilber and Kikoski, both on the tedious head, and the following solos. Inspired by Michael Brecker”s playing on Chick Corea’s “Quartet #2.” Zilber demonstrates his very original, powerful sound on tenor. “Other than Wayne Shorter, no non- Coltrane tenor player had more influence on me,” says Zilber about Brecker, who he considers to have been the most influential of his generation.

On “Autumn Lieb,” Zilber switches over to soprano in reverence for NEA Jazz Master Dave Liebman. Zilber reharmonized and reconstituted pieces of “Autumn Leaves,” and “Autumn in New York, two standards frequented by Liebman over the years. The lyrical melody alludes to a serene and peaceful side to Zilber’s composing and playing, connected in spirit with Liebman’s eloquent phrasing.

Remaining on soprano, “Weather Wayne” is an homage to Wayne Shorter’s Weather Report years in deep burn mode. Shorter is a true renaissance man in the jazz lineage, a bridge to true compositional global outreach, across sixty years. In the post Coltrane world, Shorter revolutionized the high register soprano with a probing multi cultural approach adopted hook, line, and sinker by Zilber. In the interest of allowing the listener some elasticity in their own interpretation, I will just say that this high energy piece will keep me coming back to this album for many years to come.

“Last Night Trane (In the Distance), is an emotive ballad written as an ode to Coltrane’s peaceful and deeply spiritual sound on the album Ballads (Impulse, 1963). ” My approach was simply to write a ballad that feels like what Trane might have played,” said Zilber. He starts the piece with the first two notes from “I Want to Talk About You ” from Coltrane’s early release, Soultrane (Prestige, 1958). Zilber summons beautiful, harmonic colors, and alludes to Coltrane’s sentimental side. His tone, and lush phrasing indeed bares his romantic side as well.

A lot of what makes Originals For the Originals so engaging is that Zilber possesses a striking sound all his own. His tenor sound is deep, dense, and elastic, rounded off by impeccable articulation, while from his probing intuitive sensibility on soprano emerges a softer, more reflective narrative.

While Zilber dedicates his compositions to seven titans of the instrument, this dedicated premise is not what draws me to this recording. If familiarity with historic players such as John Coltrane, or Sonny Rollins draws listeners to explore this album, then Zilber’s homage will have served the purpose of enlightening us to their dynamic talents. Put simply, Zilber is one of the true masters of modern jazz saxophone, and though an unknown anomaly to many, his prodigious talents evidenced by his recordings and live performances are truth. Originals For the Originals is a top 10 of 2017 candidate without a doubt, and a must listen for any jazz fan that pays homage to the masters of the past, and moves ever forward with the inspired works of the present.

Thanks to Scott Yanow for the truly excellent review!

Scott Yanow, one of the foremost Jazz Critics in the country, has written a very generous and thoughtful review of Originals for the Originals in The New York City Jazz Record October Issue. http://nycjazzrecord.com/

 

Originals for the Originals

Michael Zilber (Origin)

by Scott Yanow

David Kikoski has been a major pianist since moving to New York in 1985 (and is) a sideman on saxophonist Michael Zilber’s Originals for the Originals, a tribute to seven of the leaders’s favorite saxophonists (Michael Brecker, Sonny Rollins, Dave Liebman, Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson, John Coltrane and Paul Desmond) via wittily-titled originals hinting at their musical spirits.

It is an intriguing set, with Zilber sounding like some of his heroes and not like others. Uptempo “Breckerfast Club” and more somber “Leaves” pay homage to Brecker. The former is a raging piece with Kikoski tearing into the changes and Zilber contributing rapid lines that somehow also sound thoughtful. The sophisticated ballad “Leaves” is a bit mournful, reminding listeners of Brecker’s premature passing. “Partly Sonny” borrows part of its melody and calypso feel from Rollins’ “St. Thomas”, which Zilber cleverly disguises. On “Autumn Lieb” (hints of both “Autumn Leaves” and “Autumn In New York”) and passionate “Lieb Dich”, he switches to soprano and comes close to capturing the dedicatee’s adventurous style.

Zilber pays homage to Wayne Shorter on both soprano (explosive “Weather Wayne”) and tenor (laidback and melancholy “Pastel Blues”). Kikoski makes major statements on those two pieces, displaying his versatility. “Hen House” was actually written for Joe Henderson although Zilber sounds closer to Coltrane. The two Coltrane tributes are the wistful “Late Night Trane” and passionate “Coltraning Daze”. The latter, based loosely on a well-disguised “I Love You”, is taken quite fast on soprano and could actually pass for a Coltrane piece, complete with a saxophone/ drums duet for a few choruses. “Coltraning Daze” feels like a relative of “Countdown” or “Giant Steps” with its chord structure, but is given a unique treatment due to drummer Clarence Penn’s parade rhythms. The closing “St. Paul”, taken by Zilber on soprano, is the lengthiest piece. Even if Zilber’s playing does not conjure up Desmond, his lyricism would have been appreciated by the alto saxophonist.

There is much to discover throughout Originals for the Originals, both in the high-quality playing and the historical references, making it a CD well worth listening to closely.

For more information, visit crisscrossjazz.com and origin-records.com.

@jazzhaikuz

Yup, I did it. Have put a toe gingerly in the Twitter waters. Fear not, no 3AM insanity from this end.  To keep it interesting, all of my contributions will be in the form of the classic 5-7-5 Haiku form.  To that end, if you are inclined to follow, my handle is @jazzhaikuz

Keep it intriguing

forget one hundred forty

I’ll tweet jazz haikus

 

On John Shifflett

With John, Jason Lewis and Peter Horvath at Yoshi’s Oakland

John Shifflett was unique – not pretty unique, very unique or really unique, but unique in the true meaning of the word.  He was my musical friend for over 20 years, and bizarrely enough, the first time we played, we were both on a big band rehearsal in Oakland, a couple of years after I moved out from New York. I say bizarrely, because John and I never played a big band gig or rehearsal together again, NOT ONCE, despite several hundred gigs, 6 CDs and a bunch of rehearsals and sessions. 

 
I played occasional gigs with John w Andre Bush, Paul Nagel and others, and by 1998, I knew he and his partner in crime Nagel were ideal choices to join a quartet I co-led with the great Steve Smith. John stayed with that group until Steve moved away 5 years later, including an amazing tour of Canada with Dave Liebman, playing Monterey and a CD documenting the group.  He also joined Nagel and Amendola on a live record that Liebman and I did at the jazzschool, joined me on several occasions in Vancouver for festival and club hits, played in the group Zilberella with Susan Muscarella, Tim Bulkley and me for 2 years, and, for the last 10, he and the other side of his musical heartbeat, Jason Lewis, were an indispensable part of the quartet I co-lead with guitar great John Stowell.  One of my fondest memories is the 10 summers we all did co-teaching the advanced summer intensive at the jazzschool, John, Jason, Peter Horvath and me always being there.  It was always the best and most fun week of teaching I did all year, thanks to John and the others.
 
So whether it was with Steve Smith and Nagel, Muscarella and Tim Bulkley, Liebman, Amendola, Stowell, and of course Jason, it really didn’t matter, John always brought more soul and swing and musicality and joy and solid choices to the proceedings than any of us had a right to expect.  He was a truly great musician, ALWAYS putting the music first, and while he had a deep and subtle understanding of harmony, melody and rhythm, the thing that he brought that every great musician I have ever heard or played with has is the CRY, that reaching down deep into the most vibrant part of the heart. Utterly without ego, but powerful and with conviction. That was John Shifflett.  Sometimes, when he was really digging a moment, he would even vocalize that cry behind you as you played. 
 
It was almost impossible to pick among the dozens of songs we recorded together, but the two I settled on are from the last CD we did together with John Stowell and Jason Lewis. The songs are 2 I wrote, Basement Blues and Stowell in Heart.  Basement Blues was written, in part, for John, one of the very few times I ever gave him a written bass line, because it reminded me of what he might have done. Stowell in Heart is on there because, while John was a reluctant soloist, he was a beautiful one, and this represents the kind of solo magic he could spin when he had the space.  There is not a musician on the planet who has been there for more of my happiest musical moments the past 20 or so years, and like all of you, I will miss his sound terribly much. So long, John, Michael Zilber