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Eternal Balance

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2023年01月01日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルFresh Sound
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 FSNT067
SKU 8427328420679

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Charles Owens Quartet: Charles Owens (tenor saxophone); Jason Lindner (piano); Omer Avital (bass); Daniel Freedman (drums). Recorded in New York, New York in 1999. The Charles Owens Quartet is one of a few bands around New York that hangs at Smalls and plays a set or two each week there, while also gigging at various other nightspots around the city and in Jersey. This date, recorded in 1999, marked the sixth anniversary that the band -- Owens on tenor, Jason Lindner on piano, Omer Avital on bass, and Daniel Freedman on drums -- had been playing together. And here they sound like it. Six years is a long time to play together in the jazz world these days. This cats know each other's strengths well, and they play to them. Unlike a lot of records that come out on the Fresh Sounds label, this one has all the goods in the right place. Owens is a wonderful tenor player. He has his own tone, and is a stylist. He's certainly heard Paul Gonsalves and Coltrane, but he's also listened to plenty of Dexter Gordon's Blue Note period as well as Sonny Rollins' Impulse! years. There isn't a weak track on the set, but one of the best is "No Resolution," an Owens original with the rhythm section motivating him in 3/4, tracing it out and stretching into other figures as Owens makes his tenor sing with the melody and solo throughout the minor blues form. There's a keen version here of the chestnut "Yesterdays," on which the rhythm section moves to 5/4 in a straight eighth groove, putting a funky backspin on it and stretching it to the breaking point. Owens responds with a series of arpeggio maneuvers that are not only soulful, they are deft, knotty, wide-ranging, and spot-on with the weird changes. Another winner is Owens' "Virginia," a wonderfully complex tune that offers a kind of rocking head that segues into an elegant swing for the solos. Eternal Balance separates this band from the faceless hundreds of groups that roam the New York streets looking for work and recognition with only half the trick bag full. For these cats, it's bursting at the seams. ~ Thom Jurek

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      No Resolution - Owens, Charles Quartet
    2. 2.
      In the Still of the Night - Owens, Charles Quartet
    3. 3.
      I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good) - Owens, Charles Quartet
    4. 4.
      Yesterdays - Owens, Charles Quartet
    5. 5.
      Virginia's Song - Owens, Charles Quartet
    6. 6.
      Eternal Balance - Owens, Charles Quartet
    7. 7.
      April in Paris - Owens, Charles Quartet

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Charles Owens Quartet

その他
アーティスト: Charles Owens

商品の紹介

The Charles Owens Quartet is one of a few bands around New York that hangs at Smalls and plays a set or two each week there, while also gigging at various other nightspots around the city and in Jersey. This date, recorded in 1999, marked the sixth anniversary that the band -- Owens on tenor, Jason Lindner on piano, Omer Avital on bass, and Daniel Freedman on drums -- had been playing together. And here they sound like it. Six years is a long time to play together in the jazz world these days. This cats know each other's strengths well, and they play to them. Unlike a lot of records that come out on the Fresh Sounds label, this one has all the goods in the right place. Owens is a wonderful tenor player. He has his own tone, and is a stylist. He's certainly heard Paul Gonsalves and Coltrane, but he's also listened to plenty of Dexter Gordon's Blue Note period as well as Sonny Rollins' Impulse! years. There isn't a weak track on the set, but one of the best is "No Resolution," an Owens original with the rhythm section motivating him in 3/4, tracing it out and stretching into other figures as Owens makes his tenor sing with the melody and solo throughout the minor blues form. There's a keen version here of the chestnut "Yesterdays," on which the rhythm section moves to 5/4 in a straight eighth groove, putting a funky backspin on it and stretching it to the breaking point. Owens responds with a series of arpeggio maneuvers that are not only soulful, they are deft, knotty, wide-ranging, and spot-on with the weird changes. Another winner is Owens' "Virginia," a wonderfully complex tune that offers a kind of rocking head that segues into an elegant swing for the solos. Eternal Balance separates this band from the faceless hundreds of groups that roam the New York streets looking for work and recognition with only half the trick bag full. For these cats, it's bursting at the seams. ~ Thom Jurek|
Rovi

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