Stefon Harris & Blackout - Sonic Creed (2018)

  • 28 Sep, 18:24
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Artist:
Title: Sonic Creed
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Motéma Music
Genre: Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:53:54
Total Size: 124 mb | 303 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Dat Dere
02. Chasin' Kendall
03. Let's Take a Trip to the Sky feat. Jean Baylor
00. 4The Cape Verdean Blues
05. Go
06. Song of Samson
07. Throw It Away
08. Now feat. Jean Baylor
09. Gone Too Soon

Personnel:

Stefon Harris - vibraphone & marimba
James Francies - piano (1-8) & keyboards (1,3,7)
Joshua Crumbly - bass (1-8)
Terreon Gully: drums (1-8)
Casey Benjamin - alto saxophone (1, 2, 4, 5), soprano saxophone (6, 7), vocoder (3, 8)
Mike Moreno - guitar (1, 4, 5, 7, 8)
Jean Baylor - vocals (3, 8)
Regina Carter - violin (8)
Joseph Doubleday - marimba (9)
Daniel Frankhuizen - cello (8)
Pedrito Martinez - percussion (1, 2, 4, 6)
Felix Peikli - clarinet, bass clarinet (1, 2, 4-6, 8)
Elena Pinderhughes - flute (4, 8)

In its most basic function, the music that makes up Sonic Creed serves as a mirror to African American life in the here and now. It explores the history, legacy, struggles, and joys of the Black community, speaking to all of it at once through sound and sentiment.

Sonic Creed arrives almost a decade after this groove outfit's last showing—Urbanus (Concord, 2009)—but the time away hasn't hurt the band. If anything, Blackout has become a more limber group capable of carving out more capacious settings. With key personnel holdovers like drummer Terreon Gully and saxophonist Casey Benjamin, well-suited Blackout newcomers such as pianist James Francies and bassist Joshua Crumbly, and a handful of notable guests, there are new worlds of possibility to be found within this realm.

Opening with an updated take on Bobby Timmons' "Dat Dere," Harris and company immediately nod to Art Blakey's place in the pantheon while painting a funky futurist's vision. The sophisticated yet earhty edges of that opener hearken back to many of Urbanus' signatures, but what follows demonstrates the aforementioned wider gaze: "Chasin' Kendall," a lightly soulful Harris original written for the vibraphonist's two sons, rides peacefully atop a singsong bass line; "Let's Take A Trip To The Sky" is pure loving reverie, a slow jam written for Harris' wife that highlights guest vocalist Jean Baylor's soothing pipes; Horace Silver's "The Cape Verdean Blues," a number that Harris once arranged for the SFJAZZ Collective during his tenure with that super band, bounces, swerves, and shimmers in all the right ways; and album centerpiece "Go" gives Wayne Shorter his due by providing some unexpected turns while also maintaining a prescribed outlook.