Sam Kirmayer - Opening Statement (2019)
Artist: Sam Kirmayer
Title: Opening Statement
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Sam Kirmayer
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 55:29 min
Total Size: 290 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Opening Statement
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Sam Kirmayer
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 55:29 min
Total Size: 290 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Synecdoche
02. For All We Know
03. Jiro's Dream
04. Resonance After Dark
05. My Shining Hour
06. The Night We Called It a Day
07. One for Pete
08. Opening Statement
Whenever a group of young musicians (in this case a guitar-led quartet from Montreal) makes its recording debut, a number of questions quickly arise. First and foremost, can they play? Check. Do they swing? Check. Is the music bright and refreshing? Check. Are they sharp and enthusiastic? Check. Do they blend well as a team? Check and check again. Having checked all the boxes, guitarist Sam Kirmayer and his colleagues produce an Opening Statement that boldly announces their arrival and bodes well for the future.
Kirmayer, who started playing the guitar (rock division) at age seven and was nudged toward jazz by a music teacher in college (he graduated from Montreal's McGill University in 2016), lists Wes Montgomery and Grant Green among his influences, and nods to them on the album with his original composition "Synecdoche" (after Montgomery's "Four on Six") and the standard "For All We Know," a tribute to Green that is played not as a ballad but a groover that hurries from the starting gate and sprints to the finish line. Kirmayer also salutes fellow guitarist Peter Bernstein with the easygoing "One for Pete" (which embodies tasteful solos by Kirmayer, New York-based pianist Sean Fyfe and bassist Mike De Masi who then trade fours with drummer Dave Laing).
Kirmayer also wrote "Jiro's Dream" (for a master sushi chef) and the hard-swinging "Opening Statement," which is positioned not first but last on the menu. Kirmayer displays his exceptional chops on that one, as he does throughout the session. Fyfe is another sharp improviser whose mastery of the keyboard is consistently impressive. As for De Masi and Laing, each one solos nicely when called upon while lending inflexible support to Kirmayer and Fyfe.
Kirmayer, who started playing the guitar (rock division) at age seven and was nudged toward jazz by a music teacher in college (he graduated from Montreal's McGill University in 2016), lists Wes Montgomery and Grant Green among his influences, and nods to them on the album with his original composition "Synecdoche" (after Montgomery's "Four on Six") and the standard "For All We Know," a tribute to Green that is played not as a ballad but a groover that hurries from the starting gate and sprints to the finish line. Kirmayer also salutes fellow guitarist Peter Bernstein with the easygoing "One for Pete" (which embodies tasteful solos by Kirmayer, New York-based pianist Sean Fyfe and bassist Mike De Masi who then trade fours with drummer Dave Laing).
Kirmayer also wrote "Jiro's Dream" (for a master sushi chef) and the hard-swinging "Opening Statement," which is positioned not first but last on the menu. Kirmayer displays his exceptional chops on that one, as he does throughout the session. Fyfe is another sharp improviser whose mastery of the keyboard is consistently impressive. As for De Masi and Laing, each one solos nicely when called upon while lending inflexible support to Kirmayer and Fyfe.