Sheryl Bailey & Harvie S - Plucky Strum - Departure (2017)

  • 16 Jan, 07:52
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Artist:
Title: Plucky Strum - Departure
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Whaling City Sound
Genre: Jazz
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless +Booklet
Total Time: 00:54:25
Total Size: 14 / 250 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Sublime
02. Old & Young Blues
03. Suite: Judy Blue Eyes
04. Sabado
05. Now I Know
06. Hissing of Summer Lawns
07. What She Said
08. Cranshaw
09. Song of the Guitar
10. The Good Old Days
11. Alone


Plucky Strum features Sheryl Bailey and Harvie S in an extraordinary pairing that weaves together intimate musical story lines. It is in a category beyond Jazz utilizing a myriad of musical styles. Made up of acoustic guitar and acoustic bass, they explore the joy of creative improvisation through lush harmonies, beautiful melodic lines, and captivating rhythms. This CD features 10 original tunes.

„Its fanciful title-guitarist Sheryl Bailey strums, bassist Harvie S plucks-may imply whimsy, but the melodic intricacy created by the duo on this all-originals outing (four by him, six by her) is some seriously heady stuff. Bailey and S never drop the ball-something ear-catching is always happening here, even during the quietest, most reflective moments. “Broken Glass,” carried over from Bailey’s 2014 organ trio recording A Meeting of Minds, takes turns both somber and sweet, the guitarist’s crystalline, precise picking complementary to S’s deep-diving at the top of the neck. On “Charlie Haden,” each player mirrors the other’s path intently, their closely mic’d string action and slightly askew harmonics suggestive of the intimacy the song’s namesake brought to his performances.

Bailey in particular is a revelation. A veteran of several different configurations, her fluidity of style is impressive, her agility uncommon. On no two tunes here does she repeat herself: If there is a thread it’s in her mastery of texture and tone, and her technique is imposing without being flashy. “Bluzin’ F” is a basic walking blues, but the guitarist tucks in subtle Django-isms and fortuitous chord shifts that elevate it; on “S and S,” which Bailey based on “Sweet Georgia Brown,” the two chase each other like a cartoon cat and mouse-teasing, toying, hiding and running in circles. “For Jimmy” (that being Jimmy Wyble, late guitarist) finds Bailey taking more of a support role to S’s magnificently rich, free-range roaming. Despite the complexity that’s never far from the surface, Plucky Strum feels deceptively simple.“ (Jeff Tamarkin, JazzTimes)