AVENUE BLUE featuring Jeff Golub - Avenue Blue (1994)

  • 02 May, 16:49
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Artist:
Title: Avenue Blue
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: Bluemoon[R2 79199]
Genre: Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log) | MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 51:58
Total Size: 307 MB(+3%) | 123 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Pick Up The Pieces (4:57)
02. Stockholm Prelude (0:57)
03. Stockholm (3:51)
04. Gimme Some (4:23)
05. That's The Way Of The World (4:43)
06. West Side Serenade (4:20)
07. Nightingale (5:46)
08. I'll Be Around (4:58)
09. Atlanta Nights (4:50)
10. Just Goodbye (5:07)
11. Lucy I'm Home (4:37)
12. Moon River (3:27)
AVENUE BLUE featuring Jeff Golub - Avenue Blue (1994)

personnel :

Acoustic Bass – Jack Daro
Bass Guitar – Chris Bishop
Drums – David Palmer, Michael Dawe
Electric Bass – Cliff Hugo
Euphonium – Nick Lane
Flugelhorn – Rick Braun
Guitar – Jeff Golub
Keyboards – Kevin Savagar, Rick Braun, Steve Gaboury
Percussion – Brad Dutz, Roger Squitero
Piano – Steve Gaboury
Soprano Saxophone – Bill Evans
Tenor Saxophone – Jim Biggins, Jimmy Roberts
Trombone – Nick Lane
Trumpet – Rick Braun

It seems like ages since record companies had actual house producers, but Mesa-Bluemoon's Rick Braun seems to be gracing some of the label's most engaging projects these days. First came Willie & Lobo's worldbeat finesse, and now Avenue Blue featuring Jeff Golub, a snappy, fluid guitarist who takes the sharp lilt of Steve Laury into fascinatingly cool textures ranging from hip-hop to atmospheric new age with just enough jazz tradition infused to cross genres. It's a credit to Golub, in fact, that his wide palette of original compositions ring truer than do surefire soul covers like "Pick Up the Pieces" or "I'll Be Around." Braun (who adds his own trumpet flair) allows the sure-fisted Golub to be the star here, keeping the moods potent but slightly understated, even on the Tower of Power-like charts of the best cut, "Gimmie Some." The album's real charm lies in its shifting, unpredictable dynamics, as Golub attains out-there fusion textures just before softening to a Wes Montgomery-like solo pose on the soft-spoken strains of "Moon River." Definitely an auspicious debut.~Jonathan Widran