Mark Lewis - New York Session (2017)

  • 19 Jul, 17:50
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: New York Session
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Audio Daddio
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 65:42 min
Total Size: 149 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
----------
01. Koan
02. Child's Play
03. Dl Blues
04. Boberto's Magical World
05. Connie
06. Sierra Leone
07. Up To It
08. Not As Beautiful As You
09. Summer Is Over
10. The Lydian Express
11. Roll 'em Joe

As well-traveled and widely recorded as alto saxophonist Mark Lewis has been over the past four decades, his new CD "The New York Session" is likely to be the album that helps rectify his current under-the-radar reputation. Recorded last year in Brooklyn with a world-class rhythm section—pianist George Cables, bassist Essiet Essiet, and drummer Victor Lewis—the new disc was released by Lewis’s Audio Daddio label on January 27. It’s the work of an artist clearly reveling in the company of fellow masters making the most of his tasty compositions.

“There’s so much to savor and admire here,” writes critic Ted Gioia, a self-professed Mark Lewis fan who contributed the CD booklet notes. “Lewis’s musicality, his inventiveness, his humor, his ability to immerse himself in the soundscape of the performance with total emotional commitment—these all stand out here in track after track.”

Based in Bremerton, a small city west of Seattle on the Puget Sound where he returned to be close to his family, Lewis maintains a busy schedule that includes teaching private students and college clinics. He continues to expand his daunting book of compositions, which number over 1,700. Though he’s recorded more than 20 albums, only a fraction of his compositions have been documented on record, another reason why "The New York Session" is a particularly important release. The discovery of a master improviser is always thrilling, but finding a player/composer at the peak of his powers is a rare occurrence indeed. Though fully aware of his accomplishments, Lewis sees himself as part of a modern jazz continuum. “I try to approach each composition, each performance, with knowledge and technique from studying the masters who came before and also the innocence of a child,” he says. “I hope it keeps the music authentic and genuine.”


IsraCloud : Download