Jon Ailabouni - You Are Not Alone (2023)
Artist: Jon Ailabouni, Simon Harding, Mike Conrad, Karyn Quinn, Christopher Jensen, Ryan Frost, Claire Ailabouni
Title: You Are Not Alone
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Skydeck Music
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:15:33
Total Size: 368 / 175 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: You Are Not Alone
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Skydeck Music
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:15:33
Total Size: 368 / 175 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Border Town Boogaloo (08:22)
2. What Wondrous Love Is This (09:48)
3. Overture (08:16)
4. Playful (07:24)
5. Invisible (08:21)
6. Fraught Hope Blues (Bass Intro) (01:26)
7. Fraught Hope Blues (05:17)
8. Lullaby and Goodnight (09:18)
9. Azrak (10:46)
10. You Are Not Alone (06:30)
Personnel:
Jon Ailabouni – trumpet & flugelhorn
Simon Harding – alto & tenor saxophones, bass clarinet, flute
Mike Conrad – piano
Karyn Quinn – acoustic & electric bass
Christopher Jensen – drums
Ryan Frost – dumbek (9)
Claire Ailabouni – voice (10)
You are not alone. Others share your griefs. Others will share your joys.
This album contains music for the heart, designed for healing, feeling, and being. In each selection, the musicians collectively meditate on a specific challenge or theme, creating a form of musical storytelling that is both personal and communal, both intimate and vast. Sometimes it’s a party. Other times a prayer. Or both.
The album is intentionally ordered, moving through both lament and joy, with improvised segues that weave one piece to the next. I encourage you to listen to the album as you’d watch a movie, as a whole and in one sitting.
-Jon Ailabouni
This album contains music for the heart, designed for healing, feeling, and being. In each selection, the musicians collectively meditate on a specific challenge or theme, creating a form of musical storytelling that is both personal and communal, both intimate and vast. Sometimes it’s a party. Other times a prayer. Or both.
The album is intentionally ordered, moving through both lament and joy, with improvised segues that weave one piece to the next. I encourage you to listen to the album as you’d watch a movie, as a whole and in one sitting.
-Jon Ailabouni