Hans Ulrik - Jazz & Latin Beats (2006)

  • 16 Sep, 14:19
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Artist:
Title: Jazz & Latin Beats
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: Stunt Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:50:33
Total Size: 319 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. We'll Be Together Again
02. Blackbird
03. Take 5
04. My Sweet Louise
05. Gone With The Wind
06. The Man I Love
07. Bambolotto
08. No Moe
09. Amnesia
10. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men

Jazz & Latin Beats is a follow–up to Copenhagen–born saxophonist Hans Ulrik’s Jazz and Mambo, which won a Danish Grammy Award as “Jazz Album of the Year” in 1998. This is another strong outing, even though the “Latin beats” are always subordinated to the Jazz and in some cases (“Gone with the Wind,” “The Man I Love,” “Sad Young Men”) aren’t even present. Ulrik claims John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins as his principal role models, and the Rollins influence is conspicuous on several numbers — “Gone with the Wind,” Ulrik’s “Bambolotto,” Rollins’ “No Moe” — but elsewhere Ulrik is much less Rollins–like, adopting a light, airy sound and plainspoken approach more comparable to that of Eddie Harris, James Moody or, among the younger generation, Harry Allen or Scott Hamilton. Ulrik also divides his time between tenor sax and clarinet, playing the latter (and sounding much like Swedish master Putte Wickman) on “Sad Young Men,” Lennon / McCartney’s “Blackbird,” Brubeck’s “Take 5” and Gershwin’s “The Man I Love.” The album opens quietly with a lovely version of the standard “We’ll Be Together Again” set to a gently swaying mambo beat and including a perceptive solo by bassist Anders Christensen (a standout as well on “Gone with the Wind” and “The Man I Love”). “Blackbird” and “Take 5” quicken the pace before Ulrik slows it again for another easygoing mambo, his own “My Sweet Louise” (featuring his tenor and Niclas Knudsen’s crystalline guitar). Here, as on “Together Again,” Ulrik dubs clarinet behind tenor for added color on the last chorus. The Ulrik–Rollins connection surfaces on “Gone with the Wind” as well as on the up-tempo “Bambolotto and “No Moe,” which follow his warmhearted reading (on clarinet) of “The Man I Love.” Pianist Jacob Christoffersen moves to organ (as he does on “Blackbird,” “Bambolotto” and “No Moe”) for part of Ulrik’s “Amnesia,” after which the group exits the way it entered —quietly — with “Ballad of the Sad Young Men.” While there’s no doubt that this is Ulrik’s gig, his companions are more than window–dressing, with Christoffersen, Knudsen, Christensen, drummer Mikkel Hess and percussionist Lisbeth Diers laying down a plush rhythmic carpet on which Ulrik is wonderfully free to maneuver and to swing, which he does quite well. (Jack Bowers)