Artist:
Jake Leckie, Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Randal Fisher, Darius Christian
Title:
Planter of Seeds
Year Of Release:
2024
Label:
Self Released
Genre:
Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Quality:
FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 44:07
Total Size: 806 / 226 MB
WebSite:
Album Preview
Tracklist:1. Planter of Seeds (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Darius Christian & Randal Fisher) (05:27)
2. Big Sur Jade (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Darius Christian & Randal Fisher) (05:25)
3. Clear Skies (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Darius Christian & Randal Fisher) (04:13)
4. The Aquatic Uncle (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Darius Christian & Randal Fisher) (06:01)
5. Starboard (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow & Cathlene Pineda) (07:16)
6. Santa Teresa (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow & the Guide Trio) (03:59)
7. String Song (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow & the Guide Trio) (05:32)
8. The Daughters of the Moon (feat. Nadav Peled, Beth Goodfellow, Cathlene Pineda, Darius Christian & Randal Fisher) (06:10)
Planter of Seeds is bassist/composer Jake Leckie’s third release as a bandleader and explores what beauty can come tomorrow from the seeds we plant today. What are we putting in the ground? What are we building? What is the village we want to bring our children up in? At the core of the ensemble is The Guide Trio, his working band with guitarist Nadav Peled and drummer Beth Goodfellow, who played on Leckie’s second album, The Guide, a rootsy funky acoustic analog folk-jazz recording released on Ropeadope records in 2022. For Planter of Seeds, the ensemble is augmented by Cathlene Pineda (piano), Randal Fisher (tenor saxophone), and Darius Christian (trombone), who infuse freedom and soul into the already tightly established ensemble.
Eight original compositions were pristinely recorded live off the floor of Studio 3 at East West Studios in Hollywood CA, and mastered by A.T. Michael MacDonald. The cover art is by internationally acclaimed visual artist Wayne White. Whereas his previous work has been compared to Charles Mingus, and Keith Jarrett’s American Quartet with Charlie Haden, Leckie’s new collection sits comfortably between the funky odd time signatures of the Dave Holland Quintet and the modern folk-jazz of the Brian Blade Fellowship Band with a respectful nod towards the late 1950s classic recordings of Ahmad Jamal and Miles Davis.
The title track, “Planter of Seeds,” is dedicated to a close family friend, who was originally from Trinidad, and whenever she visited family or friends at their homes, without anyone knowing, she would plant seeds she kept in her pocket in their gardens, so the next season beautiful flowers would pop up. It was a small altruistic anonymous act of kindness that brought just a little more beauty into the world. The rhythm is a tribute to Ahmad Jamal, who we also lost around the same time, and whose theme song Poinciana is about a tree from the Caribbean.
“Big Sur Jade” was written on a trip Leckie took with his wife to Big Sur, CA, and is a celebration of his family and community. This swinging 5/4 blues opens with an unaccompanied bass solo, and gives an opportunity for each of the musicians to share their improvisational voices. “Clear Skies” is a cathartic up-tempo release of collective creative energies in fiery improvisational freedom. “The Aquatic Uncle” features Randal Fisher’s saxophone and is named after an Italo Calvino short story which contemplates if one can embrace the new ways while being in tune with tradition. In ancient times, before a rudder, the Starboard side of the ship was where it was steered from with a steering oar. In this meditative quartet performance, the bass is like the steering oar of the ensemble: it can control the direction of the music, and when things begin to unravel or become unhinged, a simple pedal note keeps everything grounded.
The two trio tunes on the album are proof that the establishment of his consistent working band The Guide Trio has been a fruitful collaboration. “Santa Teresa”, a bouncy samba-blues in ⅞ time, embodies the winding streets and stairways of the bohemian neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro it is named for. The swampy drum feel on “String Song” pays homage to Levon Helm of The Band, a group where you can’t always tell who wrote the song or who the bandleader is, proving that the sum is greater than the individual parts. Early jazz reflected egalitarianism in collective improvisation, and this group dynamic is an expression of that kind of inclusivity and democracy.
“The Daughters of the Moon” rounds out the album, putting book ends on the naturalist themes. This composition is named after magical surrealist Italo Calvino’s short story about consumerism, in which a mythical modern society that values only buying shiny new things throws away the moon like it is a piece of garbage and the daughters of the moon save it and resurrect it. It’s an eco-feminist take on how women are going to save the world. Pineda’s piano outro is a hauntingly beautiful lunar voyage, blinding us with love. Leckie dedicates this song to his daughter: “My hope is that my daughter becomes a daughter of the moon, helping to make the world a more beautiful and verdant place to live.”
Jake Leckie – Bass/Compositions
Nadav Peled – Guitar
Beth Goodfellow – Drums
Cathlene Pineda – Piano
Randal Fisher – Tenor Saxophone
Darius Christian – Trombone