John Ellis - Roots, Branches & Leaves (2002)

  • 14 Oct, 21:51
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Artist:
Title: Roots, Branches & Leaves
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Fresh Sound New Talent[FSNT 124CD]
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log) | MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 53:05
Total Size: 287 MB(+3%) | 125 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. John Brown's Gun (Ellis) - 9:04
02. Ed (Ellis) - 7:54
03. Nowny Dreams (Ellis) - 7:59
04. Who? (Ellis) - 4:19
05. Light-Headed (Ellis) - 7:04
06. The Lonely Jesus (Trad.) - 3:11
07. Confirmation (Parker) - 5:56
08. For All We Know (Lewis-Coots) - 7:38
John Ellis - Roots, Branches & Leaves (2002)

personnel :

John Ellis - tenor saxophone, winds
Aaron Goldberg - piano, Fender Rhodes
Roland Guerin - acoustic bass
Jason Marsalis - drums, cymbals, tambourine
Nicholas Payton - flugelhorn (#2), trumpet (#4)
Bilal Oliver - vocals (#1,3,6)

This remarkable recording begins with "John Brown's Gun," Ellis' cutting-edge jazz adaptation of a folk song he learned as a child on his grandmother's knee. Pianist Aaron Goldberg, bassist Roland Guerin, and drummer Jason Marsalis join the tenor saxophonist in riotous, swinging play, augmented at certain intervals by the understated vocals of Bilal Oliver, who masterfully evokes the ghosts of the South. Oliver reappears on "Nowny Dreams," another folk adaptation that finds Goldberg switching to the hip but delicate Fender Rhodes. Ellis' haunting free-form arrangement of "The Lonely Jesus" also boasts the sound of the Rhodes; Oliver's peculiar incantations resurface, along with a mysterious female voice listeners hear from again at the very end of the disc, on a hidden track that follows Ellis' overdubbed woodwind-choir arrangement of "For All We Know." The voice, one presumes, is a tape of Ellis' grandmother, singing the verse that begins "John Brown's Gun." The effect is endearing and even magical; one is struck by Ellis' generosity, as he shares with listeners this most intimate source of inspiration. The remainder of the record is quite strong: Highlights include the moody "Light-Headed," the 7/4 reading of "Confirmation," and trumpeter Nicholas Payton's two guest appearances, on the pretty waltz "Ed" and the piano-less swinger "Who." But it is the folk-inspired material that affords Ellis an originality of the most striking sort.~David R. Adler