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Ellery Eskelin - Jazz Trash '1995

Jazz Trash
ArtistEllery Eskelin Related artists
Album name Jazz Trash
Country
Date 1995
Genrecreative jazz
Play time 1:11:55
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 326 MB
PriceDownload $2.95
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“Eskelin has a great sound on the tenor saxophone: swaggering, rich,
sensitive but not constrained…In the welter of clones claiming to inherit
the ‘jazz tradition’, he is a welcome reminder of the special
poignancy a saxophone can deliver.”

— Ben Watson, Hi-Fi News & Record Review

Ellery Eskelin’s fifth recording as a leader and his debut on Songlines
develops concepts first charted in his trio release Figure of Speech (Soul
Note), which was named one of the best jazz records of 1993 in the Village Voice
critics poll. Continuing his use of unusual instrumentation, this time he puts a
creative spin on the organ trio tradition; the result, says critic Kevin
Whitehead, “is audacious (and concept-driven) even by his
standards”. The program of originals includes uptempo and folkish pieces
as well as several atmospheric, almost timeless themes, ending on a 7/4 blues.
But, as Eskelin explains: “Rather than improvise with the themes, harmony
or what have you, I’ve structured this music so that our improvisation
often contrasts with the written. The improvisational strategies are different
in each composition, creating a new format or shape for every piece…I
should mention that Jazz Trash is not meant to denigrate jazz. It’s only
meant to disarm those overly serious types who seem intent on fighting over who
gets to carve the music’s tombstone. I love jazz, after all my mother
plays Hammond B3 organ.” With collaborators whose experience in other
areas of music consistently brings fresh perspectives and approaches to a jazz
context, he has produced a CD that touches the listener with its power and
eloquence.

In the twelve years since Eskelin moved to New York from Baltimore, he has
performed and recorded with many of the music’s innovators. In addition
to leading the present trio, he is a member of the cooperative group Joint
Venture, Joey Baron’s trio Baron Down, Mark Helias’ quintet Attack
the Future, and Phil Haynes’ 4 Horns and What?, and has also played
recently with trombonist Ray Anderson. He has appeared on over twenty recordings
and has come to be regarded as “one of the important jazz figures of his
generation” (Robert Hicks, Jazziz) and a “tenor original”
(Kevin Whitehead, Pulse).

Andrea Parkins is a composer and improvisor whose influences range from Conlon
Nancarrow and Sun Ra to west African drumming and kora music. She has appeared
in John Zorn’s Cobra and with musicians such as Otomo Yoshihide, Ikue
Mori, Tenko and Joe Morris. She leads her own trio, and has has written solo
pieces for accordion and sampler as well as ensemble pieces and music for dance,
theater and film; she has also composed music and designed sound for her own
sculptural installations and multi-media works. As an accordionist, Parkins
expands the instrument sonically by combining extended techniques with
fragmentation of traditional accordion syntax.

Jim Black attended Berklee College before moving to New York, where he has
gained recognition for his highly textural, compositional style. He tours and
records with Tim Berne’s Bloodcount and Dave Douglas’ Tiny Bell
Trio (Songlines) and can also be heard with the Ben Monder Trio. He co-leads and
composes for the collectives Human Feel and Pachora, is composing music for
upcoming projects including a recording with Dewey Redman and Ed Schuller, and
has recently performed with Jane Ira Bloom, Lee Konitz, Fred Hersch, John Zorn,
Hank Roberts, Herb Robertson, Mark Dresser, Jerome Harris, Marc Ducret, Hal
Crook, Django Bates, and Marty Ehrlich.

Best of 1995, Jazz Times and Cadence; Best of 1996, Cadence and Jazz Magazine
(France)

“As radical and questioning as elements of Jazz Trash are, the disc is as
imbued with jazz life. Eskelin’s personal compositional vision, his
supple phrasing and gorgeous tenor sound all qualify him as a major player in
today’s creative music…One of the great emergent talents of our
time. — John Corbett, Down Beat

“A stimulating, adventurous recording which exemplifies all that’s
desirable in creative improvised music: fearless curiosity, instrumental acumen
and restless discovery…Emotionally, the music ranges from churning energy
to dry, moody pastoralism…Intelligent and recommended.” —
Carl Baugher, Cadence

“The end result is a display of edgy virtuosity that is constantly
unpredictable, a mix of eerie rhythms and hair-raising playing that sounds like
David Murray jamming with the Soft Machine…highly individual and highly
recommended.” — Jerome Wilson, Option

“Eskelin affirms a very personal style…sometimes with power, always
with beauty.” — Bernard Loupias, Jazz Magazine (Paris)

Ellery Eskelin


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