Blue Note Record's Magnificent 7: Payton, Wilson, Coltrane, Charlap, Washington, Bernstein and Nash - Video
PUBLISHED:  Feb 19, 2009
DESCRIPTION:
The Blue Note 7 performing Thelonious Monk's "Criss Cross," includes interviews with Nicholas Payton, Steve Wilson, Ravi Coltrane, Bill Charlap, Peter Washington and Lewis Nash.

The Blue Note 7 are a jazz septet formed in 2008 in honor of the 70th anniversary of Blue Note Records. The group consists of Peter Bernstein (guitar), Bill Charlap (piano), Ravi Coltrane (tenor saxophone), Lewis Nash (drums), Nicholas Payton (trumpet), Peter Washington (bass), and Steve Wilson (alto saxophone, flute).

The group recorded an album in 2008, entitled Mosaic, which was released in 2009 on Blue Note/EMI, and toured the United States in promotion of the album from January until April 2009. The group plays the music of Blue Note from various artists, with arrangements by members of the band and Renee Rosnes.

2009 is the 70th anniversary of the birth of Blue Note, the label founded in New York by German emigre Alfred Lion. During its mid-1950s to mid-1960s heyday, it was practically synonymous with hard bop, nurturing a great many of its leading artists and recording dozens upon dozens of classic albums. 2009 is also the 25th anniversary of the relaunch of Blue Note under the leadership of Bruce Lundvall.

To mark the occasion, Blue Note assembled the seven-piece band which recorded Mosaic: A Celebration of Blue Note and which starts a 50-city North American tour on January 7. The band's repertoire consists exclusively of standards from Blue Note's hard bop archive, while its line-up is composed not of surviving first-generation label veterans, but of relatively young musicians steeped in its legacy.


Musical direction is credited to pianist and current Blue Note artist Bill Charlap, but he appears to be first amongst equals rather than martinet with a metaphorical baton. Five of the eight tracks on Mosaic were arranged by band members other than Charlap—drummer Lewis Nash, trumpeter Nicholas Payton, alto saxophonist Steve Wilson and guitarist Peter Bernstein—while Charlap arranged another, and fellow pianist and Blue Note artist Renee Rosnes the remaining two. By and large, the arrangements stay close to the original recorded versions, as do the trajectories of the soloists. The intention is not to "reinvent" the music, but simply to celebrate it. Most of the tracks last around seven minutes and include three or four brief solos.


The album kicks off with two energetic, up tempo readings: pianist Cedar Walton's "Mosaic," written for Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, and tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson's "Inner Urge." They're both exciting, attention-grabbing curtain raisers, but it's on the more reflective and moderately-paced tracks which follow where the band really shines. Pianist McCoy Tyner's "Search For Peace" (arranged by Rosnes), vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson's "Little B's Poem" (arranged by Wilson) and pianist Duke Pearson's "Idle Moments" (arranged by Bernstein), the latter written for guitarist Grant Green, are each gorgeous.


"Idle Moments," the sublimely chilled-out and lyrical title track from Green's 1963 album with Henderson and Hutcherson—which also included an exquisite version of pianist John Lewis' "Django"—is a particularly hard track to revisit with conviction, so enduringly perfect is the original version. But Bernstein turns in an extended solo which, though following the contours of Green's original, is more than a clever pastiche.


Of the edgier tracks, pianist Thelonious Monk's "Criss Cross," first recorded by Monk for Blue Note in 1951 and the oldest composition on the album, is the most memorable. Charlap avoids imitating Monk, contributing instead a fine solo in his own clear-eyed style.

Blue Note Records is a jazz record label, established in 1939 by Alfred Lion and Max Margulis. Francis Wolff became involved shortly afterwards. It derives its name from the characteristic "blue notes" of jazz and the blues. At the end of the 1950s, and in the early 1960s, Blue Note headquarters were located in New York City, at 43 W 61st Street. The label is currently owned by the EMI Group and in 2006 was expanded to fill the role of an umbrella label group bringing together a wide variety of EMI-owned labels and imprints specializing in the growing market segment of music for adults.
Historically, Blue Note has principally been associated with the "hard bop" style of jazz (mixing bebop with other forms of music including soul, blues, rhythm and blues and gospel). Horace Silver, Jimmy Smith, Freddie Hubbard, Lee Morgan, Art Blakey, Lou Donaldson, Donald Byrd and Grant Green were among the label's leading artists, but almost all the important musicians in postwar jazz recorded for Blue Note on occasion, albeit most often only once.
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