John Beasley + Dwight Trible, "Duality" Chelsea Bridge - Video
PUBLISHED:  Jul 24, 2012
DESCRIPTION:
"DUALITY"
Dwight Trible sings / John Beasley swings
...re-imagining, re-interpreting and re-inventing eight jazz standards.

Song List:
1. I'll Be Tired of You
2. Black is the Color
3. Backlash Blues
4. Chelsea Bridge (lyrics: Dwight Trible)
5. You Don't Know What Love Is
6. Strange Fruit
7. A Column of Birds
8. Autumn Leaves

iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/duality/id477619552

Credits:
Live album recorded at Redcat (Disney Hall), Boston Court and Mimi's, 2010.
Dwight Trible, vocals, and John Beasley on piano
Engineer - Benjamin Tierney
Produced by John Beasley and Dwight Trible
Mixed at The Hive, Venice, California

Background:
In 2010, two master improvisational musicians John Beasley and Dwight Trible came together to perform and record three duet concerts at the Redcat (Disney Hall), Boston Court (Jazz Bakery Concerts) and at a private concert series @ Mimi's Jazz Salon. Selected tracks from the live recordings is presented in "Duality," a duet LIVE album. "Duality" captures pianist, John Beasley and vocalist Dwight Trible re-imagining, re-interpreting and re-inventing eight jazz standards. Expect the unexpected with these fresh impressions on the tangled web of love, prejudice and life. The spellbinding poignancy of Dwight's voice and his instinctual spacing along with the intelligent, improvisational storytelling of John's playing finds you listening without a protective barrier around your heart.

Bio/Quote:
Dwight Trible is a singer who combines the best of vocal virtuosity with musicianship and improvisational skills to the delight of audiences and musicians alike. In addition to performing with his group, The Dwight Trible Ensemble, Dwight is the vocalist with the Pharoah Sanders Quartet and the vocal director for the Horace Tapscott Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra.

The Los Angeles Times aptly summarizes the essence of John Beasley in one sentence: "John Beasley, the one-time keyboardist for Freddie Hubbard and Miles Davis, whose playing reflects a variety of generational influences, incorporating the emphatic chordal clusters of Herbie Hancock, the rhythmic quirkiness of Monk and the lush intelligence of Art Tatum into a highly refined personal voice."
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