Remember the Sound (Homage to Michael Brecker & George Robert) - Video
PUBLISHED:  Apr 08, 2010
DESCRIPTION:
Remember the Sound (Homage to Michael Brecker& George Robert)
Jim McNeely: composer/arranger

George Robert Jazztet

Personnel:

George Robert: alto sax
Robert Bonisolo tenor sax
Matthieu Michel: flugelhorn
Rene Mosele: trombone
Mathieu Schneider: flute
Laurent Wolf: baritone saxes
Vinz Vonlanthen: guitar
Emil Spanyi: piano
Jean-Pierre Schaller: electric bass
Marcel Papaux: drums

Montage Vidéo Concept production: STUDIOP3 Mathieu schneider 2010

https://www.mathieu-schneider.ch/
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Label: TCB -The Montreux Jazz Label
Audio CD (February 10, 2009)
Production: HEMU

Track listing:
Burn
Silver Spheres
In Step Out Ahead
Bumps
Into Thy Hands
Hudson Funkshon
Remember the Sound


By George Kanzler
Working with a tentet similar to mid-size bands he's led on his own projects, composer/arranger Jim McNeely has fashioned a musical tribute to the late Michael Brecker that manages to conjure up aspects of the late saxophonist's music and musical personality, without resorting to overt mimicry or pastiche. Led by alto saxophonist George Robert, with faculty from the jazz program he heads at Switzerland's Lausanne Conservatory, the Jazztet negotiates the harmonic and counterpoint-rich music with esprit and élan.

The music references various periods and stylistic aspects of Brecker's career, beginning with the aptly titled "Burn," a flag waver the composer says is inspired by Brecker's many up-up-tempo quartet numbers. But "Burn" is no quartet piece; it's a full-fledged orchestral number with a theme that burgeons into counterpoint and fugue-like contrasts before giving way to Robert Bonisolo's inspired tenor sax and guest Randy Brecker's fiery trumpet solos over restlessly churning horns. "Silver Spheres" recalls Michael Brecker's tenure with Horace Silver, in an undulating tune that could have come from the pianist's book. High and low horns provide an ongoing ensemble counterpoint on "In Step, Out Ahead," a salute to Brecker's time in Steps Ahead, while the rocking backbeat groove of "Hudson Funkshon" recalls the Brecker Brothers years, complete with a distorted guitar solo and a saxophones/flute soli emulating the sound of the EWI (electronic wind instrument) that Brecker played in that band. Brecker's more spiritual side is remembered in the ballad "Into Thy Hands," featuring Robert's alto and a coda from Mathieu Schneider's flute, and the title tune, a gospel-influenced number with Bonisolo's tenor in the lead interacting with the horns as choir.

George Kanzler
Jazz and music critic for major daily newspaper, also syndicated by Newhouse News Service, from 1968 to 2002; frelance since.
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