CATALOGUE
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Wayne Horvitz
Forever
Wayne Horvitz (piano)
Timothy Young (guitars)
Keith Lowe (acoustic bass)
Andy Roth (drums)
Note:
This is a re-issue of American Bandstand (SGL 1528-2) released
in February 2000 and now withdrawn due to legal action by Dick Clark.
For audiophiles, a DVD/DVD-A version of Forever is being released by
Hi-Res Music, www.hiresmusic.com.
Wayne's second record with Zony Mash acoustic is the hybrid SACD Sweeter
Than the Day (SGL 1536-5).
When Wayne Horvitz decided a few
years ago to do a new piano record (the first leading his own group
since 1987's Nine Below Zero with Butch Morris and Bobby Previte), he
took his time until he found the combination of players that was just
right. The wait was worth it: thanks to a great-sounding piano and studio,
eleven of his distinctive tunes, and the members of his Hammond B-3
based group Zony Mash playing "unplugged", the music shines. Foregrounding
melody and harmony through the gently plangent voicings of the piano/guitar
front line, concise solos, and thoughtful group interplay, the program
sets a leisurely pace while evoking a range of styles and feelings.
Impressionistic ballads that might recall Paul Bley, Ellington/Strayhorn,
Debussy, or the wistful and piquant irony of Satie, blend with mid-tempo
songs likewise steeped in the history of jazz, r&b/r&r, soul, funk,
blues, gospel, and the avant-garde. A chamber-jazz homage to musical
roots, Forever is an open-hearted yet serenely beautiful record.
Born in New York City in 1955,
Wayne Horvitz lives in Seattle with his wife, composer/pianist/singer-songwriter
Robin Holcomb. In addition to Zony Mash electric (3 CDs on Knitting
Factory Records), he leads Wayne Horvitz's Four + One - featuring Eyvind
Kang (violin), Julian Priester (trombone), Reggie Watts (keyboards),
and Tucker Martine (electronics and live processing; CDs on Intuition
and Avant). Past ensembles include The President, Pigpen, and the Horvitz,
Morris, Previte Trio. He co-leads the New York Composers Orchestra and
the free/funky cooperative improvising quartet Ponga (with saxophonist
Skerik, Dave Palmer, and Bobby Previte; CDs on Loosegroove and P-Vine).
As a sideman and collaborator he has performed and recorded with Marty
Ehrlich, John Zorn (Naked City, Sonny Clark Memorial Quartet, etc.),
Philip Wilson, David Moss, Curlew, Robin Holcomb, Bill Frisell, Billy
Bang, Kazutoki Umezu, Fred Frith, Carla Bley, Elliott Sharp, and Michael
Shrieve, among others. He has composed for theater, dance, film, video,
TV (PBS's Chihuly in Venice), and multimedia, including collaborations
with Paul Taylor, Bill Irwin, Crispin Spaeth, theater directors Carey
Perloff (Pounds's Elektra and Pinter's Mountain Language) and Gordon
Edelstein (Death of a Salesman), and Gus Van Sant. He has had pieces
commissioned by The Kitchen, the Kronos Quartet, Brooklyn Academy of
Music, New World Records, the Seattle Chamber Players, and Earshot Jazz.
In Jan. 2000 he premiered his score to Chaplin's The Circus, for two
pianos, two clarinets, and violin, in Oporto, Portugal. He has produced
records for Elektra, New World, Nonesuch, Antilles, Gramavision, Shanachie,
and Sound Aspects with artists including Bill Frisell, Butch Morris,
Robin Holcomb, John Adams, Fontella Bass, The World Sax Quartet, and
Peter Apfelbaum and the Hieroglyphics Ensemble; he also produced the
soundtrack for Daniele Luchetti's film La Scuola composed by Bill Frisell,
and Frisell scores for two animated TV specials by cartoonist Gary Larson.
A detailed Horvitz discography can be found at www.nwu.edu/jazz/artists/horvitz.wayne/
discog.html.
Guitarist Timothy Young has performed
in Seattle rock bands The Scabs, Scallywags and Devilhead, and with
Robin Holcomb, Eyvind Kang, Bill Frisell, John Zorn, Julian Priester,
Michael White, Sam Rivers, and the Young Composers Collective (renamed
the Degenerate Art Ensemble), with whom he helped create a live score
for Fritz Lang1s Metropolis (available on CD). He also spent five years
touring with Cambodian master musician Dr. Sam Ang Sam performing traditional
Pin Peat repertoire.
Bassist Keith Lowe's early background
is in symphonic music; more recent interests include the blues (the
Duffy Bishop Band, Rod Cook's Toast), Louisiana blues-rock (Guano Bueno),
and jazz and funk (Crack Sabbath, with Skerik, Leif Totusek, Ron Weinstein,
and Mike Stone). He tours with Fiona Apple and Bill Frisell's Willies.
Drummer Andy Roth plays jazz, rock,
funk, reggae... He has performed and recorded with Robin Holcomb, Bill
Frisell, Jay Clayton, Jim Knapp, and the New York Composers Orchestra
(West), and is a member of Seattle world-beat band The Groove.
***** (five star rating)
Horvitz and co. tone things down a bit while pursuing refined
elegance on delicately melodic and altogether stirring pieces such as
"Ben's Music" and the gently understated "Tired". Horvitz and guitarist
Timothy Young continue their enticing blend of richly stated chord voicings
and sonorous unison lines on "Prepaid Funeral" as the pianist's well-placed
chords and crisp delivery speak volumes. On this piece, the musicians
turn up the heat as they pursue subtle dynamics and finger-snapping
grooves via Horvitz' Texas roadhouse style piano articulations and Young's
animated yet intentionally fragile picking and acute phraseology....From
beginning to end the musicians allegorize personal sentiment without
becoming morose or overly introspective...[a] wonderful recording.
Glenn Astarita, All About Jazz
****1/2
Working with his band Zony Mash in an acoustic setting, Horvitz
creates an album that is rich with flavors. From the introspective grace
of "Ben's Music" to the sly tango of "In the Ballroom", the disc abounds
with warmth and sensitivity. It's similar to the work of the Lounge
Lizards in that it doesn't go by preconceptions of jazz, but uses the
genre as a touchstone, venturing into everything from Eastern European
motifs to surf guitar. A terrific album.
Tim Sheridan, All Music Guide
Like Frisell's recent work,
Wayne Horvitz' American Bandstand further explores and expounds
upon the gentler, subtler aspects of his musical personality. Though
certainly not as overtly 'country' as Frisell's Nashville, Horvitz'
understanding of country, blues, folk, and even singer - songwriter-type
music is made quite plain on this CD. None of these elements are represented
in an obvious way, and that's perhaps the main reason why this disc
appeals so strongly. For me, the music on American Bandstand
conjured myriad visual images, and it is fitting that several of the
compositions were commissioned for film scores (Capricious Midnight,
Little Man) and theatre productions (Ben's Music). The strength of the
music here lies in Horvitz' beatifully crafted compositions. Like Monk
and Herbie Nichols, Horvitz is able to create memorable and distinctive
melody lines from seemingly disparate, even mundane, motifs and phrases.
On "Prepaid Funeral," Horvitz uses a morse-code like repetition of notes
for differrent durations to create tension in an otherwise playful tune.
Horvitz' tunes are full of odd accents, rests that last a half-beat
longer than you'd expect, and harmonies that seem caustic one moment,
sunny and sweet the next.
Dave Wayne, Jazz
Weekly
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- Ben's
Music
- Prepaid
Funeral
- Love,
Love, Love
- Capricious
Midnight
- 9
to 4
- In the
Ballroom
- Forever
- Disingenuous Firefight
- Tired
- Little
Man
- American Bandstand
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