| | Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre Morning Song CD Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre Discography of CDs
Tenor saxophonist Kalaparush Maurice McIntyre recorded as sideman on the legendary first AACM recording, Roscoe Mitchell's "Sound" (DMK #408). He went on to record "Humility In The Light Of Creator" (DMK #419) and "Forces And Feelings" (DMK #425). Though
Personnel: Kalaprush Maurice McIntyre (tenor saxophone); Jesse Dulman (tuba); Ravish Momin (drums). Recorded at Riverside Studio and live at the Hungry Brain, Chicago, Illinois on August 30-31, 2003. Personnel: Kalaparush Maurice McIntyre & The Light (tenor saxophone); Jesse Dulman (tuba). Liner Note Author: John Corbett . Recording information: Riverside Studio, Chicago, IL (2003); The Hungry Brain (2003). Despite what John Corbett's otherwise excellent liner note essay says, Morning Song marks the third time this current lineup of the Light has recorded together. There was a CIMP date called South Eastern in 2002, and The Moment on Entropy Stereo in 2003. The reason for making the correction is merely to show how seasoned this band is, and how wonderfully attenuated its voice is as a collective. Saxophonist Kalaparusha, tuba player Jesse Dulman, and drummer Ravish Momin have, as evidenced in this Delmark recording -- on which McIntyre returns the Light to the label after thirty-some odd years and other incarnations -- have become a unit with one of the most singular voices in the new jazz. With this streamlined lineup, where rhythm becomes the focal point onto which melody and harmony are not only executed but also discovered, the notion of song is what comes across most pronouncedly. There are 11 new compositions by McIntyre here, all of them written with this band in mind, all of them with wide, deep sonorities that embrace gaps in time and space to create a language both deep and wide, where harmony is not an extension of the players, but is the speech the players communicate with to one another. Elements of jazz history, and the entire development of the vanguard waft through the grooves here on pieces such as "In My Morning Song," "Here Comes the Light," "Mobo," and "Symphony No. 1," while the blues underscore virtually everything in them. The blues are what give the edgier statements their meaning, their stance of articulation. This is a date with great respect for the tradition of the AACM, for Chicago jazz in general, and with a restlessness at its heart that offers new utterances in the jazz idiom. Highly recommended. ~ Thom Jurek
Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre Morning Song Songs Morning Song Review
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Purchase Morning Song CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Reggie Workman Summit Conference CD (1994)
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$16.45 At the age of 14, DaveRocK picked up a guitar and started to teach himself to play. Two years later, he was sneaking into bars to play with some of the most talented musicians in the Lake Cumberland area. He continued to play music all through high school, teaching himself to play bass and drums along the way. After several bands, he formed Fireline in 2003. In 2004 they released "No Turn Here," and began playing area clubs on a regular basis, including a gig as opening act for Capitol Records artist Huck Johns during Derby Day festivities at Phoenix Hill Tavern in Louisville, Kentucky.In 2006, DaveRocK took a break from Fireline to play bass for Lennon Murphy, the supporting act on the Motley Crue/Aerosmith Route of All Evil Tour. After a family emergency brought him home, he returned ready to branch out on his own. He started writing and recording his own album in January 2007. Work on the album was put on hold when he moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in June 2007; however, he quickly discovered that his love for original music had a much stronger hold on him than his desire to make money playing in a cover band. He returned ...
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