Bitter bitter weeks – Peace is Burning Like a River

Bitter bitter weeks
Peace is Burning Like a River
2007 CD, Mp3 Download
Bitter bitter weeks
Peace is Burning Like a River
2007 CD, Mp3 Download
High Two is proud to announce that we will be releasing the third album from Bitter Bitter Weeks. Titled Peace is Burning Like a River, the album has Brian McTear morphing his solo project into a full-fledged rock band. Featuring members of Apollo Sunshine, The A-Sides, The Novenas, Audible, Velvet Crush, and more in support, Peace is Burning retains the intimacy of the previous Bitter Bitter Weeks albums while infusing more energy and volume.
Bitter Bitter Weeks will perform songs from the new album at Johnny Brenda’s in Philadelphia will help from Creeping Weeds and Apollo Sunshine on Friday, April 27. Read More
Plus Cynthia will be playing at World Cafe Live in Philadelphia on Friday, Feb. 2. See below.
Intimacy and honesty are what draw people to Cynthia G. Mason. The Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter has the rare ability to bring listeners inside her emotions. For nearly 10 years, Mason has earned acclaim and fans through a series of self-released recordings. On Quitter’s Claim, Mason makes her songs widely available for the first time with a national release.
The album has already received great press from the Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News, City Paper, Weekly, and others. Read more about it here.
Philadelphia Inquirer {Michael Pelusi, Dec 2006} “Her entrancing, hushed songs never go to obvious places. Instead, they feature unexpected chord progressions and intriguingly elliptical lyrics”… “Excellent”
Philadelphia City Paper {Brian Howard, Dec 2006} “[Quitter’s Claim] delivers on the promise of [Mason’s] eponymous CD and ups the ante.”
Philadelphia Daily News {Sara Sherr, Dec 2006} “Gentle enough for the ‘XPN/Lilith crowd, but her darkly observant lyrics and intricate guitar picking have earned her comparisons to Cat Power, Suzanne Vega and Kristin Hersh.”
Songs: Illinois {Craig Bonnell, Jan 2007} “Philly’s best”
Cynthia G. Mason – vocals, guitar
Larry D. Brown – guitar, vocals, harmonica
All songs by Cynthia G. Mason
Engineered and mixed by Larry D. Brown
Cynthia G. Mason – vocals, guitar
Larry D. Brown – guitar, vocals, harmonica
All songs by Cynthia G. Mason
Engineered and mixed by Larry D. Brown
Intimacy and honesty are what draw people to Cynthia G. Mason. The Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter has the rare ability to bring listeners inside her emotions. For nearly 10 years, Mason has earned acclaim and fans through a series of self-released recordings. On Quitter’s Claim, Mason makes her songs widely available for the first time with a national release.
Mason’s voice is best compared to Suzanne Vega and Chan Marshall of Cat Power, but her voice is more than just her vocal intonations. She also has a distinct voice as a writer, crafting elegant, engaging ballads of regret, guilt, and longing. Her songs – always dark and unhurried – are marked by opposition. She is open, but guarded; honest, but mysterious; bitter, but reassuring; calm, but unsettled; restless, but complacent. Her songs are quiet ruminations that somehow resonate loudly.
Her first set of new songs in five years, the tracks on Quitter’s Claim are raw and delicate. Backed only by sparse acoustic guitar, Mason allows nothing to distract from her assured voice and cathartic lyrics. The result is a collection of songs that appear cold and dark, but reveal themselves to be warm and permeating.
Depending on your frame of reference, Quitter’s Claim marks either a departure or return to form for Mason. After experimenting with a backing band and elaborate production for her self-titled, self-released 2001recording, Quitter’s Claim brings her back to her roots with a stripped-down, raw production style that presents her songs with utmost immediacy.
While the recording style may alternate, there are elements of Cynthia’s music that are moving in one direction. Most essentially, Cynthia’s lyrics have entered a new level of sophistication and superiority. Her songs have always been raw and revelatory, commanding and engaging, poignant and intrepid, but the 10 songs that make up Quitter’s Claim advance her style in a huge leap that was worth the wait.
While the arrangements of her previous record were well-suited, her first-person songs are even more engaging in first-person singular. Cynthia is joined by just one other musician on the album, guitarist and longtime accompanist Larry D. Brown, who makes music under the Grey Reverend moniker. The sparse arrangements and the intentional room ambience of the recordings give the album a perfectly balanced level of distance and warmth.
Having just two guitars and vocals might seem monotonous, but Mason does an excellent job with Brown, who produced the recordings, to vary the proceedings. First of which, is that even though the overall tempo of Mason’s songs is always slow, she and Brown do an excellent job of varying the underlying guitar tempo in each song. There is also a certain subtlety as to how the duo augment the base material. On a number of tracks, Brown sneaks a delicate harmonica into sections of songs; rather than playing for the course of an entire song, he instead uses the harmonica for sporadic texture. Backing vocals by Brown and Mason (overdubbed) along with other subtle touches give the album an incredible amount of depth.
The songs that comprise Quitter’s Claim developed over the past five years. Most of the songs are ones that Mason has been playing live for almost that long. The time away from recording has given those songs time to grow, develop, and evolve into the perfect paintings that they truly are. While Quitter’s Claim presents an artist who has been growing a devoted fan base and developing her craft for ten years, in many ways the album also presents a new artist who deserves to be recognized as a fresh voice with a remarkable talent as both a writer and perfomer.
Philadelphia Inquirer {Michael Pelusi, Dec 2006} “Her entrancing, hushed songs never go to obvious places. Instead, they
feature unexpected chord progressions and intriguingly elliptical
lyrics”… “Excellent”
Philadelphia City Paper {Brian Howard, Dec 2006} “[Quitter’s Claim] delivers on the promise of [Mason’s] eponymous CD and ups the ante.”
Philadelphia Daily News {Sara Sherr, Dec 2006} “Gentle enough for the ‘XPN/Lilith crowd, but her darkly observant lyrics and intricate guitar picking have earned her comparisons to Cat Power, Suzanne Vega and Kristin Hersh.”
Cynthia G. Mason - Quitter's Claim
Cynthia G. Mason
Quitter’s Claim
2007 CD, Mp3 Download
Sonic Liberation Front
Change Over Time
2006 CD, Mp3 Download
Sonic Liberation Front - Change Over Time
Kevin Diehl – drums, Yoruba-Cuban percussion, electronica
Chuckie Joseph – drums, Yoruba-Cuban percussion, vocals, guitar
Julian Pressly – saxophone
Dan Scofield – saxophone
Matt Engle – bass
Rich Robinson – Yoruba-Cuban percussion
Ira Bond – Yoruba-Cuban percussion
Bart Miltenberger – trumpet
Sonic Liberation Front is a band without peers. The amorphous Philadelphia unit has essentially created its own genre in its evolution as a band. Combining free jazz with Afro-Cuban percussion and modern electronics, Sonic Liberation Front has forged an incredible sound assemblage – one that has sailed to new levels on Change Over Time.
While others simply talk of combining the ancient with the futuristic, SLF have done so. More than any other band on the scene today, SLF is continuing on the paths of Sun Ra, Albert Ayler, Ornette Coleman, and Art Ensemble of Chicago – new dimensions of folk art forms for tomorrow.
After previous collaborations with such luminary jazz artists as Sunny Murray, Andy Gonzales, and Badal Roy, SLF recruited veteran saxophonist Julian Pressley (sideman for Illinois Jacquet and Odean Pope) into the fold for Change Over Time. Pressley’s contributions to the musical direction of Kevin Diehl (a student of Murray) and Chuckie Joseph (a Yoruban cultural scholar) gives the new version of SLF an incredibly authentic center that the ensemble builds on throughout Change Over Time’s eight diverse compositions.
In 1999, Sonic Liberation Front formed as innovative project to combine free jazz, Afro-Cuban percussion, and electronics. The result was a one-of-a-kind band that broke down genre distinctions for undeniably brilliant concoction. Since then, though, SLF has building on that foundation – turning a unique concept into a great thing.
Like species who adapt to their climates, the aptly-titled Change Over Time shows a band that is getting stronger as they adjust. Change is certainly the theme of the music here, as SLF has re-tooled with new members and an exciting array of new compositions. Twelve musicians play on Change Over Time, with only three holdovers from SLF’s last album.
Despite the turnover, SLF’s third album (and second for High Two) follows up where its 2004 tour de force Ashé A Go-Go left off. Ashé received wonderful praise from nearly everyone who heard the album, garnering attention from Pitchforkmedia.com, Village Voice, JazzTimes, The Wire, and others around the world for its brilliance and innovation.
On Change Over Time, Sonic Liberation Front experiments with even more different types of percussion. In addition to a Western drum kit, the album includes iya, itotele, tumbador, segundo, quinto, djembe, doundoun, kinkini, and surdo on the album. SLF isn’t just using different drums for the sake of it – each instrument is well-placed accent within the music.
One of the things that sets SLF apart from most jazz or world music groups is how its music is recorded. Great attention is given in the arrangement and recording of the music to give the listener a unique experience. While most groups have horns and vocals out front with percussion to support, SLF seeks to reverse that. Sonic Liberation Front has the drums out front so that the listener hears the band the way the drummers hear it. When listening to Change Over Time, the urgency of the percussive attack is paramount, but it also doesn’t take away from the intricacy of the hornplay.
What makes Change Over Time SLF’s best album to date is the increased focus on varied songwriting and maintaining a cohesiveness across diverse compositions. Whether it is the rhumba of “First Rain,” the balladry of “Omio,” the electrolayered “D’Accord, Baby,” the noise extrapolations of “Ouaga to Bobo,” the percussion-centered “The Next Thing That Happens,” the jazz-centered “Dominical” and “Glass Eyes,” or the dark funk of “Change Over Time” – all the SLF tracks fuse together into an extremely potent body of work.
Perhaps the most striking and unique of all of SLF’s songs ever is Change Over Time‘s title track. Featuring Julian Pressley and other SLFers just straight talking trash atop an infectious rhythm – it makes the listener feel like they are walking right into a party. A fine way to end a fine album.
Also of note is that SLF includes half of Shot × Shot, the young Philadelphia jazz quartet that released its debut on High Two in April 2006 to rave reviews from Magnet, Downbeat, The Wire, Signal to Noise, and others. Bassist Matt Engle and saxophonist Dan Scofield split time in both groups and each contributes a composition toChange Over Time.
Point of Departure {Bill Shoemaker, Jan 2007} “Philadelphia’s Sonic Liberation Front is well on its way to becoming one of the more important American ensembles of the decade. Their mix of post-Coleman jazz, Afro-Cuban folkloric music and electronica manages to be immediately accessible without diluting any of its constituent parts.”
Jazzwise (UK) “Excellent Philadelphia octet centering on the Yoruba drums of Kevin Diehl, with Ornette/Cherrylike horns, chant and hints of electronics in a hypnotic set played with both intensity and a sense of abandon.”
All About Jazz NY {Jeff Stockton, Jan 2007} “As you would expect from a band led by drummers, the music leads with an African-Cuban- Caribbean percussive attack that reminds you of David Murray’s work with the Gwo-Ka Masters, Fela’s blend of ripping saxophone, multiplicity of drums and hypnotic vocals and, when they talk trash and funk it up on the title track, the Rebirth Brass Band. . . . Sonic Liberation Front makes jazz music with ears tuned to the big world around them.”
Consumer Guide {Tom Hull, Jan 2007} “Kevin Diehl’s Afro-Cuban percussion continues to amaze, especially when Dan Scofield’s avant-rooted sax skips and skids over the complex beats”
Philadelphia City Paper {Shaun Brady, Dec. 7, 2006} “SLF often counters the looseness of a drum circle with the rigor of tightly composed melody lines — then lets the horns fly free while the percussionists chant over a tight, interlocking rhythm. Then there’s the collision of old world and new, as traditional Afro-Cuban rhythms contend with electronic loops and cut-up bursts.”
Descarga {Peter Watrous, Feb. 6, 2007} “Editor’s Pick: Here’s an idea that hasn’t really taken off, which is surprising: the group, from Philadelphia, mix Afro Cuban religious percussion with a sort of free/post/bop jazz approach. At times it could be related to the Art Ensemble of Chicago, let’s say, with some electronica thrown in. Whatever the references, it’s good, the eight piece group (with four guests), rocking in rhythm, the music big and broad and open, another innovation in the rapidly growing field of Latin jazz, Santeria meets the avant guard. Highly good and highly recommended”
Shot × Shot are heading out for a series of dates in the mid-west. The quartet is heading to Chicago, Minneapolis, Madison, and Pittsburgh.
Dave Burrell – piano
Michael Formanek – bass
Guillermo E. Brown – drums
All Compositions by Dave Burrell (Lanikai Sounds Publishing Co., BMI)
Produced by Mark Christman and Daniel Piotrowski
Recorded by Jon Rosenberg at Systems Two, Brooklyn (November 2005)
Mixed by Eugene Lew with Mark Christman at Equalloudness, Philadelphia (April 2006)
Photography by Shawn Brackbill
Design by Steven O’Malley
Dave Burrell has long been recognized as an important pianist among the most astute jazz fans. Best known for his contributions to the music of Archie Shepp, David Murray, Pharaoh Sanders, and others, Burrell has finally positioned himself as one of the pre-eminent bandleaders in jazz. After a long hiatus from recording, Dave Burrell returned in 2004 with the album Expansion (High Two). His new trio recording, Momentum, is his best and most assured album to date.
Fronting a new, more dyanmic trio, featuring bassist Michael Formanek and drummer Guillermo E. Brown, Burrell shows a brave and complex new vision for jazz – one that respects precedents while forging a new path, all without falling into the traps of wandering improvisation. While Formanek and Brown lay the foundation, the pianist boldly roams in and out of the structure of his compositions, elegantly improvising on the songs’ motifs.Momentum is a lesson in both vigor and restraint – a captivating achievement that is certain to impress and attract.
After going nearly 30 years without a proper studio recording as a group leader, Dave Burrell returned with a definitive recording, 2004’s Expansion. Despite the long break from group recordings, Burrell was anything but inactive during that period. He worked for many years with David Murray and experiment in composing music in a variety of genres, breaking away from free jazz that established his career in the 1960s.
While Expansion captured the variety of Burrell’s compositional and improvisational skills, Momentum achieves a brilliant cohesiveness. Joined in the studio for the first time by either Formanek or Brown, Burrell plays much more inside the jazz tradition than at any point in his career. That’s not to say that Burrell has compromised his innovative style, but his new working trio combines for a more eloquent and sophisticated sound.
Although Burrell is the composer and leader of the group, he is not one to monopolize the spotlight; Burrell understands the power of collaboration. He allows his bandmates to weigh in not just with solos, but allows stylistic control. Just as he let bassist William Parker and drummer Andrew Cyrille help shape the tone of Expansion, his new compatriots, both bandleaders in their own right, help define Momentum.
Fomanek, known for his longtime association with Tim Berne and his work with Joe Henderson and Fred Hersch, has added a stabilizing dimension to Burrell’s music. Brown inserts a complex rhythmic dimension into Burrell’s pieces. Equally influenced by jazz and electronic music, Brown is a new kind of jazz drummer. As a member of the David S. Ware quartet and some of Matthew Shipp’s various ensembles, Brown established himself as a new voice behind the drums, but rarely has been as innovative as on Momentum.
Burrell composed six new compositions for Momentum. Picking up on some of the motifs from Expansion. Influenced by the continuing conflict in the Middle East and discontent in the U.S., Momentum is full of dark contemplation, but also of inspiration and promise.
Three of the pieces come from a score Burrell composed for the Oscar Micheaux silent film, Body and Soul(which starred Paul Robeson in his first film role). “Downfall,” “4:30 to Atlanta” and “Broken Promise” were first performed to accompany the film in Spring 2005.
When Expansion received various accolades from such outlets as NPR, Downbeat, The Wire, Village Voice, andJazzTimes, Burrell set out to make an even better record. As a reference point, he sought out to re-tackle one of the tricky compositions from Expansion for Momentum, “Coud d’Etat.” With Brown and Formanek giving the piece a deeper, smoother base, Burrell carves out the melody. The new version shows not just a new arrangement, but how Burrell continues to change, adapt, and develop – an artist still taking risks and growing forty years into his career.
Harp {Byron Coley, Jan/Feb 2007} “Dave Burrell’s genius as an improviser lies in his talent to obliterate conventions and stylistic gulfs that would swallow most people whole. . . . Burrell’s fully on his game here. He successfully interpolates great gobs of jazz history without getting overly preachy.”
Jazz Times {Brent Burton, Jan/Feb 2007} “Momentum, shows that Burrell’s art, unlike his reputation, is anything but tethered to the past.”
All About Jazz {Troy Collins, Dec 2006} “Burrell hones in on the jazz tradition with intensity and focus, delivering one of the finest statements of his career. . . . Momentum is a mature and haunting album from an acknowledged master—and a definitive statement from an under-appreciated legend.”
Philadelphia City Paper {Shaun Brady, Dec. 21, 2006} Number 1 Jazz Album of 2006: “Burrell elaborates haunting melodies into bluesy swing and stabbing dissonance, engaging his DB3 trio in tense, shifting interplay.”
Bagatellen {Derek Taylor, Nov 11, 2006} “As with Expansion, there’s a unified feel to the set and the tracks progress from overcast gloom to almost an almost optimistic countenance on the closing new version of “Coup d’Etat”, itself perhaps a bit of musical palmistry presaging the recent electoral reversal. At just under three-quarters of an hour it’s also a welcome exercise in economy, one that makes repeat spins all the more remunerative.”
Exclaim! {Nate Dorward, Nov 11, 2006} “Burrell remains one of jazz’s true originals, capable of beguiling you with a sprightly passage of stride piano before knocking you over with a keyboard-pummelling washout. And while Momentum may be one of his less fiery outings, its dark intensity still puts virtually every contemporary jazz piano recording in the shade..”
All About Jazz {Ian Patterson, Jan 2007} “Momentum is a high point in Dave Burrell’s forty-year career. Much of the album’s success is down to the energy and creativity of his fellow musicians, Formanek and Brown, who contribute enormously to this collective jewel, which is eccentric yet straightahead, abstract yet tuneful, simple yet sophisticated.”
Jazz Review {Lyn Horton, Dec 2006} “The beginning and end to any single song are crystal clear. They define the choice of limits for the steadfast focus of a piano master. The memory of how Burrell speaks through his instrument is indelible. The pleasurable memory of Momentum is inescapable.”