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John Stein’s Newest Album Takes A Landing On Shelves For Release: October 31, 2011 Review by Edward Blanco from All About Jazz, 10/25/11
With HI Fly, renowned jazz guitarist John Stein takes flight, leading his high-flying quartet
on another top-flight set. The album is a follow-up to his recent Raising The Roof (Whaling City Sound, 2010), and features new band mate, pianist Jake Sherman, replacing
keyboardist Koichi Sato, who appeared on the Stein's last two recordings. Sherman
is a student at the Berklee College of Music, where the Stein is an Associate Professor.
On this album, Stein navigates the band through five clever new compositions, and
lifts several old standards to new heights under the wings of fresh new arrangements.
Kurt Weill's oft-recorded classic, "Speak Low," is propelled by longtime collaborator
Ze Eduardo Nazario's drums and crashing cymbal accents, as well as the guitarist's
handiwork, giving the old tune a new feel. Sherman provides a futuristic grinding
sound on Randy Weston's title track, using organ in support of Stein's crisp lines.
Applying a light approach to the aptly titled standard, "Lazy Afternoon," Stein and
crew move the piece along quite slowly, while David Raskin's classic "Laura" is presented
in a new arrangement, a refreshing mid-tempo romp which lifts the tune from its more
familiar down-tempo territory. The last cover tune included is Victor Young's "Love
Letters," where Nazario and Sherman take over with some superb exchanges.
Four of the remaining five tracks are Stein originals that allow individual band members
to share the spotlight, beginning with another Stein alum, bassist John Lockwood's
propulsive lines on "Threesome," while "Sea Smoke" allows the Brazilian-born Nazario
to swing mightily on one of the burners of the set. Stein provides the lead chords
on "Plum Stone," as organist Sherman takes his turn center stage on this swinging
take.
The music gets bumpy on "Funkin' It Up," as Stein and the crew encounter some funky
winds on the set's finale, though the funk is truly not that strong. Whether flying
high and fast or low and slow, with interesting new charts and a skilled seasoned
guitarist as captain, Hi Fly is an album that will certainly be on the radar and surely worth tracking.
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