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Mike Longo's New Jazz CD Features Inspired & Deep Improvisational Exploration For Release: November 1, 2011 Release by Music Industry News Network
With every new recording, jazz pianist Mike Longo digs a little deeper into the chemistry
of the music, pushing himself and his band to more fully explore the intricacies of
the rhythmic nature of jazz, attempting to go to new places where surprising results
await. Longo named his new album To My Surprise in honor of those special musical moments that unfold.
To My Surprise, produced by saxophonist Bob Magnuson, features The Mike Longo Trio (with jazz stalwarts
Bob Cranshaw on bass and Lewis Nash on drums) on a half-dozen tunes, and on the other
six numbers the trio is supplemented with two special guests who are renowned horn
players -- Jimmy Owens on trumpet and flugelhorn, and Lance Bryant on tenor saxophone.
The music features Longo’s tight-arrangements of both his original compositions and
several surprising selections of outside material, brought to a flowering fruition
by the band’s inspired and deep improvisational exploration. The results are a stunning
collection of acoustic modern jazz at its finest, rooted in the be-bop traditions
of the past, but pushing into new territory, lessons Longo learned from studying with
Oscar Peterson 45 years ago and playing with Dizzy Gillespie extensively for a quarter-century.
To My Surprise and many of Longo’s other recordings are available online at Jazzbeat.com
and CDbaby.com as well as digital download sites such as iTunes, Rhapsody, eMusic,
Amazon-downloads and many other online locations. In addition, Longo is revered as
a master jazz teacher (he has written numerous textbooks) and he is just releasing
his second instructional DVD (The Fundamentals) of an eventual four-disc series titled The Rhythmic Nature of Jazz. The first two DVDs are available at Jazzbeat.com.
“Sometimes you have to walk through a musical door just to see what happens,” Longo
explains. “Quite often when I try something completely new to me, it seems a bit strange
at first, but then I am pleasantly surprised when it works. I hope the listener feels
the same way, even if it is on a subconscious level. Sometimes the surprise is an
unusual chord progression, or an unlikely layering of the melody line, or complex
polyrhythms. With my original compositions, it starts with a germ of an idea, a motif
loaded with energy ready to move forward. I build a structure around it. Then I give
it to the band, and in the studio the energy and excitement are added. During the
improvisational sections, it is just like each musician is composing as they go along.
If the structure is sturdy enough, the music can be performed live again and again
changing with each performance.”
This new album showcases Longo’s always-evolutionary playing on a dozen tunes recorded
“live in the studio, mostly first takes with the absolute minimum of editing” to capture
the most spontaneous, rapturous, improvisational jazz possible (“We only had one rehearsal
the day before to check song structure.”). Longo worked with this same trio on his
highly-successful last album (Sting Like a Bee went to #3 on the international Jazz Week airplay chart). “Bob and Lewis are both from the same ‘polymetric school’ of playing
where you can have more than one meter going on at the same time,” Longo states. “With
them and with the quintet there is a contrapuntal perfection between the musicians,
plus a great action-reaction thing, a lot of spontaneous combustion with surprises
going on.” Longo has performed with Cranshaw, Nash and Owens numerous times in various
settings over the years. “Jimmy Owens and I first played together in 1968 in Dizzy
Gillespie’s All-Star Band,” Mike recalls. This latest CD is Longo’s first opportunity
to play with Bryant.
On To My Surprise, the quintet tunes are original Longo compositions penned in the past year plus “Magic
Bluze” which Jimmy Owens contributed. “When I was writing the material,” says Longo,
“I could hear the horns, so I scored some specific horn parts and also on each tune
left sections for improvisational soloing.” The recording kicks off with the highly-energetic
(and tongue-in-cheek-titled) “A Picture of Dorian Mode” followed by the slow “Still
Water” with the piano echoing the horn melody line. On the title tune Longo took a
left-turn by inserting a G-major-seventh chord (“that’s the surprise”), and it leads
to Owens’ smooth trumpet solo followed by a rich-and-creamy sax solo by Bryant with
the two horns playing different lines simultaneously near the end.
Not surprising to Longo fans, the six tunes the trio covers get completely revamped.
Longo enjoys taking challenging material, such as music originally written for horn
bands, and coming up with a piano arrangement. As usual, he selected pieces by two
of his favorite composers -- Wayne Shorter (“Limbo”) and Herbie Hancock (“Eye of the
Hurricane”). “I turned ‘Limbo’ into a waltz. ‘Hurricane’ is so intricate it was extremely
challenging to work out the piano part, especially to be played at such a fast pace,
but we nailed it in one take.” Similarly Longo makes piano-trio music out of classic
vocal numbers such as “I Hadn’t Anyone ‘Til You,” “Old Devil Moon” (“entirely reharmonized
in a modern style with fourths in inversions”), “You’ve Changed” and “In The Wee Small
Hours.”
Mike began playing piano at age three. He was performing professionally in Florida
as a teenager when Cannonball Adderley heard him and soon they were playing the Southern
“chittlin’ circuit” together. Longo earned his Bachelor of Music degree in classical
piano at Western Kentucky State University while also playing with the Hal McIntyre
Orchestra, Hank Garland and the Salt City Six. In Chicago in the early Sixties, Oscar
Peterson invited Longo to study with him at the Advanced School of Contemporary Music
for jazz musicians. Longo spent the next six months in what he calls “the most intense
period of study in my life,” often with private lessons from Peterson. “I learned
all the T’s from him – touch, time, tone, technique, taste, textures and temperature.
That last one has to do with intensity, how hot you play. What I learned about jazz
piano playing from him was profound.”
Mike moved to New York and became a house pianist at the Metropole Cafe where he played
with Coleman Hawkins, Henry Red Allen, George Wettling, Gene Krupa and other jazz
notables. Eventually Longo also got to work with many great singers -- Nancy Wilson,
Gloria Lynn, Jimmy Witherspoon, Joe Williams, Jimmy Rushing, to name a few. Longo
did an extended stay at Embers West with bassist Paul Chambers accompanying acts such
as Frank Foster, Frank Wess, Clark Terry, Zoot Sims and Roy Eldridge. In addition,
over the years Mike has performed on albums by Dizzy Gillespie, Astrud Gilberto, James
Moody, Buddy Rich, Lee Konitiz and many others.
Dizzy Gillespie hired Mike as the pianist for the Dizzy Gillespie Quintet in 1966,
a position Mike held through nine years of non-stop touring and recording, and for
several years he also was the musical director for the band before striking out on
his own. But even then, he worked frequently with Dizzy for another 16 years. “I was
always learning from Dizzy. He had the greatest depth of understanding of rhythm of
any musician I ever met.” While Mike was with Dizzy, the band recorded many tunes
penned by Longo such as “Frisco,” “Let Me Out,” “Soul Kiss” and “The Truth.” Longo
started his own recording career in the early Sixties and now has nearly two-dozen
solo albums to his credit (three of them with his big band, the New York State of
the Art Jazz Ensemble).
Among his rhythm section’s multitudinous credits, Bob Cranshaw has played with Sonny
Rollins, McCoy Tyner, Wes Montgomery, Thelonious Monk, Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald,
Wayne Shorter and Joe Zawinul; and Lewis Nash has performed with Dizzy Gillespie,
the Tommy Flanagan Trio, Betty Carter, Sonny Rollins, Oscar Peterson, Wynton Marsalis,
Joe Lovano and Ron Carter. Jimmy Owens has worked with Miles Davis, Lionel Hampton,
Duke Ellington, Maynard Ferguson, Thad Jones and countless others. Lance Bryant’s
credits include Lionel Hampton, Abdulah Ibrahim, Jon Hendricks, Phyllis Hyman and
George Gee.
Mike Longo has never stopped studying music, constantly searching for new ideas, and
freely exploring deeply into the subtleties and nuances found in jazz. “On this session,”
Longo explains, “I gently steered the group, and as we went along I tried to communicate
to them key directions such as intensity, temperature, type of tone, and depth of
swing.”
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