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Big Band Bassist Brings a “Good Feeling” In Recent Album Release For Release: October 30, 2011 Review by Dan Bilawsky for All About Jazz, 9/18/11
The Good Feeling marks the debut of the Christian McBride Big Band, but the seeds
for this album were sown in the mid-'90s. Jazz at Lincoln Center commissioned McBride
to write and arrange his first major big band work—"Bluesin' In Alphabet City"—in
1995, and that experience really sparked his interest in composing for large groups.
Now, sixteen years after the ink dried on that number, it appears in the penultimate
position on his first big band recording.
Over the course of eleven tracks, McBride manages to present music that's respectful
of big band traditions, while also showcasing his own unique compositional voice.
On one piece, the band might be playing over a pedal-to-the-metal swing pulse, with
a string of strong soloists selling their wares over feisty backgrounds that come
and go ("In A Hurry"), while another number might sound like a cross between "Maiden
Voyage" and funky Freddie Hubbard-style fare ("Brother Mister"), as distilled through
the mind of one of jazz's most talented, high profile bassists.
The instrumentalists rule the roost on this album, but McBride makes room for vocalist
Melissa Walker on a few numbers, and she brings class to the proceedings. Walker's
first feature, "When I Fall In Love," opens with McBride's elegant arco work, and
contains some charming piano soloing from Xavier Davis, while the band cooks behind
her vocals on the waltzing "A Taste Of Honey." "The More I See You" opens in a relatively
calm state, with Walker singing the verse, but things really heat up later, when a
Sonny Payne-style triplet build-up from drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr. leads to some shouting
brass.
While the vocal standards tend to showcase McBride's more conservative, in-the-tradition
arrangements, his own "Science Fiction" shows what he can do when he moves away from
the norm. This number proves to be an episodic odyssey full of wonder and surprise.
Suspense gives way to sounds of the bold and big variety, and Davis and McBride set
things in motion with driving, hook-laden riffs. Seismic shifts take place in certain
places, while more subtle adjustments are at play throughout the piece. McBride utilizes
flutes and bass clarinet in expert fashion, and these instruments help to broaden
the overall sound of the band.
Featuring McBride at the top of his game, The Good Feeling, like its creator, is steeped
in tradition while remaining tapped into what's current and exciting in jazz today.
Track Listing: Shake N' Blake; Broadway; Brother Mister; When I Fall In Love; Science
Fiction; The Shade Of The Cedar Tree; The More I See You; I Should Care; A Taste Of
Honey; Bluesin' In Alphabet City; In A Hurry.
Personnel: Christian McBride: bass; Steve Wilson: alto saxophone, flute; Todd Bashore:
alto saxophone, flute; Ron Blake: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute; Todd
Williams: tenor saxophone, flute; Loren Schoenberg: tenor saxophone (2, 8); Carl Maraghi:
baritone saxophone, bass clarinet; Frank Greene: trumpet; Freddie Hendrix: trumpet;
Nicholas Payton: trumpet; Nabati Isles: trumpet; Steve Davis: trombone; Michael Dease:
trombone; James Burton: trombone; Douglas Purviance: bass trombone; Xavier Davis:
piano; Ulysses Owens, Jr.: drums; Melissa Walker: vocals.
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