Bass CDs
Leon Lee Dorsey Explores The Music Of Thelonious Monk On “Monktime
Leon Lee DorseyExplores The Music Of Thelonious Monk On “Monktime,” Bassist’s First Album In 20 Years, Set For September 13 Release On Jazz Avenue 1 Records…
Twenty years after the release of his last album, bassist Leon Lee Dorseyreassumes the mantle of a recording artist in his own right with the September 13 release of MonkTime(Jazz Avenue 1 Records). The debut of Dorsey’s DSC Band, which also includes guitarist Greg Skaffand celebrated drummer Mike Clark, features the trio applying their potent chemistry to eight compositions by jazz titan Thelonious Monk.
While Dorsey is himself a talented, accomplished composer and arranger, he brings a minimal, spacious treatment to bear on MonkTime—preferring to let the tunes speak for themselves. “We wanted to retain the original character of Monk’s music,” Dorsey says. “We weren’t looking to reinvent the wheel on masterpieces. We wanted to keep the essence of the songs, that timeless commonality they have, while blending in our own spices and flavors.”
Those spices and flavors are simultaneously bold and subtle: a paradox that Monk would surely have appreciated. Skaff, as the DSC Band’s principal soloist, favors lean single-note lines that tend toward the low and middle registers (as on “Blue Monk”), imbuing them with a distinctive round, dark tone. It gives extra oomph to the chords and high crescendos he does employ in places like “Little Rootie Tootie.” Clark reins in his famously brawny chops; he keeps the swing supple and assured but eschews pyrotechnics, even in his solos on “Monk’s Dream” and “Epistrophy.”
Dorsey, meantime, sets the pace.
Whether it comes through his beautiful reading of the melody on “Monk’s Mood” or the gentle pulse and solo he lends to “Ugly Beauty,” the bassist’s command of both the repertoire and ensemble avoids flash, yet is nevertheless unmistakable.
Dorsey keeps it tight on MonkTime; only one of the eight tunes strays beyond to the six-minute mark, and then just barely. “We took a page out of the vinyl era in keeping the songs at a manageable length,” he says.It brings a sense of clarity and focus to the performances, spotlighting the trio’s interplay as much as the individual improvisations.
Leon Lee Dorsey was born March 12,
Dorsey attended Oberlin College Conservatory, graduating with double degrees in music in 1981. Under the tutelage of bass legend Richard Davis, he received his first master’s at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and a second master’s from the Manhattan School of Music in New York. Dorsey then pursued doctoral studies at the City University of New York under Ron Carter, finishing his doctorate at Stony Brook University.
In 1986, Dorsey began a two-year stint with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, including performances with Frank Sinatra and visits to the White House, which honed his skills for his next endeavor, namely as a Jazz Messenger. In 1988 he joined Art Blakey’smost fabled of jazz finishing schools, which left a lasting impact on his subsequent career.
Since arriving in New York, Dorsey has performed and recorded with jazz legends Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Hilton Ruiz, Cassandra Wilson, James Carter, Freddie Hubbard, and the Duke Ellington Orchestra. He released his acclaimed debut album, The Watcher, in 1995 and followed it up with 1999’s Song of Songs. In 2003 he founded Leon Lee Dorsey Studios in New York City, at which more than 100 albums have since been produced.
Dorsey is also prominent as a jazz educator.
From 2008 to 2011 he was Coordinator of Jazz Studies and Director of the Jazz Seminar at the University of Pittsburgh. Currently, he teaches harmony and jazz arranging and composition at Berklee College of Music in Boston. He looks forward to working with the DSC Band and hopes to be announcing performance dates soon. “I felt from the start that with the chemistry of this band—there’s no horn and no piano, the two instruments that defined Monk’s sound—we could go to the magical music level.”
Visit online at www.leonleedorsey.com
Bass CDs
New Music: Pops Magellan Releases Live EP, DAMAGE
Pops Magellan unveils her debut live EP, DAMAGE (Live at EastWest Studios), a three-track performance project recorded at the legendary EastWest Studios. Captured in Studio One using one-take camera performance, the session offers a raw and intentional introduction to Magellan’s artistic world as a solo artist, bandleader, and producer.
The live EP features three compositions from her DAMAGE era:
“Misunderstood,” featuring Taylor Graves and Robert Sput Searight
“Deep Thoughts,” featuring Noa Kahn
“Drive Complaining,” featuring Robert Sput Searight and Artur Menezes
Originally released as a series of live performance videos on YouTube, the session now lives as a body of work, highlighting Magellan’s ability to merge high-level musicianship with groove-driven, emotionally resonant compositions. Each track unfolds as a conversation between players, balancing technical precision with spontaneity.
Recorded in a single day at EastWest, the session reflects Magellan’s commitment to capturing music in its most honest form. With a focus on raw live interplay, DAMAGE (Live at EastWest Studios) sets a clear tone: this is an artist building her identity in real time.
The session features a handpicked group of collaborators. Robert Searight, founding member of Ghost-Note, brings his signature groove, alongside virtuoso Noa Kahn, acclaimed guitarist Artur Menezes, and Grammy winner Taylor Graves, who co-produced two songs on the original EP.
“It was a way to start a strong foundation for the world I’m building.” says Pops. “I wanted to make something beautiful, strong, and honest, something I’d be proud of looking back.”
Pops leads every aspect of the project, from curating collaborators to shaping the sonic and visual identity. The result is a refined yet powerful debut live statement that positions her at the intersection of musicianship, artistry, and modern performance culture.
With more music on the way and live shows to be announced soon, DAMAGE (Live at EastWest Studios) marks the beginning of a larger vision still unfolding.
Stream DAMAGE (Live at EastWest Studios) HERE
Watch the Live Session HERE
Bass CDs
New Music: Martin Wind, September
Martin Wind celebrates 30th Anniversary and release of new CD “September”…
Bassist/ Composer Martin Wind celebrates the 30th anniversary of his move to NYC with the release of his new album “September” (Laika Records) at these Tri-State concerts:
April 9: Smalls, NYC (sets at 6 and 7:30 pm)
April 10: Puffin Cultural Forum, Teaneck, NJ (7 pm)
April 11: Deer Head Inn, Delaware Water Gap, PA (7 – 10 pm):
He will be joined by the partners of his acclaimed Gravity Trio – Peter Weniger on tenor saxophone and Jonas Burgwinkel on drums.
The trio’s special guest will be pianist Glenn Zaleski, who’s been playing for artists such as saxophonist Melissa Aldana and vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant, among others. Together, Martin and Glenn used to work frequently with the late, great clarinetist and saxophonist Ken Peplowski.
The group will be performing selections from the new CD “September,” which is now available as of March 6 on all streaming platforms and for sale at
www.laika-records.de and www.martinwind.com (U.S. only).
As leader and co-leader, Wind has released more than 30 albums, among them Turn Out the Stars – Music Written or Inspired by Bill Evans (2014), My Astorian Queen (2021), and New York Bass Quartet – Air (2022), which DB Magazine heralded as “a bass manifesto”.
Also available as of January 30: Newvelle Records release of Martin Wind’s LP “Stars” featuring the
All-Star line-up of Anat Cohen (clarinet), Matt Wilson (drums) and Maestro Kenny Barron on piano.
Bass CDs
New Music: Bassist Nate Edgar and The Nth Power, Simple Life
Bassist Nate Edgar and The Nth Power have released their latest single, available on all major streaming platforms.
“Simple Life” showcases Nate’s deep-pocketed, country-funk groove, locking in seamlessly with bandmates Nick Cassarino (guitar/vocals) and Nikki Glaspie (drums/vocals). The tune also features the brass power of The Soul Rebels.
“Simple Life” is the second single from The Nth Power’s upcoming album, out May 1. The album “Never Alone” marks the band’s first release on the GroundUp music label, and includes contributions by:
Nicholas Payton
Skerik
Courtney Smith
Dominique Xavier
Jon Deas
And The Soul Rebels
The Nth Power:
thenthpowermusic.com
https://ffm.bio/thenthpower
https://music.apple.com/us/artist/the-nth-power/657446657
https://soundcloud.com/the-nth-power
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC95_b9RpVDiTUt1EpPI3OEQ
Bass CDs
New Album: Jon Henriksson, Shapeshifter
Out today, April Records proudly presents the new album from Stockholm-based bassist and composer Jon Henriksson – a confident and flexible statement that deepens his place within contemporary Scandinavian jazz. Following the success of his 2023 debut Harmonia, which placed second in Orkesterjournalen’s “Golden Album” readers’ poll, Henriksson returns with music that foregrounds collective interplay, shifting forms, and a strong compositional voice.
Born in Gothenburg and now active across Sweden and Europe, Henriksson has collaborated and toured with artists including Lars Jansson, Håkan Broström, Erik Söderlind, Klas Lindquist, Jonas Kullhammar and Christina von Bülow. Alongside leading his own ensembles, he remains a sought-after bassist in a wide range of projects, balancing a deep connection to the jazz tradition with a modern, exploratory approach.
Shapeshifter is built around a core quartet of tenor saxophone, piano, double bass and drums, expanded with guitar on three tracks and trombone on two. The album moves fluidly between contrasting moods, from forceful and driving to reflective and restrained, with each piece shaped by the musicians’ intuition and responsiveness. The title reflects Henriksson’s compositional philosophy: allowing roles, textures, and forms to evolve as the music unfolds.
The ensemble brings together long-standing musical relationships. Pianist Rasmus Sørensen and Henriksson have collaborated since their studies at Skurups Folkhögskola (Henriksson is a longstanding member of Sørensen’s own trio), while drummer Jonas Bäckman forms part of a well-established rhythm section partnership with the bassist across numerous projects, including the Britta Virves Trio. Saxophonist Karl-Martin Almqvist, a member of the Danish Radio Big Band, completes the quartet, with guitarist Pelle von Bülow and trombonist Rasmus Holm joining the session shortly before recording to expand the album’s sonic palette, where the music called for it.
Originally conceived as a quartet album, Shapeshifter took its final shape in the lead-up to recording as additional instrumental colours were introduced organically. The piece Toninho, a tribute to Brazilian guitarist and composer Toninho Horta, features acoustic guitar and subtle wordless vocals, reflecting melodic influences that sit naturally within the album’s contemporary jazz framework.
Across the record, space, pacing, and interaction remain central. Rather than forcing constant motion, the music allows ideas to develop with clarity and intent, resulting in an album that highlights Henriksson’s growing assurance as a composer and bandleader, while keeping the collective at its core.
Bass CDs
New Album: Oteil Burbridge & Lamar Williams, The Offering
Bassist Oteil Burbridge and vocalist Lamar Williams. Jr. have announced the release of The Offering, a full-length studio album coming out via Floki Studios on May 1st. Recorded at the rising destination studio in Iceland’s Northern Coast and produced by drummer, engineer, and Soulive co-founder Alan Evans, the collaborative project shares the first offering off of the new album, “The Way We Rise.”
The album features an all-star lineup of drummer John Morgan Kimock, percussionist Weedie Braimah, organist Melvin Seals of the Jerry Garcia Band, pianist and violinist Jason Crosby, guitarists Tom Guarna and Jaden Lehman — musicians whose overlapping histories connect the Allman Brothers Band, Dead & Company, the Jerry Garcia Band, Soulive, and West African percussion traditions.
“The Way We Rise” opens the album with a message of endurance. Burbridge describes it as a reflection on “how we get through hard times” and on “tenacity and perseverance,” adding that its closing groove feels “spiritually fortifying” and “like a strengthening thing.”
Across its eight songs, The Offering centers on melody, groove, and message rather than genre, drawing together Southern soul, gospel harmony, improvisational rock, and African-rooted rhythm carried through Burbridge’s banjo explorations into song-driven ensemble music.
The music began more than a decade earlier during informal writing sessions between Burbridge and Williams in Burbidge’s basement studio in Georgia, where Burbridge was teaching himself banjo and developing rhythmic and harmonic exercises as a way of learning the instrument’s structure and lineage.
“I didn’t have any kind of aim in mind when we wrote these songs,” Burbridge says. “I was just learning to play the banjo, and those exercises ended up turning into songs.” He brought the melodies to Williams and asked whether he heard lyrics within them. “He did, so we just put two and two together,” Burbridge adds.
The material remained unfinished for years — written but not arranged — carried through touring schedules, family life, and other projects until the collaborators unexpectedly circled back. “It was mind-blowing that after all those years we came back and got to record this music,” Williams says.
Their connection reaches back to the late 1990s in the extended orbit of the Allman Brothers Band. Burbridge first gained national recognition with Aquarium Rescue Unit before joining the Allman Brothers in 1997, performing with the group for seventeen years and later co-founding Dead & Company.
Williams — the son of Allman Brothers bassist Lamar Williams — forged his own path as a vocalist, songwriter, and bandleader shaped by gospel phrasing, soul repertoire, and years of touring. What began as porch writing between friends slowly became the foundation of The Offering, though more than ten years passed before the music was finally recorded.
Producer Alan Evans provided the bridge from unfinished material to a completed album. His path into production emerged organically through years of recording, mixing, and problem-solving in the studio, often finding himself asked to guide projects once musicians recognized his broader creative perspective. “It all comes down to the song,” Evans says.
Having previously worked with Burbridge at Flóki Studios, he returned to Iceland determined to capture a live, ensemble-driven performance rather than assemble recordings piece by piece. The demos, Evans explains, revealed something distinct from any expected Dead-adjacent sound, pointing instead toward a more song-centered approach shaped by banjo textures, deep groove, and layered influences. This ensemble, Evans says, could perform “both live and in the studio at a high level.”
