Connect with us

Bass CDs

New Album: Leon Lee Dorsey, Cantaloupe Island

Published

on

New Album: Leon Lee Dorsey, Cantaloupe Island

Leon Lee Dorsey, Cantaloupe Island…

Renowned bassist Leon Lee Dorsey continues his prolific streak with the issue of Cantaloupe Island, the latest album to be released on his Jazz Avenue 1 label and a continuation of his bountiful partnership with revered drummer Mike Clark. On their sixth collaboration since 2019, the stalwart rhythm section brings in virtuosic guitarist Russell Malone for an invigorating nine-track program of compositions by Horace Silver, Wes Montgomery, Prince and more. Cantaloupe Island will be released on February 17, 2023

Since joining forces four years ago, the dazzling duo of Dorsey and Clark has released a plethora of critically acclaimed albums with a different featured guest each time. Prior to the pandemic, the pair joined Greg Skaff for the all-Thelonious Monk program on Monktime. Soon after, they brought in pianist Michael Wolff for the DownBeat Editor’s pick release Plays Sgt. Pepper, before turning attention to Thank You Mr. Mabern, the last album of the late piano giant Harold Mabern. Two more releases followed including the Latin jazz rumination Freedom Jazz Dance with pianist Manuel Valera and last year’s well-received soulful meditation on the blues with pianist Mike LeDonne, Blues on Top. While each release reveals a new musical side of this dynamic rhythmic pairing, their unique simpatico remains ubiquitous. 

On Cantaloupe Island, Dorsey and Clark have tapped guitar great Russell Malone. “Russell Malone is an absolutely phenomenal musician,” said Dorsey. “Soulful and swinging and a brilliant improviser, he embodies the tradition and history of two of the greatest guitarists of all time, Wes Montgomery and George Benson. Russell can thrive and uplift any situation. He has had a longstanding partnership with my mentor and teacher, the legendary bassist Ron Carter. So it was a tremendous honor to have Russell on board with Mike and myself on our sixth project together. It was a dream come true and a perfect fit.”

Malone’s musical history with Ron Carter reaches back to the guitarist’s 1998 album Georgia Peach, his third as a leader, and has continued over time as a member of Carter’s Golden Striker Trio (first with pianist Mulgrew Miller, currently with pianist Donald Vega). Malone was also prominently featured on the recent PBS documentary, “Ron Carter: Finding the Right Notes.” The guitarist applies his harmonic sophistication and melodic invention with soulful aplomb on this spirited trio outing.

The triumvirate opens with the title track, Hancock’s “Cantaloupe Island,” with Clark alluding to his own broken rhythm syncopated patterns that he played on tour with the iconic keyboardist-composer back in the early 1970s on tunes like “Chameleon” and “Spank-a-Lee.” This is a more overtly funky take than Tony Williams’, which takes a rolling soul-jazz approach on the original recording from Hancock’s landmark 1964 Blue Note album, Empyrean Isles. A more syncopated version here, Malone’s deft jumping back and forth from urgent rhythm playing to rich chord voicings to cleanly picked, warm-toned single note lines, draws parallels to Grant Green. Clark’s loose, conversational approach behind the kit here sets the interactive tone that prevails throughout these nine tracks.

Horace Silver’s lively waltz “Barbara” (from 1975’s Silver ’n Brass on Blue Note) finds the remarkably polyrhythmic Clark tippin’ on the ride cymbal while maintaining that highly interactive pulse on the kit. Dorsey holds the fort on bass before unleashing one on his patented melodic solos as Malone supplies gentle arpeggios underneath. On an earthy, energized rendition of Silver’s “Sister Sadie” (from 1959’s Blowin’ the Blues Away on Blue Note), Malone digs in against Clark’s infectious Texas shuffle and Dorsey’s solid walking bass groove, flaunting some stinging chops that alternately signify early George Benson and latter-day T-Bone Walker.

Bumpin’ on Sunset,” the Latin-tinged number from 1966’s Tequila that introduced a generation of guitar players to Wes Montgomery’s smooth octaves playing, is rendered here as an entrancing soul-jazz groover. Malone summons up some signature Wes octaves work along with deft use of chord melodies and flowing single-note lines. For a change of pace, they deliver a lush, relaxed rendition of the Ray Noble ballad, “The Very Thought of You,” with Clark’s sensitive brushwork setting a subdued tone for Malone’s minor key reharmonizations on that familiar standard. Dorsey’s sparse low-end presence here adds to the meditative nature of this hauntingly beautiful interpretation. 

Shifting gears, their snappy rendition of Prince’s “Thieves in the Temple” (from his 1990 soundtrack album to the film Graffiti Bridge) has drummer Clark back in a funk bag with Malone carrying Prince’s vocals on guitar. Aside from supplying some insistent, double-timed comping and rich chord melodies, Malone also delivers some wicked string-bending and adventurous single-note statements on this pop number (which was also covered by Herbie Hancock on his 1996 album, The New Standard).  

A waltz-time interpretation of the standard “That’s All” is underscored by Clark’s hip brushwork and Dorsey’s melodic bass lines. Malone’s chord melody work and fluid single-note lines punctuate the upbeat proceedings. When Clark switches to sticks and swings in a more forceful mode, the guitarist digs in and delivers with gusto, alternately running some flowing legato lines and more deft chord melodies. Dorsey’s agile, woody-toned bass solo here is right in the harmonically inventive tradition of his former teachers and mentors Ron Carter and Richard Davis. Clark returns to brushes as the trio takes it out in elegantly swinging fashion. 

Their dreamy take on the Kenny Burrell dark-hued ballad, “Listen to the Dawn,” is a veritable clinic in the art of chord melody playing by special guest Malone. They conclude the program with a laid-back, loping rendition of Wes Montgomery’s “The Thumb,” an oft-covered tune that also first appeared on Wes’ 1966 Verve debut, Tequila. Clark engages in some fantastically interactive playing here with Malone while Pittsburgh native Dorsey walks in the tradition of another legendary Pittsburgher, Ray Brown. Clark takes it down to a whisper behind Dorsey’s remarkably fluid bass solo before Malone returns to exchange vigorous eights with the drummer. 

This stellar outing is yet another example of the musical synergy that Clark and Dorsey have forged together over time. And Russell, one of the classiest and most acclaimed guitarists on the jazz scene today, brings something very special to that ongoing partnership on Cantaloupe Island.

Liner notes by Bill Milkowski. 

Tracklisting:

  1. Cantaloupe Island (5:52) (Herbie Hancock)
  2. Barbara (4:59) (Horace Silver)
  3. Sister Sadie (4:35) (Horace Silver)
  4. Bumpin’ on Sunset (5:06) (Wes Montgomery)
  5. The Very Thought of You (6:48) (Ray Noble)
  6. Thieves in the Temple (6:07) (Prince)
  7. That’s All (5:51) (Bob Haymes)
  8. Listen to the Dawn (6:26) (Kenny Burrell)
  9. The Thumb (7:38) (Wes Montgomery)

Visit online at leonleedorsey.com

Bass CDs

New Album: Zev Feldman’s Time Traveler Recordings’ Buster Williams ‘Pinnacle’ Muse Catalog Reissue

Published

on

Zev Feldman's Time Traveler Recordings' Buster Williams 'Pinnacle' Muse Catalog Reissue

A precious, but previously elusive gem by the brilliant bass player Buster Williams will re-enter the jazz firmament with Time Traveler Recordings’ April 18 reissue of Pinnacle, the NEA Jazz Master’s celebrated 1975 debut album as a leader.
 
The package, an exclusive RSD release on LP, is being reissued for the very first time since its original release. It is the latest installment in TTR’s Muse Master Edition Series, unearthing the long-lost masterworks from the catalog of the historic Muse Records. The series is a collaboration with Virgin Music Group and Craft Recordings, spearheaded by TTR co-founder, producer and “Jazz Detective” Zev Feldman.
 
Remastered AAA directly from the original analog tapes by Matthew Lutthans at the Mastering Lab in Salina, Kansas, Pinnacle is pressed on 180-gram vinyl by Optimal. It will be issued in a hand-numbered, high-gloss tip-on sleeve, featuring a new liner essay by journalist Mike Flynn and a rare period photograph of Williams by Raymond Ross. The package also includes the original 1975 notes by Elliot Meadow who produced the original session which was recorded at Blue Rock Studios in NYC.
 
Thirty-three years old at the time of these August 1975 sessions, Camden, New Jersey native Charles Anthony “Buster” Williams was already an acclaimed and in-demand jazz bassist. He’d spent most of the 1960s touring and recording with Nancy Wilson, also freelancing for the likes of the Jazz Crusaders, Harold Land, and the Miles Davis Quintet—substituting for Ron Carter for several months in 1967—where he met and worked with Herbie Hancock. Williams joined Hancock’s Mwandishi band in 1971, placing him on the cutting edge of the new jazz fusion movement.
 
Pinnacle, recorded after Mwandishi’s breakup, finds Williams still very much informed by that idiom of funky, experimental jazz. The band includes fellow Mwandishi alum Billy Hart on drums and fellow Miles veteran Sonny Fortune on soprano saxophone and flute, along with legendary trumpeter Woody Shaw and a venturesome crew including saxophonist Earl Turbinton, keyboardist Onaje Allan Gumbs and percussionist Guilherme Franco. (Vocalists Suzanne Klewan and Marcus also join on two tracks.)
 
Williams blazed new trails in the use of electric bass in jazz: “A pioneer among jazz doublers—musicians equally adept on upright and electric bass,” notes Flynn in his new essay. But, while he features his Fender electric bass on the thumping opener “The Hump,” on most of the album Williams plays the acoustic upright bass that had always been his first love. It anchors the darker, funkier journeys the band takes on “Pinnacle” and “Batuki” and sets the swinging tone for the acoustic numbers, the deep spiritual jazz “Noble Eagle” and the breezy, playful “Tayamisha.”
 
“What I love about the acoustic bass is what I have to do to get music out of it,” Williams muses. “The sound I get depends all on me, not the help of an amp. The instrument relates to my heart; it’s alive, it has emotion, it’s not just a piece of wood.”
 
“Bass players are often described—perhaps unfairly—as the anchor of the band,” writes Flynn. “But in the hands of a master like Buster Williams, the bass becomes something much more: the engine, the heartbeat, the mellifluous core driving the music forward.”
 
Williams composed four of the album’s five tracks, making Pinnacle a brilliant first showcase for his writing as well as his playing and bandleading. “Buster’s writing abilities have not gone unnoticed in the past,” observes Meadows in his original liner notes for the album. “The writing for this date is fresh and varied. ‘The Hump,’ which should make you get up and do something, contrasts with the haunting serenity of the title song. Then ‘Tayamisha’ (named for Buster’s daughter) is light and airy as opposed to the intensity of ‘Noble Ego.’”
 
A prophetic release, Pinnacle forecasts the subsequent 50 years that Williams has spent balancing forward-looking musical adventures with the bounty and rigor of the tradition. “The title says it all,” writes Flynn. “Pinnacle wasn’t just a debut. It was a statement of arrival—an artist stepping forward from a prolific past into a fearless, unbounded future.” And, under the curation of Time Traveler’s Muse Master Edition Series, it now sounds better than ever.
 

Continue Reading

Bass CDs

New Music: Carlos Henriquez Big Band, Monk Con Clave

Published

on

New Music: Carlos Henriquez Big Band, Monk Con Clave

Monk con Clave is the new album from the Carlos Henriquez Big Band, out now!  Therein, bassist and bandleader Carlos Henriquez roots the large-ensemble recording in his long relationship with the work of Thelonious Monk and the cultural history of San Juan Hill.

Listen to the album here.

He brings together a multigenerational band drawn from members of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and its extended community, including percussionist Pedrito Martínez, trumpeter Mike Rodriguez, pianists Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Osmany Paredes, and Robert Rodriguez, vocalist Anthony Almonte, flutist and vocalist Jeremy Bosch. The project places Monk’s compositions beside original works shaped by Bronx memory and Nuyorican identity.

Few figures in modern art carry the singular presence of Thelonious Monk. His unmistakable melodic contours, harmonic tensions, and rhythmic logic continue to define the jazz repertoire, with musicians reinterpreting his work across generations. Monk lived in Manhattan’s San Juan Hill neighborhood before its disappearance during the construction of Lincoln Center, and his sound still carries the imprint of that vanished New York community.

Henriquez’s work as a bassist, composer, and bandleader has drawn sustained critical recognition across the jazz world. JazzTimes has praised his playing as “clean, crisp and to-the-point…jet fuel for the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra,” while noting that “anyone surprised by the depth and breadth of Henriquez’s talents simply hasn’t been paying attention.” DownBeat has described him as “an emerging master in the Latin jazz idiom,” and WRTI has called his Grammy-nominated album The South Bronx Story “a terrific album,” highlighting his rare ability to unite Afro-Latin clave and jazz swing with few peers.

Henriquez built his artistic life through decades at Jazz at Lincoln Center. He joined the organization in the late 1990s as a teenager performing with Wynton Marsalis, became a full-time orchestra member, and spent years touring, recording, arranging, curating, and directing performances. “It’s almost like a mini Wynton Marsalis throughout those 30 years,” he says. “My participation there has been basically my whole life. It’s my home and a place where I’m gonna continue to develop and to lead.”

Monk’s voice has remained central to that life. “Something stood out,” Henriquez says. “It made me feel comfortable. It made me feel like I also had a voice in this music.” He hears Monk’s rhythmic language through his own identity as “a Nuyorican — somebody born in New York City whose parents are from Puerto Rico.” The music on Monk con Clave grew from that connection because he “was already listening to his music and very attracted to his uniqueness and him being himself.”

Henriquez assembled the band for what he calls “a great moment for me, especially for this project.” The session carried humor and familiarity. “Everybody’s on point. If you mess up a note, everybody starts jumping on you. That’s the fun part… all the talking amongst friends to keep our spirits and our attention span as high as possible.” During one solo, Rubalcaba stunned the room so completely that the musicians looked around “like they saw a ghost, like they saw an alien.”

The album opens with “Round Midnight,” where, Henriquez says, Rubalcaba’s playing “becomes water and takes the shape of whatever he wants to do.” “I Mean You” captures what Henriquez calls “the vibe of Afro-Cuban music at its best.”

El Son De Teo” unfolds through a slow Son atmosphere connecting the homage to Teo Macero, creating “a real Son vibe.” His original composition “San Juan Hill” reflects “the ups and downs of being Black American and Puerto Rican Latino during the transition period, with Robert Moses having to move people out of their locations.” On “Ugly Beauty,” Henriquez shifts Monk’s triple meter into four and draws on the ballad language of Beny Moré, while a vocal performance by Anthony Almonte delivers what he describes as “luscious sounds.”

Evidence of Four and One” references Monk’s classic compositions “Evidence,” first recorded in 1948, and “Four in One,” a formally unusual work from 1951. Here Henriquez manages to combine both tunes as if it were one. Built on rapid sixteenth-note with both melodic lines overlapping. “Raise Four” follows the lineage of Machito and Chico O’Farrill through a six-eight pulse and the explosion of Pedro Martinez & Jesus Ricardo.

Green Chimneys” carries a Mozambique feel that features piccolo flute and bass on the melody. “Who Knows” stands as “a reflection of people I look up to — Tito Puente, Machito, Chico O’Farrill — Afro-Cuban and Afro-Puerto Rican.” The closing “Plena Azul Blue Monk” draws on Puerto Rican plena tradition, where “the trombone just playing the melody” evokes figures such as Papa Vázquez, William Cepeda, and Rafael Hernández.

For Henriquez, the music returns to the place that shaped him.

Continue Reading

Bass CDs

New Music: LESTER WINCHESTER MCKENDREE , They Got It All

Published

on

New Music: LESTER WINCHESTER MCKENDREE , They Got It All

Well-respected roots rock/Americana sidemen; drummer JIMMY LESTER (Billy Joe Shaver, Webb Wilder, Los Straitjackets), bass player/songwriter/singer/bandleader MARK W. WINCHESTER (Planet Rockers, EmmyLou Harris, Brian Setzer), and keyboard player KEVIN MCKENDREE (Lee Roy Parnell, Delbert McClinton, Brian Setzer) form super-groove-group LESTER WINCHESTER MCKENDREE to go it alone, together, on their debut collaborative release, THEY GOT IT ALL (Times Three Records/MAY 29, 2026).

The drum, bass and piano (with vocal) trio recorded over two “live” days at McKendree’s Rock House studio in Franklin, TN early this year, focusing on a collection of Winchester’s original songs the three had been performing together on local club dates, brand new material (the unique origins of which we’ll get to), as well as two instrumentals collaboratively conjured in the studio.

Originally feeling the power of their locked-in, feel-based natural groove while backing E. Street Band bassist Garry Tallent on his solo album and brief tour in 2017, Winchester says he wanted to feel that again. “On that tour, Garry would let his musicians do an original song or two of their own, and I never forgot how great it felt and sounded to sing my songs with Kevin and Jimmy, or how Jimmy and I backed Kevin’s instrumental piano romps.”

In recent years, as Lester Winchester McKendree began performing live, an evolution began taking place with regard to Winchester’s instrument of choice. “I was changing strings one day and started thinking about the band Morphine, and how their frontman Mark Sandman, rest in peace, played a 2-string bass. So I took a YouTube deep dive, got inspired, and only put two strings back on my own bass”, Winchester explains. The sonically unique, melodically interesting result made the decision for the band to record an album a no-brainer.

Songwriters will often say a guitar new to them will “have songs in it”, or that writing on an instrument one is not totally familiar with can open up new creative possibilities. Winchester described it this way: “Songs just started falling out of that thing. Sandman played with a slide, but I just used my long fingers. The 2-String is tuned in fifths, and I started finding melodies and riffs, and for the first time ever, really, wrote all the music to pieces before any lyrics came.”

About a year after stringing his own bass with only two, Eastwood Guitars serendipitously (for Winchester) brought to market a replica “Sandman Model” 2-String bass. Winchester immediately ordered one. “When I got it, it was tuned in a different key than my Silvertone, but sure enough, songs started falling outta that thing too.” The songs that ‘fell out’ of that Sandman Model 2-String bass, by way of Winchester’s creative mind, make up the bulk of THEY GOT IT ALL, and the sparse fire and crisp energy that McKendree’s piano and Lester’s drumming bring to these tunes infuses them with, well, ‘cool’. The 2-String bass running separately, but simultaneously through bass and guitar amps, gives the trio a guitarish crunchiness you wouldn’t expect with no 6-stringer in the fold.

All three of these accomplished musicians’ careers started commingling in Nashville in the late 1980s.

JIMMY LESTER, a Nashville, TN native, moved from Billy Joe Shaver’s band to the original drum chair for Webb Wilder and the Beatnecks. Lester also established himself as a master of surf-rock drum style as a founding member of Los Straightjackets, which coincided with the
formation of roots rock cult hero band The Planet Rockers, of which Winchester was a founding member on upright bass.

Originally from Monroe, NC, MARK W. WINCHESTER moved to Nashville in 1988. He went on to join Emmylou Harris’ Nash Ramblers, before a stint as a Music Row staff songwriter, where he penned a hit for Randy Travis (‘Would I?’). He later joined the Brian Setzer Orchestra, and has had several of his songs recorded by Setzer, including ‘Rooster Rock’ on which Setzer had Winchester sing lead vocal.

KEVIN McKENDREE, from the Washington D.C. area, came to Nashville as the piano man for Lee Roy Parnell and quickly established himself as a real-deal roots and blues keyboardist, eventually playing on multiple Grammy-winning albums. McKendree (as well as Winchester) played with blues mastermind Mike Henderson, Brian Setzer’s Rock-A-Billy Riot, and The Brian Setzer Orchestra. McKendree’s 20+ year partnership with Delbert McClinton, as musician/co-writer/producer/engineer, led to the 2020 Grammy-winning McClinton album TALL, DARK, & HANDSOME -recorded by McKendree at his Rock House studio.

It was there at the Rock House, with McKendree on keys and control board, that he, Lester, and Winchester, with no bosses, no agenda, and no pressure, laid down the live, loose, properly boned, expertly fleshed, lyrically interesting, groovy aural document that is THEY GOT IT ALL.

Maybe they do.

Visit online at www.markwwinchester.com

Continue Reading

Bass CDs

New Music: Oteil Burbridge & Lamar Williams Jr. New Single, Hush

Published

on

New Music: Oteil Burbridge & Lamar Williams Jr. New Single, Hush


Oteil Burbridge & Lamar Williams Jr. Champion Love Over Hate in New Single “Hush” | New Album ‘The Offering’ Out May 1.

Bassist Oteil Burbridge and vocalist Lamar Williams Jr. continue the rollout of their forthcoming collaborative album The Offering, with the release of its second single, “Hush”. A slow-burning Southern soul meditation rooted in love, peace, and emotional clarity, the track is a centerpiece on the album with a potent, thematic statement, in Williams’ words to “block out all of that nonsense” and “remember that there is more love in the world than hate.” The full-length album arrives May 1 via Flóki Studios, recorded on Iceland’s northern coast and produced by drummer, engineer, and Soulive co-founder Alan Evans.

While much of The Offering grew out of Burbridge’s banjo-based writing, “Hush” emerged from he and Williams’ shaping a deliberate sonic vision. Burbridge says they were “trying to capture a more old school Memphis, Macon, Muscle Shoals vibe,” leaning into a Southern soul feel that fits Williams’s phrasing. The end result is a song that is unhurried with a deep pocket that allows the groove and the song’s message breathe and stand at the forefront.

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.

CONNECT WITH OTEIL BURBRIDGE

Website // YouTube // Instagram // Facebook

Continue Reading

Bass CDs

New Music: Pops Magellan Releases Live EP, DAMAGE

Published

on

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

Continue Reading