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The Search Within
Sean Jones
első megjelenés éve: 2009
(2009)

CD
4.670 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  The Search Within (Interlude)
2.  Transitions
3.  The Ambitious Violet
4.  Life Cycles
5.  The Storm
6.  Letter of Resignation
7.  The Search Within (For Less)
8.  Summer's Spring
9.  Sunday Reflections
10.  Sean's Jones Comes Down
11.  Love's Lullaby
12.  The Search Within (Postlude)
Jazz / Post-Bop, Mainstream Jazz

Sean Jones - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Al Pryor Producer
Brian Hogans Sax (Alto)
Carolyn Perteete Vocals
Casey Conroy Creative Director
Don Murray Engineer
Doug Sax Mastering
Gregoire Maret Guest Appearance, Harmonica
Gretchen Valade Liner Notes
Inbal Neer Make-Up
John Peace Photo Assistance
Joshua Blanchard Assistant Engineer
Kahlil Kwame Bell Percussion
Luques Curtis Bass
Maria Ehrenreich Creative Services Director, Production Director
Nicole Merhej Stylist
Obed Calvaire Drums
Orrin Evans Fender Rhodes, Piano
Raj Naik Art Direction, Photography, Design
Rick Kwan Assistant Engineer
Sangwook "Sunny" Nam Mastering
Tate Wittenberg Photo Assistance
Walter "Kid" Smith Sax (Tenor)
Will Friedwald Liner Notes
Will Wakefield Production Coordination

During the course of Sean Jones' burgeoning career beginning with his Mack Avenue Records debut in 2004, Eternal Journey, the trumpeter/bandleader has embarked on a series of quests, passionately plumbing the depths of different wellsprings of his life as a musician. His first album, recorded when he was 24, was his awakening, "my first step out into the recording world," Jones says. That was followed by more steps as well as leaps, with the theme of personal navigation at the center of his vision. In the process, Jones has developed into one of jazz's top young trumpeters, known for both his lyrical fluidity and high-tier technical facility. "The idea of being on a journey has been in line with all my albums," he says. "My second album, Gemini, explored both sides of my musical loves, r&b and jazz. I expanded that with Roots, where I revisited my youth and paid tribute to gospel. And then on Kaleidoscope, I created a collage of sounds, exploring different timbres by enlisting vocalists to be collaborators."

On Jones' fifth album, The Search Within, the venture continues, but this time the focus turns inward. "This is a journey inside my soul that's taken place over the past 10 years," Jones says. "It's an assessment of where I am in the present as well as how I've learned from my mistakes and triumphs as a way of looking into the future. This album goes very deep for me. It's a spiritual and sonic journey for me."

Along for the ride is a superb band (a group of "unsung heroes," Jones says) that includes Orrin Evans on piano and Fender Rhodes, saxophonists Brian Hogans (alto) and Walter Smith (tenor), bassist Luques Curtis and drummer Obed Calvaire, all of whom have been mainstays in Jones' band. "If it ain't broke, why fix it?" Jones says when asked about the group's personnel consistency. Special guests include Gregoire Maret on harmonica, Erika Von Kleist on flute, Kahlil Bell on percussion and vocalist Carolyn Perteete, who Jones introduced on Kaleidoscope.

The Search Within strikes a decidedly reflective posture even though Jones delivers a stylistic range of expression, from straight-up swing to down-home groove to lyrical balladry. The title song serves as the theme on the album. A segment of the tune opens the album as a prelude, another part appears midway as an interlude and the third section closes the disc as a postlude. (The tune appears in its entirety as a digital exclusive.) "'The Search Within' sets the mood for the album," says Jones. "I wrote it while sitting at the piano, reflecting on my life. I started out playing a set of chords, then figured out the melody later. The first part is reflection, the second part is like looking at the mirror and being surprised at how deeply chaotic things can be in your life, and the third part is this sense of resignation and reflection." Jones adds with a laugh, "By the end it's also about saying, OK, let's move on now. I'm tired of looking at myself."

After the pensive prelude, Jones buoys the proceedings with "Transitions," a bright, swinging tune with the leader's blaring, frenzied trumpet lines and exhilarating alto sax-trumpet interplay. "This tune is designed to jar you out of a free-floating experience," Jones says. "It represents how it feels when you're going through a transition, how you segue with a chaotic kind of feeling from one experience to another. In the middle section I wanted to give that sense of being on a rollercoaster ride where it's like you're floating in the air."

The balladic beauty, "The Ambitious Violet," is one of two songs Jones composed inspired by poet/philosopher Khalil Gibran. The poem tells the story of a violet that wishes to be a rose. It gets its wish but is destroyed by a storm that sweeps through the garden, ruining everything except the violets. "It's about how you'd rather spend one day as a towering rose than all your days as a violet," Jones explains. "It's about wanting more. That's part of my story—coming from a small town but wanting more, whatever it takes." The second Gibran-inspired piece is "The Storm," a parable of a young innocent whose purity of love gets crushed by society. The main character retreats to a cave and relates his story and the wisdom he has found during a fierce storm. The tune itself is turbulent, fueled by Calvaire's drum tumult.

In between the two tunes Jones delivers the graceful melody "Life Cycles," playing a luscious tone on flugelhorn. It was inspired by a conversation with a friend about life being a series of cycles. "The two of us talking about this made me feel good, kind of like how it feels when you drive down the highway and just allow your thoughts to flow," Jones says. "It's a pretty simple tune that I wrote out and later turned into a song with a samba feel to it." Featured on the tune are Von Kleist and Maret.

The waltz, "Letter of Resignation," is a song co-written by Jones and Perteete, who penned the lyrics. "Carolyn is just amazing," says Jones. "Her voice is so pure, she's a great lyricist and she's a one-take wonder. That's all it takes when she sings a song." The tune is about the painful recognition that love isn't always reciprocated. "You love someone, but they'll never love you back in the same way you long for," says Jones. "So, you're resigned to this, accepting that the romance isn't going to be that utopia you were hoping for." While Perteete gives voice to the resignation, Jones' trumpet plays the sentiment.

The groove-steeped tune on the album is "Summer's Spring," composed by alto saxist Hogans who wrote it, Jones says, "during a transition in a relationship between summer and spring." Jones again plays flugelhorn and delivers sumptuous harmonies with Hogans on the piece that also includes Evans playing the Fender Rhodes. "We wanted a groove feel," says Jones. "The tune felt more organic that way. We wanted the groove to pop."

That piece is followed by another Jones reflection, titled appropriately "Sunday Reflections," that was written while he was traveling from New York (where he was playing in the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra as the big band's lead trumpeter) to Pittsburgh (where he is the Professor of Jazz Studies at Duquesne University). He superimposed an r&b melody over the swinging feel he first created. Swing opens the door to whimsy on the playful, time-changing "Sean's Jones Comes Down" that jazz elder Frank Foster wrote for the youngster. "I met Frank in Cleveland once and I asked him tons of questions about New York," Jones says. "Frank joked with me that I was jonesing for the city. After I moved there, Frank called me and told me he had written a piece about me no longer having a jones to get there. I love the tune, and yes, it is difficult to play."

The end song, "Love's Lullaby," that comes before the thematic postlude was originally written by Jones for a Pittsburgh dance ensemble. It opens with a passionate trumpet solo and features moving trumpet-flute interplay. "It's probably my favorite song on the album," Jones says. "It describes a lovers' evening. It's filled with emotion, but it's also spiritual. And it also expresses love's extremes, from the lowest lows to the highest heights. Erika and I were trying to do something different with our instruments, to give the feeling of a bird or butterfly, to present that oooh feeling."

A compelling view into the inner life of Jones, The Search Within advances the rising-star career of the young trumpeter who turned 30 last May. Remarkably this is Jones' fifth album for Mack Avenue, which has afforded him the opportunity to pursue his musical journeys. "Mack Avenue is one of the great jazz labels," he says. "They understand artists and their need to express themselves without the burdens of the business. In a pure sense, they make it possible for me to bring my vision to life."


For his fifth recording on the Mack Avenue label, trumpeter Sean Jones has really stepped up his game as a composer of contemporary jazz music. He's raised the stakes by writing music that still reflects his love for hard bop, but has intensified it with a more intricate and involved thought process that speaks to his coming of age and maturity. This is exciting music more reliant on teamwork merging with a bigger sound than his previous recordings. While Jones is not completely removed from the proceedings as if a sideman, it's clear he has the intention to blend in more with his bandmates, and attain the type of unified whole found in the best work of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Woody Shaw, or Wynton Marsalis. Pianist Orrin Evans is a very positive force on driving the music ahead, while newcomer saxophonists Brian Hogans and Walter Smith sound like they know their roles well, and are not egocentric to the point of bold upstaging -- they all fit quite well together. Whether Jones will ever be the second coming of Lee Morgan or Freddie Hubbard is to be determined, but he's sure working hard to live up to their estimable reputations. "Transitions" represents this hard blowing, unabashed approach, a terrific, quick and hip tune that tackles the 7/8 time signature in a near wild mindset. A popping Latin rhythm behind singing sounds from the three horns on "The Storm" leads to their best interplay in counterpoint and vocal-like chatter. The funky soulful tune "Sunday Reflections" repeats the instrumental as voice extension concept in a mix of contemporary and traditional hard bop stance in the finest Blue Note records tradition. Evans steps up filling space everywhere he can with bright tones on the other hard bopper "Sean's Jones Comes Down," featuring the trumpeter's best solo. On the retro CTI side, a bouncy "Summer's Spring" has Evans on the Fender Rhodes as Jones teams with flutist Erika Von Kleist, a 6/8 samba beat and the harmonica of guest Gregoire Maret identifies the soaring harmony of "The Ambitious Violet," and vocalist Carolyn Perteete returns from previous efforts with Jones to sing her obligatory number "Letter of Resignation," a beautiful song with the triple entendre tale of true love and fate, evoking being regretfully resigned, resigning as in quitting and re-signing on again with romance. The sweet and languid moments in ballad form, and even the three- to two-minute "The Search Within" prelude, interludes, postlude (and fully rendered hidden title track) are compelling as bridges, implying the lengthy internal search that Jones embarked upon has yielded wondrous, revelatory results. Sean Jones certainly must be considered alongside Jeremy Pelt, Terence Blanchard, Nicholas Payton, and Roy Hargrove as a top-drawer modern jazz trumpet player, and this album firmly solidifies that notion. ~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide




Sean Jones

Active Decade: '00s
Born: May 29, 1978 in Warren, OH
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Post-Bop, Standards

Trumpeter Sean Jones is a firebrand musician with a bent toward muscular post-bop. Born in Warren, OH, in 1978, Jones began playing trumpet in the fifth grade, and by high school had developed a strong interest in jazz, especially the music of legendary trumpeter Miles Davis. Gigs at local jazz clubs and performances with the Cleveland Jazz Orchestra followed, and Jones ultimately enrolled in the music school at Youngstown State University in Ohio. Graduating with a bachelor's degree, Jones then earned a master's degree from Rutgers University. Since that time, Jones has performed with a variety of name musicians, including Joe Lovano, Frank Foster, and others. He is also a member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and a professor at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, PA. He released his debut album, Eternal Journey, on Mack Avenue in 2004. Gemini and Roots followed in 2005 and 2006, respectively.
---Matt Collar, All Music Guide

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