Search - Bennie Wallace :: Old Songs

Old Songs
Bennie Wallace
Old Songs
Genre: Jazz
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Like his younger contemporary James Carter (and Joe Lovano, for that matter), tenor saxophonist Bennie Wallace seems able to reference a panoply of jazz legends in his playing. He's got the octave leaps that Eric Dolphy ma...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Bennie Wallace
Title: Old Songs
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Jvc/Sire
Release Date: 1/21/1997
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Modern Postbebop, Bebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 009119001328

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Like his younger contemporary James Carter (and Joe Lovano, for that matter), tenor saxophonist Bennie Wallace seems able to reference a panoply of jazz legends in his playing. He's got the octave leaps that Eric Dolphy made his own, and a swing-era sense of full-bodied tone and breathy playing, to boot. His renditions of standards on Old Songs, then, sound alternately like Ben Webster, Sonny Rollins, and some genetic hybrid of about six other saxophonists. He leaps all over "I Hear a Rhapsody," with a lean trio of himself, bassist Bill Huntington, and drummer Alvin Queen. When pianist Lou Levy drops in, as on "My One and Only Love," "Skylark," and "What's New," things are far more intimate and gorgeous, showing Wallace's command of the ballad, sultry moods, and his horn's full range. This is a fantastic, underrecognized album. --Andrew Bartlett

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CD Reviews

Wallace masters old songs with sheer virtuosity
Wordsworth | Greenwich, CT | 09/28/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I first heard Bennie Wallace live at JazzAid:New Orleans, a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina relief in Greenwich, CT. When he started to blow on that horn, he transported me to another world. At the JazzAid concert Bennie also performed with Alvin Queen, who plays drums on this CD, and Danton Boller. There's pure magic in this music, from "When You Wish upon a Star" to the pure, honest, reverend simplicity of "My One and Only Love" and Hoagie Carmichael's heartbreakingly, sweet "Skylark," which sounded to me like the jazz equivalent of the poetry of Keats. To say that Bennie Wallace is a tenor sax virtuoso may be an understatement because his talent, technical facility and genius for improvisation are not of this world. And you can really hear in his quality the timeless blend of invention and powerful grace in deference to the classic melodies of the old songs. If you love hearing jazz that constantly surprises you with off the charts improvisation, listen to Bennie and Alvin on this CD. The old songs never sounded so new in this collection of favorites that establish Bennie Wallace as one of the jazz greats of our day -- this jazz man is a living legend."