Brian Blade - Mama Rosa

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Album Details

Title: Mama Rosa
Artist: Brian Blade
Release Date: 4/21/2009
Label: Verve
Album Type(s): Promotional , lyrics/libretto
UPC: 602517974579
Genre: Rock
Style: Straight-Ahead Jazz
Moods: Intense, Reflective, Searching, Uncompromising, Cerebral, Complex, Freewheeling, Passionate, Sophisticated
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. After the Revival
  2. Mercy Angel
  3. At the Centerline
  4. Brother
  5. Get There
  6. Second Home
  7. You'll Always Be My Baby
  8. Nature's Law
  9. Struggling with That
  10. All That Was Yesterday
  11. Her Song
  12. All Gospel Radio
  13. Psalm 100

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2009CDVerve001261302

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Given the state of the music business in 2009, it would seem a terrible decision to allow an award-winning jazz drummer, composer, and bandleader -- not to mention an in-demand session musician -- to record what amounts to a "pop" album. Yet that's exactly what Verve's Forecast imprint did when it let Brian Blade, leader of the Fellowship Band, one of its premier showcase acts, record Mama Rosa. And thank God they did. Blade has been writing and recording songs on two-track and four-track demos for decades. He's been singing them for friends and family members for about as long. Blade is a natural born storyteller with an evocative singing voice, an individual and polished guitar style, and real estate with enough fine musicians to bring them into his projects. This is music that has heart, melody, and sophisticated and well-intentioned lyric poetry, and these songs are concerned with what it means to try and live alone and with others in the light each day. Produced by Blade and Adam Samuels, this lovely, understated, 13-song set (ten vocal tracks, three instrumentals -- two of them brief ambient pieces -- and a lone cover) is staffed by great players: Daniel Lanois, Greg Leisz, Daryl Johnson, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Jon Cowherd, and Chris E. Thomas of the Fellowship Band, Kelly Jones, Tucker Martine, Jenny Lee Lindberg, Aaron Embry, and Patrick Smith. The songs are mostly slow to middle tempo ballads that are kissed only slightly by anything resembling jazz (mostly in the atmospherics and in the piano charts), but are anchored more deeply in rock, folk, and other roots music with guitars and drums playing the primary roles.

With its languid intro, the opener "After the Revival" offers a reverb-laden tale of the namesake of this album, Blade's grandmother, Rosa. It's a slow shuffling whisper of a tune with lovely guitars, both acoustic and electric, underscoring a tale of family and faith, and faith is at the heart of most of Blade's songs here. It is followed by the gorgeous "Mercy Angel," a love song to be sure, but not of the usual variety. Blade's piano, guitar, and drums are aided by Lanois' electric solo guitar and bass work, and the high lonesome duet work of Jones, who helps to make the meaning of the song even more ambiguous. It could be a love song to God, to another spiritual benefactor, or to the Beloved. The balance of earth and sky are felt best in the larger ensemble piece "At the Centerline," where Blade, in a quintet with Cowherd, Thomas, Lanois, and Geoffrey Moore, is accompanied by a four-part backing chorus in a tune that weaves old-school African-American gospel (pre Thomas Dorsey), New Orleans style funeral chants, rock, and minor mode folk-blues in a haunting, shimmering, dirge that is perhaps the finest moment on the album. Other notables include a wonderfully unexpected and highly original cover of Milton Nasciemento's "Brother" that has been completely rearranged but is nonetheless utterly recognizable, the stripped down solo acoustic number "Natural Law," the more rockist instrumental, "Struggling with That," and a simple, country-styled paean to the Statue of Liberty called "Her Song" with smokin' guitar work by Lanois. Chances are, most fans of his work as a jazzman will take scant notice of this -- their loss. Others, who have admired the work of songwriters such as Lanois, Joni Mitchell, Bruce Cockburn, Buddy Miller, Robbie Robertson, and others will find Mama Rosa to be a welcome addition to their collections. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Aaron EmbryAlto (Vocals), Piano
Adam SamuelsProcessing, Photography, Mixing, Producer, Engineer, Audio Production, Mastering
Andy KmanRelease Coordinator
Annabel MehranPhotography
Brian BladeProducer, Piano, Guitar, Photography, Drums, Arranger, Vocals, Bass, Audio Production
Chris E. ThomasBass
Clint WelanderAudio Engineer, Assistant Engineer
Dahlia Ambach CaplinA&R
Daniel LanoisVocal Harmony, Bass, Pedal Steel, Soloist, Guitar
Darryl JohnsonTenor (Vocal), Vocal Harmony
Dave ColemanAssistant Engineer, Audio Engineer
Evelyn MorganA&R
Geoffrey MooreGuitar, Guitar (Nylon String)
Greg LeiszWeissenborn, Lap Steel Guitar, Pedal Steel
Hollis KingArt Direction
Jennifer TipoulowPhotography
Jenny lee LindbergBass
John BighamBaritone (Vocal)
John NewcottRelease Coordinator
Jon CowherdOrgan (Pump), Piano
Kelly JonesPhotography, Vocal Harmony
Kurt RosenwinkelGuitar
Lisa HansenRelease Coordinator
Patrick SmithPedal Steel
Rocco DelucaSoprano (Vocal)
Rod SnyderPhotography
Sachico AsanoDesign
Shawn StroopePhotography
Silverlake Male ChorusChoir, Chorus
Steve SullivanEngineer
Tatjana ReimannPhotography
Tucker MartineProcessing, Engineer, Mixing