Seamus Blake - Echonomics

Seamus Blake - Echonomics
S



Album Details

Title: Echonomics
Artist: Seamus Blake
Release Date: 2/27/2001
Label: Criss Cross (Netherlands)
UPCs: 182478493826, 8712474119721
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Post-Bop, Jazz Instrument, Saxophone Jazz
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Circle K.
  2. Why Not
  3. Last Minute Club
  4. Children and Art
  5. Echonomics
  6. Rain Your Love Down
  7. God Only Knows

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2001CDCriss Cross (Netherlands)1197

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs

  • No similar CDs were found for this album.

Album Review

Seamus Blake, one of our more adventurous young tenor saxophonists, assembles a strong quartet for this relatively mainstream Criss Cross date. Pianist David Kikoski and bassist Ed Howard worked together for many years in Roy Haynes' group. Drummer Victor Lewis mentored Blake when the young tenorist moved to New York. So, among the four players, there's a great deal of experience shared in common. Blake leads the foursome through three solid original tunes (including "Circle K," a cut from 2000's Sun Sol), a quietly inspired reading of Stephen Sondheim's "Children and Art," covers of Stevie Wonder's "Rain Your Love Down" and Brian Wilson's "God Only Knows," and a slow, foreboding take of "Why Not" by the underexposed West Coast pianist George Cables. Although Blake travels outside the jazz norm with his sparing use of echo and wah-wah effects, the album lacks the kind of sustained audacity of, say, 1999's Stranger Things Have Happened. But even here, Blake is posing some important questions about the present and future of jazz. In particular, Blake, like many of his peers, is pondering the meaning and relevance of the modern pop repertoire for jazz musicians. The Beach Boys' classic "God Only Knows," for instance, with its unforgettable melody, complex harmonic movement, and odd phrase lengths, is a nice choice in theory. In practice, however, the song loses something when it becomes fodder for jazz soloing, detached from the lyrics that made it truly great. ~ David R. Adler, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Dave KikoskiPiano
Ed HowardBass
Gerry TeekensCover Design, Producer
Gildas BocléPhotography
H. BloemendaalCover Design
K. HasselpflugExecutive Producer
Max BollemanEngineer
Seamus BlakeSax (Tenor)
Victor LewisDrums