Search - Jason Adasiewicz :: Rolldown

Rolldown
Jason Adasiewicz
Rolldown
Genre: Jazz
 
  •  Track Listings (7) - Disc #1

Document Chicago #14 — Rolldown includes seven studio tracks and an eight minute video, takes its name from Adasiewicz's four year-old working band of the same name featuring Josh Berman, Aram Shelton, Jason Roebke and Fran...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Jason Adasiewicz
Title: Rolldown
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: 482 Music
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 5/27/2008
Album Type: Import
Genre: Jazz
Style: Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 650594105423

Synopsis

Product Description
Document Chicago #14
Rolldown includes seven studio tracks and an eight minute video, takes its name from Adasiewicz's four year-old working band of the same name featuring Josh Berman, Aram Shelton, Jason Roebke and Frank Rosaly. 'Composing pieces for Rolldown started with free improvisation on the piano' explains Adasiewicz, who wrote all the music during a year in Madison, Wisconsin in which he supported his wife's academic pursuits and re-evaluated his life while working on a vegetable farm. 'The melodies are usually comprised of more than one voice and the tunes do not follow a chord progression, but were constructed using conventional ABA song form. Harmony is created spontaneously during the group's improvisation, and the rhythm, while deeply rooted in the jazz tradition, at times pulls away from any suggestion of pulse.' 'He emphasizes his terrific originals in Rolldown,' wrote the Chicago Reader's Peter Margasak, adding, many songs on Rolldown 'recall the brilliantly oblique postbop material Bobby Hutcherson recorded for Blue Note in the late 60s, but others are based on gently rippling, coloristic passages. Adasiewicz lays down spiky, sweet-and-sour harmonies behind the solos, and his own improvisations are jagged tangles that make unexpected turns and recapitulations.' Adasiewicz is a member of more than 20 working bands, including the Guillermo Gregorio Trio, Fred Lonberg-Holm's Valentine Trio + 1, Rob Mazurek's Exploding Star Orchestra, the Nicole Mitchell Quartet and Ken Vandermark's Double Quartet. His debut as a leader on 482 Music follows a long association with the label that includes recordings with Aram Shelton's Arrive, Harris Eisenstadt and Mike Reed's Loose Assembly. He also appears on two tracks from the sampler that launched the label's Document Chicago series in 2003.

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CD Reviews

Proof that Chicago's creative improv scene is 2nd to none.
greg taylor | Portland, Oregon United States | 10/15/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Read the album info above. It steals most of my thunder. So the first thing I want to do is to repeat the fact that this is #14 in the Document Chicago series being put out by 482 Music. There have been some really outstanding issues in the series including CDs by Harris Eisenstadt and Scott Rosenberg. If you are at all adventurous in your musical taste, this is a great series to explore.

And this CD is a powerful addition to that collection. The review above gets it pretty much right with the comparison to the exploratory feel of the mid-60s Jackie McLean Blue Notes. That is a very high compliment but not an inappropriate one. Adasiewicz has a nice odd melodic sense. The guys have been playing together as a regular band for over four years and they compliment each other beautifully.

Aram Shelton is a really good youngish alto sax and clarinet player. Josh Berman has some intense and beautiful moments on the cornet. Adasiewicz is impressive as a soloist but really impresses for how he sets the mood of the piece on his vibes. Frank Rosaly on the drums and Jason Roebke seem to be all over the Chicago scene and together they are beautifully tight.

Listen to the samples, download those silly MP3s, buy the regal CD and listen to the whole thing. Watch the video hidden so cleverly on the CD with the title Hide. But expand your cultural sensibilites in any case and give these guys a listen. Creative improv music never dies. If always finds new heros, new creators, new enclaves within which to grow. Jason Adasiewicz' music may just be one of those new paths. Check him out along with the rest of the Document Chicago series."