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Event
Teodross Avery CD Release: After The Rain: A Night for Coltrane
CRITICAL PRAISE "Avery himself is the one who keeps the fire burning, changing between honking outbursts and throaty intensity and softly singing melodies like the pure ballad reading of the title track.
All About Jazz (2019) 4 stars (out of 5) for After The Rain: A Night for Coltrane
In the beginning there was John Coltrane. Growing up in a family that listened to a vast and global array of music, Teodross Avery experienced an epiphany at 13 when he first heard Tranes epochal harmonic steeplechase Giant Steps. Taking up the tenor saxophone, he emerged in the mid-1990s as one of the most powerful young voices on the scene, with two critically hailed releases for GRP/Impulse! Averys long and productive journey has taken him down many musical paths, from gigs with jazz legends and hip hop stars to sessions with NEA Jazz Masters and platinum pop albums. With his Tompkins Square label debut After The Rain: A Night for Coltrane, Avery has found his way back home, reasserting himself as a supremely eloquent exponent of the post-Trane jazz continuum. Recorded live at Oaklands Sound Room, the album is slated for release on May 10, 2019. It is a return to my roots, says Avery, 45, who possesses a huge, brawny tone and a capacious harmonic imagination. Listening to Tranes music was my foundation, and this album is definitely a reintroduction to this area of my career. Ive been busy with a lot of other stuff, but I was always playing acoustic jazz with top level cats. I wasnt putting out albums. I was on record dates, but not my own albums. This was the perfect opportunity to make my own statement.
For the Sound Room concert Avery reconnected with some of the Bay Areas most formidable improvisers, joining forces with pianist Adam Shulman, Oakland-reared, New York-based drummer Darrell Green, and bassist Jeff Chambers, who played on the Yoshis album release gig for his seminal 1996 hip-hop inflected album My Generation. I grew up hearing Jeff with Freddie Hubbard, Bobby Hutcherson, Ahmad Jamal and other heavyweight players, Avery says. Hes one of the greatest bassists around, but after he made the date at Yoshis we didnt play together until about 2014. He was the logical choice, and so was Darrell, who I played with in the Bay Area and New York. I always love his feel. And Ive played with Adam since the early 2000s when I did gigs with Marcus Shelby. With the highly cohesive band Avery delves deeply into Coltranes songbook, opening with a brightly burning run through Blues Minor. Maintaining a steady level of energy throughout the nine-minute sojourn, the quartet offers a master class in the power of a briskly swinging mid-tempo groove. The sets longest piece, Africa, is also drawn from the classic 1961 album Africa/Brass, Coltranes debut release on Impulse! orchestrated by Eric Dolphy and McCoy Tyner. Its an epic performance that builds to ecstatic heights and then simmers back down with Chambers eerie arco bass solo backed by Greens clackety trap work. Born July 2, 1973 in Fairfield, California, Avery grew up in Oakland and Vacaville, where he spent most of high school. Looking for more rigorous musical training he attended Berkeley High his senior year played in the schools award-winning jazz band under director Charles Hamilton (a mentor for future jazz stars such as Joshua Redman, Dayna Stephens and Justin Brown). Wynton Marsalis recognized his oversized talent and purchased him a saxophone. Berklee College of Music made a similar judgment, giving him a full scholarship. At 19, he found another champion in eminent A&R executive Carl Griffin, who signed him to GRP/Impulse Records. His 1994 debut album In Other Words focused on his original compositions, and earned widespread critical praise. Sought out by stars like Aretha Franklin, Betty Carter and Ramsey Lewis, he soaked up head-turning bandstand experiences and still managed to finish college while on the road in 1995. Its hard to overstate the impression Avery made when he hit New York. Within a week of moving to the city in 1995 he was playing at the Blue Note with piano legend Cedar Waltons sextet featuring trumpet great Art Farmer. Over the next few years, he performed and recorded with veteran jazz masters such as Hank Jones, Ben Riley, Harold Mabern, Bobby Watson and Dee Dee Bridgewater, while also working with rising stars like Cyrus Chestnut, Lewis Nash, Donald Harrison, and Roy Hargrove. With the manifesto-like My Generation, a guitar-centric session featuring John Scofield, Peter Bernstein, and Mark Whitfield on alternating tracks, Avery embraced his Ethiopian heritage and the protean power of hip hop (with Black Thought of The Roots rapping on the title track). While Avery has kept a relatively low profile on the jazz scene over the past two decades, hes never put down his horn. After touring internationally with Lauryn Hill in the late 1990s, he started recording prolifically as a session musician in New York City, contributing to hit albums by Amy Winehouse, G-Unit All Stars, Joss Stone, and Talib Kweli. Returning to academia, he completed a PhD in Jazz Studies from the University of Southern California in 2016, and is now assistant professor of Jazz Studies and Commercial Music at California State University Dominguez Hills in Los Angeles. Avery started gaining attention again in straight ahead circles as part of a powerhouse tenor sax tandem with Howard Wiley on Hammond B-3 great Doug Carns 2015 album My Spirit (Doodlin' Records). He revealed a different side of his musical personality on 2017s Post Modern Trap Music (Katalyst Entertainment), a duo collaboration with drum master Marvin Bugalu Smith, who has played with the likes of Archie Shepp, Sun Ra, and Chet Baker. In many ways, the project was a primal scream of freedom after years battened down in grad school. I had this sense I need to record an album and not be guided by piano and bass, he says. I needed to be in the drivers seat as to where the harmony was going. It was like a release. When I was at USC, everything was very regimented. Thats part of the point of pursuing a doctorate. I needed to clear my intellectual palette. The saxophone/drums duo was pioneered of course by John Coltrane and Rashied Ali, and Post Modern Trap Music paved the way for After The Rain. A major addition to his slim but growing discography, the album catapults Avery back into jazzs top ranks as a fierce and captivating improviser ready to reclaim his vaunted reputation.
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LocationThe Sound Room (View)
2147 Broadway
Oakland, CA 94612
United States
Categories
Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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