GoodSound! "Music" ArchivesPublished May 1, 2008  | 
       
      
         
        
          
             
            Auktyon: Girls Sing 
            Geometriya GEO 012 
            Format: CD 
            
              
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             And now for something completely different: Russian bohemian
            speed rock. Frenetic, electric, hyper and hurdy-gurdist, Auktyon made such an impression
            on American musicians Marc Ribot and John Medeski that those two powerhouses asked to join
            them in the sessions for their next studio recording. And so Girls Sing was born.
            Along with Ribot on guitar, Medeski on keys, Frank London on trumpet, and Ned Rothenburg
            on alto sax, the eight Russian musicians of Auktyon display a musical sensibility that
            impressively blends folk forms of the old world with the funk forms of the new. While the
            structure of most of the songs is basically two chords, the direction the musicians then
            go in is one of creative chaos across the proverbial map. "Rogan Born" is all
            suspense with a fun, Boris-and-Natasha-esque vibe. It features Medeski on noir piano, and
            seemingly drunk, angry Russian threats spewed by the vocalist. Conversely,
            "Tam-Dam" lilts along as dreamily as a butterfly on the breeze. Apparently,
            Auktyon has been performing and recording, in one form or another, since 1983. I have only
            two questions: Why havent I heard of them before? What the hell are they singing?...Shannon
            Holliday | 
           
          
             
            Holly Cole: Holly Cole 
            Koch Koc-CD-4404 
            Format: CD 
            
              
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             Holly Cole is
            the Canadian singers first recording to be released by a US label since 1997s Dark
            Dear Heart. While Coles discs can be filed under "Jazz," shes
            always sung whatever grabs her -- her third disc, the essential Temptation, was
            a collection of songs by Tom Waits, and its that kind of project that seems to
            puzzle both record labels and jazz purists. At first, Holly Cole seems like a peace
            offering to the latter, but Cole does things on her own terms. Her take on Jobims
            "Waters of March" uses an acoustic guitar, but it isnt bossa nova as much
            as smart pop. "The House Is Haunted by the Echo of Your Last Goodbye" has the
            snap of Mel Tormés original, but the New Orleans-style arrangement adds a hint of
            melancholy. The arrangements, by Gil Goldstein and Marty Ehrlich, are complex and often
            darkly beautiful, but its Coles voice and her subtle interpretive skills that
            make an old chestnut like Michel Legrands "I Will Wait for You" sound
            fresh. Listen to her simple, emotionally effective version of Irving Berlins
            "Be Careful, Its My Heart" and try to figure out, as I do, why kudos and
            record sales go to singers far less deserving of them
.Joseph Taylor
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            Caribbean Jazz Project: Afro Bop Alliance 
            Heads Up HUCD 3137 
            Format: CD 
            
              
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             From original material by project founder and vibe and marimba
            player Dave Samuels, to jazz standards by Thelonious Monk, Oliver Nelson, Dizzy Gillespie,
            and John Coltrane, the Caribbean Jazz Project is not your run-of-the-mill Latin-jazz copy
            band melding bossa nova with Bill Evans in smooth-jazz style. No, Samuels and company play
            pure big-band bop overlaid with characteristic Latin jazz beats, mixing the two as if
            theyd always been together. They do this with flair, and an infectious sense of fun
            that will grab your attention and have you thinking theyve somehow managed to
            transplant New York City to Cuba. For an example of their joie de vivre, listen to how
            alto saxophonist Steve Williams bristles with fresh ideas on John Coltranes
            "Naima." This big bands various voices can each be heard in sparkling
            detail thanks to Bob Dawsons superb engineering: The Project is spread out on a
            wide, deep soundstage, and the mix lets you clearly hear each instruments tone and
            timbre. From first note to last, Afro Bop Alliance will grab you, then have you
            simultaneously reaching for the Repeat button and the phone -- to call your audio
            buddies
.John Crossett | 
           
          
             
            Jamshied Sharifi: One 
            Ceres CER001 
            Format: CD 
            
              
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             For One, Jamshied Sharifi gathered musicians from the US,
            Iran, India, Africa, Ireland, and Tibet. In the studio, they erased the boundaries and
            oceans that separate their homelands, to create music with a message of limitless creative
            and spiritual freedom and sacred oneness. "One" opens the album with grace and
            power, the voices of Tibetan singer Yungchen Lhamo and Malian vocalist Abdoulaye Diabaté
            lilting and weaving in intricate chant around an array of instruments that ranges from
            horns, wood flute, and oud to gourds, hand drums, and synthesizer (Sharifis primary
            instrument). Throughout, One boasts lush, layered arrangements and ambient swells
            as Sharifi and his collaborators explore the beauty, sadness, grace, and wonder that unite
            us all. The closing track, "Requiem," is a poignant tribute to those who died on
            September 11, 2001, while "Darfur Is Burning," sung by Diabaté, is an
            impassioned plea to focus awareness on a country now ablaze with genocidal war. This
            discs 11 songs tell 1001 tales, but the ultimate theme can be traced to that of just
            one
.Shannon Holliday | 
           
          
             
            Interstate Cowboy: Theres a Road 
            Ranch Ruckus RRR 2007 
            Format: CD  
            
              
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             On their website, Interstate Cowboy describes their music as
            "Great Western Swing, Americana, and Rockabilly." While the bands music
            does contain all of those elements, the description doesnt capture how original they
            are. Tim Champlin, the bands lead singer and songwriter, combines American roots
            music in surprising ways, evoking Bob Wills one moment, Buck Owens the next, then Little
            Feat, yet never pinning himself down to anything but writing a good song. The rest of the
            band is rock-solid, especially pedal-steel player Dick Meis and guitarist Grant Gordy,
            whos learned a few things from Eldon Shamblin (Willss great guitarist) and Wes
            Montgomery. The bands instrumental version of the Gershwins "Lady Be
            Good" is full of wit and fire, and I like to think Johnny Mercer would have enjoyed
            their turn on his "Im an Old Cowhand." Champlin can write a traditional
            country song with the best of them, but his most original tunes ("I Got
            Nothin," "Theres a Road") are tougher to peg -- and, once
            youve heard them, even tougher to get out of your head. The recording is admirably
            clean, spacious, and dynamic. Next time around, trimming a little fat (do we really need
            another rendition of "Frankie & Johnny"?) will make for a more consistent
            disc
.Joseph Taylor | 
           
         
         
        
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