Label: Mack Avenue
Format: CD
Barcode: 0673203106925
Catalog number: MAC 1069
Releasedate: 11-10-13
Format: CD
Barcode: 0673203106925
Catalog number: MAC 1069
Releasedate: 11-10-13
With Out Here, premier bassist Christian McBride’s fifth recording on Mack Avenue Records, McBride introduces his latest working group: a trio, fully embracing at age 41 his role as standard-bearer and mentor. Pianist Christian Sands and drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr.—both younger, emerging artists—have been performing with McBride’s smallest group for about three years, honing their trio conception to a fine point of expressive depth and nuance with select performances around the world.
- A diversified trio, hardcore swingin,’ blues and the American songbook
- Concert in the Bimhuis, Amsterdam at 29th of November 2013
- For the fifth consecutive year, Christian McBride has been chosen as the best bassist in the leading Downbeat Critics Poll, not only for his virtuoso playing, but also because of the pleasure he radiates.
- McBrides played with jazzlegends such as Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock and Pat Metheny and popstars such as James Brown, Sting and The Roots.
- His playing always sounds powerful, both in solos and in the rock-solid guidance.
With Out Here, premier bassist Christian McBride’s fifth recording on Mack Avenue Records, McBride introduces his latest working group: a trio, fully embracing at age 41 his role as standard-bearer and mentor. Pianist Christian Sands and drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr.—both younger, emerging artists—have been performing with McBride’s smallest group for about three years, honing their trio conception to a fine point of expressive depth and nuance with select performances around the world.
“It’s a pretty diversified trio,” says McBride descriptively. “The real core foundation is hardcore swingin,’ blues and the American songbook. Part of that is because Christian [Sands] is so well-rounded and willing to go to so many places, that I can’t help but want to swing hard with him and Ulysses.” McBride, however, thought he’d never helm a jazz trio.
When he hit the jazz scene like a comet at age 17, McBride’s huge, woodsy sound and precocious agility invited comparisons to the legendary bassist Ray Brown. The late jazz bassist was not only renowned for performing on classic jazz dates with modern greats from the 1940s onward, but also for his central role in trios led by Oscar Peterson as well as his own stellar trio ensembles afterward. Once McBride recorded with Brown as a member of the early ’90s group Superbass, the association was bound to stick. He loved Brown as a mentor and father figure, but avoided leading a trio because of the inevitable comparisons.
Helming a trio was the furthest thing from McBride’s mind—until an Inside Straight appearance in 2009 became a trio date due of the absence of saxophonist Steve Wilson and vibraphonist Warren Wolf. But instead of calling for replacements for two members of Inside Straight, he opted for expedience and played the gig with pianist Peter Martin and drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr.
Out Here is McBride’s 11th recording as a leader. Since the early 1990s he has recorded on over 300 dates as a sideman. Aside from relatively recent travels with Pat Metheny; Chick Corea, Roy Haynes,
John McLaughlin and Kenny Garrett; the Monterey Jazz Festival on Tour – 55th Anniversary; and residencies and artistic leadership roles with organizations ranging from New York’s 92nd St. Y and Jazz House Kids to NJPAC, McBride has toured consistently for several years with his own quintet, Inside Straight. He also fronts the Christian McBride Big Band, whose Mack Avenue recording, The Good Feeling, won the GRAMMY® Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album in 2012—his third GRAMMY win overall.
Owens has been a mainstay in McBride’s groups of late. He has regularly subbed for Carl Allen in Inside Straight and is the drummer for the Big Band. “Ulysses and I have a closely formed musical relationship, where we know one another’s time and feel very well,” McBride says. “I think he’s picking up the tradition after Lewis Nash. I love his combination of technique and artistry.”
McBride had his eye out for Sands ever since hearing him on Marian McPartland’s National Public Radio “Piano Jazz” program. “I knew he was a student of Dr. Billy Taylor’s. But when I heard him he floored me. It was amazing hearing an 18-year-old really dealing with the tradition. He had his technique together, and all his tempos—ballads, medium, bebop. Plus he played the blues and could get esoteric too. I thought: finally, a young player who has all of the language. It was such a relief.”
Considering the tendency of many young players to focus on complex rhythms, baroque technique, and being different for the sake of difference, hearing these three gentlemen explore jazz fundamentals with such wonder, drive and sensitivity serves as a welcome antidote. “My trio seems to be an anomaly these days,” says McBride. “I find myself, when listening to young guys on the scene, it’s very musically clever, but I’m not feeling that kind of soul satisfaction that I felt at one time. There was a time when the young guys took pride in paying tribute to the masters but still keeping their own identity and remaining within their own generation.”
With Sands and Owens, McBride exhales with relief since they play the full spectrum of the music at will. Out Here opens with “Ham Hocks and Cabbage,” a flowing, feel-good, down-home blues with intro by Sands and melody by McBride. Oscar Peterson’s “Hallelujah Time” is a praise song to the divine taken up-tempo, with rejoicing solo turns by McBride on bow; and Sands, who trades eights with Owens before the trio closes with panache. An even faster tempo emboldens their reenactment of the Ahmad Jamal trio arrangement of “Cherokee,” alternating a waltz tempo with jet-speed precision rarely attempted since the glory days of bebop. Owens especially shines here, demonstrating a range of brush and stick work worthy of envy.
Wistful memories inspirit “I Guess I’ll Have To Forget,” originally recorded on McBride’s Sci-Fi date in 2000. On that recording, McBride says the song had “all these detours and side roads to it. I brought it back this time for some variety, to break up the mood and atmosphere. The way the song is played now is actually the way I originally wrote it: very simple, something that a vocalist could write lyrics to.”
Dr. Billy Taylor’s “Easy Walker” is taken at what McBride calls a “grown-folks tempo,” what with a deep-in-the-pocket, no-rush flair and the luxuriant insouciance of swing. “My Favorite Things” is performed in 5/4, and is the most experimental number. “We let our imaginations run wild,” he says. “It’s a song that everybody knows so we wanted to do something different so folks won’t tune out.”
Tuning out is no option on other standards present. “Most of the standards that inspire me come from Frank Sinatra,” admits McBride, regarding “East of the Sun, (and West of the Moon).” He adds Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole and Carmen McCrae to the array of vocal lights he turned to when he “really started listening to singers. They understood the beauty of simplicity; they sing the story the way the writer intended. They don’t put their own artistic expression before the story.”
Sinatra’s version of “I Have Dreamed” from The Rat Pack: Live at the Sands recording in 1963 was the longing spark for his heartfelt, bowed interpretation of a memorable song from The King and I. The closing number, “Who’s Making Love,” features McBride’s tributes to Johnnie Taylor and, humorously, to Robert Wilson of The Gap Band. It’s also the trio’s nod to McBride’s roots in soul and R&B. “My bone marrow is soul music. I never had to learn how to play soul music or R&B as I did for jazz and classical music.”
McBride’s talent and mark on the music scene transcend genre, so he’s no longer under Ray Brown’s shadow. And on this recording, his trio hits a jazz sweet spot. For listeners of Out Here, the result is music for the soul.
“It’s a pretty diversified trio,” says McBride descriptively. “The real core foundation is hardcore swingin,’ blues and the American songbook. Part of that is because Christian [Sands] is so well-rounded and willing to go to so many places, that I can’t help but want to swing hard with him and Ulysses.” McBride, however, thought he’d never helm a jazz trio.
When he hit the jazz scene like a comet at age 17, McBride’s huge, woodsy sound and precocious agility invited comparisons to the legendary bassist Ray Brown. The late jazz bassist was not only renowned for performing on classic jazz dates with modern greats from the 1940s onward, but also for his central role in trios led by Oscar Peterson as well as his own stellar trio ensembles afterward. Once McBride recorded with Brown as a member of the early ’90s group Superbass, the association was bound to stick. He loved Brown as a mentor and father figure, but avoided leading a trio because of the inevitable comparisons.
Helming a trio was the furthest thing from McBride’s mind—until an Inside Straight appearance in 2009 became a trio date due of the absence of saxophonist Steve Wilson and vibraphonist Warren Wolf. But instead of calling for replacements for two members of Inside Straight, he opted for expedience and played the gig with pianist Peter Martin and drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr.
Out Here is McBride’s 11th recording as a leader. Since the early 1990s he has recorded on over 300 dates as a sideman. Aside from relatively recent travels with Pat Metheny; Chick Corea, Roy Haynes,
John McLaughlin and Kenny Garrett; the Monterey Jazz Festival on Tour – 55th Anniversary; and residencies and artistic leadership roles with organizations ranging from New York’s 92nd St. Y and Jazz House Kids to NJPAC, McBride has toured consistently for several years with his own quintet, Inside Straight. He also fronts the Christian McBride Big Band, whose Mack Avenue recording, The Good Feeling, won the GRAMMY® Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album in 2012—his third GRAMMY win overall.
Owens has been a mainstay in McBride’s groups of late. He has regularly subbed for Carl Allen in Inside Straight and is the drummer for the Big Band. “Ulysses and I have a closely formed musical relationship, where we know one another’s time and feel very well,” McBride says. “I think he’s picking up the tradition after Lewis Nash. I love his combination of technique and artistry.”
McBride had his eye out for Sands ever since hearing him on Marian McPartland’s National Public Radio “Piano Jazz” program. “I knew he was a student of Dr. Billy Taylor’s. But when I heard him he floored me. It was amazing hearing an 18-year-old really dealing with the tradition. He had his technique together, and all his tempos—ballads, medium, bebop. Plus he played the blues and could get esoteric too. I thought: finally, a young player who has all of the language. It was such a relief.”
Considering the tendency of many young players to focus on complex rhythms, baroque technique, and being different for the sake of difference, hearing these three gentlemen explore jazz fundamentals with such wonder, drive and sensitivity serves as a welcome antidote. “My trio seems to be an anomaly these days,” says McBride. “I find myself, when listening to young guys on the scene, it’s very musically clever, but I’m not feeling that kind of soul satisfaction that I felt at one time. There was a time when the young guys took pride in paying tribute to the masters but still keeping their own identity and remaining within their own generation.”
With Sands and Owens, McBride exhales with relief since they play the full spectrum of the music at will. Out Here opens with “Ham Hocks and Cabbage,” a flowing, feel-good, down-home blues with intro by Sands and melody by McBride. Oscar Peterson’s “Hallelujah Time” is a praise song to the divine taken up-tempo, with rejoicing solo turns by McBride on bow; and Sands, who trades eights with Owens before the trio closes with panache. An even faster tempo emboldens their reenactment of the Ahmad Jamal trio arrangement of “Cherokee,” alternating a waltz tempo with jet-speed precision rarely attempted since the glory days of bebop. Owens especially shines here, demonstrating a range of brush and stick work worthy of envy.
Wistful memories inspirit “I Guess I’ll Have To Forget,” originally recorded on McBride’s Sci-Fi date in 2000. On that recording, McBride says the song had “all these detours and side roads to it. I brought it back this time for some variety, to break up the mood and atmosphere. The way the song is played now is actually the way I originally wrote it: very simple, something that a vocalist could write lyrics to.”
Dr. Billy Taylor’s “Easy Walker” is taken at what McBride calls a “grown-folks tempo,” what with a deep-in-the-pocket, no-rush flair and the luxuriant insouciance of swing. “My Favorite Things” is performed in 5/4, and is the most experimental number. “We let our imaginations run wild,” he says. “It’s a song that everybody knows so we wanted to do something different so folks won’t tune out.”
Tuning out is no option on other standards present. “Most of the standards that inspire me come from Frank Sinatra,” admits McBride, regarding “East of the Sun, (and West of the Moon).” He adds Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole and Carmen McCrae to the array of vocal lights he turned to when he “really started listening to singers. They understood the beauty of simplicity; they sing the story the way the writer intended. They don’t put their own artistic expression before the story.”
Sinatra’s version of “I Have Dreamed” from The Rat Pack: Live at the Sands recording in 1963 was the longing spark for his heartfelt, bowed interpretation of a memorable song from The King and I. The closing number, “Who’s Making Love,” features McBride’s tributes to Johnnie Taylor and, humorously, to Robert Wilson of The Gap Band. It’s also the trio’s nod to McBride’s roots in soul and R&B. “My bone marrow is soul music. I never had to learn how to play soul music or R&B as I did for jazz and classical music.”
McBride’s talent and mark on the music scene transcend genre, so he’s no longer under Ray Brown’s shadow. And on this recording, his trio hits a jazz sweet spot. For listeners of Out Here, the result is music for the soul.