Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Razor and Tie Joe Jackson Test Pressing Contest

 
 
 
Our friend Bob at Razor and Tie has given me a vinyl test pressing of the new Joe Jackson jazz album 'The Duke' to give away to a lucky blog reader.   Joe Jackson's 'The Duke' is scheduled for release on 180 gram vinyl on March 16th (CD debuted at #1 on Billboard Current Contemproy Jazz Chart) and even though it won’t be in stores until then, fans can get it early, only through www.joejackson.merchnow.com

The contest is simple.  A random drawing of all the email entrants will be done and one will be declared the winner.  Send your email entries to rbenson30@wi.rr.com with the words "Razor and Tie Joe Jackson Test Pressing Contest" in the subject line.   Limit one email entry per person.  Contest ends at noon on Friday 22, 2013.  Winner will be announced Friday February 22nd at 1 pm.



DUKE ELLINGTON TRIBUTE ALBUM, THE DUKE

The Duke finds Joe Jackson interpreting 15 Ellington classics over the course of ten tracks, interspersing melodic and rhythmic elements of various compositions in a manner that's consistent with Ellington's own freewheeling approach.  Rather than emulating the songs' original big-band settings, Jackson filters the material through his own musical imagination while exploring an assortment of unexpected grooves and textures.  The resulting album is a seamless fusion of sounds and styles, whose abundant sense of playfulness is consistent with Ellington's boundary-breaking attitude.

Jackson’s distinctive voice is featured on I’m Beginning To See The Light, Mood Indigo, and I Got It Bad (And That Ain’t Good), while It Don’t Mean A Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing) finds him trading vocals with punk icon Iggy Pop. R&B diva Sharon Jones, meanwhile, shines with a soulful I Ain’t Got Nothin’ But The Blues. In keeping with Ellington’s multiculturalism, Jackson also encouraged Iranian singer Sussan Deyhim to perform a soaring Caravan in Farsi, and Lilian Vieira, of the Brazilian/Dutch collective Zuco 103, to create a sunny, sexy Portuguese version of Perdido.

The album’s striking mix of electronic and organic textures is especially evident on instrumentals like Isfahan featuring Steve Vai and Berlin electronic musician Kris Ingram Lanzaro, Rockin’ In Rhythm, The Mooche, and Black and Tan Fantasy. The musicians include two contemporary jazz stars, violinist Regina Carter and bassist Christian McBride; rock guitar hero Steve Vai; drummer Ahmir 'Questlove’ Thompson   and other members of The Roots; and two of Jackson’s old associates, guitarist Vinnie Zummo and percussionist Sue Hadjopoulos. Two album tracks (PERDIDO and IT DON'T MEAN A THING) were recorded in collaboration with Zuco 103 at their studio in Amsterdam. The remaining tracks were recorded, and the whole album mixed, in New York by legendary producer/engineer Elliot Scheiner.

Though The Duke is a tribute album, it’s also very much a Joe Jackson album, consistent with his long-standing sense of musical adventure.

Tracks

1. Isfahan (with Steve Vai)
2. Caravan (with Sussan Deyhim)
3. I'm Beginning To See The Light / Take The 'A' Train / Cotton Tail (with Christian McBride & Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson)
4. Mood Indigo (with Regina Carter & Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson)
5. Rockin' In Rhythm (with Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson)
6. I Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues / Do Nothin' 'Til You Hear From Me (with Sharon Jones & Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson)
7. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good) (with Sue Hadjopoulos)
8. Perdido / Satin Doll (with Lilian Vieira)
9. The Mooche / Black And Tan Fantasy (with Vinnie Zummo & Ahmir '?uestlove' Thompson)
10. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) (with Iggy Pop)


JOE JACKSON  -  THE DUKE  -  Bio

“I revere the Duke, but I didn’t want to make a reverent album”, Joe Jackson says of The Duke, his new tribute to jazz legend Duke Ellington.

The Duke is indeed an unconventional salute to Ellington, demonstrating the timeless brilliance of his compositions while showcasing Jackson’s skills as arranger, instrumentalist and singer. Though it’s his second album of non-original material (after 1981’s Jumpin’ Jive) it’s nonetheless a deeply personal project for Jackson, whose affinity for Ellington has been an inspiration throughout his own three-decade-plus career.

The Duke finds the iconoclastic Jackson – a five-time Grammy nominee – interpreting 15 Ellington classics over ten tracks, ingeniously combining several songs into medleys. Rather than emulating the original big-band arrangements, Jackson filters the material through his own musical imagination. The result is a surprising yet seamless fusion of styles, whose abundant playfulness is consistent with Ellington’s own freewheeling approach.

“Ellington didn’t consider his own arrangements to be sacred”, Jackson notes. “He constantly reworked them, sometimes quite radically. So I think my approach is in the spirit of the man himself”.

Jackson used no horns on The Duke – an audacious move, considering how they dominated the original recordings. “That was my only rule”, he says. “I wanted to take it in a completely different direction, and there was a danger of just sounding like watered-down Ellington if it wasn’t different enough. Not using horns was a good place to start. It makes you think: what else can we do?” So, instead of reeds and brass, the album features synthesizers, vibraphone, accordion and string quartet.

Jackson’s passion for Ellington goes back to his teens. “I loved the fact that there was so much going on, yet it was kind of hard to pin down,” he recalls. “Within the space of 3 minutes he could go through several different moods, brilliantly and seamlessly”. Ellington’s example also shaped Jackson’s own musical approach, even when he was playing raw rock’n’roll in the wake of the British punk movement. “One of things I learned from him was how to work with musicians,” he says. “He was able to showcase the personality of every player in his band, yet still be completely in control. He had a way of leading without being a dictator, of realizing his own vision while allowing others to shine. Ellington was a big-picture guy, and that’s what I’ve aspired to be”.

The Duke is fuelled by the same restless creative urge that has made Joe Jackson’s catalogue so eclectic, yet fiercely individual. He started building his resume as a teenager, studying composition at London’s Royal Academy of Music and recording a pair of singles with pre-punk combo Arms and Legs.

Jackson’s first three albums – Look Sharp!, I’m The Man and Beat Crazy,  released between 1979 and 1980 – combined catchy, hard-hitting tunes with articulate, often humorous lyrics. Despite early commercial success, Jackson soon spread his musical wings, first with Jumpin’ Jive and then 1982’s massively successful Night and Day, on which he embraced a more sophisticated, adult approach, influenced as much by jazz and latin music as rock. He continued in a similar vein with Body and Soul (1984) Big World (1986), Blaze of Glory (1989) and Laughter and Lust (1991).

Jackson turned further away from the pop mainstream with the gentle, soul-searching Night Music (1994), the satirical rock-opera Heaven and Hell (1997) and Symphony No. 1, which won the 2000 Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Album. Also in 2000, Joe released the belated sequel Night and Day II, a personal favourite which he has called his ‘most underrated album’. In 2003, Jackson surprised fans by reuniting the band from his first three albums for an acclaimed album of new songs, Volume 4, and a successful world tour. Relocating to Berlin in 2008, he recorded the minimal yet majestic Rain with just piano, voice, and his original rhythm section. The trio have since toured extensively, and in 2010 released Jackson’s favourite of his several live records, Live Music.

In addition to his own albums, Jackson has written several film scores, notably for Francis Ford Coppola’s Tucker and James Bridges’ Mike’s Murder. He has also played piano and/or sung on records by Suzanne Vega, Joan Armatrading, Ruben Blades, Rickie Lee Jones, Nina Hagen, and William Shatner. In 1999, Jackson published a well-received book, A Cure For Gravity, which he described as ‘a book about music disguised as a memoir’.

ThoughThe Duke is a tribute album, it’s also very much a Joe Jackson album, consistent with his longstanding sense of musical adventure.

“When I started this”, Jackson says, “It felt a little daunting – like, how am I gonna pull this off? But it started to pick up momentum, and took on a life of its own. I got to work with people I never thought I’d be able to get, and they were all extremely enthusiastic and supportive of the project. It all came together in a way that surpassed my expectations. And it’s been a hell of a lot of fun”.

Read more about the release HERE



 Duke Ellington at the Hurricane Club in New York, May 1943
Ellington led his band from 1923 until his death in 1974. Ellington wrote over 1,000 compositions and his career spanned more than 50 years.  It included leading his orchestra, composing a career-spanning songbook, writing movie soundtracks, composing stage musicals and exemplary world tours. He is widely regarded as the most important composer in jazz; and he is generally considered to have elevated the perception of jazz to an art form on a par with other traditional genres of music.

Read more about Duke Ellington HERE
 

No comments: