School Of The Arts: The brainchild of keyboardist extraordinaire T Lavitz (Dixie Dregs, Jazz Is Dead), SOTA culls the supreme talents of such fusion as well as progressive instrumental music heavyweights equally drummer Dave Weckl (Chick Corea) bassist John Patitucci (Corea, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter), guitarist Frank Gambale (Corea, Vital Information), electrical violinist Jerry Goodman of Mahavishnu Orchestra, Shadowfax, as well as Dixie Dregs fame, as well as T's longtime friend, Dregs mastermind, as well as Magna Carta label mate, monster axeman Steve Morse. “School of the Arts is dissimilar from every album I've ever done equally a leader," says Lavitz.
Keyboardist T Lavitz’s fusion credits include the Dixie Dregs as well as Jazz Is Dead, but he gets extra points for craftiness inwards putting together this collective. Lavitz seemed to realize that an electrical fusion outing past times this cast would travel deemed predictable, as well as hence exterior of the occasional electrical violin past times Jerry Goodman as well as bass past times John Patitucci, he went all acoustic. That chemical cistron of surprise, as well as musical chemical scientific discipline (Lavitz, Goodman as well as guitarist Steve Morse play together alongside the Dregs; Patitucci, drummer Dave Weckl as well as guitarist Frank Gambale alongside Chick Corea), brand for inspired playing. Goodman sounds improve than ever, including during his 1970s stint alongside the Mahavishnu Orchestra. His unison lines alongside Lavitz’s piano, along alongside Weckl’s intricate drums as well as percussion, energize “No Time Flat.” The invitee appearances past times Goodman as well as Morse (on the Dregs-like “On Fire” as well as neo-classical “Portrait”) exercise highlights throughout.
Lavitz was never a major composer inwards either the Dregs or Jazz Is Dead (a highly intricate Grateful Dead embrace band), all the same he wrote nine of the eleven pieces here. The results are mixed, ranging from the off-timed, Goodman-enhanced “Like This” to his predictable “High Falutin’ Blues.” Gambale’s “Gambashwari” as well as “Teaser” seem designed, equally exercise most of his solos, to showcase to a greater extent than technique than soul. More problematic is the fact that Lavitz recorded his pianoforte inwards Massachusetts, Weckl recorded his drums inwards California, as well as some of Patitucci’s bass lines were captured inwards New York. It’s a organisation of convenience that never plant equally good equally recording collectively inwards the same room. Weckl is a wonder on the percussive showcase “A Little Mouse Music,” but elsewhere his free-rein tracks occasionally cross the overplaying line. For School of the Arts, Lavitz as well as fellowship travel a passing grade, but don’t ever exhibit their expected A-worthy work.
Cutting-edge compositions, beautiful sinuous melodies, as well as massive chops brand School of the Arts (SOTA) a genuinely rare confluence of influences as well as musical styles, pushing jazz as well as jazz-fusion into some other dimension.
With SOTA, Lavitz (with 4 decades sense inwards the music biz - having played alongside such wide-ranging musicians equally Widespread Panic, Bill Bruford, Billy Cobham, Nils Lofgren, Pat Benatar, Jefferson Starship, Mother's Finest, Dave Fiuczynski, Peter Himmelman, Dennis Chambers, Jeff Berlin, as well as Scott Henderson) is top dog, playing acoustic pianoforte (an musical instrument unopen to his heart), as well as composing most of the textile for the band's debut.
Underscoring Lavitz's empathy as well as musical instincts, is the keyboardist's powerfulness to spearhead as well as check together the SOTA project, despite each member's busy schedule: Morse is constantly touring alongside Deep Purple (occasionally alongside the Dregs); Jerry Goodman is an in-demand electrical violin trailblazer; Patitucci as well as Weckl crisscross the public alongside diverse artists as well as solo work; as well as equally good for Gambale, who lately finished a tour alongside Billy Cobham.
“The music is definitely interactive," Lavitz says. “When I necessitate keep a solo, there's Frank Gambale answering me, similar something you'd hear on a gig."
Case inwards point: the Afro-Latin acoustic jazz melody “Gambashwari." Sinewy guitar as well as pianoforte chords/notes weave unopen to i some other inwards syncopated patterns, stating main, contra as well as counterpoint melodies. It's breezy, non cheesy, jazz -- the sort that possesses sophistication without beingness elitist, dull or unlistenable. It's utterly infectious jazz-fusion alongside aspirations toward sleeping accommodation or classical music, alongside rock's reckless abandon simmering simply nether the surface.
Other tracks include, “High Falutin' Blues" (an appropriate championship for a vocal that crosses the boundaries of country, blues, as well as jazz), “Like This" (listen equally Weckl locks into Patitucci's lean bass business all the spell commenting on Goodman's as well as T's jazzy/bluegrass-esque soloing acrobatics), as well as “Teaser" (a Chick Corea-style acoustic rocker, consummate alongside trill-filled pianoforte performances, blanketed past times Weckl's silky stream of beats). “Dave Weckl set downward some of the best drum tracks I've heard inwards a while," Lavitz says.
Despite the obvious -and some mightiness state inevitable--chops heard on this record, the high bird of musicianship never detracts from the overall period of time of the compositions. In fact, the tape has a band of newfound freedom; of a songwriter allowed to spread his compositional wings, which recalls the artistic inventiveness as well as motivation that drove Lavitz to exercise his 1986 solo debut, Storytime - an album produced inwards the wake of a Dregs' breakup. “I am really excited nigh this, because non solely did I travel to write the mass of the music, but I produced, played as well as played solely acoustic," says Lavitz. “While it has elements from other recordings I've done, it seems, at to the lowest degree to me, to stand upward out equally beingness really different."
Track listing:
01 Fairweather Green 5:29
02 No Time Flat 4:49
03 On Fire 4:54
04 Portrait 6:19
05 Like This 4:55
06 High Falutin' Blues 5:10
07 Gambashwari 5:01
08 Dinosaur Dance 6:09
09 Teaser 5:09
10 H5N1 Little Mouse Music 7:41
eleven Maybe Next Time 3:58
Personnel:
• T Lavitz: Piano
• Dave Weckl: Drums & Percussion
• Frank Gambale: Acoustic Guitar
• Jerry Goodman: Violin (Tracks 2, 5, 8)
• John Patitucci: Acoustic & Electric Bass
• Steve Morse: Acoustic Guitar (Tracks 3, 4)
Keyboardist T Lavitz’s fusion credits include the Dixie Dregs as well as Jazz Is Dead, but he gets extra points for craftiness inwards putting together this collective. Lavitz seemed to realize that an electrical fusion outing past times this cast would travel deemed predictable, as well as hence exterior of the occasional electrical violin past times Jerry Goodman as well as bass past times John Patitucci, he went all acoustic. That chemical cistron of surprise, as well as musical chemical scientific discipline (Lavitz, Goodman as well as guitarist Steve Morse play together alongside the Dregs; Patitucci, drummer Dave Weckl as well as guitarist Frank Gambale alongside Chick Corea), brand for inspired playing. Goodman sounds improve than ever, including during his 1970s stint alongside the Mahavishnu Orchestra. His unison lines alongside Lavitz’s piano, along alongside Weckl’s intricate drums as well as percussion, energize “No Time Flat.” The invitee appearances past times Goodman as well as Morse (on the Dregs-like “On Fire” as well as neo-classical “Portrait”) exercise highlights throughout.
Lavitz was never a major composer inwards either the Dregs or Jazz Is Dead (a highly intricate Grateful Dead embrace band), all the same he wrote nine of the eleven pieces here. The results are mixed, ranging from the off-timed, Goodman-enhanced “Like This” to his predictable “High Falutin’ Blues.” Gambale’s “Gambashwari” as well as “Teaser” seem designed, equally exercise most of his solos, to showcase to a greater extent than technique than soul. More problematic is the fact that Lavitz recorded his pianoforte inwards Massachusetts, Weckl recorded his drums inwards California, as well as some of Patitucci’s bass lines were captured inwards New York. It’s a organisation of convenience that never plant equally good equally recording collectively inwards the same room. Weckl is a wonder on the percussive showcase “A Little Mouse Music,” but elsewhere his free-rein tracks occasionally cross the overplaying line. For School of the Arts, Lavitz as well as fellowship travel a passing grade, but don’t ever exhibit their expected A-worthy work.
Cutting-edge compositions, beautiful sinuous melodies, as well as massive chops brand School of the Arts (SOTA) a genuinely rare confluence of influences as well as musical styles, pushing jazz as well as jazz-fusion into some other dimension.
With SOTA, Lavitz (with 4 decades sense inwards the music biz - having played alongside such wide-ranging musicians equally Widespread Panic, Bill Bruford, Billy Cobham, Nils Lofgren, Pat Benatar, Jefferson Starship, Mother's Finest, Dave Fiuczynski, Peter Himmelman, Dennis Chambers, Jeff Berlin, as well as Scott Henderson) is top dog, playing acoustic pianoforte (an musical instrument unopen to his heart), as well as composing most of the textile for the band's debut.
Underscoring Lavitz's empathy as well as musical instincts, is the keyboardist's powerfulness to spearhead as well as check together the SOTA project, despite each member's busy schedule: Morse is constantly touring alongside Deep Purple (occasionally alongside the Dregs); Jerry Goodman is an in-demand electrical violin trailblazer; Patitucci as well as Weckl crisscross the public alongside diverse artists as well as solo work; as well as equally good for Gambale, who lately finished a tour alongside Billy Cobham.
“The music is definitely interactive," Lavitz says. “When I necessitate keep a solo, there's Frank Gambale answering me, similar something you'd hear on a gig."
Case inwards point: the Afro-Latin acoustic jazz melody “Gambashwari." Sinewy guitar as well as pianoforte chords/notes weave unopen to i some other inwards syncopated patterns, stating main, contra as well as counterpoint melodies. It's breezy, non cheesy, jazz -- the sort that possesses sophistication without beingness elitist, dull or unlistenable. It's utterly infectious jazz-fusion alongside aspirations toward sleeping accommodation or classical music, alongside rock's reckless abandon simmering simply nether the surface.
Other tracks include, “High Falutin' Blues" (an appropriate championship for a vocal that crosses the boundaries of country, blues, as well as jazz), “Like This" (listen equally Weckl locks into Patitucci's lean bass business all the spell commenting on Goodman's as well as T's jazzy/bluegrass-esque soloing acrobatics), as well as “Teaser" (a Chick Corea-style acoustic rocker, consummate alongside trill-filled pianoforte performances, blanketed past times Weckl's silky stream of beats). “Dave Weckl set downward some of the best drum tracks I've heard inwards a while," Lavitz says.
Despite the obvious -and some mightiness state inevitable--chops heard on this record, the high bird of musicianship never detracts from the overall period of time of the compositions. In fact, the tape has a band of newfound freedom; of a songwriter allowed to spread his compositional wings, which recalls the artistic inventiveness as well as motivation that drove Lavitz to exercise his 1986 solo debut, Storytime - an album produced inwards the wake of a Dregs' breakup. “I am really excited nigh this, because non solely did I travel to write the mass of the music, but I produced, played as well as played solely acoustic," says Lavitz. “While it has elements from other recordings I've done, it seems, at to the lowest degree to me, to stand upward out equally beingness really different."
Track listing:
01 Fairweather Green 5:29
02 No Time Flat 4:49
03 On Fire 4:54
04 Portrait 6:19
05 Like This 4:55
06 High Falutin' Blues 5:10
07 Gambashwari 5:01
08 Dinosaur Dance 6:09
09 Teaser 5:09
10 H5N1 Little Mouse Music 7:41
eleven Maybe Next Time 3:58
Personnel:
• T Lavitz: Piano
• Dave Weckl: Drums & Percussion
• Frank Gambale: Acoustic Guitar
• Jerry Goodman: Violin (Tracks 2, 5, 8)
• John Patitucci: Acoustic & Electric Bass
• Steve Morse: Acoustic Guitar (Tracks 3, 4)
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