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A Jamais
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A Jamais
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
A Jamais
Current price: $18.99
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Joshua Breakstone
has never been the most groundbreaking guitarist in the
jazz
world, but when it comes to making
bop
-oriented recordings that are pleasingly solid, he usually comes through.
Breakstone
's chops are impeccable, and even though he is essentially a '50s-minded traditionalist, the guitar virtuoso isn't afraid to think outside the box when it comes to choosing material -- the fact that
has interpreted a
country-pop
tune (
Willie Nelson
's
"Crazy"
) and provided a
tribute to '60s
surf
rockers
the Ventures
(1991's
Walk Don't Run
) speaks well of him. Those who enjoyed his '80s and '90s output should have no problem getting into
A Jamais
, which was recorded during a visit to France in 2003 and finds a 48-year-old
forming a trio with two France-based musicians: bassist
Louis Petrucciani
(brother of the late pianist
Michel Petrucciani
) and drummer
Joel Allouche
. Clearly,
doesn't buy into the hysterical anti-French hate-mongering that was all over
Fox News
and American talk radio in 2003, and by recording this CD in Valflaunesse, France in 2003, he did his part to say "Vive la France" and pump some American dollars into the French economy. Not that
is meant to be any type of political statement;
's only agenda is a musical agenda, and the guitar trio format serves him well on this album.
employs no pianist on
-- strictly guitar, bass and drums, which is just as well because he shines in a trio setting. The guitarist is unaccompanied on his pensive
"Chanson des Cevennes"
and
Bud Powell
"Hallucinations"
(the only song on the CD he didn't write), but most of the time,
is joined by
Petrucciani
Allouche
-- and both musicians do their part to make
an enjoyable addition to his catalog. ~ Alex Henderson
has never been the most groundbreaking guitarist in the
jazz
world, but when it comes to making
bop
-oriented recordings that are pleasingly solid, he usually comes through.
Breakstone
's chops are impeccable, and even though he is essentially a '50s-minded traditionalist, the guitar virtuoso isn't afraid to think outside the box when it comes to choosing material -- the fact that
has interpreted a
country-pop
tune (
Willie Nelson
's
"Crazy"
) and provided a
tribute to '60s
surf
rockers
the Ventures
(1991's
Walk Don't Run
) speaks well of him. Those who enjoyed his '80s and '90s output should have no problem getting into
A Jamais
, which was recorded during a visit to France in 2003 and finds a 48-year-old
forming a trio with two France-based musicians: bassist
Louis Petrucciani
(brother of the late pianist
Michel Petrucciani
) and drummer
Joel Allouche
. Clearly,
doesn't buy into the hysterical anti-French hate-mongering that was all over
Fox News
and American talk radio in 2003, and by recording this CD in Valflaunesse, France in 2003, he did his part to say "Vive la France" and pump some American dollars into the French economy. Not that
is meant to be any type of political statement;
's only agenda is a musical agenda, and the guitar trio format serves him well on this album.
employs no pianist on
-- strictly guitar, bass and drums, which is just as well because he shines in a trio setting. The guitarist is unaccompanied on his pensive
"Chanson des Cevennes"
and
Bud Powell
"Hallucinations"
(the only song on the CD he didn't write), but most of the time,
is joined by
Petrucciani
Allouche
-- and both musicians do their part to make
an enjoyable addition to his catalog. ~ Alex Henderson