Home
Tuesday's Blues
Barnes and Noble
Tuesday's Blues
Current price: $18.99


Barnes and Noble
Tuesday's Blues
Current price: $18.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
An outstanding debut from Israeli-cum-Texan-cum-Oregonian sax player
Idit Shner
,
Tuesday's Blues
showcases her take on jazz as a catalyst for innovation on beloved pieces. The majority of the compositions are traditional Israeli works of various stripes, all reworked heavily to embrace the post-bop aesthetic with modern touches -- given enough room to grow their own grooves, as it were.
Shner
takes seeming inspiration from
Coltrane
and
Parker
(of course) but there's something else in her sound -- a strong devotion to a simple groove, a bump and shake hailing from the old R&B circuits that reworks even her self-penned "blues" number into a shimmying, funky outlet for the band to let loose. The pieces all have the feel of an excellent group of players jamming, meshing together fluidly, and the energy is consistently high. In her sentimental renditions of childhood lullabies (
"Elisheva Doll"
) and even devotional pieces (
"Adon Haselichot,"
a Yom Kippur prayer), there's an intensity and a speed in the instruments' delivery. The quartet never misses a beat, and fills each composition with a full dose of power. It's the solos that really make up the record, though --
Stefan Karlsson
's extended piano solo in the title track shimmers through the scales like few can pull off without becoming stale, while
's solos can twinkle and extend like
(in
) or honk and squawk like (a more reserved)
Big Jay McNeely
"Ha Lachma"
). There's a lot to like here, from the masterful arranging of traditional pieces that barely lets on that the pieces have a more restrained history of their own, to the sheer force and skill of the players involved. An excellent outing all around. ~ Adam Greenberg
Idit Shner
,
Tuesday's Blues
showcases her take on jazz as a catalyst for innovation on beloved pieces. The majority of the compositions are traditional Israeli works of various stripes, all reworked heavily to embrace the post-bop aesthetic with modern touches -- given enough room to grow their own grooves, as it were.
Shner
takes seeming inspiration from
Coltrane
and
Parker
(of course) but there's something else in her sound -- a strong devotion to a simple groove, a bump and shake hailing from the old R&B circuits that reworks even her self-penned "blues" number into a shimmying, funky outlet for the band to let loose. The pieces all have the feel of an excellent group of players jamming, meshing together fluidly, and the energy is consistently high. In her sentimental renditions of childhood lullabies (
"Elisheva Doll"
) and even devotional pieces (
"Adon Haselichot,"
a Yom Kippur prayer), there's an intensity and a speed in the instruments' delivery. The quartet never misses a beat, and fills each composition with a full dose of power. It's the solos that really make up the record, though --
Stefan Karlsson
's extended piano solo in the title track shimmers through the scales like few can pull off without becoming stale, while
's solos can twinkle and extend like
(in
) or honk and squawk like (a more reserved)
Big Jay McNeely
"Ha Lachma"
). There's a lot to like here, from the masterful arranging of traditional pieces that barely lets on that the pieces have a more restrained history of their own, to the sheer force and skill of the players involved. An excellent outing all around. ~ Adam Greenberg