Very nice review from The Jazz Times

Thanks to Jazz Times and Mike Joyce for the kind review of Shot Through With Beauty. Much appreciated…

http://jazztimes.com/articles/28628-shot-through-with-beauty-john-stowell-michael-zilber-quartet


jazztimes.com

10/2011
John Stowell/Michael Zilber Quartet
Shot Through with Beauty
Origin Records

Fans of John Scofield’s ’90s recordings should find much to enjoy on Shot Through With Beauty, and not merely because the album features a new quartet led by guitarist John Stowell and saxophonist Michael Zilber personalizing two sharply contrasting Scofield compositions, “Wabash III” and “The Beatles.” The former tune boasts an arrangement with twisting harmonized lines, guitar and sax solos that shrewdly bridge R&B swagger and postbop dissonance, as well as a rhythmically lopsided funk spin—courtesy of bassist John Shifflett and drummer Jason Lewis—that won’t quit. “The Beatles,” on the other hand, is comparatively subdued: sleek, insinuating and atmospheric, at least until Zilber’s impassioned soprano turns up the heat.

When the band tackles tunes by Kenny Wheeler (“Kayak,” with Zilber on tenor sax) or Dizzy Gillepsie (“Con Alma,” as spacious as it is soulful), it’s not hard to imagine Scofield himself admiring the fresh perspectives and intuitive interplay that develop. Stowell’s bandmates also keep a series of worthy compositions coming. In addition to penning the album’s title track, a ballad that lives up to its billing, Zilber contributes three tunes that are always enjoyable and quite often intriguing. (“Tender,” the album’s unaccompanied tenor coda, is one such track.) Shifflett’s coiled “Quantum Theory” and Lewis’ resonating portrait “In the Park” inspire similarly colorful interludes.

Stowell doesn’t add to the playlist, but there’s no mistaking his remarkable prowess and sensitivity on electric and acoustic guitars—or the fun he’s having in this highly interactive setting.

The Morning After The Night Before (well, the afternoon after, to be accurate)

Right up front, sorry to disappoint those expecting a steamy and seamy accounting of a tawdry one-night stand, virtual or real…this is about a GREAT one-night stand of a different variety, the show we just played at Yoshi’s. I could write a lot on it, and will write about the wonderful students who came to play and to listen another time, but for this one, suffice to say I was profoundly moved and grateful that so many friends made the effort to come out. That is the first and foremost thing that struck me. An amazingly high % of friends I reached out to personally (I.E. one on one, not through mass mails or facebooks) came, and I am moved and humbled by that. I’d say that of the 150 or so people there, at least 100 were friends of mine, and that is wonderful. As moving was the fact that many many more wanted to come, but had conflicts, sometimes as serious as emergency surgery, and still took the time to let me know they were thinking of us. Amazing…

Continue reading “The Morning After The Night Before (well, the afternoon after, to be accurate)”