TIME OUT TAKE FIVE: Falkner Evans, Franco Ambrosetti, Jan Hammer & More
Time Out Take Five is a regular column comprised of pithy takes on recent jazz releases, spotlighting titles deserving attention that might otherwise go unnoticed.
On ‘Your Mother Should Know Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles’ Renowned Pianist Ivories Up Fab Four’s Catalog (ALBUM REVIEW)
It’s only natural for Brad Mehldau to release a solo piano album comprised almost entirely of material by the Beatles.
Larry Campbell & Teresa Williams Cook Up Smokin’ Live Set On ‘Live At Levon’s’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams have never lent themselves to easy comparisons to classic duos of the country genre–Porter Wagoner/Dolly Parton or Tammy Wynette/George Jones.
10 Years Later: Ben Harper & Charlie Musselwhite Join Forces On ‘Get Up!’
Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite’s Get Up! (released 1/29/13) is the collaboration of two music lovers who happen to be musicians.
Bob Dylan’s ‘Fragments – Time Out of Mind Sessions (1996-1997): The Bootleg Series Vol.17’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
ltimately, Fragments is yet another thought-provoking installment of the Dylan’s discography, not only in direct reflection of its source material but also on its very own terms.
50 Years Later: Revisiting Little Feat’s Defining Studio Album ‘Dixie Chicken’
After two excellent albums as a quartet, duly applauded by critics but overlooked by the masses (despite yeoman’s work on the promotional parts of their Warner Brothers record label), Little Feat reinvented itself as a sextet for Dixie Chicken. It is in this configuration that the group gained the fame it holds today (albeit in one of many subsequently revamped lineups).
Revisiting The Latest Batch of Grateful Dead Archival Releases (ALBUM REVIEWS)
As illustrated by David Lemieux and his crack team of Grateful Dead archivists, there’s a big difference between ‘predictable’ and ‘consistent.’ Continuing from late 2021 into and throughout this year, their ongoing efforts to provide provocative exhumations from the vault of the iconic band span decades of performances by the various personnel lineups of the Dead
David Crosby 1941-2023: A Deeper Look At The Counter Culture Legend’s Vast Career
The Byrds’ lush vocal harmonies, arguably as significant to their sound as the chiming twelve-string guitar, are distinguished in large measure by Crosby’s high harmonies. Hear his voice keen through “5D,” and while doing so, note that his rhythm guitar is a driving force of the performance: the man was as formidable in that instrumental role as his peers of the era John Lennon or Steve Miller.
45 Years Later: Warren Zevon Goes Big On ‘Excitable Boy’
Brighter, more polished and more overtly comedic than the haunting noir that is Warren Zevon’s Asylum Records debut, Excitable Boy is still a far cry from the overly-romanticized California pop-rock of forty-five years ago.
55 Years Later: Revisiting Bob Dylan’s Americana Leaning ‘John Wesley Harding’
Bob Dylan’s eighth studio album John Wesley Harding (released 12/27/67) may be the most singular piece of work he’s ever created.