Friday, August 24, 2012

Russ Nolan - Tell Me (feat. Zach Brock, Art Hirahara, Michael O'Brien & Brian Fishler) (Rhinoceruss Music 2012)

Dear Listener,
Though this is anything but a dance record, most of the music was inspired by dancing the last five years in the New York Salsa scene. Eddie Torres, the scene’s legendary innovator, once told me I ‘was one of the only musicians he knew who could get the music from his fingers down to his toes.’ It was only natural to take what I learned in the dance and apply it back to my music. These compositions are some
of my first ‘steps’ in the Latin Jazz world.
Writing a tune and instructing the rhythm section to ‘just play it Latin’ is similar to telling a world-class chef to simply ‘make me a meal’. Many details had to be fleshed out. My seven Latin-influenced compositions have references to some of my favorite composers and their
works. For example, both No Secrets (a Brazilian Baião in 2/4 time) and View from the Bridge (a Bolero in
10/8), are based on Jaco Pastorius’s classic, ‘Three Views to a Secret’. Tell Me is based on a combination
of Herbie Hancock’s harmony on ‘Tell Me a Bedtime Story’ and the form based on Pastorius’s ‘Havona’
from his Weather Report tenure.
A study of Hancock’s re-harmonization of Stevie Wonder’s ‘I Just Called to Say I Love You’ had a
profound effect on me writing Beyond Arbitrary (Afro-Cuban 6/8) and the 12/8 undercurrent of Creepin’
(also Stevie Wonder) was influenced by one of renowned drummer Ignacio Berroa’s grooves on his
Codes recording (one of my favorite Latin Jazz compositional study albums). Oliver Nelson’s classic,
Stolen Moments is also treated as an Afro-Cuban 6/8 undercurrent. Although not a strict or traditional
Salsa composition, Joe Zawinul’s, A Remark You Made gave me a vehicle to treat a ballad with some
sabor (flavor)!
Finally, the two non-Latin-influenced arrangements of Man in the Mirror (performed by Michael
Jackson; straight eighths, 7/4) and Nowhere Man (John Lennon) were written for the dear members of
my faithful following in NYC. Although most of them are not musicians, they wanted to hear their
favorite music in a new way. As every bandleader knows, it is vital to develop an audience beyond one’s
peers. I find an honest comment from a non-peer about the overall effect of my music infinitely more
helpful and inspirational than the redundant and often obligatory ‘Ya, Man’ or ‘Sounds great, Man’.
Thank you for the opportunity to share my love and excitement for music with you.

cdbaby