Guitarist Johnnie Valentino,
Pianist Jim Ridl, Bassist Andy Lalasis, & Drummer Bob Shomo
Join Pedicin on New CD
Due July 31 from Jazz Hut Records
Pianist Jim Ridl, Bassist Andy Lalasis, & Drummer Bob Shomo
Join Pedicin on New CD
Due July 31 from Jazz Hut Records
July 2, 2012
"I'm more comfortable
now playing the saxophone, sounding the way I want, than I ever have in
my life," Pedicin says. A tenor man's tenor man, he is devoted to what
he described as the "raw, inside-your-body sound" of the classic players
on the instrument.
On the new disc, his 11th, Pedicin leads a quintet comprised of colleagues of many years' standing -- guitarist Johnnie Valentino, bassist Andy Lalasis, and drummer Bob Shomo -- as well as pianist Jim Ridl, a more recent addition to the ensemble. The CD was produced by Joseph Donofrio, best known in the jazz world for his work on Pat Martino's Grammy-nominated Blue Note recordings.
"I feel better playing
live than in the studio," he says. "In the studio, there's so much room
for anxiety and critical self-judgment. With a live audience, you just
play. You're in your element and in the moment."
Live at the Loft offers a personal survey of songs written by or associated with Pedicin's main musical inspiration, John Coltrane -- from "Impressions," taken at a slower tempo than the original, to "Like Sonny" and "Africa" ("It lets us get out of the box for a minute"), and including exquisite readings of the ballads "I Want to Talk About You" and "Say It (Over and Over Again)."
Michael Pedicin, 64, grew up in a musical family in the Philadelphia suburbs. His father, alto saxophonist and singer Mike Pedicin,
was an extremely popular entertainer and bandleader in the Philadelphia
area who enjoyed a No. 1 Billboard pop chart hit in 1957 with "Shake a
Hand." By the time Pedicin Jr. was 13 and had heard saxophonist Willis
"Gator Tail" Jackson in person and Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley on
record, he knew he wanted to spend his life playing saxophone.
At 20, Pedicin began earning his living as a member of the horn section at Philadelphia's Sigma Sound Studios,
where he worked for producers Kenny Gamble, Leon Huff, and Thom Bell,
playing on sessions by such artists as the Spinners, the O'Jays, and Lou
Rawls. He also went on the road with Maynard Ferguson, Stevie Wonder, and David Bowie.
In 1980, Pedicin made his first album, Michael Pedicin Jr.
(Philadelphia International), which yielded the surprise hit "You" --
big in New York City and even bigger in the Philippines. Subsequently he
toured with Brubeck, and was a mainstay in the Atlantic City casinos,
hiring orchestras and playing behind such singers as Frank Sinatra.
In support of Live at the Loft, Pedicin will be making his first West Coast appearances as a leader at Yoshi's San Francisco 8/21, and at Vitello's, Studio City, 8/23. Drummer Justin Faulkner (Branford Marsalis, Kurt Rosenwinkel) will be his special guest in the band, which also includes Johnnie Valentino on guitar, pianist Jim Ridl, and Chris Colangelo, bass.
Photography: Paul Dempsey
Web Site:
www.michaelpedicin.com
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YouTube:
Michael Pedicin talks about "Live at the Loft"
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Media Contact:Terri Hinte
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