Mack Avenue SuperBand Thrills Motor City Audiences
in Fourth Incarnation of All-Star Band Led by
Musical Director/Bassist Christian McBride on
Live From the Detroit Jazz Festival - 2015
Album Available January 22, 2015
via Mack Avenue Records
Group to Tour Nationally in 2016 -
Full Performance Schedule to be Announced
Since its rollicking debut at the 2012 Detroit Jazz Festival, the Mack Avenue SuperBand
 has become a tradition at the annual event, a gathering of label 
superstars that the Motor City can look forward to every Labor Day 
weekend. Live From the Detroit Jazz Festival - 2015 captures the fourth incarnation of the all-star ensemble, for the first time under the leadership of Christian McBride.
 This year, McBride takes over as musical director (a role previously 
held by fellow bassist Rodney Whitaker), leading a knockout 
conglomeration of Mack Avenue artists through a set as sweltering as 
that late-summer day in the concrete outdoor arena of Hart Plaza.
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   Christian McBride  | 
Joining McBride as first-time members of the SuperBand are pianist Christian Sands and trumpeter Freddie Hendrix.
 While neither has recorded as a leader for Mack Avenue, both have 
recorded for the label under McBride's leadership: Hendrix in the 
bassist's Big Band and Sands as a member of both Inside Straight and the
 Christian McBride Trio. The rest of the seven-piece group all are 
returning veterans: drummer Carl Allen has anchored the band since the beginning, while saxophonists Tia Fuller and Kirk Whalum and vibraphonist Gary Burton are all three-time members. 
The
 members of the SuperBand represent a diverse range of generations and 
styles. It offers a rare opportunity, for instance, to hear NEA Jazz 
Master Gary Burton engage with a group of younger players with more of a
 hard-bop focus than he usually encounters in his own more 
modern-leaning bands. "This is definitely not my normal zone," he admits
 with a chuckle. "But this is the music I grew up playing. I was a bebop
 guy in my teens and twenties - that was the standard jazz of the day. 
Playing straight-ahead is something I hadn't done much for a while, so I
 was looking forward to a relaxing, fun, jam session kind of setting 
where I didn't have to read a million notes and play a lot of complex 
music. In spite of that, some of the music ended up being fairly 
complicated and challenging."
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Gary Burton   | 
"I'm
 looking forward to playing some of the music that we played in Detroit 
and a lot more and seeing where it goes," McBride says. "These bands 
change a little bit every year and we already know that this is not 
going to be a permanent group, so we just want to have as much fun as we
 can while we're together."
The
 2015 concert recording features pieces penned by six of the seven 
members, kicking off with the "fatbacks and greens" (to steal McBride's 
words) of Whalum's soul-jazz burner "Preach Hank!" The tune echoes the 
saxophonist's roots in the Baptist church as well as his love for 
R&B sax great Hank Crawford, aligning it with his previous Mack 
Avenue tributes to soul icons Babyface and Donny Hathaway as well as the
 collaboration of John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman.
Hendrix's
 aptly named "Sudden Impact" follows, its hard-charging groove and 
brawny horn melody sparking blistering solos from Sands and the composer
 himself. McBride's lovely 5/4 jaunt "Paint Brushes" - one of those 
trickier-than-expected pieces that Burton cited - passes its trickling 
melody from voice to voice among the band members before ceding the 
spotlight to Burton and Fuller. The vibraphonist was inspired to make 
one of his rare forays into composing with the ballad "All You Have To 
Be Is You," which features Fuller's soprano engaging with his own 
cloud-like accompaniment.
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   Kirk Whalum | 
Fuller
 contributes the brisk "Decisive Steps," unleashing the more tempestuous
 side of her soprano playing as well as a bold, soaring turn from 
Hendrix. The set concludes with an 11-minute run through Sands' muscular
 "Up!," allowing everyone in the band to show off their estimable - and 
crowd-pleasing - chops.
The
 Mack Avenue SuperBand "follows a tradition of record labels, no matter 
what genre, having a sense of pride in their roster," according to 
McBride. "What I like about Mack Avenue is that it seems to be one of 
the few - dare I say only - jazz label that really has an eye on 
straight-ahead jazz. They're certainly not opposed to breaking tradition
 - and breaking tradition is actually part of the jazz tradition - but 
at the same time they don't shun musicians who like to play swing 
rhythms."
Burton
 echoes that sentiment, recognizing that the "label family" idea harkens
 back to an earlier generation of jazz. "These days, everybody seems to 
be off doing their own thing. This really is like something from a past 
era, and I was a little surprised and pleased that the label decided to 
put it on tour. But there is something special about the Detroit Jazz 
Festival for the people on the label, and it increasingly feels like a 
touchstone. Come Labor Day weekend, we're going to be in Detroit and a 
bunch of us from the label will get together and play."
Mack Avenue SuperBand ·  Live From the Detroit Jazz Festival - 2015
Mack Avenue Records ·  Release Date: January 22, 2016
For media information, please contact:
DL Media · 610-667-0501
Greg Angiolillo · greg@dlmediamusic.com
Maureen McFadden ·  maureen@dlmediamusic.com
Don Lucoff · don@dlmediamusic.com
Serving the Finest in Jazz Since 1988
For press materials on Mack Avenue SuperBand, Mack Avenue artists or its family of imprints 
(including album covers, promotional photos and logos), please visit media.mackavenue.com
MACK AVENUE ·  the road to great music ·  mackavenue.com
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