"Richie Cole Plays Ballads & Love Songs,"
The Alto Saxophonist's
First Ballad Album in His 45-Year Career,
To Be Released Oct. 21
A Quartet Date 
Recorded in Cole's New Home Base of Pittsburgh
With Guitarist Eric Susoeff,
Drummer Vince Taglieri, &
Bassist/Producer Mark Perna
October 3, 2016
"I don't play the saxophone, I sing the saxophone," 
Cole says. "It's all about telling a story. If you don't know the melody
 or the words -- which is true of a lot of musicians -- you can't tell 
the story."
Though Cole has probably been better known for his footloose 
"Alto Madness" bebop style, dating to his early-'70s association with 
vocalese master Eddie Jefferson, he's hardly been a stranger to ballads.
 Yet the new album came about entirely by chance.
CD producer (and bassist) Mark Perna booked 
studio time last September for Cole's Pittsburgh Alto Madness Orchestra.
 When the horn section picked up a big-money road gig at the last 
minute, Perna decided to use the time instead for a "fun blowing session
 for our archives." 
At the end of the evening, Perna realized that 8 of the 11 
songs cut that night were ballads, and all were first takes. It occurred
 to him that Cole had never released a proper ballads album before. "We 
decided to finish the album at our next session," he says. "Three more 
songs were recorded, the album was mixed and sequenced, and that was 
it."
Richie Cole Plays Ballads & Love Songs includes popular standards such as "Emily" (the name of his mother, who always asked him to perform it in his sets), "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," and "Alfie," but also offbeat choices like "The Internationale," the Soviet national anthem; "That Sunday, That Summer," a minor early-'60s hit for Nat King Cole; and "Chances Are," a major hit in 1957 for crooner Johnny Mathis.
Deepening and intensifying his always distinctive vibrato, 
Cole takes ownership of the Mathis song, which was featured on Shorty 
Rogers's 1959 album, Chances Are It Swings, but few if any other major jazz releases. 
Another quality that sets Richie Cole Plays Ballads & Love Songs
 apart is its intimate setting. Cole is accompanied by a cool and 
companionable Pittsburgh-based quartet comprised of the lyrical, 
light-fingered guitarist Eric Susoeff, who's worked 
with artists ranging from Dizzy Gillespie to Ivan Lins, and whose 
primary focus is his Latin jazz quintet Salsamba, founded in 1984; 
versatile drummer Vince Taglieri, whose extensive 
experience includes work with big bands, theater productions, r&b 
vocalists, and jazz artists such as Bobby Shew and Sean Jones; and 
bassist/producer Mark Perna, a veteran musician who's 
recorded six albums under his own leadership, plays trombone and bass in
 the improvisational klezmer band Klezlectic, and has worked with Don 
Aliquo, Emily Remler, and Ron Affif, among many others.
A native of Trenton, New Jersey, 68-year-old Richie Cole
 has lived at various times in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas
 and also spent time in Chicago and San Antonio. In 2014, following a 
divorce, he moved to Pittsburgh at the behest of his daughter Annie, who
 lives there with her husband and children. 
"I always liked this town," he says of the city that claims 
Billy Strayhorn, Art Blakey, Stanley Turrentine, Ahmad Jamal -- and 
Eddie Jefferson -- among its native sons. Mark Perna
 was instrumental in getting him on various local gigs, and in getting 
area musicians to participate in the rehearsal bands Cole put together 
between tours and recording dates. As Cole's original composition, "I 
Have a Home in Pittsburgh," suggests, things have worked out 
exceptionally well for him in the home of the Steelers, the Pirates -- 
and a strong jazz scene in which he's now a full participant. 
CD release shows by Richie Cole Quartet & Richie Cole's Pittsburgh Alto Madness Orchestra:
10/30 Orchestra at Village Tavern & Trattoria, Pittsburgh, 3:00-6:00pm 
     (Quartet performs between Orchestra sets)
11/4 Quartet at Press Bistro, Johnstown, PA, 7:00-10:00pm
11/17 Orchestra at Westmoreland Jazz Society, Greensburg, PA, 7:30-9:30pm
     (Quartet performs between Orchestra sets)
12/2 Orchestra at James St. Gastropub, Pittsburgh, 8:00pm-12 midnight
     (Quartet performs between Orchestra sets)
Photo: Aaron Jackendoff
Web Site: markpernamusic.com
Media Contact:
hudba@sbcglobal.net
510-234-8781
 
