Music
CD Reviews
We'll Know When We Get There...
The Bernstein Bard Trio
Bernbard Music, 2006


The Easy Tease
Brolique Productions, 2006
My house reeks of sewage and my landlord lives in Texas. Listening to The Easy Tease's new full-length has lifted the stink from my nose to the sweet sounds of somewhere else. With a combination of salty air and wet wood, my nostrils breathe relief. The first track, aptly titled "Shipwrecked or Bad Luck and Rain" is Gilligan with only a God Speed You! Black Emperor record for company.We are guided onwards into this gentle storm. A maelstrom of sandy grit lies under the deceivingly tender lap of waves. The banjo tickles and we like it. The trombone is a sophisticated French circus, acrobatic and demanding. The Sherlockian piano is introspective and searching. The horseshoe beat finds its way out of the crowded pub with drunken deliberation. My dear Watson! Let us wander in for a pint. All the children sing. Fearless, gender-bending voices dance with anticipation and excitement like my nephew when there is a frosting beater to be licked. Methodically earnest and thoughtful, they whisper and then surge with melodic angst back to shore.
This is an indie-rock record with a brave heart and the rhythmic variety is instantly likable. One imagines the band's live shows mixing the noxious levity of The Pogues with the singular angularity of Neutral Milk Hotel. The group's members studied at Bard College and now sow their seeds throughout the Mid-Hudson Valley. www.theeasytease.com.
- Jason Broome

The Kansas City Sound
Independent, 2006
In the 1930s, Kansas City, Missouri, was a prime region for American jazz, with the hottest players and composers swingin' their batons off. On One For The Bishop, erstwhile band leader and saxophonist Harvey Kaiser and his orchestra pay tribute to not only Count Basie, but to the KC Sound's own late pianist/vocalist, Joel "Bishop" O'Brien. (The session was O'Brien's last and the CD is dedicated to his memory.) After Bishop's passing, Billy Alfred (here on six cuts) picked up piano duties.The streamlined unit hits the ground running with "Tickletoe," a rarely covered Basie-Lester Young burner, followed by more Basie with "Blue and Sentimental," which contains a delightful Eddie Diehl guitar solo. The skintight rhythm section of Bill Crow on bass and Marvin Bugalu Smith on drums backs up O'Brien on the jumpin' "Hackensack Lady" (a mash-up of Monk's "Hackensack" and the Gershwins' "Lady Be Good"). The session also stars trumpeter Fred Smith and ex-Monk side man Eddie Bert on trombone. One For The Bishop was recorded in 2004 at the late Steve Burgh's uptown Kingston studio, and Burgh sat in on the alternate take of Basie's "9:20 Special." Special is the word, all right, for this fine ensemble effort, available at www.cdbaby.com.
- DJ Wavy Davy
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