jazzreview.com - Where People Talk About Jazz Since 1997

Register Login

Acid Jazz - CD Reviews (80)

One of the more prominent exponents of the Hammond B-3 organ, Dr. Lonnie Smith resets the groove quotient on his third album for Palmetto Records. He doesn’t reinvent th…
Read more...
Blue Plate Special is guitarist Will Bernard’s follow up to his 2008 Grammy-nominated Party Hats and his second recording for Palmetto Records. This disc features…
Read more...
Some groups do an excellent job of describing their sound, style, and very essence in their promo material. Some do a lousy job, the description turning out to be quite …
Read more...
State of Monc’s Clipperton Extended release might be a lot of things to a lot of people and I just might be one of those people. A lot is happening here from a …
Read more...
"Danceable Hardjazz." That’s how this interesting group with strong European roots and influences describes its music. After listening to Soul Integration, thei…
Read more...
Saxophonist Karl Denson provides more with a little less on this tight-knit trio date featuring guest artists chipping on various tracks. Known as a jazz-based groove me…
Read more...
Four80East is one of the so-called nouveau jazz bands that has emerged in an era where a smooth jazz wave has proliferated the sanctity of traditional jazz ideologies. S…
Read more...
The New York based acid/electronic jazz trio Big Tall Wish was formed in January, 2004 in New Orleans while guitarist Mike Barile and bassist Steve Armstrong were studen…
Read more...
Guildford’s Englishman Rupert Leighton has a way with making his piano dance, whether to digital bass and rhythmical programs or to lavish cymbal and horn formations. Hi…
Read more...
Multi-instrumentalist, composer, arranger and producer Michael Harwood, internationally known as Cruiserman, gives smooth funk and chillout grooves atoms of acid/electro…
Read more...
Some of the best jazz in music often comes from obscure artists from unknown origins with pluralistic ideas. But in the United States and beyond its Continental borders,…
Read more...
Jean Paul "Bluey" Maunick - founder, and the other members of Incognito have been leading figures in the U.K.’s club scene since the early 1980’s and since then have won ov…
Read more...
Back when he was growing up in Nigeria, Bukky Leo was spotted practicing his saxophone by the original Afrobeat drummer Tony Allen, who instantly invited Bukky into his …
Read more...
Mike Ladd is both a (literate) producer of cutting-edge (certainly not that "gangster" stuff, word-up yo) hip-hop and an MC, one whose aim is not to make a spectacle of him…
Read more...
With the motion picture DeLovely, there has been a definitive resurgence in the interest of the life and music of Cole Porter. Porter was one of the greatest song…
Read more...
Just imagine a trumpet, some kick-butt drums, electric guitar, organ, some violins, a DJ scratching to a hip-hop beat of about 94 bpms's, and you'll have an image in you…
Read more...
Whenever I get a new jazz CD of any kind to review, I usually have to be ready for something that can only come from the "intuitive creative spirit that comes from withi…
Read more...
Wolfgang Mitschke, a German living in Berlin, has imagined what it’s like to be Latin and living in New York, one supposes, from the suggestion of the title of his latest C…
Read more...
The sound--Sons of Armageddon states it is 'not' a metal band. They describe their sound as 'post-apocalyptic electro-jazz' for the pre-apocalyptic listener. This group …
Read more...
It’s a mistake to believe just because music has elements of improvisation, or even has large improvised sections within its structure, it can be called jazz. Certainly nob…
Read more...

1997 - 2013 © jazzreview.com. All rights reserved.

Top Desktop version