The Trumpet Player
  • Avishai Cohen
    Avishai Cohen

Avishai Cohen

The Trumpet Player

Fresh Sound New Talent

Personnel:
Avishai Cohen (tp), John Sullivan (b), Jeff Ballard (d), Joel Frahm (ts)

Reference: FSNT-161

Bar code: 8427328421614

"What a pleasure to hear an emerging musician put out a record with the real spirit what I consider jazz to be. That is the spontaneous, risk taking which the listener should feel immediately and is a trademark of the masters of jazz... Real playing in real time!! That is what this debut recording of Avishai Cohen's shows."

-Dave Liebman (From the inside liner notes)



01. The Fast (Avishai Cohen) 6:02
02. The Trumpet Player (Avishai Cohen) 10:28
03. Dear Lord (John Coltrane) 7:36
04. Olympus (Avishai Cohen) 8:47
05. Idaho (Avishai Cohen) 6:48
06. Shablool (Avishai Cohen) 10:30
07. Giggin' (Ornette Coleman) 6:23

Album details

Total time: 56:51 min.

Personnel:
Avishai Cohen (trumpet), John Sullivan (bass), Jeff Ballard (drums). Guest: Joel Frahm (tenor sax on #4,5 & 7)
Recorded in New York City, on November 25, 2001

Mixed by Fab at Pure Mix, New York City, May 12-13, 2002
Mastered at Jon Gordon Music, New York City, September 18, 2002

Liner notes by Dave Liebman

Produced by Avishai Cohen
Excutive Producer: Jordi Pujol

Press reviews

"It's a good moment for trumpeters in jazz. Wynton Marsalis has been performing at his peak recently; Dave Douglas still comes up with a different band every year; Jeremy Pelt, Keyon Harrold, LeRon Thomas and Jonathan Finlayson are among the promising new arrivals. Avishai Cohen is the latest to step forward with a first recording. (There has been confusion: he has the same name as a prominent young bassist in New York,
and they're both Israeli.)

Mr. Cohen's album, "The Trumpet Player," on the Spanish label Fresh Sound, is a thrown gauntlet: it's almost all just a trio of trumpet, bass and drums. Playing as the leader without a chordal instrument places incredible demands on a trumpeter; outside of the avant-garde, it hasn't been done much before. But Mr. Cohen, evidently, likes the challenge. With the bassist John Sullivan and the drummer Jeff Ballard, he plows ahead, rooted in disciplined eighth-note playing but regularly breaking out into more abstract, intuitive phrases; he's got some of the confident tone and rhythm of Clifford Brown under his fingers, and plays battling, hard hitting figures and intervals."

-Ben Ratliff (The New York Times, Oct. 2003)
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/ben_ratliff/index.html
_________________________________________________

"Avishai Cohen, the trumpet player (not to be confused with the bassist/keyboardist of the same name), comes from a rich musical heritage in his native Israel. His sister is clarinetist Anat Cohen, his brother saxophonist Yuval Cohen, and together they front a fine progressive/contemporary jazz group, 3 Cohens. For his debut CD as a leader, the trumpeter has chosen a trumpet/bass/drums format, challenging because there are no chordal instruments to play off of. The sparseness of the instrumentation means there's nothing to lean on, play off of, or hold back from. This lends itself to the burnished attack and matted finish the horn offers, but also can tend to lead to overly lengthy stretches where Cohen's playing has to constantly command attention and remain interesting to the listener. Certainly drummer Jeff Ballard (also a member of the other Avishai Cohen's bands) is more than valiant in keeping the rhythm navigation on an intriguing keel.

Two ten-and-a-half-minute tracks, "The Trumpet Player" and "Shablool," could be virtually the same piece, both in waltz time, both drawn out and singular-minded, both more treatise than short story. "The Fast" is a neo-bop, upbeat jam that displays Cohen's clean lines and angular ideas. Clearly influenced by hard boppers like Clifford Brown, Lee Morgan, and Freddie Hubbard, Cohen takes those precepts and turns them into inexhaustible Zen-like epics. Tenor saxophonist Joel Frahm is added, but plays after the fact on the 5/4 exercise "Olympus," taking the first solo, while a welcome interchange during "Idaho" mixes the group dynamic in a manner reminiscent of the partnership between Don Cherry and John Coltrane. The trio does a nice version of Coltrane's "Dear Lord" in 4/4 to implied 3/4, while Frahm jumps in as a soloist only for Ornette Coleman's choppy "Giggin'," where Cohen leaps out of his shell after a playful intro from Ballard and before a deft solo from bassist John Sullivan.

The Trumpet Player is a first effort with loads of potential, and as Avishai Cohen's career goes ahead, there will be many collaborators to join with and concepts to explore. This CD sports clear, present, and solid musicianship, but if there is a shortcoming to the proceedings, it is the sameness or lack of variety that prevents the music from becoming great. That should happen in due time."

Michael G. Nastos -All Music Guide

Price:

10,95 €  (tax incl.)

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