JORGE SYLVESTER
Alto Saxophonist, Composer, Conductor, Arranger, Bandleader, Producer, Educator
Born in Colon, Panama Jorge attended the Panama Conservatory of Music and the University of Panama. He received a Bachelor of Science Degree in Music from the State University of New York College at New Paltz in 1981. A unique innovator and impressive composer and arranger in the idiom of creative music, his sound is reminiscent of Eric Dolphy and Ornette Coleman. Jorge has remained on the cutting edge of the creative NY Jazz scene since his arrival from Spain in 1980. Sylvester’s blend of African-Caribbean rhythms with new music is what gives him his distinguished voice.
Beginning his professional career at age 14, Jorge was leading his own Caribbean dance band, writing his own arrangements and compositions. He studied privately with renowned Panamanian jazz saxophonist, Euclides Hall. Upon the recommendation of his professor, Efrain Castro, Jorge became a regular musician in the great Panamanian pianist Victor Boa’s band.
Heading for Europe in his early twenties, Sylvester spent ten years touring and recording with his ensembles and freelancing throughout Europe.
ADDITIONAL STUDIES: Mr. Sylvester studied advanced harmony with Argentinian pianist, composer Luis Vecchio in Las Palmas de Gran Canarias, Spain whose Quartet he also then recorded with. Upon his arrival to New York in 1980, he took one private lesson with Master Tenor Saxophonist George Coleman. He later attended vibraphonist Karl Berger’s Creative Music Studio in Woodstock, NY where he took workshops with Bassist, Dave Holland, Saxophonists, Oliver Lake, Steve Lacy, Marion Brown, Violinist Ramsey Ameen, and many others.
ARTIST PERFORMANCE ASSOCIATIONS:
Andrew Cyrille, Craig Harris, David Murray, Oliver Lake, Gunter Hampel, Monte Croft, Stefon Harris, Rodney Kendrick, Karl Berger, Carlos Garnett, Santi Debriano, Billy Cobham, Danilo Perez, poet Sekou Sundiata,
The Black Rock Coalition Orchestra, Kuumba Frank Lacy’s Vibe Tribe, Next Legacy Orchestra, Joe Bowie’s Defunkt Big Band and Nora McCarthy who is a member of his group(s) The ACE (Afro-Caribbean Experimental) Collective and its extended edition with strings. Since their collaboration that began in 2000, Ms. McCarthy also co-leads several groups with Sylvester, namely: The ConceptualMotion Orchestra and A Small Dream In Red (voice and saxophone duet)
A CD by the same name was released on the Sundown label in March, 2003 and in 2013, In the Language of Dreams was released on their RedZen Records label. Both CDs garnered rave reviews establishing them as one of the world’s most unique and innovative duos performing in this format and instrumentation.
TOURS/RESIDENCIES/NOTABLE CONCERTS:
Andrew Cyrille at The Kitchen NYC, Europe with Joe Bowie’s Defunkt Big Band; Performances with Trombonist composer Craig Harris; Europe and Israel with the World Saxophone Quartet; Danilo Perez’s Panamanian Jazz All Stars for the Panama Jazz Festival; Podgorica, Montenegro Jazz Appreciation Month Series with A Small Dream in Red and appeared on the television show, Good Morning Montenegro; concert and recording in Linz, Austria at the Brucknerhaus Concert Hall with Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective; Vision Festival X, NYC with ConceptualMotion Orchestra; the Baha’i Center, Dizzy Gillespie Theater, NYC yearly residency from 2010 to present with CMO; and, monthly residency (both performances and workshops) at El Taller Latino Americano Arts Center, NYC with CMO featuring guest artists since 2018.
Jorge Sylvester Spirit Driven Quintet featuring Nora McCarthy recently performed in concert at Clements Place, a jazz venue in association with Rutgers University in Newark, NJ.
Mr. Sylvester composes, arranges and conducts new music for his various groups and his ever expanding projects; performs frequently, teaches privately and conducts workshops throughout New York and elsewhere in the United States teaching his unique approach to composition using Afro-Caribbean rhythms.
DISCOGRAPHY:
Mayhem at Large: Jorge Sylvester Spontaneous Expressions, release date 2021; blesSINGS with Nora McCarthy People of Peace Quintet, RedZen Records, 2016); In the Language of Dreams with A Small Dream In Red Voice and Saxophone Duo (RedZen Records, 2013); Spirit Driven with Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective (RedZen Records 2010 rel. 2013); Toward the Hill Of Joy Featuring Nora McCarthy with George Brandon Blue Unity Ensemble (Blue Unity Music, 2011); Playground with Lucian Ban & Asymmetry (Jazzaway Records, 2005);
A Small Dream in Red with A Small Dream In Red Voice and Saxophone Duo, (Sundown Jazz Records, CSU, 2003); The Mass (Palmetto Records, 2000) with the Collective Identity Saxophone Quartet featuring Sam Newsome, Aaron Stewart and Alex Harding; Another Side (CIMP Records, 2000) with tenor saxophone Ken Simon Quartet featuring drummer Barry Altschul; Magic Night (Jazz Stop Records, Madrid Spain, 1989) with the Chastang/Sylvester Sextet; Viriato Blue (Jazz Stop Records, Madrid Spain, 1983.) with Miguel Angel Chastang Quintet; The Blue Oneness of Dreams (Mouth Almighty Records, 1997) with Poet Sekou Sundiata; The Essence All Stars featuring Doug Carn, Idris Muhammed and Josh Roseman (Hip Hop Records, 1997.)
SOME REVIEWS:
October 4, 2013 Jazz Inside Magazine REVIEWS
Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective
SPIRIT DRIVEN— Four 001. UnseenRainRecords.com,
jorgesylvesteracecollective.blogspot.com
Construction No.2; Masouc; Paulina’s Prayer; The Light of Truth’s HighNoon Is Not for Tender Leaves; Obeahman; Construction No.1; To Be With You; Remember Haiti; Cycle of Life
PERSONNEL: Jorge Sylvester, alto saxophone, producer, arrangements;
Nora McCarthy, vocals, producer, graphic design; Waldron Mahdi Ricks, trumpet;
Pablo Vergara, acoustic piano; DonaldNicks, electric bass; Kenny Grohowski, drums.
David Stoller, engineer; Ramsey Ameen, liner notes; Steve Vavagiakis, mastering
By Alex Henderson
Alto saxophonist Jorge Sylvester and singer Nora McCarthy have been collaborating musically for at least 12 years, and their collaboration continues to yield excellent results on Spirit Driven.
This two-CD set (which contains about 87 minutes worth of music) underscores the unpredictable, risk-taking nature of the Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective, which includes not only Sylvester and McCarthy, but also, trumpeter Waldron Mahdi Ricks, pianist Pablo Vergara, electric bassist Donald Nicks and drummer Kenny Grohowski. The music ranges from avant-garde jazz to post-bop, and Sylvester’s alto playing is soulful, heartfelt and convincing whether he is playing inside or outside.
McCarthy’s contributions to Spirit Driven are extensive. In addition to producing Spirit Driven with Sylvester, she wrote all of the lyrics and poetry. She also composed “The Light ofTruth’s High Noon Is Not for Tender Leaves,” and did the arrangement on “To Be With You.”
Sylvester composed the bulk of the music on the CD—“Construction No.2” and “Paulina’s Prayer” “Masouc,” “Construction No.1,” “Remember Haiti” and “Cycle of Life” by himself.
On Spirit Driven, McCarthy’s vocals can be divided into three main categories: (1) singing with lyrics, (2) wordless scat singing, and (3) spoken word poetry. And in all three, McCarthy has no problem getting her points across emotionally.
It’s easy to understand why this double-disc is titled Spirit Driven: the ACE Collective’s performances have a very spiritual quality. That spiritual outlook is as evident on “Cycle ofLife,” “Masouc” and “Obeahman” as it is on “The Light of Truth’s High Noon Is Not ForTender Leaves.” The latter has a spirituality that recalls the late Abbey Lincoln, and McCarthy really soars with that Lincoln-ish mood.
“Remember Haiti,” one of the more avantgarde offerings on Spirit Driven, is a gem. Sylvester and McCarthy wrote that piece in remembrance of the victims of the earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, Haiti in January 2010, and McCarthy expresses herself with a combination of spoken word poetry and wordless scatting.
One of the appealing things about Sylvester’s albums is his ability to incorporate a variety of world music and make it all fit together. Sylvester, who is originally from Panama but now lives in New York City (also the home of Cleveland native McCarthy) has had no problem showing audiences the relationship between African, Caribbean and Latin music. And he does exactly that on the exuberant “Obeahman,” which is full of world music vitality.
Another one of Sylvester’s strong points is his determination to be consistently musical no matter how outside a particular song might become.“Masouc,” “Remember Haiti” and“Construction No.2” are among the more outside offerings on Spirit Driven, yet all of those selections are quite musical. Some free jazz favors atonality for the sake of atonality: instead of venturing outside, the musicians stay outside. But that isn’t the approach that Sylvester is going for on this album. Sylvester, even on the most abstract parts of this album, thrives on musicality, melody and composition. He also thrives on rhythm, savoring the rhythmic traditions of the Caribbean, Latin America and Africa while maintaining his improvisatory jazz focus.
Spirit Driven is yet another rewarding collaboration from Sylvester and McCarthy
October 2013 | THE NEW YORK CITY JAZZ RECORD CD REVIEW
The musical relationship between alto saxophonist Jorge Sylvester and vocalist Nora McCarthy dates back12 years to their first performance as the duo A Small Dream in Red (which takes its name from the 1925masterpiece by Russian abstract painter Wassily Kandinsky). Each is a complete and free thinking performer in their own right, but it’s hard to deny that together they have developed a particularly powerful sense of interplay. This year, Sylvester and McCarthy are back as A Small Dream in Red, with a new record called In The Language Of Dreams, which they dedicate to both Kandinsky and Ornette Coleman, as “leaders of the avant garde movement”. The 12-track, 70-minutealbum covers plenty of ground, including several diverse duo originals, two of Coleman’s tunes (with poetry by McCarthy) and a decidedly trippy take on“April in Paris”. The album opener, an original called “Dizzy Bird”,is a perfectly paced starting point, as Sylvester bounces nimbly through bop-tinged riffs and McCarthy pays lyrical homage to Coleman and the historical context of his innovations. Both performers are really in their element on Coleman’s “The Blessing” and “The Sphynx”, stretching out into abstract territory and channeling their spiritual perception of the alto saxophonist’s forward-thinking messages while also maintaining their own confidently probing voices.Another original worth highlighting is the unsurprisingly loosely structured “Composition VIII”, an especially minimalist free improvisation in which the pair beautifully explore longer held notes and more deliberately jarring choices in tonality.
McCarthy returns as a compositional collaborator and performing member of Sylvester’s Afro Caribbean Experimental (ACE) Collective, for that group’s hefty two-disc, nine-track, 87-minute album Spirit Driven.The sextet - with includes trumpeter Waldron Mahdi Ricks, pianist Pablo Vergara, electric bassist Donald Nicks and drummer Kenny Grohowski - skips ably across the spectrum between ethereal free improv and tight, funky beats while often sticking with the typically dense harmonies of Sylvester and McCarthy’s writing, as well as pursuing unexpected paths within the rhythmic terrain of Afro Caribbean traditions. Nicks and Grohowski form a particularly strong backbone on“Construction No. 2” and “Construction No. 1”, which open the first and second discs, respectively. Both tunes are refreshingly accessible from an improvisational standpoint, beginning with relatively straight ahead grooves that gradually morph and reach farther outside the changes, with spontaneous yet swinging solos and McCarthy’s strong vocal presence. Sylvester’s somber tune “Paulina’s Prayer” is a great addition, featuring sensitive ensemble playing and a moving solo by the leader, as well as some good mute work from Ricks.And the creative duo of Sylvester and McCarthy come to the forefront once more on “Remember Haiti”, a jointly written and extremely inspired tune, which begins with chaos and coalesces into a unique verbal and aural documentation of the societal troubles faced by that nation.
by Sam Spokony
Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective
Brucknerhaus Linz, December 6, 2010 ******
Those who were expecting Calypso-singing Harry Belafonte clones must have been disappointed. The pieces composed by the Panamanian saxophonist use the rhythmic tradition as a basis for extended forays into the world of the contemporary. The young drummer Kenneth Grohowsky juggled the odd meters with exquisite ease. Sylvester's compositions are solid ground for exciting, improvisational excursions particularly by the singer and poet Nora McCarthy and the trumpeter Waldron Mahdi Ricks.
"Ace Collective enthusiastically received in Linz"
Christoph Haunschmid, OONachrichten Kultur Medien
(http://jorgesylvesteracecollective.blogspot.com/p/reviews.html)
“...Jorge Sylvester's distinctive alto saxophone sound is imbued with the volatility of Caribbean basin's complex mosaic, transformed and focused by the probing musical linguistics pioneered by the great saxophonists of modern jazz. Jorge's composer's imagination is the matchless structural coherence of his improvisational work.”
Ramsey Ameen, 12/2005
“...If Ornette Coleman had be born and reared in Nassau, his music would have sounded like this.”
C. Michael Bailey - All about Jazz
“ Sylvester's alto work is deeply rooted in bebop but fluent in the most modern of horn vocabularies. With this album, (In The Ear Of The Beholder) he makes his mark as one of the more advanced, imaginative voices in Afro-Caribbean jazz.”
David R. Adler – All Music Guide
“...Panamanian-born, New York-honed alto saxophonist Jorge Sylvester has produced a set of challenging island-accented jazz with his aptly named, Afro-Caribbean Experimental Trio.
‘In The Ear Of The Beholder’, bespeaks variety in the form, with each track opening up a different vista.
Billboard Spotlight, February 24, 2001.
“...There are no clichéd romantic notions of breezy island music on this bold adventure led by Panamanian alto saxophonist Jorge Sylvester. With his edgy rhythmic pulse and diamond-hard tone, Sylvester has crafted an album that boasts the same sort of Herculean, calypso-driven improvisations of Sonny Rollins and the lofty intentions of Julius Hemphill and Oliver Lake's 1970s Arista Freedom dates.”
John Murph, Jazz Times Magazine Review of
"In The Ear of The Beholder“.
..As for Sylvester, he’s one the most capable soloists holding an alto today–"Por la Clave," for instance, is full of outright Ornette-ish inflections with ample support once again from the rhythm section. There are several gutbucket textures here that evoke the wailing harmonic breadth of some of jazz’s best improvisers, from Eric Dolphy to Sonny Simmons. It’s a restrained but flawless stream of emotive improvising and it heralds one of the greater under looked talents of the day. Jorge we never knew ye!”
Joe S. Harrington – New York Press.
Review of In The Ear of The Beholder
“...Sylvester chose McCarthy’s voice because of its similarity in sound and spirit to the horn and for her versatility within the context of the instrumentation of the Collective as well as for her unique improvisational and interpretative abilities.”
Ramsey Ameen, A Gathering of the Tribes Magazine
*NEW LIVE DOUBLE CD SET RECORDING*
MAYHEM AT LARGE
JORGE SYLVESTER SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSIONS
The Last Baha'i Session
ALTO SAXOPHONE SOLOS IMPROVISATIONS, DUETS, AND OCTET PERFORMANCES WITH SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSION ENSEMBLE
FEATURING:
JORGE SYLVESTER - ALTO SAXOPHONE AND IMPROVISATIONS
NORA MCCARTHY - VOICE AND IMPROVISATIONS
VINCENT CHANSEY - FRENCH HORN AND IMPROVISATIONS
JOSE' DAVILA - TUBA AND IMPROVISATIONS
KUBA CICHOCKI - PIANO - AND IMPROVISATIONS
MARVIN SEWELL - ELECTRIC GUITAR AND IMPROVISATIONS
WALDRON MAHADI RICKS - TRUMPET AND IMPROVISATIONS
TONY MORENO - DRUMS AND IMPROVISATIONS
RECORDED AND MIXED BY Gene Torres at NEW YORK'S BAHA'I CENTER ON MARCH 3, 2020
CD COVER ART BY Nora McCarthy©2020
DEDICATED TO GEORGE H. SYLVESTER (R.I.P) My Father
RAMSEY AMEEN (R.I.P) Musical Mentor Violinist, Composer, Mathematician
MIKE LONGO (R.I.P) Pianist, Composer and Creator of Jazz Tuesdays at NY'S BAHA'I CENTER
©LizokaMUSIC 2021
COMING UP IN MARCH 2021
*NEW LIVE DOUBLE CD RECORDING*
MAYHEM AT LARGE JORGE SYLVESTER SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSIONS
The Last Baha'i Session
ALTO SAXOPHONE SOLOS IMPROVISATIONS, DUETS, AND OCTET PERFORMANCES WITH SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSION ENSEMBLE
FEATURING:
JORGE SYLVESTER - ALTO SAXOPHONE AND IMPROVISATIONS
NORA MCCarthy - VOICE AND IMPROVISATIONS
VINCENT CHANSEY - FRENCH HORN AND IMPROVISATIONS
JOSE' DAVILA - TUBA AND IMPROVISATIONS
KUBA CICHOCKI - PIANO - AND IMPROVISATIONS
MARVIN SEWELL - ELECTRIC GUITAR AND IMPROVISATIONS
WALDRON MAHADI RICKS - TRUMPET AND IMPROVISATIONS
TONY MORENO - DRUMS AND IMPROVISATIONS
RECORDED AND MIXED BY Gene Torres at NEW YORK'S BAHA'I CENTER ON MARCH 3, 2020
CD COVER ART BY Nora McCarthy©2020
DEDICATED TO GEORGE H. SYLVESTER (R.I.P) My Father
RAMSEY AMEEN (R.I.P) Musical Mentor Violinist, Composer, Mathematician
MIKE LONGO (R.I.P) Pianist, Composer and Creator of Jazz Tuesdays at NY'S BAHA'I CENTER
©LizokaMUSIC 2021
COMING UP IN THE YEAR 2021:
NEW LIVE DOUBLE CD RECORDING
ALTO SAXOPHONE SOLOS IMPROVISATIONS, DUETS, AND OCTET PERFORMANCES
WITH SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSION ENSAMBLE
FEATURING:
NORA McCARTHY - VOICE AND IMPROVISATIONS
VINCENT CHANSEY - FRENCH HORNE AND IMPROVISATIONS
JOSE' DAVILA - TUBA AND IMPROVISATIONS
KUBA CICHOCKI - PIANO - AND IMPROVISATIONS
MARVIN SEWELL - ELECTRIC GUITAR AND IMPROVISATIONS
WALDRON MAHADI RICKS - TRUMPET AND IMPROVISATIONS
TONY MORENO - DRUMS AND IMPROVISATIONS
Jorge Sylvester Ace Collective: Spirit Driven
By FLORENCE WETZEL, Published: November 28, 2013
In a 1967 interview with Jazz & Pop magazine, John Coltrane stated: "I know that there are bad forces, forces put here that bring suffering to others and misery to the world, but I want to be the force which is truly for the good." In his lifetime and beyond, Coltrane has inspired artists to infuse their work with this mission, and certainly alto saxophonist and composer Jorge Sylvester can be counted as one of Coltrane's heirs. Spirit Driven is an 86-minute sonic feast by Sylvester and his ACE Collective that shows just how music and spirituality can intertwine. This is music that invokes forces for the good, played by people who feel these forces—and it also offers a cautionary tale about what happens to the world when these forces are absent.
The ACE (Afro-Caribbean Experimental) Collective is breaking new territory with its musical amalgamation of the Afro-Caribbean diaspora, the jazz tradition, and free music art-forms. Artists such as Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus and Dizzy Gillespie used Afro-Caribbean rhythms in their compositions, but their work didn't experiment with the pulses in these rhythms; part of what sets the ACE Collective apart is their expansion and reconfiguration of these pulses. In addition, the Collective includes poetry and storytelling in many of its pieces, and they also bring to light traditional songs from the Afro-Caribbean tradition. Clearly this music goes deep and wide, and the result is a multi-layered, multi-cultural aural banquet.
The music is also special because of the six musicians who play it. First there's Sylvester, the guiding force behind the Collective. He grew up in Panama, where he studied formally at the Panama Conservatory of Music; he also received an old-school foundation with jazz saxophonist Euclides Hall, which empowered him to lead a Caribbean dance band when he was just a teen. He then spent a decade in Europe soaking up various musical worlds, including free jazz explorations with the Luis Vecchio Quartet. In his thirties Sylvester jumped into the American scene, including studying at SUNY New Paltz and participating in Karl Berger's legendary Creative Music Studio in Woodstock, where Sylvester worked with masters such as bassist Dave Holland and saxophonist Marion Brown. His musical world expanded from there, and over the years he has performed with vibraphonist Stefon Harris, the David Murray Big Band, the Oliver Lake Big Band, Kuumba Frank Lacy's Vibe Tribe, multi-instrumentalist Hammiet Bluiett, and the World Saxophone Quartet. In addition to this illustrious sideman work, Sylvester has excelled as a leader, developing his own musical vision and exercising his considerable talents as a composer, conductor, and arranger, including co-leading the groups The ConceptualMotion Orchestra and A Small Dream in Red. At this point in his career, Sylvester is experiencing the exciting bloom of a mature musician who is wholly realizing his vision.
The rest of the Collective adds their own depth and brightness to the proceedings. Singer and poet Nora McCarthy has been collaborating and co-leading with Sylvester since 2001, contributing her formidable skills as a vocalist who moves easily from the traditional to the avant-free; then there's the mighty trumpeter Waldron Mahdi Ricks, who has played with historic greats such as drummers Art Blakey and Roy Haynes, as well as provided compositions for notable TV projects. Chilean Pablo Vergara studied with eminent bassist Ron Carter and has been part of musical worlds ranging from saxophonist Gato Barbieri, to flautist Dave Valentin, to Cuban violinist Alfredo DeLaFe, to Turkish Sufi virtuoso Omar Faruk Tekbilek. Electric bassist Donald Nicks is best known for his excellent work with jazz-funk master Roy Ayers and soul-jazz keyboardist Mark Adams; and drummer Kenny Grohowski, the youngest member of the Collective, has played with an impressive range of jazz, rock, Brazilian, and New Classical artists, including guitarist Vernon Reid, singer Cassandra Wilson, and bassist Lonnie Plaxico. All in all, the Collective contains decades of experience in a wealth of musical worlds. As Ramsey Ameen states in Spirit Driven's liner notes: "This is a veritable star cluster of musicians."
The recording contains nine powerhouse songs, with the buoyant 14-minute opener "Construction No. 2" illustrating just what this group can do. The tune has an intricate arrangement that takes a journey through many moods and rhythmic changes; this is a quality that all the pieces on the recording share, and as a result each song feels like a short story with its own tale to tell. It's also apparent that each of these musicians can execute compound rhythms and complex harmonies at very fast speeds. This creates a tremendous energy, a forward thrust to the music that's alive and kicking. Among the many pleasures of this tune, there's simpatico front-line work with Sylvester and Ricks, which is further strengthened when McCarthy joins in, melding her voice with the others in pure sound forms. The solos are uniformly strong: Sylvester offers a warmhearted solo that's overflowing with elegantly shaped phrases; McCarthy's free-form scatting is soaring and true, with a variety of delightful turns and bends; and there's a fine trumpet solo by Ricks, who among his many talents is able to play adroitly in the high register. And it's all propelled by an exceptional rhythm section that keeps the whole thing cooking—Nicks' bass offers many a funky groove, Vergara is sparkling and inventive on piano, and there's first-rate drumming by Grohowski, who keeps the rhythms aloft and shifting with enviable ease. The tune ends on a thrilling high note, with everyone playing all out. This is full-on energy music, bold and bright and compelling, bursting with life force and spirit.
The majority of the songs feature lyrics or vocalizations, but there's also "Paulina's Prayer," a 9-minute instrumental written for Sylvester's mother. An eloquent tune with a charming melody, it features yet another intriguingly multifaceted arrangement, with flourishes and shifts in unexpected places. The rhythm section shines on this piece, with oh so graceful touches including shimmering cymbals and deep, gentle basswork. Again the solos are outstanding: Sylvester's sax is lyrical and pretty, while simultaneously infused with a haunted quality; Ricks' trumpet aches with tenderness; and Vergara's piano is both graceful and economical. In this piece, Sylvester offers a lovely tribute to his mother, and superbly expresses one of the most essential bonds that drives the spirit.
"To Be with You" is an example of the Collective's commitment to traditional songs in the Afro-Caribbean tradition. Known as the "all-time classic Latin soul ballad," the tune was written in early 1950s by Nick Jimenez and Willie Torres, the team responsible for composing some of the first Latin dance music in English. A luminous ballad that's spacious and romantic, the piece provides a magnificent vehicle for McCarthy. One of her strengths is the ability to interpret lyrics, and here her phrasing is exquisite, locating the direct heart of the song's passionate longing. The rest of the group plays with the most delicate touch, taking the tune at a slow, measured pace as the tender emotions unfold and deepen. Mention must be made of Sylvester's long, gorgeous solo, an intertwining of soul and delicacy that's beautifully executed. There's also fine work by Sylvester and Ricks behind McCarthy's lyrics, again demonstrating the two players' in-tandem strength; it's always a pleasure to hear these two intertwine. This album is about spirit of all kinds, and "To Be with You" offers a reminder that the highest romantic love is driven by spirit as well.
In a recording chock-full of strong songs, two in particular stand out. "Remember Haiti" is a dazzling tune with tremendous energy and an impassioned message, a heartfelt homage to this island nation and the great suffering it has recently endured. The rhythms on this 9-minute piece are particularly stunning, and it's a wonder to witness the group execute them with such accuracy and flair. The first half of the piece features vocalizations by McCarthy, fiery and melodic and free flying. A host of energies boil throughout this section, as the rhythms express beauty and urgency and chaos and more than a touch of menace. It's an artful exploration of the joy of this island, along with its sobering truth. Just past the midpoint, McCarthy starts an ardent poem about Haiti, both a tribute to this land and a call to action. The poem includes the horrific fact that since November 2010, Haiti's death toll from earthquake, hurricanes, and cholera is 295,000 dead and counting, and there's also thousands of people lost, starving, and living in squalor. McCarthy delivers the poem with burning conviction, calling forth the anguished cries of our fellow humans: "Don't turn a blind eye . . . Wail at the wall of global indifference." The arrangement includes call-and-response with the rest of the group, providing a powerful Greek chorus to affirm the truth of McCarthy's poem. This is a great tune in the rich tradition of jazz protest music, pointing out where the spirit is lacking and calling on the world to dig deeper.
"Obeahman" is the recording's tour de force, a brilliant piece that combines remarkable musicianship with layers of meaning. The song starts with a nimble sax solo by Sylvester, then busts out into a fantastic rhythm, with vocalizations by McCarthy that keep abreast of the complex rhythmic tiers. Then McCarthy sings the famous Caribbean tune "Yellow Bird," which is a reworking of the 19-century Haitian song "Choucoune." It's an incredibly appealing melody, but it's also a piece of music that has become infused with island tourism. And then there's the title: "Obeah" refers to folk magic or sorcery, and the Obeahman has always been a powerful figure in Caribbean culture, including playing a crucial role in slave rebellions. It's an interesting choice to use this title to reinterpret a song that most tourists associate with the "carefree" Caribbean lifestyle—but the title could just as easily refer to the musicians themselves as magicians. Clearly there are nuances of culture and intentions in this piece that are open to interpretation, and yet at the end of the day, this is just terrific music: the tune has an incredibly appealing rhythm, as fast and complex as spinning plates in the air. The Collective manages to turn a classic song inside-out and make it their own, all the while remaining true to the unique spirit and unseen aspects of island culture.
The album ends with the upbeat "Cycle of Life." The tune is grounded throughout by Nicks' funky bass grooves, and contains more great front-line work with Sylvester, Ricks, and McCarthy, as well as sensitive percussive accents by Grohowski. There's a warm solo by Sylvester laced with sinuous lines, and a fluid solo by Rick, nimble and lightning-fast. McCarthy contributes a joyful scat interlude, her voice buoyant and free as a bird, and Vergara's piano solo is appealingly lithe and bluesy. The lyrics provide a reminder of the interconnection and common origin of all life, and altogether the song is a great way to end this 86-minute musical journey, a reminder that all spiritual experiences—joy, love, romance, tragedy, magic—come and go as part of an even bigger cycle.
There's probably no nobler way to spend one's life than in the pursuit of making spirit manifest, to search for the good and then share it. Coltrane certainly felt this way, and it's clearly the right—perhaps the only—direction for the musicians who make up the groundbreaking ACE Collective. The music on Spirit Driven does in fact have an incredible spirit, something truly uplifting and life-affirming that's a potent layering of musical influences, cultural knowledge, and spiritual intention. The ACE Collective has brought utmost sincerity and musical skill to this recording, and the result is a multi-cultural explosion that is not to be missed.
Track Listing: Construction No. 2; Masouc; Paulina’s Prayer; The Light of Truth’s High Noon Is Not for Tender Leaves; Obeahman; Construction No. 1; To Be with You; Remember Haiti; Cycle of Life.
Personnel: Jorge Sylvester: alto saxophone; Nora McCarthy: voice; Waldron Mahdi Ricks: trumpet; Pablo Vergara: piano; Donald Nicks: electric bass; Kenny Grohowski: drums.
Record Label: Four
The musical relationship between alto saxophonist Jorge Sylvester and vocalist Nora McCarthy dates back12 years to their first performance as the duo A Small Dream in Red (which takes its name from the 1925masterpiece by Russian abstract painter Wassily Kandinsky). Each is a complete and free thinking performer in their own right, but it’s hard to deny that together they have developed a particularly powerful sense of interplay. This year, Sylvester and McCarthy are back as A Small Dream in Red, with a new record called In The Language Of Dreams, which they dedicate to both Kandinsky and Ornette Coleman, as “leaders of the avant garde movement”. The 12-track, 70-minutealbum covers plenty of ground, including several diverse duo originals, two of Coleman’s tunes (with poetry by McCarthy) and a decidedly trippy take on“April in Paris”. The album opener, an original called “Dizzy Bird”,is a perfectly paced starting point, as Sylvester bounces nimbly through bop-tinged riffs and McCarthy pays lyrical homage to Coleman and the historical context of his innovations. Both performers are really in their element on Coleman’s “The Blessing” and “The Sphynx”, stretching out into abstract territory and channeling their spiritual perception of the alto saxophonist’s forward-thinking messages while also maintaining their own confidently probing voices.Another original worth highlighting is the unsurprisingly loosely structured “Composition VIII”, an especially minimalist free improvisation in which the pair beautifully explore longer held notes and more deliberately jarring choices in tonality.
McCarthy returns as a compositional collaborator and performing member of Sylvester’s Afro Caribbean Experimental (ACE) Collective, for that group’s hefty two-disc, nine-track, 87-minute album SpiritDriven.
The sextet - with includes trumpeter Waldron Mahdi Ricks, pianist Pablo Vergara, electric bassist Donald Nicks and drummer Kenny Grohowski - skips ably across the spectrum between ethereal free improv and tight, funky beats while often sticking with the typically dense harmonies of Sylvester and McCarthy’s writing, as well as pursuing unexpected paths within the rhythmic terrain of Afro Caribbean traditions. Nicks and Grohowski form a particularly strong backbone on“Construction No. 2” and “Construction No. 1”, which open the first and second discs, respectively. Both tunes are refreshingly accessible from an improvisational standpoint, beginning with relatively straight ahead grooves that gradually morph and reach farther outside the changes, with spontaneous yet swinging solos and McCarthy’s strong vocal presence. Sylvester’s somber tune “Paulina’s Prayer” is a great addition, featuring sensitive ensemble playing and a moving solo by the leader, as well as some good mute work from Ricks.And the creative duo of Sylvester and McCarthy come to the forefront once more on “Remember Haiti”, a jointly written and extremely inspired tune, which begins with chaos and coalesces into a unique verbal and aural documentation of the societal troubles faced by that nation.
by Sam Spokony
NEW DOUBLE CD "SPIRIT DRIVEN"
Jorge Sylvester ACE (Afro Caribbean Experimental) Collective
~ NOW AVAILABLE FOR SALE ~
CONTACT: Redzenrecords.com
"Spirit Driven"
Double CD on RedZen Records
Jorge Sylvester ACE Collective:
Nora McCarthy – voice, poetry; Waldron Ricks—trpt; Pablo Vergara—pno; Donald Nicks—elec. bs; Kenny Grohowski—drums, percussion.
This CD is a continuation of the ACE Trio CD "In the Ear of the Beholder"An exploration from within of the Afro Caribbean Rhythms as a rhythmic and melodic vehicle to create new forms of extended compositions using the Voice, the Trumpet and the Piano as 3 independent textures to the ACE Trio.
Spirit Driven is a highly rhythmic and spiritually motivated compositional journey through the various cultures that make up the Caribbean Islands encompassing their significance and contribution to the present day advanced musical concepts in jazz and avant-garde/free music. The music is original, modern, imaginative and experimental. The use of language, “word,” in the form of poetry and lyrics is throughout and used to convey each song’s spiritual and historical message.
The CD includes a composition dedicated to Haiti.
In the language of dreams -
A tribute to Ornette Coleman and Wassily Kandinsky.
A Small Dream In Red, minimalist innovative voice and saxophone duo, Nora McCarthy—voice, Bodhran; Jorge Sylvester—alto saxophone. (http://www.asmalldreminred.com.)
A powerfully artistic CD comprised of original compositions, poetry and improvisation as well interpretations of five of Kandinsky's masterpieces graphically and spontaneously composed in the moment. There are also several covers of choice music which includes two Ornette Coleman compositions with lyrics written by McCarthy. The duo employs various techniques they discovered working in this format as well as other techniques employed by all art forms. Deconstruction, diminution, expansion, elaboration, symbolism, line and design among others. Intuitive and symbiotic, the two altos enter into each work with absolute freedom from preconception and create within and outside the form the textural content of each piece.
COMING UP MARCH 4, 2023
Pioneer Valley Jazz Shares
PRESENTS:
Jorge Sylvester SPONTANEOUS EXPRESSIONS
Jorge Sylvester -Alto saxophone and Improvisations
Nora McCarthy - Voice and Improvisations
Kuba Cichocki - Piano and Improvisations
Tony Moreno - Drums and Improvisations
March 4, 2023 7:30 PM
Hawks & Reed, 289 Main Street Greenfield, MA