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Norman David and The Eleventet - Intention (2024)

Norman David and The Eleventet - Intention (2024)
  • Title: Intention
  • Year Of Release: 2024
  • Label: Each and Only
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
  • Total Time: 01:18:18
  • Total Size: 496 MB | 179 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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01. Let's Talk Later, Now
02. Slapdash
03. Happening Later Now
04. Exotic Chaotic
05. Endless Beginnings
06. Elongated Intro
07. Ingredients
08. Intention
09. It Would Be Good
10. Guy of Darkness
11. Added Strength

Saxophonist/composer/arranger/band leader Norman David grew up and matured as a musician in Montreal and moved to Boston to study with the late, revered, and multifaceted Herb Pomeroy at the famed Berklee College of Music. While there, in 1980, David founded a large jazz ensemble just a few members short of a full big band called the "Eleventet." It melded the improvisational qualities of a small ensemble with the rich sound and interactional possibilities of a big band. He found it a wonderful vehicle for his compositional and music directing instincts, and some of the best working musicians loved the band and performed in it on a regular basis in Boston, Colby College in Maine, and elsewhere.

Eventually, David relocated to Philadelphia to take a teaching position in the Jazz Department of the Boyer College of Music at Temple University. The band continued to thrive in this city, has a performing home in the Plays and Players Theater at 1714 Delancey Street near Rittenhouse Square, and has released about half a dozen superb albums, all featuring David's compositions and bearing his unique soprano saxophone soloing and sophisticated style of composing and arranging which allows the musicians to play charts and improvise at very high levels, each with his own imprint.

The band's most recent release is called Intention and is consistent with the other albums in the series. The songs are David originals. The song titles are clever, esoteric, and suggestive in stimulating ways. In this particular recording, the arrangements are reminiscent of Stan Kenton's innovations (fostered as well by his arranging cohort Pete Rugolo) that bore the name "Artistry in Rhythm" as part of the "progressive jazz" movement of the 1940s-50s. Like the Kenton band of that era, the Eleventet swings, yet also has a staccato feel that makes the musicians focus on every note and phrase. The Eleventet's personnel features both steady regulars and those who are "semi-regulars" who participate when their schedules and locations permit, The overall effect is of great ideas, meticulous performance, brilliant improvising, and enjoyable mental stimulation. Such a "right brain/left brain" interaction is David's strength and shows up a little differently in each track of this release.

For starters, the opening number, "Let's Talk Later, Now" commences with David's soprano saxophone in as if in a brief statement at the beginning of a classical composition. It then takes on a distinctly conversational style as other musicians and their instruments enter the fray. Soon the metaphor of "conversation" takes on a quasi-realistic flavor as the notes merge together into "phonemes," the linguistic term for elements of sound in a word. The effect of speech sounds, initially surprising and engaging, then becomes disturbing, as the song's title suggests "Let's talk later..." A funereal dirge-like rhythm carries the music into histrionic territory that takes on a variety of forms and instrumentations, leading to a heady but mainstream alto saxophone solo by Matthew Urbina, as the ensemble playing takes on a more familiar modern jazz flavor. All this mayhem is suddenly silenced,

The title "Slappdash" means chaotically put together, and it is the individual listener's call whether that applies to this arrangement. A clarion statement on the trumpet leads up to a very swinging solo by tenor saxophonist Dylan Band. Some spot-on piano work by Tom Lawton can be heard in various ensemble parts of this track. The piece may seem too well put together to deserve the title "Slappdash" except that the various choruses relate little to one another sonically and thematically.

"Happening Later Now" begins as a lazy modernist ballad with some interesting instrumentation illustrating how the eleven- instrument format combines small group improvising with big band unisons and harmonies—for example, a great trumpet solo by Tony DeSantis and a more introspective improvisation by Scott Robinson's baritone saxophone. De Santis and Robinson then do some additional improvs with march-like ensemble playing.


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