Track Listings
| 1. Ballad of ’91 |
| 2. Well You Couldn’t |
| 3. Latin in Deed |
| 4. Cabin in the Rain |
| 5. E flat Potato |
| 6. Latch On |
| 7. Didn’t You Know |
| 8. Everlasting |
| 9. Where Are We |
| 10. Fanfare for Jan |
| 11. Looking Back |
| 12. Tritone City |
| 13. Ballad of ’91 out take |
Editorial Reviews
Tom Surowicz, City Pages, Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Midwest Jazz
"Renzs talent for writing hip, complex, yet hummable themes is uncanny."
Product Description
Paul Renz has been an all-star student, mastering guitar, bass and composition. A scholarship boy on the National Deans List. Summa cum laude at Berklee College of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music. "Whos Who Among Students at American Universities and Colleges 1984-1985."
Paul Renz has also been an all-star teacher. Tutor of ear training, composition, harmony, theory and arranging at Berklee. Then a high school gifted students teacher in Virginia. Summer camp music director in Maine. And a community college prof back in Virginia. Presently Renz is a Minnesotan, working at both the MacPhail Center for the Arts and the West Bank School of Music.
Thats a lot of time spent in classrooms. Yet the good news is that theres nothing remotely academic about Renzs music. Nothing dryly theoretical or by-the-book predictable whatsoever. Paul Renzs music is a kick! Its a fresh, breathing, surprising, tune-filled, character-to-spare personal amalgam of so much thats so fine about modern mainstream jazz. Paul Renzs sounds are certainly well-schooled, but never dry or fuddy. Renz has had some great teachers, including composer, arranger, pianist and "Lydiot," George Russell-the post-bop and big band living legend. And ECM guitar star Mick Goodrick. Not to mention Berklees venerable Herb Pomeroy. He does all those cats proud on Everlasting.
The CD certainly isnt a one-man show. Bassist Renz is in great Land OLakes company. Theres trumpeter Jon Pemberton, of Size Six, the Skatet and his own Pembertones, making a belated CD debut. Plus longtime Guthrie Theater musician, Keni Holmen, Cedar Ave. Big Band saxophonist Dave Brattain, TC Jazz Cartel guitarist extraordinaire "Wally" Walstad, fellow Berklee grad and trio leader David Singley, plus crafty drummer Ron Edgar. The latter gent spent 12 years in L.A. as a studio drummer, working with Victor Feldman and other heavyweights. Edgar describes himself as an "underground, selective player," and the same tag could be applied to the rest of Everlastings clearly talented cast.
Renz gives each of them plenty of space to shine. Hes the most democratic kind of bandleader, a fellow whose primary interest is making the compositions blossom fully. Thats no surprise, since Renz wrote all 12 tunes on Everlasting. Composing and arranging is obviously the mans forte. Some of these songs will stick to your ears like white on rice. Renz is a helluva chart writer.
I wont do any blow-by-blow review of Everlastings contents. You can hear for yourself how hip the music is. Lets just mention a few salient points. Its apparent from the very first notes blown by Keni Holmens solo saxophone that listeners are in for something special. There are no tired head/solos/head arrangements on Everlasting, no overworked bop chords strung together haphazardly and no slumming blues ditties. Instead you get, boom! an instant cadenza. There are several such solos that leap off this album and Renz the composer wastes no time letting Holmen fire off the first one. This is no random gesture, either. Everlasting is loose and a bit rambunctious, yet ultimately as well scripted as a play by Pinter.
"Well You Couldnt" is an obvious tip of the composers cap to his greatness, Thelonious Monk. "Latin in Deed" is a stunner with plenty of Afro-Cuban fire yet no latin cliches. Brattain and Pemberton blow with precision then abandon, their horns soaring and sparring and scintillating. Singley sounds just a tad like 60s Hungarian wizard Gabor Szabo in his splendid solo. And Edgar will have you reaching for those old Art Blakey meets Sabu records as he closes the track with some hands-on beauty.
Now dig the elegant voicings of "Cabin in the Rain," where Renzs electric bass packs room-filling weight. And relish the intertwined horn lines of "E flat Potato" and "Latch On," worthy of some classic Blue Note or Prestige albums. Amazingly, these tracks were recorded live, with just on
Everlasting
Everlasting,Paul Renz,Walker Records
Jazz Music:
Jazz Music
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Boccadoro: Cantata on Yiddish Melodies; L'Astrolabio del Mare