AUM Fidelity

DARIUS JONES TRIO ..Man'ish Boy (A Raw & Beautiful Thing) ..AAUM057

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1 .Roosevelt .1.14
2 .Cry Out
.7.03 (MP3 Excerpt)
3 .We Are Unicorns .4.04 (MP3 Excerpt)
4 .Meekness .5.32
5 .Salty .2.51
6 .Chasing The Ghost . 9.44 (MP3 Excerpt)
7
.Big Train Rollin' . 5.28
8 .Forgive Me . 5.48 (MP3 Excerpt)
+ .Chaych!* . 10.15

All compositions by Darius Jones, except 3 by Jones/Cooper-Moore, 5 by Jones/Cooper-Moore/Rakalam,
7 by Jones/Rakalam; all published by Aston Boy Music (ASCAP)
P+C 2009 AUM Fidellity

Darius Jones: alto saxophone
Cooper-Moore
: piano, diddley-bo
Rakalam Bob Moses: drums

Produced by Darius Jones & Steven Joerg
Recorded on April 27, 2009
by Michael Marciano at Systems Two Studio, Brooklyn

Masterfully mixed with and mastered by Michael Marciano at STS.


Original cover art/paintings by Randal Wilcox.

 

“Darius Jones has the capacity for a proud, rafters-raising tone on alto saxophone, and as an improviser he’s fearless but disciplined. (...) A couple of months ago he released “Man’ish Boy (A Raw & Beautiful Thing),” a robustly accomplished debut that confirms not only the blunt fact of his arrival but also the ceaseless vitality of his chosen tradition. A keen awareness of that tradition underpins the album, for reasons of spirit and style. Mr. Jones, who is in his early 30s, wisely teamed up with a pair of sympathetic mentors, the drummer Rakalam Bob Moses, 61 , and the multi-instrumentalist Cooper-Moore, 63. Their interaction is open-hearted and intense (...) it adds up to a powerfully soulful blend."
.....The New York Times (Critic's Choice), Nate Chinen

“..with expressive glissandi as opulently sensual as that of Johnny Hodges, and a knack for flipping innocent melodic utterances into lines fraught with chancy harmonic and rhythmic ambiguities, Jones’s concept is proudly his own. This record poses big questions about the relationship between the African-American tradition of spirituals, blues and gospel, and now.”
.....The Wire, Philip Clark

“..brimming with intricacy and raw, soulful invention. .. [on the achingly beautiful ballads] time seems to be suspended while the three musicians breath slowly as one.” –
.....Signal To Noise, Marc Medwin

"A phenomenal debut, Man'ish Boy presents the singular artistry of Darius Jones .."
.....All About Jazz, Troy Collins

"It's always very exciting when you come across a new name in the music, and especially someone with a fully formed, distinctive sound."
.....
BBC – Jazz on 3, Jez Nelson

"On Man’ish Boy, alto saxophonist Darius Jones delivers one of the most impressive debuts in recent memory, displaying a remarkably well-developed concept and individual sound. .. Jones has a big, fleshy, lived-in tone, with a vibrato that owes as much to Johnny Hodges as it does to Albert Ayler. It’s defiant, vulnerable, proud, and weary; there is laughter and sobbing in it. He imbues simple melodies and phrases with huge emotional weight. .. Amazingly, there’s little sense of two veterans supporting a younger, less experienced player. They sound like a trio of peers, which bodes well for this exciting new voice.
.....Point of Departure, Ed Hazell

"The best music tells you something not only about the musicians, but about yourself. Man’ish Boy is that kind of record. It’s not just good. It’s important. And we are the richer for its existence... For his debut statement, 31-year-old Jones wanted to tell his story. To talk about what it means to be poor and black and struggling and intelligent in this day and age. Jones has fit all that and more into an incredible recording that will make you sing, make you weep and make you marvel."
.....Pop Dose, Jason Crane

"[Darius has got] a head full of ideas and a heart full of talent. He never wastes a note or a breath."
.....JazzTimes, Steve Greenlee

"An alto saxophone player whose sound drips with passion .. Jones has a talent for penning intensely emotional themes, which provide a fertile launching pad for his vibrato-laden alto preaching. .. the valedictory, elegiac "Forgive Me" sounds like a newly found spiritual, with some of most beautiful sounds ever committed to disc.
.....All About Jazz, John Sharpe

"Man'ish Boy offers a superb listening experience that runs the gamut of human emotions .. Darius Jones' recording debut as a leader turned out to be one of the jazz highlights of 2009. This sets the bar pretty high for the young saxophonist's next move."
.....All Music Guide, François Couture

"Each time we’ve seen Jones play, we’ve been seriously impressed with the sheer gut-level intensity he projects, whether he’s blasting out a furiously minimal riff or digging into a deep blues groove."
.....
Time Out New York, Hank Shteamer

Darius Jones – For the Love of the Craft
.....-RVANews/RVAJazz Feature Interview

Catching up... Darius Jones and post-summer jazz records:
.....Perfect Sounds

"This is the finest sax trio disc of the year. Don't miss out on this rambunctious treasure!"
.....Downtown Music Gallery, Bruce Lee Gallanter

“Only an authentic motherfucker could get Cooper-Moore and Bob Moses to back him up on a debut record.”
.....
LoveGloom Blog: Top 10+ of 2009

"A strong, passionate, soulful representation of the vicissitudes of life transpires from every minute of the impressive first album (as a leader) by alto saxophonist Darius Jones. Flanked by masters Cooper-Moore (piano and diddley-bo) and Rakalam Bob Moses (drums), Jones achieves the difficult aim of presenting a self-portrait which is at one and the same time visceral and fragile, and – in essence – achingly beautiful."
....Touching Extremes

“This powerful and beautiful album is an important statement by a voice that needs to be heard.”
....The Jazz Session Feature Interview

“BEST JAZZ ALBUMS OF 2009 = #17 / BEST DEBUT ALBUM OF 2009 = #2”
....Village Voice 2009 Jazz Critic Poll


Favorite debut records of 2009:
..Darius Jones, Man'ish Boy
Why this year is the year of the saxophone trio, in no particular order:
..Darius Jones, Man'ish Boy
Best uses of unconventional instruments, 2009:
..Cooper-Moore, diddley-bow
....NPR / A Blog Supreme / The Year-End List of Lists 2009



ALL ABOUT JAZZ-NEW YORK: BEST DEBUT RELEASE 0F 2009

THE JAZZ SESSION (by Jason Crane) TOP 10 JAZZ CDs of 2009 = #3 / BEST DEBUT = #1

Hank Shteamer (Time Out NY) on THE GIG (NY Times critic Nate Chinen's blog) year-end email roundtable conversation: Supergroup Outbreak, But No Generation Gap   “Take 31-year-old saxist Darius Jones, who tapped two under-appreciated veterans -- pianist and diddley-bo expert Cooper-Moore (63), and drummer Rakalam Bob Moses (61) -- for his powerful debut, Man’ish Boy (A Raw & Beautiful Thing), a gutsy, blues-infused free-jazz session that came in at No. 5 on my year-end list. Cooper-Moore and Moses each have lengthy résumés to draw on, but Jones isn’t interested in nostalgic references. Like Them Crooked Vultures, Man’ish Boy sounds vigorous and inventive, with the younger player lighting a fire under his elders and vice versa.”

BOSTON GLOBE – Top 10 Jazz albums for 2009
Darius Jones Trio. Man’ish Boy. “The young saxophonist plays both raucously and sweetly, and he puts every genre at his disposal, from blues to swing to free improvisation.”

BOSTON PHOENIX – 2009: The Year in Jazz
• Darius Jones Trio
“Alto-saxophonist Jones, 31, now lives in Brooklyn (natch), but he hails from rural Virginia, and he likes churchy old blues, boogie-woogie, and the kind of folkish tunes that Albert Ayler used to write. On Man'ish Boy (AUM Fidelity), his music sounds older than old — ancient, in fact — but also completely up to the minute. Working with Boston drummer Bob Moses and New Yorker Cooper-Moore (who plays piano and his homemade diddley bow), Jones delivers forceful melodies with a just-discovered freshness. The trio's show at Outpost 186 in October was a standout.”

DESTINATION: OUT – FAVE JAZZ JAMZ OF 2009
Darius Jones Trio. Man’ish Boy.
"The future is tomorrow. Taking the rough with the smooch.

 

Darius Jones is an extraordinarily gifted young alto saxophonist and composer; Man'ish Boy (A Raw & Beautiful Thing) is his remarkable debut as a leader. Jones joined the New York music community in 2005, after living and studying in Richmond, VA. In his short time here, he has amazed and inspired musicians and audiences from widely divergent backgrounds with his meticulously honed musical gifts. Soul-power is at his foundation; forward looking expression always at the fore. Some bands Jones currently works with are the Cooper-Moore Trio, Mike Pride's From Bacteria to Boys, William Hooker's Bliss (East), and Trevor Dunn's Proof Readers. Jones also has a band with Travis LaPlante, Andrew Smiley, and Jason Nazary called Little Women; their first record Teeth came out in 2008.

Man'ish Boy is a deeply personal work that found Jones meditating on his life growing up in the south: not an easy life, but one suffused with familial love, hard work and self-assurance. His experiences in church, particularly hearing gospel choirs – the ecstatic combination of powerful individual voices coming together to create something greater – were a deep inspiration for this project. An abiding respect for elders and the breadth of life experience they bring led Jones to ask master musicians Cooper-Moore (piano, diddley-bo) and Rakalam Bob Moses (drums) to be part of this project. Jones first met Moses at a performance while still in Virginia, and they have had a close relationship ever since. Jones joined forces with Cooper-Moore, a fellow Virginian and church-goer as a youth, after moving to NYC. Cooper-Moore was asked specifically to also play diddley-bo here: a one-wire stringed instrument with roots in the deep south via Africa; with it, he most definitely brings the organic funk.

Herein: ballads of deeply affecting tenderness, an intense polyrhythmic excursion that literally does chase the ghost in holiness fashion, a series of open-ended pieces that further display the remarkable improvisational gifts of the three musicians, and more.

*The album's bonus track, Chaych!, features Darius' regular working trio with fellow younger highlights on the NYC new music stage Adam Lane: bass and Jason Nazary: drums, and makes abundantly clear the connection between juke joints and churches of the deep south. –SJ


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