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Marcus Strickland : Triumph of the Heavy, Vol. 1 & 2
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Vol. 1 features Marcus Strickland's newly evolved quartet as well as his debut on alto saxophone, and Vol. 2 features a live recording of Strickland's trio at Firehouse 12 (New Haven, CT). 17 tracks of the gutsy saxophonist's fresh approach!
Genre: Jazz: Jazz quartet
Release Date: 2011
Triumph of the Heavy, Vol. 1 & 2
Marcus Strickland
Record Label: Strick Muzik
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Lilt 7:35 Album Only
2. Za Rahula 3:18 Album Only
3. A World Found 3:43 Album Only
4. A Temptress' Gait 6:38 Album Only
5. Dawn 7:23 Album Only
6. Bolt Bus Jitter 5:45 Album Only
7. Virgo 1:56 Album Only
8. Shapes 6:22 Album Only
9. Set Free 4:17 Album Only
10. 'Lectronic 3:40 Album Only
11. Mudbone 11:35 Album Only
12. Surreal 10:59 Album Only
13. Gaudi 9:20 Album Only
14. A Memory's Mourn 9:29 Album Only
15. Prime 11:21 Album Only
16. Portrait of Tracy 8:22 Album Only
17. Cuspy's Delight 8:32 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

This album is very special to me. It’s album #7 (a number that’s very significant in some people’s eyes) and I think it’s now safe to say I have a body of work. On this album you’ll hear a highly developed Marcus Strickland, one who is very sure of what he’s doing and very comfortable with taking risks. I’ve honed a lot of talents that weren’t developed at all when I first started recording.

This is also the first time I’ve recorded on alto saxophone. The alto saxophone was my first horn. I started playing alto when I was 11 but veered away from it by the time I was 14 because I was listening to nothing but tenor players at that time. My dad bought me the professional tenor I wanted and then my student alto just sat collecting dust and being used for spare parts. But I’ve been longing for an alto for a long time, so that’s the first thing I asked for when I got my saxophone endorsement. I already had this vision of what I wanted to sound like on alto. I just needed the horn.

I’ve also developed a lot as a composer. Every song on this album has a story behind it and has a very special place in my heart. I’m composing music with a purpose behind it, with expressions that I want to get out.

This is a very personal album. It documents a special moment in my career that cannot be replicated and my relationship with three very special musicians. It captures one of the greatest performances I’ve done with my trio after we became really familiar with each other from touring for a while. It also showcases the rebirth of my quartet.

I’ve put a lot of myself into this project. Not only are all but two of the 17 tracks my own compositions, but I also mixed the music myself, deciding how to shape it and present it to you. And lastly, I created the album artwork too. I had a strong vision of what the album should look like and I did my best to visually produce that experience.


TRIUMPH OF THE HEAVY
Once upon a time, some months after I started seeing my girlfriend Dawn, we were in the car listening to my iPod. We’d never listened to her iPod in the car, so I said to her “Hey, why don’t you put on your iPod?” So she does. And her immediate reaction after hearing the music on her iPod was “You know what? This sounds kind of light compared to the music you listen to.” And that really stuck with me because often times many things have been extracted from commercial music so it can appeal to the masses.

In the music industry, there’s quite often an entity trying to get artists to adulterate their sound so it’s more “accessible.” I think that comes from fear of an artist’s new idea, because a new demand has to be created. And that’s a scary thing. It’s the unknown. You don’t know how people are going to react to it. But that’s also what makes it special.

After that day in the car I wanted to associate the title of my next recording with weight because I wanted to express that music with substance, a strong sound and which takes risks can move people. It can, in fact, appeal to a greater audience. But, as demonstrated through my girlfriend’s experience, only if we give it a chance through exposure. So that’s what I call it: Triumph of the Heavy.


VOLUME 2
The same musicians who played on Idiosyncracies played on this album, but it’s a very different trio. We toured together a lot before recording Volume 2, becoming more intimate with the music and more intimate with each other, feeding off of each other. Just like with any relationship, with time our natural flow got easier. Our musical conversations and interactions became more natural. We learned more about each other and also about ourselves. The biggest development is trust: we trust each other more on this record than on Idiosyncracies because that was towards the beginning of the trio. And when trust is at such a height, it allows many spontaneous things to happen. It’s very exciting.

Playing with EJ and Ben gets a performance out of me that’s like no other with anybody else. While playing the track “Surreal”, for example, I remember we were very in tune with the groove. It was swinging extremely hard and I did some things on the horn that I didn’t know I could do before the session. And that’s what it’s all about. That feeling is like no other.

We have a special bond. EJ and I learned music together so that bond is extremely strong. It’s not just because we’re twins, it’s that we grew up with each other and we learned music together and we were together for every step of our development. Through life too, not just music. And that bond comes out in the music. It’s like creating a sentence together or ending a sentence for one another or just participating in the middle of it. Music is merely another language we’ve learned to have conversations with.

And with Ben I felt that we found our lost triplet. He fits right in there. He was immediately comfortable with the conversations that me and EJ would have and he knew how to get in and start boxing with us too.

Volume 2 is also a live recording. Playing for a live audience heightens the adrenaline: you don’t have the luxury of correcting mistakes. It puts you on a kind of high wire. These people have paid to see you perform and they don’t want to hear something that’s careful and at the same time they don’t want to hear you messing up the music. That energy cannot be replicated in the studio unless you bring the audience to the studio, which is exactly why I chose to record live at Firehouse 12.

Volume 2 captures a very special moment: a great performance from a band that’s really in sync with each other because we’ve been touring together for a while. That was probably one of the best performances I’ve done with the trio…so far.


VOLUME 1
I wanted Volume 1 to sound very different from the trio recording. I didn’t want to record this volume at the same stage of the process as Volume 2 because I want my recordings to sound like either an evolution or just something totally different from what preceded it. In a way I added more excitement to the studio process by recording while the music was fresh, while it was close to the beginning of its development and interpretation. I think that’s another very special moment in a band: it’s the birth of the band. You’re witnessing the birth of my new quartet here.

My previous quartet recordings were before I experienced the high interaction of the trio. So after that, going back to the quartet had a much fresher feeling. What I looked for in the musicians and the way I composed for it were very different.

The role of the piano in the most basic form is providing harmony. But when I went back to the quartet I was writing for the piano as if I were writing for a percussive instrument, which the piano happens to be aside from its harmonic and melodic qualities - this is all because its sound is produced from striking. So getting into the percussive side of the piano just livens up what we already had, which was this great homogenous sound of me, Ben, and EJ. It enhanced it.

I met David a while back through EJ. He was on a gig of EJ’s and I heard how he accompanied each soloist and that’s what really stood out to me. David is sensitive to what’s around him and when he accompanies a soloist you can tell his first priority is the soloist. That takes a high level of musicianship that has nothing to do with his technical prowess. That has to do with who he is as a human being. How much he considers other people. That’s what really stood out about David Bryant as a pianist.

The volume numbers of these recordings are in order of the most recent recording rather than chronological order. Just as when you’re introduced to new people you are likely to experience the most updated version of them first and then you may get a chance to learn of their past, so it is with my latest work. Enjoy.

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REVIEWS

"his brawny solos are free of quotes and of cliches, his own or anyone else's."
author: Doug Ramsey (AllAboutJazz.com)
                            
"Indeed, to single out two tenor performances, on "Mudbone" and "Prime" his brawny solos are free of quotes and of cliches, his own or anyone else's... Strickland has a tone notable for its depth and butteriness... he frequently achieves heaviness, in the sense of density and profundity"
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"This double CD - his fourth release on his own label and seventh overall - shou
author: James Hales (Downbeat Magazine) 4 1/2 stars
                            
"Blame our collective short attention span or a jazz variation of the starmaking machinery that dominates mainstream pop music, but it seems we always have space for just one or two saxophonists in the spotlight. That needs to change, and there's no better example of why than Marcus Strickland. Even with high-profile gigs with leaders like Dave Douglas and Roy Haynes, he's flown a bit under the radar. This double CD - his fourth release on his own label and seventh overall - should serve notice: Marcus Strickland is a major talent as both an instrumentalist and a composer. Divided into studio and live sets, Triumph of the Heavy is notable for the Strickland's recording debut on alto - his first horn - and a DIY ethic that finds him writing all but two of the 17 compositions, mixing the audio and designing the artwork. The flyspeck font he chose for his liner notes is one of his few missteps. The live set, a highly varied 70 minutes recorded at Firehouse 12 in May 2010, showcases the hand-in-glove movement of Strickland's regular trio: twin brother E.J. on drums and Ben Williams ("our missing triplet") on bass. Piano-less/sax-led trios will always draw comparisons to Sonny Rollins', but, although he can go there - an outrageously over-the-top soprano solo on Jaco Pastorius' "Portrait of Tracy" is perhaps the closest - playing against that stereotype are the moody, dark-hued "A Memory's Mourn" and the meaty, rangy "Prime", with an outstanding solo from Williams. What strikes most here is the trio's ability to seem drumhead tight yet very loose, and to appear like they are simultaneously telescoping and collapsing genres. On "Surreal", for example, Williams swings deep while E.J. smashes cymbal sprays and Marcus pulls out soprano lines that reference bop, free bop and urban-inflected timing. In the studio eight months later, Strickland adds pianist David Bryant, who introduces himself on the hard-charging "Lilt" as a cross between McCoy Tyner and Jason Moran - very percussive, with some interesting harmonic ideas. Right away, the leader changes things up, serving an unexpected, short ballad as a second course - a delicious tenor and arco bass duet at the center of it. Equally novel, and brief, is "Virgo," featuring a chorus of over-dubbed clarinets and saxes. Time and again, it's Strickland's ability to defy expectations and change his approach that is so winning. The slow, rolling and soulful pace of "Dawn," with an ideal amount of wide vibrato on the soprano sax is the perfect balance for the bold alto and mulitple tempo changes of "A Temptress' Gait."
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"'Triumph of the Heavy' could be a master's thesis for a reed player."
author: Bob Karlovits (Pittsburgh Tribune)
                            
"'Triumph of the Heavy' could be a master's thesis for a reed player. The energetic, lively, two-disc set by Marcus Strickland is a display not only of excellent play, but rich compositional technique. One disc is a collection of 10 originals done for a traditional woodwind-piano-bass-drums quartet. The other has seven pieces for a sax-bass-drums trio and is more forward-looking, built around songs that are vehicles for improvisation rather than melody. Strickland wrote all but one track for each disc. Both feature Strickland's twin brother, E.J., on drums and Ben Williams on bass, while David Bryant sits in on piano on the foursome recording. The use of a pianist seems to spell the difference. The chordal nature of the keyboard adds a little stricter definition to that recording, while the trio outing is more open. Both are commendable performances by all involved."
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"radiant saxophone playing set to songs and arrangements whose melodies are no-n
author: S. Victor Aaron (Something Else Reviews)
                            
"The story continues. Yesterday saxophonist Marcus Strickland's new, double-disc record Triumph Of The Heavy, Volumes 1 & 2 went on sale, and the narrative of this record begins where the story of his prior one, Idiosyncrasies (2009), left off. On that CD, Strickland dives head first into the tricky balancing act of leading a sax trio, with bassist Ben Williams and drummer E.J. Strickland, his twin brother. He made it even more challenging by not falling back on tried-and-true standards, mostly coming up with originals, and even where he did play someone else's music, the songs weren't play-by-the-numbers standards, and mostly weren't even jazz tunes. The record put Strickland on a higher plane, an accomplishment I thought merited a spot on the 2009 Best of Mainstream and Modern Jazz list. On Triumph Of The Heavy, Volumes 1 & 2, Strickland continues down the path of expanding his art, building upon the ambitious template he established on that prior record: direct, radiant saxophone playing set to songs and arrangements whose melodies are no-nonsense and well-defined, with forward-looking rhythms that absorb some of the more modern music fully into jazz. All while using space and placing his band mates in prominent roles. In these ways, Strickland is the present-day equivalent to Sonny Rollins (with apologies to the still living, still thriving Rollins). Yes, the story continues, but first with Volume 2 instead of Volume 1, because this disc is a smoldering live date Strickland performed with his Idiosyncrasies trio. By this time, the three had been performing together as a threesome for some time, so it's possible to hear the growth in the bond among them since that studio date. The last two songs are even pulled from Idiosyncrasies, first a funky take on Jaco Pastorious' "Portrait Of Tracy," and then Strickland's own rubbery composition "Cuspy's Delight," where Marcus' tenor gets a little more ambitious here than on the original. The rest of the selections appear to be new originals Strickland is introducing in this live setting, like "Prime," performed in the video below. His soprano sax gets some spotlight, as on "Surreal," which fits the title of the song as it describes Marcus' performance during the solo, and E.J. is just killing it on his kit behind him. "Mudbone" is underpinned but some hip-hop/jazz rhythm and spidery bass playing from Williams that pops. Volume 1 takes us to a new chapter of sorts. It's a studio set, and also a return to Strickland's quartet format, with the addition of pianist David Bryant to the trio. This isn't a step back to the earlier albums, however, because Strickland goes back to this configuration informed with the ideas he formulated and integrated into his music during the time as a trio. And Bryant is a willing and sympathetic participant to this fresher conception: his playing leaves the voids that afford everyone else breathing space and he's also fits into the groove nicely. "Breathe" in fact seems to be the name of the game on this disc, as Strickland opens up the melodies and lets everyone groove…not in the boring, cyclical sense, but by taking some basic shards of music and build a construction that blurs the distinctions between the composed and the improvisational. From the dynamic, bustling "Lilt," to the urgent "'Lectronic" (which, coincidentally or not, sounds sort of like an acoustic adaptation of an electronic song), finds the balance between the past of jazz and the future. But there's more to Volume 1 than just taking the trio ideas and adding a piano. Strickland adds an alto sax to his repertoire, making this a highly unusual occasion where a leader is playing tenor, alto and soprano at various times on an album. All three saxes, as well as a clarinet and bass clarinet are all dubbed together for "Virgo," to create a sleek, modern unplugged groove for him to jam over. "Za Rahula" displays the art of playing a dark, beautiful melody in an unhurried fashion. "A Temptress' Gait" is another display of the unique funk foundation of Williams and E.J., who through these trick rhythms never let go of the swing. With Bryant now in the mix, it seems to make that swing even more evident. With all the tactical nods to current music forms dotting the sonic landscape on this album, Marcus Strickland's aim for this album is very much opposed to the goal for most music made today: "I wanted to associate the title of my next recording with weight, because I wanted to express that music with substance, a strong sound and which takes risks can triumph, it can move people," he explains. By taking pieces of the here and now and attaching it to the more substantive precepts of jazz from the past, Triumph Of The Heavy, Volumes 1 & 2 attempts to reach out to a wider audience without making any compromises. I don't know how many ears this album will actually persuade, but on an artistic level, it's already a triumph."
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