Year Of The Dog – Grant Gordy and Ross Martin

Fans of flatpicking guitar are as inclined to find the two guitar duo as the ideal place to practice their art as they are the fuller sound of a full bluegrass band. The lead lines don’t have to fight against a full rhythm section to be heard, and the soloist and accompanist roles can easily swap between them, utilizing different registers of the instrument.

This has long been true among guitar slingers whose passion is complicated fiddle tunes, and remains so as the flatpicking world expands to accept jazz and new acoustic sounds within the repertoire expected for steel string acoustic guitar.

You can barely ask for a better example than in Year Of The Dog from two of the brightest lights in the acoustic world, Grant Gordy and Ross Martin. Both have plied their trade as itinerant flatpickers for hire around the country, with Grant working with Darol Anger in Mr. Sun and Ross in The Matt Flinner Trio, as well as with their respective solo projects.

After opening with a lovely piece of Martin’s called Beacon, with something of a Norman Blake feel, the pair launch into some chamber bop with Bud Powell’s Celia from 1956 – which suits this two guitar setting beautifully. The transition seems perfectly sensible in the hands of these two master pickers, as stylistically odd it may read in print.

Next up is Gordy’s Storm Of The Century (Of The Week), a somewhat whimsical two-part fiddle tune that finds the guys trading eights and fours before merging into a funky, syncopated, almost-contrapuntal duet. Very tasty. Sweep, another from Ross, emerges as a tone poem with both guitars working arpeggiated rhythms. Grant’s As The Crow Flies follows, another fiddle tune with a strong gypsy element.

Before long, they are performing Bach’s 2-Part Invention No. 2, written as a keyboard exercise in the early 18th century and still studied and performed widely as duets among string, wind, and brass players worldwide. That’s staying power! Then you hear a screaming take on the Dixieland standard, Dear Old Dixie, more associated these days with the banjo, which gets a quirky reharmonization midway through before returning to form full of fiery demonstrations of Ross and Grant’s stunning command of their six strings.

Other strong cuts include a stately rendition of the Southern Gospel standard, Farther Along, where both pickers can show off their lyrical side, and a sprightly version of Snowflake Reel paired with Pat Metheny’s Bright Sized Life. The fiddle tune gets a nice twin treatment along with some spicy improvs across the B-part’s unexpected flatted six chord, and it folds sweetly into Metheny’s jazzy cut from his debut album in ’71.

They close with a gorgeous reading of the old show tune, I’ll Be Seeing You, whose lyrics (not included here) convey the loneliness and near-despair soldiers experienced during World War II. It was very popular during the ’40s, and these two capture the despondency and pain the song conveys instrumentally, not a simple thing to accomplish. The way Ross and Grant make jazz guitar work on acoustics is among the record’s most impressive features, done in a way that fans of more traditional folk guitar styles will surely appreciate as well.

Both of these men have a mastery of their instruments, and they allow their individual styles to show through across the tracks. Their tones are similar, but there are enough differences to make it interesting. For those keeping tabs, Ross is in the left channel and Grant in the right.

Year Of The Dog is available wherever fine music is sold. Anyone who takes pleasure in virtuosic guitar playing will enjoy it from tip to toe.

Music du jour from Matt Flinner Trio

With a new CD set to hit later this month, Matt Flinner has created this video to explain what he and his trio are up to these days with their concept of music du jour. The guys have challenged themselves to each compose new music daily while touring this past few years, the best of which has been recorded for this new Compass Records project, Traveling Roots.

The Trio is Matt on mandolin, Ross Martin on guitar, and Eric Thorin on bass. You wouldn’t call their music bluegrass, but that is the form they all learned to play in.

Matt explains here…

 

Look for Traveling Roots on January 22.

Jake Schepps Quintet – Entwined

As sure a sign as any that bluegrass has reached a level of real maturity and acceptance as a contemporary art form is the number of cross genre projects that have been produced of late. Ryan Cavanaugh on banjo with Bill Evans’ Soulgrass is one example in the jazz world, and the success of the Goat Rodeo Sessions among classical music lovers is another. And in the pop world, is there anyone left who hasn’t recorded with Alison Krauss?

Colorado banjoist Jake Schepps has been on the forefront of melding bluegrass instruments with classical music for many years. He recorded an album of Béla Bartok music arranged for a string band, An Evening In The Village, and is now preparing to release Entwined, a collection of four new compositions commissioned for his Jake Schepps Quintet.

Schepps reached out to a trio of modern classical composers with his idea, and convinced his friend and Quintet mandolinist Matt Flinner to tackle one. There are full length pieces from Marc Mellits (Flatiron), Matt McBane (Drawn), Gyan Riley (Stumble Smooth), and Flinner (Migrations) running to over 75 minutes of music.

Performing along with Schepps and Flinner are Ryan Drickery and Enion Pelta-Tiller on violin, Grant Gody and Ross Martin on guitar, and Eric Thorin on bass.

As the album was being rehearsed and recorded earlier this year in Denver, Schepps had a pair of filmmakers from Cloudgate Studios on hand to capture the excitement, and has released this six minute video as a promotion for the album. Especially interesting are the comments from the composers who began their work without much familiarity with the string band instruments.

Even if you think you don’t like classical music, most bluegrass fans will appreciate this mini-documentary.

 

Entwined is set to hit on January 27, but is available to hear and pre-order now from Jake’s bandcamp page. Schepps and his Quintet will tour along the east coast with this new music in January, and in Colorado in February. Full details available online.

Jeff Austin staying busy

When we published a review of Yonder Mountain String Band’s show in Charlottesville, VA recently, we noted that mandolinist Jeff Austin was absent, owing to the recent birth of a daughter, Penelope.

So there was no surprise when we caught up with him for an interview a few days later, that she was the first thing on his mind. Jeff mentioned that it was good to be sleep-deprived, but for all the right reasons. New parents will understand exactly what he means.

But duty calls, and Austin is back on the road next week for a string of dates with Here & Now, before heading into the studio for his first solo project.

Here & Now finds Jeff with Larry and Jenny Keel (guitar and bass, respectively), and Danny Barnes on banjo. They have four more dates in early March before everyone starts touring in earnest with their own groups, and Austin says he can’t wait.

“I’m really excited to get out and play music with those guys. It’s an absolute blast. I feel so supported on every side.

Plus we all get along really well – we get in the vehicle and start laughing. Then I laugh for three more days when I get back.”

Those last few shows are…

  • March 5: Cabooze – Minneapolis, MN
  • March 6: Miramar Theatre – Milwaukee, WI
  • March 7: City Winery (2 shows) – Chicago, IL
  • March 8: Bell’s Brewery – Kalamazoo, MI

To help promote this final swing, Here & Now is offering a free live show download recorded August 30 of last year at the Elk’s Lodge of Troy, OH. There are a total of 19 tracks, including this version of Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Breakdown.

But it’s the upcoming solo project that really has Jeff’s creative juices flowing. He’ll be teaming up with Danny Barnes again on banjo, with Ross Martin on guitar and Eric Thorin on bass. With Jeff on mandolin, this will serve as the core band, with “some cool guest artists” joining in.

“I’m about to turn 40, and I didn’t always take really good care of myself. But with a lot of love from my amazing family, I see that living is so much better…

Not a lot of people get a shot of working as a musician. I am really grateful for that, and don’t want to waste any opportunities. Now I get to also do music of my own, that has a different identity as my music.

It will be a different kind of record. Some songs will be slower, some will have drums, and some may be more similar to what I do with Yonder. It will all be music I have co-written with friends.

Yonder will still be touring, but this is something that is really important to me.

Jeff heads in to work on this new project when the tour with Here & Now concludes. When he finishes that, it’s back on the road with YMSB, followed by a Spring tour with Barnes, Martin and Thorin supporting the solo record.

He explained how he met up with two of his new collaborators.

“Me and Eric have been playing music together since I moved to CO about 16 years ago. I heard Ross Martin playing with a jazz band in a club – they called it acid jazz – and he was shredding. Then I went to see a bluegrass band and Ross was in that band too.

o when Eric and I started talking about playing together more, I wondered whether Ross might want to be involved as well.”

Fortunately, he was and Austin began the discussions that have led to plans for the new record. There are also plans to film much of the recording process, so there is the possibility of a film to look forward to as well.

Keep an eye on Jeff Austin’s web site for more information about the solo album, and the tour starting in May.

Jake Schepps & Expedition to premiere new piece

Colorado banjoist Jake Schepps will be premiering another new classical composition scored for a bluegrass group (banjo, mandolin, guitar, fiddle, bass) on December 6 at the eTown Hall in Boulder, CO. It’s part of a series of four pieces he’s commissioned, all of which will be recorded for a CD release in September 2014.

This untitled piece was commissioned from Matt McBane, a Brooklyn composer. Jake says it runs roughly 25 minutes in length, and that it isn’t yet completely finished. He hasn’t even seen the last two short movements, with rehearsals set to begin on Sunday. Talk about cutting it close!

Working with Jake at the premiere will be Matt Flinner on mandolin, Ross Martin on guitar, Ryan Drickey on violin, and Eric Thorin on bass. After the holidays, they will take the piece on tour, performing in three northeastern cities in January.

The premiere will be recorded and filmed for a documentary about this set of four commissions. Recognizing the lack of classical material either written or easily arranged for a bluegrass band, Schepps has stepped around this boundary by reaching out to composers directly. Last year he premiered Flatiron, a piece from Marc Mellits, which has also been recorded for the CD, and filmed for inclusion in the documentary.

Another piece written for Jake’s ensemble by Gyan Riley will be premiered at some point in the fall of 2014, most likely in New York City. More details on that show are yet to be determined.

The fourth in this commission series is a long-form composition from Matt Flinner, set to be recorded in March.

I guess the bluegrass band isn’t just for bluegrass anymore!

© Bluegrass Today [year]
powered by AhSo

Exit mobile version