Bob Sneider released two new CD's this year, both
on Sons of Sound records. He teamed up with Paul
Hofmann on Escapade and he joined with
Joe Locke in The Bob Sneider Joe Locke Film Noir
Project:
Fallen Angel. With these two projects
Bob Sneider expresses two sides of jazz. Escapade is
a duet with pianist Paul Hoffman (a follow-up to
there 2004 release: Interconnection) is
chamber jazz at its finest, demonstrating with
eloquence that jazz is a serious musical idiom. With Fallen
Angel we change from day to night and from the
concert hall to the smoky basement jazz club, evoking
the unforgiving dark underbelly of urban life.
Teaming Sneider's guitar with
the haunting sound of Locke's vibraphone and a
killer combo defines the dark mood and sets an
emotional hook. Both
CD's are highly recommended.
Escapade, the second collaboration from Bob Snider
and Paul Hofmann, has found
its' way into my CD player over and over again. It reminds me so much
of Jim Hall and Bill Evans masterpiece, Undercurrent,
which is considered one of the best jazz recordings
of all time and certainly the finest example of
jazz piano/guitar duo performance. Escapade approaches
this with a very similar sound, especially evident
on "My Funny Valentine" the only tune
these two records have in common. The rest of Escapade is most original
compositions by Hofmann and Sneider that reveal
a deep understanding of harmony and form. The music varies in intensity, rhythm and
density with many surprises
and clever turns, with
several quotes from classic and baroque music.
The interplay between Sneider and Hoffman reveals
a musical relationship based on a desire to create
beauty along with common respect and trust in the
ability of the other.
The Film Noir Project includes Bob Sneider on
guitar, Joe Locke on vibes, Bob's brother John
Sneider on trumpet, Grant Stewart on tenor, Paul
Hofmann on piano, Phil Flanigan on bass, and Mike
Melito on drums. In Fallen
Angel Bob Sneider with
Joe Locke lead a solid septet though film tunes,
the title tune written by Joe Locke, and "The
Last Kiss" written by Paul Hofmann. It is
a concept project that hits its mark with a stylized
1940's sensibility, but subtle
solos and post-bop harmonies keep it from being nostalgic reenactment.
From the opening track, Locke's "Fallen Angel",
we get a sense of sadness in the melody on the
vibes while Hoffman provides a relentless supporting
vamp that subtly drives the song forward with a
sense of inevitability. Evocative
throughout, it's easy to imagine a black-and-white
rain soaked city street, a pool hall and a mysterious
woman who looks too good to be anything but trouble. I guess
the point is this is music to listen to. The mood
is there, but the musicianship is too. Bob Sneider
adopts a grittier style, but his tone is still
sweet and pure. Locke delivers
the goods again and again on vibes throughout this project along
with the solid band on material that in less skilled
hands could've turned out like so many tired film
scores. Throughout Fallen
Angel the combination
of guitar, piano and vibraphone blend surprisingly
well and provide a rich blanket of sound in these
great arrangements. Dave Grusin's "Theme from
Mulholland Falls"and John Bary's "Body
Heat, both arranged by Joe Locke, serve as excellent
showcases Grant Stewart's tenor prowess. John
Sneider proves to be a skilled balladeer on trumpet with
a full round sound particularly on "Chinatown
(Theme)" which he also arranged.
Guitarist/composer/educator Bob Sneider is currently
the Jazz Guitar Professor at the Eastman School
of Music. Sneider performs a multi-faceted role
at Eastman as Instructor of Jazz Guitar at the
Eastman's Community Education Division and Jazz & Contemporary
Media Department.
Before joining the Eastman faculty in 1997, Bob
Sneider won Downbeat's 1989 "Outstanding Performance
in High School Jazz" award; an award he duplicated
at the collegiate level in 1993. Sneider toured
with two-time Grammy Award Winner Chuck Mangione
for nearly four years. Other notable performers
with whom Sneider has performed include: Nat Adderley,
Don Menza, Nick Brignola, Houston Person, Etta
Jones, Nnenna Freelon, Gene Ludwig, Steve Gadd,
Gerry Niewood, Ralph Lalama, Roy McCurdy, Freddie
Cole, Jon Faddis, Keeter Betts and frequent appearances
with the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra Pops(guitar/banjo).
Bob has also toured with his brother John, who
plays on several of the cuts on this debut album.
The Film Noir Project band
Paul Hofmann was born in Buffalo, New York in
1962. His parents were Paul's first piano teachers,
and he went on to study at the National Music Camp
(Interlochen, Michigan) and at the Eastman School
of Music, where he now serves full-time on the
Eastman Community Music School faculty.
In this capacity Paul teaches private composition
and jazz piano instruction, as well as teaching
a variety of classes and improvisation workshops
ranging from Jazz Composition & Arranging and
Jazz Lab Band to three innovative classes Hofmann
has introduced into the curriculum: New Inventions,
New Etudes and Contemporary Popular Composition.
Paul also remains active as a performer, composer
and recording artist; and when time permit as a
producer and music columnist.
Joe Locke is regarded by many to be the most gifted
vibraphonist of his generation. In addition to
his strengths as an instrumentalist, the recent
recordings and live performances by the Joe Locke & Geoffrey
Keezer Quartet, the Milt Jackson Tribute Band and
his group "4 Walls of Freedom", offer
evidence of his ever-growing stature as a band
leader, composer and conceptualist.
Locke was born in Palo Alto, California, but raised
in Rochester, N.Y., Locke is a self-taught improviser,
though he benefited from his early studies in classical
percussion and composition at the Eastman School
of Music with John Beck, Gordon Stout, Ted Moore
and David Mancini. As a jazz musician, Locke was
precocious, having played with such luminaries
as Dizzy Gillespie, Pepper Adams and Mongo Santamaria
before he was even out of high school. Since moving
to New York City in 1981, Joe has performed with
Grover Washington Jr., Kenny Barron, Dianne Reeves,
Eddie Daniels, Jerry Gonzales' Fort Apache Band,
Rod Stewart,The Beastie Boys, Eddie Henderson,
Hiram Bullock, Bob Berg, Ron Carter, Jimmie Scott,
The Mingus Big Band and Randy Brecker, among many
others. Joe has toured extensively throughout the
world, both as leader and guest soloist. Joe Locke
has released more than 20 recordings as a band
leader, and appeared on over 100 albums as a guest
artist.
— Don Berryman
© Jazz Police, April 2006
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