Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola) Jay Rodriguez
Album info
Album-Release:
2018
HRA-Release:
23.02.2018
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Ghost Dancer (Live) 09:54
- 2 Golden Earring (Live) 05:37
- 3 Clouds (Live) 05:01
- 4 All of You (Live) 05:04
- 5 Your Sound (Live) 06:02
- 6 When the Stars Fell (Live) 06:03
- 7 Spirits (Live) 06:54
- 8 Inolvidable (Live) 06:02
- 9 Lover (Live) 07:22
- 10 Let's Just Kiss and Say Goodbye (Live) 04:58
Info for Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)
“Fleet-fingered saxophonist Jay Rodriguez has played it all in New York: salsa with Celia Cruz and Tito Puente, hip-hop with DJ Premier and Groove Collective, straight-ahead with Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Barron and Doc Cheatham.” – NPR “He could be breathy and insinuating on a ballad, brawny and extroverted in an up tempo.” – THE NEW YORK TIMES “Prolific. Prodigal. Profound. That is Jay Rodriguez. Sometimes the sound is explosive, wild and full of fury, other times his music aches with a passion that’s painful and bare. Always modest and reverent, Rodriguez harnesses the unbridled audacity of youth and melds it with the uncanny discipline of a hardened New York jazz veteran. Married to the song while sleeping with the groove, his sound sings of commitment to an ideal—it is spontaneity, culturally untethered and unpretentious, the excitement of far flung love at all costs. It is perfectionism kissed by chaos.” (THE NEW YORKER)
For this auspicious emergence, Jay brought together an exciting ensemble to address melodically intriguing, swinging repertoire with which to charm the discerning, SRO audience at Dizzy’s Club (JALC), NYC, on the night of Rosh Hashanah, 2016. He lets loose on original tunes and seldom heard standards, enlisting the great Billy Harper as second saxist with whom to weave and spar; remarkably versatile pianist Larry Willis; in-demand (one hearing tells you why) Brooklyn bassist Eric Wheeler; drummer J.T. Lewis, famed for associations with Living Colour, the trio Harriet Tubman, and actress/singer Vanessa Williams, and Billy Martin of Medeski Martin & Wood on percussion. This troupe imbues their music with drive and nuances that remain vivid beyond the moment of their creation.
Jay Rodriguez
is one of the busiest men in jazz, and one of the few playing most all the reeds as a leader and sideman with wildly diverse musicians, synthesizing these experiences within his own projects. Jay picked up the clarinet in grade school at age 7, after moving to NYC in 1970 from Barranquilla, Colombia, and furthered his reed studying with Phil Woods (´82-´84), Joe Allard, Tito D’Rivera (father of Paquito) and Joe Henderson. He was playing lead alto with the late great Tito Puente by the age of 15, graduated with the highest honors from New York City’s renowned High School for the Performing Arts and continued his studies at Manhattan School of Music and The New School.
When asked about his childhood, Rodriguez recalls: My saxophone guru, Mark Friedman, tried to teach me how important it was to be a kid. Of course, I didn’t listen, so I was playing gigs constantly. I’d be coming home at 6 o’clock in the morning, then going to school. That was my childhood and I don’t regret it. Always open-minded and versatile, Jay´s first jobs included latin bands, jam sessions in Harlem, and studio work on commercials. Since the late ´80s, he has split his time between gigs with Bill Ware (´88), Groove Collective (´93), Medeski, Martin and Wood (´94), more mainstream acts like Dizzy Gillespie´s United Nations Orchestra (´91), Gil Evans´ Orchestra (´92-´94), David Murray, Doc Cheatham, Kenny Barron and Roy Hargrove (´94). Capable on nearly all reeds, but primarily a soloist on saxes and flutes, Jay has a lithe sound and refreshing willingness to explore any genre and contribute mightily to any ensemble.
He is also the Musical Director and founding member of the New York City phenomenon Groove Collective. In its over two-decade career, the band has opened for and jammed with James Brown, backed Tupac Shakur, and shared the stage with Isaac Hayes, Erykah Badu, The Roots, and B.B. King, among others. Rodriguez also earned two of his three Grammy Nominations for the band’s album “Declassified.” Jay earned one of his Grammy Nominations for the band’s album “People People Music Music” (2006).
This focus and determination have propelled Rodriguez into a highly successful musical career. A three-time Grammy Nominee, he has performed or recorded with a diverse list of talent, including icons Joe Lovano, Elvis Costello, Gil Evans, The Mingus Big band, Celia Cruz, Tito Puente, Craig Harris, Ray Barretto, Latin pop star Ruben Blades and Willie Colon, Eddie Palmieri, Bobby Sanabria, Stevie Wonder, Joan Osborne, Debbie Harry (Blondie), the great Cuban pianist Chucho Valdes, JB Horn, Fred Wesley, Bernie Worrell of Parliment Funkedelic, the great Cuban All Star jazz band Irakere, Paquito D’Rivera, Ray Barretto, Slide Hampton, James Moody, Clark Terry, Wynton Marsalis, Cab Calloway, The New York Philharmonic, orchestrated for composer Philip Glass, rap artists as Guru’s Jazzmatazz Jazz/Hip Hop project, among others.
Jay has also worked on dance projects with Little Louie Vega, Dennis Ferrer, DJ Smash, and recorded/toured with Prince, Gangstar, DJ Premiere, George Porter Jr. and more.
His pantheon of important musical contributions has been a part of the NYC music scene in many genres as a composer, arranger and soloist for the past 30 years. Many of Jay’s achievements can be found in the “Encyclopedia of Jazz” (authors: Leonard Feather and Ira Gitler).
Recently signed with Manager/Producer Suzi Reynolds, Jay is hard at work on a new recording and reviving Groove Collective with a new album as well. Rodriguez remains as active as ever on the international scene, performing over 200 gigs a year.
Booklet for Your Sound (Live at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola)