Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Matt Haviland Something To Say

Matt Haviland
Something To Say
Connotation Records

Trombonist Matt Haviland has been performing and been a featured soloist with some of the top names in been jazz since the early 1980s. Past credits include work with the Illinois Jacquet Big Band, Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Maria Schneider, Steven Bernstein's Millennial Territory Orchestra, and the Mingus Big Band. Currently, he is a regular member of several ensembles in the New York area, notably the Pete McGuinness Jazz Orchestra, Scott Reeves Jazz Orchestra, Peter Leitch's New Life Orchestra, and Diane Moser's Composer's Big Band.

For this recording, he put together a stellar ensemble with Vincent Herring on alto sax, David Kikoski on piano, Ugonna Okegwo on bass, and Johnathan Blake on drums. Mark Gross on tenor sax and Bill Mobley on trumpet are each present on three selections. Four of the performances are by a quintet, one by a quartet, two by a sextet, and two by a septet. Whatever the format, this is a terrific contemporary jazz recording in the mode of classic sixties Blue Note recordings.

The bright sextet interpretation of Freddie Hubbard's "Arietis" gets the music off in a heated manner. Haviland exhibits a rowdy, gravelly tone while his solo develops fluidly. Gross's tenor contrasts with a somewhat dry tone followed by Herring's fiery trills kicking off an inspired solo that is energized by Blake's drums before Kikoski's follows with more spirited playing.

The leader's "Fillet of Soul" is built on a bass line with shifting minor harmonies that evokes "Body and Soul." This septet performance opens with Okegwo's statement of the bass figure over which the four horns all solo. In addition to the marvelous harmonies from Haviland's arrangement of the four horns, Gross and Mobley are exceptional here." The other septet performance is the energetic "The Way It Is," with the energy building with each of the horn solos.

Kikoski provided the arrangement for a lively rendition of Joe Henderson's "Inner Urge." Haviland and Herring are inspired before Blake provides some percussive fireworks. Kikoski provides a lovely setting for Haviland's wooly, lyrical solo on the quartet performance of Cole Porter's "Get Out Of Town." Blake adds to this splendid performance with his agile use of brushes. Haviland's imaginative arrangement of Charlie Parker's "Visa," transforms the tune into a slower tango number, with Blake's off-kilter rhythms adding to the appealing, if quirky, flavor here.

The rest of this recording is of similar quality. "Something To Say" is an outstanding recording with first-rate material and excellent, imaginative, and inspired playing that showcases Matt Haviland's talents as a composer, player, and leader.

I received a download to review from a publicist. Here is Matt Haviland leading a group at Small's in NYC in 2018.



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