![]() ![]() ![]() There is one other vocal, by Mishelle Fuller ("Georgia on My Mind"). The title track is a rap, presumably by Davis or Young, whose focal point is the blues. Davis's trombone is the dominant voice in the sextet, with trumpeter Dave Young, pianist Josh Cooper and guitarist Jesse Lava also having their say (Young is especially effective on Fats Waller's "Jitterbug Waltz"). Back to ETHS: the large ensemble fares reasonably well on such oft-played charts as Sammy Nestico's "Basie Straight Ahead," Neal Hefti's "Li'l Darlin'," Jobim's "No More Blues" and Hoagy Carmichael's "Georgia on My Mind," and wrestles valiantly with the more challenging originals, Antonio García's "Midwest Fest" (on which García, an instructor at nearby Northwestern University, trades trombone licks with the band's Mario Davis) and Doug Beach's "Flashback." "Fest" calls for a walking, Basie-like groove that is slightly beyond the band's capabilities at this point, while "Flashback's" tight unison passages for brass and reeds disclose problems with articulation and power that time and experience should erase. So let us bear with them while they work things out. ![]() Some of them may indeed become the Jazz standard-bearers of tomorrow. Nor are they to be censured, as this is the crucible in which younger players learn the basics of Jazz and forge their own musical identitites. While it's obvious that these are high-school musicians (the solos are always a dead giveaway), director Dave Fodor had his young charges well prepared for their visit to the studio, and the lapses in technique that are inescapable among players at this level aren't unreasonably intrusive. The Evanston Township (IL) Jazz Ensemble (six tracks) and six-piece Combo (four) play respectably well in this program of Jazz standards and a couple of original charts recorded in May '97. ![]()
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