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Albrecht Mayer is a rarity among reed players, achieving a level of recognition among audiences more like that reached by many violinists or pianists. His recordings of music arranged for oboe or English horn from its original instrumentation or even from vocal music have sold well, thanks to his ability to make his instruments sing. For 2012's Song of the Reeds, Mayer -- and colleagues -- presents selections that are specifically for oboe or English horn, but once again, the idea of the oboe acting as a singing voice is the guiding principal. The works are all Romantic or post-Romantic era pieces, when songs without words were a dominant form of music. The Schumann Romanzen are the most familiar of the all the selections, standards of the oboe repertoire, but everything else is relatively unknown. The Schilflieder -- lending its name to the album's title -- adds a viola to the oboe and piano. The five pieces were inspired by the poetry of Nikolaus Lenau and are very much of their time: full of heart-on-sleeve emotion, lush lyricism, and heroism. The fourth one almost sounds like a silent film accompaniment. Mayer, pianist Markus Becker, and violist Tabea Zimmermann make the music engaging and communicative, precisely controlling their phrasing, but making it sound completely natural and not hamming up the sentiment. The same is true of the Herzogenberg Trio for oboe, horn, and piano. Liebesruf eines Faun is akin to Debussy's Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun, with a little whimsy thrown in. Becker's jazz-inflected prelude flows neatly into the excerpt from Weismann's Variations, Op. 39. The choices here are further examples of Mayer's incredible fluidity of sound and ease of expression that given him his well-earned reputation. ~ Patsy Morita, Rovi
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Reed Seed was Grover Washington, Jr.'s final album for Kudu/Motown. It was also one of two recordings his issued in 1978 -- the other is the stone-killer live set Live at the Bijou. While the saxophonist had been experimenting with funk since 1971's Inner City Blues, by 1975's breakthrough recordings Mister Magic and Feels So Good, he'd perfected his groove. His appeal to fans of more radio-friendly material was ready: he had stellar grooves, very polished production, and accessible arrangements -- not too mention his stellar emotive attack on any saxophone he chose to play. Many straight-ahead jazz fans dug Washington's sound as well because of his technical facility on his instruments.Reed Seed, like its immediate studio predecessor Secret Place is a transition album from jazz-funk to what would become contemporary or, if you will, smooth jazz. That said, it is no less compelling than Mister Magic or Feels So Good. It follows those recordings in formula, beginning with the solidly funky Do Dat, written by sidemen John Blake (keyboards and violin) and Leonard Doc Gibbs (percussion, vocals). Kicking it with a popping, repetitive bassline, Washington's tenor enters on the melody amid handclaps and the sounds of a backing chorus (provided by Rita & Lita Boggs). Containing a killer bass solo and bridge, it's a perfect length at 4:27 to be a single, and it was. This is followed by the uptown groover Step n Thru, introduced by Blake's violin and synths, as well as nice guitar work from Richard Lee Steacker (the track's author). But the real prize is a smoking soprano solo from Washington as the tempo begins to move. The title track is a feature for Blake's violin to shine along with killer bass and percussion work, with Grover's soprano being intentionally restrained to providing its own sense of lyrical groove. There's a very fine cover of Billy Joel's Just the Way You Are, and Santa Cruzin' sets the template for the direction he would follow in the future. It's a midtempo stepper with lithe funk and lots of acoustic piano and a very simple, direct melody that focuses on atmosphere as much as lyricism. The album's final number, Loran's Dance, is a nocturnal one with Washington overdubbing his saxophone lines (alto and tenor); it develops on a Spanish-tinged theme, and the Rhodes work by Blake is exceptional. When Washington begins to solo, the atmosphere and textures are abundant yet full of space and dimension. It's sexy as hell. Reed Seed was a fitting way for Washington to leave the Kudu/Motown stable; it's a high-quality, wonderfully memorable set of mid- and uptempo funky jazz from a master. In addition, while the charts may not support this assertion, it is, along with his other records for these imprints and CTI before them, arguably the best and most consistent string of albums he ever recorded, as well as the platform that launched him into superstardom first with Elektra and then with Columbia. [Verve reissued this on CD in 2009 as part of their excellent Originals series.] ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi
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