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Brooklyn Ritual

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Download links and information about Brooklyn Ritual by Kenny Berger. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:06:18 minutes.

Artist: Kenny Berger
Release date: 1998
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:06:18
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Emerson 5:55
2. Doo-wop 4:20
3. Smoke 5:03
4. One Last Goodbye 4:20
5. Brazil 6:53
6. Hogwash 7:03
7. Big City 3:38
8. Stevie Steps Out 5:46
9. Strictly Ballroom 7:27
10. Afu 6:44
11. Something Cool 4:14
12. Reggae Jackson 4:55

Details

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Some dogmatists in the jazz world would have us believe that improvisers have to record a lot of overdone standards in order to prove that they are legitimate. Such dogma is mindless; while standards can be great for practicing, there is no law stating that jazzmen are obligated to record a lot of them — or that original material cannot dominate their albums. To his credit, trumpeter John McNeil does most of the writing himself on Brooklyn Ritual, a 1997 date that he co-leads with reedman Kenny Berger (who is heard on baritone sax, clarinet, and bass clarinet). All of the musicians on this CD are New York residents; that is true of McNeil and Berger as well as trombonist John Mosca, bassist Dean Johnson, and drummer Steve Johns. The only well-known standard that this pianoless quintet interprets is Ary Barroso's "Brazil"; McNeil is the composer on decent post-bop pieces that range from the melancholy "One Last Goodbye" and the angular "Strictly Ballroom" to the intriguing "Doo-Wop," which manages to combine doo wop elements with the intellect of Miles Davis' 1960s groups. Doo wop, of course, was never meant to be intellectual — it thrived on simplicity — and McNeil's ability to fuse doo wop with something totally different speaks well of the Davis-influenced trumpeter. Brooklyn Ritual isn't a masterpiece, but it's a likable post-bop effort that will appeal to those who have a taste for the cerebral.