Create account Log in

Nick@Night

[Edit]

Download links and information about Nick@Night by Nicholas Payton. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Jazz, Contemporary Jazz genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:11:35 minutes.

Artist: Nicholas Payton
Release date: 1999
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:11:35
Buy on iTunes $4.99
Buy on Amazon $4.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Beyond the Stars 5:46
2. Captain Crunch (Meets the Cereal Killer) 5:31
3. Faith (For Faith Evans) 8:39
4. Pleasant Dreams 4:34
5. Interlude No. 1 (Turn up the Funk) 0:55
6. Nick@Night 6:14
7. Somnia 5:24
8. Interlude No. 2 (Turn Out the Burn Out) 1:10
9. Prince of the Night 6:51
10. Blacker Black's Revenge 8:28
11. Little Angel (For Christopher) 5:58
12. Exquisite Tenderness 4:52
13. Sun Goddess 7:13

Details

[Edit]

By the last years of the 1990s, Nicholas Payton's trumpet-playing and leadership abilities were growing in leaps and bounds in live performance. However, the valedictory record of that decade displays growth only in the former and mostly caution in the latter, for Payton remains staunchly committed to the neo-bop verities and ceremonies. Part of the problem is that Payton's material — he contributes ten of the 13 tracks — is still not terribly memorable by and large, although he may be developing a distinctive talent for naming tunes. You gotta love titles like "Captain Crunch (Meets the Cereal Killer)" and "Nick@Night," but the music is strictly traditional stuff, refusing to transcend the ordinary. There are exceptions early and late on the disc when touches of instrumental enterprise peek through; "Beyond the Stars" would sound like an ordinary slice of post-bop were it not for the fact that Anthony Wonsey (and Payton!) are playing harpsichords, adding a sting from an instrument not explored much in jazz since the swing era. The multi-sectioned "Faith" also has its best moments when backed by harpsichord and celeste, and "Sun Goddess," a tune done by Ramsey Lewis in the '70s, has a striking harpsichord-backed opening. There is no doubt that Payton's choice of notes and use of space continues to mature, and his quintet — with Wonsey on piano, Tim Warfield on saxophones, Reuben Rogers on bass, and Adonis Rose on drums — just gets tighter and more intuitively interactive. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi