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Irvin Mayfield – New Orleans Jazz Playhouse (7CD/Book) *US ONLY*

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*When Ordering Outside Of US, Please Contact The Store*

Release Year: 2015

Label: Basin Street

Track List

CD1

  1. Angola (For Ernest Gaines)
  2. Seven Years (Feat. Jamison Ross)
  3. Keep On Pushing (Feat. Jamison Ross and Michael Watson)
  4. Blue In Green
  5. James Booker
  6. Li’l Liza Jane (Feat. Gerald French)

CD2

  1. Yesterday (Feat. Davell Crawford)
  2. Old Wyne
  3. Vodou Love Call
  4. Fatimah
  5. Buddy Bolden’s Blues (Feat. Don Vappie)

CD3

  1. Skyfall (Feat. Sasha Masakowski)
  2. The Denial
  3. Back Home Again In Indiana/Donna Lee
  4. Saint James Infirmary Blues (Feat. Sasha Masakowski)
  5. They All Ask’d For You (Feat. George Porter, Jr.)

CD4

  1. Harlis Laughing
  2. Tom Thumb
  3. Othello And Desdemona
  4. Over The Rainbow/Skylark
  5. Eh La Bas (Feat. Don Vappie)

CD5

  1. You Are My Sunshine
  2. The Affair
  3. Marzique Dancing
  4. Jasmine

CD6

  1. Mack The Knife (Feat. James Rivers)
  2. Dianne
  3. The Obsession
  4. Pretty One

CD7

  1. When My Dreamboat Comes Home
  2. Love Petals
  3. Someone To Watch Over Me/ My Funny Valentine
  4. Magnolia Triangle

Hard Cover

The seven CDs included with this book were recorded live at Irvin Mayfield’s Jazz Playhouse on world-famous Bourbon Street in the heart of the French Quarter. The impetus for the recording was the “Love Sessions,” the annual weeklong fund-raising event envisioned by the musician-author to commemorate the victims of Hurricane Katrina and to help rebuild the city of New Orleans. Joined on stage by dozens of special guest and further fueled by a loyal and impassioned audience, the Playhouse revue easily captured the essence of Jazz During those sessions. Now, through recordings from that generous occasion, Irvin Mayfield and his friends continue to give back to the city while taking you, the listener, on an intimate and inspirational journey.

Irvin Mayfield prides himself on offering visitors to his Jazz club a bespoke experience, from the lyrical sounds crafted to the singular libations served there. And this book is no different. Page after page of carefully curated images and passionately penned essays amass to create a portrait of a place, a celebration of a culture, and an invitation to indulge in the love supreme that is New Orleans Jazz.

 

Reviewed In OffBeat

John Swenson (Jazz Fest Bible 2015 Issue)

Trumpeter Irvin Mayfield has taken a typically contrarian approach to the death of the music business. Instead of compressing his music into the tiniest package technically possible and distributing it for free on the Internet, Mayfield has gone in the opposite direction, releasing a collector’s item 7-CD package of music accompanied by a lavish coffee table book. And Irvin Mayfield really knows how to make a great coffee table project.

Where most artists have been cut off at the knees by the disappearance of seed money for projects, Mayfield has run his various operations like the wily executive he is, partnering with public and private industry to actualize his various ideas and promoting jazz as a viable entertainment alternative at a time when public opinion polls list jazz as the least popular genre of music in the United States. Priced at $119, this set is not out of line for a 7-CD collection, but instead of putting it in a plastic CD jewel case or LP-sized box, the seven discs are tucked into the covers of the book. Think of the book as the most luxurious set of liner notes you’ll ever encounter. The set is organized around seven days of music in Irvin Mayfield’s Jazz Playhouse, located on the ground floor of the Royal Sonesta Hotel. Each day highlights the regularly scheduled performers at the Playhouse as well as standing for a day during the run of Mayfield’s favorite charity operation, “The Love Sessions,” an annual week-long event that culminates on the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, August 29th.

The book includes beautiful photographs by Gordon Parks and Herman Leonard, reproductions of Blue Dog paintings by George Rodrigue, who Mayfield says inspires him to play, photographs of food and drink available at the Playhouse, menus and posters from the club and from Mayfield’s career, beautiful photographs of the performers, from the sage of New Orleans jazz Ellis Marsalis to contemporary burlesque queen Trixie Minx, and much more, all on expensive paper, all suitable for framing. It is a luxury item well worth adding to the bill of every hotel guest at the Sonesta, every music lover with a Big Chief pass to the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.

It is also a great collection of music by an outstanding group of musicians. The New Orleans Jazz Playhouse Revue is a septet augmented by special guests over the course of the week.

There’s too much here to review in great detail but I’ll offer highlights:

Disc 1: “Angola (for Ernest Gaines).” This soulful Mayfield composition features outstanding solos from trombonist Vince Gardiner, saxophonists Jason Marshall and Derek Douget, Mayfield and pianist John Chin.

“Keep On Pushing.” This Curtis Mayfield classic is a great medium for the hypnotic groove Irvin Mayfield’s band can lay down. Vocalists Jamison Ross and Michael Watson harmonize beautifully on this track.

“Li’l Liza Jane.” Uplifting New Orleans traditional Mardi Gras Indian songs get a spirited treatment from drummer/vocalist Gerald French, who plays the Playhouse every Monday night with the Original Tuxedo jazz band.

Disc 2: “Old Wyne.” The first of several compositions by the late great drummer James Black. Mayfield’s rediscovery of Black’s catalog on this album is worth the price of admission by itself.

“Buddy Bolden’s Blues.” Mayfield closes with another party tune, this one featuring Don Vappie on banjo.

Disc 3: “St. James Infirmary Blues.” This early 20th century song, originally about the Yellow Fever plague, took on new meaning after Katrina. Sasha Masakowski really nails it and Vince Gardner contributes a hair-raising trombone solo.

“They All Ask’d for You.” Bassist/vocalist George Porter Jr. joins the fray for this joyous romp through a classic from the Meters and elsewhere.

Disc 4: “Harlis Laughing.” A mesmerizing Harold Battiste composition gives the band members another chance to lay out in superb fashion. Vince Gardiner leads off with a trombone solo of impressive power, swing and tonal grace. Mayfield plays one of his best solos on the record.

Disc 5: “Marzique Dancing.” Another great piece by Battiste with a nuanced performance from the band on a gorgeous arrangement. John Chin sounds like he’s literally dancing across the keyboards. Derek Douget’s tenor floats like high cloud formations, swept along by the rhythm section’s tradewinds. You can tell how much respect Mayfield has for Battiste by the trumpet solos he brings to these songs.

“Jasmine.” One of the most important things Mayfield does on this record is call attention to the great New Orleans drummer and composer James Black, who never got a real chance to present himself to the public. This killer tune gets an expressive vocal from Michael Watson and an absolutely devotional muted trumpet solo from Mayfield.

Disc 6: “Pretty One.” Another transcendent theme from James Black, this previously unrecorded gem unfolds magnificently in this clever arrangement. Mayfield leads off with a lengthy, statement-of-purpose solo before the band members trade variations on the theme.

Disc 7: “When My Dreamboat Comes Home.” Looking at the title, I figured this was a toss. Then I listened to it. The tune can be as cornball as they come, but this band elevates it to a level of hipness that has to be experienced to be believed, really the essence of the New Orleans experience. Mayfield says that whenever they play this people dance. I believe it.

“Magnolia Triangle.” The package finishes up with one more James Black tune, one of his best-known compositions. The band negotiates the tricky theme with merry aplomb. Everybody gets a chance to blow on this funk-drenched and pertinently polychromatic vehicle.

This band could easily do an album of Black compositions, an album of Battiste arrangements, an album of traditional jazz, an album of New Orleans R&B, an album of Mayfield’s own songwriting and a ballads album. And that’s kind of what this musical week-long session breaks down to.


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