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All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller
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All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99

Barnes and Noble
All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Yeah,
All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller
is a tribute to the great stride pianist, but in
Jason Moran
's hands, it's not what one would expect. This album isn't full of stride piano, but it is full of
Fats Waller
's larger persona as a performer.
Waller
mixed jokes and comic routines, and did whatever he could to connect with his audience in his act, and if his piano playing was the hinge, it sat on a door that opened straight to the dancefloor. This album had its beginnings when
Moran
was commissioned by the N.Y.C. performing arts venue Harlem Stage Gatehouse to create a tribute to
as part of its Harlem Jazz Shrines series.
came up with a unique combination of piano, vocal jazz, and dance that used
's signature songs as springboards. Collaborating with singer
Meshell Ndegeocello
, wearing a large papier-mache mask of
's head created for him by Haitian artist
Didier Civil
, and adding interpretive dancers,
called his conceptual tribute The Fats Waller Dance Party, and
All Rise
is the studio-recorded rendition of the project. It's a stunning mix of piano jazz with moody, winsome late-night vocals, and it has plenty of get-up-and-go when it's time for it. If it doesn't sound much like
, one could imagine
would love it, and his signature songs are well represented, including "Ain't Misbehavin'," which
Ndegeocello
sings with a wistfully sultry edge, "The Joint Is Jumpin'," which is just that, a joyous and yet graceful romp, and a ethereal take on "Ain't Nobody's Business," which in
and
's hands becomes a dark, moody, and elegantly defiant statement in modal jazz. This set manages to be reverent to
's original recordings, but since facsimile was never the goal, it also manages to create a completely new veneer for them, and the end result is a marvelous tribute that still retains its own shape and coherency. ~ Steve Leggett
All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller
is a tribute to the great stride pianist, but in
Jason Moran
's hands, it's not what one would expect. This album isn't full of stride piano, but it is full of
Fats Waller
's larger persona as a performer.
Waller
mixed jokes and comic routines, and did whatever he could to connect with his audience in his act, and if his piano playing was the hinge, it sat on a door that opened straight to the dancefloor. This album had its beginnings when
Moran
was commissioned by the N.Y.C. performing arts venue Harlem Stage Gatehouse to create a tribute to
as part of its Harlem Jazz Shrines series.
came up with a unique combination of piano, vocal jazz, and dance that used
's signature songs as springboards. Collaborating with singer
Meshell Ndegeocello
, wearing a large papier-mache mask of
's head created for him by Haitian artist
Didier Civil
, and adding interpretive dancers,
called his conceptual tribute The Fats Waller Dance Party, and
All Rise
is the studio-recorded rendition of the project. It's a stunning mix of piano jazz with moody, winsome late-night vocals, and it has plenty of get-up-and-go when it's time for it. If it doesn't sound much like
, one could imagine
would love it, and his signature songs are well represented, including "Ain't Misbehavin'," which
Ndegeocello
sings with a wistfully sultry edge, "The Joint Is Jumpin'," which is just that, a joyous and yet graceful romp, and a ethereal take on "Ain't Nobody's Business," which in
and
's hands becomes a dark, moody, and elegantly defiant statement in modal jazz. This set manages to be reverent to
's original recordings, but since facsimile was never the goal, it also manages to create a completely new veneer for them, and the end result is a marvelous tribute that still retains its own shape and coherency. ~ Steve Leggett
Yeah,
All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller
is a tribute to the great stride pianist, but in
Jason Moran
's hands, it's not what one would expect. This album isn't full of stride piano, but it is full of
Fats Waller
's larger persona as a performer.
Waller
mixed jokes and comic routines, and did whatever he could to connect with his audience in his act, and if his piano playing was the hinge, it sat on a door that opened straight to the dancefloor. This album had its beginnings when
Moran
was commissioned by the N.Y.C. performing arts venue Harlem Stage Gatehouse to create a tribute to
as part of its Harlem Jazz Shrines series.
came up with a unique combination of piano, vocal jazz, and dance that used
's signature songs as springboards. Collaborating with singer
Meshell Ndegeocello
, wearing a large papier-mache mask of
's head created for him by Haitian artist
Didier Civil
, and adding interpretive dancers,
called his conceptual tribute The Fats Waller Dance Party, and
All Rise
is the studio-recorded rendition of the project. It's a stunning mix of piano jazz with moody, winsome late-night vocals, and it has plenty of get-up-and-go when it's time for it. If it doesn't sound much like
, one could imagine
would love it, and his signature songs are well represented, including "Ain't Misbehavin'," which
Ndegeocello
sings with a wistfully sultry edge, "The Joint Is Jumpin'," which is just that, a joyous and yet graceful romp, and a ethereal take on "Ain't Nobody's Business," which in
and
's hands becomes a dark, moody, and elegantly defiant statement in modal jazz. This set manages to be reverent to
's original recordings, but since facsimile was never the goal, it also manages to create a completely new veneer for them, and the end result is a marvelous tribute that still retains its own shape and coherency. ~ Steve Leggett
All Rise: A Joyful Elegy for Fats Waller
is a tribute to the great stride pianist, but in
Jason Moran
's hands, it's not what one would expect. This album isn't full of stride piano, but it is full of
Fats Waller
's larger persona as a performer.
Waller
mixed jokes and comic routines, and did whatever he could to connect with his audience in his act, and if his piano playing was the hinge, it sat on a door that opened straight to the dancefloor. This album had its beginnings when
Moran
was commissioned by the N.Y.C. performing arts venue Harlem Stage Gatehouse to create a tribute to
as part of its Harlem Jazz Shrines series.
came up with a unique combination of piano, vocal jazz, and dance that used
's signature songs as springboards. Collaborating with singer
Meshell Ndegeocello
, wearing a large papier-mache mask of
's head created for him by Haitian artist
Didier Civil
, and adding interpretive dancers,
called his conceptual tribute The Fats Waller Dance Party, and
All Rise
is the studio-recorded rendition of the project. It's a stunning mix of piano jazz with moody, winsome late-night vocals, and it has plenty of get-up-and-go when it's time for it. If it doesn't sound much like
, one could imagine
would love it, and his signature songs are well represented, including "Ain't Misbehavin'," which
Ndegeocello
sings with a wistfully sultry edge, "The Joint Is Jumpin'," which is just that, a joyous and yet graceful romp, and a ethereal take on "Ain't Nobody's Business," which in
and
's hands becomes a dark, moody, and elegantly defiant statement in modal jazz. This set manages to be reverent to
's original recordings, but since facsimile was never the goal, it also manages to create a completely new veneer for them, and the end result is a marvelous tribute that still retains its own shape and coherency. ~ Steve Leggett

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