Adam Nussbaum – The Lead Belly Project (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 43:59 minutes | 838 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Artwork: Digital booklet | © Sunnyside Communications
The discovery of the music of Leadbelly was transformative for young Adam Nussbaum. The only child of artistic parents in Norwalk, Connecticut, Nussbaum was exposed to many recordings, from classical and folk to jazz and blues. It was the image of Huddie Ledbetter on the original Folkways 10-inch record covers that fascinated the five year old. The celebrated blues and folk musician’s music seared itself into his ears, as it does in young listeners, informing the future drummer’s musical approach for years to come, most explicitly on his new recording, “The Leadbelly Project”.
From jazz and soul to rock and country, the blues are the bedrock and a uniting feature for much of the popular music originating in the United Sates. The simple and repetitive structures are easy to grasp and perform, making the blues extremely approachable. Under the command of brilliant writers like the legendary Lead Belly, the blues maintains a unique place between high art and common expression.
The blues is simple music. What do they call it? Three chords and the truth? They say the same about country music and rock, but that’s another article. But for much of American music, blues is the bedrock, be it rock, soul, funk, a good slice of country western, and, yes, jazz.
Drummer Adam Nussbaum zeros in on the blues with the Lead Belly Project, exploring the seminal delta blues of Huddie Ledbetter (1888-1949), aka, Lead Belly. An inspirational artist, Lead Belly has found its way into jazz explorations often. Saxophonist Clifford Jordan went there in a big way with These Are Our Roots: The Music of Lead Belly (Atlantic Records, 1965); and saxophonist Geof Bradfield—inspired by Lead Belly via Jordan, presented in 2015 the excellent Our Roots (Origin Records). Lead Belly was one of the smoother, more polished of the delta blues artists (it is, of course, relative), his sound less raw than that of Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton or Son House. Interestingly, Nussbaum and his cohorts lean toward the raw side with their takes on Some of Lead Belly’s best known tunes. It’s two guitars, Steve Cardenas and Nate Radley, joined by saxophonist Ohad Talmor and drummer/leader Nussbaum, immersed in the glorious simplicity of the music. Talmor’s sax has restrained, rough-around-the-edges sound at times, and a big, holy, resonant tone at others. The guitar-manship is refined, luminous—a country twang sneaks in on “Bring Me A Little Water, Sylvie.” They have a rockabilly feel on “Black Girl (Where Did You Sleep Last Night).” As rough hewn as this quartet’s renderings are, there is also a deft exquisiteness to them. A loose, spontaneous, soundtrack-to-America feeling, with top level musicianship involved in the serving up elemental sounds.
Tracklist:
01 – Old Riley
02 – Green Corn
03 – Black Girl (Where Did You Sleep Last Night)
04 – Bottle Up and Go
05 – Black Betty
06 – Grey Goose
07 – Bring Me a Little Water, Sylvie
08 – You Can’t Loose Me Cholly
09 – Insight, Enlight
10 – Sure Would Baby
11 – Goodnight Irene
Musicians:
Adam Nussbaum – drums
Ohad Talmor – saxophone
Steve Cardenas – guitar
Nate Radley – guitar
Download:
mqs.link_AdamNussbaumTheLeadBellyPrject2018HDTracks24882.rar