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"Melancholy and menace: those are the feelings that all film noir seems to exude like a vapor... that pungent and irresistible noir atmosphere, ... shadows, rain-slicked streets, blinking neon signs and dimly lit rooms, shrouded by heavy drapes... the uncanny quality of... some eternal, imagined past, like a memory of a life you never lived... Like film noir, jazz moves in a world whose meaning exists in a mood, where story and content cannot be separated from the palpable atmosphere in which they exist... here... the parallel universes of jazz and noir collide... in the melancholy air of something just out of reach, in the darkly romantic allure of the pursuit of the forbidden... This is where Fallen Angel succeeds so brilliantly. Starting with impeccable choices of classic noir scores, it then turns the extraordinary Bob Sneider/Joe Locke Septet loose to improvise around the themes. This alchemy, the inspiration of producer Frank Aloi, brings together the best of both worlds and results in something that, like all great ideas, feels at once strikingly original and at the same time, utterly inevitable—a classic simply waiting to be discovered.
— Allen Coulter, Director Allen Coulter resides with his wife Kim, in NYC; he is the director of many of the most critically acclaimed episodes of the Sopranos, and numerous other TV series episodes and pilots, as well as the upcoming feature film for Focus Films, "Truth, Justice and the American Way", a drama focusing on the mysterious death of actor George Reeves, TV's "Superman". (Adapted from Premiere Magazine 2-15-06 / Interview Magazine 2-28-06 ads) CD Number - SonsOfSound SSPCD031/SO20031
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Featuring Bob Sneider and Joe Locke. In record stores February 22, 2006, from Sons of Sound.
The Film Noir Project is:
I know this music will take you away. Joe Locke's matchless playing and writing bring life to Fallen Angel, a love that involves a line not to be crossed, the bitter-sweet pleasure of it all, and the gut wrenching pain of knowing that before the dawn she'll be gone, with another. Paul Hofmann's "Last Kiss" takes up where Joe Locke leaves off — she's gone again, the fading filmstock of a love for a lifetime that was but a snap shot, and now nothing. The unique voicings of Bob Sneider's guitar and Joe Locke's vibes playing over and in the traditional instrumentation of the be-bop quintet — an artistry that perfectly fits the frame of each noir portrait to be painted. Bob Sneider, already a master among his peers, but a talent deserving far greater recognition among jazz fans, can walk the walk in both solos and arranging; in his thematic statements — feel the Parisian cabaret of the 20's in his “Le Modernes” arrangement, and solos, in the idiom, always great jazz improvisation, outside the box. Joe Locke's arrangement of “Mulholland Falls,” complex, compelling, a massive conspiracy in the desert at the genesis of the nuclear age after WW II, and the cover up of radiation sickness, and then the smaller, personal, and more devastating conspiracy of the investigating cop, a cheating husband, undone by blind chance in the apparently unrelated homicide case that propels the action. Phil Flanigan's bluesy boozy portrait of Phil Marlowe in “Farewell My Lovely,” perfectly portraying Robert Mitchum, the quintessential private eye, standing behind a dirty window in a flea-bag hotel in pre-war LA, staring out at the neon washed boulevards, lamenting a lifetime of tilting with the windmills of human frailty at the price of growing old with nothing more than a snap brim hat, trench coat, and .38. John Sneider's re-harmonizing of the Diva theme, the night walk in Paris, the "diva", and the bike-messenger, finally in one surreal moment, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower, walking as one, lost in an all too brief moment that insulates them from inexplicable murder and mayhem. The playing is superlative, every arrangement darkly beautiful — the irresistible honey trap of “Body Heat,” the danse macabre of “Farewell to Maria,” the gambler's soliloquy to love lost in “Hurricane Country.” John Sneider's trumpet laments perfectly capturing the gorgeous melodies. Grant Stewart, a post bop tenor, comfortable in the idiom, but with the big tone reminiscent of Lester Young, Ben Webster, and Coleman Hawkins, carrying forward the after-hours themes with short but memorable solos. And Paul Hofmann, Mike Melito and Phil Flanigan propelling every piece and perfectly complementing the front line. Listen, no happy endings here, but a bittersweet beauty nonetheless — let the Bob Sneider/Joe Locke Film Noir Project take you away — ENJOY! — it was a pleasure being a part of this project. — Frank Aloi (from CD liner notes) |