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Season of Changes | 
enlarge | Artist: Brian Blade Fellowship Label: Verve Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $10.98 You Save: $8.00 (42%)
New (46) Used (10) from $10.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 7122
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 001069602 UPC: 602517610477 EAN: 0602517610477 ASIN: B0015MS7DO
Release Date: May 6, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!
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| Tracks:
| • | Rubylou's Lullaby | | • | Return of the Prodigal Son | | • | Stoner Hill | | • | Season of Changes | | • | Most Precious One | | • | Most Precious One (Prodigy) | | • | Improvisation | | • | Alpha and Omega | | • | Omni |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description 2008 release of Brian Blade and The Fellowship Band which is their first new album in eight years by this critically acclaimed ensemble. Season of Changes finds the dynamic performer and composer reunited with his writing partner and muse, Jon Cowherd (Lizz Wright's Salt) and the critically acclaimed guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel. Brian Blade is universally acknowledged as one of the finest drummers and musicians in all of popular music. His resume is as diverse as it is impressive having recorded and or/performed with Bob Dylan, Daniel Lanois, Bill Frisell, Emmylou Harris, Joni Mitchell, Joshua Redman, Seal, Wayne Shorter and more. 9 tracks.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Thanks Brian for some of Kurt's most enjoyable playing August 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I just played this cd after listening to Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar, co-produced by John Scofield, and I was struck by how Kurt Rosenwinkel's playing with the Brian Blade Fellowship sounds better to me than the playing of most of the greats of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. So many of these guys sound tense, as if they're trying to prove something. I like virtuosity as well the next man, but I like it most when a player's skill gives him the confidence to relax and get into a tune. Kurt's playing on this album displays that rare combination of flawless technique and a big heart. In fact these are my favorite KR tracks since Heartcore. Melvin Butler's tenor playing and Chris Thomas's bass playing are unusually soulful too. Thanks Brian for a great album.
The Wait is Over July 6, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have been checking and looking and waiting since Perceptual. In fact Perceptual is always in my rotation. The new CD Season of Changes has allowed Perceptual to rest (briefly). Contrary to it's title Blade and The Fellowship Band have not let up on making an audio experience visual. This groups sound makes you envision a place, a time or a person that you may or may not know. The sound is also atmosphere of intensity. When you hear them play, you feel them, you feel him. Absolutely outstanding from beginning to end and you will not put it down until his next CD (then you'll pick it back up again and again).
Taking Jazz to a different place... music for you soul! June 18, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
All of Brian Blades Fellowship albums (this is the third) are excellent! The compositions are from the heart and soul of the writer's and the players bring life to them with pieces of their own hearts and souls. This is not the same old bebop variations that you hear from Wynton and his followers. This is new music, that's rather difficult to pigeonhole. It's definitely jazz, though. There is great improvising, there is a great flow within the whole group. They obviously love to play this music, and they obviously love to play together. They have a definite group sound, and the compositions are not just platforms for solos, they are complex conceptual pieces that sound simple. That's a difficult thing to pull off and they do it masterfully. Be sure and listen to it several times before you decide if you like it. It grows on you, and soon you'll be carrying it with you everywhere you go, just like I do!
Mesmerizing June 3, 2008 3 out of 9 found this review helpful
This CD and his first release are well worth getting. (I did not get the second CD yet). I am unfamiliar with the BBF but recently heard a few cuts on the radio. At first you may think you are listing to Pat Methany but after awhile this group is very versitle and pleasently unpredictable. You can listen to the whole CD without being concerned about quality. Thoughts of the Jazz Crusaders and Kenny Garrett come to mind as Brian Blade allows his band great liberty in his long pieces. I say support real jazz...support the BBF!
Intoxicatingly delicious June 2, 2008 12 out of 20 found this review helpful
Two albums in, I've learned to recognise Brian Blade's very unique sound and as soon as I heard the first few bars of the first track on this CD, the first we've heard from him and his Fellowship Band since 2000, a beatific smile spread over my face. Some hoping for some sort of musical radical departure may be disappointed, feeling that this is just more of the same but I'm as happy as a lark with it. As always, Kurt Rosenwinkel's guitar seduced me in from the word go and I was swept away right until the very last note of the final track.
More or less all the members of the Fellowship Band are present and correct: supporting Blade and his drums are Jon Cowherd on piano, pump organ, Moog & Wurlitzer; Rosenwinkel is on guitar of course; Myron Walden is on alto saxophone & bass clarinet; Melvin Butler on tenor saxophone and Chris Thomas is on bass. The only thing missing from the familiar mix is Dave Easley and his pedal steel guitar but it's a minor deficiency - if that's even the appropriate word to use - and goes practically unnoticed.
I have no favourite tracks this time around (though the unusually thumping, driving beat of "Most Precious One (Prodigy)" is the one song that made me look up from what I was doing while I was listening); the entire album is intoxicatingly delicious. Highly recommended, as are Blade's other two recordings, 1998's Brian Blade Fellowship and 2000's Perceptual.
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