Wallace Roney: No Room for Argument

Wallace Roney: No Room for Argument

performed by Wallace Roney, 1960-, Steve Hall, 1953-, Antoine Roney, 1963-, Geri Allen, 1957-, Adam Holzman, 1958-, Buster Williams, 1942-, Lenny White, 1949- and Val Jeanty, fl. 1998 (Concord Jazz, 2000), 1 hour 12 mins, 10 page(s)

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Details

Field of Interest
Jazz
Content Type
Music recording
Duration
1 hour 12 mins
Format
Audio
Sub Genre
Avant-Garde
Label
Concord Jazz
Page Count
10
Performer
Wallace Roney, 1960-, Steve Hall, 1953-, Antoine Roney, 1963-, Geri Allen, 1957-, Adam Holzman, 1958-, Buster Williams, 1942-, Lenny White, 1949-, Val Jeanty, fl. 1998
Date Recorded
2000-04
Release Date
2000
Review
Wallace Roney's No Room for Argument is about "heritage, mentors, wisdom, responsibility, and spirituality." This CD is packed with excellent straight-ahead, avant-garde, and free jazz that also features samples from speeches given by {%Martin Luther King, Jr.}, {%Malcolm X}, and audio by {%Deepak Chopra}. Roney's evolved, imaginative use of his muted trumpet to achieve the meditative and philosophical concepts inherent in the opener "No Room for Argument" is accomplished effectively. Roney weaves its sound into the well-known orations delivered by {%King} and {%Malcolm X}, giving each note a new design that offers his solution to the challenges of performing respected works in a new medium. His mentor piece, an arrangement and direction of "Homage & Acknowledgement," a vital rework featuring the duality of the great Buster Williams at work on the bassline for John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme," and Roney's interpretation of the trumpet sounds of Miles Davis on "Filles de Kilimanjaro" is a exceptional seven-minute masterwork that supplies both the spiritual depth and insistent ground rhythms inherent in the original recordings of the '60s. "Virtual Chocolate Cherry" is a boundless arena for the world-class drummer Lenny White. He makes a very strong impression and his very presence on this CD serves to further the respect Roney has for the lasting mark on his playing on this CD -- the open sound of the '60s that Lenny White helped Miles Davis to initiate. He gives his Gretsch a workout tempered by excellent solos from Geri Allen and Adam Holzman. This CD is a great one and shows Roney as a leading jazz trumpeter. ~ Paula Edelstein, All Music Guide
Subject
Jazz, Music & Performing Arts, Avant-garde, Avant-Garde
Keywords and Translated Subjects
Avant-Garde

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