Frank Unzueta: Thoughts Revealed.
Sunstone Records. $12.97.
Junior Doctor: Clumsy Words and
Bad Pickup Lines. Hubbub. $9.99.
Tae Phoenix: Rise. $7.99.
The music on Thoughts Revealed is not really “a new
sound in jazz,” as pianist/composer Frank Unzueta considers it to be. It is, in fact, rather determinedly
old-fashioned – in a good sense. The CD
mainly focuses on Unzueta – not surprisingly, since he produced it and wrote
all the music – but also showcases the talents of Gordon Peeke on drums and percussion,
Larry Steen on acoustic and electric bass, and Eric Marienthal on soprano
saxophone. The performers play well
together and, just as importantly, play well off each other, handing tunes and
themes among themselves neatly and pleasantly.
The nine tracks on the disc meander through most of the moods that jazz
conveys. The Me You Created is a nicely formed ballad that contrasts
interestingly with the lyrical Angel
Girl. Many of the pieces have a
wistful, romantic sound to them, including Elisa’s
Dream, Anything for You (For Cathy) and Love
Me When Winter Comes. But Unzueta
offers other emotions, too. There is,
not surprisingly, a strong Spanish cast to Madrid,
the longest track and in some ways the most elaborate. And the distinctly upbeat Happy Toes Rag is a real charmer, with
swing rhythm and clear Scott Joplin inspiration. The two remaining works, The Apostle and It Means
Nothing…It Means Everything, have charms of their own, with Unzueta’s piano
usually dominant but plenty of opportunities for the other instrumentalists to
shine as well. Fans of straightforward,
moody but not depressive jazz, nicely arranged and well played, will enjoy this
disc.
Enjoyment is harder to
come by in the (++) Clumsy Words and Bad
Pickup Lines by the Florida-based Junior Doctor. The band’s name comes from its four members’
medical-school history (they are all dropouts, presumably now pursuing a
higher…well, at least different…vocation).
Mark Hartman is lead singer and rhythm guitarist; Jarrod Kearney is on
drums; Richard Peidro handles bass; and Terrence Donnelly is guitarist. Three of the dozen tracks on Clumsy Words and Bad Pickup Lines, the
group’s second CD, are pretty good: Uh-Oh,
Dancing in Your Dreams and Impressive. But most of the songs sound rather insincere,
with a manufactured and polished veneer that is perhaps intended to be
sophisticated but comes across as crassly commercial – as if the aim is to rock
out, but not too much. What I Do and Wrong Place, Right Time seem intended as dark-side-of-adolescence
tales, and they are certainly adolescent enough – but their effect is rather
juvenile. In contrast, Back Home is apparently supposed to be
sweet, but it sounds programmed and superficial. Leaving
feels derivative, and the other tracks – Perfect
Girl (Make Her Mine), Keep On, Beautiful and Blind, Alright and Not Now – all have a calculated feel to
them, as if the whole CD has been carefully packaged to produce a snappy pop-rock
mashup. Nothing really wrong with that,
but nothing very individualistic or memorable, either. The CD is kind of OK, kind of emo scream,
kind of energetic, kind of bouncy, but never really goes beyond “kind of”
anything.
Tae Phoenix’s (+++) Rise, though, is actually kind of
neat. Phoenix (Teresa Valdez Klein) has
declared herself a singer-songwriter and pianist and also calls herself a
feminist, geek and “subvertiser.” Oh, and
she works for T-Mobile, because “every aspiring musician needs a day job.” Wise words, those. The words on Rise, an independent release, are perhaps not so wise, but they are
certainly intense enough. In fact,
“intense” pretty well describes Phoenix’s style. Yes, the eight tracks here (two being
different versions of the same song) are all about the usual stuff – love, loss
and so forth – but Phoenix delivers them strongly: she has a big voice, if not
an especially distinctive one, and she uses it well in piano-driven music that
has some flavor of Elton John and some of Christina Aguilera. That doesn’t sound like a very promising
combination, but Phoenix almost makes it work.
Wendy’s Tale, Beautiful Lies,
Rise, I Loved You Then, You Raised the Bar and Set Me Free – the titles capture the ideas of the songs, and
although the topics, like the titles, are pretty straightforward and fairly
similar to each other, Phoenix delivers each one as if she really means
it. Her sincerity overcomes the weakness
of her topics. The two most interesting
tracks on the CD are the “clean” and “explicit” versions of Does She Know Yet? – which starts with
the line, “You didn’t need to lie to keep me in your bed” and goes on from
there in entirely unsurprising directions to which Phoenix brings more
sincerity than the words themselves would indicate. “You’re fake and you’ll break every promise
you make, and excuse it with a smile” – come on! But what is good about Phoenix isn’t her
lyrics – it’s the way she puts them across, giving them heartfelt meaning that
goes beyond what the words themselves say.
Rise is most notable for mixing
a set of not-very-special ingredients together to create something effective
and enjoyable, if not quite magical.
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