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Robert Walter
Super Heavy Organ
MT-2309-2
Recorded in New Orleans
Robert Walter - Hammond Organ,
Clavinet, Piano, Melodica and Percussion
Stanton Moore – Drums and Percussion
Johnny Vidacovich – Drums and Cymbals
Tim Green – Tenor Sax
James Singleton – Bass
Anthony Farrell – Vocals
All tracks except "Poor Tom" by Robert Walter.
"Poor Tom" (Page/Plant)
The Hammond Organ. Ask anyone who has played one on the club scene and they ’ll tell you horror stories about jacking the B3 up fire escapes or removing
doorframes; not to mention the instrument’s sheer weight, alone. No
question, the Hammond is a super heavy organ.
Then there’s what’s under the hood. There are two layers of keys, four sets
of drawbars, and eighteen changeable presets, creating a sound that arguably
smokes any modern instrument. You need a virtuoso sitting behind the
Hammond or, somehow, it doesn’t erupt in those fat, bubbly tones, or in
those long glissandos that rip the paint off the wall.
“I just love the instrument,” Robert Walter enthuses. He knows the mantle
he wears when he plays the Hammond and the Leslie. He knows the lineage,
which, in no particular order, includes Jimmy Smith, Brother Jack McDuff,
Jimmy McGriff, and newcomers like Joey DeFrancesco. Walter wasn’t born
behind an organ; in fact, he began gigging with a piano and a Fender Rhodes.
The story goes that he wanted something more powerful, wider in
bandwidth—something…heavier.
Robert Walter’s Super Heavy Organ
Robert Walter is the definitive soul-jazz organist of his generation. His
latest project, Super Heavy Organ, was recorded in his new hometown of New
Orleans. One cannot help but wonder why he waited until recently to
relocate from his native West Coast to the Crescent City, with its musical
history rich in both classic jazz and dirty loose limbed funk. “I had been
performing in New Orleans for years. As a kid I was obsessed with the music
coming out of this city. I made a decision to come here and experience it
first hand. It’s the best move I have ever made. I have been lucky enough
to record an album with some of my favorite musicians, people who have
influenced me,” remarks Walter. The new release is a collaboration with
some of the city’s most respected musicians, including drummers Stanton
Moore and Johnny Vidacovich, bassist James Singleton, tenor saxophonist Tim
Green and guest vocalist Anthony Farrell. They recorded live in the studio
with a decidedly rough edged sound to capture the raw spontaneity of the
performances. The interactions between the young leader and his veteran
band mates are mutually inspired. “My concept was not to imitate New Orleans
music of the past, but to infuse the tradition with my own ideas,” he
describes. The resulting music is both exploratory and modern while
maintaining its ties to the heritage of jazz. It is unquestionably
innovative and funky at the same time.
Robert Walter has earned international acclaim for his work with the Greyboy
All-Stars, who are credited with resurrecting the classic soul-jazz sound
for a modern audience, and for pioneering his own group, the 20th Congress.
Walter’s bold attack of his Hammond B-3 and inventive compositions give his
Super Heavy Organ band its edge and place it at the forefront of the modern
jazz scene. His playing is by turns dissonant and audacious or subtle and
soulful, favoring surprising shifts of emotion over show stopping technique.
He explains, “I try to keep a sense of danger in my music.” His unique
melodies are a celebrated contribution to the evolution of jazz, soul and
funk music.
Robert showcases his genius on the Super Heavy Organ album, specifically
with the track “Criminals Have a Name for It.” Indeed! Robert highlights
the bottom register of the acoustic piano, using the low keys to demark a
sort of Gulf Coast clave, juxtaposing thick organ tones overtop. The next
track, “34 Small” is a jazz waltz, against which Walter, pulls out all of
the stops, soloing with eighths, sixteenths, and thirty-second note
clusters. All the while, the pulse and the energy magnify.
Stanton Moore is the ideal drummer to accent a powerhouse ensemble of New
Orleans infused jazz and funk. Born and raised in Louisiana, Moore has
undoubtedly been influenced by the past and present jazz greats who have
resided there. Moore gained recognition as a founder of the funk/groove
band, Galactic, with whom he continues to tour. He released Flying the Koop
in 2002; a highly charged, improvisation-rich collaboration with Chris Wood,
Karl Denson, Brian Seeger and saxophonist Skerik. Moore tours with Robert
Walter in the funk super group, Frequinox, and was featured on Robert’s 2000
release Money Shot. No one in the business can compete with the incredible
energy that Moore provides on stage, enabling him to pull magical rhythms
from his drum kit. Stanton Moore owns up about the first track on the
Super Heavy Organ album, “I’ve always enjoyed working with Robert. He’s a
great player and a great writer. I always look forward to learning whatever
new tunes he brings to the table. I learned ‘Adelita’ at the session and it’s become one of my favorite tunes to play live.”
Johnny Vidacovich’s loose and syncopated drumming has inspired not only his
many students, most notably Stanton Moore and Brian Blade, but a whole
generation of young drummers. He has played with legendary New Orleans
pianists Professor Longhair and James Booker as well as such jazz greats as
Eddie Harris, Nat Adderly and Mose Alison. He continues to record and tour
with Astral Project, one of New Orleans’ longest running and most relevant
modern jazz groups. He contributes both slippery funk and understated
beauty to the music. His elastic rhythms are essential to the Super Heavy
Organ band and its recording. The song “El Cuervo,” which is in 7/4, is a
forum for musical expansion. When it graduates into a jazz vamp to
underscore Tim Green’s solo, Johnny V. reveals himself as the consummate bop
drummer, alternately teasing us with chunks of funk.
Tim Green, master of the tenor saxophone, gives a distinct character to
Robert Walter’s Super Heavy Organ. His playing is harmonically adventurous
and deeply emotional. A New Orleans resident, Green has been active in the
city’s jazz scene for many years. He has played with such renowned
musicians as Peter Gabriel, Bruce Hornsby, the Indigo Girls, Medeski Martin
and Wood, Phish and George Porter. Green also served as the President of
the Louisiana Jazz Federation, which helps to promote jazz awareness
throughout the state. Green’s saxophone additions to Super Heavy Organ are
riveting and unforgettable. The song, “Smells like Dad’s Drunk Again” is
harmonically and rhythmically one of the more bizarre—and satisfying—tracks
on Super Heavy Organ. Tim Green is absolutely in his element negotiating
the changes. He just builds and builds against the gritty Hammond and the
cushion of ride cymbal and toms.
Bassist, James Singleton, was beckoned to New Orleans at an early age. He
was quick to make a name for himself by playing with such blues and jazz
greats as Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, James Booker, John Mooney and the band
Astral Project. He continues to reside in New Orleans, offering his
masterful bass lines to various musical projects. His chemistry with
longtime collaborator, drummer Johnny Vidacovich is undeniable. On the
track ‘Hardware,’ he transforms a simple funk vamp into something more
ominous and primitive with his raw approach and outrageous slides on the
acoustic bass.
Anthony Farrell has made use of his vocal gift since he began performing on
the Venice Beach Promenade at the age of six. As the youngest member of the
Robert Colburn School of Performing Arts Jazz Workshop, Farrell was afforded
the opportunity to study under such Jazz luminaries as Harold Battiste,
Nedra Wheeler, and Wynton Marsalis. The expert training paid off. He has
offered his musical talent to the funk trio, Greyhounds, since 2000. The
song “Spell” is pure soul. This is universal. This could be Willie Mitchell
in Memphis; this could be the Nevilles in New Orleans. Farrell’s role is
significant; his quiet, wordless vocal refrain evokes a haunting mood.
Both the Super Heavy Organ album, and the band, are about listening,
reacting and stretching out. The sound is brilliant enough from the get
go…and then, somehow, it starts its build! When it finally comes down to a
whisper, and the Hammond is in the reeds, it works magic. And there’s dark
magic a plenty on this album.
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