2019 Grammys Jazz Category Nominees |
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snobb
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Posted: 31 Jan 2019 at 12:38pm |
Here's a quick rundown of the hottest prospects in each category, including best contemporary instrumental album, which theoretically features recordings made almost entirely by jazz artists yet is given its own designated field. The 61st Annual Grammy Awards air on Feb. 10 live from the Staples Center in Los Angeles.
Field 10 - Jazz • "Some Of That Sunshine" • "Don't Fence Me In" • "We See" • "De-Dah" • "Cadenas" This category essentially whittles down a clash between two modern masters of jazz piano in Fred Hersch and Brad Mehldau, both of whom are representing exceptional solos off their best albums in years, Live In Europe and Seymour Reads The Constitution!, respectively. For Hersch, it would mark his 14th nomination while Mehldau will be enjoying his ninth overall shot at a little golden gramophone. And when you take into consideration that neither piano man has won a statue yet, surely it's looking to be a piano duel for the ages. Field 10 - Jazz • My Mood Is You • The Questions • The Subject Tonight Is Love • If You Really Want • The Window Don't underestimate the potency of The Questions, Grammy-winning Chicago crooner Kurt Elling's Branford Marsalis-produced album of interpretations of deep favorites by Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Peter Gabriel and more. But it's gonna take more than a few cool covers to override the momentum of Cecile McLorin Salvant, whose brilliant duet set with pianist Sullivan Fortner is being hailed as her finest work yet, and a shoo-in for a third consecutive statue in this category. And with the quiet fire of her translation of the Great American Songbook on The Window, the competition better be shook. Field 10 - Jazz • Diamond Cut • Live In Europe • Seymour Reads The Constitution! • Still Dreaming • Emanon This is by far the most stacked category in the jazz department. And on any other day, there wouldn't be any argument against seeing onetime Beyonce saxophonist Tia Fuller taking home the gramophone for her excellent, spirited fifth LP Diamond Cut, especially when she blows pure lightning against the dream rhythm section of Dave Holland on bass and drummer Jack DeJohnette. But the peaks of several year-end lists in 2018 -- including Billboard's -- all point towards legendary reedist Wayne Shorter redefining the term he's most associated with, fusion, through an ingenious amalgamation of creative jazz and comic books as visionary as anything he's done with Miles, Joni or Jaco. And at 85, he's far from finished pushing things forward. Field 10 - Jazz • All About That Basie • American Dreamers: Voices Of Hope, Music Of Freedom • Presence • All Can Work • Barefoot Dances And Other Visions Kamasi Washington's Heaven & Earth should've made the cut for this category, no questions asked. Not that it would've stood a chance against the strongest contender in this pack -- if based only on sentiment. However, that's what makesAmerican Dreamers: Voices of Hope, Music of Freedom such a sharp competitor. Not only is this a killer big band album, it's a beautiful story of this union between modern trumpet giant John Daversa and a choir of talented young men and women, all of whom happen to be protected under DACA, a program in constant danger of being cut by the Trump Administration. Songs like James Brown's "Living in America," Cole Porter's "Don't Fence Me In," Led Zeppelin's "The Immigrant Song" and Sondheim's "America" from West Side Story are transformed into call-to-action hymns for the very souls singing them. Field 10 - Jazz • Heart Of Brazil • Back To The Sunset • West Side Story Reimagined • Cinque • Yo Soy La Tradición All five of these nominees have proven their championship level abilities in shaping the vibrancy of Latin jazz in the 21st century. But it's hard to see anyone in this group beat out alto sax player Miguel Zenón's elegant chamber jazz tribute to his beloved, embattled Puerto Rico. Accompanied by Chicago's Spektral Quartet, Zenón turns a decade's worth of research on his homeland's rich traditions in music, religion and folklore into a singular sound that pushes the definition of Latin jazz unlike any record in recent memory. Field 3 - Contemporary Instrumental Music • The Emancipation Procrastination • Steve Gadd Band • Modern Lore • Laid Black • Protocol 4 Since its implementation in 2001, the contemporary instrumental category has largely consisted of jazz fusion acts. Why the Recording Academy won't just make it part of the jazz field is a real wonder. But it does provide an opportunity for New Orleans trumpet great Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah to finally land the Grammy that's eluded him since his last nomination in 2006 for best contemporary jazz album (a category that doesn't even exist anymore). The third and final chapter of his Centennial Trilogy, The Emancipation Procrastination, is peak Christian as he and his group meld the worlds of Miles Davis' In A Silent Way and Mezzanine by Massive Attack, highlighted by an otherworldly take on Radiohead's "Videotape" from the band's consistently misunderstood masterpiece In Rainbows. This music transcends category. from www.billboard.com |
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