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Harvie S

Neww CD Harvie S Kenny Barron
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Release date August 12th

 
European Booking Agency
Artefix Music
Christian Gruber
cell +43(0)664 310 53 42
fax +43(0)2755 8789 4

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Photo credit Seth Glassman
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Harvie S Master Class

Review of Harvie S Band Live Click here

   
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Harvie's latest CD on Zoho Music
 
... "Funky cha's greatest success is that it mixes enough
Jazz to keep listeners engaged and enough Latin grooves
to make dancers move."
 
Bass Player Magazine

Harvie S
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Funky Cha - album reviews All Music Guide

Listening to the veteran New York composer/bassist's fourth project since 1999 is like taking a frenetic joyride through a realm where classic Latin music forms blend furiously with the best of America's jazz traditions. Harvie S has been at this a long time; in 1966, he traveled to Cuba to study with some of the island's master players. Since then, he's masterfully blended the two forms, working with great bandleaders like Juan-Carlos Formell, Stan Getz, Paquito d'Rivera, and Arturo O'Farrill, among others. The one major thing he's learned: both forms have the same African rhythmic roots. But why read a dull history book when you've got the bassist and his wild but subtle-when-they-have-to-be quintet providing such vibrant illustrations of the connection? They launch the disc with a hard-driving, heavily percussive jam on Thelonious Monk's "Rhythm-a-Ning" and the rolling, pitter-patter grooving original "C7 Heaven" (featuring Daniel Kelly's vibrant piano ensembling beautifully with Jay Collins' sax), then ease coolly into the date's most memorable -- if least chops-heavy -- number, the original piece "Mariposa en Mano," a sensuous slow-dance number dedicated to S's wife; S had recorded it as a bossa nova on an earlier album but his mixed vibe of son montuno and charanga is more than just a little intoxicating. From then on, he works a spirited balancing act between crazy-makers like the well-titled "Earquake" and the subtler, harmonically rich "A Bright Moment" and a hypnotic, classically influenced cover of Cole Porter's "What Is This Thing Called Love." ~

Jonathan Widran, All Music Guide "