The stirring sounds on Michael Dease's Best Next Thing form a big July prospect

The Marc Free label Posi-Tone continues to deliver magnificently journeying straightahead and never sounding hokey in the process. Take Art, just for starters recently part of the release cycle. And Art Hirahara, the very same, is catchable in …

Published: 7 Jun 2022. Updated: 22 months.

The Marc Free label Posi-Tone continues to deliver magnificently journeying straightahead and never sounding hokey in the process. Take Art, just for starters recently part of the release cycle. And Art Hirahara, the very same, is catchable in Ronnie Scott's with Stacey Kent later this week.

The definite purple patch continues next month with the release on 8 July of the latest from warm toned trombonist Michael Dease on his latest record Best Next Thing for the label. For Dease's sound if you know the timbre and fantastic facility of UK trombonist Harry Brown but haven't made the equally formidable aquaintance hitherto of the sound of Dease you will feel right at home.

On Best Next Thing Dease connects in the front line with trumpeter and labelmate Alex Sipiagin and alto saxist Rudresh Mahanthappa, Rudresh best known in his early career for his groundbreaking work with Vijay Iyer.

Pianist for-the-ages Renee Rosnes, Mingus Big Band bassist Boris Kozlov and the Frisellian drummer Rudy Royston complete the all-star personnel and raise us suitably up.

Recorded last September in a New York studio highlights include Steve Turre opener 'Rainbow People' (which was on the 2008 HighNote album of the same name), Dease's own 'Parker's Brood' tribute to Barry Harris, 'Charly Jaye', 'Horse Trading' and 'Lullaby for Rita'. Claudio Roditi's 'One for Dease' is also on the album along with Rosnes, Sonny Rollins, Rufus Reid and Charles Tolliver numbers. Take it from us having given the album a few spins the Dease treatments are more than decent and banish any deleterious jadedness that can banjax the best of us at times. Will ''decent'' be part of the understatement of the week? Who knows – it's only Tuesday but suffice is to say no-one needs to brag: the music does the talking all by itself. Michael Dease photo: Jessica D. Cowles

Updated on 9 June adding 'Parker's Brood'

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Black Top, Steve Saunders, Chris Bowden and the Hypnos Files - Birmingham dates

Black Top with Xhosa Cole appearing at the Midlands Arts Centre on 28 June, then Steve Saunders' Abstract Visions of a Foreign Land next day at Symphony Hall… … and in the third of these adventurous Birmingham TDE Promotions dates on 30 June at …

Published: 7 Jun 2022. Updated: 22 months.

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Black Top with Xhosa Cole appearing at the Midlands Arts Centre on 28 June,

then Steve Saunders' Abstract Visions of a Foreign Land next day at Symphony Hall…

… and in the third of these adventurous Birmingham TDE Promotions dates on 30 June at the Hare & Hounds Echo Juliet (aka Emily Jones) opens for saxophonist Chris Bowden.

Steve Saunders, above. Photo: Bandcamp publicity shot.