“Whatever Bubbles Up”
The Bob Florence Limited Edition
Summit Records (DCD 360)
Multi-talented, Grammy-Award-Winner Bob Florence has garnered national and
international acclaim as a jazz composer, arranger, band-leader, keyboardist,
accompanist and educator.
Bob says: “Joy is the first hearing of a new composition or arrangement
played by my friends. Joy is hearing all the soloists...” “There is almost total
freedom within the rhythm section. Most of the time I just leave them alone
and let them find something. I’ve almost forgotten how to write bass and drum
parts. I said ‘almost.’ All of the elements above define joy.”
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Selections:
- Dukeism
- Nerve endings HEAR IT! (988KB MP3)
- Chelsea Bridge HEAR IT! (1.20MB MP3)
- Running With Scissors
- Kissing Bug HEAR IT! (624KB MP3)
- Never Let Me Go
- Q&A HEAR IT! (1.23MB MP3)
- Whatever Bubbles Up HEAR IT! (982KB MP3)
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| The Limited Edition: Bob Florence, Piano, Composer, Arranger & Leader
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| Trumpets & Flugelhorns: | |
Wayne Bergeron
George Graham
Mike McGuffey
Ron Stout
Steve Huffsteter
Carl Saunders
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| Trombones: | |
Charlie Loper
Alex Isle
Bob McChesney
Bryant Byers - bass trombone
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| Guitar: | |
Larry Koonse
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| Bass: | |
Trey Henry
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| Drums: | |
Dick Weller
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Review:
THE BOB FLORENCE LIMITED EDITION
Whatever Bubbles Up (Summit) (73:41)
Whenever master chef Bob Florence sets foot in the kitchen to slice and dice
a new album, the listener can be sure that Whatever Bubbles Up will
be as tantalizing and tasty as it is nourishing. Florence has been doing
this sort of thing for more than four decades and knows how to put together
a musical banquet that's guaranteed to please almost everyone's palate.
The entrées on Florence's latest spread include five of his own singular
compositions, two ("Chelsea Bridge," "Kissing Bug") by Duke Ellington's
alter ego, the awe-inspiring Billy Strayhorn, and last but not least, the
Jay Livingston / Ray Evans standard "Never Let Me Go," which serves as a
vehicle for Florence's elegant solo piano. Bob's charts are edgier and more
elaborate than in years gone by, underlining his close kinship with another
West Coast colossus, Bill Holman. Like Holman, Florence comes at the
listener from all manner of exotic and surprising angles; and like Holman,
he uses the entire orchestra as his canvas, whipping up provocative
"conversations" among the various sections while never forgetting that the
cardinal purpose of a big band is to swing.
The album opens with Florence's "Dukeisms," an absorbing tone poem
commissioned for the Ellington centenary in 2001. To complement expressive
statements by guitarist Larry Koonse, tenor Jeff Driskill, alto Kim Richmond
and drummer Dick Weller, there are, according to Florence, five "musical
quotes" from the Ellington canon embedded in the score. See how many you can
identify (first time through, I recognized two). "Nerve Endings," Florence's
"description of a tennis player," walks briskly behind resourceful solos by
trumpeter Carl Saunders and tenor Tom Peterson, preceding Strayhorn's
sublime "Chelsea Bridge," which features long-time trombone stalwarts
Charlie Loper (who plays the melody) and Bob McChesney.
Weller, trumpeter Ron Stout and a third masterful trombonist, Alex Iles,
are the soloists on "Running with Scissors," inspired, Florence writes, by
the admonition from parents to children not to "run with scissors in your
hand," while Koonse and alto Don Shelton share the honors on "Kissing Bug."
The lustrous "Q&A" showcases yet another of the band's world-class
improvisers, trumpeter Steve Huffsteter, who plays muted all the way. Stout's
trumpet, also muted, launches the quirky title selection, the idea for
which came to Florence when he heard Mike Myers' answer to a question from
Barbara Walters about his future plans ("whatever bubbles up"). Iles and
Driskill are the other soloists.
This is another bounteous feast for fans of Bob Florence and the Limited
Edition, none of whom will be displeased. The writing is strong and
inventive, the performance, as always, top-drawer. One can't say enough
about the impeccable brass and reeds, nor about the band's sturdy and
adaptable rhythm section (Florence, Weller, Koonse, bassist Trey Henry).
"There is almost total freedom within the rhythm section," Florence writes.
"Most of the time I just leave them alone and let them find something for
me" -- a stratagem that never seems to go awry. More big-band Jazz of the
highest order from the esteemed Bob Florence and his (un)Limited Edition.