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Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records to Release Anticipation, the New Recording from Trumpeter/Composer David Smith

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BROOKLYN JAZZ UNDERGROUND RECORDS To Release ANTICIPATION, The New Recording From Trumpeter/Composer DAVID SMITH (Available May 25 on, digital release date is May 4)

Featuring Kenji Omae (sax), Nate Radley (guitar), Gary Wang (bass) & Greg Ritchie (drums)

CD Release Celebration - May 4 @ The Cornelia Street Cafe!

“David Smith's lyricism and sincerity of line and inflection combines well with his expanded sense of intervallic melodic construction. The result is a style rich in content, engaging emotionally and rich in character." --Michael Philip Mossman

On May 25, 2010 Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records proudly releases the new recording, Anticipation, from the Canadian-born, Brooklyn-based trumpeter/composer David Smith. The album features an outstanding rhythm section that has been Smith's working unit for the past several years, Nate Radley on guitar, the much in demand Gary Wang on bass, and fellow Canadian Greg Ritchie on drums; plus an old friend on saxophone, longtime musical colleague Kenji Omae. As you can hear on Anticipation, these are musicians with whom Smith shares a special camaraderie.

Anticipation , the follow up recording to Smith's debut recording Circumstance (2006, FSNT),is largely about the experiences in Smith's life surrounding the birth of his daughter Hannah (who appears on the cover and inside). The recording opens with the title track, which refers to “the feelings, and to some degree anxiety I felt about impending fatherhood, but also the word as a musical term." Smith explains further, “the tune is built around a three-part counterpoint in the guitar with each resulting chord anticipating the beginning and middle of each measure which ends up making for a somewhat relentless and perpetual motion throughout the song."

For David Smith, meeting guitarist Nate Radley was the impetus for him to start a band, and he has had the luxury to have him on nearly all of his gigs since the beginning (2005). Smith explains, “we played for the first time at a session at Greg Ritchie's place, and after playing one of my tunes and one of his tunes, I felt that he and I shared a musical compatibility that is very rare." Radley's tune “Carillon", first played at that informal session, is featured on Anticipation simply because Smith loves how it combines musical interest with relative simplicity. “It is beautifully constructed and lots of fun to play on," said the trumpeter.

Smith composed “Bittersweet" (which employs some species counterpoint techniques he was studying at the time) in an attempt to convey some of the complex emotions he was feeling about fatherhood prior to his daughter's birth. The tune was also influenced by the Ben Monder composition “ Luteous Pangolin", as played by The Alan Ferber Nonet, of which Dave is a member.

“Alone" was composed during an unplanned separation from his wife and daughter. Smith explains, “We live in a Brooklyn duplex and our landlord decided to do a major gut renovation of the entire apartment directly below. Our place became filled with fine dust and out of health concerns we hastily sent my wife and daughter to Japan to stay with family until the renovations were done, which ended up lasting two months. The feelings of separation for the first time, and at a time of considerable development (right after her 1 st birthday), were not something I was prepared for. As is often the case though I am most inspired to write when I have strong feelings to express and this tune came out rather easily. Being alone I had the luxury of spending a lot of time listening to music (not always possible with a young child), and one day listening to the first few measures of the Mozart D Minor Piano Concerto (no. 20 K.466) I immediately ran to the piano and began with the first few measures of this."

The other fascinating original composition on the recording is “The Question", Smith's double-time, intervallic melody over the changes to Monk's “Ask Me Now", with a bar of 5/4 thrown in at the end of the bridge, “more or less for comic relief," said Smith.

Other highlights on Anticipation include a stirring rendition of the standard “All Or Nothing At All", rendered here with Smith's triadic reharmonization of the melody. And satisfying Smith's penchant for John Coltrane tunes that utilize his “Giant Steps" cycle, Smith offers up a brilliant odd-time arrangement of Coltrane's “Satellite."

Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records, a sister company to the Brooklyn Jazz Underground collective, was launched in the Spring of 2008. The label grew out of the entrepreneurial, DIY spirit that gave birth to the BJU in January of 2007. BJURecords is proud to expand its catalog with Anticipation, a stellar new recording from an artist who is conscientiously building a momentous body of work that reflects and defines the Brooklyn scene in its own unique way.

More on David Smith: The trumpeter began his professional career in Toronto, moving to NYC in 2000 at the urging of saxophonist Kenji Omae. Smith managed to relocate armed with a study grant from the Canada Council for the Arts. Before long he was much in demand on the NYC scene, and is currently a member of almost twenty different ensembles. He was most recently featured on new recordings by Harry Connick Jr., Jon Gordon, and others.

His debut album as a leader, Circumstance, was released in October of 2006 on the Fresh Sound New Talent label, featuring his original compositions played by an outstanding quintet featuring Seamus Blake (tenor saxophone), Nate Radley (guitar), David Ephross (bass) and the ubiquitous Mark Ferber (drums). While the roots of the music on Circumstance , and on his new release on BJURecords, Anticipation, is in classic jazz, Smith combines elements of classical harmony and counterpoint resulting in a very original compositional style. His approach to the trumpet is also unique, intervallic and harmonically sophisticated yet lyrical and emotional.

In addition to his own recordings, Smith is featured as a sideman on over two dozen recordings including releases for Fresh Sound New Talent (Alan Ferber Nonet, Delphian Jazz Orchestra), Steeplechase (Kim Bock Quartet, Russ Spiegel Sextet) and Interplay Records (Cecilia Coleman Quintet), as well as several independent releases (Paul Carlon Octet, Sarah Lynch, Numinous). He has also recorded for national broadcasts on CBC Radio in Canada and Denmark Radio and appears on two film soundtracks. Smith has also been called upon to record with the likes of Lonnie Plaxico, Billy Hart, Chris Cheek, Lenny Pickett and Tom Jones among others. Smith is an international touring artist, appearing in major jazz clubs around the globe, from NYC to Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Denmark, Sweden and Haiti. Smith has a Master of Arts Degree in Jazz Performance from the Aaron Copland School of Music in New York, and is an adjunct faculty member at the College of Staten Island, CUNY.

In addition to his musical endeavors, Smith is a hi-fi hobbyist and an avid amateur photographer, both significant interests of his for the last six to eight years. He rebuilds tube amps dating from the '40's to the mid-'60's, and also builds his own speaker cabinets for which to listen to his modest collection of around 4,000 LPs. With photography he shoots 35mm and medium-format film.

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