Brian Bromberg Releases New Video Featuring the Late Nick Colionne

"Baton Rouge (Live from Berks Jazz Fest)" is from the 2021 Berks Jazz Festival

Brian Bromberg Releases New Video Featuring the Late Nick Colionne

"Baton Rouge (Live from Berks Jazz Fest)" is from the 2021 Berks Jazz Festival

“When I was writing the music for my album A Little Driving Music, this song just showed up and essentially just kinda wrote itself. Same with the name, Baton Rouge. It just came to me. I was thinking of Baton Rouge in the summer, hot, humid, sticky, and bluesy. A great vibe! The first musician I thought of to play on the song was guitarist Nick Colionne. We have been friends for years and played together a number of times, but never recorded together. I thought this song would be perfect for him and for the two of us to do together. 

This video is from the 2021 Berks Jazz Festival where Nick sat in with my band and we got to perform it live together for the first time. Sadly, I had no idea that it would be the last and only time we would play it together. I am heartbroken that we lost Nico way too soon, but I am so happy that we have this performance of us playing Baton Rouge together. I will cherish this performance and the wonderful smiles we both have playing together.”

โ€” Brian Bromberg

After nearly a year of being cooped up within the same four walls, itโ€™s only natural that oneโ€™s thoughts might turn to the freedom of the open road. Thatโ€™s certainly true of virtuoso jazz bassist and world-renowned producer Brian Bromberg, whose third pandemic-era release shrugs off the prevailing mood of COVID-era claustrophobia and political strife for A Little Driving Music, a fun, funky paean to cruising with the top down and leaving your troubles behind.

While countless musicians have spent the quarantine months in a state of limbo, the always-prolific Bromberg quickly figured out a way to continue making music while remaining socially distanced. Out now on Artistry Music/Mack Avenue Music Group, A Little Driving Music follows the bassistโ€™s wide-ranging holiday album, Celebrate Me Home, and the remixed and remastered digital release of his stunning tribute album Bromberg Plays Hendrix. 

โ€œIn one aspect it’s been a weird, heartbreaking time to be a musician who just wants to play music with human beings, for human beings,โ€ Bromberg laments. โ€œOn the flip side, I’ve been really fortunate. It’s been a really positive, productive period because I’ve had nothing but time to sit in front of a computer or pluck my strings.โ€

A Little Driving Music features a dozen brand-new Bromberg compositions as well as a surprising 80s cover song, the joyful Katrina and the Waves hit โ€œWalking on Sunshine.โ€ Despite recording each musician in isolation and at a distance, the bassist managed to (virtually) assemble an elite roster of longtime collaborators and all-star special guests including saxophonists Dave Koz, Everette Harp, Gary Meek, Elan Trotman, Darren Rahn and Marion Meadows; keyboardist Tom Zink; guitarists Jerry Cortez, Nick Colionne and Ray Fuller; drummers Joel Taylor and Tony Moore; vibraphonist Craig Fundiga; and percussionist Lenny Castro. Thereโ€™s even a string orchestra featuring members of the National Symphony Orchestra of the Dominican Republic, conducted by arranger/producer Corey Allen (again, with COVID safety protocols in place).

โ€œThis is the hand you’re dealt, so you make the most of it,โ€ Bromberg says of the unusual circumstances under which the album was recorded. โ€œEverything about how we do things has changed, but when you come to terms with that and accept it for what is, you can enjoy the process. Especially when you’re dealing with a lot of talented people and state-of-the-art technology โ€“ it’s amazing what you can do despite not being in a prime situation.โ€

No trace of that adverse situation can be heard as the album kicks off with โ€œFroggyโ€™s,โ€ a carefree, high-spirited funk tune highlighted by a lively horn section emulating the chorus of frogs that often greets the composer at his Southern California home. Bromberg takes a blistering solo on piccolo bass, which could easily be mistaken for a shredding electric guitar. The baton is then picked up by Everette Harpโ€™s vibrant turn on sax. 

A diary entry for these strange times, โ€œQuarantineโ€ was the first track penned by Bromberg after lockdown commenced. The rest of the album was also composed in quarantine, with the sole exception of the title track โ€“ fittingly enough, as the freewheeling โ€œA Little Driving Musicโ€ fills the listener with a sense of movement and freedom much missed over these solitary months. โ€œThat Cool Groovy Beatnik Jazzโ€ is another self-explanatory title, conjuring the laid-back, finger-snapping groove of a classic BYOB hipster cafรฉ (meaning Bring Your Own Bongos).

Both โ€œBado Boy!โ€ and โ€œLullaby for Badoโ€ are dedicated to a cat that Bromberg and his fiancรฉe rescued from Barbados, a complicated tale that eventually involved the islandโ€™s Minister of Agriculture. (โ€œIt would be as if you wanted to rescue a cat and had to talk to the Vice President of the United States to do it,โ€ Bromberg says incredulously.) The former tune, which features Barbados-born saxophonist Elan Trotman, reflects the felineโ€™s playful spirit; the latter, pairing Brombergโ€™s emotional acoustic bass with the Dominican Republic strings, is an elegy for the lost cat.

โ€œWe knew he was sick, but we hoped he’d live a long time,โ€ Bromberg recalls. โ€œUnfortunately, he only lived a year, but he had a hell of a year living with us instead of being alone as a stray cat sick in the Caribbean.โ€

With an assist from Dave Koz, โ€œWalking on Sunshineโ€ reimagines the 80s classic in a jazz context, slower and funkier than the incessantly upbeat original. โ€œAfter the year we’ve had โ€“ and, sadly, the year we’re likely going to have โ€“ a little positive energy goes a long way,โ€ Bromberg explains. โ€œSo, I wanted to record something with positive energy and uplift that also had that twist, that most recording artists might not have thought of doing.โ€

Short for Sagittarius, โ€œSag 5โ€ is named for the December 5 birthday that Bromberg shares with saxophonist Darren Rahn, who guests on the track, melding sounds so harmoniously with the bassist that it lends a bit of credence to astrological synergy. Adding Andrew Neu on clarinet and Mitch Formanon accordion, โ€œA Rainy Day in Parisโ€ transports the listener to a cafรฉ in the City of Lights as the weather turns gray outside. โ€œIf that song doesn’t make you want to have a glass of wine and some cheese, I don’t know what will,โ€ insists Bromberg. โ€œThe only thing missing is a red and white checkered tablecloth.โ€

With Marion Meadows extolling the hopeful melody on soprano sax, โ€œPeaceโ€ is Brombergโ€™s offering to the search for sanity in a contentious world. As he describes it, the tune is โ€œthe equivalent of a musical time out, suggesting that everybody just take a deep breath while the world and this country, in particular, is pretty upside down.โ€ 

The country-accented โ€œJedediahโ€™s Goldโ€ paints a sepia-tinged portrait of a Gold Rush miner and his stake in the Old West, while โ€œThe Sitting Roomโ€ luxuriates in the feeling of relaxing in a favorite, comfy spot at home. The greasy, slinky โ€œBaton Rougeโ€ detours down south for a bit of hot, sweaty, fun-in-the-sun funk with Nick Colionne laying down some down-home guitar licks.

โ€œThere’s some heavier music on A Little Driving Music,โ€ Bromberg concludes, โ€œbut for the most part it’s a fun, positive energy record. There’s nothing better than that Zen moment of listening to great tunes on the road, looking out the window at life. That’s the vibe of it to me: I hope people just want to put it on in the car and crank it up.โ€ 

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Bass Magazine   By: Bass Magazine