Scott Ambush and Spyro Gyra to Release Album of Covers

Seminal contemporary jazz band mines a collection of vinyl classics for their first album in six years.

Scott Ambush and Spyro Gyra to Release Album of Covers

Seminal contemporary jazz band mines a collection of vinyl classics for their first album in six years.

Free of the tension of having to write great songs, the five members of Spyro Gyra were laughing and having fun in the recording studio. Creativity flowed as the venerable contemporary jazz band revisited the songs that inspired them from their youth when they were listening to music on vinyl. That artistic fount was spun into โ€œVinyl Tap,โ€ Spyro Gyraโ€™s first album in six years, which drops October 11 on the Amherst Records label.

โ€œIt was tensionless as we โ€˜warpedโ€™ the tunes. We had a world of brilliant music to choose from and we didnโ€™t have to worry about writing brilliant music. It was a really fun project to make,โ€ said saxophonist Jay Beckenstein, who will lead Spyro Gyra on tour to support โ€œVinyl Tapโ€ with a string of US concert dates beginning November 15 in Newark, NJ after a three-week international trek that begins at the Cancun Jazz Festival on October 23.

When Spyro Gyra manager Phil Brennan proposed the albumโ€™s concept a few years ago to bandleader Beckenstein for their 31st album, he knew that it might take some convincing, so he came prepared with an intriguing concept. Brennan suggested that the band use their arrangement talents to transform the originals into something brand new. The challenge appealed to Beckenstein, who soon overcame any misgivings.

โ€œItโ€™s clichรฉ (to record covers) in saxophone-based contemporary jazz. We did not want to sound like a fantastic wedding band. I was really afraid that if we didnโ€™t do our own thing, that our identity would be lost. It was imperative in the creative process โ€“ and everybody (in the band) knew this in a big way โ€“ that things had to be mixed up. Things had to be jolted out of the old way of approaching the songs. We really tried to come up with a new take on whatever (song) we were doing. We put solos into tunes that really are complete extensions that never had anything to do with the originals,โ€ said Beckenstein.

What initially stands out on โ€œVinyl Tap,โ€ which was produced by Spyro Gyra, are the wildly imaginative arrangements. Beckenstein said, โ€œThe arrangements were put together with everyone in my basement with all the equipment set up. We were all together in the pre-studio arrangement process. It was all done democratically. Spyro Gyra is a musicianโ€™s group collective. When you have five talented guys, you can do some cool arranging things.โ€

Spyro Gyra are Beckenstein, Tom Schuman (keyboards), Julio Fernandez(guitars), Scott Ambush (bass) and Lionel Cordew (drums). The musicians have somewhat of a wide range of ages, which explains some of the diversity of the material recorded for โ€œVinyl Tap.โ€ Beckenstein selected the album opener, โ€œSecret Agent Mash,โ€ a supercharged and ultrahip mashup of โ€œSecret Agent Manโ€ and โ€œAlfieโ€™s Theme.โ€ โ€œSunshine Of Your Loveโ€ is virtually unrecognizable in its new form as a Latin big band number. The first cut going for playlist adds on September 23 is the plaintive โ€œCanโ€™t Find My Way Home,โ€ which takes on a bit of a western feel and benefits from the soulful perspective of Beckensteinโ€™s saxophone protagonist. โ€œWhat A Fool Believesโ€ is slowed to become a contemplative power ballad that breaks into a mid-song swing cadence.

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Bass Magazine   By: Bass Magazine