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People Music

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (8 ratings)
People Music album cover
01
Listen to the Heros Cry
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
7:39
$0.99
02
Fair Hope Theme
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
6:49
$0.99
03
Gang Gang
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
7:03
$0.99
04
Ms. Angelou
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
6:42
$0.99
05
The Movement Revisited
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
8:30
$0.99
06
Unusual Suspects
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
7:28
$0.99
07
Dream Train
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
6:05
$0.99
08
New Hope's Angel
Artist: Christian McBride, Inside Straight
5:28
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 55:44

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eMusic Review 0

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Britt Robson

eMusic Contributor

Britt Robson has written about jazz for Jazz Times, downbeat, the Washington Post and many other publications over the past 30 years. He currently writes regula...more »

05.23.13
Broad, languid melodies undergirded by percolating rhythms and clean, incisive interplay
2013 | Label: Mack Avenue Records / The Orchard

When you possess virtuoso technique and a genuine passion for tradition, being conservative doesn’t mean being careful or tepid. That’s the clarion message sent by bassist-leader Christian McBride and his quintet Inside Straight on their second record, People Music.

The populism in the title is reinforced by the crowd-pleasing panache with which the group resurrects the classic bop-ensemble synergy most commonly associated with the Blue Note label in the ’50s and ’60s. There are broad, languid melodies undergirded by percolating rhythms and clean, incisive interplay. There are staccato toe-tappers that invite spirited solos, and a broad canvas is invariably stretched out to accommodate them.

It helps that Warren Wolf is arguably the most exciting and accomplished bop vibraphonist since Bobby Hutcherson, both a striking soloist and team player whose rhythmic and harmonic sensibilities mesh with pianists Peter Martin and (on two tracks) Christian Sands and saxophonist Steve Wilson create a distinctive signature for the group. That said, there is no question that McBride is the leader here. There’s no mistaking his rugged, rubbery pizzicato pulse. Even playing at a breakneck pace, he never substitutes flash for context and conception.

Choice tracks include Wolf’s “Gang Gang,” with its circular groove spiraling out… read more »

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