Overtime

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (118 ratings)
Overtime album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 78:39

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 »

04.22.11
The longstanding quintet takes on big band.
Label: Dare2 Records / Sunnyside Records

The brilliant decision to simply wrap big band instrumentation around the longstanding Dave Holland Quintet (the most comfortably intuitive small jazz ensemble of this millennium) gives the bassist-leader both a powerful rhythmic engine and tremendous maneuverability. Indeed, agile solos from Holland and drummer Billy Kilson (who left both of Holland's groups after this recording) are more plentiful than on the quintet discs, and Holland's magnificent, four-part, 51-minute “Monterey Suite” that opens Overtime provides a more expansive canvas for the larger band. The cherished hallmarks of the quintet — Steve Nelson's diaphanous vibes, Chris Potter's broken-field solos — still obtain, and flow into new territory with the addition of baritone sax and flugelhorn voicings, and greater centrifugal force. In other words, more seems to be better for Holland the composer, a 60-year old Hall of Famer who somehow hasn't stopped improving.

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Why can't I download this?

greg.cr

From the reviews this has been downloadable in the past in the UK so why isn't it now?

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Awesome and I don't like big bands

Bigtoga

Amazing album

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Good but not fantastic

danmmr

There are better Dave Holland releases but this is still well worth the download. If you are jazz fan then you should get this and don't worry this isn't an "out there" release (though I really like those kinds of releases).

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Bombastic

AG

I've had a chance to see the Dave Holland Big Band in their first concert in Montreal and it's just about the best concert I've ever seen. I just love Dave Holland. However, I would like to warn people about what to expect on this album. If you're familiar with Dave Holland's ECM recordings, you should know that this album is a bit different. It swings very hard but can get downright bombastic at times. It's a great album but fans of the ECM esthetic should expect something different.

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Just Download It

MartinSmith

This a superb album of big band jazz played by some consummate musicians led by bass maestro and composer Dave Holland. Every track on this album is a delight and is my first download today following my return to eMusic. Anyone with an interest in great jazz and big band jazz in particular should download this immediately. You will not be disappointed!! I have just listened to this album for the sixth time in a row - it is fabulous and I am now going to have to review my all time top ten albums.

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You Need This!!!!

DutchJazz

If your tastes run anywhere near big band, modern jazz or, even better, modern big band jazz get this album now, immediately, do not hesitate!! Anyway, Dave Holland has been running one of the best groups in jazz for a couple of decades now and this expanded version of it is just as exciting. Pay special attention to the Monterey Suite (first four tracks) composed especially, you guessed it, for the Monterey Jazz Festival.

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Don't Hesitate! Download Now!

JazzJunkie

Even if it's your last seven tracks, snag this album. Absolutely phenomenal modern big band music. The core players of Holland's quintet are all pushing the envelope as modern innovators and they are surrounded by a big band of other current greats. Track 2 with the god-like Billy Kilson on drums is a good place to start for the hesitant.

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This exceptional date by Dave Holland Big Band was recorded in 2002 in New York, yet remained unreleased until 2005. As is to be expected, Holland assembled a fine cast of seasoned and young players, some of whom are veterans of Holland’s quintets and quartets. These are four saxophones — two alto, tenor and baritone — three trumpets and trombones, and vibes as well as bass and drums. They include Chris Potter and Robin and Duane Eubanks, Antonio Hart, Steve Nelson, Josh Roseman, Billy Kilson, Taylor Haskins, Gary Smulyan, Jonathan Arons and Alex Sipiagin. The music centers around the opening four-part “Monterey Suite,” a tour de force commissioned by the Monterey Jazz Festival and originally performed there in 2001. Holland’s writing for the trombone section is dynamite. Roseman, Arons, and Robin Eubanks offer up solid bottom rung lines and tight timing as anchors for the rest of the brass though they often charge out front. Potter once more displays his talents as not only a fine soloist but as an excellent ensemble player, carrying the chair with authority and verve. The beautiful “Ario” hosts some really knotty and swelling harmonic interludes and the closer, “Last Minute Man,” is electrifying, transcending the confines of the studio. This is an essential Holland date, it is exciting, colorful and wildly innovative. Let’s hope he composes and records more in this idiom soon. – Thom Jurek

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