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Joanne Brackeen, Popsicle Illusion CD cover artwork

Joanne Brackeen, Popsicle Illusion

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1692054

Disk length: 1h 11m 47s (12 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1999

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Joanne Brackeen...

Tracks & Durations

1. If I were a Bell 5:46
2. Michelle 6:41
3. Popsicle Illusiion 4:13
4. From This Moment On 6:05
5. Bess You Is My Woman 8:22
6. The Touch of Your Lips 5:43
7. Telavivision 5:46
8. Knickerbocker Blues 5:31
9. High Tea for Stephany 5:02
10. Prelude to a Kiss 6:17
11. Nature Boy 6:30
12. Interview with Joanne 5:42

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Joanne Brackeen is a genuinely exciting pianist, with energy, whimsy, and sheer technical bravado. She consistently stretches her material, layering propulsive rhythms and dense harmonies with kinetic abandon. This is just her second solo CD, but the first, from 1990, was sufficient to launch the celebrated Concord series of Maybeck Recitals. Her imagination is particularly active here. "If I Were a Bell" is recast in 7/8 with a stride left hand, an off-kilter combination of tune, rhythm and style that paves the way for the inventions to come. The Beatles' "Michelle" is continuously transformed, passing through a baroque hymn and Granados-like Spanish fantasia, while her limpid, slightly oblique approach to Ellington's "Prelude to a Kiss" makes it her own. Brackeen's ability to be in two or more musical places at once shows up in the originals as well as the standards, with "Telavivision" mixing up Middle Eastern meters and a stately melody with passages of driving, straight-ahead improvisation. From the boogie woogie of "Knickerbocker Blues" to the angular neomodernism of "High Tea for Stephany," Brackeen's playing is infused with rare spontaneity. --Stuart BroomerJoanne Brackeen is one of jazz's most prized possessions: a virtuoso pianist and master composer who epitomizes the history and evolution of jazz from traditional to free, and everything in between; all with a contemporary edge. Arkadia Jazz is pleased to announce the release of Popsicle Illusion, Joanne's tour-de-force solo piano recording. Popsicle Illusion is the follow up to Pink Elephant Magic, her Grammy nominated debut recording on Arkadia.

Joanne Brackeen is one of jazz's most prized possessions: a virtuoso pianist and master composer who epitomizes the history and evolution of jazz from traditional to free, and everything in between; all with a contemporary edge. Arkadia Jazz is pleased to announce the release of Popsicle Illusion, Joanne's tour-de-force solo piano recording. Popsicle Illusion is the follow up to Pink Elephant Magic, her Grammy nominated debut recording on Arkadia.

"Joanne's talent is immeasurable and this recording shows her many dimensions," says Arkadia CEO Bob Karcy. "It's unbelievable! We came up with the idea of a solo piano album, and everything she played was incredible witty, complex, beautiful, she has it all." Popsicle Illusion has a generous selection of standards and originals, all with the distinctive Brackeen touch.

Leading off the disc is a stride version of Frank Loesser's If I Were a Bell from Guys and Dolls. Perhaps as allusion to the gambling motif of the musical, Joanne's version is in 7/4, a risk taking odd meter not usually associated with the stride piano style. "It has another dimension when you put it 7/4, it's more rhythmical" says Joanne. "Plus I had never recorded anything in seven for solo piano." When you roll the dice, number 7 is the winning combination, and Joanne has a winner here!

Lennon and McCartney's Michelle, treated as a deeply felt chamber piece, crescendos with the complex reharmonization of the melody in a darker and more delicate mood. The song is like an arch; the solos are built into the form, sonic hues and dynamics become more overt and then recede into silence.

Joanne's own compositions are showcased as well. The rhythmically dense Popsicle Illusion is full of twists and turns. "It doesn't go exactly where you think it will," says Joanne. "It has repeats and keeps going back to the same place, but it's a tiny bit different. Like if you have a popsicle and you go to take another lick, and it's melted!" Similarly, Telavivision is another odd meter romp that has echoes of the Mid-East and New York all rolled into one. "It has one part that has structured odd-meters and another part that has a blues form." And speaking of the blues,

Knickerbockers is named for the New York City club at which Joanne frequently plays, and indeed is a blues. Joanne's idiosyncratic nature shines through, complete with harmonic and rhythmic extensions that are completely her own.

High Tea for Stephanie may be the most challenging track on the CD- it defies categorization, a sort of Bud Powell, Cecil Taylor and Prokofiev meeting of the minds. With wild arpeggios, ominous, thick chords and an abstract center solo, is this "New Music" or jazz? You be the judge as Joanne reaches into areas rarely explored by jazz pianists today. For those who like a familiar tune to hum along with, there is Cole Porter's From This Moment On (treated as blistering bebop), Ray Noble's bouncing, lighthearted The Touch Of Your Lips, Gershwin's Bess, You Is My Woman as a sensitive ballad, as is Ellington's Prelude to a Kiss. The masterful, bluesy Nature Boy closes out the session. Every song has the signature Brackeen interpretation that is bound to turn a few heads in amazement. This is Joanne's first studio solo piano recording and, as are all her projects, Popsicle Illusion is a creative, witty, diverse and complex statement from the artist. An Arkadia extra feature has an interview with Joanne at the end of the disc where she talks about some of the compositions and c

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