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Reviews
of The Book of the Storm:
...truly an outstanding effort...I was quite surprised to hear how
amazing this disc is. Rob Reddy’s The Book of the Storm
stands out as one of the great discs of this year.
—Bruce Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery
News (August 3, 2007)
Featuring a who's-who of New York talent, Small Town is a versatile
and powerful ensemble. Using polyphony, unconventional rhythms in odd
meters, orchestral hockets and layered counterpoint, a regal sensibility
permeates this long-form work. Dense and uncompromising, yet accessible
and infinitely rewarding, The Book of the Storm is Reddy's
most fully realized work yet, a high water mark in an ever expanding
discography.
—Troy Collins, AllAboutJazz.com (September
14, 2007)
Publisher’s Pick
—Michael Ricci, AllAboutJazz.com (September 16th, 2007)
It isn’t often that you will find a more
appropriately named album than The Book of the Storm from Rob
Reddy and friends, released on the saxophonist and composer’s
personal label. The music here is booming and menacing, combining orchestral,
experimental big band and electric sounds, the last of those qualities
due to the guitar work of Jon Margulies and Brandon Ross.
—Mike Szajewski, WNUR-FM's Jazz Pick
of the Week (September 17, 2007)
He says that he uses improvisation to support
the melodic. Here the two merge, intermingle, weave their paths into
and out, and bring in stunning dynamics and dynamism into the work.
Reddy’s use of instruments is exemplary.
—Jerry D'Souza, AllAboutJazz.com (September 20, 2007)
His role here is that of both composer and conductor,
and he's fortunate indeed to have a group so clearly capable of making
his music come to life...the skills of Reddy the composer are amply
in evidence in the balance struck between ensemble weight and color.
What's abundantly obvious is that he’s found his own voice and
it's only to his credit that he speaks so persuasively with it.
—Nic Jones, AllAboutJazz.com (September 23, 2007)
An adventurous conceptual orchestral suite melding
together everything from post-Mingus big band through to prog rock and
classical symphonic traditions.
—Selwyn Harris, Jazzwise (October 2007)
It’s a wondrously articulate outing.
—Glenn Astarita, jazzreview.com (October 2, 2007)
...a massive statement that shows just where jazz
composition, new music, collective improvisation and individual expression
meet. These are organic compositions that have a sense of architecture
that allows the big picture to be more than the sum of its brilliant
parts...there is a dark beauty that indicates the presence of an intelligent
and thoughtful composer.
—Donald Elfman, AllAboutJazz-New York (November 2007)
Rob Reddy’s projects feature smart, stylistically
varied writing, ensemble configurations that facilitate strong colors
and contrasts, and room for him and his cohorts to contribute through
improvisation. These elements are employed on this four-movement composition
for the 19-piece Small Town, with two noteworthy differences. Reddy
foregoes playing saxophone to concentrate on conducting; and the piece’s
Hurricane Katrina-charged inspiration results in an unprecedented abundance
of ominous, even harrowing music.
—Bill Shoemaker, DownBeat (December 2007)
Top 10 of 2007 list
—Jerry D'Souza, AllAboutJazz.com (December 10, 2007)
Top 10 of 2007 list
—Andrea-Jane Cornell, CKUT-FM (December 11, 2007)
Reddy conducts the 19-piece ensemble, balancing
the power of massed voicings with sections of intricate counterpoint
and areas where he opens things up for nimble interactions within smaller
sub-groupings. Reddy has already proved himself as a savvy small ensemble
leader and reed player. With this release, he also shows a penchant
for extending his music into potent large-ensemble settings.
—Michael Rosenstein, Signal to Noise
(Winter 2008)
Reddy’s new disc is his most ambitious to
date...a cogent, passionately argued piece of music that does justice
to its grave subject-matter.
—Nate Dorward, Cadence (Jan/Feb/Mar 2008)
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