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Mark F. Turner's Best of 2015

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The number of artists that continue to produce quality jazz is not slowing and that's a beautiful thing. It's becoming more difficult to differentiate between so many varied releases but here are few that stood out in 2015.

Kamasi Washington
The Epic
(Brainfeeder)

Straight-ahead, hard swinging and Afrocentric, Los Angeles based composer/saxophonist Kamasi Washington delivers an epic adventure with his 172 minute opus that includes a jazz ensemble, choir, and strings filled with a vibrancy that would make John Coltrane and Sun Ra smile.

Ike Sturm + Evergreen
Shelter Of Trees
(Self-Produced)

Led by bassist Ike Sturm who serves as The Director of Music for the Jazz Ministry at Saint Peter's Church in Manhattan, New York, this program of sacred music and contemporary jazz is both soothing and exhilarating.

Tomoko Omura
Roots
(Inner Circle Music)

Chosen as one of 2015's "Rising Stars" in Downbeat magazine's critics poll, violinist Tomoko Omura's Roots is evidence that some of the most alluring music is that which combines disparate locales and cultures

Julian Lage
World's Fair
(Modern Lore Records)

A phenomenal technician, Lage is more importantly a guitarist pronounced tonality and delicate touch who exudes a plethora of moods from his instrument as displayed with his first solo acoustic release.

José James
Yesterday I Had The Blues: The Music Of Billie Holiday
(Blue Note Records)

In celebration of Billie Holiday's 100th birthday (April 7th 1915), singer José James provides a heartfelt and engaging homage with an excellent tribute to "Lady Day."

Pete Rodriguez
El Conde Negro
(Destiny Records)

Trumpeter Pete Rodriguez has crafted a sumptuous release where the deep sultry tone of his vocals and horn are equally alluring. This Nuyorican (Puerto Rican descendants who live in or near New York City) combines jazz, classical and abstract ideas with neo-romanticism flair in a release that draws inspiration from the past yet exudes fresh individualism.

Nicole Mitchell / Tomeka Reid / Mike Reed
Artifacts
(482 Music)

In celebration of the AACM's 50th anniversary, three of the organization's current members give fresh interpretations of the founder's music that embody the spirit of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians.

Donny McCaslin
Fast Future
(Greenleaf Music)

Saxophonist Donny McCaslin digs further into the acoustic-electronic playground first visited in 2012's Casting for Gravity (Greenleaf Music). Not just more of the same but better. Its funkiness is brought by a tight ensemble with savvy production work.

William Parker
Great Spirit
(Aum Fidelity)

This previously unreleased collection from William Parker and his amazing Raining On The Moon ensemble is uncompromising jazz with an uplifting vibe.

Kendrick Lamar
To Pimp a Butterfly
(Interscope)

The critically acclaimed third studio album by rapper Kendrick Lamar represents the very best in hip hop—thought-provoking, social commentary of life on the fringes, with elements of funk, spoken word, and jazz; correctly described by Lamar as "honest, fearful and unapologetic."

Laurent Coq and Walter Smith III
The LaFayette Suite
(Jazzandpeople)

French pianist Laurent Coq and American saxophonist Walter Smith III continue the spirit of collaboration which interestingly enough began around 1777 between French nobleman / military officer Marquis de Lafayette and President George Washington during the American Revolutionary War, in one of 2015's most interesting recordings.

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