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Chris Biesterfeldt: Urban Mandolin

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Chris Biesterfeldt: Urban Mandolin
A mandolin player opening his first album as leader with Dizzy Gillespie's mercurial "Bebop"? Wow! That takes a lot of (fill in the blank). But Chris Biesterfeldt, best known as a guitarist, and for Broadway shows at that, not only sails through those tricky changes but handily nails everything else on this impressive trio album whose other protagonists are bassist Adam Armstrong and drummer Eric Halvorson.

The mandolin, not exactly a guitar but somewhere in the neighborhood, is most closely linked to bluegrass music, which makes Biesterfeldt's decision to set aside the guitar, at least temporarily, to record exclusively on the mandolin that much more audacious. The gamble pays off, as Biesterfeldt breathes life and energy into a variety of engaging tunes from jazz standards by Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Eddie Harris and Jimmy Smith to lesser-known works from the jazz and pop realm and even one classical exercise, J.S. Bach's "G-Minor Presto."

Guitarists are well represented; Pat Metheny wrote the buoyant "Bright Size Life," Frank Zappa the sinuous "Rollo Interior." Smith weighs in with his well-known blues, "Back at the Chicken Shack," and flag-waving "Ready and Able," Harris with the funky "Freedom Jazz Dance." Also on the menu are Parker's "Quasimodo," Monk's "Bye-Ya," Chick Corea's swaying "Armando's Rhumba," Wayne Shorter's free-wheeling "Witch Hunt," Jaco Pastorius' galvanic "Teen Town" and Randy Brecker's aptly named "Some Skunk Funk." Biesterfeldt gives each one his unreserved focus and respect, as do Armstrong and Halvorson. Among the more obscure compositions, Benedicto Lacerda and Alfredo Vianna's lively "Segura Ele" is an especially arduous test of mandolinic virtuosity, one that Biesterfeldt passes with high marks.

While the mandolin lacks the guitar's range, elegance or subtlety, Biesterfeldt makes the most of its assets, which include unambiguous good humor and visceral appeal. This is music to which toe-tapping is compulsory, not optional. And even though Urban Mandolin is blazoned as jazz, the specter of bluegrass often tarries close at hand even as Biesterfeldt and his teammates labor earnestly to assure he remains at arm's length. Such is the nature of the mandolin, even in the capable hands of a jazz partisan such as Biesterfeldt.

Track Listing

Bebop; Quasimodo; Freedom Jazz Dance; Bach G Minor Presto; I Can’t Make You Love Me; Teen Town; Bright Size Life; Ready and Able; Armando’s Rhumba; Bye-Ya; Witch Hunt; Segura Ele; God Only Knows; Back at the Chicken Shack; Some Skunk Funk; Rollo Interior.

Personnel

Chris Biesterfeldt: mandolin; Adam Armstrong: bass; Eric Halvorson: drums.

Album information

Title: Urban Mandolin | Year Released: 2013 | Record Label: Self Produced

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