Darren English, a young trumpeter from Cape Town, South
Africa now living in Atlanta, makes his recording debut with the March release
of Imagine Nation. Fronting a rhythm
section featuring Kenny Banks, Jr. on piano, Billy Thornton on bass and Chris Burroughs
on drums along with guest shots on selected tracks by vocalist Carmen Bradford,
tenor sax player Greg Tardy and trumpeters Russell Gunn and Joe Gransden, he
runs through a 10-piece set highlighted by an original three-part suite
celebrating the life of Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid.
The three tunes in the suite are the album’s opening title
piece, the punning “Imagine Nation” and “Pledge for Peace” (which includes
spoken word sections from Mandela) and “The Birth” which follow later in the
set. Since he calls this a suite, I would normally expect the three elements to
follow each other. Why, English chose to separate them, I have no idea. Indeed,
they seem to play just as reasonably as separate pieces. There is one other
original composition, a tribute to Russell Gunn leader of the Krunk Jazz
Orkestra which English calls “Bullet in the Gunn.” English is a member of the
Gunn orchestra and plays on their recent release The Sirius Mystery.
The rest of the album is made up of well-known standards
giving the trumpeter the opportunity to showcase his own original steps down
well-worn paths. So for example when he plays the opening melody of the
venerable “Body and Soul” without his mouthpiece, he seems to be serving notice
of something new in contrast to the lovely tones that follow with the
reintroduction of the mouthpiece. Whether it works or not is open to question.
He does a super job on the other hand working with Gunn and
Gransden on an exciting version of the old Charlie Barnet showpiece “Cherokee”
and his take on the Dizzy Gillespie classic “Bebop” is a winner as well. Bradford
does a fetching vocal on “What a Little Moonlight Can Do (To You)” and they
work elegantly together on “Skylark.”
If his debut is any indication, both as composer and
performer, Darren English is a force to be reckoned with.
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