Waterloo Records

Sui Generis
Artist: Mark Masters & Hagens,Tim
Format: CD
New: Call (512) 474-2500 to check in-store availability $16.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. Doyle Hud's Two Step
2. The Stoic
3. Deep Pools
4. Velocity
5. Interlude
6. Waxing and Waning
7. Pebbles
8. Meet Me At Sal ; Angies
9. The Hammer

More Info:

Mark Masters & Tim Hagens - Sui Generis / Mark Masters composes music for legendary trumpeter Tim Hagens on Sui Generis, which is Latin for "Of it's own kind". It was nearly fifty years ago that a teenage Mark Masters, then an aspiring young jazz trumpeter, first encountered the sound of trumpeter-flugelhornist Tim Hagans, who was playing in the Stan Kenton orchestra. Over the years, as Masters evolved into one of the most acclaimed composer-arrangers of his generation, he collaborated frequently with Hagans and came to know him as a singular talent. "Tim is a true original," Masters says. "He's developed his own harmonic language, which not many people have done. The term 'sui generis'"-a Latin phrase meaning "one of a kind"-"absolutely applies to him." Indeed, Sui Generis, is an album-length showcase for the trumpeter, placing him front and center of the composer's own idiosyncratic Mark Masters Ensemble. Originally conceived as featuring Hagans within a showcase of jazz standards, the project evolved into what Masters now calls "a kind of a concerto for chamber orchestra." Ever shifting in personnel and instrumentation, the Mark Masters Ensemble maintains two constants in all it's variations: an extremely high bar of musicianship, and a taste for Masters' distinct, unconventional aesthetic. In this case, the Ensemble positions Hagans alongside two saxophones (Nicole McCabe on alto and Jerry Pinter on tenor and soprano); Dave Woodley's trombone; John Dickson's French horn; and the rhythm section of pianist Jeff Colella, bassist Chris Colangelo and drummer Kendall Kay. Hagans' place in the spotlight, Masters is keen to stress, shouldn't diminish the importance of these other musicians on Sui Generis. "They're all active participants and collaborators in this whole thing," he says. "Even though it's orchestral music, it's still an improvised music; spontaneity and surprises happen, and all you can do is smile and look at your fellow musicians and marvel, because you know that their surprises will make the music better. And that is at the heart of what all jazz records should be."
        
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