Music Review: Manhattan New Music Project - Jazz Cycles
Published August 21, 2007
Orchestral jazz seem to be a dying art these days. Oh sure, there are Ellington, Monk and Mingus tribute bands, but there seems to be a dearth of composers creating new works. Well OK, maybe that's a little dramatic. In reality, such jazz composers still do exist today, but they toil in relative obscurity. One of the more notable contributors to the under-appreciated art of classical jazz among contemporaries was Paul Nash.
Paul Nash was a jazz guitarist who studied classical composition and from early on in his career concentrated on composing for and leading large ensembles. Shortly after he completed his studies in composition in the San Francisco Bay Area, Nash stuck around the area and founded the Paul Nash Ensemble in 1977, later establishing other jazz orchestras. The young, budding talents of trumpeters Mark Isham and Tom Harrell as well as future Spyro Gyra vibe player Dave Samuels have cut their teeth playing in Nash-led groups before making their own marks on the jazz world.
Eventually, Nash moved back to his native New York City in 1990, where he launched another vehicle for his compositions, the Manhattan New Music Project. Over the years MNMP has played in venues around NYC, presenting the music of Nash of other modern creative composers from the USA and around the globe. Prior to Jazz Cycles, they had put out just two albums, Mood Swing and The Soul Of Grace.
You might be wondering why I write of Paul Nash in the past tense. In 2003 while in his mid-fifties, Nash was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. He met this challenge with a determination to create a last flurry of compositions before his impending death to be recorded by the MNMP. The ensemble convened in the studio on December 6, 2004 and in a live-in-the-studio six hour session of only two takes, knocked out the fourteen tracks that make up this CD. The following day, during mixing, Nash fell ill and had to be brought straight to the hospital from the studio. He died there six weeks later.
The seven-piece band that came into the studio for Nash's last hurrah consisted of Shane Endsley on trumpet, Bruce Williamson on alto and soprano saxes, Tim Ries on tenor saxes, Vic Juris on guitar, Jay Anderson on bass, Grisha Alexiev on drums and Jim Ridl on piano. Juris, the guitarist who played alongside Mike Stern on Dave Liebman's Back On The Corner, displays a decidedly more John Scofield-like tone on this set. Jay Anderson, late of David Witham's Spinning The Circle provdes his accurate acoustic bass services for MNMP as well.
- Music Review: Manhattan New Music Project - Jazz Cycles
- Published: August 21, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Jazz
- Writer: Pico
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Comments
I've been listening to this disc all week, considering a column about Paul Nash, and essentially I'm in agreement with you here, Pico. I think Jazz Cycles is on my best of '07 list.
Thanks, Michael. From the little research I've done I think you'll find Nash to be a very interesting subject if you decide to write about him.





it's true, there aren't a whole lot of larger ensembles anymore. i can only think of the Dave Holland thing (which i assume isn't ongoing), Carla Bley, and also boston's Either Orchestra.