

Visit:
www.daveschnitter.com
recorded
and mixed by jimmy madison at garden studios NYC,
February 2001. photography. art direction &
design by ximo tebar. p & c 2004 omix records.
www.omixrecords.com, email: promojazz@omixrecords.com
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01 |
Dili
Dali D.Schnitter |
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02 |
Sketch
D.Schnitter |
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03 |
For
All We Know Coots/Lewis |
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04 |
Sooner
or Later D.Schnitter |
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05 |
All
or Nothing at All Altman/Lawrence |
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06 |
Flirtation
with Faust D.Schnitter |
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07 |
You Don't Know What Love Is De Paul/Raye |
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08 |
Sputnik
J.Zollar |
DAVE
SCHNITTER tenor sax
JAMES ZOLLAR trumpet
THOMAS BRAMERIE bass
JIMMY MADISON drums
Produced
by Ximo Tebar

Saxophonics
SKETCH by David Franklin
Folks who remember Dave Schnitter as a hard-bop tenor
player with the Jazz Messengers in the '70s might be a
bit surprised by his latest offering. Sketch (Sunnyside),
recorded in early 2001, does indeed demonstrate Schnitter's
continued ease with that classic approach, but with its
lack of a chordal instrument, quirky stop-and-go compositions
by Schnitter or trumpeter James Zollar ("Dili Dali,"
"Sketch," "Sooner or Later," "Flirtation
With Faust," "Sputnik"), and sometimes
free-jazz improvisational phraseology, it also shows the
marked influence of Ornette Coleman's early groups. It's
on the standards "For All We Know," "All
or Nothing at All" and "You Don't Know What
Love Is" where Schnitter is most likely to show his
Coltrane and Joe Henderson influences and Zollar to demonstrate
his considerable hard-bop skills (he can also do a fine
New Orleans gut-bucket imitation). With long-time associate
Jimmy Madison on drums and the broadly experienced Thomas
Bramerie on bass, the group achieves a high level of cohesion
that enables them to interact quite effectively. Sketch
is a satisfying combination of the familiar and the unpredictable.
David Franklin, JAZZTIMES, December 2004 issue
Le
jazz a sa tribune ! -- CitizenJazz
Dave Schnitter - Sketch [ Omix Records ]
Ancien saxophoniste des Jazz Messengers d'Art Blakey,
Dave Schnitter enchaîne sur Sketch une série
d'exercices de style : swing, new-orleans, free, bop...
tout y passe. Un disque plein de rebondissements. James
Zoller, si peu présent sur la scène jazz
internationale, est ici magnifique.
CitizenJazz France, Oct 2004
Dave
Schnitter / Sketch
By Samuel Chell / All About Jazz NYC, August 2004
Not
only did David Schnitter have the longest tenure of any
tenor saxophonist in Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers but
he was always present on the most exciting and memorable
of Bu's sets that I was privileged to catch. His return
to music and recording after a sabbatical of over 20 years
is at once cheering and disturbing. There may have been
more schooled and disciplined players preceding and succeeding
Schnitter, not to mention younger, more marketable icons
that attracted record producers following the post-Wynton
era. But none of them brought to a performance a huge
unconstructed tone so disproportionate to
the player's diminutive size, a determination to let emotion
control technique instead of vice versa, and finally a
passion for playing that precluded virtually any hip
posturing (with the exception of the James Brown-Wilson
Pickett style vocals Art Blakey began to require of him).
His comparative neglect for two decades is one of the
crueler injustices in a music that is hardly known for
fairness. Not a single one of his four excellent LP's
for Muse has been issued on CD. As a result, Sketch (along
with the more accessible music on a recent European release,
Pen Pals) is a welcome return of the prodigal Messenger.
Schnitter's
sound is now somewhere between Hank Mobley's warm muskiness
and Coltrane's direct, vibratoless approach.
The
music on this recording requires close, attentive listening,
and I doubt many listeners will assimilate it in a single
sitting. Schnitter plays less symmetrically but more lyrically
now, favoring the upper register of the horn and being
less conscious of the bar lines. It's as though he's abandoned
the influence and powerful breathstream of his former
hero, Dexter Gordon, and turned to Ornette Coleman and
John Coltrane for conceptual inspiration. Schnitter's
sound is now somewhere between Hank Mobley's warm muskiness
and Coltrane's direct, vibratoless approach. It bears
a mournful, elegiac quality that no doubt tells a story
in itself. Regardless, it's one of the most distinctive
sounds on the modern tenor scene, immediately recognizable,
as are his melodic ideas, especially the ascending, staccato-like
phrases that he uses to counter predictability.
Sketch might have be a more auspicious return for Schnitter
had he augmented the quartet, at least on the three standard
tunes, with a chord instrument (piano, vibes, or guitar).
For a musician who spent years playing alongside Bill
Hardman, Valery Ponomarev, and Freddy Hubbard, it's not
surprising that the leader has selected a first-rate,
empathetic trumpeter to join him on the frontline. James
Zollar not only covers the basesfrom Cootie Williams
to Don Cherrybut listens to and builds on the ideas
of the leader, at the same time abstracting them and inserting
humor. Listeners who responded favorably to Ornette Coleman's
quartets or to a Wayne Shorter session such as Footprints
Live may find Sketch comparatively mainstream and accessible.
Others will no doubt grow impatient with the lean textures
and polytonal conversations between the two instrumentalists
on the eight extended musical sketches.
In sum, for Schnitter fans this album is testimony to
his growth and continued musical vitality. On the other
hand, if you're new to Dave Schnitter, you may wish to
begin by looking for the approximately eight out-of-print
albums on which he plays with Art Blakey or is listed
as leader. Most highly recommended is the in-print DVD
Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, a 1976 afternoon concert
in Umbria, Italy with Bill Hardman on trumpet. It's some
the most honest, heartfelt, creative jazz performed during
an era better known for disco music, roller skates, and
Creed Taylor compromises.
Track listing: Dili Dali; Sketch; For All We Know;
Sooner or Later; All or Nothing at All; Flirtation with
Faust; You Don't Know What Love Is; Sputnik Personnel:
Dave Schnitter (tenor sax); James Zollar (trumpet); Thomas
Bramerie (bass); Jimmy Madison (drums)
The
Return Of The Prodigal Son
by Federico García Herráiz
Omix
is pleased to announce the release of Sketch, originally
recorded in February 2001. This will be a nice surprise
for everyone who follows Schnitter's career. If you know
about Schnitter's extensive musical knowledge and his
love for Dexter, Rollins and Coltrane, it is all documented
here. A quartet without piano, whose structure and compositions
reflect Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry's spirit of the
late 50s and early 60s.
Here as then, the fresh ideas and the facility to elaborate
lines and responses is based on a full understanding between
the trumpeter James Zollar and the saxophonist. Three
standards close to Schnitter's musical sensibility, "For
All We Know", "All or Nothing at All",
and "You Don't Know What Love Is", are played
with heart breaking expressionism.
Summarizing it all, this is another step forward for a
jazzman that still has a lot to say and is going to give
us more.
Dave
Schnitter
by Russ Musto / All About Jazz NYC, Nov 2003
David
Schnitter is the jazz world's forgotten messenger, a marvelous
musician who just happened to be in the right place right
before the right time. The 55 year old tenor saxaphonist
has yet to receive the recognition he deserves as a central
figure in the reorganization and resurgence Art Blakeys
Jazz Messengers underwent during the 70's paving the way
for the astonishing ascendancy into popular culture the
venerable institution later experienced with the introduction
of Wynton Marsalis into the band. Schintter joined the
Messengers in 1975, at a time when the 20-year-old organization
was in a real danger of premature extinction, and remained
a member into 1981-attaining the longest continuous tenure
of any player in the groups illustrious history. The short
lived bands Art led in the years prior to Schinitter's
induction featured a series of tenor saxophonists whose
conceptions were inspired by the modal experiments of
the day; and while much exciting music was created by
these groups one could sense that the organization had
strayed from it's avowed mission of a feel-good swinging.
David's confirmed allegiance to the saxophonic styles
of Dexter Gordon and Sonny Stitt, two of Blakey's favorite
collaborators, proved him to be the perfect recruit to
steer the group back on course.
Schnitter's debut recoding with art, In Walked Sonny,
paired the young tenorist with his idol Stitt, an experience
that would have terrified most saxophonists, young or
old, but one for which he has well prepared. "I had
played with Sonny Stitt many times at the Village Gate,"
he notes. "Me and Hilton Ruiz and Mario Rivera, we'd
all be hanging out, and say let's go down and bother Sonny."
Prior to the date the saxophonist played with two undocumented
editions of the Messengers: one a sextet with Shunzo Ono
on trumpet and the fiery Jackie McLean protégé
Nelson Sanamiego on alto; the other a quintet with the
great Woody Shaw. It was the In Walked Sonny band (sans
Stitt), with reenlisted Messengers Bill Hardman and Walter
Davis, Jr., however, that would endure. "We started
working more and it started gaining momentum little by
little, boom, boom, boom. We were over at Ronnie Scott's
in London for two weeks and then the next thing you know
we were all over Europe. That band lasted more than two
years."
Then in 1977 Russian trumpeter Valery Ponomarev replaced
Hardman, alto saxophonist Bobby Watson joined the front
line and the next great edition of the Jazz Messengers
was born, as evidenced in the classic Roulette recording
Gypsy Folk Tales. Soon David gained a new notoriety with
the band with the band when Art began featuring his soulful
singing in a show stopping Ray Charles-inspired rendition
of "Georgia". He remembers how he was accidentally
recruited to be the band vocalist: "One night in
Japan we were at a club after the concert and I was singing
and Art heard it. He saw that it got a good response from
the audience and said "We're going to put that in
the show". That was a great thing about Art: if he
saw you could do something he let you do it and it was
good for you and good for him, too. So it worked out,
but I got a little tired of it ( the singing) after about
a thousand times (laughs)."
The constant touring was also tiring out the young tenor.
"Art used to be on the road 40 weeks a year. He had
more energy than all of us put together. Hell yeah, I
was tired by the time I left. But I learned a great deal.
I didn't realize it all until later." In 1980 Schinitter
joined fellow Messenger alumnus Freddie Hubbard's band
for two years. Then he took his resume (that included
four excellent recordings as a leader for Muse and impressive
sideman appearances with organists Charles Earland and
Groove Holmes, in addition to Hubbard and Blakey) and
disappeared. "I moved to Spain in '80-82',"
he says. "I had a couple of festivals with Sal Nistico
and did a seminar with Claudio Roditi.
Then they brought me back and the people were so hospitable
and nice that I decided to move there and throughout Europe.
It was a very nice experience."
Schnitter moved back to New York in 1990 and devoted himself
to teaching, both privately and at The New School, where
he's been an instructor for the past nine years. "
I wasn't playing in public fro maybe 5 or 6 years,"
he recalls. "I wasn't looking for work as a leader,
but I was always playing with friends herein the house,
just not in the clubs. I got spoiled in Spain and I got
kind of turned off to the business here and the whole
rejection thing. I guess I was taking it personally."
He returned to the role of sideman about five years ago,
working with former Messenger bassist Mickey Bass uptown
at the Lenox Lounge and more recently with drummer Craig
Wuepper downtown at Smalls. He's also has a new album,
Pen Pals (Munich), with Dutch pianist Edgar van Asselt
and has begun working as a leader again.
While playing with Wuepper at the Ear Inn one night Jazz
Gallery director Dale Fitzgerald came in and surprised
to see the tenor saxophonist there made arrangements to
have him perform at the Gallery. Schnitter brought in
an excellent group with bassist Dennis Irwin ( who had
been with him for most of his years with Blakey), along
with pianist Michael Cochrane and Ronnie Burrage on Drums.
Unfortunately, very few people were able to hear it. David
approaches this lack of popular recognition with candor
and no bitterness. "I moved out of the country at
the height of my career. I was gone for almost ten years
and people forgot me. It's as simple as that. That's when
I realized the importance of playing in these clubs. It
helps when people see you and that's what I'm supposed
to be doing. Playing music for people and being a Messenger.
Sorprendente
Un nombre como el de Dave Schnitter no es fácilmente
olvidable. Y no sólo por su presencia en los Messengers
de Art Blakey o sus abundantes colaboraciones con Freddie
Hubbard, sino también por su prolongada estancia
en España durante los años 80. Quien le
haya perdido un poco de vista puede recuperar al saxofonista
gracias a Sketch, un disco de 2001 que ahora
aparece editado en nuestro país gracias al sello
valenciano Omix. En el álbum, Schnitter se acompaña
por un trío en el que aparecen James Zollar como
trompetista, Thomas Bramerie en el bajo y Jimmy Madison
con las baquetas. Con o sin piano, como en este caso,
la fluidez técnica de Schnitter sigue vigente y
sus recovecos formales sorprenden cada vez que se le escucha.
Esteban Perez, Todas Novedades, Oct. 2004
Campeón
Absoluto
El cuarteto ofreció una lección de jazz
actual con el liderazgo de alguien con el que hay que
contar en la nómina de tenores. Schnitter se mueve
con toda comodidad en un tema como "Equinox"
de John Coltrane. Pero su hermoso timbre se hace campeón
absoluto cuando aborda una balada como "How the deep
is is the ocean". Su triada de referencia en su instrumento
siguen siendo Dexter Gordon, John Coltrane y Sonny Rollins
y precisamente de este ultimo guardó el calypso
"St Thomas" para rematar el concierto. No fué
un ejercicio de nostalgia, sino un manifiesto de buen
estado de un gran músico.
Javier de Cambra, La Razón, Sep, 4,
2004, IVAM Jazz Festival Valencia
Impresionante Dave Schnitter
Hablar de Dave Schnitter es hablar de uno de los grandes
jazzmen más injustamente olvidados de las últimas
décadas. Su paso por los Messengers de Art Blakey
entre 1975 y 1981 -ningún músico, excepto
Blakey, estuvo tanto tiempo en la banda- fue fundamental
para el resurgir y la reorganización de aquel combo,
dejándolo listo para que la presencia de Wynton
Marsalis lo situara bajo los focos populares.
El estilo de Dave Schnitter se alía con Dexter
Gordon y Sonny Stitt (su ídolo) con un swing que
desprende buenas vibraciones y una inabarcable cultura
musical. Estuvo unos cuantos años fuera de circulación,
dedicado a la enseñanza y cansado del show business,
pero ha decidido que era el momento de volver y reclamar
todo lo que se merece. El hijo pródigo todavía
tiene muchas cosas que decir. El grupo que trajo al Jazzroom
es toda una declaración de intenciones, con monstruos
de la categoría de Michael Cochrane, Dennis Irwin
y Victor Jones, los tres con suficiente nivel como para
encabezar cualquier programación. Impresionante.
Jazz Room Barcelona / Atrapalo.com / Sep. 1, 2004
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