Tom Brantley - Reviews of Boneyard

Reviews of Boneyard

From the International Trombone Association Journal's review (October 2009, by Stan Pethel)

A boneyard is usually a place you find old junk airplanes, cars, and other rusting vehicles, but in listening to this CD the words of the prophet Ezekiel come to mind, “Shall these bones rise again?” The answer is yes. Tom Brantley shows his originality, creativity, and heritage on this CD. The promise of more to come is a hopeful thought.

From The Brass Herald (May 2009, by Philip Biggs)

Tom Brantley . . . is a musician who transcends technique and the practical considerations that most mortals have to deal with. One can just sit back, relax, and soak up the music-making. In fact, the same can be said of Tom Brantley as is said about great sportsmen. Two or three come to mind - Sachin Tendulkar when batting for the Indian Cricket team, Cesc Fàbregas when playing for Arsenal FC and, dare I say, Mike Lowell with the Boston Red Sox.

From Allmusic.com (April 2009, by Ken Dryden)

With his debut recording as a leader, trombonist and jazz educator Tom Brantley offers a versatile release, including both established and new compositions and live and studio performances, as well as a variety of different bands. Highly recommended.

From Jazzreview.com (April 2009)

Trombones ring loud and clear during this hybrid, live-studio date. Leading a large ensemble, top-flight bone-man Tom Brantley launches a vibrant modern mainstream gala, featuring originals and interesting spins on time-honored standards. Brantley’s corpulent tone and fluid attack combines hefty doses of improvisation with acute reinventions of a given melody line. Brantley executes sublime and mood-eliciting balladry. No doubt about it, Brantley has formulated a divergent set, complete with works that span various cadences and storylines. The strength of material and memorable arrangements translate into an endeavor that pronounces intelligence, wit, and plain old savvy, to complement the performers’ zealous soloing jaunts.

From Jazz Society of Oregon (April 2009)

In a myriad of instrumental settings ranging from a trombone-guitar duet to a five trombones and rhythm group, Tom Brantley solidly states the case for all of you bone freaks . . . as a leader, Brantley has done his homework and takes on all comers with style, wit, and, most importantly, musical acumen.

From JazzTimes (December 2009, by Bill Milkowski)

Trombonist Brantley shifts nimbly from an organ-fueled shuffle-blues version of Duke’s “In A Mellow Tone” to Saint-Saens’ classical “Adagio” delivered as a jazz ballad to a wacky rendition of Bird’s “Confirmation” done as a second line groover. A Carl Fontana influence is apparent on his stunning duet with guitarist LaRue Nickelson on “Stardust.” He also engages Keith Oshiro in a spirited two-trombone romp through Randy Weston’s “Hi Fly.” Jerald Shynett offers some fine contrapuntal writing for five trombones on his lyrical “Exemption.”

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