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The Reese Project

 

Press Reviews 

 

Jazz Week.com, October 12th, 2005, by Tad Hendrickson

Reese Project, Vicodin Dreams (95 North)

"...this band is working outside the jazz spotlight, but there is plenty take in here on the group's sixth effort. It's also as good a place as any to dive in. Formed in 1990, the self-proclaimed "East-Coast Cool" group features flute, cello, B3 and drums as well as occasional piano and percussion. Yet even with the unusual instrumentation, the band sounds entirely natural on this set of originals, blues and classics.  Highlights include the swingin' original "Scatastrophy" and the flute-driven "Wade in the Water." Indeed, there is nothing sleepy about this cool sounding disc."

Jazzsters ready Celtic treats for sinfonia's St. Pat's concert

By Geoff Gehman Of The Morning Call
THE DETAILS:       THE REESE PROJECT
www.mcall.com/entertainment/music/all-a_reeseboxmar11,0,4670749.story

 

What: Lancaster County jazz quartet performs arrangements of Celtic works with the Pennsylvania Sinfonia Orchestra during a St. Patrick's Day concert.  When: 7:30 p.m. Saturday.  Where: Symphony Hall, 23 N. 6th St., Allentown.  Tickets: $30 and $25; $26 and $24, seniors; $20 and $15, students.  Info: 610-434-7811, http://www.pasinfonia.org.  Rest of program: Handel's Suite in D Major (''Water Music''), Vaughan Williams' ''Rhosymedre,'' Haydn's Symphony No. 104 in D (''London''), Holst's ''Brook Green Suite''

The husband is a jazz musician who plays pennywhistle, bamboo flute and an ocarina as big as a bloated softball. The wife is a classical musician who plays jazz on electric cello. Together, they play in four bands that play everything from samba to silent film scores everywhere from a martini bar to a planetarium. Oh, yes, they also run a record company that releases titles like ''Apocalyptic Hayride.''

Tom and Laurie Reese run their musical hayride from Mount Joy in their native Lancaster County. On Saturday, they'll hit the road, a place they know very well, to beef up their jazz, classical and folk chops in a St. Patrick's Day concert with the Pennsylvania Sinfonia Orchestra.

The Reese Project, the couple's jazz quartet with drummer Aaron Walker and guitarist Bobby Brewer, will perform Celtic numbers with the orchestra at Allentown Symphony Hall. The program includes the Reeses' arrangements of Irish harp numbers, a Scottish medley and the Appalachian tunes ''June Apple'' and ''Kitchen Girl.'' The band will solo on Tom Reese's ''Planxty Kong,'' a tribal number honoring one of his favorite films, the 1933 version of ''King Kong.''

The Reeses have long been on the radar of Pennsylvania Sinfonia executive director Alex Meixner, a jazz trumpeter and a fellow member of a touring educational program run by the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. He mentioned the couple's goal to work more with orchestras to Allan Birney, the Sinfonia's music director and conductor. Birney agreed to add the Reese Project to the Sinfonia's small roster of non-classical acts: a jazz group led by Allentown guitarist-producer Mike Krisukas and the Tango Project.

''We just thought it would be nice to do something a little unusual,'' says Birney. ''There's not a heck of a lot of Irish classical music for orchestra; it's mostly folk and other kinds of music. I don't see us starting a yearly Celtic tradition; we're just taking advantage of the happenstance of a date falling on St. Patrick's Day.''

For the Reese Project, planxtys and reels are but the tip of the harp. The band specializes in ''East Coast Cool,'' an answer to the ''West Coast Cool'' of Wes Montgomery, the late, great, effortlessly soulful jazz guitarist. Hybrids range from a rock version of ''Abigail Judge'' by blind harpist Turlough O'Carolan to Tom Reese's ''Lullaby in Clay,'' a samba played on one of his more than 30 ocarinas made in 19th-century Vienna. On the band's seventh and latest CD, cut live last year in a Fort Worth church, Bach's Minuet in G segues into Lennon-McCartney's ''Norwegian Wood.''

The group's schedule is just as diverse. To make ends meet, and increase the exposure that makes ends easier to meet, the Reeses have performed at a jazz festival at a Lancaster County winery and HMV record stores in Manhattan. They've improvised during screenings of ''Metropolis,'' ''The Birth of a Nation'' and other silent films. Tom Reese, a science fiction fan, particularly enjoys playing to the 1925 version of ''The Lost World,'' based on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's book about adventures with dinosaurs.

The Reeses are dedicated educators as well. The National Endowment for the Arts has given Tom three grants for directing a theater program at the Fulton Opera House in Lancaster. He and Laurie have worked for The Commission Project, a nonprofit in Rochester that pairs composers with students in upstate New York. One of their workshops involves building ocarinas; he likes to demonstrate by playing a D model, which is as big as a small cantaloupe.

The Reeses grew up 12 miles apart in Lancaster County, with Laurie in Landisville and Tom in Elizabethtown. Despite the short distance between hometowns, they never met in their youth. Tom, 54, was busy fronting jazz groups and raising a family. Laurie, 45, was busy freelancing as a mostly classical cellist on the East and West coasts, sessioning with everyone from Henry Mancini to Gloria Estefan. One of her colorful assignments was recording a Christmas album by Yes singer Jon Anderson. ''He'd always tap on the mike,'' she recalls, ''and say: 'More echo, more echo.'''

Laurie and Tom first collaborated in 1991 when he hired her for a date at the Hotel Hershey. She bluffed her way into his band by fibbing that she knew how to improvise. Fifteen years later, she naturally switches gears whether she's playing love songs during a wedding reception or synchronizing to a laser light show.

The Reeses clearly believe that the family that plays together stays together. They perform in a classical duo (MuZette), a classical trio (Susquehanna) and a Celtic folk-rock quartet (Wyndfall). Their Wyndfall Records label issues CDs by these groups, plus the Reese Project and non-Reese projects.

One of the reasons the Reeses founded Wyndfall was the chance to name their own songs. Two years have passed, and Tom is still sore that a former record executive gave a CD the same title as a song inspired by Reese's dental surgery.

''I wrote 'Vicodin Dreams' around 3 a.m. one night, after having a tooth extracted, when I was hallucinating that we were performing Dave Brubeck's 'Take Five' in 6,'' says Reese with a laugh. ''I wanted to name the record 'Evening in Vermont,' but [the record executive] said it would sound too much like a live album. Some radio stations wouldn't play it because there's a narcotic in the title. It's kind of childish, but I understand. Because people take the wrong meaning out of everything in this world.''

Some of the sting was relieved by the fact that ''Vicodin Dreams'' remained for two months in JazzWeek magazine's Top 60. It's one of a handful of the Reese Project's high charts. ''Blue Etude,'' a 2000 recording, stayed for five weeks on Gavin's national radio jazz list. ''Dark Kat Revisited,'' a track from the 2004 CD ''Apocalyptic Hayride,'' spent six weeks in the Hot 11 at WRTI, the jazz/classical public radio station in Philadelphia.

''Apocalyptic Hayride'' has a cover of a nightmarish painting by Hieronymus Bosch and a tune devoted to another nightmare: the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Inspired by Simon and Garfunkel's interpolation of ''Silent Night'' with broadcasts of the Vietnam War and serial murders, Reese wrote ''Elegy 9-11/a.m. news'' for three flutes, English horn and more than two minutes of radio reports of the destruction of the World Trade Center towers.

''I was a little reluctant to do any kind of 9/11 tribute,'' says Reese. ''I just didn't want to be exploitative; I just wanted to suggest the souls of friends and loved ones departing the buildings as they collapsed. Evidently, it went over well in Mexico; a DJ there told me 'That's all people want to hear.'''

Carving a foreign career is one of the Reeses' goals. They envision touring Ireland for the first time with a keyboardist and a bassist. They also want to play more orchestral dates and expand their recording horizons. They recently received a boost when Concord Records, a well-known jazz label in Beverly Hills, agreed to release the Reese Quartet's remake of Herbie Mann's ''Memphis Underground'' to test the market for a CD.

In the meantime, the Reeses will continue being honorary Irish musicians. On Saturday, they'll play a pair of banks before they perform with the Pennsylvania Sinfonia. It will be an easy schedule compared to last year's St. Patty's massacre – er, marathon. That day Tom and Laurie played seven gigs in a duo, trio and quartet, roaming from restaurant to college to bars. After 17 hours on the run, they felt exhausted, exhilarated and ready for a few Guinness dreams.

geoff.gehman@mcall.com

610-820-6516
 

Poet of Music
Central PA Magazine
  Musician and composer Tom Reese is a man of blues.
  No, maybe a folksy man of Irish music.
  A classical kind of guy? He definitely is the type of person who can say, "Shakespeare was a brilliant jazz musician" -- and make you believe him.
  There is no definitive catch-all label besides musician-composer (and, perhaps, occasional poet.  It all depends on where and when you've heard him, or which of his many recordings you may own.
  Working within the boundaries of various music styles -- and, sometimes, stretching those boundaries -- "helps me become more in touch with what's around me as a freelance musician," he says. "It helps me be more aware of the world and what the world wants to hear."
  Reese'foray into the arts began when an Elizabethtown College professor encouraged his interest in poetry. It still remains a love os his, says Reese, who has pulled together a collection of his verses. "I would be totally satisfied with being a poet of words."
  Instead, he has turned to the poetry of music, using it to paint his own sorrows, as in "Lament for Cora Lee" recorded by the Susquehanna Ensemble, a group of Central PA instrumentalists with tastes as eclectic as Reese's. And he has used it for his musings on nature, like "Acorn Waltz" with the Arcona Reel Band or "La Valse de Neige," written during a snowstorm and performed with the Susquehanna Ensemble.
  "I often had the whole idea mapped out to convert visual to musical," he says. "I've always been focused to the point where I know pretty much what I want out of the tune before I start."
  Reese plays soprano flute and seven other woodwind instruments from around the world -- from the Irish pennywhistle and Italian ocarina to the Chinese bamboo flute and Peruvian pan pipes -- as well as keyboards.
  He has been edging toward classical efforts lately, and recently had the chance to play Beethoven's Mass in C with an orchestra. It was, he says, "like the Little League slugger meeting Mickey Mantle."
  When it's a truly great piece, written by an inspired composer, playing the score can be like meeting part of the composer in person.
  "When I was inside of it, playing with the orchestra, the sound ... it was exciting. You can touch him. A voice is added, it's collective, and you're part of a powerful spirit.
  "Nothing I've ever heard is as important as Beethoven, Brahms, Bach, Debussy. I'm learning, from listening to classical music, how to write music. And the style doesn't matter."
  Now, after years of writing music for solo instruments, ensembles and bands of all types, Reese thinks he knows what his biggest opus will be.
  It's a concerto for his wife, cellist Laurie Haines Reese. "Without Laurie, I wouldn't have any of this," Reese says. "I wouldn't have the ambition to do this with my skills, and she inspires it."
  But he doesn't bring Laurie in to test newly written passages. "I don't want to use my wife as a tool to write this," he says. "When she plays it, I want it to be spiritual. I want her to be inside it and make it hers."
  Writing the concerto will be "four years of my life," he predicts, "and it'll probably be the most important thing of my life."


The Reese Project, "Blue Etude"
Rambles.net
The Reese Project is indeed a family affair, made up of flautist Tom Reese (who composes the songs), Kirk Reese on piano and Laurie Haines Reese on cello.  The other members are ... You might think from the instrumentation that the Reese Project is oriented to chamber jazz, but this CD will set you straight. The Reese Project is everything from blues (the concentration here) to bop to funk, and in each style they are more than adept and quite frequently sublime.

The album starts with a funky, down-home groove, but then there's a complex chord that lets us know we're listening to JAZZ, and the flute comes in, warm and fluffy as a new puppy. Because of the fact that there's no reed to bend, I've always felt that it's difficult to get much passion from a flute, but Tom Reese proves the exception, working wonders with just a column of air, changing that warm puppy into a junkyard dog when the spirit moves him.  He's got great chops and can play lightning fast, but also knows when to slow down and let the emotion carry him. Kirk Reese on piano is his equal, as his first solo proves. Block chords lead into some elegant single-note right-hand work, and the level stays high through the CD. 

The title track, a duet between Laurie Haines Reese and guitarist Bobby Brewer, is a glorious piece of music, and whether or not it's jazz depends on how broad your definition is.  Mine is VERY broad. Still, this has more to do with Bach than bop, with interweaving lines between cello and guitar. It has a stark, spare, minimalist sound, with rich dissonances that slowly resolve themselves. A guitar/cello duet isn't something you expect in a jazz album, and its appearance here is in startlingly beautiful contrast to the rest of the music. Jazz is, after all, about surprise, and too often it's unsurprising. Not in this case.

"Blue Etude" more than fulfills the promise of the Reese Project's earlier work. It's a fine hour of beautifully recorded jazz that offers creative compositions, tight performances and eye-opening surprises. And that's what the best jazz is all about.

See complete review at:  www.rambles.net/reese_blueetude.html


The many projects of TOM REESE
Fly Magazine
    Men like Tom Reese are a rare breed. Renaissance men. Guys that can do it all and never spread too thin. As a jazz flautist, classical flautist, and composer, his concepts and images in music are respectfully timeless.  Reese, like a true artisan, relies on heartfelt inspiration to begin his creations. He peers through everyday life and interprets nature in his own graceful compositions. Great thoughts never go out of style, and Reese is driven by the simple basics of life that many of us take for granted.
    He tells me in our interview, "I live a life of peace, life is great, and I'm blessed. My approach to jazz is a conversation." The Reese Project's latest album, Blue Etude, is a prime example. Released in 2000, the album is an invigorating and bustling banter between Reese and 10 other musicians; a prominent vibe of friendship abounds within the recording. Blue Etude very curiously pulls the listener in with a baffling diversity of tunes. Approaching the three-minute mark in "Loose Goose Blues," Reese can be heard interjecting his trademark "Yeah" amid a minefield of slick drum fills. Never shy about exposing his enthusiasm, Reese seems to radiate a contagious optimism in every project he graces. The music is inclusive, just like Reese.  When I first met him, he was playing at Ellington's in Lancaster and he introduced me to everyone he knew in the room. Beyond being polite, he made sure that I felt comfortable and included. Hes bearing on music is much the same.
    Jazz is a brotherhood. Many players and writer I know advise not to venture forth into the world of jazz alone. Reese's consortium is one of artists he can trust with his sketches. "The cats I play with are just an extension of my thought processes," he says. To get a call from Reese means he reveres you as someone exceptional. He met his wife, Laurie Haines Reese, after they played a gig together at the Hershey Hotel. He views Laurie not only as an inspiring partner but as "a professional msuician he can always count on."
    Formed in 1990, The Reese Project include Reese on flute and Indian flute, brother Kirk Reese on piano, and rounding out the family, wife Laurie on cello. The Project also features Nashville monster Bobby Brewer on guitar, Johnny DeFrancesco (brother of world-famous organist Joey DeFrancesco) on guitar, Paul Klinefelter on bass, and Glenn Ferracone on drums.  The CD also features a few additional guests: vocalists Anne Sciolla and Jesse Yawn, along with Johannes Dietrich on violin and viola, and Jeff Stabley on congas.  The chemistry among these players led the Innervisions' Jazz charts to rate Blue Etude the No. 1 album of 2000 [and 2001].  And it reached No. 43 on Gavin's national radi jazz charts; the CD stayed in the top-60 for five weeks. Live, local performances are a montage of the aforementioned lineup, trimming the group down to a duo at some venues.
Complete article can be seen at www.wyndfallrecords.com/reeseproject.


Jazz without the Smoke at Alois Restaurant
Lancaster Sunday News 3-23-03
  Andrew Gerofsky decided to go out on a limb for some of his customers. 
  He put away the ashtrays at the bar and proclaimed Wednesday night smoke-free at Alois Restaurant at Bube’s Brewery, 102 N. Market Street, Mount Joy.
  To celebrate his experiment, he booked the Tom Reese Project, a local jazz band. And while jazz is typically associated with smoky barrooms, the smoke-free night was a big success, with a full bar and appreciative comments like “It felt good to be at a bar to eat and not taste smoke in my food.”
  Gerofsky said he wants to give people the option of not having to sit in a smoke-filled room. To that end, he’d like to offer the same band on different nights of the week so everyone has a choice.
  “I’m treading lightly on Wednesdays at first because I have to prove that this will be viable to the business.”
  If so, he said he’ll start booking bands for every smoke-free Wednesday.
  He’s scheduled Tom Reese for April 16, and Gerofsky said he is planning on booking more bands immediately.


Third Stream, Reese Project & Jenny V. return
Lancaster Intelligencer Journal
Good musicians take their time crafting new recordings, and they sometimes drop out of sight for short periods of time to recharge their creativity. Here are some top local jazz musicians (along with their venues) who have done both lately:
    The Reese Project has a new line-up and is scheduled to release a new CD in September on Dreamscape Records, their new Sugar Daddy label.  The Reese Project has accepted invitations for appearances at both the Montreux and Montreal Jazz Festivals in 2005.  A tour of England also is in the works for this winter.
    The driving force behind The Reese Project's ambitions is flute player and songwriter Tom Reese.
    The band's recording from 2000, "Blue Etude," was stunningly good jazz that reached No. 43 on the Gavin National Jazz Charts. So expectations are high for the new music.
    The lineup for the July 3 appearance at the Bleveder is Tom Reese, New York organist Dave Lewis and Laurie Haines Reese on cello.  Local drummer Aaron Walker and vocalist/saxophonist Paul Atherton will round out the band's touring lineup.  Kir Reese, Tom's brother, will play piano on the group's new recording.
 

Click on pictures for larger images, then resize picture to read. 

    Poet of Music, Central PA Magazine, Article by Jennifer Kopf

 

  "Classics Reel," about Silent Film Series, in What's Doing Section of the Lancaster Sunday News. April 11th, 2004

 

"Making Tracks," Blue Etude CD Review by Toby Knapp, September 2000

The Fly Magazine           
  It's been said that art imitates life. Check out the latest disc from The Reese Project and you'll see how.
  You'll also hear one of the most impressive modern jazz projects in the country ... which incidentally ... comes from a small town in Lancaster County.
  "I approached [the project] like a storyboard," says Tom Reese, who plays the flute and composed all the selections on the disc. "Like Miles Davis, I got good jazz players to play jazz songs with rudimentary jazz tunes and took the best stuff."
  So, why is this man from Mt. Joy and his jazz getting national attention?
  It really is that good.
  All songs on "Blue Etude" radiate a very personal feeling and invoke emotion ... the same emotions Reese felt when writing and composing the project. All the songs relate -- in some way -- to Reese's life. From "Levi's Blues," which Reese wrote for his parrot Levi, to the moving and heartfelt "Key to Your Heart," which Reese wrote as a tribute to his second failed marriage. The entire project is incredibly upbeat and, as Reese says, "lighthearted."
  "It's all designed to be enjoyable," says Reese when asked to sum up the project. "It has a universal appeal. It's very hip."
  It's hip, it's local, and it's for jazz fans everywhere.

 

     "An Appetite for Jazz," August 19th, 2001, Lancaster Sunday News

 

Blues Summit (a new high for blues) by Catheryn Sharnberger
Fly Magazine
  Some of the best blues musicians in the region will be in the spotlight on September 17, when a Blues Summit is held at L.C. Jordan's in Elizabethtown. The event is sponsored by Horseplay Records, out of Lewisberry.
  Audiences will be treated to a mix of blues standards, jazz standards and original tunes at the show, says Tom Reese, who is organizing the event. With Reese on flute, the lineup features Dave Maxwell on piano, Johnny DeFrancesco on guitar, Paul Klinefelter on bass and Glenn Ferracone on drums. Each musician has extensive and impressive experience, including Maxwell, who has spent time gigging with the house band on "Late Nights with Conan O'Brien." Along with standards, the show will feature original music. "We'll do some of Dave's originals. We'll probably do some of mine, but it will be mostly blues standards and jazz standards," Reese notes.
  This is the second such event that has been held locally. The first one, held over Memorial Day weekend at L.C. Jordan's, was a huge success, featuring a packed house. "People were there 'til 3:30 [am], in shock, last time," Reese says, adding that audiences can expect to be treated to "high-level blues jazz. They can expect a lot of high energy music from world-class musicians." They can also expect a listenable show: "It's not real loud, either. It's not going to burn anyone's brains." Along with performing at the Blues Summit, the lineup will convene for an album on Horseplay Records, due out this fall, Reese says.
  Press from Alois Restaurant

 

    What's the Buzz, Strasburg Jazz Festival.  Ashley M Groff, Fly Magazine, February 2003.  

 

Press from The Reese Project's 2002 visit to Rochester, NY, performing and teaching at a children's workshop for jazz.  11/14/02

All that ‘Apollo’ jazz
Greece (New York) Post 11/14/02
  Tom Reese is like a poet, writing the language of music with his flute.
  “It’s free-form; there is no wrong,” he told a crowd of student musicians gathered in the auditorium of Apollo Middle School Nov. 6.  “This is you, expressing yourself.”
  His band, a Pennsylvania-based jazz quartet called the Reese Project, performed for more than 100 students last week.  The foursome then presented the youngsters with a daunting challenge: Using the notes they’d already learned that morning and in class, they were to play in unison without a musical script.
  Jazz, he told the students, has a “basic literature.” Once that’s been learned, the rest should come from inside, he said.
  It was a concept that appealed to seventh-grader Hayden Welch, who has been studying the clarinet for two years and sees a musical career in her future.
  “We’re just learning improv,” she said, her eyes wide. “I’d say I’m pretty good.”
  Some of the students weren’t quite as serious. One boy found the oversized brass bell of his slide trombone made a nice hat. Another picked attentively at his saxophone’s neck strap. Still, others were bobbing their heads and tapping their feet to the music.
  “Now, I want you to play any notes you want in a certain rhythm,” Reese told the students as the workshop came to an end. “This is free. It’s soul.”
  Apollo music teacher Bruce Trojan agreed.
  “Improv is spontaneous composition,” he said. “But everybody can learn how to do it.”
  It may have been the first time the students were being told to abandon the rules, especially by a man who, with his broad build and long gray ponytail, looks more like ‘70s classic rocker David Crosby than jazz great Miles Davis. Reese has been playing the flute – what he calls his “axe” for 32 years and still practices, or “woodsheds,” for two hours each day.
  His band’s latest collection, “Blue Etude,” features a drummer, a pianist and his wife, Laurie, a cellist.
  The album is being sponsored by the Commission Project, a non-profit Rochester agency that arranges for artist residencies in participating schools. The group contacted Trojan about Reese, and the middle-school teacher welcomed the idea of an improvisational jazz workshop.
  “They’re learning improv now, and I thought it would be good for them to hear it from someone other than me,“ Trojan said of his students.
  On-the-fly playing puts musicians better in touch with their own rhythms and each other., Reese said. It’s a matter of creating sounds in an order that just seems right, rather than by following a written plan.
  Reese made jokes throughout his presentation, poking fun at popular music: “the only time I’ll ‘rap’ is a Christmas time.”
  He taught the crowd some jazz jargon: “That was a ‘cool ride,’” he said after one particularly rousing set. And, for the benefit of his young charges, he often spoke in sounds rather than words.
  “The first one is ‘da, da, daaa,” and the second one is ‘da, daaaa,’” he said, giving the students a melody to play while the Reese Project performed a spontaneous number. “I learned English for no reason at all.” 

 

    Chaddsford Winery Jazz Festival, 2003. 

 

 

    Art Inspires Music.