Liner Notes
Distressing Disguises - There's a quote by Mother Theresa where she was asked
"Where do you see God?" and she said "I see God everywhere in all his
distressing disguises". She was referring that God was in everyone but was
hidden behind, ego identification, hate and a host of other things that suppress
the goodness in people. I thought it would make a nice title for a forward
moving, positive feeling yet reflective mood.
Buonarroti's Ceiling - If you ever thought you wrote a good tune or took a great
solo just look at the ceiling in the Sistine Chapel, it'll really put you in
your place as an artist. Magnificent, beyond words! I tried to create the mood
with this piece that puts me in that chapel and in the Vatican in general.
Meditative and ethereal is what I was going for.
Teach Me I Dare You - A quote by a fellow professor colleague that succinctly
defines the feeling of teaching a student who doesn't want what you selling
which can be frustrating and confusing.
Baby Dom - A tune dedicated to my two year old nephew Dominic. Just a cute happy
baby who laughs and plays the way a two year old should.
Song of India - Rimsky Korsakov's song has always been a favorite. I always
liked the melody and always thought Ronnie would make something great happen
with this piece which he did. A different groove along with the bass flute and
Jim's great trombone playing simply put this in a unique zone that feels like a
bath or mist or something: very smooth and just right.
The Truth Will Out - This piece sort of reflects a truth that suddenly and
magically appears when in a meditative mood. Truth sometimes allows itself to be
realized when in a calm mood. A meditative sketch type piece that, once again,
Ronnie owns.
Where the Jade Buddha Lives - On a trip to Thailand with Maynard Ferguson to
play with King Bhumibol (who plays sax) I visited Thailand's oldest and largest
temple, Wat Pho in Bangkok. There is a building in the temple called Main Bot
which houses a Jade Buddha that contains the ashes of Buddha. Very grand,
eastern, beautiful and calming.
The Puppy's Not Cute Anymore - There was a music student that was cute when
young. As he matured he became more knowledgeable, worldly and unfortunately,
cynical. Years later he went on a tirade about how some of the best players in
the world didn't really impress him and thought they were weak players blah,
blah, blah... It was such an insane conversation I wasn't listening anymore to
what he was saying and I found myself just watching as he dug himself deeper and
deeper into non-cuteness. When he left one of my friends turned to me and said
"Well, the puppy's not cute anymore". That was that.
The Long Goodbye - I named this tune after we recorded it. All I said was let's
play around with an 'F' tonality. I felt it captured the feeling of dealing with
someone suffering through any type of prolonged drawn-out illness or bad
situation. Exhausting, realizing, waiting, coming to grips with it etc...
Whenever I listen it puts me into a 'good place' (calmer, peaceful). This is
probably my favorite tune of the project.
I tried to create inherent moods for each piece. The goal for the players was to
create within that 'space' each piece offered, not simply plug in standard licks
and such. I knew that something special would show itself with this particular
group. The synergy and organic blossoming was something I was hoping for. It
wouldn't have happened without the special talents and contributions of these
great artists.
Denis DiBlasio