ZZCD 9806 - A
Rhythm Indicatvie with the Damon Brown Quintet
(PLEASE SEE COMMENTS FROM DAMON BROWN FANS at bottom of page)
The Jazz Rag September/October 1998 (Issue 52)
For his debut recording as leader, trumpeter Damon Brown used a quintet with saxophonist Andy Panayi and guests on certain titles. Brown has a pleasing tone on trumpet and uses the mellow sound of the flügelhorn to good effect on a programme of eleven titles, all originals except for the closing Bye Bye Blackbird.Brown displays an interesting variety in his phrasing, using tonal and rhythmic devices, both theme statements and soli - this is heard to particularly good effect on Blues For JW and on the boppish (ironically titled) Swing Features where his work in the middle register is incisive and economic. The highlight to this listener is the agile phrasing on Bye Bye Blackbird - Brown tears through his solo in a melodic but rapid way that recalls Clifford Brown.
Brown's fellow musicians are to be complimented on their roles as support and in their own right.
For a debut album A Rhythm Indicative has much to commend it.
GREG MURPHY
Crescendo
Judy's Goat . Minnie The Minx. . Web. The Mondey's Dream
. Love Unfold . Blues for J.W. . Swing Featured . The Don . A Rhythm Indicative . It
Hasn'6 Moved . Bye Bye Blackbird
Quintet: Damon Brown (trumpet, flugelhorn), Gareth
Williams (piano), Geoff Gascoigne (bass), Winston
Clifford (drums), andy Panayi (reeds), Christian
Brewer (alto sax), Jonathan Gee (piano).
Ten out of eleven tracks on this issue are compositions by
leader/trumpet, flugel player Damon Brown (the
exception being the last title, a familiar standard), and it must be acknowledged that the
performances are of consistently high musical quality - polished, with solos (as you might
expect from the prestigious line-ups indicated above) of interest and originality: Brown's
poised, lightly-swinging horns supply and authoritative led and thoughtful solos modes.
The basic quintet is composed of vastly experienced souls, welcome in multifarious
manifestations of contemporary jazz activity, stylistically a melange of boppish unisons
and well-written coontrapuntal confections all performed accurately with a steady
finely-swinging verve and vigour. And then, the special guests contribute a flavour of
hard-bop variations.
All in all then, as impressive album debut for the enterprising jazzmanb. it there
is just one aspect of this package that does concern me a tad -nothing to do with the
music, just policy, ten originals by Demon seem to create a situation of what I
micht percieve as an element of anonymity. It might have been a more commercial ploy to
have jazzstandards say, by Ellington, Mulligan or Kern, Proter and the like- strong
melodies, finely-crafted sequences, something for the prospective investors to latch on
to. There's little amiss with the originals except perhaps their unfamiliarity. Yes, this
programme is neat of tried-and-tested, shall we say, realignment of policy and
preservation of such regard for musicality would wiith some flexibility (just a little
clinical coolness tinctures the output here, I recon), would pay handsome future dividends
for Damon and Company.
Ken Rattenbury
The Times - Showcase for a new generation - New Jazz Albums
Damon Brown Quintet - A Rhythm Indicative ( Zah Zah ZZCD 9806)
As A showcase for a representative sample of the new established generation in UK jazz,
this album, led by trumpeter
Damon Brown, is hard to beat.
In addition to his crisp, fleet trumpet it also features a susperbly cohesive core band:
the pleasantly gruff saxophonist/flautist Andy Panayi, the wittils rambunctious pianist
Gareth Williams and the superb rhythm team of bassist Geoff Gascoyne and drummer Winston
Clifford.
With telling guests appearances from saxophonists Tim Garland and Christian Brewer and
pianist Jonathan Gee, with a bag of original compositions ranging from sinuous blues and
light fund to the brisk chases across neat accommodating chord eequences favoured by hard
bop, this is a highly auspicious debout from one of the UD's most versatile younger
musicians.
Chris Parker
The Jazz Rag
Damon Brown Quintet - A Rhythm Indicative ( Zah Zah ZZCD 9806)(70:17)
For his debut recording as leader, truppeter Damon
Brown used a quintet with saxophonist Andy Panayi and guests
on certain titles. Brown has a pleasing tone on trumpet and uses the mellow sound of the
flügelhorn to good effect on a programme of eleven titles, all originals except fo the
closing, Byu Bye Blackbird.
Brown displays and interesting variety in his phrasing, using tonal and rhythmic
devices, both theme statements and soli - this is heard to particularly good effect on Blues
for J.W and on the poppish (ironically titled) Swing Features where his work
in the middle register is incisive and economic. the highlight to this listener is the
agile phrasing on Bye Bye Blackbird - Brown tears through his solo in a melodic
but rapid way that recalls Clifford Brown.
Borwn's fellow musicians are to be complimented on their roles as support and in their own
right. For a debut album A rhythm Indicative has much to commend it.
Greg Murphy
Cadence Vol. 25 No. 3 March 1999
Another modern British group investigating the styles of the past, this time the hard
bop and modal sound of the Fifties and Sixties. True, we've been inundated with young
American musicians doing this kind of stuff in the past fifteen years but this CD is an
improvement on most of that. Damon Brown and his
friends play with real fire. Pieces like "Minnie The Minx" and "Web"
reek of Blakez, Adderly and mid-period Coltrane vibes but at least they sound exciting.
Brown himself has and impressive tone, on trumpet and flugelhorn, and so do all of his
saxophonists, particularly Andy Panayi. The real
standout tunes here are Blues For J.W." and "Rhythm Indicative" the kind of
funky blues lines Bobby Timmons or Nat Adderly might have written, with cool playing from
Brown, preaching tenor from Tim Garland, and
spirating soul from Panayi and
Christian Brewer. These may be old sounds but there's
enough freshness in them to be worth checking out. Jerome Wilson
Comment via Zah Zah Web Site on Tuesday 27 July 1999
Damon Brown - A Rhythm Indicative, what an album. I saw him at the Lemon Tree in Aberdeen, his music and feeling just blew me away, I can't wait for his next album.

Comment via Zah Zah Web Site on Saturday August 28 1999
After seeing Damon Brown and his Quintet at the Red Sea Jazz Festival, I can only say
that Damon is a very talanted and exciting composer and player, as well as all the other
members of the quintet. Damon plays with his heart and soul, and as for Tenor-man Denis
Baptise, I can only say that he's one of the most exciting new tenor players I heard in
quite some time.
Itay Kochva, Israel