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I Cakewalked With a Zombie

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Phillip Johnston and the Greasy Chicken Orchestra

Phillip Johnston and the Greasy Chicken Orchestra

Phillip Johnston: soprano sax
Peter Farrar: alto sax
Tim Clarkson: tenor sax
Jim Loughnan: baritone sax
Peter Dasent: piano
Tim Rollinson: banjo
James Greening: sousaphone
Nic Cecire: drums

The Greasy Chicken Orchestra has finely tuned their brand of swinging 20s/30s jazz in a two-year residency at Sydney’s Foundry616, featuring some of Sydney’s finest musicians as they celebrate the music of New Orleans and beyond. With a focus on early Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and Jelly Roll Morton, tunes include such early jazz classics as South Rampart Street Parade, Muskrat Ramble, and Frog-I-More Moore Rag. The band is led by Phillip Johnston, an American saxophonist/ composer who lives in Sydney while still maintaining a musical life in his hometown of New York City.

In 2023, the GCO released its first recording on Earshift Records, entitled I Cakewalked With A Zombie (Earshift 081). The recording includes both original arrangements of classic tunes of the 20s & 30s, and original tunes by Phillip Johnston that pay homage to that era.

You can listen to/purchase the recording on Bandcamp here.

Streaming services here.

“Johnston has always understood that jazz’s history is a rich resource rather than a liability, and with this band he immerses himself almost completely in this era of energised and good-humoured dance music . . . a nuanced and blended sonority, combined with an emphasis on pinpoint arrangements and concise solos.” – John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald (27 Apr 2016)

Video demo for GCO

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Current Recordings

Diggin’ Bones

Phillip Johnston & the Coolerators: Diggin’ Bones

Released October 26, 2018, on Asynchronous Records

Diggin’ Bones, the first CD by Phillip Johnston & the Coolerators features a unique sound which combines funky organ combo jazz with modernist jazz composition. Produced by The Necks’ Lloyd Swanton and featuring some of Australia finest jazz/multi-genre improvisers, this recording shows a new side of Johnston’s music, and recording history which began in 1983 with Take The Z Train by The Microscopic Septet.

Musicians

Phillip Johnston: soprano/alto saxophone
Alister Spence: organ
Lloyd Swanton: bass
Nick Cecire: drums

Media

Promotion by The Music Outpost

W. Royal Stokes (Jazziz/Washington Post) Notable Releases of 2018

AustralianJazz.net. Best recordings of 2018:“Music with a sardonic sense of humour. Total coolness.”

“…a hard-grooving quartet session that feels like an even looser, funk-and swing-heavy, horn-driven extension of Medeski, Martin & Wood’s decades-long innovations, with strong emphasis on group chemistry, on Spence’s swirling organ work and Johnston’s swinging and identifiably smooth tone on both alto and soprano. . . this is music where individual solos do emerge, but the fundamental modus operandus is more about a collectively interpretive approach that, even in its adherence to Johnston’s at-times knotty scores, is performed with such reckless abandon as to suggest that no two performances of any of Diggin’ Bones’ ten tracks will ever be remotely the same. And that, in a nutshell, is Diggin’ Bones’ most compelling magic.

–John Kelman, Allaboutjazz.com

“The presence of organ rather than piano immediately gives Johnston’s tunes a different sound…blends wistful alto with punchy organ, the latter with gritty, bluesy air… incorporating rock, jazz and blues into an infectious, cooking recipe.”

–Ken Dryden, New York City Jazz Record

“Despite the avant-ish tilt of their résumés, Spence and Swanton cook on Diggin’ Bones. They have a lot to work with; Johnston writes as pointedly as he does for The Micros and other venues, his wit slippery with a few drops of vinegar… Despite Spence, Swanton and Cecire’s simmer, Johnston plays it rather cool throughout the proceedings. Johnston’s soprano sound resembles Steve Lacy’s in the ‘90s, when the astringencies of the ‘70s had been squeezed out and replaced with a fuller, warmer envelopment, while his alto approaches Paul Desmond’s idealized martini dryness… What brings them into the ballpark of 21st Century organ jazz is the band’s conviviality, which is contagious.”

–Bill Shoemaker, Point of Departure.

“A Characteristically Dark, Cinematic New Album from Phillip Johnston: this is arguably the best band Johnston has worked with outside of the Micros, and this album is one of the best and most tuneful of 2018.”

–New York Music Daily/Lucid Culture USA

“New York saxophonist and composer Philip Johnston spends as much time in Australia as in the USA. He expresses himself there with consummate musicians ready to follow him in his musical explorations. Known among others for his participation in Fast ‘n’ Bulbous, Philip Johnston continues to express a vision of jazz that belongs only to him. Moreover, he and his Australian musicians present in this disc a relaxed style, even downright cool, but never boring. It is even eloquent at many moments as the phrasings are pleased to burst into improvisations, often complex, initiating a jazz where the swing is not absent. With an ounce of funk, to further groove, the four acolytes serve a music full of wits played with a communicative pleasure. They drink, as they see fit, to all styles of music and it gives a nice bazaar, with a hint of Orientalism, where the pieces are shifted well enough to form melodies with varied colors that sing to the music. ‘hear. The apparent lightness of the whole can be seen, in this context, as a form of politeness partially masking the substantive work conducted with a real musical authority. Cool and cheerful.”

­–Yves Dorison, Culture Jazz (FRANCE)

“Johnston’s compositions have more than enough changing aspects—from beautiful soprano sax solos to funky organ breakdowns—and tunes which range from eccentricity to dramatic moments that there is plenty to hear which is enticing, exciting and sometimes enthralling. . . worth discovering for fans of organ/sax jazz who want to experience something atypical and slightly idiosyncratic.

–Doug Simpson, Audiophile Audition

“…an inseparable mix of sources and interests, in which the random episode, the anecdote of life lived acts as a detonator for an explosion of musical creativity that follows paths never trivial or predictable, and often ventures, without losing irony and lightness, in inaccessible territories. In the variety of climates and genres that this new adventure also shows, live together songs developed around simple funky riffs that become ideal terrain for improvised explorations that are never conventional and rich in inventiveness by the four musicians…”

–Tracce di Jazz (ITALY)

“Here we have a band showing that when it comes to playing jazz and blues there is often an overlap, here brought together with a huge amount of swing and funk. Swanton and Cecire do their best to provide a structure for the other two to work on, and then stay out the way while also displaying their own wonderful musical ability. Cecire is the more flamboyant of the two, with an impressive work rate on different areas of the kit, but Swanton keeps it all tied down and doesn’t let the band get too out of control.”

–Jazz Music Archives (NEW ZEALAND)

“…seriously beautiful music …extremely fine musicians all of whom are completely attuned to Mr Johnston’s vision. …classic Johnston music, which is deceptively simple, but which also emerges as being highly idiomatic and complex in not only in sub-text but also in the rhythmic gestures and devices that he employs – featuring often abrupt changes in metre – as well as often using repeated phrases, subtly played, layer upon layer… The breadth of modes employed…is not just simply staggering but also highly inventive.”

–Raul da Gama, “Phillip Johnston x 2”, Jazz da Gama (ITALY)

“Johnston has released a new album from his band the Coolerators, Diggin’ Bones, on which he is joined by Spence, Cecire and Necks bassist Lloyd Swanton. This presents another facet of his music: a love of aerated, groovy, organ-based jazz. …worth the cost of admission…7.5/10”

–John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)

“There is no lack of jazz talent down under to play Johnston’s creative music. The Coolerators includes the leader…Alister Spence…Lloyd Swanton…Nic Cecire. …. The presence of organ rather than piano immediately gives Johnston’s tunes a different sound. …“Regrets #17” was previously…by Johnston’s Transparent Quartet; this new arrangement feels much looser, with greater interaction…Spence’s rollercoaster accompaniment stimulating Johnston’s adventurous spirit. “

– Ken Dryden, New York City Jazz Record, Jan. 2019

“If edgier than standard organ jazz, the whole is still mighty inviting (and klezmer-tinged), so if you enjoy Microscopic and/ or Medeski, Martin & Wood, I’ll bet you’ll like this, too. A-“

– Joseph Neff, The Vinyl District 

“…Johnston is in good company when he’s not in New York. …Diggin’ Bones…is a collection of animated jazz instrumentals that combine playful melodies with folk and klezmer influences… This is fun and irresistible melodic groove music that invites the listener in… …there are many…standouts (ten cuts total) that will still be playing in your head the morning after.”

– Peter Thelen, Expose

CD Notes

“Frankly” – is a tune that embodies the sound of what I’m trying to do with the Coolerators: to combine the sound of funky organ combo jazz with more modernist compositional ideas. One of the main things I love about playing with the Coolerators is these musicians’ comfort level with a wide variety of styles, which is both suitable and absolutely necessary for this music. Their combination of superb musicianship and ever-surprising unique personal styles makes thrilling collaborators. Alister Spence’s organ solo is a standout here.

What Is Real?” – This is a tune that I originally used to play with my band Phillip Johnston’s Idea when we played around the wonderfully diverse rock scene in New York in the 1980s. This was an amazing time to be in New York: where an incredible richness of variety flowered in the New York club scene. PJ’s Idea was a very improvisational counterpoint to The Public Servants, the more compositionally-oriented No-Wave band I co-led with vocalist Shelley Hirsch from 1980-1982. Most of the Idea tunes were simple funky riffs that we used as vehicles for improvisation – and we did this in rock clubs! It was a great time.

Diggin’ Bones” – Two tunes on this recording were originally recorded on the duo CD I made with Guy Klucevsek, Tales From The Cryptic (Winter & Winter). I have subsequently played this one in a number of different settings, varying the soloing from a modal groove to completely free. The Coolerators reinvent it every time we play. It’s been called a klezmer tune, but I don’t really hear it that way. I don’t know what it is, maybe a bitonal multi-world music dance number.

Temporary Blindness” –  is a new tune that I wrote specifically for this recording; it and “Ducket” (see trk 10) represent most accurately where a certain facet of my writing is at today. For better or worse, like “Pipeline” on the Transparent Quartet CD, I feel that these are tunes that only I could have and would have written.

Later” – I originally invented the main melody here as something to play when I used to play on the street solo on Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco in the mid-70s while I waited for my girlfriend to get off work at a jewellery store for tourists. Later I struggled off and on for decades trying to figure out how to make it into a complete tune. This current version, like others from this CD, is one that I’ve found a way to play in different settings.

The Revenant” (Hurley) – “The Revenant” is a tune by Michael Hurley, a folk musician and visual artist whose music I have loved since I discovered his LPs Arm Chair Boogie and Hi Fi Snock Uptown in a used record store in the early 70s. This spooky ballad hails from the record Wolfways and has chilling and melancholy lyrics. I try to do it justice to it by translating into a modified ska tune. Lloyd’s beautiful bass solo evokes the spirit of the tale beautifully I think. The version is dedicated to Anna Volska who always loved our version of this song.

“Legs Yet” – Is another tune that originated in Phillip Johnston’s Idea. There’s almost nothing to it, yet is has a specific sound, rooted in its combination of blues and whole tone scales. That small seed gives rise to a very particular kind of improvisation, which nevertheless is always different in the hands of these creative musicians.

Trial By Error” – While I love the version I recorded with Guy (see trk3), this tune always wanted to be played by a band as well. Guy and I were in part brought together by our mutual love of counterpoint, which is reflected in this tune, but Nic Cecire’s great drumming adds a new level of rhythm to it.

Regrets #17” – This is a tune that I previously recorded with my 90s band The Transparent Quartet. One of my favorite things about the Coolerators is the freedom and spontaneity of our group improvisations, which is why you see that in a number of tunes played here like “What Is Real?” and “Legs Yet”. This is where the excitement of a live gig is captured on recording.

Ducket Got A Whole In It” – I end with another tune written specifically for this recording. Why would someone write a tune like this? I will answer by saying that I try to write tunes that have the necessity of motivic improvisation built into them, and I think that you will hear that all of the tunes on this record have improvisations that are very closely linked to the tunes themselves and that it could not be otherwise. That’s what I’m trying to do anyway.

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Playing With Monk

Playing With Monk is jazz duo of piano and saxophone, focused around the music and influence of jazz iconoclast Thelonious Monk.

This project for the two veteran composer/instrumentalists consists of a unique repertoire drawn from the iconic compositions of Thelonious Monk, both the well-known and the obscure, as well as original tunes both new and old from the two composers’ catalogues that are inspired/influenced by Monk’s work.

The music is swinging, bluesy and spiky, as Monk would have liked it.

News Flash! : Click this link for more information about their latest project:
Jazz Goes To The Movies.

They are co-leaders of the early jazz repertory band The Greasy Chicken Orchestra, who are in their 7th year of regular performances at Sydney’s Foundry 616. Johnston’s New York band The Microscopic Septet’s 2010 recording Friday The 13th: The Micros Play Monk (Cuneiform) was given 4 stars, made an Editor’s Pick and called ‘a love letter to Monk’ by Downbeat Magazine.

This new duo is the latest in a long history of collaboration between Dasent and Johnston on new and inventive projects that combine originality and a deep love of the breadth of jazz history.

Video clip: Playing With Monk plays Monk’s Locomotive


Jazz Goes To The Movies is a special project of Playing With Monk.

Dasent and Johnston perform jazz interpretations of beloved themes from classic Hollywood films.

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Been Up So Long It Looks Like Down To Me: The Micros Play The Blues

The Microscoptic Septet: Been Up So Long It Looks Like Down To Me: The Micros Play The Blues

Released on Cuneiform Records on Feb 10, 2017.

What happens when you put the blues under a microscope? When the lens is wielded by the incisive deconstructivists of the Microscopic Septet, the musical odyssey traverses territory that’s disarmingly strange, pleasingly familiar and consistently revelatory.

Following up their earlier post-2006 Cuneiform releases, Lobster Leaps In (2008), Friday The 13th: The Micros Play Monk (2010), and Manhattan Moonrise (2014), Been Down So Long is the latest recording documenting the 21st Century Micros saga: the co-leaders–wandering soprano saxophonist Phillip Johnston currently living in Sydney Australia, and Manhattan weird bop pianist Joel Forrester–come together, with the rest of the band in New York City regularly, and 35 years after their debut, write, perform and record new music.

A record that assembles a variety of different takes on the jazz-blues format, from blowing tunes to highly arranged orchestral pieces, a blues march, a punk rock tune, an homage to 20s Ellingtonia, a reharmonized blues interpretation of Silent Night, with a couple of bop tunes thrown in and a salute to R&B legend Joe Liggins and the Honeydrippers, Been Down So Long expresses Johnston & Forrester’s love of the melodic, rhythmic and harmonic language that has infused their work throughout their careers: the blues. But it’s also a chance for the great musicians who have always brought their work to life–drummer Richard Dworkin, bassist Dave Hofstra, and saxophonists Dave Sewelson, Mike Hashim and Don Davis–to stretch out in their idiosyncratic soloistic styles.

Visit The Microscopic Septet page at Cuneiform Records.

Media

 “seminal, brilliant post-modern jazz”

– Downbeat Magazine

“one of the most distinctive sounds in modern jazz.”

– John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald

Credits

Tracks 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 11 by Phillip Johnston © Jedible Music (BMI).
Tracks 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 12, by Joel Forrester © Way Real Music (BMI).
Track 13 by Joe Liggins © Nanohits Inc (BMI).

Recorded May 24–25, 2016 at Tedesco Studios.
Engineered, mixed and mastered by Jon Rosenberg.
Assistant engineer: Tom Tedesco
Cover Art: Kaz
Photography: Greg Cristman
Graphic Design: Bill Ellsworth
Produced by Phillip Johnston.

Albums by The Microscoptic Septet

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Manhattan Moonrise

The Microscopic Septet: Manhattan Moonrise Released released May 27, 2014 via Cuneiform Records  Manhattan Moonrise is the 3rd release by…

Lobster Leaps In

The Microscopic Septet: Lobster Leaps In Released September 17, 2008 via Cuneiform Records “…sounds like someone mistakenly booked the Art…

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Phillip Johnston & the Coolerators

Phillip Johnston has led Phillip Johnston & the Coolerators since moving to Australia in 2005. After a 2-year lay-off (while focussing on the Greasy Chicken Orchestra, New York’s Microscopic Septet, ‘Page of Madness: Suite from Improvisers’ and touring Wordless!), beginning in 2018, he will be focussing on the group as his main performing vehicle.

The band brings together two of Australia’s most internationally acclaimed touring musicians, Alister Spence (Alister Spence Trio, Clarion Fracture Zone, AAO) and Lloyd Swanton (The Necks, the catholics) with one of Sydney’s most in-demand rhythm section players, Nic Cecire. The music covers a range of styles but avant organ jazz is at the centre of it.

Media

“….consumate musical artists, they present a unique style of jazz performance that is relaxed, smooth, and eloquent with phrasing that bursts forth intricate improvisations in jazz and swing with a splattering of funk that is all class – for the uninitiated and jazz aficionados alike a delight to imbibe.

–Peter McGill, SoundPet

It is jazz played with some true wit… freely drawing on all styles of music to create quirky, cartoonish pieces, coloured with chirpy melodies and unexpected moments of poignancy.

–John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald

Musicians

Phillip Johnston: soprano, alto saxophones
Alister Spence: organ
Lloyd Swanton: bass
Nic Cecire: drums

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The Microscopic Septet

The Microscopic Septet are widely considered one of the most important and unique bands to come out of the New York Downtown scene of the 1980s. Never sufficiently contained by a single category, the Micros—co-led by by soprano saxophonist Phillip Johnston and pianist Joel Forrester—formed during a remarkable period of musical experimentation and quickly distinguished themselves as a raucously fun, musically adept, and wickedly clever jazz band.

“The past is a big place filled with music. Some players cling to it like a security blanket; others fool themselves that they can invent new sounds out of thin air. The smart ones use the past as a resource: an infinite library from which to steal any number of hooks and probably make a clean getaway. But borrowing from the past is different from wallowing in it, and hip modernity springs from the subtlest tweak of something old. That’s the game the Microscopic Septet plays. Although you might variously hear echoes of Duke Ellington, Sun Ra or Louis Jordan, the compositions by pianist Joel Forrester and soprano saxophonist Phillip Johnston suddenly dart up unforeseen alleys, like the past is chasing with sirens screaming. Even more than the compositional quirks, what ensures their escape is the players’ characters oozing from the music – and it’s a fun ooze. Now, 34 years on, the Microscopics have their own past to cannibalise; their own bones to spit out. The result? One of the most distinctive sounds in contemporary jazz.”

– John Shand / The Sydney Morning Herald

 “seminal, brilliant post-modern jazz”

– Downbeat Magazine

“one of the most distinctive sounds in modern jazz.”

– John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald

Musicians

Phillip Johnston: soprano sax
Don Davis: alto sax
Mike Hashim: tenor sax
Dave Sewelson: baritone sax
Joel Forrester: piano
Dave Hofstra: bass
Richard Dworkin: drums

Releases

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  • Current
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  • Uncategorized
Manhattan Moonrise

The Microscopic Septet: Manhattan Moonrise Released released May 27, 2014 via Cuneiform Records  Manhattan Moonrise is the 3rd release by…

Lobster Leaps In

The Microscopic Septet: Lobster Leaps In Released September 17, 2008 via Cuneiform Records “…sounds like someone mistakenly booked the Art…

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The Silent Six

The Silent Six is the band that performs with Wordless!

“While this was have-a-good-old-timey music, that spirit belied its complexity and the long-developed rapport of the sextet in performing it…” –Andrey Henkin, THE NEW YORK CITY JAZZ RECORD, Page 4 JULY 2019

In Wordless!, The Silent Six turn on a dime between 20s jazz, New Music, tango, avant garde styles and film music in order to accompany the 15 graphic sequences in the show. Now, whenever possible, the band has been performing on its own, playing music that unites all of Johnston’s historical musical vehicles. Almost all of these great players are band leaders in their own right (except for Hofstra, the preeminent sideman) and bring their own unique musical personalities to this widely varied music.

From a recent article in New York City Jazz Record by Ken Dryden: (Jan 2019)

“There are many jazz clubs to choose from when visiting New York City, but seasoned fans should make Smalls a high priority. It lacks fancy decor but its main focus is creating an intimate listening environment: minimal conversation, good acoustics and great musicians. Johnston brought a mix of new and old compositions for his only U.S. booking last month. He alternated between soprano and alto saxophones throughout both sets, joined by bassist Dave Hofstra and baritone saxophonist Michael Hashim, both old friends and fellow veterans of The Microscopic Septet. The band also included Joe Fiedler, the trombonist from Fast ‘N Bulbous; Neal Kirkwood, a pianist who often subbed in the Transparent Quartet; and drummer Rob Garcia.

A lot of Johnston’s music is inspired by traditional jazz, but adds frequently dissonant, witty solos and unexpected twists. A rollicking rendition of Jelly Roll Morton’s “Frog-I-More Rag” took the early master’s music into the 21st Century without losing its essence. “Regrets #17”, which came from the aforementioned Diggin’ Bones CD, was a swaggering blues shuffle with terrific interplay between Johnston and Hashim. “The Dream Detective” added a second baritone saxophonist, Dave Sewelson, another Micros alum. It was fun to hear early Duke Ellington works like “Awful Sad” played with such enthusiasm, showcasing Hofstra at length. “Planetella Rock” was a perfect closer, a hip Johnston blues interpreted with lots of soul by the band.”

And here is a link to the Jazz Lives website, with some video clips from that gig.

The Silent Six at Barbès in Broolyn, photo by Scott Friedlander
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Joel Forrester & Phillip Johnston Duo

Joel Forrester: piano
Phillip Johnston: soprano saxophone

Joel Forrester and Phillip Johnston met in 1974 on East Tenth Street in New York City’s East Village when Joel wandered into Phillip’s apartment, after hearing him practicing Monk’s “Well You Needn’t” from the street. Since that time they have played in trios, quartets, septets, and most notoriously in The Microscopic Septet, which they co-lead. But during the past 35 years they have always continued to play as a duo.

In November of 2010, Joel Forrester and Phillip Johnston embarked on a short tour of the West Coast to promote the Microscopic Septet’s CD Friday The 13th: The Micros Play Monk (Cuneiform Rune 310). They did radio interviews, and played gigs as a duo, as they had for years, and as part of the promotion of the record played Monk tunes, including ‘Well You Needn’t’. They really didn’t need an excuse, as they had been playing Monk tunes since they first began playing together in the early 70s.

Well You Needn’t (Monk)

Nov 26th 2010 was a special night at The Hillside Club, in Berkeley, California. Despite almost missing the gig after being trapped in San Francisco in a street rally by Critical Mass, they arrived just a little late, and, leapt on stage and began playing. Fortunately the evening was recorded by the artistic director, Bruce Koball (whose day job happens to be as a recording engineer), because it turned out to be a good one.

Bunny Boy (Forrester)


Jazz Times
called it, “a masterpiece of intimacy, empathy and synergy“.

“Leaving their buddies behind, the masterminds behind The Microscopic Septet pair up for what promises to be a telepathic duet.”–The New Yorker

After what seems like a gillion years together, pianist Forrester and saxophonist Johnston have fashioned a rare rapport, and their new duet disc, Live at the Hillside Club, teems with a well-rendered wit and flows with fraternal accord.” –Jim Macnie, The Village Voice

“Joel Forrester (piano) and Phillip Johnston (soprano) have a gift for composing quirky yet unforgettable songs. . . No matter what configuration a band may have, the presence of Forrester and Johnston guarantee memorable music.” –Ken Dryden, New York City Jazz Record

Mr. Johnston is a fine soloist who brings poignancy and poise to these songs. Mr. Forrester’s playing is refined yet economical, sounding as if he is drawing from a wealth of styles and traditions. Even the four Monk covers are done with both craft and reverence and filled with little surprising twists.

This disc is one of the most laid back and enchanting offerings we’ve listed in recent memory.” –Bruce Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery

“Well You Needn’t is creepy fun expertly done, Pannonica direct yet relaxed and unselfconsciously beautiful, and with Epistrophy, they let its carnivalesque quality speak for itself rather than being caricaturish.”–Lucid Culture

“. . . an intense and enjoyable record. It treats the roots of the mainstream in an unexpected way and sincerely pays tribute to a composer like Monk for whom the two musicians have an unconditional love. The original compositions, instead, are all by Forrester, with the exception of “Splat”. . . there is also more than a moment of pure inspiration and successful strength.“–All About Jazz Italia (best of 2011)

Contact: phillip@phillipjohnston.com

Buy the CD on CD Baby