- 歌曲
- 时长
简介
Tim Conley- Electric & Acoustic Guitar Jon Thompson- Tenor & Soprano Saxophone Jason Fraticelli- Upright Bass Joe Falcey- Drums & Percussion Recorded: Sept 03' RetroMedia Sound Studios, Red Bank, NJ Mastered: Mark Wilder Sony Music Studios, New York, NY For More info look for Tim Conley on www.Jambase.com --------------- DJ Emanuel Ferritis, 103.3 WPRB in Princeton, NJ- "Tim Conley, "Ocean Exposition" - Self Produced - Trenton-area guitarist releases a fine jazz album. Think John McLaughlin's "Extrapolation" mixed with the ECM sound. Will somebody please sign him?" --------------- CD review from TAXI-Independent A&R Company: Jan/Feb 2004 "Great material, well produced and nicely presented." (The title track Ocean Exposition)"...slowly builds for almost eleven minutes...I love the transition from the intro to the first main section - a bit unexpected. The meter in 5 always opens some unique possibilities...The juxtaposition of 3+2 and 2+3 is in a cool rhythmic shift... Structurally, the piece is pretty free- while sections are clear, they have rather wide boundaries. The strongest part of the piece for me was the tension that builds between the sax and guitar...The unison lick they end up on is really cool!" --------------- Rhythms of the Sea By: Daniel Shearer, TimeOFF(Princeton Packet) 4/21/04 As a youngster, Tim Conley spent a lot of time at the Jersey Shore, so it seemed logical to name his band, the Ocean Exposition, after his favorite childhood playground. Performing with Electric Jellyfish, the Yardley, Pa., native had been writing songs with a side project in mind. When the members of Jellyfish went separate ways last year, he approached his roommate, Jon Thompson, a saxophonist and performer with the genre-defying outfit named Lazlo, about putting together a band. They recruited Ewing drummer Joe Falcey, bassist Jason Fraticelli, a Pennsbury High School alumnus, and started playing at Joe's Mill Hill Saloon in Trenton, John & Peter's in New Hope, Pa., Tritone - a club on South Street in Philadelphia - and Conduit in Trenton, where the band will open the Jazz Mandolin Project's upcoming show. Also at Conduit, the band recently opened for the Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, and the avant-garde jazz trio Living Daylights. "Jellyfish definitely had a lot of jazz influences," Mr. Conley says, "but it also was very funk influenced. (The Ocean Exposition) went more of a rock way, as opposed to funk. It's definitely a jazz fusion, but its got more of a rock vibe than a funk vibe." Ocean Exposition released its first studio album in January, a dreamy, well-mastered six-track collection recorded at Retromedia Sound Studios in Red Bank. "Dawn on the Water," the recording's six-minute opening track, begins with the sound of surf and a gentle line on upright bass. Mr. Conley offers clean chords from his hollow-body guitar, while Mr. Thompson delivers the first hint of a melody, which repeatedly passes from sax to guitar and back again. "Ocean Dream" unfolds in five-measure bars, with Mr. Falcey riding light on a cymbal and punctuating the rhythm with an occasional rim shot. "Laughing Face" is a playful romp with a Latin feel. "We basically did the whole thing live, in the studio," Mr. Conley says. "Almost every song on there is in odd time signatures, and it really just kind of felt like water, the rhythms of the ocean." --------------- Music with the Unpredictability of the Ocean by Kevin L. Carter, US. 1 Newspaper 7/19/06 Tim Conley comes by the name "Ocean Exposition" for his band legitimately. The guitarist, originally from Yardley and still a resident, spent most of his summers growing up "down the shore" on a boat owned by his parents. "It has two meanings," he says. "The first meaning comes from my personal situation; my parents were avid boaters, and they were teachers, so they had the whole summer off. As I remember it, we would often spend the whole summer on a boat in Bricktown, close to Point Pleasant." The family, according to Conley, would travel up and down the East Coast, making stops in ports all along the way. They lived on the boat, and sometimes they experienced choppy seas and other seaborne calamities that made things a bit difficult. "There was a lot of unpredictability about being on the sea," Conley says. "We had a lot of experience with boats breaking down, and being caught in bad weather. Those experiences have also been a big influence on my work." The second meaning of Ocean Exposition likens the band's unpredictability in mood, ambiance, chord structure, and time changes to the unpredictability of the ocean. An excerpt from Conley's Myspace page reads as follows: "The `Ocean' represents life, evolution and motion. The unpredictability of the Ocean in Time and Space. The `Exposition' is the gathering and display of these parts into one big piece of music. Most of the compositions are connected in some way, either borrowing melodies, grooves, or progressions from one another or simply by connecting one song or improvisation into the next." Conley elaborates. "When I was writing these songs (on the band's eponymous 2004 debut album), that was on my mind. The track "Laughing Faces" was the name of the boat I grew up on, and I started writing a lot of the songs in odd time, with the signatures jumping from 5/4 to 4/4 to 6/8. It doesn't stay in one spot. It's like the ocean, the waves, which are always unpredictable. They are parallel to each other, but moving independently. Each one is completely different. It just seemed right to put (the music) into that context. Ocean Exposition brings its mix of jazz, world, and Latin groove to two upcoming shows. The first (with keyboardist Joe Ashler added) is Saturday, July 20, at Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, and the second is at Small World Coffee in Princeton on Saturday, August 5. Most of the compositions the band plays are Conley's. He establishes the framework, but then the rest of Ocean Exposition quickly takes them over. The band features Conley on guitars, Jon Thompson on saxophones, Jason Fraticelli on bass, and Joe Falcey on drums. All of the band members started out as rockers but now the band has taken off into a jazz-fusion-jam band direction. "For an improvisational band or a jazz band it is all about what that band may sound like on that day. The next day we may play the song completely differently. And we are also playing every song completely differently than the way we played them two years ago. We are structuring them differently and trying to grow together." Conley's parents, John and Kathy, started out as public school teachers but branched into nonprofit work. Conley's father worked for Mercer Street Friends Center and the Village Charter School, and Conley's mother worked as a program director for Camp Fire (formerly Camp Fire Girls). His parents are now retired and still sail their boats whenever they can. Band members Conley and Fraticelli grew up near each other and went to school together as youth, both graduating from Pennsbury High in 1996. But they didn't often play music together. "We both went to Bucks County Community College for music, and that's when we started hanging out and playing," says Conley. Fraticelli later moved to the New School in New York while Conley stayed local. He began working with a band called Electric Jellyfish, which gigged often at Joe's Mill Hill Tavern in Trenton. That is where he met Ewing native Falcey and saxophonist Thompson. "There was definitely a very cool scene down there for a few years." The musicians began moving away from rock and toward jazz. Fraticelli and Conley got turned on to jazz while in school. "At first I was not really responsive to it; it wasn't really my choice. But they crammed it into my head, and I started to develop a love for it. It is a really amazing art form. For us as a band to play as improvising musicians is really a no-brainer." When asked about his main musical influences, Conley gets a bit uncomfortable, only because he has so many, and because so many of them subtlely or even unconsciously influence his music. "That's a hard question. It's impossible to even listen to everyone," he says. He cites musicians such as Bill Frisell, Trey Anastasio, Marc Ribot, Jon Scofield, John McLaughlin, and Frank Zappa and the guitarists (Thom Yorke, Ed O'Brien and Jonny Greenwood) from Radiohead as big influences. Although Conley does not mention Brian Blade as an influence, he shares a penchant for the airy, dreamy ambiance with the Louisiana-born drummer. Blade has recorded two arresting albums as a leader and has gigged with saxophonists and guitarists and other musicians as diverse as Wayne Shorter, Joshua Redman, Daniel Lanois, Rick Margitza, Norah Jones, and Joni Mitchell. Conley says the band recorded its 2004 disc in two days. "We had been gigging for a year and working on a lot of songs, and just spent time working them out. When we went in the studio, we literally played them just one or two times, and most of the tracks are first takes. The record is pretty much close to a live sound." In this regard, Conley's music evokes the best aspects of the ECM Records oeuvre, a German label that also specializes, at least sometimes, in adventurous but accessible, quickly recorded genre-bending acoustic jazz fusion music. Every member of Ocean Exposition is involved with other projects, so Conley says that this group likes to concentrate lots of shows into a month or two and then take a month or two off. "We want to get our fan base to grow - and I know that is not always that easy to do. We don't have any vocals, and each time we play the songs they are different," he says. "But people come out and listen to the shows, record them, and put them online. That helps a lot. They can download the shows and hear how the songs are changing with time. People are coming out more to see us now." ...check website for more dates...