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Time Took Care of It

by Danny Fox Trio

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  • Book/Magazine + Digital Album

    (Each cookbook purchase comes with a download code for the digital album)

    I have long turned to music and food to satisfy my soul. The connections between them are endless. They bring people together but also provide solitary comfort and sustenance. There are countless styles, methods, and forms from all over the world to explore.

    As a professional musician and avid home cook, I notice similarities when composing a piece and concocting a dish: Does this song need another section? Should I add a bread crumb topping to this pasta? A dominant or diminished chord here? Smoked paprika or sumac? Does it need editing? Are there too many ingredients in this chickpea stew? How do I link these disparate melodic ideas? What if I combine bitter radicchio with milky mozzarella? Can I write a song with these compositional limitations? What meal can I make using only what’s languishing in the fridge?

    Improvising is about reacting to what’s happening around you and inventing on the fly. Cooking engages all of your senses as you make adjustments and add creative flourishes. It's no coincidence that the vast majority of my musician friends are good cooks and open-minded eaters. I have been at gigs where the entire set break is spent discussing pizza techniques or Ma Po Tofu recipes.

    With that, I present a mini-cookbook companion to our trio’s fourth album Time Took Care of It. In our 15 years as a group we have shared countless meals. I cherish the rehearsals that spill into impromptu home-cooking or discovering an exciting spot on tour: butter burgers in Milwaukee, steamer clams in Portland, dim sum in Oakland.

    Even the clunkers were memorable. Max and Chris will never let me live down the time I nixed a fast food stop on I-80 hoping to find a more satisfying culinary experience, and instead I led us to a red sauce joint straight out of Kitchen Nightmares. Then there was the time that Max ordered the delicacy “pizza slice wrapped around hot dog” in Columbus, and we'll never forget how good that beer tasted after we mistakenly found ourselves in the middle of the woods as guests on a culty radio show.

    Each album track has a dish and drink pairing. The recipes are not ironclad and the measurements are rough. Luckily there is no comments section! (You can send complaints to me directly). Hope you enjoy the album and recipes. Thanks for supporting our trio. Let’s eat!

    Includes unlimited streaming of Time Took Care of It via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more
    ships out within 1 day
    edition of 100 
    Purchasable with gift card

      $25 USD or more 

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Includes unlimited streaming of Time Took Care of It via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ships out within 1 day
    Purchasable with gift card

      $20 USD or more 

     

  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $15 USD  or more

     

1.
Altbauer 03:43
2.
So Long Mel 05:17
3.
4.
Fruit Fly 05:10
5.
The Ogres 06:32
6.
Dr. Bob 04:47
7.
Slow Ham 03:51
8.
Chive Tie 03:32
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
Post Vals 07:14

about

"The group certainly doesn't operate like a typical jazz piano trio…Fox's original compositions are episodic, rigorously arranged, and generally eschew the usual song forms employed in mainstream jazz.” – Chicago Reader

Revered for “changing the sound and expectation of a jazz piano trio (John Schaefer, WNYC’s New Sounds),” the Danny Fox Trio releases its fourth album Time Took Care of It. Since its critically acclaimed 2011 debut, The One Constant (Songlines), the group has continued to push the boundaries of the classic piano trio format. Composer/pianist Danny Fox draws upon his considerable talents melding jazz and modern classical music on his latest album containing some of the most poignant and creative compositions of his career. Employing his long-time trio comprising bassist Chris van Voorst van Beest and drummer Max Goldman, the album showcases the group’s unique signature sound fueled by their wide-ranging interests in chamber music, bluegrass, and rhythm and blues, and anchored by their roots in jazz.

Formed in 2008, the Brooklyn-based Danny Fox Trio is a true working band. For the past 15 years, the trio has been developing a rapport that's immediately palpable in their music through countless hours of workshopping, gigging, and recording. This chemistry not only contributes to the precision of their performances, but allows each member to feel confident enough to take musical risks thereby giving the band a sound that is all-encompassing yet strikingly individual. According to The New York Times the trio’s sound is, “complete within itself and not in a hurry; it’s cool but not modish.” The Vinyl District cites: “The Danny Fox Trio puts an individualist stamp upon a form that often thrives on subtle differences in execution, as they solidify their existence as an extension of the long and vibrant piano trio tradition.”

Radiating the influence of classical music, but without the expectations that association can bring, the album’s 15 original tracks navigate through a vast array of grooves, harmonies, time signatures, tempo shifts, free improvisations, and dynamics while always remaining grounded in the thematic material, giving the music a seamlessness and cohesion such that it is both challenging and highly listenable. The piano, typically both the lead melodic and harmonic voice, rarely performs these two roles simultaneously. Instead, Danny opts for textures that feature the abilities of his bandmates and explore the more extreme ranges of the piano.

The album dazzles out of the gate with the dramatic “Altbauer” immediately showcasing the bass with a searching, lyrical melody before the piano leads the band on a climb to the summit. Another illustration of the bass elevating far above mere sympathetic support is “Dr. Bob” where Chris echoes Danny’s eerie, angular lines before a rhythmically fearless solo turn. Dedicated to Max’s father “Papa Joe” Goldman, the eponymous “Time Took Care of It” unfurls cascading lines from a folky piano figure, threading through various keys and grooves yet always adhering to the central theme. The simmering “Slow Ham” filters Danny’s love of Donny Hathaway and Al Green through Ravel-like harmony while also summoning his piano hero Richard Tee with furious left hand bass rumbling.

The music, although highly composed and structured, also contains ample space for interactive, often telepathic improvisation between the musicians: a triplet phrase that ricochets in split seconds from drums to bass to piano in the boisterous free sections of “So Long Mel”, Max and Chris perfectly anticipating Danny’s bluesy flourish in “The Ogres”, and the spacious but intense closing of “Something in the Shed.” Rather than adhere to the standard “melody-solo-melody” format, the trio weaves improvisation into the compositions in unexpected ways.

The epic closer “Post Vals” careens through varied landscapes: a sultry, down-home 6/8 intro, a jazz waltz, and a brisk bass-forward up-tempo swing. The piano and bass hone in on an earlier melodic fragment as the bedrock for a powerhouse drum solo to close out the album.

Since its inception, the trio has released three albums: The Great Nostalgist (2018), Wide Eyed (2013), and The One Constant (2011). Time Took Care of It was recorded in June 2022 at Machines with Magnets in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, with sought-after engineer/mixer Seth Manchester and mastered by Grammy-winning classical engineer Mark Donahue.

For media requests, please contact Adhyâropa Records at adhyaroparecords@gmail.com.

About Danny Fox:
Danny Fox is a Manhattan-born, Brooklyn-based pianist and composer. After graduating with a degree in psychology from Harvard University, Danny moved back to NYC to study classical piano with John Kamitsuka. Since 2008 he has led the Danny Fox Trio. He has also founded the genre-bending chamber quintet “Bubble Feed” featuring clarinetist and fellow Adhyaropa artist Sam Sadigursky. Called a "pianist of diverse accomplishment" (The New York Times), Danny is active in a wide variety of settings, co-founding the New Orleans rock and roll group Tubby, playing in the Brooklyn roots and bluegrass scene, as well as performing on Broadway and TV/Film sessions. He has performed with artists as diverse as Bruce Springsteen, Cassandra Wilson, Emmylou Harris, and Christina Courtin and the Knights. Most recently, he composed the music for the documentary Searchers which premiered at the Sundance Festival. DannyFoxMusic.com

About Chris van Voorst van Beest:
Chris van Voorst van Beest is a Brooklyn-based bassist and composer originally from Maine. Hailed as "a double bassist with an exceptional ability to improvise," (Sound & Vision Magazine) Chris has performed and recorded with diverse artists such as Frank Kimbrough, Robert Glasper, Gabriel Kahane, and George Garzone. Sought after for his versatility, Chris performs in the immersive theater hit Sleep No More and collaborates with choreographer Kelly Ashton Todd, with whom he wrote and performed Nest, a dance commission centering around nature within the urban landscape. Chris also composes contemporary classical music, recently finishing his first work for orchestra Short Story. His chamber ensemble performs “Miniatures and Improvisations,” where short composed pieces are immediately followed by improvised responses. Chris was awarded a Dutch grant for composition in 2010 to compose music for the children's book The Lamplighter and has been nominated three times for the Charles Ives Arts and Letters award.

About Max Goldman:
Max Goldman is a Providence-based drummer and educator. Born in Rochester, NY, Max was fortunate to study under local greats Jeff Lewis, Steve Curry and Rich Thompson. He moved to New York City in 2001, attending NYU and the New School, where he studied with Tony Moreno, Gerald Cleaver and Kenny Washington. Since graduating in 2006, Max has been active in Brooklyn’s creative music scene and toured in the US, Russia, Europe, and South America. In addition to the Danny Fox Trio, Max has performed and recorded with diverse artists such as Tony Malaby, Becca Stevens, Tim Berne, Michael Attias, Midnight Magic, Nomi Ruiz, and Eleanor Friedberger. He has been called “a seriously propulsive force” by the Chicago Reader and his drumming has been described as “beautifully melodic, even pianistic" by the New York Jazz Review.

credits

released April 7, 2023

Danny Fox, piano
Chris van Voorst van Beest, bass
Max Goldman, drums

All compositions by Danny Fox (BMI)/Son of Fabius Music and arranged by the trio
Additional arrangements by Chris van Voorst van Beest

Recorded and Mixed by: Seth Manchester, Machines with Magnets
Mastered by: Mark Donahue
Layout and design by: Mary Choueiter
Album artwork by: Risha Lee

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Danny Fox Trio New York

Brooklyn-based band reinventing the sound of the classic piano trio

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