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Reviews / Articles


Vintage Guitar Magazine Oct 2007 - First Fret feature article
Vintage Guitar Magazine - Music of the Spheres Review
Cadence Magazine - Music of the Spheres Review
Down Beat Magazine - "Doug James/Sax Gordon CD Review"
Just Jazz Guitar - "Rotary Ahead!" CD Review
The TAB - "Rotary Ahead!" CD Review
The Boston Globe - Jazzy classics ahead
Swing Too tonight

Vintage Guitar Magazine  September 2007 - by John Heidt
www.vintageguitar.com

Mike DiBari Trio - Music of the Spheres  Palomino Jazz

     Swinging out of Boston again, Mike DiBari continues his hard swinging style, this time in a trio setting, where he oh-so-comfortably mixes jazz and blues.

     In the liner notes, DiBari describes how the song and the titles are meant to be a concept.  And while it's difficult to imagine an instrumental album telling a story, his explanation makes it clear.  

     The opener, "Follow Your Bliss," is a light swing that shows how easily DiBari navigates changes without losing his innate sense of swing.  As in several of these tunes, bassist Greg Loughman shines, and Mike and drummer Mike Connors trade fours to take the song home.  "The Hero's Journey" has a cool statement of melody and playing from Mike that gets a little outside but holds beautifully.  "Moon and Turtle" is a moody ballad that features some of the nicest playing.  "Notion of Love" is a jaunty, swinging blues where DiBari starts with single-note lines that turn into a harmonic workout with chords that play off the melody.  "Into the Blue" is an uptown blues guaranteed to make your finger snap; DiBari's playing swings while remaining bluesy and soulful.

     DiBari is a young player, but his mix of jazz and blues guarantees his traditional style will be around as long as the six-string is.

 

1) MIKE DIBARI, MUSIC OF THE SPHERES, PALOMINO 799506.
Follow Your Bliss / The Hero’s Journey / Moon And Turtle (Tsuki to Suppon) /
Notion Of Love / Music Of The Spheres / I Never Knew / Into The Blue. 38:02.

DiBari, g; Greg Loughman, b; Mike Connors, d. 12/04, Sudbury, MA.
©Cadence Magazine July 2007 (page 123)  www.cadencebuilding.com  ph:315-287-2852

     The song titles and background notes on (1), dealing with Mike DiBari’s inspiration through the writing of scholar Joseph Campbell, might lead you to expect some sort of grand concept piece but instead this sounds like your normal Jazz guitar trio session, which is not a bad thing by any means. DiBari is a fluid player with a precise touch and he really rolls on swinging funk inflected pieces like “The Hero’s Journey” and “Notion Of Love” playing undulating lines steeped in the Blues and integrating well with his trio partners, Greg Loughman and Mike Connors. “Music Of The Spheres” is a slick Brazilian piece, “Moon and Turtle” shows how beautifully DiBari can play at ballad tempos and “Into The Blues” takes the CD out with a short coda of easy-riding Blues. Mike DiBari is a talented musician who plays with the drive and flair of a Pat Martino or John Abercrombie. His music would sound good no matter what titles he used for it.

 

Down Beat magazine (March 2006)  BLUES - by Frank-John Hadley

    Doug James & Sax Gordon (D&G 001; 49:16) jjj  Two saxophonists who know the score in the jump-blues major leagues rip and roar through a program of original songs, trading fours and taking compacted choruses that affirm their great admiration for King Curtis, Gene Ammons and Big Jay McNeely. James' baritone spouts bebop in spots and r&b dynamo Gordon shows his reeds no mercy walking the imaginary bar. They visit an old strip joint on "Steppin'." Duke Robillard, Mike DiBari and Rick Russell, keeping their clothes on, play good guitar all over.

 

JUST JAZZ GUITAR - No.40 August 2004

     I never much cared for rotaries, those circular roads in New England that keeps clueless motorists traveling in perpetual circles until they figure out which way to go, but I sure do like "Rotary Ahead!" and can appreciate Mike DiBari comparing jazz to the circuitous throughways with many possibilities.  

     Working with two different bass-drums rhythm sections, DiBari has turned in a potent mix of jazz and blues that always swings.  The back-cover quote from Duke Robillard and the album's dedication to Barney Kessel are further clues to the disc's appeal.  

     DiBari swings indeed.  "Billie's Bounce" establishes his bebop credentials right away, while showing how the music of Charlie Parker is rooted firmly in the blues.  Nice renditions of "Fly Me to the Moon" and "My Romance" follow, and the album showcase his affinity for both swinging up-tempo jazz-blues as well as balladry.

     DiBari's tone is great throughout.  He used a L5 Wes Montgomery on most of the tracks, playing and ES-135 with P-100s on the others.  Frankly, he sounds the same with both guitars, which are strung with round-wounds and run through a tweed Fender Blues Junior.  Microphones on both the amp (in an isolation booth) and in the room with the guitar add a wonderful glassy edge to the tone.

     He sign on the final track, "When I Grow Too Old to Dream," where I hear echoes of John Pizzarelli, but it's still the guitar that shines through.

-  Steven Rosenberg

TAB - Entertainment - Friday, June 20, 2003

     Cambridge-based Mike DiBari introduces this set of guitar trio jazz with a variety of standard taking on different moods. "Billie's Bounce absolutely bops, Fly Me to the Moon is nice and easy, My Romance is, well, romantic. But once DiBari, a superb guitarist, whether strumming  big, lush chords or picking out a speedy solo, launches into some of his own material, the whole album jumps up to a higher level of confidence. The trios -- he has different bass and drum players on different tracks -- kick back, let loose and soar. Nothing taken away from the openers like a good gig, this just gets better as it goes along. As far as DiBari's lone vocal on When I Grow too Old to Dream, it's OK, but he might want to stick to the strings.

- Ed Symcus

The Boston Globe - Calendar - May 15, 2003
Critic's Tip
Jazzy classics ahead

     Praise from the great Duke Robillard - what more could a jazz guitarist ask for?  Ask Mike DiBari, because Robillard is one of his fans.  Robillard calls "Rotary Ahead," DiBari's new CD, "a swinging session that demonstrates his flair for melodic classic jazz stylings and tasty blues solos."  Indeed, DiBari plays like the better jazz guitarists of yesterday. 

- Steve Greenlee

Worcester Magazine - Thursday, February 13, 2003

     There's a world where swing, bebop, soul-jazz and the blues all meet.  That's where you'll find guitarist Mike DiBari and his Swingtet.  A sharp player, DiBari always hits the mark regardless of whether he's shooting from the hip on hard blues, plucking out delicate lines on a ballad, or keeping the groove on an upbeat jump tune.

     DiBari actually got his start as a classical guitarist.  He's kept the technical skills and added the soul of great guitarists like Freddy King, Charlie Christian and Grant Green.  His 1997 album, Jimpin' The Blues, took songs associated with uptown swingers like Louis Jordan and Wynonie Harris and infused them with sharp, stinging guitar licks.

     But for his upcoming CD (to be released this spring), DiBari is taking another approach.  He'll be offering a set of original compositions that mix his blues background with the sound of jazz, taking cues from Thelonious Monk and Horace Silver.  Joining him on record is "Sax" Gordon Beadle, a masterful player singularly able to infuse his soulful playing with blues and jazz.  "Of course with Gordon, you can't help but include a bit of an R&B feel," says DiBari.  "I wish there wasn't such a line drawn between jazz and blues, because there is so much common ground.  I love taking a bebop tune and playing a gut-wrenching blues solo on it."

     Besides the hard bop and the blues, expect the band to be working through some other materials on Thursday night.  "The CD will also include a take on the song 'Dinah,' which was originally popularized by Benny Goodman and Louis Armstrong," says DiBari.  "I also do a slow-grinding New Orleans shuffle.  I like to take the traditional aspect of this music, mix it in with some more modern ideas, and see what happens."

- Noah Schaffer

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