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Catalyst

Jeff King - tenor sax, flute, effects

Luis Deniz - alto sax, soprano sax, effects

David Braid - piano, rhodes, synths

Rich Brown - bass

Joel Haynes - drums



Juno award winning saxophonist Jeff King's group Catalyst (known as Jeff King's Catalyst) features a fantastic group of internationally recognized musicians that fuse together jazz, pop, blues, electronic, hip hop, rock, funk, and pretty much everything else in King's original compositions.

"Catalyst", the title of their debut recording on the G-THREE label features 8 original compositions along with covers of two great pop classics "Strawberry Fields" and "Don't Give Up" .

His current lineup features:

Rich Brown - bass

Ted Quinlan - guitar

Mark Kelso - drums

Luis Deniz - alto sax

Jeff King - tenor sax and flute.

Jeff King: Catalyst - Jazz Times
By JERRY D'SOUZA,
Saxophonist/woodwind multi-instrumentalist Jeff King has made Toronto his home from the time he came to the city to study jazz, after graduating in classical saxophone, flute and clarinet. Over the years, he has formed his own band and performed with several jazz musicians including a host of Canadians, some of whom are his accomplices on Catalyst. King couldn't have chosen better for his debut recording; each musicians is a luminary in his own right, and brings a lucid and luminescent presence.
King, who wrote all of the compositions except "Don't Give Up" and "Strawberry Fields," judiciously blends several elements that enliven the music and add depth to the groove, both of which are interpreted stylistically by the band.
They waste no time. After a short opening preamble, Rich Brown kicks off "Issues" with a funky bass, and keeps the whorls percolating. King is strident on saxophone, but is never over the top, as he funnels a cascade of authoritative phrases that call on hard bop and free cross-fertilization. The atmosphere is almost constantly highly charged, but for a brief bridge that fans soft effects into the mix. It's a well-balanced tune and impacts right across the narrative.
"Getting A Life" provides stark contrast. The resplendent ballad finds King articulating the melody with finesse letting the groove run deep and then filling it with lyrical eloquence. Saxophonist Luis Deniz creates his own sonic space with a loquacious drenching of the tune, using elongated lines to maximum effect. With Joel Haynes adding his signature drum grooves, this slowly turns into a heated calypso, in a seamless switch that keeps the intensity ticking.
King's visitation of "Don't Give Up" and "Strawberry Fields" fires up the songs all over again. He picks the flute on the former, indulging in the melody with sweetness, then changing trajectory by moving from airiness to gently ingrained urgency. The arrangement is expansive, and lets the band look across the field of improvisation, with Brown elucidating the melody engagingly, letting its nectar seep into the senses. David Braid, one of the finest exponents of jazz piano, unveils his expansive technique, meshing it with substantial creativity. He accentuates the thrust with his harmonic drive, and turns what was once pastoral into the blues in tandem with Haynes, who gets a dollop of rhythm to accentuate and add splashes of radiant colour.
The melody lines of "Strawberry Fields" open the window to different parameters. Rock is a given locution, but swing, an expansive jazz vocabulary and free improvisation lead to a whole new manifestation.


King's debut CD is seductive, and heralds his coming as a top-notch musician.

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