Showing posts with label Neil Yates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Yates. Show all posts

Monday, 1 December 2014

Leo Appleyard - Pembroke Road - Album art inspiration

on F-IRE (CD 75)
Leo Appleyard
Pizza Express 16/11/2014

Last month saw the release of guitarist Leo Appleyard's debut album, Pembroke Road, on F-IRE records (F-IRECD 75). He launched it in style at the Pizza Express Soho during the London Jazz Festival in 2014 (16/11/2014). The album has already received a flurry of excellent reviews including London Jazz, Jazz Mann and on the Jazz UK's hotlist!

Eric Ford - drums
I was lucky enough to be at the London Jazz Festival launch but also to be Leo Appleyard's artist for his album artwork. As usual this started with listening, making notes and responding to the music with imaginations. The words that tumble out don't always make sense but are a great way to channel ideas.


Max Luthert - Bass
The launch itself included four fifths of the album personnel. Leo Appleyard (Guitar) was joined on the Pizza Express stage by Duncan Eagles (Saxophone), Max Luthert  (Bass) and Eric Ford (Drums). The man who was missing due to other professional commitments was folk brass specialist Neil Yates (Trumpet/Flugelhorn).
 

Duncan Eagles
Saxophone
Just a month earlier this had been the very site of bassist Max Luthert's debut album (Orbital) on Whirlwind Records but on this day he played a more carefree role. The early tune 'Anywhere South' epitomised this romping attitude. I remember Appleyard had this composition up his sleeve during those early jazz jams he attended in Kingston-upon-Thames. His dexterity has quickened in that time, he rocks back and forth with an occasional knee bend now and like his footsteps this album has a travellers feel about it.

Anywhere South idea
'Anywhere South' was the most productive when I came to find ideas for the album. I wrote, "Chipper chunk, cascade of rocks, bouncing down a hard baked cliff. Tight dark pools. Scurrying lizards lazing in the hot glare, their feet jump and skip. White walls whose liquid amber bricks melt within, and pour into the crackling landscape." The dark pools are very much those of Duncan Eagles' saxophone and it was these that made me think of open windows and the motifs from American noir films.

Homeless Wizard idea
The images generated by the album (and the launch gig) opener, 'Homeless Wizard' were eventually used in the inside of the CD. They also found their way into an exhibition of Art and Poetry called Jawspring. The illustration of a moon magnetically following a car along an impossible motorway intersection sat alongside a poem by Jane Barton at the Village Hall Gallery in Wimbledon (21/03/14). It was also a nod of the head to Leo Appleyard's formative years at the Birmingham Conservatoire and the journey's he would soon be travelling as a musician over the infamous Spaghetti Junction.

Mantra idea
'Mantra' made me think of something much more primal. There was a large Eskimo print on the wall of my family home where I grew up and the power of this tune spoke of this black and white clarity. My first impressions came out like this, "Sharp old wood, drop like stalactites. A set of jaws cranked open with pneumatic pumps, the jagged dental clamps. Man trap becomes trapped Man. Mantra. Tramline tongue, echoing mechanics in a hollow cavernous chest. The modern Jonah." They ended pictorially with what you see here on the left.

Pembroke Road idea
The title track 'Pembroke Road' was a high point of Leo Appleyard's launch gig with an edgy performance from Duncan Eagles and aided by his effect pedals. Eagles sent Appleyard down this formidable road with one of his typically prickly and uncompromising passages of play. I imagined the wildness of Pembroke Road in my drawings. In reality Pembroke Road is the name given to the track that leads to the recording studio in Pembrokeshire where the quintet recorded the album.

Walsio idea
“The first time I went to the studio I was inspired by the sense of space and isolation.”
 Leo Appleyard.


I Remember You
idea
Before we settled on the final idea for the album art we explored two more tunes for inspirational art. 'Walsio' brought a very obvious response in the shape of coloured drawings of apples while 'I Remember You' was more disturbing. The notes I wrote for the latter helped shape the warehouse that you can just see in the background of the finished front cover at the top of this page. "Empty, siphon, funnel. Discharging its dark viscous contents. The slow sweep of the broom. The old warehouse, the wind like a rattling penny in an old tin money-box."

The final design of the warehouse window brings you a taste of the album and reflects the layers that lurk within the CD's 9 tracks. It shows the blue sky reflections that we all dream off, particularly when were starting off a project. There are repairs already in this collection of panes, the way that Leo Appleyard's compositions have been rebuilt through practice and live performances. You might even say that a few stones have already been thrown at these windows too. After all the life of a young jazz musicians requires you to quickly develop a thick skin. The final part of this jigsaw is the cheeky flavour, the advertising imagery that has been broken apart but is produced for you here to see.

Alban Low


Friday, 29 November 2013

Leo Appleyard - Stepping out

Leo Appleyard - Guitar
It was a nervous debut for Leo Appleyard at the Pizza Express on the first Sunday (16/11/2013) of the EFG London Jazz Festival. Although well known in the tight Birmingham jazz circuit and in quarters of South-West London he is a fresh face on the block.

Before a sold out Soho crowd the angelic guitarist wound up the spring of his quintet's (+ Special guest Neil Yates) ample talents. In turn they played tighter and tighter until finally they were let loose as the concert struck it's concluding chimes. The opener, "The Homeless Wizard" found the musicians a little errant and they felt their way into the dark ambience of the venue and the grandeur of the festival.


Neil Yates - Trumpet and Flugelhorn
Although Neil Yates came to the stage for the second tune it took a few minutes to dispel some of the creases from his dishevelled suit and playing. "The Cleaver" announced the real arrival of the band. Neil Yates screwed up his face like the twirled end of a toffee and this summed up the performance. He stuck in there, despite not being at his most fluent, we chewed on him until we got our sweet stuff.

Duncan Eagles -
Saxophone
Although "The Cleaver" is a swinger, as the name suggests it is not a happy sway that rocks this tune, but it was the chance for both Eric Ford on drums to add his North African lilt and Max Luthert on bass to cut in with his superb throbbing presence.

Max Luthert - Bass
In demeanour and as a band leader Leo Appleyard doesn't dominate, preferring to extract unexpected performances from the men around him. "Mantra" slowly unravelled Duncan Eagles on saxophone, jettisoning his usual porcupine delivery, he wafted up to us like a soothing cloud of lyrical steam that cleared our sinuses and we breathed deep in this young tenor's talent.

Eric Ford - Drums
The slow drip of Max Luthert developed into a gentle cascade but never reached a roaring torrent on "Pembroke Road". Luthert, like Eagles before him, showed his advancing maturity in his field by playing with restraint, it was noticeable too that Neil Yates' chin was elevating that bit more, less scrunched and more proud. We got the full effect of his talents and the group fulfilled their prowess on the final tune "Anywhere South" which gave us an upbeat and accomplished send off.

This was a gig that took some time to reach its full stride but I think we can safely assume that today's small steps will lead to a giant leap for Leo Appleyard in the future.

AL.

www.leoappleyard.com