If Only for One Night | |
Type: | Live album |
Artist: | Wallace Roney |
Cover: | If Only for One Night (Wallace Roney album).jpg |
Released: | April 20, 2010 |
Recorded: | July 30 – August 2, 2009 |
Venue: | Iridium Jazz Club, New York City |
Genre: | Jazz |
Length: | 61:33 |
Label: | HighNote HCD 7202 |
Producer: | Wallace Roney, Dawn Jones |
Chronology: | Wallace Roney |
Prev Title: | Jazz |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Home |
Next Year: | 2012 |
If Only for One Night is a live album by trumpeter/composer Wallace Roney which was recorded at the Iridium in New York City in 2009 and released on the HighNote label the following year.[1]
Allmusic's Michael G. Nastos said "Retro-fusion and funk à la latter period Miles Davis with hard-swinging jazz and some pop-type ballads comprise this meaty and beaty session full of energetic highs and introspective low-key music. ... A diverse and enjoyable set, overdue for Roney in a club or concert setting, it shows he's a strong player with plenty of ideas in the tank based in tribute to his idol Davis". Financial Times reviewer, Mike Hobart, stated "Roney is a forceful and atmospheric trumpeter, stretching out in sympathetic company, his rounded tone perfectly captured by this live club recording".[2] In The Guardian, John Fordham noted "Plenty of trumpeters play Miles's notes, and get close to his sound – but Roney goes deeper, because he also shares the uncanny timing and dramatic instincts, and the vision to conceive a moment-to-moment improvised solo as a narrative whole".[3] PopMatters', Will Layman wrote: "Throughout this set, the band is inventive and powerful, even if they seem to be searching for a clear identity. In being able to play anything (at least anything Davis-inspired), the band loses itself a bit. Roney seems most himself on the final track, a solo trumpet essay for his son, where he sheds the Miles sound somewhat and hints at his classical studies".[4]
All compositions by Wallace Roney except where noted