Recordings
notreble.com review
Another review in from the bass player website No Treble. Check it out here.
Another review in from the bass player website No Treble. Check it out here.
Got a nice little mention from emusic.com reviewer/writer Dave Sumner, reprinted here: “Justin Morell, Dectet: Subjects and Complements: A gorgeous recording that behaves with a third-stream elegance. A jazz album that likes to shoot the breeze about classical music. And Read more…
This review just posted on the Pittsburgh Tribune website. Reprint here: Justin Morell Dectet (Sonic Frenzy) From a set of five fugues to familiar-feeling pieces that coast along in classic big-band fashion, the Justin Morell Dectet offers a clever look Read more…
The latest installment of youtube videos from the Subjects and Complements recording sessions: LORAC. This excerpt starts with the opening of the piece and plays up to the start of the solo section (which, on the CD, features John Daversa Read more…
Reviews are beginning to post for the upcoming Subjects and Complements. Here’s one review from the online magazine Midwest Record. More to come.
I heard this newer song by CeeLo Green the other day and thought, here’s a perfect example of compound thematic/phrase structure. I’m talking about the chorus, which begins around 0:47 in the video here: Caplin (see Classical Form by William Read more…
It isn’t often that one can look to top-40 pop music for a clear cut example of rhythmic motive diminution, but this is exactly what happens in the song “I Knew You Were Trouble” by Taylor Swift. Here’s a link Read more…
I’ve posted a video of excerpts of four tracks from the upcoming Subjects and Complements CD. I’m still looking for the best way to release this music, so as of now the best I can say is that I hope Read more…
A video from the recording session for my upcoming CD, “Dectet”, which should be available late 2012. Check out the wonderful solos by Alan Ferber and Leonard Thompson. The rest of the band includes Bob Sheppard, Phil O’Connor, Ben Wendel, Read more…
The four texts in this cycle are excerpts from a very long six-volume poem by Lucretius (ca. 99- 55 BCE) in which he describes the details of Epicurean philosophy. In simple terms, this is a philosophy of the physical world, Read more…