Wilbur Rehmann, saxophones
Blackie Nelson, guitars
Ken Nelson, keyboards
Rennan Rieke, bass
Jeremy Slead, drums
Special Edition Quartet:
Wilbur Rehmann, saxophones
E. Doctor Smith, drums
Peter Fox, keyboards
Mike Shea, electric bass
Influences
Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, Ahmad Jamal, Bill Bruford's Earthworks, Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, McCoy Tyner, Thelonius Monk, Stan Getz, Stanley Turrentine, Ornette Coleman, Pharoah Saunders, Cannonball Adderley, Bennie Maupin
Known for his keen ear and smooth tones, Rehmann is the leader of the "Wilbur Rehmann Quartet", and the man behind "Montana Jazz". "Rehmann and his Quartet," wrote Mike Clark of the Great Yellowstone Coalition, "have brought to us a sense of joy, wonder and solitude with their original jazz interpretations, which explore the interior landscapes of the American West and the meaning of wilderness". Rehmann’s "Going Down the Gulch" is but one of many fine examples of that style, and embodies a true "Big Sky Jazz" sound.
Rehmann grew up listening to the last of the traveling big bands in the late forty’s and early fifties. and as a teenager, got interested in bebop and wanted to know not only why they played like that, but how. Now he knows, and he plays it on the alto, soprano and tenor saxophones. Watching and listening to him play is definitely a joy.
Rounding out Rehmann’s quartet is guitarist "Blackie" Nelson, one of the most creative and inventive musicians around. Nelson is also one of the sweetest sounding guitarists in Montana, and apparently knows more songs and music than any one person ought to. In 1954 he and his wife Isabel drove to Bozeman to hear Charlie Parker who personified the cutting edge sound of his day, and that’s exactly what Nelson is today.
Bassist Ken Nelson does it all, and he does it well. Acoustic and electric bass, piano and synthesizer, organ and guitar and, of course, dobro. He has a tremendous sense of time and rhythm but it is his harmonic explorations that continue to amaze and enthrall. Drummer and percussionist Dennis Unsworth plays his full kit with exquisite sensitivity and grace His quick wit and melodic sense come through whether it’s taking a full-fledged solo flight or when he’s simply trading fours with the rest of the group.
The group’s two albums, "Back Home Jazz" (1996), and Mann Gulch Suite, (1999) have an underlying message unique to jazz, (or any other genre to be fair); protecting the environment. Rehmann’s concern for a clean and healthful environment, and his desire for everyone to be made aware of the effects of pollution and global warming, are clearly a motivating, if not inspiration force in his music, and a passion shared by many of Rehmann’s friends and colleagues, including the legendary saxophonist Sonny Rollins.
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