Bottesini To Play Modbo Gallery in Colorado Springs January 9th
Come check out Bottesini at a really cool venue in The Springs next weekend, with our fantastic regular working ensemble:
Paul Riola: Saxophones
Glen Whitehead: Trumpet
Glenn Taylor: Pedal Steel
Doug Anderson: Bass
Jay Ellis: Drums

January 3, 2010 No Comments
Bottesini Makes Westword 2009 Moovers and Shakers List
The Bottesini Project tops 2009 Moovers and Shakers List in Westword.
The Bottesini Project is considered a top moover and shaker by Westword Magazine. Please check it out here for only $3.99:
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Its normally priced at $29.99, so this is a really good deal! That’s like buying one watermelon, but getting a whole truck load of watermelons. Sort of.
January 3, 2010 No Comments
Westword Article about Chicago performance by Dave Herrera
The Bottesini Project sets up shop in Chicago
November 5, 2009 No Comments
Bottesini In Chicago Nov 15 with Jeff Parker, Josh Abrams and Josh Berman

Bottesini will be setting up shop for one night in Chicago with a stellar lineup of Denver and Chicago musicians:
Paul Riola: Saxophones Josh Berman: Trumpet (Exploding Star Orchestra) Jeff Parker: Guitar (Tortoise, Isotope 217, Fred Anderson) Mark Clifford: Vibes (Bottesini, The Playground) Josh Abrams: Bass (The Roots, town and Country) Antwon Owens: Drums (Bottesini)Josh Berman has been so kind to host us in his Emerging Improvisers Series at The Hungry Brain in Chicago. This will a wonderful opportunity for collaboration between the improvisational scenes of Denver and Chicago.
http://www.emergingimprovisers.org/events.html
November 5, 2009 No Comments
Now Purchase Naima’s Grass Pajamas Featuring Nels Cline through iTunes
October 23, 2009 No Comments
Naima’s Grass Pajamas reviewed in The Westword this week by Jon Solomon
The Bottesini Project
Naima’s Grass Pajamas
Bocumast

On the Bottesini Project’s outstanding self-titled debut, leader and saxophonist Paul Riola recruited high-caliber musicians like Tortoise guitarist Jeff Parker and drummer Scott Amendolato play on tunes that were largely improvised. For its followup, Naima’s Grass Pajamas, Riola assembled a new cast of players, among them Wilco guitarist Nels Cline, bassist Keenan Wayne, guitarist Janet Feder and laptop wizard CacheFlowe, to create an equally vivid collection of tunes that stemmed from a day of collective improvising. As Riola puts it, the tracks were then reconstructed during mixing to tell a more coherent and cohesive story. While it’s intriguing to hear Cline in a completely different environment than, say, performing with the Nels Cline Singers, the other players make equally compelling contributions to this disc, which wonderfully straddles the organic and electronic.
October 22, 2009 No Comments
Glenn Taylor Orchestra to Play Showcase this Friday at Meadowlark

October 21, 2009 No Comments
Review of CD Release written up in Westword
Over the Weekend: The Bottesini Project at Notably Fine Audio
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| Jon Solomon |
The Bottesini Project
Friday, October 16, 2009
Notably Fine Audio
Better than: Any other local collective improvisation group.
One of the great things about Bottesini Project shows is the uniqueness of each performance. Since the shows are based completely based on collective improvisations, there’s a freshness and vibrancy about the performances that’s not found in rehashed jazz standards or playing tunes that have been completely mapped out. While the idea of free jazz might confuse some people with its loose structure and disregard for musical rules at times, there are times where spontaneous pieces can actually sound like pre-written tunes.
As the leader of the Bottesini Project, saxophonist Paul Riola usually recruits high caliber players who excel at the art of improvisation, which is documented on the group’s self-titled debut album that features Tortoise guitarist Jeff Parker, drummer Scott Amedola, Ron Miles, and DJ Olive. On the Bottesini Project’s outstanding new album, Naima’s Grass Pajamas, Riola brought in Wilco guitarist Nels Cline, San Francisco-based bassist Keenan Wayne, lap steel player Glenn Taylor, reedsman Mark Harris and guitarist Janet Feder.
As with other Bottesini Project performances, Naima’s Grass Pajamas started off as collective improvisations recorded live in the studio and were then later reconstructed. It was fitting that the group celebrated the release of where the album was recorded – Notably Fine Audio. Friday night’s septet featured five of the musicians on the album as well as guitarist Roger Green and Colin Bricker at the laptop.
Although some of the pieces the group played Friday drifted into completely different territory than some of the tracks on Naima’s Grass Pajamas, the group’s set was equally as compelling. At other times, the group explored similar textural landscapes, anchored by Bricker’s laptop-based beats. After Riola opened the first tune on tenor sax, Bricker fired up a tabla beat on the laptop while Taylor created some intriguing sustained terrain using an EBow and Feder tapped on the body of her nylon string guitar. The piece then cascaded into slower section with Green holding up a small music box to the front pickup of his Telecaster. After switching from tenor to alto, Riola bounced off lines off with Harris back as well as weaving lines that vaguely recalled later-era Ornette Coleman.
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| Jon Solomon |
Wayne opened the second piece with percussive harmonic tapping on his bass. Feder joined then joined in by using mallets on the top of her guitar’s body while Riola delivered some breathy tenor work. Green, surrounded by a multitude of guitar effect pedals, created some brilliant reversed guitar loops that later disintegrated into some wonderful textural volume swells a la Bill Frisell. Somewhere in the midst of all of this, Bricker summoned a beat that recalledAnother Green World-era Brian Eno. Harris started tapping his alto sax to the beat, Feder started tapping her fretboard while Taylor and Riola traded off lines. After Bricker switched off the drums, the other players kept the pulse going with sort of sidewinding, angular March of the Munchkins kind of thing with Riola laying out some bluesy lines over it. It was brilliant. After finishing the tune, Riola said the piece was titled “Anterior Lateral View.”
The last piece began with Harris humming into his sax, almost chant-like, while Green created some gorgeous ambient echo-laden guitar washes and Taylor sounded more like a guitarist by running his lap steel through distortion. After Bricker played rain forest samples, the group locked into a groove anchored by Wayne thumping bass that just kept intensifying for maybe five minutes or so until they all stopped.
CRITIC’S NOTEBOOK
PERSONAL BIAS: I’ve seen the Bottesini Project perform with many different line-ups, but this was one of the group’s most engaging sets.
RANDOM DETAIL: Although the group only played three long pieces, they each sort of felt like suites.
BY THE WAY: While Naima’s Grass Pajamas for sale at the show, the official street date is October 27.
October 19, 2009 No Comments
Nels on the Cover of Jazz Times
NELS ON THE COVER OF JAZZ TIMES!

Nels is featured on the cover of the Oct 2009 issue of JAZZ TIMES. You can read the feature article here.
October 17, 2009 No Comments
Westword article about CD release on Friday
Nels Cline collaborates with the Bottesini Project
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On Naima’s Grass Pajamas, Paul Riola’s Bottesini Project has assembled something of a dream lineup, including guitar legend Nels Cline of Wilco, bassist Keenan Wayne, CacheFlowe, Janet Feder and Glenn Taylor. The musicians recorded a day’s worth of improvisations, then Riola and Colin Bricker spent many additional hours in the studio assembling the final product. “We collaged a lot of the sessions together, so we could form what we thought was a coherent narrative of the improvisations,” Riola explains. “The album is not a stamped-out document of the improvisations. We really took a musique concrete approach to it.”
Riola says it was a project four years in the making. When he booked Cline for a solo performance in town he was finally able to make it happen. “What I like to do is put musicians together. I pay a lot of attention to what musicians are doing, listen to a lot of music,” Riola says. “What I like to try to do is hire folks with a shared aesthetic.”
The results can be heard when the album is released for digital download on October 20 via Bocumast. If you can’t wait, there’s a special performance featuring Paul Riola (Saxophone/Electronics), Mark Harris (Saxophone/Electronics), Roger Green (Guitar), Janet Feder (Prepared Acoustic Guitar), Glenn Taylor (Pedal Steel), Keenan Wayne (Bass), and Colin Bricker (Laptop) set for this Friday, October 16 at Notably Fine Audio, 2949 Larimer Street. Tickets are $15 and include an exclusive CD version of the album. Seating is extremely limited, so you’ll need to R.S.V.P. if you plan to attend — and wear something snappy, the performance will be filmed for live DVD release.
October 13, 2009 No Comments



