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 “'I wish it need not have happened in my time,'
              said Frodo. 'So do I,' said Gandalf, 'and so do all who live to
              see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to
              decide is what to do with the time that is given us.'” — J.R.R. Tolkein
 
 In JD Allen's liner notes for Queen City, it becomes clear that he
              spent a great deal of time during the pandemic thinking about
              “what to do with the time that is given us.” In the notes Allen
              writes, “Performing music for and with people is what I do and
              I've come to the realization that an audience of listeners of any
              size is a part of the music; it's also a shared experience.
              Covid-19 changed that and forced me to try to remember why I
              started playing in the first place, the years before I started
              performing and recording.” The tenor saxophonist's response to his
              period of introspection is this current recording, a solo
              saxophone program. It is a recording full of stark, uncompromising
              power, affording some rare insight into the psyche of the
              performer. This is not a Coleman Hawkins' “Picasso”-toned,
              I-love-my-horn-and-my-horn-loves-me type of symbiosis. There is a
              real sense of confrontation between Allen and his horn and, by
              extension, the audience which makes for a unique listening
              experience. This is not to imply that Queen City is some severe
              piece of avant garde abrasiveness. Rather, it encompasses an
              extraordinarily wide-range of musical languages which communicates
              an equally broad spectrum of emotions. Melodies of ravishing
              beauty alternate with angular, aggressive phrases to express
              frustration, anger, resolve, hope, love and acceptance in what may
              become one of the most personal and revealing recordings to come
              out of the trying time of Covid-19.
 JD ALLEN, solo tenor saxophone TRACKSThree Little Words • Wildwood Flower • Maude • O.T.R. • Retrograde
              • Gem and Eye • Mother • Queen City • Vernetta • Kristian with a K
              • Nyla's Sky • Just A Gigolo • These Foolish Things
  Three
                Little Words
  Q.T.R.
  Queen
                City
  Kristian
                with a K
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