Gekker-Small Jazz Duo - Highlights from Songbook

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Trumpeter Chris Gekker joined Greg on piano to perform an eclectic set of jazz, pop, and original music at Babcock Presbyterian Church in 2013. This video is a compilation of highlights from the concert.
Year: 2013

Easter Sunday at Ashland Presbyterian Church

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Greg joined organist Sheila Slade-Lee at Ashland Presbyterian Church to perform trumpet music for Easter Sunday in 2023. This is a compilation of selections from throughout the service.
Year: 2023

Baltimore Jazz Consortium - Live at Edenwald

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The Baltimore Jazz Consortium performed at Edenwald Retirement Communty in 2019, presenting a concert of jazz standards for an appreciative audience. This video is a compilation of highlights from the performance.

Greg Thompkins - Tenor Saxophone
Greg Small - Piano
Shawn Simon - Bass
Chuck Ferrell - Drums
Year: 2019

This I Dig of You

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Ravita Jazz performed at Baltimore's An die Musik in a concert featuring jazz standards and music from their latest recording, Oriana. The performance of Hank Mobley's standard, "This I Dig of You," featured Benny Russell (Sax), Greg Small (piano), Phil Ravita (bass), and Nucleo Vega (drums).
Year: 2022
See more information about What If?
Washington DC-based flutist, vocalist and composer Alex Hamburger returns on her pictorial sophomore statement What If? due out June 29, 2023 via Unit Records. The release of What If? follows Hamburger’s conceptual debut And She Spoke (2021), an homage to the ferocity of trailblazing female creatives stretching from Maya Angelou to Terri Lyne Carrington to Hamburger’s own activist-poet grandmother. The highly-orchestrated, textural paths exhibited on And She Spoke became a sketch of Hamburger’s sensitivity to human experience and propensity for transforming feeling into sound. What If? continues this deed in the sublime and empirical fashion that its title suggests — across nine original compositions, Hamburger reminds us that such hypothetical questions entertain possibility and ignite our imaginations.

She enlists her routine roster of collaborators for the operation, including album producer José Luiz Martins, who is also heard here on keys, synths and piano, Tyrone Allen II on electric, acoustic and synth bass, Chase Elodia on drums and Patrick Graney on percussion. Special guest Andrew Bailie joins the track “Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron)” on guitar and bass. Like her debut, Hamburger called mixing engineer Patrik Zosso for the bright sonic developments we now know as her signature as well as recording engineer Mark Reiter. In 2021, Hamburger was named a recipient of the Chamber Music of America Performance Plus Grant, through which she was able to collaborate with powerhouse trumpeter Ingrid Jensen on the production of What If? “Both Ingrid and the whole band's insight really helped shape the music that I had written into these fully formed pieces they became,” the bandleader adds.

For Hamburger, composing means creating a visceral narrative and scene. As a result, the output of What If? is immense and multi-hued, combining electric sounds, synths and pedals with percussion and acoustic instruments. At times, moments are abstract, while other settings find comfort in more traditional songform moments with lyrics. Album opener “Ladybug” creates a sensible entryway for this kind of genre-bending, methodical tendency. Trading her words for winds graciously, Hamburger balances both instrumental roles without compensation, all while such intermittent sounds complement the track’s themes of dissociation.

Leaning deeper into the abstract, both pieces of “Molinos de Viento” source inspiration from Hamburger’s studies of Dadaist poetry. Honing in on the notion that art is made from randomization, “Molinos de Viento: Meditation on the Wind”, by virtue of track-producer Tyrone Allen II, is characterized by instrumental fragmentation and the especially-ridged textures of Patrick Graney’s percussion. In 2018, Hamburger wrote these sporadic sounds by a name-from-hat drawing method while a part of the prestigious Focusyear band in Basel, Switzerland. The tracks’ title is sourced from a hallucinatory scene in the Don Quixote epic, when Sancho mistakes windmills in the distance for a group of threatening giants. Hamburger connected a thread once more, morphing Sancho’s delusions into grounds for the fantastical. “Things aren’t always what they seem or appear to be,” she notes.

“Every song has a different process, a different starting point, be it a melody, a groove, another song or just a few words or chords,” Hamburger states. Tracks like “Surface Unknown” and “Plastic Stars” are soaked in ambient, trance-inducing and fusion atmospheres, the foremost unfolding into lush rhythmic stylings and resolving itself through transcendent harmonies brought forth by Hamburger’s flute and José Luiz Martins’ synths.

While at times her music grapples with notions of randomness and abstract principles, other moments such as “November 3rd” evoke concrete truths and memories. Written amid the infamous Biden-Trump Presidential election in November 2020, the composition is a device of her devout studying of Wayne Shorter’s catalog at the time and taking long walks in the woods to reflect. "November 3rd” portrays an effort to reach toward sanity, and it’s another moment where Hamburger’s style—here more straigthahead than the rest—matches the story behind it.

“​​The main concept of What If? is perception,” Hamburger shared in a statement. “The idea of challenging our perception of reality and how it relates to others and can change. It’s about exploring life in transition and questioning the boundaries of our human experience in today's society.” Keenly, Hamburger closes What If? with “Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron), a poignant, folk-flushed tribute to her two late friends. Through ethereal multi-tracking, she sings from Lowell’s point of view, relaying a message to Aaron and creating a symbol of eternal connection. This notion feels broadly understood in the context of loss and, too, an essential final impression of What If?, a record imbued with sensations, questions and multiple answers.

Lydia Liebman Productions ( Lydia Liebman and Bari Bossis)
credits
releases June 29, 2023

Alex Hamburger: flute, voice and compositions
José Luiz Martins: all keys, synths and piano
Tyrone Allen II: electric, acoustic and synth bass (except Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron)) & production on Molinos de Viento: Meditation on the Wind
Chase Elodia: Drums
Patrick Graney: Percussion (Surface Unknown, Molinos de Viento, Plastic Stars)
Andrew Bailie: Guitar and Bass on Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron)

All compositions by Alex Hamburger
Produced by José Luiz Martins

Recorded at Bias Studios by Mark Reiter in Springfield VA (except Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron))
Mixed by Patrik Zosso (except Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron))
Gone Too Soon (For Lowell and Aaron): mixed by Michael Turnwall
Mastered by Colin Girod at Master Tape

Cover:
Photo by Nick Moreland
Hair and Makeup by Bravosbeauty
Styled by Emma Lurye
Art and Design by Charles Prioleau

Released on Unit Records
This project is funded in part by the Pathways To Jazz grant, a donor advised fund of the Boulder County Arts Alliance
This project is supported by Chamber Music America’s Performance Plus Program which funded the band to work on the music with Ingrid Jensen
Year: 2023

Plastic Stars

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Plastic Stars by Alex Hamburger
Full Album "What If?" out June 29th on Unit Records

Alex Hamburger- Flute/ Voice
José Luiz Martins- Keys
Tyrone Allen II- Bass
Chase Elodia- Drums
Patrick Graney- Percussion

Recorded at Bias Studios by Mark Reiter
Mixed by Patrik Zosso
Mastered by Colin Girod at Master Tape
Video production by Jamie Sandel

Cover Photo taken by Nick Moreland
Makeup by Bravos Beauty
Styled by Emma Lurye
Daniellance90
Daniel Lance Jr., a native of Baltimore City, Maryland, is a multi-talented individual with a deep passion for producing and writing music, playing basketball, and creating captivating visual media. Born and raised in the vibrant city, Daniel's diverse interests and creative pursuits have shaped his unique identity.
Patrick Paulus
Strange Bedfellows: Contemporary Tragedy & The Commercial Determinants of Health  (World Cinema Studies – Lifelong Learning Activity, 2025)
Lee Marsh
Musician and Poet, I draw inspiration for folk music and the mountains.  For the past couple of decades I have focused on Irish Music and the Appalachian Mountains.  I published my first book last year:  Music and Mountains, Poetry inspired by Irish Music and the Appalachian Mountains.  I am in the process of creating a website, Poets-Place.Net to serve local Baltimore poets. 
Enayet Hossain
Enayet Hossainis a highly accomplished tabla player hailing from a renowned Indian musical lineage, spanning three generations. Born in Bangladesh to an Indian father and a Bangladeshi mother, Enayet's family relocated to the United States when he was just six years old. Enayet received his musical training from his father, Hamid Hossain, an esteemed Indian music teacher based in the United States, renowned for his teachings at UMBC and his mentorship of numerous students in tabla, sitar, and Indian classical vocal music.
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