Reviews

Reviews | D-Lucca

 

D-Lucca, Pressing Forward. Shades

of Joe Satriani and Eric Johnson, albeit

less showy, surface on this instrumental

New Age jazz album. Solos also go to

sax and bass, but the real star is

Walnut Creek resident D-Lucca's guitar.

His tone is clear and bright, though not

devoid of bottom end, and his playing

confident and workmanlike. Unlike

many skilled guitarists, he serves the

song before his vanity.

(D-Lucca Entertainment)

By Nate Seltenrich

 

 

 

 

Next Level

JAZZ REVIEW.COM

Featured Artist: D-Lucca

CD Title: The Next Level
Year: 2008

Record Label: Innervision Records

Style: Various Jazz Styles

Review:

From the opening notes of The Next Level, bassist D-Lucca frames this as a San Francisco treat, as you can hear the trademark nuances that so often mark music from that region.  This starts off with the promise that it will be a very pleasant aural journey. It delivers on that promise throughout.

D-Lucca has played with quite the impressive and diverse list of who’s who in the business, including the late, great vibraphonist/percussionist Lionel Hampton, drummer Peter Erkskine, vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater, and the late saxman Michael Brecker, as well as Rosemary Clooney, Debbie Boone, and Tony Tennille.  The influence of that experience comes across immediately here.  D-Lucca is also currently touring with keyboardist Terry Disley of Acoustic Alchemy fame.

The material on this album is at once refreshingly original, smooth, cool, and well-written. His and his band’s masterful technique and playing don’t hurt, either! There’s substance, feel, and a genuine sense that all’s right with the world in listening to this abundantly charming project.  Tunes like the opening and title track, as well as “Keepin’ the Fire Lit” and “Blues Driver,” clearly showthat D-Lucca tried very hard not to leave many stones unturned in cranking out the creativity.  Of course, I singled out those tunes only because they are among my favorites. They are not the sole tunes of note, mind you. This album is worthy of a complete listen, lest you miss something truly inspiring. Everything fits here---from the jazzy chords of guitarist Lorn Leber to the driving drums of several different contributors in this area. D-Lucca’s various basses add, as usual, several different dimensions to it all.  Truly impressive work, and congrats are definitely in order.

Reviewed by: Ronald Jackson

 

 

Cruise Control

BASS PLAYER MAGAZINE

Homegrown

Daniel LuccaParenti

|September 2006

Cruise Control [D-Lucca]

Bay Area bassist Daniel Lucca Parenti’s biggest gig was touring behind jazz and pop vocal legend Rosemary Clooney for several recent years. His solo material, however, reveals an artist whose personal ambitions extend to modern, electronica-influenced sounds. Aptly handling a variety of basses, including melody-manning piccolo, Parenti’smaterial is alternately laid-back and fused-out modern jazz. Great playing.

 

SMOOTH JAZZ.COM

D-LUCCA Cruise Control D-Lucca Entertainment

At age 12 people were noticing Daniel Lucca Parenti (D-Lucca). His high school music teacher was so impressed with hisability to read music he gave him a bass guitar and told him that if he could learn to play it over the summer he would invite him to be in the jazz band.  And so he did… the following years were filled with hard work, lessons and hours of practice. By 17 he had become an accomplished jazz, swing and rockbassist and continued his scholastic performance in college. At 19 he was chosen to be the bassist for Matt Catingub’s Copa Cat Pack Band with Concord Jazz Records.  He has played with Rosemary Clooney and Michael Feinstein (with both for four years), he has toured extensively playing jazz festivals all over the world, and recorded four CDs with Concord (two were Grammy-Nominees). This accomplished musician has also managed to complete his Bachelor’s Degree in Music Performance and Composition. Today, D-Lucca is one of the top call bassists in San Francisco and is currently touring with keyboardist Terry Disley (Acoustic Alchemy). CRUISE CONTROL is his 2nd solo release to date; it’s filled with intriguing musical textures and introspective melodies and infused with cool and modern jazz sensibilities, as well as electronica influences.  Adeptly featuring a variety of basses including 4 string piccolo and 5 string fretless, CRUISE CONTROL showcases this jazz impresario as deep and innovative with songs like “Distance From Life To Love,” “Cruise Control,” and “06”standing out for us. ~SANDY SHORE  

 

JAZZ REVIEW.COM

 

CD Title: Cruise Control

Year: 2006

Record Label: D-Lucca Entertainment

Style: Fusion

Review:

Veteran bass guitarist Daniel Lucca’s album Cruise Control is one of the best jazz fusion albums you will ever pick up. D-Lucca has fused jazz and rock so beautifully that you don’t know when one ends and the other begins. The elements are so entwined that they beat with one heart brandishing the regalia of Steely Dan. D-Lucca’s music is not rushed, but gingerly plotted with brandy savoring grooves, azure-esque textures beaming with laminated luster, and chords with gorgeous definition, clarity, and warmth. His music has a fire-side/smooth jazz rustle with ambient arcs andt restles coordinated by expert fingers.

D-Lucca composed and arranged all of the songs as well as bearing the brunt of executive producer. With assistant producers Boone Spooner and Wandah C. Mitchell and collaborator Terry Disley from Acoustic Alchemy on keyboards and synths, Daniel Lucca’s album CruiseControl should be earmarked by his peers as a professional level to be attained and by music fans who are looking for music that courses through their veins like a soothing broth on rankled nerves and uptight emotions.

The album opens with an upbeat jazz fusion dialogue stylized with 70s jazz-funk surges on the title track and “That Funky Bass,” which exhibits smooth jazz saxophones interacting in a lively banter with the bass. The supple tones and caressing movements on tracks like “Everlasting” and “Erowan” project a score of meaningful melodic phrases connecting to emotions and bearing traits similarly to Trey Anastasio.These reflective pieces display gentle playing and responsive exchanges in the instrumentation.

The graphic chord vibrations on tracks like “Baby” and “Light Year” are expressive and organic relatable to a Spyro Gyra fashion. The music for “Zen Of Zinn” is very fertile sprouting stalks of saxophone lines and rhythmic percussive shakers producing an ambient jazz effect. The spoken words of Mitchell and Erhabor on “Distance From Live To Love” give the track a hip hop pulsation when they recite: “We open our eyes to the ultimate surprise/ That weare not yet who we will someday be/ Our minds and hearts are like new and waiting for you/ To show us the way to LOVE.”

The words and music have themes of healing and penetrating a succor resolution. The melodies “’06” and “Light At The End Of The Tunnel” are aurally smooth and tenderly vacillating.The smooth jazz saxophone on “Expresso” and percolating synths are sweetlyversed as they wrap around each other and the listener in its homey cove. The lightly rosin guitars play in harmony to the boinging synths and steadyshakers. The music chords prance gracefully on “Your Smile” as the saxophone chimes produce rings of vivid roseates. Tracks like “Lucca’s Love” and “Experience (Live)” move to a fire-side/lounging jazz tempo while the final track “R. U. Home Yet” basks in country flanged guitar pluckings and light toe tapping beats with ablues-folk texturing whistles through the rhythmic steps.

Daniel Lucca has been in the music business since he was 19 years old when he began recording with such artists as Matt Catingub, Rosemary Clooney, Michael Feinstein, The Big Kahuna And The Copa CatPack, Maureen McGovern, Debbie Boone, Tony Tennille, Peter Erskine and many others. He obviously picked up a few things about making exquisite melodies because he does them with the precision of the fingers of a Waterford Crystal’s craftsman. The chord progressions are so finely quilted that you never see the seams. All the elements work together without a note out of place.

Reviewed by: Susan Frances

 

EJAZZ NEWS.COM

 

CDReviews: D-Lucca- “Cruise Control” - CD-2007 Independent

Posted by: editoron Tuesday, July 17, 2007 - 08:18 PM

 

Glenn Astarita

It’s easy to discern why the bassist known as D-Lucca isa first call, San Francisco Bay Area session ace. Now performing with keyboardist Terry Disley of Acoustic Alchemy notoriety, the artist has supported the late diva Rosemary Clooney and stints with various orchestras. But this electronics-hued album defines the artist’s strong compositional acumen to complement his solid chops and inventive e-bass frameworks.

He crosses that opaque border by churning out a blend of hardcore jazz-fusion with melodically attractive hooks. In addition, D-Lucca uses variable EFX techniques for texture and gusto during many of these pieces. Not sappy or over-baked, the album is largely built on pumping beats amid select tracks featuring Disley’s clustering electric piano chord progressions and breezy synth lines. D-Lucca’s bass arsenal is impressive here. And he shows a romantic side on the wistful piece titled “Baby.” Then with “Light Year,” he goes head-to-head with lead guitarist Lorn Leber, where the musicians soar skyward via stinging choruses and a climactic finale.

Saxophonist Daniel Zim imparts a laid-back groove on “Light at the End of the Tunnel,” as D-Lucca consummates the festivities with a walking-bass pattern throughout the composition titled “R U Home Yet.” In a nutshell this album signifies an unanticipated musical highlight for 2007. Most importantly, D-Lucca shines as a formidable composer here. – Glenn Astarita

 

 

X-Mas

SMOOTH JAZZ.COM

 

D-LUCCA Have Yourself A Fretless Little Christmas InnervisionRecords

 

The unmistakable sound of the fretless bass is complex and rich and everything that is deep and meaningful in music. D-Lucca knows this instinctively and has become a master of reaching all new melodic highs (and lows) on his instrumental work. HAVE YOURSELF A FRETLESS LITTLE CHRISTMAS is such a special holiday release that we will be playing nearly half of the tracks from it on SmoothJazz.com and SmoothLounge.com Radio this holiday season. The two-time Grammy-nominee bassist for Rosemary Clooney (he also played with Michael Feinstein) has put his heart into the holidays with this seasonal release. I so love the hip, swagger on “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,”and the chill-out, late night vibe on “We Three Kings,”while the smooth and jazzy “Silver Bells" makes me want to whip out my Macy’s card (it’s that festive) right now. D-Lucca’s spin on “Drummer Boy” is swampy-thick and the resonating harmonics are lush. I guarantee that you’ve never heard “TheChristmas Song” like the one on HAVE YOURSELF A FRETLESS LITTLE CHRISTMAS… some sort of hyper-disco, dance trance version, like maybe the Espresso machine was actually in the recording studio… super fun! And perhaps the sweetest tune on here is the album’s namesake, “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,”featuring D-Lucca’s melodious playing along side Terry Disley’s delicious piano.  Ahhhh yes, soon it will be Christmas Day and we’ll be fretless all the way! ~SANDY SHORE

 

 

All 4 You

 

WANDAH C MITCHELL

 

The All For You Project is a collection of beautiful heart-felt love ballads from D-Lucca to his wife and family, filled with harmonious piccolo and electric bass melodies.  Encompassing both classic and modern rhythms and sounds, this melting pot of music definitely fills its listener with the overwhelming feeling of LOVE.  This is the most beautiful and thoughtful thing that anyone has ever done for me and my children.  It is so sincere;
so heart-filled.  The All For You Project once a day, definitely keeps the doctor away.  If Life, Love, & Happiness was a recipe in a cook book, The All For You Project would be the main ingredient.

 

Wandah Carol Mitchell - D-Lucca's Wife