Biography
The jazz ensemble Happy Apple takes its name from a plaything popular with children during the 1960s. Formed in 1996 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the trio originated with saxophonist Michael Lewis and drummer David King, after which bassist Erik Fratzke came aboard shortly thereafter. Although their inventive, tuneful improvisations within the small-group format earned the label “jazz punk,” the musicians demonstrate command of jazz’s full lineage; their refined free-bop pieces feature memorable themes, witty touches, and lucid structural logic. Lewis’s strikingly songful tenor saxophone leads the way, supported by sturdy themes contributed by each member. The group sidesteps fusion clichés by evoking rock energy without yielding to it, thereby producing an original, luminous, and distinctive sonic identity. Intensity can rise to searing levels, and the musicians show no reluctance toward sonic exploration or free-jazz ventures, yet melody remains a constant anchor. Four self-released albums appeared before wider distribution: Blown Shockward and Crash Flow (1997), Part of the Solution Problem (1998), Body Popping, Moon Walking, Top Rocking (1999), and Please Refrain from Fronting (2001). Youth Oriented, the first release on a major label, arrived in 2003 via Universal Music and reached U.S. listeners through Sunnyside Records. Sunnyside also handled 2005’s Peace Between Our Companies. Happy Apple maintains an active touring schedule while keeping Minneapolis as its operational base.
Albums



