Alex Sipiagin - Horizons

Label: Blue Room Music, 2024

Personnel - Alex Sipiagin: trumpet; Chris Potter; tenor and soprano saxophone; John Escreet: piano, keyboards; Matt Brewer: electric and acoustic bass; Eric Harland; drums.

Seasoned trumpeter Alex Sipiagin joins forces with frequent collaborators on his latest record, Horizons, which features two compositions by guitarist Pat Metheny and six Sipiagin originals. He pairs up with the formidable saxophonist Chris Potter for a striking frontline, and enjoys the rhythmic and harmonic contributions from pianist John Escreet, bassist Matt Brewer, and drummer Eric Harland. 

Metheny’s first piece, “While You Weren’t Looking” opens the album with an eruptive post-bop energy, alternating fluid phrases and stop-and-go rhythmic drive. Sipiagin and Potter - working together for the 11th time on a project of the former - interact upfront before their respective solos, with the trumpeter fearlessly exploring the full range of his instrument, and the saxophonist infusing humor into his motifs and in-and-out excursions. Escreet concludes the improvisation section with brio. The other Metheny composition is a sweet ballad, “When is it Now?”, played with infallible inspiration.

Sipiagin’s “Jumping Ahead” also carries a Metheny-esque vibe despite its primary inspiration from Hermeto Pascoal’s technique of reiterative melodies and harmonies. A lively theme and metric modulation also characterize numbers like “Clean Cut” and “Lost”, which reference Sipiagin’s move to Italy in 2020 after 30 years in the US, revealing the organic nature of his compositional grammar.

Dedicated to Charles Mingus and Wayne Shorter, “Overseen” is another velvety ballad initiated by dreamy keyboards and soaring soprano sax evoking Shorter-evoking glides, with Brewer’s thick bass notes gaining significance. The centerpiece, “Horizon” is divided into three parts: “Horizon 1” feels rubato at first and then rambles freely with a gripping rhythm as a backdrop; “Horizon 2” promotes  modern cool jazz with suggestive electronic vibes; and “Horizon 3” makes a bright, hopeful conclusion, painting within the frame. The album finishes with the breezy contemporary flow of “AIVA-tion”, an airy, sun-filled piece built with crisp unisons, a driven backbeat, and futuristic keyboard dimensions.

Horizons is quite adventurous within the structured post-bop envisioned by Sipiagin, whose music feels more even-tempered and comfortable than ever.

Favorite Tracks:
01 - While You Weren’t Looking ► 05 - When is it Now? ► 10 - AIVA-tion