Artemis - Artemis

Label: Blue Note Records, 2020

Personnel - Melissa Aldana: tenor sax; Ingrid Jensen: trumpet; Anat Cohen: clarinet, bass clarinet; Cecile McLorin Salvant: vocals; Renee Rosnes: piano; Noriko Ueda: bass; Alison Miller: drums.

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Artemis is an all-female supergroup whose seven members already possess deep credentials in the modern jazz world. They are not only intrepid improvisers and colorists but also true team players. Hence, Artemis’ eponymous debut album is highly demonstrative of those feats. Under the musical direction of Canadian pianist Renee Rosnes, this international ensemble proudly features New York-based jazz figures from different parts of the world, namely Israeli clarinetist Anat Cohen, Chilean saxophonist Melissa Aldana, Canadian trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, American vocalist Cecile McLorin Salvant, Japanese bassist Noriko Ueda and American drummer Alison Miller. 

Artemis is the Greek goddess of the hunt and the wilderness. The opener, precisely titled “Goddess of the Hunt”, was penned by Miller, who forges an attractive rhythm with Ueda here. The tune features four distinctive soloists - Aldana, exemplary in her acrobatic movements, is effective across the whole range of the saxophone but really stuns whenever she hits the low notes; Rosnes develops fleet phrases with horn fills in the back; Jensen’s unique locution is filled with meaningful piercing notes; and Cohen brings her dulcet sound and agile imagination to the fore.

The interesting arrangement inflicted by Jensen to The Beatles’ “The Fool on the Hill” transformed the amiable pop of the British group into polished post-bop. Amidst the collective effort, it’s hard not to notice the conjoint work of the contrabass and the bass clarinet toward low-end stabilization. This tune is not as fidgety as “Big Top”, an animated swing romp with a few rhythmic variations and a deeper connection with tradition. Rosnes, who wrote it, feels at home here as she sweeps the piano keys with bravura.

Versatility is all over the album, and if the romanticism of Cohen’s “Nocturno”, inspired by Chopin’s classical warmth and wondrously propelled by Miller’s mallet and brush work, flows in a relaxed manner, Ueda’s “Step Forward” waltzes buoyantly with a confident stride. In addition to those, Lee Morgan’s 1963 gem “The Sidewinder” unfurls with a firm sense of control in a graceful, cool-jazz interpretation set at a slower tempo. Jensen, Cohen and Aldana alternate bars, sussing out the sounds and languages that better suit this conversation.

The mesmerizing voice of Salvant brightens up a pair of pieces - a deeply-felt reading of Stevie Wonder’s “If It’s Magic”, an authentic ray of light, and “Cry, Buttercup, Cry”, a composition by Rocco Accetta that was brought to life by the jazz singer Maxine Sullivan in 1948. 

These remarkable jazzwomen make a point about creativity. 

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Favorite Tracks:
01 - Goddess of the Hunt ► 03 - The Fool on the Hill ► 05 - If It’s Magic