Label: Chill Tone Records, 2026
Personnel - Caleb Wheeler Curtis: stritch, soprano saxophone (#8), sopranino (#9), trumpet (#9); Hery Paz: tenor saxophone (#2,3,4,9), flute (#6,7); Orrin Evans: piano (#3,4,5,6); Emmanuel Michael: guitar; Vicente Archer: bass; Michael Sarin: drums.
Caleb Wheeler Curtis, the insightful saxophonist and composer who impressed with Heat Map (2022) and The True Story of Bears and the Invention of the Battery (2024), returns with Ritual, a new album of originals performed with a strong collective spirit and pronounced individuality. Focusing primarily on the stritch—a straight alto saxophone associated with Rahsaan Roland Kirk—Curtis is joined by rising guitarist Emmanuel Michael, bassist Vicente Archer, and drummer Michael Sarin. Cuban saxophonist and flutist Hery Paz contributes compelling lines on six tracks, while pianist Orrin Evans appears on four.
The powerful emotional arc of “Fantasmas”, a searching invocation of ancestry, opens the album with an open-ended bass-and-drums flux, creating fertile ground for the lyrical melody shaped by Michael and Curtis. The guitarist balances inventive phrasing, volume swells, and harmonic color, while Curtis consistently finds the right tone and intensity for his focused yet exploratory narratives. “Bleakout”, conceived during a blackout in Madrid, shifts into modernistic funk with angular vision and rhythmic density, featuring Curtis and Paz in fluid dialogue, united by a shared conversational sensibility.
Slower but steadily purposeful, “Florence” introduces a chamber-like delicacy in a measured 4/4 tempo, enhanced by guitar harmonics and atmospheric piano minimalism. “You Just Can’t Keep the Music”, a duet with Evans, moves from a precise theme in (4+5) additive meter into a brisk 3/4 for its improvisational passages. Evans also features on “Black Box Extraction”, where counterpoint and an energized funk-rock feel—sparked by Sarin’s drumming—are layered with avant-garde intensity. Curtis remains relentless in his fluid ideas, while Paz injects a touch of Latin groove before expanding outward; Michael brings the piece to a close with unrestrained creativity.
“Tenastic” and “The End of Power” may be the most direct pieces on the album, yet they retain an element of surprise. The former’s dense, driving swing—topped by vigorous interplay between Curtis and Paz (on flute) as well as Michael’s tense lines and harmonies—contrasts with the latter’s dreamlike atmosphere where a refined, almost pop-like sensibility is anchored by Sarin’s nimble brushwork.
Curtis’ compositional voice is serious, often intricate, and deeply imaginative. Demonstrating a near-telepathic rapport with his ensemble, he achieves a striking balance between grounded structure and abstract exploration, resulting in music that is consistently engaging and thought-provoking.
Favorite Tracks:
01 - Fantasmas ► 02 - Bleakout ► 04 - Black Box Extraction
