Label: Skipstone Records, 2022
Personnel - Erik Friedlander: cello; Uri Caine: piano; Mark Helias: bass; Ches Smith: drums.
Erik Friedlander is a resourceful New York-based cellist and composer with a one-of-a-kind style. His tremendous versatility makes him play avant-garde jazz, post-bop as well as chamber and world-influenced music with the same brilliancy and passion. Hence, collaborations in many different contexts with such greats as John Zorn, Dave Douglas, Marty Ehrlich, Wadada Leo Smith, and Fred Hersch, are not a surprise.
If his previous outing, Sentinel (a trio effort with guitarist Ava Mendoza and drummer Diego Espinosa), was an agreeable breathe of fresh air, then this new recording, A Queens’ Firefly, pushes the envelope, working as an expansion of his 2018 album Artemisia. The cellist spearheads a fabulous quartet, The Throw, featuring pianist Uri Caine, bassist Mark Helias and drummer Ches Smith.
The title cut floats like a cloud, beginning a musical journey that unfolds with fascination. There’s a jazz and pop music lightness to it, with Helias, Caine and Friedlander proffering lovely solos. The following number, “Match Strikes”, defies that tranquility as the group charges with rhythmic boldness and intelligent counterpoint. The catchy propulsion here conveys both depth and urgency.
The groovy “Chandelier” adopts a crisp seven-note bass figure as its glowing carpet, whereas the gracefully orchestrated “Glimmer” goes from a well-intoned cello introduction (suggesting contemporary classical musing) to a 3/4 pop-rock drum flow, and then to tranquilizing balladic expressions. Groove and modulation are detectable, and the piece acquires a fusion adventurism. A similar impression appears on the rocking “The Fire In You”, which serves as the album’s closing track.
Friedlander keeps the pocket wide on “Aurora”, a transfixing cut where the group indulge in avant-garde freedoms. With its excellent theme and odd meter, the piece plays like a folk-rock dance from a distant world. A Queens’ Firefly is an exciting album in many ways, and Friedlander’s fantastic compositions seemed to have encouraged his cohorts to play them with gusto.
Favorite Tracks:
02 - Match Strikes ► 04 - Glimmer ► 06 - Aurora