Label: Firehouse 12 Records, 2020
Personnel - Mary Halvorson: guitar; Amirtha Kidambi: vocals; Adam O’Farrill: trumpet; Maria Grand: tenor sax, vocals; Michael Formanek: bass; Tomas Fujiwara: drums + guest Robert Wyatt: vocals (#1,3,5).
The sophomore album from Code Girl, an intrepid project led by guitarist/composer Mary Halvorson that incorporates lyrics and blends elements of jazz, rock, folk, and indie pop, offers some agreeable surprises. Artlessly Falling signals the absence of trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire from the original roster of musicians, but welcomes Adam O’Farrill for his place, as well as saxophonist/vocalist Maria Grand and rock legend Robert Wyatt, who puts his voice on three pieces. The remaining members are bassist Michael Formanek and drummer Tomas Fujiwara - both colleagues of Halvorson in the Thumbscrew trio - and avant-garde vocalist Amirtha Kidambi. The material on this recording was inspired by many factors, but perhaps the most significant of them has to do with the challenging poetic forms picked by Halvorson to write the lyrics for each tune.
With words inspired by and dedicated to novelist Lawrence Osborne, “The Lemon Trees” is a pure delight. It kicks off with gentle waltzing steps conducted by arpeggiated guitar, brushed drums, and topped by Latin-flavored trumpet, quickly segueing into the sung part, where Wyatt’s beautiful voice - efficiently backed by Kidambi and Grand - takes us to the realms of King Crimson. The final section of O’Farrill’s wide-ranging solo has exclusively drums as accompaniment, and, afterwards, the drummer seizes the opportunity to deliver an enthusiastic statement himself.
Playing like an operatic lament, “Last-Minute Smear” features regular snare drum activity and sparse guitar chords with vocals atop. This pattern is dismantled and renewed with a view for unison melodies as well as improvisations by Grand and O’Farrill.
Both “Muzzling Unwashed” and “A Nearing” denote fleeting tempo shifts (duple to triple) and feature Kidambi’s easy, elastic vocals at the fore. If the former piece launches into pitch-bending guitar before gradually adding slippery bass and intimate drumming, the latter is introduced by Formanek’s ruminative discourse that anticipates the simple 4/4 groove.
Halvorson turns up the distortion levels on “Walls and Roses”, a noise-rock endeavor with alternation of tranquil and explosive passages. The guitarist, inventing herself in a swift improvisation crammed with sinister notes and intervals, and Wyatt, who sings it beautifully in the company of Grand, are outstanding. His mighty presence also juices up “Bigger Flames”, whose yearning tones conjure his own art-rock, the early days of Pink Floyd and the dream pop of The Flaming Lips.
“Mexican War Streets (Pittsburgh)” is a shapeshifter full of musical constellations that include an uncommon poignancy in the poetic vocal parts, a heavy rock passage, electronic disturbances, and some neo-psychedelia.
Halvorson, who always takes the jazz guitar to another dimension with such extraordinary talents, creates another powerful album. And, damn, how I loved to hear Wyatt here!
Favorite Tracks:
01 - The Lemon Trees ► 03 - Walls and Roses ► 06 - Mexican War Streets (Pittsburgh)