Label: Impulse! Records, 2025
Personnel - David Murray: tenor saxophone; Marta Sanchez: piano; Luke Stewart: bass; Russell Carter: drums; Ekep Nkwelle: vocals (#1,3); Francesca Cinelli: spoken word (#8).
The quartet of iconic saxophonist David Murray returns with Birdly Serenade, an eight-track album inspired by birds—the original improvisers—and their songs. Part of producer Randall Poster’s ongoing Birdsong Project, the record marks Murray’s debut on Impulse! Records and was captured at the legendary Van Gelder Studio.
The album opens with the enthrallingly vivid title track, “Birdly Serenade”, featuring Cameroonian-American vocalist Ekep Nkwelle, singing lyrics adapted from a poem by Murray’s wife and manager, Francesca Cinelli. Driven by a lilting waltz pulse, the piece radiates spiritual power, with solos from Murray on tenor saxophone and Spanish pianist Marta Sánchez. Nkwelle also graces “Song of the World”, an exquisite Latin-tinged ballad, melodically driven by bass clarinet and featuring an engrossing bass solo from Luke Stewart. The piece was written for Mixashawn Rozie, an Indigenous musician and activist.
Composed in the studio during the recording session, “Black Bird’s Gonna Lite Up the Night” bursts with fierce avant-garde energy, amplified by spiraling piano figures, a mix of bowed and pizzicato bass textures, and thunderous tom-tom resonance from drummer Russell Carter. The music builds into a vortex of sound before Stewart grounds it with steady bass steps. “Capristano Swallow”, which evokes memories of Murray’s youth of the Springtime Swarm at the Mission San Juan Capristano in California, is another avant-garde foray, reinforcing Murray’s outside playing proclivities and including a spellbinding solo piano interlude before the quartet returns with wind-like force.
“Bald Ego” channels Charlie Parker through blues and bop grandeur, featuring bar trades between the quartet and the drummer, while “Nonna’s Last Flight”, with Murray revealing borderline chromatic mechanisms on bass clarinet, is delivered with a hip posture that drowns itself in groovy funk and hip-hop vibes. Sanchez supplies rich harmonic layers beneath her elegantly intricate phrasing. The album closes with “Oiseau de Paradis”, a cascade of playful ideas paired with a French poem written and recited by Cinelli.
Murray is more interested in playing his own songs at this phase of his career, and this project, structurally disciplined but wide open to improvisation, allowed him to do just that.
Favorite Tracks:
01 - Birdly Serenade ► 04 - Black Bird’s Gonna Lite Up the Night ► 05 - Nonna’s Last Flight