Mats Gustafsson / Ken Vandermark / Tomeka Reid / Chad Taylor - Pivot

Label: Silkheart Records, 2025

Personnel - Mats Gustafsson: baritone and tenor saxophones, flute; Ken Vandermark: tenor saxophone, Bb and bass clarinets; Tomeka Reid: cello; Chad Taylor: drums.

This mighty exploratory quartet—featuring a dazzling frontline with saxophonists Mats Gustafsson and Ken Vandermark, and the rhythm section of cellist Tomeka Reid and drummer Chad Taylor adding both drive and nuance—will leave avant-gardists and free jazz enthusiasts in heaven with their control of structure and unrestricted freedom. The session was recorded in Chicago in late 2024 and comprises four compositions each by Gustafsson and Vandermark, along with six freely improvised duos featuring every possible pairing within the lineup.

The Sensation of Sliding” begins with cello pizzicato joining the horns in a quiet unison theme. Yet suddenly, it veers into a ferocious burst of energy with cacophonous saxophone layers, slashing cello, and sturdy drumming. A groovy 12-beat cycle then kicks in, evoking the Black American music tradition with its anthemic melody. Jaw-dropping solos—from Vandermark on bass clarinet and Gustafsson on baritone sax—are darkly hued and substantively muscular. Like the former track, “Drops of Sorrow, Accelerating” is a Gustafsson composition inspired by the writings of Danish poet and novelist Inger Christensen. Here, the group adopts an ancient, Sun Ra-like feel that channels his modal Nubian journeys. Gustafsson’s intense outcries contrast with the melodic contours of Vandermark’s phrasing.

The remaining two Gustafsson narratives are “Unmeasured Mile”, a cinematic, dramatic piece with standout work from Reid and Taylor, who gets heavy on toms; and “Popular Music Theory”, which concludes the album in furious avant-garde delirium.

The Vandermark-penned pieces are equally striking, especially “Blowing Out From Chicago”, a supple display of timbral and textural imagination. Rusty, serrated cello underpins the ecstatic theme statement, with Reid building added tension through chromaticism and staccato attacks, complementing Gustafsson’s fiery tenor improvisation. Though Gustafsson blows from deep within, Vandermark is equally fervent in his tribute to the city he loves, delivering an authoritative tenor solo. His “Epistemological Slide” highlights Taylor’s rhythmic prowess, while “I Am Aware, Standing in Snow” reveals eclecticism through cello lines evoking Eastern chants, as gospel tradition fuses with radiant jazz fanfare. The two horn players close the piece unaccompanied, gently restating the theme in unison after previously leading the off-the-hip explorations with focus and intensity.

Flexible pulses, melodic incisiveness, and distinctive timbral qualities - all blend beautifully at the hands of a reference quartet we can only hope records together more often.

Favorite Tracks:
01 - The Sensation of Sliding ► 02 - Blowing Out From Chicago ► 04 - Drops of Sorrow, Accelerating


James Brandon Lewis / Chad Taylor - Live in Willisau

Label: Intakt Records, 2020

Personnel - James Brandon Lewis: tenor saxophone; Chad Taylor: drums, mbira.

Following up the highly successful Radiant Imprints album, hailed by JazzTrail as one of the best of 2018, the dynamic duo of saxophonist James Brandon Lewis and drummer Chad Taylor is back with Live in Willisau, an eight-track session captured in 2019 at the 45th Willisau Jazz Festival, Switzerland. 

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The first two pieces, “Twenty Four” and “Radiance”, were drawn from their debut album. Integrating Coltrane’s “Giant Steps” and “26-2”, the former sparkles with the energy of Lewis’ propagative rhythmic figures and Taylor’s percolating sounds, which includes wildly active snare, rolling thunder toms and cymbal scintillation. At some point, both musicians express their thoughts alone. This piece segues into the next one without interruption. It's a sort of work song introduced by Coltrane’s “Seraphic Light” and containing gospel elements in the melody and beneficial changes of beat along the way. It bears some similarity in tone with Mal Waldron’s relentless “Watakushi No Sekai”, heightened here by a flawless rhythmic sense and undulating fervor.

The contemplative “Come Sunday” by Duke Ellington, stripped down to its bear essentials, along with the duo’s “With Sorrow Lonnie”, feel more spacious and relaxing as they are rhythmically conducted by the chimelike timbres of the African mbira.  

Elasticity and robustness are essential factors in the unfiltered approach adopted by these creative minds. Take, for example, “Imprints”, whose sinewy start highlights an empowering tenor that etches sinuous figures and zigzagging lines on the entangling percussive tapestries. It's great to see Lewis chaining elliptical phrases and pinning them down with low-pitched notes for stabilization. Also, Dewey Redman’s “Willisee”, my favorite track on the album, carries musical farsightedness. We find them excavating confrontational, urgent sounds - Coltrane invocations, blues tones, free bop discharges, and an auspicious mix of funk and hip-hop by the end. 

Delivered raw, the music of Lewis and Taylor is an impressive communion of technique, pure energy and sound, with both musicians orchestrating ideas not only with vitality but also with a refined taste. Recently, I’ve no idea of a better horn that mingles so beautifully with lyrical, mindful rhythms.

Grade A-

Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
05 - Imprints ► 06 - Watakushi No Sekai ► 08 - Willisee