Steve Swell - The Center Will Hold

Label: Not Two Records, 2020

Personnel - Steve Swell: trombone; Jason Kao Hwang: violin ,viola, electronics; Robert Boston: piano, organ; Ariel Bart: harmonica; Fred Lonberg-Holm: cello; Andrew Cyrille: drums.

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Steve Swell is an adventurous, in-demand jazz trombonist that has been a stalwart of New York’s downtown free jazz scene for more than four decades. For this fresh album, he convened skilled workfellows who understand his creative trade inside out. This cross-generational sextet has the particularity of featuring the highly esteemed veteran drummer Andrew Cyrille and a newly discovered young harmonica player, the Israeli Ariel Bart, who demonstrates to have an instinctive musicality. Rounding out the group are Swell’s regular collaborators, violinist Jason Kao Hwang, keyboardist Robert Boston and cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm.

Celestial Navigation” opens the record as an energetic romp filled with piercing sounds and whimsical drumming. The imaginative routes and mysterious encounters suggested in the music come with a psychedelic touch spread by strings, chromatic harmonica and organ. For the period that Swell pours out an unorthodox statement, there’s a density of buzzing sounds filling the background.

Having its epic theme replicated between sections, “The Center Will Hold” carries a whirling pianism and loose pulsation in its finely wrought procedures. A warped trombone solo and respective piano comping form an exquisite combination of dissonance and countermelody, and then it’s Cyrille who, after joining Boston’s anarchic playing, responds with a discreet, rich and polished drum talk.

The tonally rich “Mikrokosmos II” makes reference to klezmer music in a mercurial transition that leads to wah-wah violin infusions. Hwang also employs this effect on the fantastic “Robo Call”, an explorative tune couched with a sturdy trombone riff and violin countermelody, an inviting groove in six, and a great harmonica solo that picks up exactly where the trombone left off. One can sense an abundance of life here, and that feel had already been conveyed on the piece that preceded it, “Laugh So You Don’t Cry”. Here, the rhythm team pilots the ship by adhering to a fast swinging acceleration, while the effusive clamoring is accented by Boston’s Cecil Taylor-esque abstractions and Bart’s serpentine itineraries.

These musicians work really well together, giving Swell’s compositions the stunning aesthetics they deserve. With no lessening of enthusiasm, The Center Will Hold is a dazzler of a record.

Grade A-

Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Celestial Navigation ► 02- The Center Will Hold ► 05 - Robo Call


Steve Swell / Gebhard Ullmann - The Chicago Plan

Steve Swell: trombone; Gebhard Ullmann: saxophone, clarinet; Fred Lonberg-Holm: cello, electronics; Michael Zerang: drums.

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Whenever American trombonist Steve Swell and German saxophonist/clarinetist Gebhard Ullmann get together for a new album or performance, one can expect pure energy within the creditable expeditions into the avant-garde/free territory. Assuring a diversity of attractive sounds, the moods adopted can rapidly shift from boisterous to reflective.

Their first recording together, as Ullmann-Swell Quartet, goes back to 2005 with Desert Songs And Other Landscapes (CIMP), proceeding in 2008 with Live in Montreal (City Hall), and again two years later with News? No News! (Jazzwerkstatt) In all three, they relied on a go-ahead rhythmic foundation laid down by bassist Hilliard Greene and drummer Barry Altschul.

In their new album, a celebration of a decade of friendship and musicianship, they resolved to expand their concept of sound and rhythm through approaches that lead to new possibilities. To achieve this, they renew the rhythm section by calling two skilled instrumentalists from Chicago, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm, who is also in charge of electronics, and drummer Michael Zerang. The album/project gets the understandable title of The Chicago Plan.

Ullmann contributes with four compositions, including two parts of his magnificent suite “Variations on a Master Plan” whose Pt.3 fires up the recording. Making its way through an inebriating groove, this tune works as an irresistible invitation for what comes next. The reeds, always cheek by jowl, move in a zealous spiral whether playing untied polyphonies, uncanny unisons, or strolling with no accompaniment. Joy is all around even when Lonberg-Holm brings a slice of solemnity with his cello movements.

If Pt.3 is a sunny day, Pt.2 is a quiet night. The band generates a yearning chamber music that surrounds us with soberer tones. 
Swell’s 18-minute “Composite #10” oozes energy from everywhere and brings Anthony Braxton into mind, not only because of its title but also due to its structure and musical force. The first five minutes are filled with thoughtful spanks, bonks, and chomps of Zerang’s stiff-less drumming. He was just making room for the pugnacious and highly-rhythmic altercation that arrives next, where Swell and Ullmann expel brisk phrases that sometimes match, sometimes diverge. The band reserves a section for the apocalyptic white noise produced by Lonberg-Holm’s electronics.

Packed with excruciating musical venom, “Rule #1” accentuates the quartet’s impeccable sense of tempo. The reedists show off the virile and unorthodox avant-jazz jargon, having Zerang’s punchy rhythms in the background. The electrifying drummer shines once again in “Déjà Vu”, a more restrained tune devised with bouncy folk melodies, cacophonic murmurs, and precious silences.

These four staunch improvisers know how to make us alert, working the dynamics and textures with an impressive gusto. 
It might take a few years for the Ullmann-Swell Quartet reunite again, but until there, we have the creditable The Chicago Plan to rack our brains out.

          Grade A

          Grade A

Label: Clean Feed, 2016
Favorite Tracks:
01 – Variations on a Master Plan Pt.3 ► 04 – Rule #1 ► 05 – Deja Vu