Tom Guarna - The Wishing Stones

Label/Year: Destiny Records, 2017

Lineup – Tom Guarna: guitar; Jon Cowherd: piano, Rhodes; John Patitucci: bass; Brian Blade: drums.

tom-guarna-wishing-stones.jpg

In order to sonically illustrate 11 originals on his new CD The Wishing Stones, guitarist/composer Tom Guarna assembles a super quartet composed of Jon Cowherd on piano, John Patitucci on bass, and Brian Blade on drums, all of them bandleaders in their own right.

On the crystalline “Prelude”, a welcoming piece filled with full-blown melodicism and arpeggiated piano, the guitarist works his way into “Song for Carabello”, a responsive, breezy song in 7, delivered with a vibrant Rosenwinkel-feel. Soloing alternately, Guarna and Cowherd sound pretty much in-the-groove.

The relaxing “Surrender Song” is warmly propelled by the lightness of Blade’s brushwork and Patitucci’s dancing bass groove. Together, bassist and drummer craft a fetching rhythmic hook up to serve the prodigious soloing aptitudes of both the pianist and the bandleader.

There is a time for guitar synth-inflected balladry with “Moments=Eternity”, an opportunity to listen to Patitucci’s ideas, and also for amiable jazz-funk with “Unravel”, where folk-like melodies embrace the three-chord harmonic pattern with firmness. Guarna improvises over a subtle bass pedal that is later discontinued when Cowherd starts exploring on Fender Rhodes.

Bouncy post-bop symptoms occur on “Modules”, whose swinging motions serve not only to feed the individual creative moments but also the trading eights between Blade and his cohorts.

Beautiful and lyrical is the guitar intro of the title track, a joy to listen to. This number evinces buoyant funk/soul qualities pervaded in its colorful and slightly Latin soundscapes. While Cowherd often goes bluesy in his statements, Guarna exerts resolute attacks to show off crisp motivic phrases as he manipulates his Collins Soco Deluxe guitar with ample vision. A vamp is established at the end to spark off Blade’s reactions. 

The album closes with “Native Tongue” whose intro instantaneously revives “The Girl From Ipanema” in my head. Regardless the false rumor, the tune goes in a completely different direction while maintaining a temperate Latin rhythm.

With fascinating compositions, The Wishing Stones shows a quartet whose strong rapport and commitment to the music is undeniable.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Song for Carabello ► 06 - Unravel ► 08 - The Wishing Stones

Bob Ferrel - Jazztopian Dream

Label/Year: BFM Productions, 2017

Lineup includes – Bob Ferrel: trombone; Dwight West: vocals; Vinnie Cutro: trumpet; Rob Henke: trumpet; Joe Ford: alto sax; Frank Elmo: tenor and alto sax; Roy Nicolosi: alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones, trumpet; Sharp Radway: piano; Daryl Johns: bass; Steve Johns: drums; Frank Valdes: percussion; and more.

bob-ferrel-jazztopian-dream.jpg

Experienced trombonist Bob Ferrel was not only a valuable member of the Duke Ellington Orchestra (conducted by Mercer Ellington) but also backed up amazing jazz singers such as Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, and Nancy Wilson.
 
On his latest, Jazztopian Dream, he shows a true penchant for crisply executed musical dialects, hailing from the hard line repertoire of both bop and post-bop currents.

My Secret Love” is an uptempo quartet rampant where Ferrel’s gleaming tone buoys up sharp phraseologies.
The cool, Latin-infused “Alter Ego” obeys to a beautiful arrangement by its composer, the late pianist James Williams. It brims with strong melodies, an exuberant rhythm, and flashy colors. After the trombone solo, Joe Ford and Vinnie Cutro, on alto sax and trumpet, respectively, show how melodically assertive they can drive their improvisations. The pair also interacts on the neat and conscious rendition of “You’ve Got to Have Freedom” by Pharoah Sanders, complementing each other’s phrases with logical astuteness. The latter tune also features American vocalist Dwight West, whose casual posture in the way he addresses the songs is also noticeable on Parker's “Yardbird Suite”, “Don’t Go to Strangers”, a tune popularized in the 60s by Etta James, and on the totally dispensable “Every Day I Have the Blues”.

As an undoubted highlight, we have McCoy Tyner’s “Inner Glimpse”, the third part of his breathtaking Enlightenment Suite (from the 1973 album Enlightenment), which thrives with a ravishing rhythm and the typical modal approach that dominated the pianist’s scene in this particular phase of his career. On this version, the piano was entrusted to Sharp Radway who didn’t squander the chance to fly freely and expand the perception of the music. His explorations were competently followed by the forceful, Hubbard-esque lines of Cutro, and the vibrant trombone sounds of Ferrel duetting with Steve Johns’ punchy rhythms. This trombone-drums connection is also peremptory on Ferrel's only original, “Soul Bop”, a power-trio swing packed with raucous, multiphonic tones and a funk-rock pulse.

Deep-seated in the tradition but incorporating up-to-the-minute strokes, Jazztopian Dream encompasses a great selection of tunes, reviving the old times with a contagious liveliness. This makes for an enjoyable record.

       Grade B+

       Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Alter Ego ► 04 - Inner Glimpse ► 09 - Soul Bop


François Bourassa Quartet - Number 9

Label/Year: Effendi Records, 2017

Lineup – François Bourassa: piano; André Leroux: tenor sax, flute, clarinets; Guy Boisvert: bass; Greg Ritchie: drums.

francois-bourassa-number-9.jpg

Underrated Quebecois pianist François Bourassa, an inveterate experimenter with wide-ranging technique, truly deserves more international recognition than he has been receiving.

To sculpt his rhythmically explosive, harmonically advanced ninth album of originals, Number 9, he gathered his elastic quartet whose members consist of multi-reedist André Leroux, bassist Guy Boisvert, and drummer Greg Ritchie, longtime collaborators who first recorded together in 2003 on the pianist’s album Indefinite Time.

Exerting cutting-edge rhythmic variations and enticing angular movements, “Carla and Karlheinz”, the spellbinding opening piece, shows the well-oiled band in its full force, hitting their stride with telepathic powers. For this particular tune, Bourassa imagined an unlikely musical encounter between the jazz pianist/bandleader Carla Bley and the electronic virtuoso Karlheinz Stockhausen. Curiously, the outcome revealed an exciting appeal, also due to other salient influences like Monk (dissonant intervallic charm), E.S.T. (refined harmonic movements and rhythmic flow), and Berne/Mitchell (textural/timbral work for the duration of the saxophone solo). Switching from flute to tenor, Leroux cooks up a blistering improvisation, occupying a prominent position throughout this piece.

Plodding along with a 5/4 tempo, “5 and Less” is made of light and darkness in equal parts, flourishing with an artistic sumptuousness akin to Andrew Hill.

The early, quiet reflections on “Frozen”, delivered with an intensified chamber feel due to Boisvert's spacious arco work, quickly deviates toward a dark harmonic corner, perfect for the fiery timbral explorations of Leroux.

While both “Past Ich” and “18, Rue de L’Hotel de Ville” showcase the lyrical side of the bandleader, “11 Beignes” starts as a controlled avant-garde exercise, beautifully sculpted with relentless shrilling piano notes and the rich tones of the clarinets. It made me think of an experimental crossing between Muhal Richard Abrams and Don Byron. However, it all leads to an enchanting 11/4 groove worthy of Chick Corea.
 
Number 9 refrains from swinging in a typical way. Instead, it wittily uses rhythmic and harmonic twists and turns to defy our expectations. Possible categorizations are lyrical avant-jazz, progressive post-bop, or modern free. However, what's important is that you can have fun while absorbing one of the boldest and most gratifying records of the year.

       Grade A

       Grade A

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Carla and Karlheinz ► 03 - Frozen ► 07 - 11 Beignes


Rez Abbasi - Unfiltered Universe

Label/Year: Whirlwind Recordings, 2017

Lineup – Rez Abbasi: guitar; Rudresh Mahanthappa: alto saxophone; Vijay Iyer: piano; Johannes Weidenmueller: bass; Dan Weiss: drums + guest Elizabeth Mikhael: cello.

rez-abbasi-unfiltered-universe.jpg

Since a young age, Pakistan-born American guitarist Rez Abbasi realized that the six strings of his guitar were a fantastic way to express himself. Throughout the years, he has been proving a deep understanding of the instrument and a prodigious facility in painting his modern style with multi-colored Eastern elements and a superb technique.

Unfiltered Universe, the last installment of his Indo-Pakistani-influenced jazz trilogy, entraps us in complex sonic webs, embracing improvisation over well-defined structured forms with unlimited freedom.
For the third time, Abbasi summoned the multi-cultural, stellar aggregation baptized as Invocation whose members include saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa, pianist Vijay Iyer, bassist Johannes Weidenmueller, and drummer Dan Weiss. Together, they formulate piquant Carnatic South Asian seasonings to enhance the flavors of today’s contemporary jazz dishes.

The quintet takes the plunge with “Propensity”, a changeable piece marked by exotic melodic lines and a free-funk feel that derives from the bass groove. Mahanthappa flings a scalding improvisation using the raw instinct and the unmistakable timbre that has always highlighted his playing. Abbasi follows him, discoursing with pertinacity over the edgy accompaniment fomented by Iyer. 

The title track acquires an eminent chamber tone in its first minutes due to the incisive cello slashes inflicted by guest Elizabeth Mikhael. The mood changes for the improvisations as the bandleader sketches geometric figures by whether employing sharp angles or rounding off the edges with reliable melodic sense. The pianist, on the other hand, constructs slowly but virtuously. 

Functioning as an interlude, “Thoughts” is a less-than-2-minute free-form solo ride wrapped in synth-like effect.

Every tune carries Eastern folk accents in the melody, to a certain extent, but both “Disagree to Agree” and “Thin-King” are particularly driven by a rock-tinged energy that strengthens their muscular cores. The latter, whimsically shifting in tempo, displays Iyer, Abbasi, and Mahanthappa soloing interspersedly. After a short collective romp, it's Weidenmueller’s elegant bass dissertation that concludes the improvisational section.

Turn of Events” precipitates a wider sense of mystery and awe attached to the strange, dreamy textures. Once again, Mikhael contributes substantially to the atmosphere, while Abbasi and Mahanthappa ignite the fire by exchanging improvised, transonic wallops. The turns of events don’t end here.

The album closes with the gracefully groovy “Dance Number”, where guitarist and saxophonist throw in plenty of phenomenal hooks. On top of that, Iyer’s wry harmonic twists and punchy phrasing are there to gain sonic preponderance near the end.

Innovation and positivism are vital factors that Rez Abbasi doesn’t renounce. Unfiltered Universe exposes a world fusion extravagance, which even tumultuous at times, is no less than emphatically magical.

        Grade A

        Grade A

Favorite Tracks:
01 – Propensity ► 04 – Thin-King ► 05 – Turn of Events 


Marc Copland - Better By Far

Label/Year: Innervoice Jazz, 2017

Lineup – Marc Copland: piano; Ralph Alessi: trumpet; Drew Gress: bass; Joey Baron: drums.

marc-copland-better-by-far.jpg

Marc Copland is a tremendous jazz pianist with a special ability to create stunning atmospheres with unrugged textures. Having collaborated in the recent years with the virtuous bassist Gary Peacock (Now ThisTangents) and the late guitarist John Abercrombie (39 Steps; Up and Coming), Copland never turned his back to his personal projects, which usually overflow with melodic sensibility and strong rhythmic discernment.

The compositions included in Better By Far, his newest work, were skilfully penned to be performed by the same enlightened quartet that delivered the 2015 album Zenith, which deserved every accolade received. The top artists - trumpeter Ralph Alessi, bassist Drew Gress, and drummer Joey Baron, are experienced musicians who move effortlessly within the modern jazz environment.

The first couple of tunes, “Day and Night” and “Better By Far”, evoke the lyricism of Kenny Wheeler, acclaimed trumpeter with whom he joined in a trio that also included Abercrombie. Sometimes subtlety swinging, sometimes suspended in Gress’ loose rambles and Baron’s classy drumming, both tunes embrace a captivating erudition.

The quartet conjures up feathery sonic layers of scintillating beauty, whether they’re forging a disentangled, circumspect waltz such as “Gone Now”, or elegantly depicting grey landscapes smothered by sinister clouds like in “Dark Passage”.

There’s plenty of adventure throughout “Mr. DJ”, in which a daring rhythm invites to free improvisation. Here, we can hear Copland responding to Alessi’s poignant melodies through chordal sequences full of rhythmic intention. Also “Twister”, despite the ruminative and static posture evinced, follows a groovy conduct that encourages the musicians to opt for straightforward actions.

Proving that the art of swinging is fabulous and immortal, the quartet enters in that special mode when handling Monk’s “Evidence” and also “Who Said Swing?”, a playful tune in which Baron fires up a few instinct yet controlled rhythmic spasms.

Even actuating within patented structures and forms, Copland is all freedom and sophistication, preferring a beautiful time feel to complicated, showy maneuvers.
Indeed, Better By Far is by far, one of his best records.

        Grade A

        Grade A

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Day and Night ► 02 - Better by Far ► 08 - Dark Passage


Rudresh Mahanthappa's Indo-Pak Coalition - Agrima

Label/Year: Self produced, 2017

Lineup - Rudresh Mahanthappa: alto saxophone, electronics; Rez Abbasi: guitar; Dan Weiss: drums, tabla.

rudresh-mahanthappa-agrima.jpg

Fiery New York-based saxophonist/composer of Indian descent, Rudresh Mahanthappa, has risen to the jazz stardom by cultivating an impressive, unique sound that hallucinates and transfixes.

Besides the successful early partnership with pianist Vijay Iyer (Black Water; Mother Tongue; Codebook), a memorable collaboration with saxophonist Steve Lehman (Dual Identity), and an explorative original work with Charlie Parker's music as the central focus (Bird Calls), Mahanthappa formed the Indo-Pak Coalition, project with Pakistani-born guitarist Rez Abbasi and drummer Dan Weiss, an expert in Indian percussion.

Agrima, his freshest work, features this groundbreaking trio successfully resurfacing Eastern roots and traditions in order to fuse them with the most desirable improvised jazz. This is their sophomore album and a comfortable improvement regarding the debut CD Apti.

The airy, country-like atmosphere of “Alap”, the opening track, surprises due to an indolent predisposition that is not so habitual in Mahanthappa’s compositions. Restraining impetuousness in favor of a more cerebral approach, the saxophonist exhibits a distinguishable coordination with Abbasi on “Snap”, where they follow the steps of each other whether by echoing the theme’s melodic statement or engaging in ephemeral unisons. Abbasi’s textures fascinate, covered in distortion and often enriched with rock-ish riffs on the bottom register. As the guitar solo begins, Weiss switches the tabla for the drum kit, building a more robust foundation with the help of saxophone drones, which compensate the absence of harmony. Close to the finale, a cyclic harmonic progression runs on top of an animated rock pulse.

Predominantly folk, the westerner “Showcase” displays bluesy melodic phrases over a restricted harmonic movement. The band explores alternative sonorities as the time passes, opening up a space for Weiss’ polyrhythmic explorations.

Agrima”, the title track, lives from electronic stimulus to incur on an indie folk rock whose syncopated rhythm variates more than once. Again, Abbasi romps off on an abrasive improvisation that reveals all his forthrightness and confidence.

There’s plenty of bite in the bandleader’s horn on the elastic “Rasikapriya”. An early entrancing tabla soon gives its place to a brawny rock drumming after a rare abstract middle passage.

The 14-minute “Revati” departs from Abbasi’s spatial intro, which resorts to harmonics, low-pitched notes, and synth-like surroundings, to guide us toward pop/rock harmonic zones using folk jazz dialects as vehicles.

Mahanthappa closes the record with the edgy “Take-Turns”, where the splendid timbres, vertiginous language, and irreverence that made him a stalwart in the bolder side of the jazz spectrum mingles with nifty guitar chops and occasional, never-obfuscatory electronic sounds.
There’s never a dull moment in this world fusion celebration.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Snap ► 06 - Rasikapriya ► 08 - Take-Turns


Mats Holmquist - Big Band Minimalism

Label/Year: Mama Records, 2017

Lineup includes – Mats Holmquist: composition, arrangements; Randy Brecker: trumpet; Dick Oatts: alto and soprano saxophone; Magnus Wiklund: trombone; Karlis Vanags:  soprano saxophone; Gints Pabersz: tenor saxophone; Viktors Ritovs: piano; Edvins Ozols: bass; Artis Orubs: drums.

mats-holmquist-big-band-minimalism.jpg

Admired Swedish composer/arranger demonstrated a huge musical sensitivity on his previous record A Tribute To Herbie + 1, in which he invited the saxophonist Dick Oatts to co-lead his New York Jazz Orchestra.

This time, with Big Band Minimalism, things are different. Although counting on the saxophonist for the great part of the improvisations, Holmquist adds veteran trumpeter Randy Brecker to extemporize ideas and ensures a sturdy support from the Latvian Radio Big Band.

The opening piece, “The Girl in the Tree”, is divided into three sections. The first one kicks in with overlapping horn-driven layers, suddenly discontinued so the bassist speaks briefly and freely until being fetched by the pianist. Catchy melodies and cyclic harmonic progressions integrate until entering in section two. Here, a renewed rhythm takes a more funk orientation, bearing a competent trombone solo by Magnus Wiklund on its arms. Section three gives us back the beautiful harmonies that now accommodate potent horn blows atop.

A gracious walking bass advances on “The Same Old Song”, a 4/4 mid-tempo piece that vibrates with punchy melodic lines over the emancipated fluidity offered up by the rhythm section. Oatts and Brecker accessed the desired space for individual statements with relish, repeating the dose on a couple of tunes dedicated to and inspired by the minimal music pioneer Steve Reich. They are “Stevie R.”, which also appeared in Holmquist’s previous album and brims with conversational loop-like phrases surrounded by friendly pop/rock atmospheres, and “To The Bitter End”, a 6/4 fantasy that progressively liberates, ending up in a sort of military melodic cadence led by trombone.

Friends & Enemies” calls immediately our attention to a battle between the horn players and the drummer. They fight for the leadership with loud ostentation until an eventual sonic boom and before a smoother rhythm takes over, definitely imposing the ceasefire. The harmonic progression, a contrafact on Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments, sustains a hefty improvisation by Oatts on soprano.

A Quick Ride in a Jazz Mobile” starts as a ternary woodwind feast that becomes denser as other instruments introduce minimalist short phrases. Flowing with a steady backbeat, this number benefits with a stirring intervention from the Latvian Big Band and the pair of soprano solos by Brecker and Karlis Vanags.

The minimalist concept used by Holmquist has powerful repercussions in the reverberation and fascination of the sound. The tasteful arrangements were given excellent treatment by the group of musicians on board of a vessel that navigates with a remarkable sense of orientation.

       Grade B+

       Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
03 - Friends & Enemies ► 06 - A Quick Ride in a Jazz Mobile ► 07 - To The Bitter End


Stefano Battaglia - Pelagos

Label/Year: ECM, 2017

Lineup – Stefano Battaglia: piano and prepared piano.

stefano-battaglia-pelagos.jpg

Italian pianist Stefano Battaglia aims at the (im)migration crisis that keeps escalating all over. In order to call the world’s attention to the problem, Battaglia addresses a handful of compositions plus a bunch of spontaneous improvisations with acute sensitivity. Pelagos, his first solo album, was conceived with piano and prepared piano and recorded at the Fazioli Concert Hall in Sacile, Italy. 

The song titles vary from specific locations where the problem is more visible to more generalist terms regarding migration in its different varieties.
If “Destino” and “Migration Mantra” are persevering supplications, the minimalist “Lampedusa” and the tense “Migralia” are sorrowful enough to make you inconsolable.
 
Wielding attractive melodies on the title track, the pianist manages to turn the lugubrious first movements into optimistic light on a few specific passages where the classical intonations are intensified.
Other songs fully immersed in the classical genre are the moderate-moving, lightly fingered “Brenner Tocatta” and the two beautifully polished variations of the Arabic traditional song “Lamma Bada Yatathanna”, whose Eastern connotations grow dim when submitted to a solo piano treatment.

Eastern musing is certainly preponderant on “Halap”, which is complemented with an exciting groove and sinuous melody, and “Exilium”, where a relentless chord shields whether swift, whether meditative Hamito-Semitic enunciations. The latter tune gets percussive in its final part, boosted by smothered sounds and exotic melodies dispensed by the prepared piano.

Assorted chimes, vibes, and timbres generate the percussive “Processional”, as well as “Hora Mundi”, whose descendant melodic cascades bestow an idiosyncratic tone that sounds dreamlike but restless at the same time. In a different way, “Dogon” and “Heron” bring to mind the rhythms and the struggle of the African people.

The pianist operates on another register by penning “Ufratu” with stronger spiritual undertones, giving it the form of a lyrical folk dance, which feels expectant but unwavering in its moves.

Exposing his sharp sense of individuality, Battaglia delivers a poetic, well-structured, and worthwhile body of work. Some listeners may wish that Pelagos had been expanded in terms of groove and textural dimension, however, its hypnotic rhythmic churns and heartfelt melodic spirals kept my ears glued to the sounds all along.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
04 (CD1) - Lamma Bada Yatathanna ► 06 (CD1)- Halap ►04 (CD2)- Exilium


Tim Armacost - Time Being

Label/Year: Whirlwind Records, 2017

Lineup - Tim Armacost: tenor saxophone; Robert Hurst: bass; Jeff Tain Watts: drums; David Kikoski: piano.

tim-armacost-time-being.jpg

American saxophonist/composer Tim Armacost has established an enviable path within the populated jazz panorama both as a leader, sideman, and co-leader of groups such as the New York Standards Quartet and Brooklyn Big Band.

His newest outing, Time Being, is the first on the Whirlwind Records and features Robert Hurst on bass, Jeff Tain Watts on drums, and pianist David Kikoski who joins the trio only on a few selected tracks.

The rich sound and vibrant timbre of the saxophonist is immediately patented on the opening tune, “Alawain”, a virile bost-bop excursion set up in trio where the levels of energy skyrocket. Hurst begins soloing upfront before falling into a hooky groove that sounds even catchier when in the company of Watts’ creative powerhouse drumming. On top of that, the bandleader weaves expressive phrases embellished here and there with Eastern colors.
 
The title track displays the dark-toned tenor working in synch with the bass. One can feel an apparent relaxation that finds resistance in the African arrhythmias of the fidgeting drummer, while the experienced bassist enjoys freedom, whether rambling with insouciance, whether swinging the old-fashioned way.

There are three distinct pieces baptized with the title Sculpture, each of them probing a sense of strange liberation within their structured experimentation. “Sculpture #1: Phase Shift” feels like a bop tune working in the guise of a modern improvisatory routine; “Sculpture #2: Tempus Funkit" swings more than funks, opting to ululate with tempo fluctuations; “Sculpture #3: All the Things You Could Become in the Large Hadron Collider”, the last track on the album, has a vibrancy that stems from a (de)conversation between Armacost and Kikoski, which occurs with the harmonic progression of “All The Things You Are” as a point of departure. In tandem, they extract dizzying effects from their winged yet remarkably coordinated interplay.

Moods and paces are constantly altered from one tune to another. Thus, if “The Next 20” delves into balladic zone, gaining contours of a jazz standard, especially by the action of Kikoski’s harmonic smoothness, “53rd St. Theme”, based on Monk’s “52nd Street”, calls for classic bop while tingling through slowdowns and accelerations in tempo.

The two non-originals are utterly exciting. Thelonious Monk’s “Teo” provides enough punch and accent, not only thriving with the unpredictable ideas that keep bursting from the bandleader’s instrument, but also with the eight-bar improvised exchanges between Watts and his peers. No less vigorous, Ornette Coleman’s “Lonely Woman” is subjected to a delightful arrangement, starting with Hurst and Armacost echoing the phrases of each other while Watts pushes forward with consistency by employing his typically unhinged rhythms.

Tim Armacost knows how to pull emotions out of his playing. This record authenticates him as an adventurous composer, and the last pair of songs described above show how imaginative he can be when tackling a classic tune.

       Grade B+

       Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Alawain ► 08 - Lonely Woman ► 10 - Sculpture #3


Dan Bruce's Beta Collective - Earthshine

Label/Year: Ears and Eyes Records, 2017

Lineup – Dan Bruce: guitar; Russ Johnson: trumpet; Chris Madsen; tenor saxophone; Rob Clearfield: piano and Fender Rhodes; Clark Sommers: bass; Jon Deitemyer: drums.

dan-bruce-earthshine.jpg

Ohio-born guitarist Dan Bruce, a former mainstay of the Chicago jazz scene relocated to his hometown, releases his sophomore album, Earthshine, where he sculpts personal compositions with the help of high-caliber artists - Russ Johnson on trumpet, Chris Madsen on tenor, Rob Clearfield on piano and Fender Rhodes, Clark Sommers on bass, and Jon Deitemyer on drums.

Lustily built with well-developed sonic textures, the title track inaugurates the voyage to a contemporary jazz planet where the influences of the tradition are seamlessly blended to generate modern sounds. After the theme’s statement, there is a folk-tinged vamp pointing the way toward the bandleader’s improvisation, exotically colored with some modes of the jazz harmonic minor scale. A solemn collective passage leads us to the extraordinary phrasing of Johnson, who stands out through the use of gutsy intervals extended in pitch. 

As an intrepid roamer, the shining trumpeter delivers harmonious melodic leaps within asymmetrical phrases on “Ice (No.2)”, a non-imposing yet catchy piece that also features Bruce’s acoustic stringed tapestry and an agile keyboard solo.

Bent with accentuated folk tones, “Reprieve: Reprise” is a Scofield-esque bluesy treat delivered in the traditional guitar trio format. Throughout Sommers’ bass solo, the guitarist joins Deitemyer’s warmly brushed drumming, assuming and assuring the required underpinning.

The bassist, a regular presence in groups led by Dan Cray and Kurt Elling, extemporizes once again on “Sofa”, a magnetic ternary piece filled with dark humor and pertinent harmonic progressions. This tune had been previously recorded on Bruce’s 2007 debut CD, A Single Thread

If the straight-ahead predisposition heard on “Lapse” is arranged with a modicum of funk flavor while displaying a telekinetic interplay between Madsen and Clearfield, “Major_Chord” strikes with playful melodies, a cool bass groove, and a Latin-tinged piano solo. Before the reinstatement of the theme, horns and guitar take over in a collective assault followed by non-evasive drum chops.

Bruce smartly eschews overcomplicated procedures on Earthshine. He rather plays slick and tight, punching out inviting textures with an irresistible flexibility. The horn section, operating upfront, together with the participative rhythm section in the back, helped him set up an extremely pleasurable work.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Earthshine ► 05 – Sofa ► 06 - Major_Chord


Shawn Lovato - Cycles of Animation

Label/Year: Skirl Records, 2017

Lineup – Loren Stillman: alto sax; Brad Shepik: guitar; Santiago Leibson: piano; Shawn Lovato: bass; Chris Carroll: drums.

shawn-lovato-cycles-animation.jpg

American bassist Shawn Lovato puts all his musical influences to work on his debut album, Cycles of Animation, a poised collection of eight modern compositions mounted with the precious help of a quintet that features Loren Stillman on alto sax, Brad Shepik on electric guitar, Santiago Leibson on piano, and Chris Carroll on drums.

The burning counterpoint on “Loose Noodle” is absolutely stunning, provoking a hair-raising sensation as if an electric current would have been running in our veins. The rhythm, unwavering and strong in spirit, is disseminated by Lovato and Carroll, while Shepik focuses on the narration of an enigmatic episode, meticulously described with realistic expression. The rhythmic regularity of Leibson’s comping soon winds down, becoming loose when Stillman starts improvising. It reappears later, steady and nearly ritualistic, to finish the tune and favoring a few impulsive trills packed by the saxophonist.

Initiating its journey by visiting the piano trio realm, “Static Phases Illuminated” unpretentiously mingles improvisation with written material, featuring indomitable guitar reflections surrounded by delay effect before synched phrases take the central spot.
 
The title that lends its name to the album, "Animated Cycle", is divided into three parts, all of them shaped with a piano-bass-drums configuration. The first part is introspective and sorrowful, the second one creates an intriguing setting that balances the lyrical and the percussive sides, and the third sounds ample and vague, slowly catching sight of an air bubble to breathe.

On the shape-shifting neo-bop adventure “Brain Drain”, Lovato’s bass is set free but ends up swinging aplomb while inviting Leibson to the party. The pianist takes consecutive rhythmic figures with him, but minutes later, offers his place to Shepik, who clears up with consummate rhythmic coordination. To finish, Stillman steps in and flies high, having a pushy, pulsating funk groove supporting his endeavor.

The jittery “7th Street Jig” exhales folk tradition through the playful melodic statement but grows in a more exploratory avant-garde atmosphere. After the bass rambles over sweeping piano twirls, and saxophone cacophonies over crisp bass sounds, we have a fleeting collective improvisation prior to the restoration of the theme. This posture feels contrary to the closing piece, “Unplugged Slug”, where an uncompromising languor starts gaining weight very early with the introductory bass solo and proceeds in its subsequent seamless transitions. Although dreamy, Leibson’s solo keeps us alert throughout, while Stillman never loses confidence in his unguessable sayings, regardless if he has the guitarist’s eerie drones or the pianist’s tart chords sounding at a lower level. By the end, Shepik scrutinizes multiple timbres within the volubility of his melodic ideas.

Cycles of Animation serves as a showcase for an organic mosaic of colors, rhythms, and textures. Resorting to clever structural vistas, Lovato penned engaging pieces that emphasize the collective and the individual alike.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks: 
01 - Loose Noodle ► 04 - Brain Drain ► 08 - Unplugged Slug


Sam Newsome / Jean-Michel Pilc - Magic Circle

Label/Year: Self produced, 2017

Lineup – Sam Newsome: soprano saxophone; Jean-Michel Pilc: piano.

newsome-pilc-magic-circle.jpg

American soprano saxophonist Sam Newsome and French pianist Jean-Michel Pilc denote a great chemistry on Magic Circle, a duo album that explores classic jazz tunes and a couple of originals with a very personal vision.

Autumn Leaves” starts by juxtaposing the intact melody as we know it (with a few punctual escapades by Newsome) against Pilc’s adventurous rhythmic experimentation, whose primary goal seems to find ways of sounding innovative without losing melodic sense in the accompaniment. After the improvisations, one can check up on Newsome’s timbral explorations over a 6/4 piano cadence.

Ellington and Monk were evoked with sharp-angled renditions of two pieces each. The former’s “In a Sentimental Mood” starts with fugue-like classical intonations and features Newsome’s varied timbres and techniques, including multiphonics and slap tongue, while Pilc, operating on several octaves of the piano, assumes the risk for the sake of freedom. The sonic scrutiny of “In a Mellow Tone” sounds playfully percussive, resorting to ringing sax vibes and popping sounds to impress. Introduced by piano, Monk's “Misterioso” has Pilc quoting the melody of “Crepuscule With Nellie”, another Monk’s tune, and cuts short the stroll with a typical bluesy ending. Its sweet n’ sour mood differs from the beautiful “Ask Me Now”, here subjected to a disconcerting ad-lib treatment permeated with rich interplay.

One of the two originals on the album is the title track, “Magic Circle”, which comes shrouded in melancholy, evincing ingratiating piano movements and rapid sweeps sparsely sounding acerbic.

Undoubtedly a high peak, “Giant Steps”, John Coltrane’s iconic composition, is mounted with unpredictable, slow-morphing shapes that include twisted strands of horn-driven melody over crisp and refractory piano textures.

Commanding their instruments with an admirable precision, Newsome and Pilc opt for spontaneous choices in their unattached musical approach, conveying a strong sense of freedom and openness.

        Grade B

        Grade B

Favorite Tracks:
03 - Giant Steps ► 06 - Misterioso ► 09 - Ask Me Now


Satoko Fujii - Aspiration

Label/Year: Libra Records, 2017

Lineup – Wadada Leo Smith: trumpet; Natsuki Tamura: trumpet; Satoko Fujii: piano; Ikue Mori: electronics.

satoko-fujii-aspiration.jpg

Prolific Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii became a reference in the extreme end of the avant-garde jazz. Not only her ambitious big band projects (New York, Tokyo, and Berlin) have deserved accolade all over the world, but also other collaborative works like the great album Duets, recorded with the inventive bassist Joe Fonda, have drawn very positive reactions among the lovers of the creative current.

On Aspiration, her latest album, she relies on a portentous frontline of trumpeters composed of Natsuki Tamura and Wadada Leo Smith, and complements it with the electronics wizard Ikue Mori. This unusual formation also marks the very first collaboration of the pianist with the latter two.

To introduce “Intent” there is a cutting, multiphonic trumpet, later joined by its equal, which operates in synch but an octave below. Fujii’s awe-inspiring chords and linear notes contextualize the pair of horns, which keep emitting beseeching cries, in an unpredictable contemplative-aggressive communion that feels as much sinister as marvelous. The tasteful electronic effects thrown in by Mori integrate perfectly with Fujii’s textural approach. This also becomes particularly noticeable on the title track, a showcase for the bandleader’s entrancing harmonic movements and melodic delineations, and “Floating”, a piece where the trumpets fiercely clash after an atmospheric start. The horns collapse, having Fujii’s meddling framework attempting to get between them. They end up agreeing at the end, reducing the turbulence considerably and following the same interstellar route with unflinching stability.
 
Liberation”, composed by the quartet, is another segment where we can observe Wadada and Tamura embarking on mesmerizing blows as they explore the timbres of their instruments. The long high-pitched notes dropped by one of them go against the muted short phrases of the other, while Fujii, getting into action at a later time, sounds relentlessly spectral in her moves. The band skews any effusive liberating movement until the last section, which engulfs us with a stormy, deep-toned sonic efflux.

The last track is Tamura’s “Stillness”, whose initial deep tranquility awakes gradually, stirring dynamics while progressing toward a whirlwind of emotions. It is a wonderful track and the proper closure of this narrative work.

Aspiration is a challenging trip to the free-form imaginaries of a quartet that searches for the perfect poise in the abstractness and exactness of sounds.

       Grade B+

       Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Intent ► 04 - Aspiration ► 06 - Stillness


Eden Ladin - Yequm

Label/Year: Contagious Music Records, 2017

Lineup – Eden Ladin: piano, keyboards; Dayna Stephens: tenor saxophone and EWI; John Ellis: tenor and soprano saxophone; Gilad Hekselman: guitar; Harish Raghavan: bass; Daniel Dor: drums + guests Camila Meza: vocals; Yonatan Albalak: guitar.

eden-ladin-yequm.png

Pianist Eden Ladin was born in New York and raised in Tel Aviv. He has been living in New York for nearly nine years and became a treasured sideman in projects led by great artists like Omer Avital, Wallace Roney, Ari Hoenig, trumpeter Avishai Cohen, and Myron Walden.

After all these years gaining experience and developing skills, it was more than time for him to express his own vision and self with the release of an album.

Yequm, meaning ‘universe’ in Hebrew, is a product of his musical sensitivity and evinces a very personal sound and tractable style. The ear-catching instrumentation is shaped with the help of first-rate bandmates like Dayna Stephens on tenor saxophone and EWI, John Ellis on tenor and soprano saxophone, Gilad Hekselman on guitar, Harish Raghavan on bass, and Daniel Dor on drums.
 
Lonely Arcade Man”, originally written as an electronic track, opens the record with ecclesiastic organ plangency, living from a combination of serene melodies put out by Stephens’ EWI, Ladin’s soaring keyboard vibes and beautiful improvisation on the piano, and a syncopated rhythmic flux.

On the good-natured “Smell/Faded Memory”, Ladin revives some sensations from the past using nostalgic touches. A piano-guitar unison comes before Ellis’ solo but keeps echoing as he blows his soprano with impressive confidence.

From the Frozen Cave” features a special guest: Israeli guitarist Yonatan Albalak, who also wrote it. The dark and often apprehensive tone affixed to this evanescent piece opposes to the brighter light emanated by the rest of the compositions, including the following “The One Warm Hearted Man Living in the Kingdom of Ice”, which blooms with strong cinematic spirit through a fruitful blend of classical, jazz, rock, and electronic influences. Stephens contributes with a gleefully expressive solo on tenor, followed by the bandleader, and all end with the jagged texture formed by Hekselman’s distorted guitar chords. Despite this finale, the guitarist adopts an understated posture until the sixth track, “Safta (Grandma)”, where he and Ellis embark on crisp, uncluttered soloing rides. Before that, a few embellished, scale-sweeping phrases had carved attractive Eastern figures in the ternary jazz core of the song. 

Nonetheless, from that point on, Hekselman shines on “Times Square”, a Radiohead-style pop/rock song, “Gambit”, which is delivered with steadfast control, and also “Schlompi”, pushed forward with a naughty frolic and almost puerile happiness.

The appearance of another guest, vocalist Camila Meza (without her guitar), brings a celestial aura into the pristine “Dreams”, while the last track, “Autumn Song”, is probably one of the most beautiful on the album. The intricate tempo doesn't interfere with the lyricism of the tune whose melodic lines are simultaneously thrown in by Ellis and Hekselman. While assuring the song’s harmonic richness, Ladin shares with the saxophonist the time available for improvising.

Yequm is built on rich, amiable, and bracing sonic textures that enchant as they narrate both real and imaginary stories. Ladin’s openness to different styles is an asset in addition to the cohesiveness of a great band, which helped to tie everything together with plenty of light and color.

       Grade A-

       Grade A-

Favorite Tracks:
03 - The One Warm Hearted Man… ► 06 - Safta (Grandma) ► 11 - Autumn Song


Tomas Fujiwara - Triple Double

Label/Year: Firehouse 12 Records, 2017

Lineup – Tomas Fujiwara: drums; Gerald Cleaver: drums; Ralph Alessi: trumpet; Taylor Ho Bynum: cornet; Mary Halvorson: guitar; Brandon Seabrook: guitar. 

tomas-fujiwara-triple-double.jpg

The Double Trio project, put together by the virtuous Boston-born, New York-based percussionist Tomas Fujiwara, inhabits the contemporary jazz panorama with a laudable degree of excellence. The band, two mirrors of the same nature, comprises a pair of horns, masterfully handled by Ralph Alessi and Taylor Ho Bynum, a pair of hooky guitars, whose barbed sounds are the fruits of the imagination of Mary Halvorson and Brandon Seabrook, and two drums, provocatively banged by Gerald Cleaver and the bandleader himself.

Triple Double features ten tracks that morph from catchy indie rock to sparkling avant-garde jazz and vice-versa.

One can admire the group’s suppleness right in the opening track. The ternary “Diving For Quarters” primarily strikes with a double six-string roam. A variety of snoopy sounds, from squeals to hollow tones to air notes, are thrown in by Ho Bynum, who forges an atmospheric mood before Alessi expresses his vastly articulated and melodious thoughts. He does so, having a beautifully dissonant guitar polyphony and double drumming exposure working underneath. I felt this tune as a delicate lament that gradually expands with the force of a rock song.

The lofty rhythmic patterns continue with “Blueberry Eyes”, in which Fujiwara takes on a march-like African cadence as he pushes his bandmates to create freely within the outlined structural blocks. His shimmering technique prone to syncopation can be further enjoyed on “For Alan”, a percussion duet homaging Fujiwara’s mentor Alan Dawson.

In order to subdue the vivid intensity, moments of sheer musing were prepared on pieces such as “Hurry Home B/G”, an ethereal pop song propelled by brushed drumming and tweaked by guitar effects, “Hurry Home M/T”, and “Love and Protest”. The latter composition counterbalances a dreamy vulnerability in its texture due to Halvorson’s tart slide guitar, which works in opposition to the effervescent drumming and melodic flights that relentlessly push us toward a shivering climax.
 
Pocket Pass” and “Decisive Shadow” bursts with avid energy and verve. The former lifts off with swift guitar embroidery, rhythmic assaults, and improvised cogitations that later take the form of a horn polyphony; the latter is a trancelike exploration filled with mesmerizing sounds, scintillating solos, and ultimately telling power chords.

To Hours” closes the session with pure fun, offering up powerful guitar pedals and surrounding voicings, unnerving flurries of rhythmic timbres, and staggering counterpoint, all in the same package.

Triple Double is a precious work, shinning more and more at every listening. It not only shows Fujiwara’s creativity at all levels but also elevates the new shapes of jazz through a refreshing originality.

        Grade A

        Grade A

Favorite Tracks:
01 – Diving For Quarters ► 07 – Decisive Shadow ► 10 – To Hours


Anat Cohen Tentet - Happy Song

Label/Year: Anzic Records, 2017

Lineup – Anat Cohen: clarinet; Sheryl Bailey: guitar; Nadje Noordhuis: trumpet; Owen Broder: baritone sax, bass clarinet; Nick Finzer: trombone; Vitor Gonçalves: accordion; Rubin Kodheli: cello; James Shipp: vibraphone, percussion; Tal Mashiach: bass; Anthony Pinccioti: drums.

anat-cohen-happy-song.jpg

Anat Cohen is a multifaceted clarinetist-composer who has been recently immersed in the Brazilian jazz scene. Two of her recent outings, Rosa dos Ventos and Outra Coisa, recorded with Trio Brasileiro and guitarist Marcello Gonçalves, respectively, confirm exactly that.
For her newest record, Happy Song, she changes direction, gathering a dynamic tentet whose members come from different parts of the world, a fact that suits perfectly her wide eclectic vision and multi-cultural approach to music.

The repertoire here consists of eight pieces ranging in color and style and telling the story of the clarinet under the guidance of musical director and longtime collaborator Oded Lev-Ari.
 
Opening this polychromatic tour is the title track, which is nothing else than a funky exercise delivered with a contagious groove and blues-inflected speeches. Cohen’s clarinet takes the leading role, always well supported by the funky chunks of Sheryl Bailey’s guitar and the well-shaped movements superiorly orchestrated by the unified collective.
 
Valsa para Alice” is expressively poetic in its engrossing melody, featuring passionate solos by the bandleader, the vibraphonist James Ship, and the Brazilian accordionist Vitor Gonçalves. The latter’s dramatic intonations deserve the spotlight on “Loro”, a piece by the virtuous Egberto Gismonti, in which Brazilian folklore with all its enriching rhythms gives it an exuberant sense of uplift.
 
Evoking the traditional swing era, Owen Murphy’s cheerful “Oh Baby” is arranged with humor and character. It combines Duke Ellington's orchestrations with Joe Pass’ swinging fervency and rejoices with improvisations by Bailey, Cohen, trumpeter Nadje Noordhuis, and baritonist Owen Broder, intercalated by in-synch phrases and call-response maneuvers. By the end, is Pinccioti who shines with efficient rhythmic bite.

One of the most idiosyncratic pieces, “Anat’s Doina”, is split into three Eastern-tinged movements: Mayse, Der Gasne Nigun, and Foile-Shtick. The amply dramatic appeal is heavily reinforced by Rubin Kodheli’s cello, but expect other stunts like shifting rhythmic accentuations within the ternary time signature, compulsive Polka-like dances delivered with celebratory postures, and a smooth crossover jazz with strong Latin vibes.
 
Cohen and her peers also tackle “Trills and Thrills”, an emotional pop/rock ballad composed by Dev-Ari and driven by Bailey’s six-string weeping laments, and Neba Solo’s “Kanedougou Foly”, a piece propelled by exotic African percussion rhythms and where the melodic suggestions of the clarinetist find echo in the counteractions of the horn section. Cohen arranged this one herself.

Happy Song mirrors the forthright and sumptuous style of Anat Cohen, whose adaptability to multiple genres and settings is impressive. It’s remarkable how easily one can engage in this multiethnic celebration of the creative spirit.

       Grade B+

       Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Valsa Para Alice ► 03 - Oh Baby ► 06 – Trills and Thrills


Christian McBride Big Band - Bringin It

Label/Year: Mack Avenue Records, 2017

Lineup includes – Christian McBride: bass; Ron Blake: tenor sax, flute; Steve Wilson: alto and soprano sax, flute; Todd Bashore: alto sax, flute, piccolo; Carl Maraghi: bari sax, bass clarinet; Dan Pratt: tenor sax, flute; Freddie Hendrix: trumpet; David Lee: trumpet; Frank Greene: trumpet; Nabate Isles: trumpet; Steve Davis: trombone; Michael Dease: trombone; James Burton: trombone; Joe McDonough: trombone; Douglas Purviance: bass trombone; Rodney Jones: guitar; Xavier Davis: piano; Melissa Walker: vocals; Quincy Phillips: drums.

christian-mcbride-bringin-it.jpg

Every record put out by the world-class jazz bassist Christian McBride is well worth checking out. After digging Live at the Village Vanguard with his trio, the bassist returns to the big band format with Bringin’ It, an honorable follow-up to the 2011 Grammy Award winner The Good Feeling.

What does McBride bring us this time? Originals? Jazz standards? Elated post-bop classics? Well, the answer is yes to all of that, and he does it with an impressive cohort of artists and outstanding soloists, many of them retrieved from the first experience, including saxophonists Ron Blake and Steve Wilson, trumpeter Freddie Hendrix, trombonists Steve Davis and Michael Dease, as well as pianist Xavier Davis and vocalist Melissa Walker.

Gettin’ To It”, the first of three reshaped old originals by the bassist, flows with soulful energy, colored with Rodney Jones’ funk-oriented guitar chops and filled with lots of jabs and hooks thrown in by the improvisers. Hendrix sounds magisterial in his brave trumpet ululations and then Jones applies all his bluesiness to an individual statement, well backed by a trombone/baritone ostinato.

Freddie Hubbard’s “Thermo” is a triumphant, engaging post-bop vehicle for the soloists, who take us to the golden era of jazz without leaving aside the buoyant twists of modernity.

McBride’s remaining compositions, “Youthful Bliss” and “Used ‘Ta Could”, are both colorful but inhabit different worlds. The former, including a bass discourse with bright melody and groove, cultivates a post-bop idolization with occasional delicate ripples of soul and Latin for extra color, while the latter is a celebratory waltz with plenty of Mingus’ moods.

Another punch in the stomach arrives with McCoy Tyner’s “Sahara”, exuberantly set in motion by Quincy Phillips’ mallet drumming together with free-floating woodwinds, and then leaning on a 6/8 groove with vibrant horn unisons atop. Striking improvisations from piano and alto saxophone occur over modal harmonic progressions while Phillips finishes off what he had started, resorting to his classy rhythmic deftness.

Wes Montgomery’s groovy “Full House” starts with packaging all the original guitaristic steam in Jones’ well-measured solo, passing by Carl Maraghi’s magnetic baritone before the epic finale. The vivacity felt here opposes to the more tranquil vibes of the jazz standards “I Thought About You” and “ In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning”.

The vocal warmness of Ms. Melissa Walker is quite something on Djavan’s Brazilian hit “Upside Down” (the original version is called “Flor de Lis”), and also polishes up “Mr. Bojangles”, a tune by the American country artist Jerry Jeff Walker, here brought up with interesting rhythmic details and a leisurely swing.

Suffused with striking arrangements and turning the ensemble's grandiose sense of unity to its advantage, Bringin’ It is a tour-de-force album that substantiates how a modern big band can sound so stalwart and effulgent at the same time.

        Grade A

        Grade A

Favorite Tracks:
02 - Thermo ► 03 - Youthful Bliss ► 05 – Sahara


Or Bareket - OB1

Label/Year: Fresh Sound New Talent, 2017

Lineup - Shachar Elnatan: guitar; Gadi Lehavi: piano; Or Bareket: bass; Ziv Ravitz: drums.

or-bareket-OB1.jpg

Comfortably straddling traditional and modern settings, young bassist Or Bareket brings his roots and all the multicultural influences that surround him into his debut album OB1, affectingly dedicated to his late father.
 
Based in New York for quite some time, Bereket, who was born in Jerusalem and raised in Buenos Aires, establishes a fundamental, trusting connection with the members of his quartet: guitarist Shachar Elnatan, pianist Gadi Lehavi, and Shai Maestro Trio’s drummer Ziv Ravitz.

Drawing inspiration from different musical sources and marked by a 6/8 time signature, “Patience” bursts out of the gate in a kaleidoscopic cornucopia with a predetermined bass-piano unison statement and an unclouded, Jimi Hendrix-like guitar ostinato that brings a strong fusion charisma to the head. At some point, Elnatan and Lehavi exchange ideas with open ears, trapped in the enthusiastic percussive web acutely weaved by Bereket and Ravitz. The finale bolsters the innocuous encounter between funk-rock and Israeli folklore.

A bass pedal procures crystalline harmonics on “Snooze”s introductory section. Here, the easy melodies are set against a more complex harmonic sequence, yet everything is enveloped by a gentle groove. 

Opposing to the consciously contemplative “Shosh” and “Misdronoth”, we have “Joaquin”, an outgoing, dance-fueled spectacle vividly designed with eclectic ideas, and the well-ventilated waltz “La Music y la Palabra” that takes off the ground with the further assistance of Brazilian accordionist Vitor Gonçalves, one of the two special guests on the album (the other one is the influential Japanese percussionist Keith Ogawa).

The piece “Elefantes” is split into two parts. While part one is prone to modulation and maintains a classical feel throughout, even when Bereket starts his poetic declamation, the part two finds its cruising speed with a stronger jazzistic touch and a steady rhythm but embodying the same lyrical spirit.

The album ends beautifully with “Shir Lelo Shem”, an expressionistic 3-minute solo recitation by Bareket, rounded with gleeful melodic intention. 

While OB1 embraces a variety of styles and moods, it all works as an integrated whole that feels rich and breathable. This is an auspicious debut by a prodigious bassist who, additionally, reveals a persuasive sense of composition.

        Grade B+

        Grade B+

Favorite Tracks:
01 - Patience ► 07 - Joaquin ► 09 - Shir Lelo Shem


Anouar Brahem - Blue Maqams

Label/Year: ECM, 2017

Lineup – Anouar Brahem: oud; Django Bates: piano; Dave Holland: bass; Jack DeJohnette: drums.

anouar-brahem-blue-maqams.jpg

Tunisian oud player and composer Anouar Brahem is a widely reputed artist who has recorded extensively on the ECM label. Indelible works such as Barzakh, The Astounding Eyes of Rita, and especially Thimar, a memorable trio session with British multi-reedist John Surman and American bassist Dave Holland, are among his most accomplished works.

The top bass player mentioned above is part of the triumvirate that interact with Brahem in his latest outing Blue Maqams, a collection of mostly new compositions based on the Arabic modal music system that fits the unequal world chamber-jazz current he usually embraces. The other members are the British pianist Django Bates and the legendary American drummer Jack DeJohnette, who round out the real jazz rhythm section.
 
Opening Day” brings interesting ideas en-route, taking us instantaneously to torrid, distant places through the oud-bass singalong. Bates’ point of departure fully corroborates with Brahem’s melodic phrase. It all ends up in a three-side parallel melodic movement whose fluency is disrupted through a sensitive bass solo by Holland.

The bassist’s amazing sound and virtuous sense of groove, always with DeJohnette’s sober-minded rhythmic measures alongside, constitutes the body of the songs. “Bom Dia Rio”, whose Portuguese title means ‘good morning river’, and “Persepolis’s Mirage” are typical cases of spectacular drifts delivered at unusual tempos. Masterfully layered, the former tune meditates through the oud sounds after jolting with a super 10/8 time signature. On the latter piece, marked by passages with 14 beats per measure, we can hear the exotic lute-like instrument, impeccably dominated by the bandleader, embracing deep-toned sounds while advancing in perfect consonance with the bass.

There’s a soulful contemplation attached to “La Nuit”, where piano and oud embark on a candid one-to-one conversation, reflecting conjointly until the bass and the drums become involved. It feels like a tranquil prayer of gratitude.

Denoting an inflation of the Western feel due to a delicate waltzing jazz approach, the title track changes radically when Brahem isolates himself, exploring his innermost musicality. After this retreat, the reappearance of the rhythm section sounds no less than magical.

Regardless the title and the rhythmic touch, the piano-less “Bahia” doesn’t sound particularly Brazilian, rather exhibiting an occasionally hummed 2-minute solo introduction by Brahem, who first recorded this piece in 1994 with saxophonist Jan Garbarek for the latter's album Madar.
 
Blue Maqams has no need to pound or poke, finding tranquility in the pragmatic acoustic formula and unblemished technique evinced by the quartet. In these disturbing times, nothing better than listening to music that is congenial, peaceful, and deeply felt. Anouar Brahem delivers all that and more.

        Grade A-

        Grade A-

Favorite Tracks: 
03 - Blue Maqams ► 06 - Bom Dia Rio ► 07 - Persepolis’s Mirage


Brian Landrus Orchestra - Generations

Label/Year: BlueLand Records, 2017

Lineup includes - Brian Landrus: baritone saxophone, bass clarinet; Alan Ferber: trombone; Ralph Alessi: trumpet; Igmar Thomas: trumpet; Marcos Rojas: tuba; Mark Feldman: violin; Jamie Baum: flutes; Tom Christensen: oboe, flute; Michael Rabinowitz: bassoon; Alden Banta: contrabassoon; Debbie Schmidt: horn; Brandee Younger: harp; Joe Locke: vibraphone; Lonnie Plaxico: electric and acoustic bass; Jay Anderson: acoustic bass; Billy Hart: drums, and more.

Brian-Landrus-Generations.jpeg

Brian Landrus, a true prodigy in the art of playing deep-toned woodwind instruments, governs an amazing orchestra on Generations, a solid work sparkling with thoughtful arrangements and unusually fetching sounds.

The band lineup includes illustrious artists known for their creative contemporary vein such as flutist Jamie Baum, trombonist Alan Ferber, trumpeter Ralph Alessi, tuba player Marcos Rojas, violinist Mark Feldman, vibraphonist Joe Locke, bassist Lonnie Plaxico, and drummer Billy Hart, among many others.
 
Jeru Concerto”, a well-worked opus divided into four movements, opens the record with a strength of character. On the first movement, there’s consonance in the musicians’ activity. However, nothing here is too obvious and the layered sounds make us search incessantly for the essence of the music. Before the soft narration of the second movement, voiced with contrapuntal splendor, there’s a one-minute interlude where Landrus shows his impeccable command of the circular breathing technique. 
Oscillating between the pastoral and the metropolitan, the third movement continues to live in a sort of contemplation, even when the orchestration is intensified. It leads to the more extrovert fourth movement, where Landrus gives wings to his imagination as he draws phrases with an impressive tonal range from his potent baritone. The impetus is seamlessly refrained halfway to open up airy melodic spaces that regain an enthusiastic consistency on the final stretch.

The reggae accentuation of “Orchids”, whose foundation is reinforced by a diligent bass groove, gains extra coloration with the preponderant presence of Brandee Younger’s harp and the bandleader’s bass clarinet, working in conjunction with emotional horn designs.

Enigmatic and searching, “The Warrior” is a shifting piece whose storytelling is initiated with terse violin strokes in counterpoint with reed movements and occasionally supported by Locke’s soft textures. This phase lasts just until trumpeter Igmar Thomas steals the show, employing a few lines à-la Miles Davis over a mild swinging flow. Comprehending continual floating currents of instrumental skillfulness, the tune also goes through some triumphant phases enriched by bold rhythmic thrusts.
 
Arise" and “Human Nature” are among the most satisfying compositions. The former, having Plaxico’s electric bass and Rojas’ tuba paving the ground, brings a panoply of reed instruments acting collectively over an invigorating rhythm; the latter uncovers its true nature by playing with light and darkness, dancing effusively through singable flute melodies, soaring violin streaks, and deep-voiced horn traces.

The final piece, “Every Time I Dream”, brings up Bobby Hutcherson’s exquisite moods attached to a fervent desire to sound free. Nonetheless, it lies within the structural limits imposed.

Since the surprising factor never ceases, the super intriguing Generations is not an easy album to assimilate all at once. Even after repetitive listening, our gratification is magnified whenever we plunge into its astonishing ambiances.
Brian Landrus proves to be an extremely skillful composer and a first-class multi-reedist.

        Grade A-

        Grade A-

Favorite Tracks: 
06 - Orchids ► 09 - Arise ► 10 - Human Nature