Friday, December 28, 2018

Mahobin: Live At Big Apple In Kobe


Mahobin literally means “magic bottle” in Japanese and is used as the word for a Thermos bottle. To keep the musical proceedings both hot and magical, Satoko Fujii is using it as the name of a new quartet with Natsuki Tamura on trumpet, Lotte Anker on saxophone, and Ikue Mori on electronics. Their first release, and the eighth in Fujii’s 2018 marathon, is Live At Big Apple In Kobe. The disc offers a free-wheeling soundscape conjured by Tamura’s brash trumpet, Anker’s passionately fluid sax, Fujii’s complex piano stylings, and the utter unpredictability of Mori’s electronic manipulations. It all makes for an indescribable brew with new adventures in improvisation coming at you all the time. Most of the disc’s time is given over to a piece that they call Rainbow Elephant, an instantaneous concoction that finds its own balance in a natural blend of solo and collective improvisation. The comparatively brief Yellow Sky is edgier, a sort of sonic game with the players maneuvering to bounce the listener’s focus quickly from event to event. It all sounds like it was a great night for improvising at the Big Apple, with music now happily available for repeated home enjoyment.
Libra 204-050; Natsuki Tamura (tp) Lotte Anker (sax) Satoko Fujii (p) Ikue Mori (elec); Kobe, Japan, February 23, 2018; Rainbow Elephant/ Yellow Sky; 49:32. www.librarecords.com

Friday, December 21, 2018

top 13 + 4 more for 2018

yes, it’s time once again for a year-end list. here are the CDs i most enjoyed in 2018
first, a baker’s dozen of new releases, in alphabetical order:
Andy Biskin - 16 Tons - Songs From The Alan Lomax Collection (Andorfin)
Black Art Jazz Collective - Armor Of Pride (HighNote)
Samuel Blaser - Early In The Mornin' (Out Note)
Frank Carlberg/Noah Preminger - Whispers And Cries (Red Piano)
Nels Cline 4 - Currents, Constellations (Blue Note)
Steve Coleman & Five Elements - Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol. 1 
(The Embedded Sets) (Pi Recordings)
Benjamin Deschamps - No Codes (Multiple Chords)
Fred Hersch Trio - Live In Europe (Palmetto)
Joe Lovano & Dave Douglas Sound Prints - Scandal (Greenleaf Music)
Jamie Saft Quartet - Blue Dream (RareNoise)
Bobby Sanabria Multiverse Big Band - West Side Story Reimagined (Jazzheads)
Thumbscrew - Theirs (Cuneiform)
Denny Zeitlin - Wishing On The Moon (Sunnyside)

and here are some historical and reissue highlights:
Miles Davis & John Coltrane - The Bootleg Series, Volume 6: The Final Tour (Columbia/Legacy)
Frank Morgan/George Cables - Montreal Memories (HighNote)
Teddy Wilson - Classic Brunswick & Columbia Sessions 1934-1942 (Mosaic)
Various Artists - The Savory Collection 1935-1940 (Mosaic)

and thanks to all the labels and publicists who keep me busy,
and especially to all the people who actually make the music!

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Richie Cole: Cannonball


Alto saxophonist Richie Cole has been on the jazz scene since the late Sixties when he was a member of the Buddy Rich Orchestra. He came to prominence with his Alto Madness ensembles and an association with vocalist Eddie Jefferson in the Seventies. Since then he has never stopped playing and recording, both with his own bands and as a guest artist. Now based in the Pittsburgh area, Cole has been leading a quintet with guitarist Eric Susoeff, pianist Kevin Moore, bassist (and album producer) Mark Perna, and drummer Vince Taglieri for the past few years. His latest opus is Cannonball, featuring his band and guests performing a number of pieces associated with the great alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. Trombonist Reggie Watkins plays on every track, and there are appearances by drummer Roger Humphries, a member of the Horace Silver group in the Sixties who performs on Sack o’ Woe; vocalist Kenia, who sings Save Your Love For Me twice, once in English and once with her own Portuguese lyrics; and a few horns added here and there to fill out the sound. Cole is in fine form, with a bright tone and a crisply swinging approach that soars through the changes. You have to play Stars Fell on Alabama on a Cannonball tribute, and Cole does the theme justice. While Adderley’s influence is clear, Cole is by no means a copycat. His own brashly excitable sound is quite effective on such Cannonball staples as Duke Pearson’s Jeannine, brother Nat Adderley’s Jive Samba and Victor Feldman’s Azule Serape. Trombonist Watkins’ smooth lines make him an immensely supportive front line partner for Cole, and the rhythm section is superlatively swinging. That kind of backing and a stack of prime material is pretty much all Cole needs to sound his best, and on Cannonball, those conditions are just about perfect. A delightful session.
Richie Cole Presents RCP 003; J.D. Chaisson (tp on 2-5) Reggie Watkins (tbn) Richie Cole (as) Tony Campbell (as on 12) Kenny Blake (as on 13) Rick Matt (ts on 2-5) Eric Susoeff (g) Kevin Moore (p, el p) Mark Perna (b) Vince Taglieri (d, exc. on 8) Roger Humphries (d on 8) Kenia (vcl on 10,14); Aspinwall, PA, February 6, March 20 & 27,(2018 ?); 1.Del Sasser/ 2.Dat Dere/ 3.Stars Fell on Alabama/ 4.Matchmaker, Matchmaker/ 5.Jeannine/ 6.Jive Samba/ 7.Bell of the Ball/ 8.Sack o’ Woe/ 9.Mercy, Mercy, Mercy/ 10.Save Your Love For Me (Portuguese)/ 11.Toy/ 12.Azule Serape/ 13.Unit 7/ 14.Save Your Love For Me (English); 65:12; www.markpernamusic.com

Friday, December 14, 2018

Miles Davis & John Coltrane: The Bootleg Series, Volume 6: The Final Tour


While all of the material on The Bootleg Series, Volume 6: The Final Tour, credited to Miles Davis & John Coltrane, has been issued on various bootlegs over the years, this is the first official release for music from the spring 1960 European tour by the Miles Davis quintet - the trumpeter’s first Continental tour with his own group. Tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, in the process of getting his own band together, didn’t really want to go, but Davis could be persuasive. Some extra money from tour producer Norman Granz certainly didn’t hurt. Historian and journalist Ashley Kahn offers a lot of details in his extensive notes for the 32-page booklet, which also includes both on and off stage photos from the tour. The quintet’s European jaunt began in Paris on March 21 (heard on disc 1 & part of disc 2), and ended in Stuttgart on April 10. The Copenhagen show of March 24, the only show taken from the “original radio source,” fills the rest of disc 2. Two concerts in Stockholm on March 22 are on the third and fourth disc, with a 6-minute radio interview with Coltrane as a bonus at the end. 
At this point, Miles was fifteen years into his career, with major successes behind him. He had already established a pattern of his music changing and developing. Coltrane was a comparatively late starter, and while his music was changing rapidly in this period, he was headed in a different direction than Davis. On every song in this set, we hear Coltrane bursting out of the chord changes, trying everything all at once with an unusually harsh sound and a newly fractured style of improvising. Besides the utter rawness and grit of Coltrane’s horn as he stretches out, even drawing some catcalls in Paris, it’s the total aplomb and maximum swing imparted by the rhythm section of pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb that’s truly impressive. Wherever ‘Trane goes, they’re right there with him. To put things into historical perspective, note that at Coltrane’s last recording session before this tour, in December 1959, he had recorded original compositions including Like Sonny, Harmonique, & Naima, with the same nonpareil rhythm team. After returning to New York after the tour, the next sessions that the saxophonist did were with Don Cherry in June and July for The Avant-Garde on Atlantic. When Miles went on another European tour in the fall, Sonny Stitt took over on saxophone. 
While Coltrane is tearing it up night after night, Miles Davis stays as cool as ever, improvising at length in tip top shape. The quintet concentrated on a fairly limited repertoire for these shows, with So What, On Green Dolphin Street, and All Blues each making multiple appearances. The sound is excellent mono, with the Paris show having the best instrumental balance. Much more than a mere collection of live recordings, The Final Tour is history in the making, and invaluable documentation of the incendiary sounds generated by these giants of modern jazz. Not to be missed. 
Columbia/Legacy 88985448392; Miles Davis (tp) John Coltrane (ts) Wynton Kelly (p) Paul Chambers (b) Jimmy Cobb (d); Paris, France, March 21, 1960: Disc 1 (61:04): 1st concert: All of You/ So What/ On Green Dolphin Street; 2nd concert: Walkin’. Disc 2 (71:04): Bye Bye Blackbird/ ‘Round Midnight/ Oleo/ The Theme. Copenhagen, Denmark, March 24, 1960: Introduction by Norman Granz/ So What/ On Green Dolphin Street/ All Blues/ The Theme (inc.). Stockholm, Sweden, March 22: Disc 3 (36:24): 1st concert: Introduction by Norman Granz/ So What/ Fran Dance/ Walkin’/ The Theme. Disc 4 (52:24): 2nd concert: So What/ On Green Dolphin Street/ All Blues/ The Theme/ John Coltrane Interview. legacyrecordings.com

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Samuel Blaser: Early In The Mornin’


Trombonist Samuel Blaser’s Early In The Mornin’ is soaked in the blues. The basic quartet of Blaser, keyboardist Russ Lossing, bassist Masa Kamaguchi, and drummer (and harmonica player!) Gerry Hemingway is augmented on three tracks by trumpeter Wallace Roney and alto saxophonist Oliver Lake, separately and apart. Half of the tunes on the disc are traditional tunes, Lonesome Road Blues is credited to Sam Collins, and the balance are perfectly fitting Blaser originals. Lake’s guttural alto is the first thing we hear to open the disc. The rest of the band drifts into the picture, with Lossing’s electric piano supporting the entwined horns of Lake and Blaser as the piece develops. The broad tones of Kamaguchi and the chatty, interactive drums of Hemingway keep things moving right along. Blaser’s Creepy Crawler showcases the big sound of his trombone and Lossing’s electric keyboards provide the right atmosphere for this snaky composition. Truth to tell, every track here has something special going on, and I could spend a lot of time raving about specifics, like the vocal qualities of Blaser’s solo on Tom Sherman’s Barroom, Wallace Roney’s beautiful solo on The House Carpenter, the slithering trio of horns that enlivens the classic blues Levee Camp Moan Blues, or the mutant Sixties vibe that Lossing’s electric keyboard introduces into Blaser’s Klaxon. But I’d rather urge you to get a copy of this CD and discover its wonders for yourself. Like Andy Biskin’s recent 16 Tons project, Blaser draws on the famed Alan Lomax Collection for material, a staggeringly rich source of country blues, jazz, and folk music from around the world. (Currently online at www.culturalequity.org, where there are more than 17,400 audio files.) It’s a deep well that may never run dry, so long as talents like Samuel Blaser and his crew continue to dip into it and make it all new again. Heartily recommended. 
Out Note OTN 626; Samuel Blaser (tbn) Russ Lossing (p, Fender Rhodes & Wurlitzer el p, clav, minimoog, Hammond B3 org) Masa Kamaguchi (b) Gerry Hemingway (d, hca) Wallace Roney (tp on *) Oliver Lake (as on #); Hoboken, NJ & NYC, January 2017; Early in the Mornin’#/ Creepy Crawler/ Tom Sherman’s Barroom/ The House Carpenter*/ Levee Camp Moan Blues*#/ Klaxon/ Mal’s Blues/ Black Betty/ Lonesome Road Blues; 58:30. www.outhere-music.com

Monday, December 10, 2018

JP Schlegelmilch, Jonathan Goldberger and Jim Black:


JP Schlegelmilch, Jonathan Goldberger and Jim Black team up to update the organ trio format with Visitors. Black’s big beat, Goldberger’s savage guitaristics, and Schlegelmilch’s enveloping organ sounds combine in a seductive mélange of upbeat and bluesy grooves. Keyboardist Schlegelmilch and guitarist Goldberger co-composed all the songs, a series of straight-ahead melodies that give the musicians plenty of space for elaboration and exploration. The title track and Chiseler open the disc with a bang. Ether Sun is more relaxed, a little too slow in fact, and without much substance to justify the more than 5 minute running time. The trio bounces back with the tasty groove of Corvus, full of ominous guitar lines and spooky organ. The first part of Lake Oblivion rocks hard at first, then settles down to a swampy maze of beats and boings and washes of sound before rising out of the mist with an anthemic melody and then dissolving. Part two leads off with the strumming of an acoustic guitar, then sails off into the psychedelic stratosphere. Terminal Waves has a slow blues feel at the start, then oozes into the slowly moving world of Schlegelmilch’s keyboards and reverb before some penetrating guitar by Goldberger kicks in. That leads the trio into a Pink Floyd-like chord sequence with plenty of guitar heroics and an amped-up Jim Black. The very pretty, and rather brief, ballad Island ends the set, but leaves the music unresolved, and the listener wanting more. Guess I’ll have to wait for their next effort, and since Schlegelmilch, Goldberger and Black seem thoroughly compatible with one another, it’s a good bet that there will be more from this trio. Definitely worth a listen.
Skirl 39; JP Schlegelmilch (org, kybs) Jonathan Goldberger (g) Jim Black (d); Brooklyn, NY, no dates specified; Visitors/ Chiseler/ Ether Sun/ Corvus/ Lake Oblivion I/ Lake Oblivion II/ Terminal Waves/ Island. 35:21. www.skirlrecords.com

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Walter Faehndrich, Christy Doran, Remo Schnyder, & Samuel Wettstein: Âme Sèche


On a baker’s dozen of unnamed tracks, the quartet of Walter Faehndrich, Christy Doran, Remo Schnyder, & Samuel Wettstein gets down to some serious business on Âme Sèche. The freely improvised music of Faehndrich on viola and occasional vocal, Schnyder on saxophone, Doran on electric guitar and Wettstein on synthesizer is a mesmerizing jumble of sounds, some identifiable and some not. Âme Sèche, “dry soul” in English, is the perfect title for the grave and unemotional attitude of the music. The quartet’s primary commitment, it seems, in tracks that mostly last between 2 and 5 minutes, is to the purity of free improvisation with no preconceptions. The results are generally on the quiet side, with an easy-going camaraderie that only sometimes grows ornery. An intriguing session indeed, and ripe for some late-night headphone listening.
Leo CD LR 827; Walter Faehndrich (vla, vcl) Remo Schnyder (sax) Christy Doran (el g) Samuel Wettstein (synth); no recording information; 13 untitled tracks; 53:03. www.leorecords.com

Monday, December 3, 2018

Frank Morgan/George Cables: Montreal Memories


Just about anyone interested in modern jazz is a George Cables enthusiast. Dexter Gordon was a big fan of the pianist, and so was Art Pepper, good company to keep. Alto saxophonist Frank Morgan was also a devotee of Mr. Cables, and he had a following when he reappeared on the scene after a lengthy incarceration. Which makes the appearance of Montreal Memories, with the Frank Morgan/George Cables duo captured live on stage, a cause for real celebration. Appearing at the Théatre Port-Royal as part of the 1989 Montréal Jazz Festival, the pair’s enthusiasm, superb musicianship and intimate rapport are apparent from the first bars of Now’s the Time. That’s the first of three Charlie Parker compositions in the set, along with Confirmation and Billie’s Bounce. And of course Parker, the key influence on Morgan’s music, frequently performed Dizzy Gillespie’s A Night in Tunisia and Monk’s ‘Round Midnight, two other duo selections. There are also two Cables originals, Lullaby and his best-known piece, the enduring Helen’s Song, first recorded on an album by California guitarist Bruce Forman in 1984. Blues For Rosalinda, an original blues by Morgan, dedicated to his long-time companion, artist Rosalinda Kolb, the Kern-Hammerstein evergreen All the Things You Are and Wayne Shorter’s Nefertiti, in a medley with Billie's Bounce, complete the program. Morgan, who called the tunes for the pair, was acutely interested in melodies, and he picked some of the best for this gig. As Cables tells Patricia Willard for her liner notes, he was “the guy dealing with energy” while Morgan was “dealing with lyricism.” The two men had an exceptionally beautiful musical relationship, and it’s all here. Highly recommended.
HighNote HCD 7320; Frank Morgan (as) George Cables (p); Montréal, Canada, July 1, 1989; Now’s the Time/ All the Things You Are/ A Night in Tunisia/ ‘Round Midnight/ Confirmation/ Blues For Rosalinda/ Helen’s Song/ Lullaby/ Medley: Nefertiti; Billie’s Bounce; 61:07. www.jazzdepot.com

Friday, November 30, 2018

Mars Williams: Presents An Ayler Xmas, Volume 2


One of the wildest discs to come my way lately is led by the versatile and excitable Chicago saxophonist Mars Williams, who Presents An Ayler Xmas, Volume 2 to grace the holiday season. I’m not at all interested in Christmas music, but than again, except for Volume 1 (2017), Xmas albums don’t usually sound anything like this. In one sense, the combination is a no-brainer, given Ayler’s folk-song tendencies, but it does take a rather special sensibility to come up with the concept and make it work. Three of the tracks were recorded live in Chicago with Williams’ Witches & Devils ensemble, featuring a cohort of the Windy City’s premier improvisers. The other two pieces are taken from a gig with local musicians at Porgy & Bess, a nightspot in Vienna. Every track is a medley with Ayler’s pieces embedded in Christmas standards. If you’ve ever wanted to hear O Tannenbaum, sung here in a quivering voice by Christof Kurzmann, combined with Spirits, one of Ayler’s best-known tunes, then this CD is what you’ve been waiting for. Williams makes it all work surprisingly well, so if this concept intrigues you, you’ve got some new and radically different sounds to enjoy on Christmas eve.
ESP-Disk’ ESP5030/ Soul What SWR 0004; Mars Williams (sax, toy instruments) on 1, 3 & 4 with Josh Berman (cnt) Jeb Bishop (tbn on 1) Fred Lonberg-Holm (clo) Jim Baker (p, Arp synth, vla) Kent Kessler (b) Brian Sandstrom (b, g, tp) Steve Hunt (d, perc); on 2 & 5 with Thomas Berghammer (tp) Hermann Stangassinger (b) Didi Kern (d, perc) Christof Kurzmann (lloopp, vcl); 1,3,4: Chicago, IL, no date specified; 2 &5, Vienna, Austria, no date specified; 1. Xmas Medley/ 2. O Tannenbaum/ Spirits/ 12 Days of Christmas/ 3. Love Cry/ Christmas Wrapping/ 4. Carol of the Drum/ Bells/ O Come Emmanuel/ Joy to the World/ 5.Universal Soldiers/We Wish You a Merry Xmas; 53:45. espdisk.com

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Thumbscrew: Ours/Thumbscrew: Theirs


They each lead a number of bands and play in other groups, but when guitarist Mary Halvorson, bassist Michael Formanek, and drummer Tomas Fujiwara convene as Thumbscrew, the collective identity of the trio becomes the key to the enterprise. The band had a pair of well-received discs on Cuneiform (skremsky.tumblr.com/search/thumbscrew) before the label decided to go on hiatus. But Thumbscrew persisted, convincing label owner Steve Feigenbaum to put out not one but two new releases recorded during a June 2017 residency at Pittsburgh’s City of Asylum. Ours, a collection of original songs by each of the three bandmembers, and Theirs, a selection of covers by disparate composers including Stanley Cowell, Misha Mengelberg, Benny Golson, Wayne Shorter, and Julio De Caro, form a matched pair with 100 minutes of dynamically balanced and lively creativity. Start with Theirs, a carefully sequenced program of some truly lovely compositions. Does anyone ever tire of hearing expressive renditions of Herbie Nichols’ exquisite House Party Starting or Jimmy Rowles’ The Peacocks? I hesitate to pick any favorites from this bounty of stimulating performances, but I’m quite partial to their unusual high-spirited treatment of Brooks Bowman’s East of the Sun and the unstoppable groove the trio applies to Cowell’s Effi, first released on Max Roach’s Members, Don’t Get Weary album from 1968.

The equal balance of the playing extends to the composing chores on Ours, with each member of the band contributing three pieces specifically designed for this group. Halvorson’ Snarling Joys lead off the disc with a snaky low-key groove that provides a fine occasion for a lovingly textured Formanek bass solo. Fujiwara’s Saturn Way features some energetic drumming and some of Halvorson’s delicately spiky playing. Her crafty playing emphasizes the acoustic properties of her hollow-body electric guitar, with subtle sculpting by way of sparingly used effects. Formanek’s warm arco bass plays a big role here as well. The bassist’s jittery Cruel Heartless Bastards is up next, with staggered rhythms that evoke a mutant surf sound. Halvorson’s Smoketree is a slightly bittersweet ballad at first before the beat moves things in a heavier direction. There’s more of Halvorson’s innovative guitar spirit in a wild solo full of unexpected leaps, and an energetic Formanek bass solo is also prominent. Her piece Thumbprint is similarly digressive while mostly keeping the focus on Halvorson’s angular guitar lines. A pair by Fujiwara follow. One Day is hushed at first before Fujiwara moves from brushes to sticks and the piece blossoms into a mid-tempo romp. The fairly mellow Rising Snow gives Halvorson a chance to stretch out with a crisply understated solo. The final two pieces are by Formanek. His Words That Rhyme puts the emphasis on the group’s interaction with a stop/start structure that might falter without the dynamic elucidation that this tightly integrated unit provides. Unconditional closes the program with what may be the most conventional music of the date, a gently loping and restful ballad. Halvorson is impressive on this one, with an engaging solo over Fujiwara’s mallet work and Formanek’s measured walking bass. Somehow Halvorson, Formanek and Fujiwara successfully balance their fierce individuality with an equally unrelenting commitment to the collective and the music, and they make it work every time. Ours and Theirs are triumphs of creative music-making, and both are strongly recommended. 
Ours: Cuneiform Rune 439; Mary Halvorson (g) Michael Formanek (b) Tomas Fujiwara (d); Pittsburgh, PA, June 22-25, 2017; Snarling Joys/ Saturn Way/ Cruel Heartless Bastards/ Smoketree/ Thumbprint/ One Day/ Rising Snow/ Words That Rhyme with Spangle (angle bangle dangle jangle mangel mangle strangle tangle wangle wrangle)/ Unconditional; 55:54. 
Theirs: Cuneiform Rune 441; Mary Halvorson (g) Michael Formanek (b) Tomas Fujiwara (d); Pittsburgh, PA, June 22-25, 2017; Stablemates/ Benzinho/ House Party Starting/ The Peacocks/ East of the Sun/ Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair)/ Buen Amigo/ Dance Cadaverous/ Effi/ Weer is een dag voorbij; 46:07. www.cuneiformrecords.com

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Akira Sakata, Simon Nabatov, Takashi Seo, & Darren Moore: Not Seeing Is A Flower


The international quartet of Akira Sakata, Simon Nabatov, Takashi Seo, & Darren Moore did a short tour of Japan, culminating in Not Seeing Is A Flower, a live recording made at Jazzspot Candy in Chiba, near Tokyo. The disc documents the first set and “abridged second set.” Given the explosive nature of saxophonist Sakata and pianist Nabatov, we would expect many boldly intense passages, and indeed by the five minute mark of Surge, the saxophonist is wailing, the pianist is pounding away, bassist Seo is contributing swirls of sound, and Moore is using his drums and cymbals to kick everything into a more frenetic and chaotic realm. But it’s not all so frenzied, as the collective mind of the quartet allows the music to ebb and flow in a natural fashion. The almost imperceptible shifts in tempo and attack result from the deep level of understanding that the musicians seem to have developed in a relatively short time on bandstands around Japan. Although the track titles indicate a certain attitude towards the music, divisions between “tunes” are rather arbitrary as the music just flows along. I could do without Sakata’s throaty shouts on Ritual, though it might have been fun to watch. I’m much more partial to his voluble reed work, like the roller-coaster ride of a clarinet solo he uncoils on Resolve. He’s working against Nabatov’s countermelodies, hurled out with great panache, Seo’s conversational bass, and the rollicking drums of Moore. The quartet brings the music to a quiet close, and a brief resolution. Abscond picks up where they left off, as a soaring Sakata, now on alto, slowly raises the heat to full boil. Not Seeing Is A Flower offers a largely satisfying program of free and unpredictable improvisations.
Leo CD LR 843; Akira Sakata (as, cl, vcl, perc) Simon Nabatov (p) Takashi Seo (b) Darren Moore (d, perc); Chiba, Japan, November 27, 2017; Surge/ Retreat/ Uncoil/ Ritual/ Resolve/ Abscond; 51:39. www.leorecords.com

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Rich Halley 3: The Literature


From the beginning of his recording career in August 1981, West Coast saxophonist Rich Halley has either played his own compositions or delved into free improvisation. With The Literature, new from the Rich Halley 3, Halley and long-time companions Clyde Reed on bass and Carson Halley on drums dip into material by some of his influences, which range from Ornette Coleman and Thelonious Monk to the Carter family and country singer Jimmie Rodgers. The results are consistently inspired renditions of classic compositions, no matter the source. The trio tears right into Miles Davis’ Little Willie Leaps to establish their working method of putting their own modernistic spin on familiar melodies. Coleman and Monk get two selections each, and we’re also regaled with tunes by Duke Ellington (a starkly beautiful Mood Indigo), Charles Mingus (a sensitive reading of Pussy Cat Dues), Sun Ra (a snappily swinging version of Kingdom of Not from Super-Sonic Jazz), and others. The trio attacks it all with a stirring mix of respect and reinvention. There are many special moments scattered among the 57 minutes, including Reed’s forceful bass solo on Monk’s Misterioso, Carson Halley’s rollicking drum solo on Mongo Santamaria’s Chano Pozo, the trio’s unified strut on Coleman’s Broad Way Blues, and Rich Halley’s powerfully angular solo on Monk’s Brilliant Corners. I highly recommend adding The Literature to your collection and finding your own favorites.
Pine Eagle 011; Rich Halley (ts, clapping) Clyde Reed (b) Carson Halley (d, clapping); Portland, OR, August 26-27, 2017; Little Willie Leaps/ Misterioso/ Chano Pozo/ Broad Way Blues/ High Powered Mama/ Mood Indigo/ Brilliant Corners/ Motherless Children/ Pussy Cat Dues/ Kingdom of Not/ Someday You’ll Call My Name/ Law Years; 57:53. www.richhalley.com

Monday, November 12, 2018

Jared Gold: Reemergence


Organist Jared Gold’s Strikezone release Reemergence, his ninth CD, kicks off with his original title track. It’s deep in the pocket, and the music pretty much keeps that groove going all the way through the nicely varied program. In part, we’ve got drummer Billy Hart to thank for that, a much-recorded veteran who played with Jimmy Smith back in the Sixties. Gold’s regular employer, guitarist Dave Stryker, who also produced the date, is another key to the success of this outing, and the addition of trumpeter Jeremy Pelt on 3 tracks was an inspired idea. The eclectic repertoire is a mix of Gold originals, a couple of standards, and tunes by Stryker (Nomad), Ornette Coleman (Blues Connotation), Stevie Wonder (Lookin’ For Another Pure Love), and gospel composer Doris Akers (Sweet Sweet Spirit). Perhaps the most surprising selection is the Lennon-McCartney song She’s Leaving Home, never one of my favorite Beatles tunes, but beautifully done here. It seems that the organ trio will never go totally out of style as long as there are practitioners who reimagine the sometimes hackneyed format, and the solidly swinging Gold is absolutely one of the cats that will keep this genre thriving. Recommended. 
Strikezone 8817; Jared Gold (Hammond B3 org) Dave Stryker (g) Billy Hart (d) Jeremy Pelt (tp & flgh on *); Paramus, NJ, January 22, 2018; Reemergence*/ It Ain’t Necessarily So/ Lookin’ for Another Pure Love*/ She’s Leaving Home/ One For John A*/ How Long Has This Been Going On/ Blues Connotation/ Sweet Sweet Spirit/ Nomad; 51:19. www.facebook.com/StrikezoneJazz/

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Ivo Perelman: The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 6

Joe Morris moves over to acoustic bass for the final Volume 6 of Ivo Perelman's The Art Of The Improv Trio, a live date recorded at a club in Brooklyn. (Click here for previous volumes.) Tenor wizard Perelman is in a positively jaunty mood to open the lengthy Part 1, with a vividly energetic Gerald Cleaver providing rhythmic excitement and a deep groove. Morris, whose attack on guitar is jittery and anxious, plays the bass with a smoother approach to sound, although he retains much of his fractured approach to rhythm. The on-stage nature of the performance gives the trio plenty of opportunities to react both to one another and to the energy of the audience. As you might expect, the 42-minute Part 1 goes through a lot of changes in tempo, volume, and dynamics, along with a few embedded solos and duos. The only constant is the restless exploration of pure improvisation. exhilarating as ever, and with a brief, boisterous encore, this rare concert appearance by a Perelman ensemble makes a fitting conclusion to The Art Of The Improv Trio series.
Leo CD LR 776; Ivo Perelman (ts) Joe Morris (b) Gerald Cleaver (d); Brooklyn, NY, July 2016; Parts 1-2; 46:42. www.leorecords.com

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Ivo Perelman: The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 5


In a brief statement that appears in Ivo Perelman’s The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 5, Joe Morris writes “Improvising is action ... informed by a philosophical and aesthetic disposition.” Morris wields his main instrument, the electric guitar, on this release, with drummer Gerald Cleaver aboard as well. The utter freedom of a Perelman date (previous volumes in this series are here) encourages the musicians to explore a variety of improvisational strategies during the nine numbered sections. Starting with the robust Part 1, which effectively marks the territory, the trio moves into the slow moving Part 2. Cleaver largely goes his own way while tenor and guitar compete for attention. Part 3 features Perelman and Morris playing a rapid call and response game, while contrastingly, Part 4 is denser and spikier, with descents into gloomy commentary, plenty of scrabbly interplay and, in the last few minutes, an understated duet between Morris and Cleaver. Part 5 is a moody four minutes of call and response by Morris and Perelman with minimal commentary by Cleaver. The quickly mutating Part 6 starts out rather pointillistic and atomized before settling down a little into a recognizably conversational mode. Perelman’s playing on this one exploits his range, with a long stay in the lower registers of the tenor before leaping up to the high end. If Part 6 displays the wide timbral extent of Perelman’s tenor, in Part 7 he mostly stays up in the extreme highs of the altissimo range that he can commandingly elicit from the horn. Morris follows him up the fretboard at first before weaving his own counter-spell. The longest piece is Part 8 which finds the trio in their most congenial mood. Their simultaneous solos bounce off one another with a steady pulse to guide them on this beautifully realized excursion. As a coda, the brief finale carefully limns the high end in a quietly meandering fashion. Volume 5 is often quieter than you might expect with an electric guitar in the line-up, but as always with Perelman and friends, the intensity and honesty are impressive, and this installment is well worth your time.
Leo CD LR 775; Ivo Perelman (ts) Joe Morris (el g) Gerald Cleaver (d); Brooklyn, NY, July 2016; Parts 1-9; 51:27. www.leorecords.com


Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Kaze: Atody Man


Satoko Fujii’s 60th birthday marathon continues with Atody Man, six tunes performed by Kaze, a coöp quartet with trumpeters Christian Pruvost and Natsuki Tamura and drummer Peter Orins joining Fujii on piano. Fujii seems to delight in unconventional instrumental groupings, and this lineup practically insures that no one is in their comfort zone, even after several previous releases and tours. Brassmen Pruvost and Tamura begin Orins’ composition Hypnotique Sympathie with long tones, in unison at first but slowly diverging. Fujii’s piano enters the music carefully at the 5 minute mark, with minimal accompaniment from drummer Orins. The sparse soundscape soon grows fuller and more heated as the trumpeters compete for space over an increasingly engaged piano and drums. Something like a groove eventually emerges in this curiously episodic piece. Orins’ fractured drumming takes the lead on Fujii’s Moving, an over-long excursion that includes a gritty trumpet duet, boldly dynamic pianistics from Fujii, and calmly sympathetic percussion work. The curious Méta-blizzard is another Orins composition. The music is very quiet and edgy to start, slowly developing into a trumpet showcase with clattery piano and drums before arriving at an actual melody with a quickened tempo and a feeling of hurried exuberance. By now, it should be quite clear that the only constant in the music of Kaze is continual change. As a listener, just when you think you have a good handle on what’s going on, the music shifts and moves in a new and wholly unexpected direction. Tempos stagger, the lead voice changes almost imperceptibly, themes emerge briefly only to be discarded, and the players frequently coax unusual timbres from their instruments. The quartet’s interplay is impressive, but for me the music of Kaze, while effective and admirable, is not necessarily lovable. Still, it’s definitely worth a listen.
Circum-disc/Libra 204; Christian Pruvost, Natsuki Tamura (tp) Satoko Fujii (p) Peter Orins (d); New Haven, CT, June 24, 2017; Hypnotique Sympathie/ Moving/ Méta-blizzard/ Morning Glow/ Inspiration 2/ Atody Man; 69:17. www.librarecords.com; circum-disc.com

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Ivo Perelman: The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 4


Strength meets strength meets strength as tenor saxophonist Ivo Perelman, bassist William Parker, and drummer Gerald Cleaver take over the studio for The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 4. (Reviews of previous volumes are here.) Parker writes that “we are actually painting in sound and enabling the concept of vision to live.” (An apt metaphor, since Perelman is also a painter whose images grace the covers of this series.) In one sense, Perelman’s music is miraculous, given that what we hear is the result of an ongoing series of instantaneous decisions by three musicians, somehow coördinated in the moment through the sheer praxis of improvisation. In another sense, it’s simply what these talented individuals do. This entry in the series features two shorter pieces of under six minutes that bracket Part 2. The endlessly flowing and captivating main event is a 41-minute sprint beginning with a particularly lyrical Perelman concentrating in the middle registers, dense counter-melodies from the ever-astute Mr. Parker, and utterly focused and dynamic drumming by Cleaver. Twelve minutes of high-energy playing lead to a subdued and almost bluesy section. Imperceptibly the pace quickens, then relaxes again, setting the stage for a beatifically calm bass solo by Parker. Perelman returns with some wispy sax lines that feel like questions that call on Parker and Cleaver to respond. A heated musical conversation ensues, with Perelman’s forays into the upper registers of the tenor and Parker’s bowed bass catalyzing the music into further explorations of time and timbre. The finale is slightly upbeat, an activated and nuanced continuation of this three-way colloquy. An assertive Parker is particularly impressive here before the music slowly returns to silence. Once again, Perelman and his carefully chosen associates have created freely improvised music that will last and reward repeated listening. Definitely recommended.
Leo CD LR 774; Ivo Perelman (ts) William Parker (b) Gerald Cleaver (d); Brooklyn, NY, March 2016; Parts 1-3; 52:20. www.leorecords.com

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Ivo Perelman: The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 3

Ivo Perelman is in familiar musical surroundings when pianist Matthew Shipp and drummer Gerald Cleaver join him for The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 3. (Earlier volumes are here.) But of course, each day is new and each encounter is fresh. The music on Part 1, the first of nine comparatively short impros, quickly turns turbulent and raucous. Cleaver in particular is playing hard and revving up the atmosphere. Shipp takes the bait at first before settling into a head-nodding calm. Perelman outdoes himself with his strangled cry in the upper regions of his tenor. The stately vigor of Part 2, of course, is completely different, except for the intensity, which seldom flags. Pianist Shipp has been playing with Perelman in one situation or another for decades now, and the pair never fails to find something new to explore. In his appreciative liner essay, Shipp makes special note of the “defiant persistence of it all. It just keeps coming at you, keeps growing in a completely independent and organic way.” The lyrical “trio-logue” of the delicately balanced Part 3 is a fine example of Shipp’s characterization of this unit’s approach to improvisation. Other highlights include the exploratory Part 4 with its down-tempo pacing, the chipper chase of Part 5 complete with a Cleaver drum solo, and the almost jaunty Part 7. It’s yet another powerful statement from Perelman and two of his closest collaborators.
Leo CD LR 773; Ivo Perelman (ts) Matthew Shipp (p) Gerald Cleaver (d); Brooklyn, NY, July 2015; Parts 1-9; 49:17. www.leorecords.com

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Dave Liebman, Tatsuya Nakatani, & Adam Rudolph: The Unknowable


The distinct aura of ritual permeates The Unknowable, a tantalizingly edgy session by the trio of Dave Liebman, Tatsuya Nakatani, & Adam Rudolph. Liebman, heard mostly on tenor or soprano saxophones, also plays a couple of flutes, recorder, piri (a double-reed instrument from Korea), and on one piece, a Fender Rhodes electric piano, while Nakatani and Rudolph perform on a roomful of percussion, with drums and other noisemakers from around the globe. Arising from a central core of innate trust among the three musicians, these spontaneous compositions are short and focused. The pieces are also generally quieter than you might expect from a saxophone and percussion lineup. Among my favorite tracks are the energizing workout of The Simple Truth, Present Time, which features Liebman’s blazing tenor sax and Rudolph’s forceful congas with an overlay of electronic flavor, and the jagged Premonition with Liebman’s boldly expressive tenor over percussive clatter. Liebman’s many fans will find much here to enjoy.
RareNoise RNR089; Dave Liebman (ts, ss, C fl, Native American fl, recorder, piri, Fender Rhodes el p on *) Tatsuya Nakatani (d, gongs, metal perc, perc) Adam Rudolph (handrumset [cga, djembe, tarija, zabumba], thumb p, sintir, mbuti harp, slit drum, perc, overtone flutes, Fender Rhodes el p on #, live elec processing); West Orange, NJ, July 2016; Benediction (Opening)/ The Simple Truth/ Late Moon/ The Unknowable/ Skyway Dream/ Transmutations/ The Turning/ Present Time/ Distant Twilight/ Iconographic*/ Cosmogram#/ Premonition/ Benediction (Closing); 48:57. www.rarenoiserecords.com

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

J. Peter Schwalm: How We Fall


Multi-instrumentalist and electronic composer J. Peter Schwalm worked on How We Fall between treatments for a brain tumor, a situation that couldn’t help but be represented in his music. With intermittent assistance from guitarist Eivind Aarset and bassist Tim Harries, Schwalm carefully layered sounds from various guitars, piano, drums, and a slew of electronic devices to create this series of relatively dark and melancholy pieces. From the sludgy psychedelia of Strofort which opens the disc to the spare and ambient finale Singlis, Schwalm’s distinctive juxtapositions prove to be surprisingly emotional soundscapes. While I’m sure that Schwalm would have been more than glad not to deal with such a life-threatening condition, he did manage to piece together the endlessly intriguing music of How We Fall. Here’s to his good health and continued creativity!
RareNoise RNR096; J. Peter Schwalm (g, p, electronic devices, acoustic & digital sound modules, d, synths) Eivind Aarset (g on 1,3,4,5,8,9) Tim Harries (b on 1,4-7,9); prob. Frankfurt, Germany, 2017; 1.Strofort/ 2.Battenfeld/ 3.Auua/ 4.Ibra/ 5.Gangesthal/ 6.Stormbruch/ 7.Clingon/ 8.Musles/ 9.Singlis; 55:29. www.rarenoiseecords.com

Monday, October 1, 2018

Noah Preminger & Frank Carlberg: Whispers and Cries


The tenor saxophone and piano duo of Noah Preminger & Frank Carlberg performs ten well-traveled standards and jazz compositions (plus one Civil War-era traditional song) on the luminous Whispers and Cries. From the beginning, with their version of the ever-beautiful Gershwin melody of Someone to Watch Over Me, the pair digs deeply into their material and emerges with over a hour of gorgeous music that will touch even the hardest of hearts. Recorded in Boston’s Jordan Hall, an acoustically resonant concert space at the New England Conservatory, Carlberg and Preminger seem to revel in their astute interactions and far-ranging improvisations. While I hate to pick favorites when every piece is imbued with such delicate charm, I’ll mention the duo’s tender dissection of Monk’s Reflections and their playful stroll through These Foolish Things as just two of the album’s many successes. In a brief liner note, Preminger asks “What is better than creating music with a like-minded friend in such a context?” with the implication that nothing could be better. After thoroughly enjoying every minute of Whispers and Cries, I’m inclined to agree with him. Strongly recommended.
Red Piano RPR 14599-4431; Noah Preminger (ts) Frank Carlberg (p); Boston, MA, July 5-6, 2017; Someone to Watch Over Me/ Take the A Train/ Embraceable You/ Reflections/ The Meaning of the Blues/ These Foolish Things/ Try a Little Tenderness/ Aura Lee/ Tea For Two/ I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face; 67:35. redpianorecords.com

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Sonar with David Torn: Vortex


Guitar whiz Henry Kaiser introduced fellow plectrist David Torn to Sonar, a Swiss quartet with Stephan Thelen and Bernhard Wagner on guitars, electric bassist Christian Kuntner and drummer Manuel Pasquinelli, thinking that they would all make some fantastic music together. Vortex, recorded over three days in Switzerland, proves him spot on with his idea. With loops within loops and rhythms within rhythms, this mass of guitar noise and muscular drumming is a load of big electric fun. More about atmosphere and feeling than heroic soloing or pyrotechnic displays of rapid-fire unisons, the rock-oriented fusion of Vortex succeeds rather nicely at imparting a sense of purposeful unity as the ensemble explores and elaborates on the minimalist compositions. Stephan Thelen is the main composer, working with Torn on Monolith and Swiss composer Don Li on the combustible Part 44. Highlights include the shifting grooves of Wave and Particles,  the super-charged title track which features more dynamic movement than the other pieces, and the peaceably angular Monolith, which Torn describes as floating along, “like a cross between Miles Davis and Jon Hassell.” Closing the show is the odd-metered Lookface!, a group improvisation laced with Hendrix-isms and staggered beats, ending with a startlingly quiet and meditative passage that fades slowly back into silence. With Torn’s grit sprinkled over Sonar’s sparkling textures, the results seem to have made everyone happy. Well worth a listen.
RareNoise RNR087; Stephan Thelen, Bernhard Wagner (g) Christian Kuntner (el b) Manuel Pasquinelli (d) with David Torn (el g, live-looping, manipulation); Maur, Switzerland, February 15-17, 2017; Part 44/ Red Shift/ Waves and Particles/ Monolith/ Vortex/ Lookface!; 56:14. www.rarenoiserecords.com

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Martial Art: Saga


Take some ECM-styled atmospheric coolness, add some revved-up electric guitar, set it all to a potent beat, and you’ll get an idea of what Swiss trumpeter Martial In-Albon is up to with his Martial Art quintet on their debut release, Saga. In-Albon’s vulnerable sounding trumpet is the main solo voice. His sound is well-served by the supportive rhythm section of guitarist Philipp Saner, keyboardist Eliyah Reichen, bassist Bidu Rüegsegger, and drummer Nici Struchen. In-Albon has worked with pianist Nik Baertsch and a variety of big band projects in Switzerland. He’s influenced by a broad spectrum of musical disciplines, dominated by jazz/rock fusion, electronic music and Baertsch’s avant-groove sound. It’s no surprise that Saga is full of contrasts, beginning with the title track, which opens the disc. The music is gentle and ambient at first until a tempo asserts itself as the main melody kicks in. A wild electric guitar takes over, with bass and drums booming and crashing. In-Albon’s trumpet solo keeps the pace and intensity way up before slowing things down for a thoughtful solo. The music gradually increases in volume and tempo, with an abrupt halt as punctuation. Saga covers a lot of ground in just over eight minutes. Next up is the urgent Recovery which combines an insistent beat, distorted guitar, and funky organ licks. Ron in Rain, which follows, is hushed, the way the world sounds in a light rain. Even guitarist Saner is somewhat restrained on this one, though his solo has a gleaming electric edge. White Lies falls in between those two poles. It’s mellow at first, built on a simple ostinato that grows more heated after the first few minutes, driven by Struchen’s crisp drumming. A raging guitar solo and In-Albon’s strangled trumpet bring the piece to a rolling boil. The band seems to run out of steam for the finale, the rather somnolent The Cicada's Song. Instead of leaving you wanting more, the track almost makes you question the rest of the CD. Luckily, on rehearing the other five tunes, my enthusiasm remains intact, and I’m looking forward to the band’s next outing.
QFTF; Martial In-Albon (tp, flgh) Philipp Saner (g) Eliyah Reichen (kybds) Bidu Rüegsegger (b) Nici Struchen (d); Hünenberg, Switzerland, no dates specified; Saga/ A Fine Line/ Recovery/ Ron in Rain/ White Lies/ The Cicada's Song; 41:19. qftf.net

Friday, September 21, 2018

Silvan Schmid Quintet: At Gamut


The Silvan Schmid Quintet really shook things up when they took the stage At Gamut, a music series in Zürich. Trumpeter Schmid wrote all the tunes for this unusual lineup of his horn with alto saxophone, cello, tuba, and drums. Beginning with clear and simple melodies, he and his band develop them in increasingly complex styles, frequently raising quite a ruckus in the process. Abrupt starts and stops, quick shifts of tempo, constantly evolving blends of instrumental colors, and continual movement between the foreground and background keep the listener on his metaphorical toes. As abstract and severe as Schmid’s music can be, the key thing is that there’s plenty of beauty revealed in these compositions as they unfold. At times, there’s so much happening at once, I could swear I was hearing more than a quintet playing. That’s partly due to the broad bottom of the band’s sound established by Lucas Wirz’s dark tuba and Silvan Jeger’s skittering cello. Then there’s the often appropriately busy drums and cymbals of Vincent Glanzmann. Schmid, with a brassy and penetrating sound centered in the trumpet’s middle register, and the excitable alto saxophonist Tapiwa Svosve make a responsive and nimble team in the front line. Svosve’s commanding solo on Spartitur I is just one of the album’s high points. Also worthy of praise is Schmid’s vocal-like introduction to Turn Into. The longest track on the disc is the finale, just shy of eleven minutes long. The quiet opening of In Bocca Al Lupo (a theatrical way of saying good luck) leads into a swirl of melodies and countermelodies. That quickly leads to a pastoral arco cello solo by Jeger cushioned by the organ-like blend of tuba, trumpet and alto sax which slowly builds in intensity and then ebbs into silence. It’s a lovely finishing touch on a provocative set of truly original compositions. Happily recommended.
hatOLOGY 751; Silvan Schmid (tp) Tapiwa Svosve (as) Silvan Jeger (clo) Lucas Wirz (tba) Vincent Glanzmann (d); Zürich, Switzerland, April 2016; Motten/ Spartitur II/ Ins Leere/ Turn Into/ Spartitur I/ In Bocca Al Lupo; 42:38. www.hathut.com

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Grant Green: Funk In France: From Paris To Antibes (1969-1970) & Slick! Live At Oil Can Harry’s


Guitarist Grant Green was a mainstay of the Blue Note label in its heyday, with around twenty albums as a leader. Historically overshadowed, perhaps, by the celebrated Wes Montgomery, Green’s pungent playing and jazz/funk orientation have proved influential with guitarists of all stripes. Resonance Records, in their quest to ferret out unknown but high quality performances, have come up with a bounty of Grant Green music with Funk In France: From Paris To Antibes (1969-1970), a two-CD set that also features a guest appearance by Barney Kessel, and Slick! Live At Oil Can Harry’s, taken from a 1975 club date in Vancouver, British Columbia. Sourced from the French radio archive, the Paris show in October 1969 takes up most of disc 1. Featured are tunes penned by James Brown, Sonny Rollins, Antonio Carlos Jobim, and Charles Trenet, plus an untitled blues. How’s that for an eclectic sequence! Green was recording exclusively on organ sessions that year. His bandmates in Paris, bassist Larry Ridley and drummer Don Lamond, were playing across Europe in late 1969 with Newport In Europe. On stages across Europe, the two were backing a rotating cast that included Barney Kessel, Red Norvo, and Stéphane Grappelli, when they played this show with Green. Their support here is impeccable. Green is playing really well, with a dazzling Insensatez and a limber excursion on Sonnymoon For Two. When fellow guitarist Kessel joins the trio, they elect to play I Wish You Love. It’s a beautifully subdued treatment of the song, which was composed by Charles Trenet, and introduced in 1942 in France. Transplanted to the US with English lyrics as the title track to a Keely Smith album in 1957, it’s a singularly appropriate song for Americans to play in Paris. With the last track on disc one, the first version of Green’s own Upshot, we skip forward about nine months to his appearances at the Antibes Jazz Festival. This time, Green is playing with his own quartet of Claude Bartee on tenor, Clarence Palmer on organ, and Billy Wilson on drums. In the looser confines of the Antibes stage, the band has a chance to stretch out. And they came ready to burn. The eighteen minutes of the July 18 take of Upshot zoom by in a flash. The second disc includes just three numbers. The quartet’s rendition of the soul hit Hurt So Bad, also from the July 18 show, is followed by two pieces from a performance on July 20. Upshot expands to nearly twenty minutes, and the finale, a deeply soulful version of Hi-Heel Sneakers, rocks the house for over twenty-seven minutes. Always happy to play for enthusiastic audiences, Green plays very energetically throughout. Resonance’s typically exhaustive 48-page booklet includes interviews, rare photos and some of original producer Andre Francis’ notes contemporaneous notes from the shows. The label talked to Green’s guitar-playing son Grant Green, Jr., and musicians Dr. Lonnie Smith, Clarence Palmer, and Eric Krasno. There are also liner notes by Michael Cuscuna and Pascal Rozat, plus an introduction by reissue producer Zev Feldman.

Move forward another five years to Vancouver, for a quintet gig Live At Oil Can Harry’s. The tapes come from Vancouver disc jockey Gary Barclay saved from his radio station job at the now-defunct CHQM-FM in Vancouver. We hear his voice at the beginning of the disc, introducing the set and reminding the crowd that they could hear it on the radio the following week. Green himself introduces the first tune by the quintet, a deep dive into Charlie Parker’s classic blues, Now’s The Time. Next up is another version of Jobim’s Insensatez, a piece that Green evidently enjoyed playing. Starting with a tender opening by an unaccompanied Green, the piece takes up nearly a half hour. The tasteful playing of Emmanuel Riggins on electric piano, Ronnie Ware on electric bass, Greg “Vibrations” Williams on drums, and Gerald Izzard on percussion gives Green plenty of textured support for his extended flights of fancy. A curious and lengthy medley ends the night. Starting with Stanley Clarke’s Vulcan Princess, this epic jam moves on to Skin Tight, a hit for the Ohio Players, Bobby Womack’s Woman’s Gotta Have It, and Stevie Wonder’s Boogie On Reggae Woman, before ending up with For the Love of Money, originally by the O’Jays. With bassist Ware leading the way, the music wades deeply into funk, with crowd-pleasing results. Green, who was without a record label in this period, is in fine form for this show. Once again, Resonance has put together a 48-page booklet, this time including an introductory essay by producer Zev Feldman, contemporaneous interviews that Barclay did with Green and electric pianist Emmanuel Riggins, the DJ’s reminiscence of the gig, conversations with Grant Green’s son Greg (also a guitarist), fellow guitarists Jacques Lesure and Perry Hughes, and an essay by A. Scott Galloway about Green and this performance. There are also a batch of photographs taken during the Green band’s sojourn in Vancouver. Maybe getting three hours of excellent “new” music on the market will raise Green’s profile to the high rank that he deserves. Both releases are highly recommended.
Paris/Antibes: Resonance HCD-2033; Grant Green (g) with [Paris] Larry Ridley (b) Don Lamond (d) Barney Kessel (g on *) & [Antibes] Claude Bartee (ts) Clarence Palmer (org) Billy Wilson (d); Disc 1 (56:39): Paris, France, October 16, 1969: I Don’t Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing (Open Up the Door I’ll Get It Myself)/ Oleo/ How Insensitive (Insensatez)/ Untitled Blues/ Sonnymoon For Two/ I Wish You Love*. Antibes, France, July 18 or 20, 1970: Upshot. Disc 2 (61:38): Hurt So Bad (July 18)/ Upshot (July 20)/ Hi-Heel Sneakers (July 20).
Oil Can Harry’s: Resonance HCD-2034; Grant Green (g) Emmanuel Riggins (el p) Ronnie Ware (b) Greg “Vibrations” Williams (d) Gerald Izzard (perc); Vancouver, BC, September 5, 1975; Now’s the Time/ How Insensitive (Insensatez)/ Medley (Vulcan Princess/ Skin Tight/ Woman’s Gotta Have It/ Boogie On Reggae Woman/ For the Love of Money); 67:05. www.resonancerecords.org

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Houston Person & Ron Carter: Remember Love


Frequent collaborators Houston Person & Ron Carter have learned a thing or two about music over the years, and on the stirring Remember Love, this stellar duo is ready and able to tell you all about it. Tenor saxophonist Houston and bassist Carter debuted as a duo with 1989's Something In Common for Muse, and followed that up with five more sessions over the decades. Obviously, it’s a situation that both men enjoy, and if the enthusiastic reception of their releases is any indication, plenty of listeners and critics have also found joy in their repeated encounters. Remember Love presents a typically well-selected group of songs, with standards including My One and Only Love (gorgeous) and The Way You Look Tonight (tender and romantic), Luiz Bonfá’s Gentle Rain, the Ellington/Strayhorn masterpiece Day Dream, and a pair of originals in Carter’s Blues for D.P. and Person’s Why Not. The only real surprise, and a welcome one, is the inclusion of You Are My Sunshine, a feature for an unaccompanied Carter. To close the show, Person goes it alone on the standard Without a Song, where he chooses not to improvise at all but just state the melody with his warm and reedy sound. That’s all he really needs. It’s easy to take such mastery for granted after Person and Carter have spent so many years in the spotlight, but that would be a grave mistake. You’d miss the immense pleasure of hearing great melodies performed by two truly gifted jazzmen. Recommended, without a doubt.
HighNote HCD 7315; Houston Person (ts) Ron Carter (b); Englewood Cliffs, NJ, March 27, 2018; Love Is Here to Stay/ My One and Only Love/ Why Not/ Day Dream/ Gentle Rain/ The Way You Look Tonight/ You Are My Sunshine/ Blues for D.P./ Easy to Remember/ Without a Song; 52:46. www.jazzdepot.com

Monday, September 10, 2018

Justin Brown: Nyeusi and Peter Erskine & the Dr. Um Band: On Call


Jazz-rock fusion never really went away after the first wave of Gary Burton, John McLaughlin, Return To Forever, and Weather Report. Two recent examples in the evolution of fusion are led by drummers, one just starting out and the other an old hand. The youngster is Justin Brown, who’s been making a name for himself in bands led by Ambrose Akinmusire, Thundercat, and Flying Lotus. His debut CD, Nyeusi (Swahili for ‘black’), is chock-a-block with funky rhythms, synthesizer keyboards, electric pianos, and Mark Shim’s wind controller. Except for a version of the obscure Tony Williams song Circa 45, which appeared on Ego (a 1971 album by his Lifetime group), and Burniss, a snippet of a bass solo by Burniss Travis, Brown wrote all of the pieces, which mostly feel like minimalist structures designed to provoke the funk, with his rapid-fire drumming at the core. The funkier the music, the better it sounds, and somewhat surprisingly, Brown’s music largely ignores developments in hip hop in favor of older R’n’B and fusion styles. That makes Nyeusi a bit of a throwback, but Brown and company lay down grooves that are so strong, I don’t think anyone will mind.

The veteran is Peter Erskine, an extremely versatile and well-regarded performer who was first heard on records in the early Seventies with the Stan Kenton orchestra. Perhaps best known for his stint in Weather Report from 1978 to 1982, he’s also played with a broad range of jazz stars, including Stan Getz, Michael Brecker, Kenny Wheeler, and John Abercrombie, to note just a few. On Call is his third disc with saxophonist Bob Sheppard and keyboardist John Beasley as the Dr. Um Band, starting with Dr. Um and The Lost Pages (2016). Electric bassist Benjamin Shepherd came aboard for the 2017 follow-up, Second Opinion. The studio disc of On Call was recorded as part of an engineering master class, with an audience of about a dozen recording engineers, so of course it sounds great. The tunes are all tributes to different musicians, leading off with Erskine’s For the Time Being, dedicated to Airto Moreira. From the start, it’s apparent that the fluent Shepherd and hard-grooving Erskine make a great combination, and their rhythmic connection will keep things interesting at all times. Saxophonist Sheppard penned a toast to Jerry Bergonzi, Might As Well Be, which is a straight-ahead burner that elicits strong solo work by Beasley on piano and Sheppard on tenor and a pleasingly understated drum solo. The main problem I have listening to this group are the grating and predictable sounds that Beasley coaxes from his keyboard setup. He does no favors to Erskine’s Uncle Don, dedicated to Don Grolnick, by soloing with a fairly cheesy synthesizer setting. Basic observation: the more he sticks to acoustic piano, the more I like it. The second disc was recorded while on tour in Italy. The band didn’t know that the house engineer was recording the show, so it was a pleasant surprise for them to hear how well it turned out. (Quick ecological aside: I wonder why Erskine decided to make this a two-disc set, since all of the music here could have fit on one CD.) Playing songs from their first two releases, the quartet settles into a tight groove on the bluesy opener, Hipnotherapy by Erskine. For once, Beasley’s organ fits in just fine. The melody and execution of Hawaii Bathing Suit make for a happy occasion, and Sheppard rises to it with a rollicking solo, goaded by Erskine’s chipper drum work. Once again, Beasley’s thin-sounding electric keyboard detracts from the overall effect. Henry Mancini’s Dreamsville is given a down-tempo treatment, with a bit of a bossa nova feel, which fits the tune nicely. Bob Sheppard is impressive in his lengthy solo. Beasley’s Eleven Eleven is about as funky as this crew gets, with bassist Shepherd and Erskine having some fun with the disco-oriented confection. Another Erskine composition, the straight-forward Northern Cross, concludes the set with a soulful saxophone solo and another display of the admirable tightness that Erskine and Shepherd bring to each and every performance. The drummer’s solo on this one is testament to his chops and taste. All in all, a fun project that would sound so much better to these ears if Beasley would stick to piano.
Justin Brown: Biophilia BREP0012; Mark Shim (wind controller) Fabian Almazan (Fender Rhodes & Wurlitzer el p, Mopho synth) Jason Lindner (Moog, Mopho, Prophet synths) Burniss Travis (b) Justin Brown (d, perc, Fender Rhodes el p);Brooklyn, NY, June 24-25, 2015 *& August 15, 2017; Jupiter’s Giant Red Spot/ Lesson 1: DANCE/ Lots For Nothin’/ Waiting (Dusk)/ Waiting For Aubade/ At Peace (Dawn)/Lesson 2: PLAY/ Entering Purgatory/ Replenish/ FYFO/ Circa 45/ Burniss/ Lindner’s in your body!; 40:35. www.biophiliarecords.com (What you get from the label by the way is a “double-sided, 20-panel origami-inspired medium, bursting with vibrant artwork and liner notes ... made entirely out of FSC-certified, robust paper, hand-folded and printed using plant-based inks.” No CD included; instead there’s “a unique code for the listener to digitally download the music in hers/his preferred format including CD-quality, uncompressed WAV files.”)
Peter Erskine: Fuzzy Music PEPCD025; Bob Sheppard (saxes) John Beasley (p, kybds) Benjamin Shepherd (el b) Peter Erskine (d); Disc 1 (studio), Fort Wayne, IN, June 2017. Disc 2 (live), Occhiobello, Italy, June, 2017; Disc 1 (44:46): For The Time Being/ Might As Well Be/ If So Then/ Uncle Don/ Silver Linings/ Two Paths. Disc 2 (34:29): Hipnotherapy/ Hawaii Bathing Suit/ Dreamsville/ Eleven Eleven/ Northern Cross. petererskine.com

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Chris Lightcap: Superette


Bassist Chris Lightcap and his pals in Superette (the band and the album title) are having a party, and everyone is invited. Two guitars plus bass and drums has always been a popular rock and roll format, but lately it’s been gaining currency in improvised music. Superette is Lightcap’s electric guitar venture, and he plays electric bass exclusively in this band, alongside Jonathan Goldberger and Curtis Hasselbring on guitars plus Dan Rieser on drums. (An aside: Hasselbring is best known as a trombonist, first appearing on record with the Either Orchestra and other Boston-area ensembles in the late Eighties. I’d appreciate it if someone could tell me the connection between trombone and guitar, a double that goes as far back as Eddie Durham with the Bennie Moten orchestra in 1929!) With special guests Nels Cline (of the Nels Cline 4 and Wilco) on guitar and John Medeski (of Medeski, Martin & Wood) on organ joining in on a few pieces, this is a gleefully genre-obliterating stew of rock, funk, blues, jazz, surf music, African pop and more. Six of the pieces are Lightcap compositions, and Hasselbring offers a pair of songs, Far Away Planet and Frozen Bread. To give a sense of where this band is coming from, there are also covers of three songs written by guitarists. Ace of Spades is by famed electric guitarist Link Wray, All Come to Meet Her is an elegant ballad from Skip Spence’s Oar, the 1969 cult album by the former member of Moby Grape, and Birds is from Neil Young’s classic 1970 release After The Gold Rush. Superette’s music pretty much ignores the typical rock structure of lead and rhythm guitar in favor of a robust group ethos. The groove and the ever-shifting texture of the instrumentation are what count. No one really stands out from the pack for long, even though there are plenty of opportunities. Superette is big loud fun from start to finish, and it’s cheerfully recommended.
Royal Potato Family no#; Jonathan Goldberger, Curtis Hasselbring (el g) Chris Lightcap (bass g) Dan Rieser (d) Nels Cline (el g on 3,5,7; lap steel g on 8) John Medeski (Hammond B3 org on 3,6,8; Wurlitzer org on 2); NYC, no dates specified; 1.Selector/ 2.She Walked In/ 3.Far Away Planet/ 4.While You Were Out/ 5.Djali/ 6. Calling On Cars/ 7.Ace of Spades/ 8.Light Trails/ 9.All Come to Meet Her/ 10.Frozen Bread/ 11.Birds; 55:38. www.chrislightcap.com

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Chris Cochrane & Stuart Popejoy: Geologic Time


In the mood for some minimalist psychedelic drones? Then Geologic Time by the guitar/bass duo of Chris Cochrane & Stuart Popejoy is just what the doctor ordered. This is certainly not your father’s psychedelia. Starting with their live improvisations, the pair applied all sorts of electronic post-production. Together, the noise quotient and the continually varied swell of Eemian hit the sweet spot of unfettered electronic improvisation, with the resulting sound somewhere between the roar of a jet engine and uncontrolled feedback. I’m hooked. While Tractored Out offers more of a give and take between Cochrane and Popejoy instead of the undifferentiated mass of Eemian, the effect is similarly unsettling. When Date Night With the Kids continually threatens to spiral out of control, the basic stuttering pulse underneath it all just manages to holds things together. The title track, at just over ten minutes, is the longest piece of the six tracks. This varied series of groans, shrieks, whoops and burbles lies atop a bed of dark, sludgy drones, creating a brutal and uncompromising soundscape. The relatively brief Aesthete’s Foot hinges on a back forth movement between two notes, shaped by variations in intensity and attack. What To Do closes the set with an urgent blast of sound that comes close to bursting apart before fading back into silence. Played loud, Geologic Time is a good way to clear out a party; listened to on headphones, it’ll give your head a real scrubbing. Either way, this is one release that won’t be ignored.
Infrequent Seams (digital release); Chris Cochrane (g) Stuart Popejoy (b); prob. Brooklyn, NY, no dates specified; Eemian/ Tractored Out/ Date Night With the Kids/ Geologic Time/ Aesthete's Foot/ What To Do; 36:24. infrequentseams.com


Friday, August 31, 2018

Andy Biskin: 16 Tons - Songs From The Alan Lomax Collection


Call me jaded, but it takes something really special to make me suspend my critical faculties for even a few minutes. Truth be told, after penning thousands of opinionated paragraphs over the years, I’ve learned that the way I listen to review material is qualitatively different from the purity of dialing right into the music that’s right in your face. Which brings us, happily, to clarinetist Andy Biskin and his new 16 Tons - Songs From The Alan Lomax Collection. Until the quintet launched into Sweet Betsy From Pike, I didn’t know that I’d been hungering for a collection of American folk songs performed by a unit of three trumpets, clarinet, and drums. Live and learn. As a new college graduate back in the Seventies, Biskin worked for the great song collector Lomax as a research assistant, a job that lasted two years. That’s the starting point of this project, and you can read all about it in Biskin’s informative liner essay. (It’s a little hard to read, set in small type in a three-panel booklet, but worth the effort.) Biskin defines his working method here as one of intercutting the songs with his own melodies and short improvisations by himself and the trio of trumpeters. There are also bits and pieces from the jazz tradition worked into the pieces, like the Monk riff that’s woven into the cheerful arrangement of Blue Tail Fly. These folk songs (and one folky original by Biskin) may seem like unlikely vehicles for improvisation, and Biskin notes that when he told people about his ideas for this material, he “got quizzical looks.” But canny arranger and conceptualist that he is, he gets everything to work much better than you might expect. Just about anyone who spends time with this disc will recognize at least a few of these songs. Many of them, after all, were learned and sung in elementary school, and that knowledge provides an internal hook for these renditions. The rest is up to Biskin and his focused group of collaborators. Drummer Rob Garcia acquits himself very well in this unconventional setup, playing with vigorous flair. From right to left in the stereo spectrum, the trumpet “choir” of Dave Smith, John Carlson, and Kenny Warren blends beautifully, a bright and supportive wall of brass that provides a contrast to Biskin’s woody clarinet and bass clarinet. 16 Tons is almost guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Happily recommended.
Andorfin Music ANDRF-007; John Carlson, Dave Smith, Kenny Warren (tp) Andy Biskin (cl, bcl) Rob Garcia (d); NYC, January 12, 2018; Sweet Betsy From Pike/ Grey Goose/ Blue Tail Fly/ Down in the Valley/ House Carpenter/ Go Fish/ Lily Munroe/ Tom Dooley/ Muskrat/ Knock John Booker/ Am I Born to Die?/ She’ll Be Comin’ Round the Mountain/ Sweet Betsy From Pike; 54:54. andybiskin.com


Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Ivo Perelman: The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 2


Three true originals, tenor saxophonist Ivo Perelman, violist Mat Maneri and drummer Whit Dickey have a meeting of hearts and minds on The Art Of The Improv Trio, Volume 2. This unit seems to find its niche in relatively calm, almost delicate miniature improvisations, though that’s not all they’re up to. They turn up the heat to full blast on Part 6, the shortest track at just one minute. Part 10 gets pretty wild as well, with a high-wire chase by tenor and viola. The perfectly paced Part 12 is especially fine, with some pungent exchanges between Maneri and Perelman. Dickey drives the music forward with his imperturbable and forthright style on drums. Equally notable are the bold, propulsive and astonishingly dense soundscape of Part 3 with its slowly rising tonal center, the playful results of the “chase me, I’ll chase you” strategy of Part 5, and the unusually tentative Part 9. Volume 2 is a typically provocative and successful Perelman session.
Leo CD LR 772; Ivo Perelman (ts) Mat Maneri (vla) Whit Dickey (d); Brooklyn, NY, August 2015; Parts 1-13; 50:11. www.leorecords.com