Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Listening Booth: half year round-up, Jazz, pt.1

The next couple of days, I will be posting thoughts on some of the records I've heard these past 6 months, by and large 2013 releases, that I haven't reviewed for Musikkmagasinet or in any other capacity but have listening notes for. I'll try to round up most of these releases by the end of this week, when I leave for a largely internet free vacation by the sea side for a couple of weeks. Starting with a couple of post of jazz records and hopefully come Friday, finishing off with some notable relases of rock/pop/rap/other. Possibly even a top 10 or so list of "2013 faves so far". Some of these albums stretch back to the beginning of the year, some may have been mentioned in previous posts, and may even already appear on the (admittedly not very up-to-date) 2013 favorites page.

EDIT: for info about my published reviews from January to June 2013, see here and here.

  • Barry Altschul: The 3dom Factor (TUM Records) – Veteran drummer whips up 10 tunes of playful, loose and at times refreshingly humorous free spirited jazz in collaboration with the bustling sax of Jon Irabagon and the meaty bass of Joe Fonda. Melodies, always central here, spin out of purposefully tumbling yet resolute and pivotal rhythms as the musicians expertly straddle the rowdy and the buoyant. 8*
  • Darcy James Argue's Secret Society: Brooklyn Babylon (New Amsterdam Records) – Nothing if not ambitious, the second outing by the Darcy James Argue conducted jazz-rock-avant jazz-post-rock-folk big band is a musical story of sorts about a mythic Brooklyn, in part a collaboration with visual artist Danijel Zezelj. Ellington-esque in vision though not necessarily execution, the music is at times both interesting and even engrossing in its scope, mimicking the hustle-and-bustle of urban life through a variety of styles and techniques, the tunes decisively moving forward. But quite often the music is too rigid, like a cab stuck in the stop-start of rush hour traffic where you'd want it to be like the street wise kid nimbly working his way in and around a crowded street. To put it another way: the jazz doesn't rock enough nor the rock swing enough, and vice-versa. 6*
  • Terence Blanchard: Magnetic (Blue Note) – Rhythmically, this recalls both syncopated modern R&B – think D'Angelo's band in their pomp – and modern post-bop/post-fusion. Not unlike such similarly inclined Blue Note releases as the recent Robert Glasper projects, even if this leans heavier on jazz. Spearheaded by the husky tone of Blanchard's trumpet, the playing is tactful, almost restrained at times, which in particular suits the low key ballads neatly. Blanchard also graciously gives plenty of room for the rest of the band: Brice Winston shines on "Jacob's Ladder", for example, while good ol' bass master Ron Carter owns the sprightly "Don't Run", not to take anything away Blanchard and Ravi Coltrane's solos. A gorgeous sounding album, not all of this works: some of it is hampered by a rather schematic turn-taking of solos, and the insistence on building layers-upon-layers in tunes like the title cut, feels a bit heavy handed in the long run. 7*

 * The Perfect Sounds Listening Booth series is where I post jotted down thoughts and impressions of records. The writing of these notes is mostly done during listens, without too much consideration to composition and/or argumentation, and while the intention is that these notes will form the basis of possible future reviews, they should not be considered fully formed reviews in and of themselves. The grades are tentative and liable to change.

Monday, July 01, 2013

Listening Booth: reviewed albums w/ grades, 2nd quarter (April to June), 2013

  • Steve Coleman & Five Elements: Functional Arrhythmias (Pi Recordings) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasint/Klassekampen April 15., 2013: 5 out of 6)
  • Billy Martin's Wicked Knee: Heels Over Head (Amulet Records) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen April 15., 2013: 5 out of 6)
  • Atomic: There's a Hole In the Mountain (Jazzland Recordings) - 7 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen May 6., 2013: 5 out of 6)*
  • Chrome Hill: Country of Lost Borders (Bolage) - 6 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen May 6., 2013: 4,5 out of 6)*
  • Ceramic Dog: Your Turn (Northern Spy) - 8 (Reviewed for Klassekampen/Musikkmagasinet June 17., 2013: 5 out of 6)
  • Made to Break: Provoke (Clean Feed) - 7 (Reviewed for Klassekampen/Musikkmagasinet June 17., 2013: 5 out of 6)*
  • Eric Revis Trio: City of Asylum (Clean Feed) - 8 (Reviewed for Klassekampen/Musikkmagasinet June 24., 2013: 5,5 out of 6)*
 *Dodged a notch for the PS scale.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

The Yeezus conundrum


If the music has lyrics, they matter.

Some people do them better than others, some put more care and effort into them than others do, some words may seem more prominent or salient than others do. But the same goes for the music. Simply put: If there are words to the music, I'm not going to ignore them.

The balance between the music and the words is another matter. Rarely has a song won me over on the strength of its words alone, whereas the other way around is the norm, I would say, for most people.

A strong lyric – be it witty, thoughtful, wise, true, or simply a well put or cleverly written string of words – will most surely enhance a songs impact. Conversely, a weak lyric – ignorant, stupid, bigoted, or simply a weakly put together string of words – will likely stick out like a sore thumb, and possibly taint or ruin an otherwise decent song. If the songs bad to begin with, then hey... (Dumb lyrics is another matter. Dumb lyrics can work masterfully set to music, and the examples are too many to start listing here).

Then there is the question of voice, which is another matter. Randy Newman is the master of giving voice to people with, let's say, views people like me are less likely to sympathise with. Sometimes to spite them, other times (see e.g. "Rednecks"), they effectually highlight the silliness of either side of the isle.

I've not made up my mind regarding Yeezus yet, and the conversations around the Internet and, to a lesser degree, printed press have been hard to ignore. There are some things on the album that grate, and it's not really the music. With the above in mind, the next few spins of Yeezus should prove interesting.

Bonus reading: Man in the Mirror: the politics of Yeezus (added June 21st, 2013)

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Listening Booth: reviewed albums w/ grades, January to March, 2013

Haven't posted notes with any regularity of late, to put it mildly. I'm hoping to rectify that over the coming weeks. The below are albums and EPs that I've reviewed in 2013 up until this week for Musikkmagasinet in Klassekampen, coupled with their original published grades plus my "translated" grades for my 1-10 system.
  • Yo La Tengo: Fade (Matador) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Jan. 7., 2013: 5 out of 6)
  • Burial: Truant/Rough Sleeper EP (Hyperdub) - 7 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Jan. 14., 2013: 4,5 out of 6)
  • Charles Mingus: The Jazz Workshop Concerts 1964-65 (Mosaic) - 9 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Jan. 21. 2013: not graded)  
  • Mostly Other People Do the Killing: Slippery Rock (HotCup Records) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Jan. 28., 2013: 5 out of 6)
  • Parquet Courts: Light Up Gold (What's Your Rupture?) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Jan. 28., 2013: 5,5 out of 6)*
  • My Bloody Valentine: mbv (self-released) - 7 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Feb. 11., 2013: 5 out of 6)*
  • Foxygen: We Are the 21st Century Ambassodors of Peace & Magic - 6 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Feb. 11., 2013: 4,5 out of 6)*
  • Miles Davis Quintet: Live in Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol. 2 (Columbia) - 8 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasinet/Klassekampen, Feb. 25., 2013: not graded)
     
  • Kris Davis: Capricorn Climber (Clean Feed) - 7 (Reviewed for Musikkmagasint/Klassekampen, Mar. 18., 2013: 4,5 out of 6)
* Dodged a notch for the PS scale.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Treasure: Griot Galaxy "Androgyny" - live in 1984

Music history is filled with artists and recordings that remain rare or obscure to us for a myriad of reasons. Jazz arguably more so than other genres. Some may have been projects, one offs or long standing, that for whatever reasons never officially recorded (the Henry Threadgill Society Situation Dance Band is a famous example). Others may be bands and artists that may have recorded their music, but did so for small and independent labels that eventually (and perhaps inevitably) folded and that time forgot. Even in this day and age of crate digging, specialists re-issue labels and the like, not everything gets picked up, and as such many a recording has faded into obscurity.

Griot Galaxy belong to the latter category, 'though given the length of their existence and the extent of their touring, one might argue they somehow fit in the former as well. Formed in Detroit, Michigan, sometime around 1972 by saxophonist and poet Faruq Z. Bey, who sadly passed away last year, Griot Galaxy only recorded one proper album: the fabulously weird, free, sci-fi jazz-funk of Kins, released by Black & White Records in 1982.

Griot Galaxy consisted of Bey, saxophonist Anthony Holland, bassist Jaribu Shahid and drummer Tani Tabbal. Other musicians have also been part of the group, among them percussionist Panda O'Bryan, who appears on the live album Opus Krampus, recorded while the band was on tour in Europe in 1984, and notably saxophonist David McMurray, who played on both Kins and GG's other live recording, Live at the D.I.A.. Their music had elements of rambunctious free jazz and propulsive funk, perhaps reminiscent of some of Ornette Coleman's harmolodic bands, as well as a hint of The Art Ensemble of Chicago, not least in their expressive and eye catching imagery.

 GG disbanded in 1989 some time after Faruq Z. Bey had been seriously injured in a motorbike accident. From what I can find, Anthony Holland seems to have done little in terms of music since then. On the other hand, David McMurray have played with everyone from Was (Not Was), Bob Dylan, Iggy Pop and Khaled, while Tani Tabbal and Jaribu Shahid have remained more closely involved in jazz. The both appear on some of James Carter's early recordings, for example, and they have both played with David Murray at various times. In fact, I was lucky enough to see Shahid play with Murray's Black Saint Quartet at Molde Jazz Festival in 2008, though at the time I was not aware that the bassist I was seeing and hearing was the very same that had played on Kins.

This leads me to this amazing recent discovery on YouTube: a live video, no less, of Griot Galaxy playing a tune called "Androgeny", recorded in 1984 at St. Andrews Hall for the Metro Times Music Awards. The picture is good, and the sound is surprisingly good, too. On this evidence, they must have been some live band in their day. (From left: Anthony Holland, David McMurray, Faruq Z. Bey, Tani Tabbal and Jaribu Shahid).


 

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Lawrence D. "Butch" Morris Feb. 10 1947 - Ja. 29 2013

I received the sad news late last night that cornetist, arranger and "conductionist" Lawrence D. "Butch" Morris passed away only 65 years old, succumbing to cancer which he was diagnosed with last year. A fiercely original musician, he had worked closely with saxophonists Frank Lowe during the 70s, and David Murray for much of the 80s and early 90s some of it along with Butch's brother, Wilber, on bass.

"Butch" Morris developed a way for large ensembles to play improvised music using what he called conducted improvisation, or conduction for short. The resulting music straddled and blurred the lines between avant garde jazz and new music. The 1985 album Current Trends in Racism in Modern America was the first recorded example of Morris' conduction.

Ben Ratliff has written a fine obituary for "Butch" Morris in the New York Times.

Friday, January 11, 2013

The 2012 Jazz Critics' Poll


The now Rhapsody hosted Jazz Critics' Poll results for 2012 were announced yesterday. My ballot can be found here (scroll down. More comments regarding my fave jazz albums of the year here, posted on these pages just before Christmas). Album of the year was won, not surprisingly, by Vijay Iyer Trio's offering Accelerando, while reissue of the year went to the Charles Mingus box set The Jazz Workshop Concerts 1964-65 on Mosaic.

I'll echo Tom Hull's comments regarding these reissues, 'though. I voted for the Mingus set, but were lucky to get a copy in the first place. Regular albums, even if you don't get copies from the record companies or their PR agents, are usually cheap enough or accessible via streaming services, meaning you'll be able to check out a whole lot of albums if you have the time and/or inclination to do so. Box sets, especially of the limited edition sets in the mold of the lovely Mosaic sets, are a different issue. I would in normal circumstances not be receiving one from Mosaic, as I'm not on their mailing list. And these sets are usually too expensive to buy. In this instance, I had to skip the Coleman Hawkins set, also on Mosaic, and hence I couldn't vote for it, even if I'm almost certain the music on there would more than deserved a place on my ballot too. I don't know how many voters got or bought both box sets, I'm guessing not too many, so it seems to me the reissue list is probably less reflective of the critical consensus than the regular album list.

Still, the main list in particular makes for an interesting read. My biggest disappointment is that my number two album of 2012, Grass Roots (AUM Fidelity), didn't make the top 50.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

More Pre- and post-poll catch-ups

Only made notes of any substance for two of these, but I'm throwing the full results of the past few weeks listening sessions up nevertheless.
  • METZ: METZ (Sub Pop) - Abrasive but also punchy and energetic, their screechy riffs propelled by some impressive drumming, with a touch of rock'n'roll boogie to their charge. As a whole, the album lacks something in terms of dynamism and range – why not give the bassist some, for example. Still, despite discernible influences – or at least "sound-a-likes" – such as Touch & Go groups like the Jesus Lizard, METZ don't sound like much else these days. At least for me, they are providing some much missed edgy, sharp and precise aggression as sound. 7
  • Kathleen Edwards: Voyageur (MapleMusic Recordings/Zoë Records) - Edwards' sweet, breathy voice provide wistfulness to the gently soaring and/or shuffling Americana of the mid-tempo tunes, but melancholy drags down the slower ones. I much prefer the former, but they are sadly in the minority here. ("Empty Threat", "Mint") 6
  • Hugo Carvalhais Trio 2: Particula (Clean Feed) - 7
  • Future: Pluto (Epic) - 7
  • John Olav Nilsen & Gjengen: Den eneste veien ut (EMI) - 7
  • Eivind Opsvik: Overseas IV (Loyal Label) - 7
  • Resonance Ensemble: What Country Is This (Not Two) - 7
  • Saint Etienne: Words and Music by Saint Etienne (Heavenly) - 8
  • Serengeti: C.A.R. (Anticon) - 8
  • Serengeti: Kenny Dennis EP (Anticon) - 7
  • Solange: True EP (Terrible Records) - 6
  • THEESatisfaction: awE naturalE (Sub Pop) - 7
  • David Virelles: Continuum (Pi Recordings) - 7
  • White Lung: Sorry (Deranged) - 7

Friday, December 21, 2012

Favorite jazz of 2012

I handed Francis Davis my ballot for the 7th annual Jazz Critics Poll a few weeks ago, and since then several publications and writers have offered their best-of-the-year's, top 10s and so forth. I had initially considered not posting mine until after the poll results had been announced, but after going over several other top 10's/faves/etc., I had second thoughts. Some of the below (not many) already look like safe bets to place high on the poll, based on the lists I've seen. Others have (sadly) not featured as prominently elsewhere:

New albums:

  • Steve Lehman Trio: Dialect Fluorescent (Pi Recordings) - Lehman looked back to some of his (post-) bop heroes, and fused their legacy with his own futuristic ideas of jazz for Dialect Fluorescent. Rhythmically complex yet groovy and propulsive, with Lehman himself weaving in and around his compatriots, Matt Brewer and Damion Reid, sometimes lightly and quietly, at other times in impressive and exhilaration leaps and hurdles. Bop for the 21st century. (Reviewed for Klassekampen, Dec. 24th, 2012)
  • Grass Roots (Sean Conley, Alex Harding, Darius Jones & Chad Taylor): Grass Roots (AUM Fidelity) - Rough blues and syrupy, acoustic funk grooves combined with soulful avant-garde. The dual attack of Jones' alto sax and Harding's baritone sax over or in conjuncture with Conley and Taylor's rock solid base, make for some of the most boisterous, hearty and compelling jazz of the year. (Reviewed for Klassekampen, Nov. 19th, 2012)
  • Vijay Iyer Trio: Accelerando (ACT) - Rhythms were central to Accelerando as well, and by a trio which is growing ever more assured in its interplay. Iyer has long had a percussive bend to his playing (listen to the heavy bass notes he slams down on the bassist-less Fieldwork recordings, for example), yet some of his most recent efforts have leaned towards a more melodic and lyrical side, notably on last year's solo album. Here, these approaches are combined to great effect, be it through covers - the tricky Henry Threadgill number "Little Pocket Demons" and a rewarding version of Michael Jackson's "Human Nature" - as well as in invigorating originals.
  • Ben Allison, Michael Blake & Rudy Royston: Union Square (Abeat Records) - After a few records of rock tinged modern jazz, Allison returned with a slightly more traditional trio record full of gently grooving (that bass riff on "No Other Side" is the sound equivalent of a boat being rocked by waves) yet becomingly edgy jazz.
  • Mike Reed's People, Places & Things: Clean On the Corner (482 Music) - Reed's efforts to channel forgotten Chicago post-war jazz into our time has perhaps never been as successful as on this year's Clean On the Corner. Rollicking, hard hitting, yet also melodic, mellow and bluesy.
  • Charles Gayle Trio: Streets (Northern Spy) - 2012 saw Gayle return to the sax, bass and drum format that helped make his name in avant-garde circles in the late 80s and early 90s. While not quite the doggedly headlong venture of old, the sparser tunes on Streets, with their herky-jerky rhythms provided by seasoned bassist Larry Roland and drummer Michael TA Thompson, showcase Gayle in a wittier mood than usual, while maintaining his gruff and spiritual edge (longer notes here).
  • Devin Gray, Dave Ballou, Ellery Eskelin & Maichael Formanek: Dirigo Rataplan (Skirl) - The playful improvisation and skittish rhythms on this album come at you like spontaneous and excitable burst of sound, intricate yet it never feels hectic nor crowded.
  • William Parker Orchestra with special guest Kidd Jordan: Essence of Ellington (Centering) - A big band full of avant-garde luminaries as well as a host of younger talents channel Ellington, sometimes in quotes, at other times by "feel", through Parker's vision of a modern big band. With Parker at the helm, no stranger to larger ensembles, you know there will be some rollicking music coming at you. 
  • Jasmine Lovell-Smith's Towering Poppies: Fortune Songs (Paintbox Records) - A gorgeous collection of subtle, loose knit, sweet with just a pinch of sour, lyricism. Nothing is rushed, here, and it's all the more rewarding for it
  • FLY: Year of the Snake (ECM) - The third album from saxophonist Mark Turner, drummer Jeff Ballard and bassist Larry Grenadier, and also their best. All three quick of mind and swift of hand, the trio whip up some bouncy yet forceful tunes that at times are more than a little reminiscent of early 80's Air.
  • Rich Halley 4: Back From Beyond (Pine Eagle Records)
  • Henry Threadgill Zooid: Tomorrow Snny/The Revelry, Spp (Pi Recordings)
  • Jason Robinson: Tiresian Symmetry (Cuniform)
  • Mary Halvorson Quintet: Bending Bridges (Firehouse 12)
  • Eric Revis 11:11 (Eric Revis, Jason Moran, Ken Vandermark & Nasheet Waits): Parallax (Clean Feed)
  • Darius Jones Quartet: Book of Mæ'bul (Another Kind of Sunrise) (AUM Fidelity)
  • Hugo Carvalhais: Particula (Clean Feed)
  • David Virelles: Continuum (Pi Recordings)
  • Ravi Coltrane: Spirit Fiction (Blue Note)
  • Tim Berne: Snakeoil (ECM)
  • Branford Marsalis Quartet: Four MF's Playin' Tunes (Marsalis Music)
  • Jim Black Trio: Somatic (Winter & Winter)
  • Wadada Leo Smith: Ten Freedom Summers (Cuneifrom Records)
  • The Bad Plus: Made Possible (Entertainment One Music)
  • Neneh Cherry & The Thing: The Cherry Thing (Smalltown Supersound)
  • Elliott Sharp: Aggregat (Clean Feed)
  • Hairy Bones: Snakelust (Clean Feed)
  • Henry Cole & The Afrobeat Collective: Roots Befroe Branches (self released)
  • Matt Wilson's Arts & Crafts: An Attitude for Gratitude (Palmetto Records)
  • Pixel: Reminder (Cuneiform)
EDIT: These deserve a mention, too: The Thing & Barry Guy: Metal (NoBusiness), Eivind Opsvik: Overseas IV (Loyal Label), Resonance Ensemble: What Country Is This (Not Two) 


(William Hooker Quintet's Channels of Consciousness (No Business) sounds very promising, but arrived to late to be considered for the list).

Archive/reissues:
  • Charles Mingus: The Workshop Concerts 1964-64 (Mosaic) 
  • William Parker: Centering: Unreleased Early Recordings (NoBusiness) 
  • Jimmy Lyons & Sunny Murray Trio: Jump Up (Hat Ology)
  • Cecil Taylor: The Complete Nat Hentoff Sessions (Ais)
  • Juma Sultan's Aboriginal Music Society: Whispers From the Archive (1970-78, Porter)
(Never got around to Coleman Hawkins Mosaic set, couldn't afford it, but I'm sure it would be in contention. EDIT: I also missed the Wilbur Ware Super Bass album, which sees the release of a "lost" 1969, and great, session, and what wold have been only Ware's second album as a leader).

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Dagsavisen's (Norw.) Critics Poll

Missed the announcement of the results of the Norwegian Critics Poll last week. The list was topped by Frank Ocean's channel Orange. No surprises there. My ballot was as follows:



Albums:
  1. Steve Lehman Trio: Dialect Flourescent (Pi Recordings)
  2. Todd Snider: Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables (Aimless)
  3. Loudon Wainwrigh IIIt: Older Than My Old Man Now (2nd Story Sound)
  4. Grass Roots (Sean Conley, Alex Harding, Darius Jones & Chad Taylor): Grass Roots (AUM Fidelity)
  5. The Mountain Goats: Transcendental Youth (Merge)
  6. Tom Zé: Tropicália Lixo Lógico (Passrinho)
  7. Vijay Iyer Trio: Accelerando (ACT)
  8. Miguel: Kaleidoscope Dream (RCA)
  9. Carolyn Mark: The Queen of Vancouver Island (Mint)
  10. Ab-Soul: Control System (ToP Dawg Entertainment)
Songs:
  1. Todd Snider: "New York Banker" (Aimless)
  2. Miguel: "Adorn" (RCA)
  3. Frank Ocean: "Pyramids" (Def Jam)
  4. Japandroids: "Adrenaline Nightshift" (Polyvinyl Record Co.)
  5. Usher: "Climax" (RCA)
  6. Sweden: "Hey C'Mon" (Vestkyst)
  7. Taylor Swift: "State Of Grace" (Big Machine)
  8. Kacey Musgraves: "Merry Go 'Round" (Mercury)
  9. Allo Darlin': "Tallulah" (Slumberland)
  10. Pussy Riot: "Putin Lights Up The Fires" (selvutgitt/internett)
Comments: voting for jazz records in this poll is a futile exercise, so I left out all bar three: the ones that were just too damn good to omit. As for the rest, well, only Miguel and Loudon Wainwright III out of my top 10 made the final top 40, 'though I could conceivably see myself voting for three or four of the others on any other day (Ocean, Kendrick Lamar, Saint Etienne and Cloud Nothings). Make of that what you want. 

Additional comment: Tame Impala. The key word is "tame".

Friday, December 07, 2012

2012 pre-poll record round-up (Listening-booth extra)

I'm throwing these notes and grades out there ahead of the poll deadlines.
  • Grass Roots (Sean Conly, Alex Harding, Darius Jones & Chad Taylor): Grass Roots (AUM Fidelity) - [Reviewed in Klassekampen, Nov. 19th, 2012: 5,5 stars out of 6] 8
  • Titus Andronicus: Local Business (XL Recordings) - [Reviewed for Klassekampen Oct. 22nd, 2012: 4,5 stars out of 6] 7
  • Ceremony: Zoo (Matador) - If there is one thing I've learned over the years of following punk and hard core, it's that "hard core" hard core fans tend to be an annoyingly retrograde bunch. The smart HC/punk bands know this, too, just ask Ian McKaye or Mike Watt. So when the latest Ceremony, formely of hard core powerhouse Bridge Nine, received fairly mixed reception seemingly on the grounds that they had abandoned their roots, I shrugged. Me, I find that their new garage leaning, slightly off-kilter, stop-start punk approach coupled with a newfound penchant for writing, y'know, hooks haven't softened their message one bit, but rather given their music focus and purpose. 7
  • Ravi Coltrane: Spirit Fiction (Blue Note) - Ask me not why it took me so long to get to this, although I must admit to not having been fully convinced by Ravi Coltrane's previous efforts. But the band here – Ravi Coltrane on saxophones, Luis Perdomo on piano, Drew Gress on bass – E.J. Strickland on drums – serves up some free-as-in loose, mostly flitting and airy tunes, some of them very short, with their interweaving improvised melodic lines that make for a very compelling and rewarding listen. About as soothing as modern jazz can get, without disappearing into the background, 'though "Check Out Time" also provides some oopmh. 7
  •  Gavlyn: From the Art (Broken Complex) - Tough, sassy, quick witted, articulate (you bet that counts) and with an assured flow that blows most of her male collegues out of the water. The backdrop heavily sampled and funky, like a loving homage to 90's era Stones Throw ("What I Do", "Staring Problem", "Why Don't You Do Right") 7
  • Jasmine Lovell-Smith's Towering Poppies: Fortune Songs (Paintbox Records) - Quintet led by New Zealand born, New York based soprano saxophonist Jasmine Lovell-Smith, currently studying music at Wesleyan University. I've seen chamber jazz applied, but to me this is less arranged, yet still a  gorgeous collection of subtle, loose knit, sweet with just a pinch of sour, lyricism. Nothing is rushed, here, and it's all the more rewarding for it. 8
  • Sonic Avenues: Televison Youth (Dirtnap) - These Montreal, QS, pop-punks lovingly recreate the 70's British forefathers, even down to the accent, with a splash of 60's garage rock. Hardly revolutionary, but at times quite catchy ("Givin' Up On You" "Television Youth"). 7
  • Cities Aviv: Black Pleasure (Mishka) - Barely audible half rap, half spoken words over stark synths. Interesting sounds, but few themes, no hooks, no stories of interest. Not much of anything here, really. Apart from sounds. 6
  • Clinic: Free Reign (Domino) - 6
  • Henry Cole & The Afrobeat Collective: Roots Before Branches (self-released) - 7
  • Donald Fagen: Sunken Condos (Reprise) - 7

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

R.I.P. Dave Brubeck

The iconic jazz pianist Dave Brubeck has passed away, aged 91. Far better obits than I can whip up on the fly are already available elsewhere on the web, for example on BBC here or even better, Ben Ratliff's obit for the NY Times. I will say this, though: Time Out and "Take Five" are monumental, but Brubeck had much more to offer than that.


Sunday, November 04, 2012

R.I.P. Ted Curson

News have been circulating on Twitter these last few hours that trumpeter Ted Curson has passed away at the age of 77, most citing a French website as a source. Sad news indeed. Curson is perhaps best know for his tenure with Charles Mingus, although he also played with such luminaries as Archie Shepp (Fire Music), Cecil Taylor and Andrew Hill, as well as recording a dozen or so records as a leader or co-leader.

Curson can be heard at the paek of his powers on "Folk Forms No. 1" from Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus (Candid, 1960), together with Mingus, Eric Dolphy and Dannie Richmond. Some band, that.


Saturday, November 03, 2012

Late fall jazz playlist

I've had a busy couple of weeks (writing for print media as well as some other, less exciting stuff), hence no Listening Booth nor much of anything else posted here lately. Still, I thought I'd put up a list of (new) jazz releases I've received (promos & DLs), streamed or bought, and have been listening to since the last LB, just to keep things alive over here. Although I have a few scrambled notes and tentative grades for a couple of these, I'll leave them out for now and rather return with more on these, as well as others, later. I will say this, though: several of these are good to really good, Grass Roots is ace. Things will hopefully pick up here soon. Maybe it's time to set a schedule and update on certain days of the week. We'll see.


  • Bad Plus: Made Possible (eOne)
  • Sean Conly, Alex Harding, Darius Jones, Chad Taylor: Grass Roots (AUM Fidelity)
  • Charles Gayle Trio: Look Up (live 1994, ESP Disk)
  • Jon Irabagon, Mick Barr & Mike Pride: I Don't Hear Nothin' But the Blues Vol 2: Appalachian Haze (Irabbagast Records)
  • Jon Irabagon's Outright!: Unhinged (Irabbagast Records)
  • Kalle Kalima & K-18: Out to Lynch (TUM Records)
  • Brad Mehldau Trio: Where Do You Start (Nonesuch)
  • William Parker: Centering: Unreleased Early Recordings 1977-1987 (NoBussiness)
  • William Parker Orchestra: Essences of Ellington (Centering/AUM Fidelity)
  • Resonance Ensemble: What Country Is This? (NotTwo)
  • Jason Robinson: Tiresian Symmetry (Cuniform Recordings)
  • Wadada Leo Smith & Louis Moholo-Moholo: Ancestors (TUM Records)
Other recent releases of note (in no particular order): Taylor Swift Red, Titus Andronicus Local Business (reviewed for Klassekampen, Oct. 22, 2012), Kendrick Lamar good kid, m.A.A.d. city, Tom Zé Tropicália Lixa Lógico, The Coup Sorry to Bother You, Serengeti C.A.R., Iris Dement Sing the Delta, Dwight Yokam 3 Pears.

Friday, October 19, 2012

R.I.P. David S. Ware

I woke up today to the sad news of David S. Ware's passing. As you may know, Ware had a kidney transplant a few years back, but recovered and made something of a triumphant comeback with a handful of records, including a solo recording, and a return to the quartet format that used to be his primary vehicle throughout his career.

I will try to write a more thorough post about his recordings and career later. For now, I'll copy and paste what I wrote on Twitter about "Aquarian Sound", one of Ware's best known compositions, earlier today:

"David S. Ware's "Aquarian Sound" is, to my mind, one of the most powerful pieces of music, never mind jazz, of the past 20 odd years. William Parker plays the bass riff as if plucking at your heart strings, Mark Edwards (on the album version) enters next, carefully hitting the ride cymbals as if for comfort. A few bars in, Matthew Shipp joins laying down four plaintive chords and sounds crestfallen. Next, Ware enters, doubling Parker's bass lines on his tenor and then... just... soars (pic and sound slightly out of sync. on the video):"


o):
David S Ware - Aquarian sound by MrDrive

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Henry Threadgill's Society Situation Dance Band

Henry Threadgill's Society Situation Dance Band never recorded commercially, it was a band made for the purpose of live performance, but short clips from a TV recording of a performance in Hamburg, Germany, in 1988 have been available on YouTube for some time. Recently, though, a user called redobstacle has uploaded the full recording in three parts. This is a treasure, not only because it seems to be the only way to hear (and see) what the Society Sitation Dance Band was about, but also because it's truly great music.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Oliver Lake at 70

Saxophonist, flutist, poet and composer Oliver Lake turns 70 today. The great man has dabbled in several strains of jazz, from ferocious honking and hard swinging Loft Jazz, to the bluesy and funk-tinged to more lyrical improvisational music. In addition to various band constellations under his own name, he played in the Human Arts Ensemble, with Charles Bobo Shaw, among others. Then there's the seminal World Saxophone Quartet, which he co-founded with Hamiet Bluiett, Julius Hemphill and David Murray, and in recent years, Trio 3, together with fellow elder statesmen Reggie Workman and Andrew Cyrille. As well as countless recordings as a sideman (whether or not he's a full member of the exciting Tarbaby yet, I do not know). To celebrate his birthday, here are a couple of highlights from his career as chosen by yours truly. It's by no means an exhaustive list, rather it's an attempt to look at the breadth of his work:

  • Human Arts Ensemble featuring C. Bobo Shaw: Whispers of Dharma (Universal Justice Records, 1972. Re-released on Arista Freedom in 1977) - HAE was a reeds, brass and percussion ensemble, and this was their first recording: two lengthy pieces on one LP side each, the first of which is all whispers and bells and gongs. The second side, however, is a whirlwind of drums and percussion, horns, whistles and shouts (literally): Very free, chaotic even, but given patience, you'll notice how the instruments slip in and out from the foreground, each yielding space for the others to say their piece. The Art Ensemble of Chicago would plow similar terrain on a couple of their records around the same time, but combine that with more rhythmic propulsion. The music here has seemingly no desire to move forward, for better or worse, but I can't but admire its relentlessness.
  • Oliver Lake: Holding Together (Black Saint, 1976) - Lake has recorded for Black Saint and its sister label Soul Note several times over the years, but this is arguable the pick of the bunch. Together with Pheeroan akLaff (credited here as Paul Maddox, his name prior to his conversion to Islam) on drums, Michael Gregory Jackson on guitars, percussion and flute, and the bass playing wizard Fred Hopkins, Lake balances intense, propulsive Loft Jazz with calmer moments, especially on the albums second half. Jackson plays counter lines to those of Lake, as well as piercing stabs here and there, while the always impressive akLaff and Hopkins makes certain the music moves forward nimbly and assertively. Highlight: "Hasan", a four plus minute piece which opens with ferocious speed and energy, and then settles into a into a damn hooky groove set by Hopkins just before the two minute mark. The opening track, "Trailway Shake / Sad Lo-uis" is pretty good too:
  • Oliver Lake & Jump Up: "Trickle Down Theory" (Gramavision, 1983) - In the mid-80s, Lake, like many of his contemporaries, tried his luck with a more funk oriented style of jazz. Well, it was hard funk really, period. Between 1982 and 1991, he released several albums on Gramavision, not all of them jazz funk, mind you. Plug it, which had contributions from Pheeroan akLaff and pianist Geri Allen, spawned this single, "Trickle Down Theory":

  • World Saxophone Quartet: Political Blues (Justin Time, 2006) - Perhaps not a typical example of WSQ's music, as on this record they added bass, drums, vocals and brass in order to vent their frustrations in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, but it remains a favorite. New Orleans funk, heavy, bluesy, energetic, soulful and groovy. Now, while there are videos from this album on YouTube, I'll compromise and post this excerpt from Night Music of just the original WSQ instead:

  • Trio 3: Time Being (Intakt, 2005) - Since around 2000, Lake has recorded with bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Adrew Cyrille, both legends in their own right, under the name of Trio 3. On their most recent albums, they've been joined by Geri Allen (At This Time and Celebrating Mary Lou Williams) and Irene Schweizer (Berne Concert), but the free spirited and loose music centered on the collectively solid interplay of the trio is perhaps best heard on Time Being from 2006. Below is a live video recorded by Paul Brown and michael Zimmerman:

Monday, August 27, 2012

Notification

A notification: Late summer/early autumn round-up should be posted in the coming week, including notes on William Parker's Essence of Ellington project, Grass Roots, Jon Lundblom & Big V Chord and more. Things have been busy since coming home from vacation, and last night my left hand took a serious beating as I foolishly tried to separate two cats fighting (one of them being mine, naturally, otherwise I would likely not have cared), so typing lengthy posts is more difficult than usual at the moment. 

Anyway, 'till then.

C

Monday, August 06, 2012

Perfect Sounds' Jazz faves of 2012, so far.

We've crossed the half way line to 2013 a while ago, but seeing as I'm midway through my summer vacation and only now have found the time to sit down at my laptop, this may be as a good a time as any to look back at some the jazz related releases I've enjoyed the most in 2012, so far. In roughly descending order:

  • Steve Lehman Trio: Dialect Flourescent (Pi Recordings) - Jagged and complex yet catchy, bouncy and propulsive, Lehman and his cohorts -- the impressive Matt Brewer on bass and hard hitting Damion Reid on drums -- look to some of their outward-seeking post-bop heroes for inspiration and fuses that legacy with Lehman's own brand of knotty avant-jazz, resulting in one of the most intriguing, exciting releases of the year, and one of the strongest in the ever impressive Pi catalog.
  • Vijay Iyer Trio: Accelerando (ACT) - Aided by his long-standing compatriots Stephan Crump and Marcus Gilmore, Vijay Iyer serves up some rhythmically astute and melodically solid originals mixed with carefully picked covers, the pick of the latter being Henry Threadgill's "Little Pocket Devils", a tune by a man who knows how to fuse funky rhythms with tricky improvisation to great effect. Exactly the type of music Iyer is aiming for, and hitting, here.
  • Mike Reed People, Places & Things: Clean on the Corner (482 Music) - Mike Reed's efforts to unearth Chicago's great hard-bop and avant-garde legacy through both doing covers and writing original material with that tradition in mind, continues on Clean on the Corner, which in turn may be his best effort yet. Saxmen Tim Haldeman and Gerg Ward both battling and joining forces up front, while Reed and bassist Jason Roebke push from the back. The result is that the fast ones are boisterous and exciting, the slow ones bluesy and, dare I say, lovely. Guest appearances by Craig Taborn and Josh Berman.
  • Charles Gayle Trio: Streets (Northern Spy) - Named after Gayle's alter ego, Streets the Clown, this latest effort sees him return to the sax, bass and drum format that helped make his name. Although Streets further proves Gayle's penchant for fiery music, it contains less of the rushing, headlong power of yesteryear. That's not necessarily a bad thing, because instead we get Monk-like rhythmic and melodic patterns, exemplified by bassists Larry Roland's percussive stop-start plucking and Michael TA Thompons jittery drumming. Streets proves the old man can still blow a horn, but also that there's place for a bit of humor in his version of fire music. (Longer post on this album can be accessed here.)
  • Devin Gray, Dave Ballou, Ellery Eskelin & Michael Formanek: Dirigo Rataplan (Skirl) - This band, with Devin Gray as it's leader, has been playing together for a few years already, and the opening track, "Quadraphonically", can be seen and heard in a live recording dating back to 2010 on YouTube. Not that the music here seems planned out: the playful improvisation and skittish rhythms come at you like spontaneous and excitable burst of sound, intricate yet it never feels hectic nor crowded.
  • Mary Halvorson Quintet: Bending Bridges (Firehouse 12)
  • Fly: Year of the Snake (ECM)
  • Darius jones Quartet: Book of MæBul (Another Kind of Sunrise) (AUM Fidelity) (Notes on this album has been posted previously here.)
  • Henry Threadgill Zooid: Tomorrow Sunny/The Revelry, Spp (Pi Recordings)
  • The Thing with Barry Guy: Metal! (NoBussiness)
There have also been interesting music by Elliott Sharp (Aggregat, Clean Feed), Wadada Leo Smith (Ten Freedom Summers, Cuniform), and Branford Marsalis Quartet (Four MFs Playin' Tunes, Marsalis Music), to name three. The second half of 2012 looks very promising too, with releases by William Parker's Essence of Ellington project and Grass Roots, a new band with Darius Jones, Alex Harding, Sean Conly and Chad Taylor, among the most mouth watering ones.
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