Friday, July 12, 2013

Listening Booth: half year round-up, Jazz, pt.2

Well, my plan went belly up, so I will have to finish this at a later date. Among the remaining releases I have jotted down notes for (from approxomately January to late June 2013) are Tylor Ho Bynum Book of Three: Continuum 2012, Jonathan Finlayson Moment & the Message, Rich Halley 4 Crossing the Passes, and Mike Pride Birthing Days, plus a few pop/rock/rap releases. Part two of this will therefore consists of exactly one album, but I'll add some tentative grades for a couple of other releases from the "in" pile, too:

  • Gerald Cleaver's Black Host: Life in the Sugar Mines (Northern Spy) – Late 60s chant-like spiritual jazz, shredding guitars, deep grooves and soaring saxophone cries crash together with splashes of electronics for spice. Half of the eight tracks here stretch beyond the 10 minute mark, the best of which move through free form outbursts, surging grooves, and quieter sections at varying intervals, the opening "Hoover" being a prime example. The lesser ones seem more bound to one motif or idea but end up treading water: "Gromek" keeps churning and churning, but moves very little in any direction. The band, drummer and main man Gerald Cleaver with Cooper-Moore on piano, Darius Jones on alto, Pascal Niggenkemper on double bass and Brandon Seabrook on electric guitar, stir up massive, raw and alluringly violent music at times – "Ayler Children", with its ascending sax and guitar lines over a rapid-fire rhythm, rocks, for lack of a better term. Though not without meditative moments, the ferociousness of this album is its most captivating quality. 7*
  • Chris Potter: The Sirens (ECM) – 7*
  • Ches Smith & These Arches: Hammered (Clean Feed) – 7*
  • Craig Taborn: Chants (ECM) – 6*
  • Trespass Trio + Joe McPhee: Human Encore (Clean Feed) – 6*
 * 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.

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.
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