четверг, 24 апреля 2014 г.

Sound & Fury - Pulsacion (2013)

Sound & Fury - Pulsacion (Ektro, 2013)

Personnel:
Jorma Tapio: alto saxophone, bass clarinet, flute
Pepa Päivinen: soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, flute
Tane Kannisto: tenor saxophone, flute
Matti Riikonen: trumpet
Julius Heikkilä: guitar
Jimi Sumén: guitar
Sampo Lassila: bass
Ilmari Heikinheimo: drums
Composed By – Edward Vesala

Tracklisting:
01 - Lamgonella Lomboo
02 - I Tell You a Story
03 - Siamese Twins
04 - Pulsacion
05 - Nattuggla
06 - Punk
07 - Shadows

For a little more than a decade before his untimely death in 1999, legendary Finnish drummer Edward Vesala led a group called Sound & Fury, which released several albums on ECM records. Largely outside of international view, the band has continued on after his death, and now returns as invigorated as ever with Pulsacion, what appears to be their first album since Nordic Gallery in 1995. Still, Pulsacion remains somewhat of a hidden gem—Ektro Records, the label run by prolific Circle bassist Jussi Lehtisalo, is known more for metal and experimental rock releases than avant-garde ensemble jazz.

Sound & Fury still contains five members from the group’s heyday—hornsmen Jorma Tapio, Pepa Päivinen, Jouni Kannisto, Matti Riikonen and guitarist Jimi Sumén—all of whom have been present since 1989’s Ode to the Death of Jazz. Added to this core is an all new rhythm section and an additional guitar. Tellingly, it takes two percussionists to fill the void left by Vesala, both of whom do an admirable job infusing these tunes with the bursting passion Vesala seemed to bring to everything he did. With Pulsacion, the band turns to previously unreleased compositions, here expertly arranged by Vesala’s wife, Iro Haarla.

Opener “Lamgonella Lomboo” gives an idea of the bright, expansive sound of the group, which immediately calls to mind both the open spaces of Nan Madol and the more forceful, adventurous albums of the late 80s and early 90s. It all sounds like standard Vesala fare—complex arrangements of ghostly melodies that swirl over a seething swarm of drums—until halfway through, when the guitar is suddenly thrust to the forefront. Long, reverb-soaked lines cut across the rest of the band, almost perpendicular to those used to sketch out the song’s framework. It calls to mind Sumén’s angular work on “Somnamblues” from Invisible Storm, but also feels like a daring step forward.

I Tell You A Story” has some utterly gorgeous sax tones, the whole thing a shimmering, laid-back tropical cruise that feels so familiar. I’m still trying to fully place it—sometimes jaunty, Very Very Circus-era Henry Threadgill comes to mind.

Later on, the title track takes a turn toward the intense. It teeters on an unsteady rhythmic base, with complex, jabbing horn motifs that build to the disorienting, shrieking cacophony of your life flashing before your eyes. But if “Pulsacion” represents the confusion of dying, “Nattuggla” is like finally ascending to that higher place: a dream of flutes and ringing guitar arpeggios that’s settled around a beautiful bass-driven centerpiece.

If there’s anything here that’s less than convincing, it’s portions of the brief “Punk”, which veer a little too close Zorn-style big band parody. The track has an energy that can’t be faulted, however, and it rushes into closing track “Shadows”, a much more satisfying piece that meanders through a loosely-knit counterpoint of horns and guitar noise.

It’s heartening to see Vesala’s long-time bandmates keeping his music alive. I’d like to think Pulsacion wouldn’t sound any different if it still was Vesala behind the kit. It’s certainly a welcome addition to Vesala’s canon, and an impressive accomplishment for a group that still lives and breathes these compositions.

A great late-year surprise.[Free Jazz Blog]

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четверг, 10 апреля 2014 г.

Chris Speed - Really Ok (2014)

Chris Speed - Really Ok (Skirl Records, 2014)

Personnel:
Chris Speed: tenor saxophone
Chris Tordini: bass
Dave King: drums

Tracklisting:
01 - Really OK
02 - All of Me
03 - Takedown
04 - Nimble Demons
05 - Argento
06 - End of the Day
07 - Delaware
08 - Round Trip
09 - Tamborino
10 - 26-2

Saxophonist/clarinetist Chris Speed's two decades descent into New York City's underground jazz realm has proven a multi-pronged mission. Not only has myriad groups he's either led or assumed membership in been vital in levitating the local scene but the multireedist has also helped document the innovators roiling the landscape via his Skirl Records imprint. Speed had a banner year in 2013: a collaboration with intrepid electro-acoustic trio Lama (Lamaçal, Clean Feed); another set of intertwining wizardry from Endangered Blood (Work Your Magic, Skirl); rock/jazz hybrid of Jim Black's AlasNoAxis (Antiheroes, Winter & Winter) and post-jazz sprawl of The Claudia Quintet (September, Cuneiform). Now, in these early days of 2014, it turns out Speed has wasted nary a minute in both further highlighting his craft and imprint, equipped with not just a single release, but a pair of disparate recordings. Speed's modus operandi has long been underscored by his effortless penchant for mellifluous phraseology mated to tasteful improvisational moxie and on Really OK, he runs that gamut - and then some. Leading a trio of bassist Chris Tordini (Tyshawn Sorey; Greg Osby) and drummer Dave King (The Bad Plus), the results are decidedly striking in their spirited, full-toned and deep resonance. Speed's immaculate rapport with his oft collaborator King has already been rooted on efforts by the drummer's Trucking Company ensemble and in duo settings (a particular raucous set last year at Barbès comes to mind) and Really OK - comprised of seven original Speed compositions, a standard (All of Me), plus tunes by John Coltrane (26-2) and Ornette Coleman (Round Trip) - illustrates that vernacular between the veteran twosome and the neophyte Tordini. The requisite term often attached to Speed's aesthetic has been described as warm but in assuming the leader role and ignited by Tordini and King s rambunctious oomph and the bass-drums clinic they dish out, the tenor saxophonist is anything but. Excluding the subtle rendition of All of Me , the trio boasts intense rhythmic fire on cuts such as the Tordini-King-dominated Nimble Demons , soul-searching epic Delaware and breathless energy music of Argento. [The New York City Jazz Record]

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вторник, 11 февраля 2014 г.

Joshua Abrams - Represencing (2012)

Joshua Abrams - Represencing (Eremite Records, 2012)

Personnel:
Joshua Abrams: guimbri, organ, ms20, harps, bells, harmonium, mpc
Lisa Alvarado: gong & harmonium (4, 7, 8)
Mikel Avery: drums (4, 5)
David Boykin: tenor saxophone (4, 6)
Emmett Kelly: electric & acoustic guitars (4, 7)
Nicole Mitchell: flutes (6)
Jeff Parker: electric guitar (8)
Tomeka Reid: cello (5)
Jason Stein: bass clarinet (6)
Chad Taylor: gong & drums (1, 2)
Michael Zerang: tambourine (8)

Tracklisting:
1. San Anto
2. Represencing
3. Moon Hunger
4. Sound Talisman
5. Sungazer
6. The Ba
7. Enter Mountain Amulet
8. Cloud Walking
9. Hidden Track

Chicago jazz/improvised music bassist Joshua Abrams brings out the guimbri, a three-stringed North African ceremonial lute, when playing with his Natural Information Society. Live, the instrument’s hypnotic groove provides the supple, willowy base from which the other instrumentalists leap. On his new album, Represencing, Abrams assembles some of the city’s best improvisers to work over the guimbri, but that droning beauty always lies at the core.

While plenty of modern musicians denounce the use of iPods and other on-the-go listening, the necessity of sitting at a record player and focusing for ritual trance music is kind of undeniable  – not to mention that this is a vinyl-only release. That immediacy and communal relationship is one that carries over from the recording process itself, as Abrams invited the improvisers into his home studio.

Dropping the needle onto the first side of the LP initiates the upward spiral, Chad Taylor’s gong and hand drums interlocking with Abrams’ guimbri, bubbling springs of David Boykin’s tenor saxophone purling outwards. The night falls as the first half closes on “Moon Hunger”, Boykin’s lightly breathed flourishes, the drama of rippling organ and Abrams’ lithe, repeating tone-clusters falling away into the night.

The second half of the disc re-starts the process, gongs and harmonium drone bringing the listener back into the meditative state. The sun rises again as well, Tomeka Reid’s cello curling around and flitting in eclipsing glory. It all closes with the entrancing “Cloud Walking”, with Michael Zerang somehow making even the tambourine an interesting addition to a track.

The core, though, remains the guimbri, Abrams’ playing on songs like “Enter Mountain Amulet” hitching, stuttering, and flowing at all the right moments to get you swaying like a mystic. Represencing is the kind of album that effaces the reality that you know exists outside of it, returning you to a time and place in which this sort of ritual trance focuses life. [Consequense of Sound]

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вторник, 4 февраля 2014 г.

Brom - Nebula (2014)

Brom - Nebula (Fancy Music, 2014)

Personnel:
Anton Ponomarev: alto sax
Dmitry Lapshin
: bass guitar
Oksana Grigorieva: drums

Tracklisting:
1. Nebula (00:51)
2. Rags (09:41)
3. Sugar Lion (04:22)   
4. Skid (05:28)
5. Bedsheet (05:46)   
6. Torch (06:13)
7. I Often Say "Thank You" (05:24)
8. Liquid Cold (04:54)

БРОМ / [Br]om plays its own mixture of genres, combining avant-jazz with punk. It is strong and structured music, they call it "no jazz" or "jazz punk". "Brom is still staying as Eye Nebula not fitting to any genre attributes" (с) Dmitry Ukhov.

Guys play with lots of different bands, prefer playing with noise bands also, garage and avant-garde bands. They really made lots of live collaborations and the first time I saw them it was a ground breaking show with Moscow stoner-doom idols The Moon Mistress. Brom shows are electric or acoustic line up, no matter how they bring you some structure feeling that you want to keep in mind, and this is a bad idea if you try to check the next band in the evening after catching that structure. Bon apetite, bro. This is second official album and the last one with electric line up, now guys play only in acoustics: Konstantin Sukhan (trumpet), Anton Ponomarev (baritone sax) and Dmitry Lapshin (double bass). Listen to their new line up here on "Concert for Friends" live album: http://brom.bandcamp.com/album/concert-for-friends . The album with this new line up is already recorded and ready to be released in the nearest time this year!

Brom on FB: https://facebook.com/brom.band Nebula also released on Fancy Music Records [FANCY035] with alternative cover art. "Brom" undoubtedly is perfectly co-ordinated, every musician feels each other. All this allow musicians to develop such an unusual style to which no one goes and appeals in Russia. The style built on a clear riff structure with floating melodic line with sound strokes (sometimes separated, sometimes even unrelated) drifting apart or forming distinct structural composition. Alexey Kruglov.


Recorded March 2012 Moscow.
Engeneered by Ilia Eskevitch.
Mixed and mastered by Nikita Onisenko.
Cover design by Dmitry Lapshin.

Brom
- it is my best friends! It is unique russian jazz band! Don't miss it!!!


You can download it for free from here: http://brom.bandcamp.com/album/nebula

среда, 29 января 2014 г.

Lark - Lark (2013)

Lark - Lark (Skirl, 2013)

Personnel:
Ralph Alessi: trumpet
Ingrid Laubrock: tenor saxophone
Kris Davis: piano
Tom Rainey: drums

Tracklisting:
1. Thieves In A Pod (11:54)
2. Nit-Splitting (18:54)
3. Hypnotic Jerk (7:03)
4. Nobody's Human (10:03)
5. DDP 9963 (For Mat Maneri) (7:44)
6. Defensive Indifference (5:23)

L
Ingrid Laubrock

Ingrid, originally from Germany now a resident in Brooklyn via th UK, performed and recorded with: Anthony Braxton, Dave Douglas, Kenny Wheeler, Tim Berne, Mark Helias, Michael Formanek, Mary Halvorson, Tyshawn Sorey, Evan Parker, Steve Beresford, John Edwards, Veryan Weston, Luc Ex, Django Bates' Human Chain, Evan Parker, The Continuum Ensemble and others.As part of the F-ire Collective, she won the BBC Jazz Award for Innovation in 2004,was nominated for the BBC Jazz Award for 'Rising Star' in 2005 and won a Fellowship in Jazz Composition by the Arts Foundation in 2006. She won the 2009 SWR German Radio Jazz Prize the and was one of the final nominees for the 2009 Westfalen Jazz Preis.

A
Ralph Alessi

Jazz Times magazine says Alessi has "drop-dead trumpet chops" and calls his music "as clean and airy and sophisticated and disciplined as post-modern progressive jazz gets." Ralph Alessi was born in San Francisco,CA, the son of classical trumpeter Joe Alessi and opera singer Maria Leone. But after taking degrees in jazz trumpet and bass-he studied under the legendary Charlie Haden at CalArts-he lit out for New York, where he swiftly became an ubiquitous presence on the downtown scene. He's been a frequent collaborator with such notable musicians as Steve Coleman, Jason Moran, Don Byron, Ravi Coltrane, Fred Hersch, Uri Caine and Dafnis Prieto. Alessi has recorded nine albums of original compositions which draw on everything from post-bop to neo classical music. In 2013, Ralph will release "Baida", a quartet CD on ECM records and "Only Many", a duo recording with pianist Fred Hersch on CAMJazz. As an educator, Ralph is the director of the School for Improvisational Music as well as an adjunct professor at New York University and New England Conservatory.

R
Tom Rainey

Tom Rainey was born in Pasadena, California in 1957. Since moving to New York in 1979 he has performed and or recorded with the following artists:John Abercrombie, Mose Allison, Julian Arguelles, Ray Anderson, Tim Berne, Jane Ira Bloom, Nels Cline, Ted Curson, Mark Ducret, Mark Feldman, Michael Formanek, Drew Gress, Mark Helias, Fred Hersch, Andy Laster, Ingrid Laubrock, Joe Lovano, Tony Malaby, Albert Mangelsdorff, Carmen McRae, Mike Nock, Simon Nabatov, New and Used, Anita O'Day, Andrea Parkins, Herb Robertson, Angelica Sanchez, Louis Sclavis, Brad Shepik, Tom Varner, Ken Werner, Denny Zeitlin

K
Kris Davis

Pianist-composer Kris Davis has blossomed as one of the singular talents on the New York jazz scene, a deeply thoughtful, resolutely individual artist who offers "uncommon creative adventure," according to JazzTimes. The Vancouver-born, Brooklyn-residing Davis was dubbed one of the music's top up-and-comers in a 2012 New York Times article titled "New Pilots at the Keyboard," with the newspaper saying: "Over the past couple years in New York, one method for deciding where to hear jazz on a given night has been to track down the pianist Kris Davis." Reviewing one of the series of striking albums Davis has released over the past half-decade, the Chicago Sun-Times lauded the "sense of kaleidoscopic possibilities" in her playing and compositions. [Squidco]

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понедельник, 16 декабря 2013 г.

Omaha Diner - Omaha Diner (2013)

Omaha Diner - Omaha Diner (Royal Artist Group, 2013)
 
Personnel:
Steven Bernstein: trumpet, slide trumpet
Skerik: saxophone
Charlie Hunter: 7-string guitar, tres-doble
Bobby Previte: drums

Tracklisting:
01 - Locked Out of Heaven
02 - Thrift Shop
03 - Single Ladies
04 - The Reflex
05 - Wishing Well
06 - Lose Yourself
07 - Another One Bites the Dust
08 - War
09 - Big Girls Don't Cry
10 - Love Train


Sitting in a diner in Omaha, Nebraska in 1954, Todd Storz noticed that a teen-age waitress selected the same song on the jukebox over and over. At that moment, Top 40 radio was born, joining the TV dinner, the Reuben sandwich, the bobby pin, the ski lift, and (some claim) fuzzy dice on the list of famous and infamous inventions from the city that sits atop the Strategic Air Command.

Now comes the latest invention, OMAHA DINER - four storied musicians attempting to re-define a format that forever perverted the way we experience music. You may love Top 40 (doubtful), you may hate it (probable), you may not care about it at all (liar), but you cannot escape it.

Top 40 as you've never heard it before - OMAHA DINER.

*** OMAHA DINER's Ironclad Guarantee: all songs have touched, however briefly, #1
on the Top 40 pop chart.
OMAHA DINER BIOGRAPHY
OMAHA DINER is many things: the world's definitive virtuoso of the seven-string guitar, the pioneer of saxophonics, a recipient of the 2012 Guggenheim Fellowship for composition, and a Grammy nominee. Omaha Diner is at home in all situations in and beyond the world of music - not only scoring one of the films of legendary director Robert Altman, but performing in another one as well.

In its 125 years of experience the Diner has worked in some capacity with an unlikely and astonishing array of artists: Aretha Franklin, Sting, John Mayer, Levon Helm, John Adams, Roswell Rudd, Linda Ronstadt, Pearl Jam, Elton John, My Morning Jacket, Courtney Love, The San Francisco Ballet, Sam Rivers, Marianne Faithfull, The Moscow Circus, Roger Waters, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, Michael Tilson-Thomas, R.E.M., Johnny Copeland, Bonnie Raitt, Lukas Foss, The Meters, Ween, D'Angelo, Les Claypool, Alvin Ailey, Digable Planets, Sonny Sharrock, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Tom Waits.

Omaha Diner has toured every continent with the (possible) exception of Antarctica, playing rock arenas, iconic Jazz clubs, Carnegie Hall, and hardscrabble Kentucky roadhouses. The Diner turns up in other places as well - author of the liner notes to Miles Davis' 'In Concert' record, actor on Saturday Night Live, dancer, sous-chef, teacher. [Fast Atmosphere]

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пятница, 8 ноября 2013 г.

Black Motor - Yöstä Aamun Kynnykselle (2013)

Black Motor - Yöstä Aamun Kynnykselle (Lumpeela Julkaisut, 2013)

Personnel:
Sami Sippola - tenor saxophone
Ville Rauhala - double bass
Simo Laihonen - drums
 
Tracklisting:
01 - Hymni
02 - Alla Parran Autaan
03 - Kaksi Huilua
04 - Aamun Kynnykselle
05 - Kelle Kuuluu Sydämein
06 - Myrsky-Kalle
07 - Pieni Kysymys
08 - Illalla Valkea Kyyhky

Even though the members of Black Motor come from the coastal town of Pori, the rural municipality of Kangasala and the small inland city of Jyvaskyla, the roots of the trio lie deep in the soil of the city of Tampere. Saxophonist Sami Sippola, bassist Ville Rauhala and drummer Simo Laihonen could undoubtedly have congregated elsewhere as well, but the easy-going, brotherly and open rock and jazz community of Tampere provided the perfect breeding ground. After taking their individual tentative steps in the scene, a new band became an inevitability.

In January 2005, after making their mark and gathering many lifetimes’ worth of experience with various line-ups both transient and permanent, the threesome felt that the time was right to set up something new, something they all could call their own. The framework would come from the soulful and rootsy free jazz of Albert Ayler and John Coltrane, but the attitude and method was snatched from punk rock. After playing the first show under the moniker of Black Motor in May 2005, momentum started to gather and it took less than two years before two recordings were out. Released in 2007, Black Motor and On Duty document a diamond in the rough: The ambitious group was nothing if not bursting with potential and bravado.

More albums and appearances both as a trio and with exciting guests followed, and media started to take note – first locally, then globally. As a 2009 concert at the Tampere Jazz Happening was reviewed by All About Jazz, special attention was directed to the backseat: ”Laihonen inserted a Milford Graves and Hamid Drake-like polyrhythmic display underneath the two-horn frontline.” At this point Black Motor had four albums out. Both Club El Toro and Vaarat vastukset had been released in 2008, and word was spreading like wildfire. Pushed along by well-received gigs where Sippola, Rauhala, and Laihonen were joined on stage by top improvisers such as guitar master Jukka Orma and woodwindsman Jorma Tapio, the hard-working jazz trio was breaking out of its mould as a cult band.

Gigs abroad began appearing in the calendar, and a milestone was reached as a particularly riveting show was released as Black Motor’s fifth album. Never Out of Fashion – Live in Amsterdam came out in 2010 paving the way for a breakthrough. As the jazz scene in Finland then was dominated by recycled hard bop and somewhat stale soul jazz, Black Motor’s free and raunchy outlook was a welcome breath of fresh air. The gutsy band that was once dubbed “grunge-like in persona, music and name” by All About Jazz had become Finland’s most talked about improvising team.

The point of no return arrived in 2011 with the release of Hoojaa. Whereas all Black Motor’s previous discs had mainly documented the driven band as it interacts on stage, the sixth album had more focus. Built exclusively on Kusti Vuorinen’s compositions, this was Black Motor distilled and forged into something timeless. No wonder that Hoojaa was shortlisted for the annual Jazz-Emma (i.e. the Finnish equivalent of the Jazz Grammy). Keeping true to the arduous approach, next year’s yield was another two albums: Jumehniemi a meandering trio effort, Rubidium a more concentrated set featuring celebrated trumpeter Verneri Pohjola. At this point, favourable reviews were par for the course both in Finland’s biggest daily newspapers Helsingin Sanomat and Aamulehti as well as leading Finnish rock magazine Soundi.

And the juggernaut rolled on. Come summer 2012, as the list of featured live guests had already grown to include pianist/harpist Iro Haarla, guitarist Raoul Bjorkenheim, and reedsman Jone Takamaki, Black Motor upped the ante by announcing that legendary saxophonist Peter Brotzmann would join them on stage at their home arena, Club Telakka in Tampere. ”Black Motor sound refreshingly hard and gruff”, commended Brotzmann in a later interview with Soundi magazine. Before 2012 came to an end the band also found time to perform with pianist/composer Samuli Mikkonen and lauded saxophonists Juhani Aaltonen and Mikko Innanen. The triumphant year was wrapped up with a landmark appearance at the London Jazz Festival.

“Finland is ripe with new, important and exciting sounds, including Black Motor’s volcanic mojo”, noted Down Beat when reviewing the threesome at the Tampere Jazz Happening in November 2012. To take matters even further, Sami Sippola, Ville Rauhala and Simo Laihonen will showcase a new approach with meditative ballad album Yosta aamun kynnykselle, released in October 2013. [Nordic Notes]


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