Wadada Leo Smith (trumpet)
Angelica Sanchez (piano)
Twine Forest (Clean Feed; 2013)
Wadada Leo Smith (trumpet)
Tumo Orchestra
Occupy The World (Tum Records; 2013)
Intimacy and intricacy are the best ways to describe two recent collaborations from Wadada Leo Smith this year. The first, with Tumo Orchestra and then in a duo session with pianist Anglecia Sanchez.
Occupy The World is another epic orchestral work with lots of improvisation and intense mood setting movements. Inspired by the global Occupy movement from the past few years, this session is not as enveloping as last years Ten Freedom Summers but it is just as broad in scope.
"Queen Hatshepsut" inspired by the Egyptian queen of the same name, is a piece flows up and down with rough chords from both Smith, the string section and Kantonen's fierce and sublime piano performance. The title track has various stages of deep reflection, as in the middle sections filled with atmospherics and free float trumpet lines.
In a similar inspirational voyage, Smith explores more intimacy with Angelica Sanchez on Twine Forest. The two have worked together for years, Sanchez is part of Smith's Golden Quartet and Organic group. Surprising that this is their first outing as a duo. Either way, it's bright, personal and highly captivating.
"Retinal Sand" sees Sanchez experimenting with the insides of the piano strings and Smith swirling with haunting accuracy. In addition to explosive outburst that blend seamlessly with the rolling and very punctuated notes from Sanchez. "In The Falls Of" while being improvised shapes itself into a lovely almost romantic ballad. The notes are soft with a melody and sparseness that stretches the piece and the imagination making for a devotional experience.
Two excellent sessions featuring similar deep, inspiring thoughts but with very clear distinction and execution. Wadada Leo Smith makes clear that with Occupy The World and Twine Forest, he is one of the most creative and prolific composers among his elder statesman colleagues on the scene today.
Mary Halvorson (guitar)
Illusionary Sea (Firehouse 12 Records; 2013)
Jonathan Finlayson (trumpet)
Ches Smith (drums)
John Hebert (bass)
Jon Irabagon (alto sax)
Ingrid Laubrock (tenor sax)
Jacob Garchik (trombone)
With Illusionary Sea, Mary Halvorson has taken another leap forward in both her compositions and leadership. This expansive septet rich combines the versatile structure of the New York scene to date. Halvorson's jazz and rock aesthetics blend seamlessly into the tradition and always exploding free forms of her bandmates--with wondrous results.
At times the combination raised eerie images of the Count Basie's Band led by Sonny Sharrock. Halvorson gives her friends/band mates all the freedom they need to mold her compositions. This is present on the fun and vivid "Four Pages Of Robots." A rousing mixture of jagged tempos, scattered percussion and later, blues elements. These are juxtaposed against Halvorson's investigative chords that splice there way into the piece when you least expect it. Superb.
While complex themes are always a trademark of Halvorson's work, "Nairam" is something different in the Halvorson cannon. It's contains all the usual twists and turns in the structure. But this piece is more lyrical and compassionate. It's a composition that could easily have words applied to it and still remain emotionally resonant. Garchik and Finlayson raise above on this number but Halvorson's direction and steady chords are what draw you to the undercurrent of the song. A highly effective piece.
There's so much within Illusionary Sea to explore that we could write about every track. But its really important for you the listener to absorb this on your own. It's one of the best Mary Halvorson records to date. That includes her work with her own bands as well as with other various groups. With Illusionary Sea, Mary Halvorson has shown another enthusiastic step beyond the critical praise (she richly deserved) into one of the most important leaders and musicians in the current working scene today. Highly Recommended. And one of JazzWrap's albums of the year.
Mostly Other People Do The Killing (quartet)
Red Hot (Hot Cup Records; 2013)
Jon Iragbagon (sax)
Kevin Shea (drums)
Peter Evans (trumpet)
Moppa Elliott (bass)
David Taylor (trombone, bass)
Rob Stabinsky (piano)
Brandon Seabrook (banjo, electronics)
Nice way to begin and end the year--with new albums by MOPDTK. At the beginning of the year I was talking about their 80s influenced Slippery Rock! This time around, they will frustrate their detractors even further with Red Hot--a bizarre and wonderful experimentation with New Orleans and Kansas City style jazz. Sound is traditional. The vision is way beyond.
The quartet is expanded to a sextet which provides a lot more opportunities for creativity and extended solo work. "Zelienople," is a raucous 30s anthem filled with some aggressive performances by Shea, Evans and the horn section. This is juxtaposed by the fun filled lines from Seabrook on banjo Stabinsky rollicking piano. Great stuff.
Melding the avant garde into this kind of venture seem dangerous. But it works extremely well on "Red Hot" and "King Of Prussia." Both vicious number for different reasons. "Red Hot" features a bluesy vamp melody wrapped by electronic one tone static. A difficult an strange occurrence at first but then you realize the inventiveness. "King Of Prussia" is a ballad filled everything lovely and distracting. Irabagon's playing is bold and very enveloping.
Remember that drunken new years eve party. Actually maybe you don't. Well "Orange Is The New Town" probably was playing in morning hours during your waking dream state. Beautifully executed with some slow emotional notes by Stabinsky and closing with a large dose of echoing chaos.
Everything lets loose on the finale "Bird In Hand." A rapturous number that will have thinking of a joyous night at the Cotton Club. The entire ensemble features throughout. It's fun, uplifting and a great way to close out a very adventurous record.
With Red Hot, MOPDTK have done another twisted and victorious job with building on tradition while making you rethink it as well. Excellent way to close out the year.
Luis Lopes (guitar) Luis Lopes (guitar)
Live in Madison (Ayler Records; 2013) Noise Solo (lpz Records; 2013)
Stefan Gonzalez (drums)
Aaron Gonzalez (bass)
Rodrigo Amado (sax)
This year we get treated with two distinct and very inspiring documents from guitarist, Luis Lopes.
Live in Madison features material from Lopes' Humanization Quartet and their two studio albums (Electricity and Humanization 4tet). The live dates as usual brings out more from an already improvisational group of musicians. But this time you can really feel the urgency in the music. In addition the attention to direct and fun in which the musicians would exude throughout the night.
One of the tracks from the original studio albums, "Big Love" has raw and fierce quality in this live setting. Amado and S. Gonzalez riff and explode with notes flying all over the place. Drawing counter to the subdue and quietly quick chords both Lopes and A. Gonzalez are illuminating in the background. While all improvised, they come together in a beautiful crash sound that steadies itself nicely in the closing minutes.
"Dehumanization Blues" has become the bedrock piece of their live performances. And here at the Madison show it's no different. Amado's long staccato notes in the beginning announce the forcefulness of the piece. This plays out well with each demonstration on grand scale how enormous this piece can get. I imagine this could almost be a twenty minute piece on its own. With varying improvised moment of its own.
Look for a new construction of sound, Luis Lopes tends to deliver every time. The intensity of the mid-section of "Dehumanization Blues" is a perfect jumping off point for Luis Lopes second release this year a completely solo project, Noise Solo.
Noise Solo is an experiment in the directions and deconstructions of sound, genre and perception. The vinyl only release is intriguing at its heart. And reflective upon conclusion. While based on the idea of noise, the album keeps a serene calm throughout the evening.
The opening movement is like a broken smoke detector being thrown down a well. There's static. There's chord changes. There's passages that are portraits in rock extreme and finally there's the element of adventure. In a similar notation that you have no idea what will come next, Luis Lopes delivers the unconventional solo album filled with found sounds and passage in progress.
But in the end--Noise Solo is something for the listener to determine on their own. It's an idea but also a free expression which will have a different effect on each listener. Not for the faint and heart. But rewarding for those who take the ride.
With Live In Madison and Noise Solo, Luis Lopes has demonstrated two aspects of his arsenal that I've always enjoyed. The sense of creative musical thought and excellent collaboration. Two exciting new records well worth your investment. Get out there and pick them up.