Jan 7 2012
Jazz New Releases: Week Ending Dec 06, 2011 (Pt. 1 of 2)
Tiny Review recs of new Jazz releases, featuring: Carlos Bica & Azul, The Neighborhood Trio, Sunna Gunnlaugs, Gansan, and Marty Ehrlich.
*****
The recs below were built off the skeleton of the recommendations I make as part of my weekly contribution to the Emusic New Arrivals article. I do the jazz recs for it. Emusic lets me copy it onto my blog 30 after it’s posted on their site. When I post on Bird is the Worm, I add album art, audio (when available), additional links, and if I’ve had the opportunity to give the album additional listens, modify my opinion a bit and tighten up the original language. So here it goes…
Let’s begin…
Carlos Bica & Azul – Things About
Double bassist and composer Carlos Bica has carved out a jazz niche for himself with his inventive style of avant-lyrical jazz fused with Portuguese folk music. With Frank Mobus on guitar and Jim Black on drums, this is yet one more fantastic release in a series of them. Their first album came fifteen years ago, a nice long stretch to develop an empathic bond for each others sound and ideas.
Things About is a pleasantly laid-back affair (for the most part), with Mobus’s inquisitive guitar giving an eerie heard but not seen in the shadows effect, the footsteps echoing through Black’s percussive accompaniment, as Bica prowls alongside both, close but just out of reach. On the Clean Feed Records label, which is often characterized by its artists love of dissonance; Bica has consistently applied a lighter touch to that aesthetic and has lately recorded albums drowned in tranquility. Highly Recommended. Jazz from the Porto, Portugal scene.
Available on Emusic.
The Neighborhood Trio – The Neighborhood Trio
Consisting of vibes, bass, and acoustic & steel guitars, The Neighborhood Trio isn’t creating traditional jazz. There is, however, a sort of throwback element to their sound, of summery mint juleps on back porches, echoes of Leon Redbone and quiet seaside lounges. An enchanting set of tunes for their debut album. Recommended.
Self-Produced. Jazz from the Minneapolis scene.
A free album track is available at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist.
Available on Emusic.
Sunna Gunnlaugs – Long Pair Bond
Sunna Gunnlaugs’ new piano trio album deftly meshes the Norwegian jazz quiet ambiance with the celebratory bounce of American jazz. An absolutely sublime album that should appeal to fans of ECM label musicians like Marcin Wasilewski as well as Keith Jarrett’s American Quartet. Highly recommended.
Personnel: Sunna Gunnlaugs (piano), Þorgrímur Jónsson (bass), and Scott McLemore (drums).
Self-Produced on her Sunny Sky Records label through a Kickstarter campaign. Jazz from the Icelandic scene.
NOTE: I have a lot more to say about this excellent album, but I’m unsure as to when my review will be published (it’ll hit a different site first and I don’t have access to their editorial calender). I’ll make a blog post when I get confirmation of the facts, but seriously, just go out and buy this beautiful album.
Free album track available at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist.
Available on Emusic.
Gansan – Elégie Berbère
Wow! Gansan is an ensemble formed to explore the marriage of the soprano sax and the Moroccan riban, a single-stringed instrument that is bowed when played, and the meshing of jazz and berber musics. Dynamic rhythms, long flowing string and sax lines, and a joyfulness that exceeds even its cerebral connection. This is just too cool. Highly recommended.
Personnel: Nicolas Dechêne (guitar), Luc Evens (double bass), Benoît Ruwet (drums), Ludovic Jeanmart (alto & soprano sax), Tamount Ifassen (Morocco), Foulane Bouhssine (ribeb, violon), and Ahmed Khaili (percussion).
Released on the Home Records label. It appears you can stream the entire album there.
Available on Emusic.
Marty Ehrlich’s Rites Quartet – Frog Leg Logic
Marty Ehrlich continues to prove himself as one of the most inventive composers on the scene. A top-notch reedman, Ehrlich has an impressive track record of exploring the melodic and harmonic possibilities of the particular theme he has for an album. Joined on this quartet date by cellist Hank Roberts, drummer Michael Sarin, and James Zollar on trumpet, Ehrlich gives alternating melodies of hard and soft edges within a jazz framework colored with an old folk music sound. Don’t know that this album will appeal to everybody, but Ehrlich should be on everyone’s short list of jazz musicians to explore. Released on the Clean Feed Records label, one of jazz’s stronger labels. Recommended.
Available on Emusic.
Part 2 will appear the day after tomorrow’s post (on Monday).
Here’s some language to protect emusic’s rights as the one to hire me originally to scour through the jazz new arrivals and write about the ones I like:
“New Arrivals Jazz Picks“, courtesy of eMusic.com, Inc.
© 2011 eMusic.com, Inc.
My thanks to emusic for the freelance writing gig, the opportunity to use it in this blog, and the editorial freedom to help spread the word about cool new jazz being recorded today.
Jan 9 2012
Jazz New Arrivals: Week Ending Dec 06, 2011 (Pt. 2 of 2)
Tiny Review recs of new Jazz releases, featuring: Kora Jazz Band, Ferit Odman, Roby Hall & Chick Lyall, Daniel Ogren, and Lama.
*****
The recs below were built off the skeleton of the recommendations I make as part of my weekly contribution to the Emusic New Arrivals article. I do the jazz recs for it. Emusic lets me copy it onto my blog 30 after it’s posted on their site. When I post on Bird is the Worm, I add album art, audio (when available), additional links, and if I’ve had the opportunity to give the album additional listens, modify my opinion a bit and tighten up the original language. So here it goes…
Let’s begin…
Kora Jazz Band – Kora Jazz Band:
The Kora Jazz Band began as a trio of kora, piano, and percussion (Djeli Moussa Diawara, Abdoulaye Diabate, and Moussa Sissokhe respectively). They mesh jazz swing with West African percussion and kora, yielding a cheerful set of tunes. A must for world jazz enthusiasts. It’s pretty hard not to tap the foot from first note to last. Guests who sit in with the trio play timbales, marimba, and steel pan, adding texture to an already deep sound. Must-listen.
The more I listen to this album, the more I enjoy it. My initial reactions were primarily on an emotional level, drinking in the joyfulness of the group’s exuberance, the brightness of their sound. But repeat listens have allowed me receive it in cerebral terms, and I find it just as engaging to my head and my heart. Highly recommend this.
Released on the Celluloid label.
Available on Emusic.
Ferit Odman – Autumn in New York:
Ferit Odman brings together an all-star lineup of seasoned pros (Terell Stafford, Peter Washington, Anthony Wonsey, and Vincent Herring) for a nice set of straight-ahead jazz. Ferit seems to have deftly found a way to develop his own signature sound on drums without drowning out his ensemble in the process; not an easy task to perform. His last album, the excellent Nommo, which featured Bryan Lynch on trumpet, seems to have slipped under the radar. Autumn in New York should rectify that oversight. Recommended.
Released on the Equinox Music & Entertainment label
Jazz from the Istanbul and NYC scenes.
Download a free album track at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist.
Available on Emusic.
Okay, I’m gonna mention two albums here that might have some date issues on the site (actual release date vs. new to emusic), but I really like them both and don’t want to go without passing on the recs. They’re both by the duo of Rob Hall & Chick Lyall.
The album Blithe Spirit is an actual new release whereas Rhyme or Reason dates back a couple years but just hit the site today. Rob Hall on sopranino, soprano, tenor saxophones and clarinet reveals power through delicacy, and Chick Lyall’s piano is the grounding force preventing the reeds from fluttering away. A pair of beautiful albums from a duo who play as if an extension of one another. Gorgeous and recommended.
Released on the FMR Records label. Jazz from the Scotland scene.
Available on Emusic.
Daniel Ogren – Laponia:
Released on the Hoob label, a small Swedish company that releases some very cool music that, in terms of jazz, is out on the fringes. On Daniel Ogren’s Laponia, the guitarist brings together a quintet of bass clarinet, piano, percussion, and bass for an enchanting indie-folk album couched in jazz compositions. Best comparison I can make is to label mates Klabbes Bank, who put out one of 2009’s best with Je Suis la Mer. Bass clarinet absolutely soars on some tracks. Some nice whimsical moments with plenty of bounce. I probably struggle more trying to describe albums on the Hoob Records label than any other. I’m at the point where I buy them on sight. You Cinematic Orchestra fans should probably scoop this one up; it’s right up your alley. I can already tell this is going to be in constant rotation on my stereo.
My above earlier comments regarding this release were correct… I am positively addicted to this beautiful album. This album should appeal to jazz, folk, and indie fans alike.
Jazz from the Stockholm scene.
A free album track is available at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist and label.
Available on Emusic.
Lama – Oneiros:
Let’s just call this avant-garde. A trio consisting of jazzers Susana Santos Silva on trumpet, Gonçalo Almeida on bass, and Greg Smith on drums, with heavy infusions of electronics, Lama has constructed an alluring set of dissonance and drive. Her excellent 2011 release Devil’s Dress already on her resume, Santos continues to develop her voice, and the interplay between all three despite challenging compositions speaks to their history together.
Lots of changes in tempo and power, never looking through the same facet of the composition for very long before switching to the next facet.
On the Clean Feed Records label, who smartly scooped this trio up. Jazz from the Porto, Portugal scene.
NOTE: This album continues to grow on me, and I’m listening to it even more than when I first bought it a month ago. Just a wonderfully engaging album.
NOTE: I’ve published a longer review of Oneiros on the Music Is Good site, found here… musicisgood.org.
Available on Emusic.
That’s it for today. Cheers.
Here’s some language to protect emusic’s rights as the one to hire me originally to scour through the jazz new arrivals and write about the ones I like:
“New Arrivals Jazz Picks“, courtesy of eMusic.com, Inc.
© 2011 eMusic.com, Inc.
My thanks to emusic for the freelance writing gig, the opportunity to use it in this blog, and the editorial freedom to help spread the word about cool new jazz being recorded today.
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2011 Releases • 0