Dec 29 2014
Bird is the Worm Best of 2014: Albums 6-10
Today’s post reveals the 6th through the 10th Bird is the Worm Top 30 jazz albums of 2014.
*****
A Best Of album has to hit me right in my heart and provoke a strong emotional reaction. A Best Of album has to engage my head and elicit a cerebral connection. Give me some intrigue. Show me your music has got personality. Extra points are awarded for doing Something Different. I want to hear music that embraces the best qualities of creativity. Strong musicianship alone is not enough. Many excellent albums fall short of earning a slot on the list. It literally pains me when I see some of the albums that aren’t included on my Best Of lists. But I listen to a lot of music, and one of the rare downsides to encountering so much great Jazz is that some of it won’t receive the recognition it deserves. So there you have it.
No matter how diligent a listener is and no matter how thoroughly that person covers the music scene, there will always be albums that slip through the cracks. It’s a matter of the scarcity of time vs. the overflow of music. It’s also a matter of subjectivity. I try to instill an objectivity into the affair, judging each album’s qualities without consideration for my own personal preferences… at least, as much as I am able. I can say for certain, my Best of 2014 list looks different than my personal Favorites of 2014 list. No attempt to encapsulate the 2014 jazz album landscape will be fully comprehensive, but I humbly offer up my list with a confidence that these albums represent the best that 2014 had to offer. But it’s a list that’s likely to gain a few addendums with the passing of time.
What you’ll read below are not reviews. They are simple thoughts, reminiscences, fragments of recollections, and brief opinions about how each album struck me both now and when I first heard it. There is a link to a more formal write-up following each entry… that’s where you go to find out what’s what about each recording. Those write-ups are accompanied with embedded audio of an album track, as well as personnel and label information, links to artist, label, and retail sites, and anything else that seemed relevant at the time I wrote about the album. Follow those links. They might just lead to your next most favorite album ever.
Beginning on January 25th, I will be revealing 5 albums a day, with the 2014 Album of the Year announcement occurring on December 31st. The posts will appear on the site’s main page. This list will get updated 24 hours after each post.
So, with all that out of the way: Let’s begin…
*****
6. Hans Feigenwinter ZINC – Whim of Fate
There is a lullaby beauty to Whim of Fate that is just as riveting as it is comforting. The trio of Hans Feigenwinter (piano), Andreas Tschopp (trombone) and Domenic Landolf (tenor & soprano saxes) adopt flight patterns that are locked in tight with one another, and it’s why melodies are thicker, rhythms livelier and harmonies warmer than they would be were each musician off doing their own thing with only a cursory thought toward cohesiveness. It’s an album of songs, each presented with a soft touch and resounding sigh, and while a few tracks break the mold with a little bit of random combustibility, they only serve to enhance the abiding structure rather than detract from it. There is something supremely satisfying about the beauty expressed by these (relatively) straight-forward tunes. In large part, it’s a result of masterfully crafted melodies, and the way in which the trio adds ornamentation and tangential creative ideas to the melody, sometimes with a plan in mind and sometimes as an afterthought. It’s a beauty that unfolds slowly and seems without end… until the trio returns to that opening statement and brings the song home, full circle. Just a gorgeous album with the most appealingly languorous disposition.
Released on Unit Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
7. Andrea Keller Quartet with Strings – Wave Rider
This is how to add strings to a jazz session. Pianist Andrea Keller avoids the easy temptation to use a string quartet for some cheap harmonic thrills and instead incorporates them into the working ideas of her jazz quartet as if strings were part of the full-time plan. The result is accentuating the nuances and making them resonate so much stronger and taking the big moments and letting them absolutely soar. This is thrilling music one moment after the other, but it’s the way in which Keller insinuates passages of contemplation into the expansive sound that really cinches the deal. The ebb and flow of intensity keeps the ear alert at all times, even when it’s drinking in one dreamy interlude after the other.
Released on the Jazzhead label.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
8. Angles 9 – Injuries
The winning formula here is the way that saxophonist Martin Küchen‘s Angles ensemble lets each song bolt right up to the precipice of coming apart at the seams, just to then bring it all back together in a final act of cohesion. This tension, added to all the wild euphoria his nonet generates over the course of seven avant-garde party-time tracks, makes for a terrifically thrilling album. Heavy on the wind instruments and percussion, they develop a huge sound that comes off as so much bigger by way of the raw emotion and sense of fun imparted by each tune. Küchen keeps adding members to his Angles project ensemble, and unsurprisingly, they become increasingly boisterous with each subsequent recording.
Released on Clean Feed Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
9. Masaa – Afkar
Forging a bond between modern European jazz and Lebanese vocals, Masaa is in the enviable position of pairing traits not so easily combined… of being both engagingly cerebral and possessing a beauty that is just plain heartbreaking. Afkar is an album of sudden and thrilling changes in pace and emotion, and it’s pretty easy to get swept up in the process. And though it is unconventional to encounter the pairing of Lebanese vocals in a jazz setting, it doesn’t prevent the music from presenting itself as pretty much a straight-ahead jazz album. Even when faced with something different, the result is immutably familiar.
Released on Traumton Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
10. Roberto Negro – Loving Suite pour Birdy So
Every motion, every note from Roberto Negro‘s Loving Suite pour Birdy So is sheer poetry. There are elements of jazz, folk, chamber and pop in this music, but it’s not a blend of influences so much as an entirely new language, a new form of creative expression that just happens to have similar qualities to the aforementioned genres. A live wire electricity is balanced with an elegance and curious tunefulness that is positively arresting. The more challenging tracks possess an inimitable charm that renders the complexities as easy to accept as a warm smile. There isn’t a moment on this excellent album that doesn’t generate all kinds of intrigue. There are moments when I reconsider not having slotted it higher up on the Best of 2014 list. Great albums will have that kind of effect.
Released on La Curieuse.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
Tomorrow’s post reveals the 2014 Bird is the Worm #2–#5 albums of the year.
Cheers.
Dec 30 2014
Bird is the Worm Best of 2014: Albums 2-5
Today’s post reveals the 2nd through the 5th Bird is the Worm Top 30 jazz albums of 2014.
*****
A Best Of album has to hit me right in my heart and provoke a strong emotional reaction. A Best Of album has to engage my head and elicit a cerebral connection. Give me some intrigue. Show me your music has got personality. Extra points are awarded for doing Something Different. I want to hear music that embraces the best qualities of creativity. Strong musicianship alone is not enough. Many excellent albums fall short of earning a slot on the list. It literally pains me when I see some of the albums that aren’t included on my Best Of lists. But I listen to a lot of music, and one of the rare downsides to encountering so much great Jazz is that some of it won’t receive the recognition it deserves. So there you have it.
No matter how diligent a listener is and no matter how thoroughly that person covers the music scene, there will always be albums that slip through the cracks. It’s a matter of the scarcity of time vs. the overflow of music. It’s also a matter of subjectivity. I try to instill an objectivity into the affair, judging each album’s qualities without consideration for my own personal preferences… at least, as much as I am able. I can say for certain, my Best of 2014 list looks different than my personal Favorites of 2014 list. No attempt to encapsulate the 2014 jazz album landscape will be fully comprehensive, but I humbly offer up my list with a confidence that these albums represent the best that 2014 had to offer. But it’s a list that’s likely to gain a few addendums with the passing of time.
What you’ll read below are not reviews. They are simple thoughts, reminiscences, fragments of recollections, and brief opinions about how each album struck me both now and when I first heard it. There is a link to a more formal write-up following each entry… that’s where you go to find out what’s what about each recording. Those write-ups are accompanied with embedded audio of an album track, as well as personnel and label information, links to artist, label, and retail sites, and anything else that seemed relevant at the time I wrote about the album. Follow those links. They might just lead to your next most favorite album ever.
Beginning on January 25th, I will be revealing 5 albums a day, with the 2014 Album of the Year announcement occurring on December 31st. The posts will appear on the site’s main page. This list will get updated 24 hours after each post.
So, with all that out of the way: Let’s begin…
*****
2. Rob Mazurek & Black Cube SP – Return the Tides: Ascension Suite & Holy Ghost
Recorded in the aftermath of the sudden passing of Rob Mazurek‘s mother, Return the Tides is creativity as the vehicle for the outpouring of pure emotion. The music influences are many of the usual suspects from Mazurek’s diverse, eclectic background… there’s the updated Tropicalia, there’s the space-y trip-rock, there’s the post-bop, there’s the avant-garde, there’s the electronica, the jazz-rock fusion, there’s the waves of improvisation, one after the other… and, really, all of that is secondary to the influence of personal loss, exposing all the raw emotions as one strives to heal and move on. It’s these interludes of intensity and transition that can lead to a place where little difference between art and artist exists. It’s from those moments of unity that the most sincere and honest creativity is generated, and this album is exactly that from first note to last. This album wears its heart on its sleeve. This is as powerful as music gets.
Released on Cuneiform Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
3. Rafael Karlen – The Sweetness of Things Half-Remembered
In recent years, there’s been a huge uptick of musicians uniting their classical training and their jazz experience into the same expression. Rafael Karlen’s sublime 2014 release is one of the best examples of this trend at its best. On this chamber jazz session, the saxophonist is joined by pianist Steve Newcomb and a string quartet for an album so lovely it exists in a state of perfection. Striking imagery is framed in vignettes of harmonic warmth, susurrant rhythms and melodies of a heavenly elegance and grace. The flights of improvisation are just as strong as the compositional foundations they spring from. There’s an alluring languorous pace to this music… one that abides even when the ensemble summons up brief animated flurries. About as beautiful as an album can get.
This Self-Produced album was released on Pinnacles Music.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
4. John Ellis & Andy Bragen – MOBRO
Saxophonist John Ellis and playwright Andy Bragen take the anecdotal story of a trash barge and turn it into an epic story. This exhilarating interpretation of the pop culture curiosity, MOBRO 4000 is adapted as the framework for a through-composed large ensemble work about environmentalism, isolationism and society. Loaded with wind instruments, guitars and vocalists, this piece originally meant for live performance loses none of its wild expressiveness on the recorded medium. So over-the-top theatrical at times that it’s transformed into massive serious dialog, not unlike how the comedy in satire reveals grave, hidden truths. A great story behind a great album, just overflowing with personality. Of all the albums on the Best of 2014 list, this is the one you want as your drinking buddy. This is pure, unabashed creativity here, reflecting the kind of vision we want all our artists to adopt.
Released on Parade Light Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
*****
5. Diego Barber – Tales
An amazing duo collaboration between guitarist Diego Barber and pianist Craig Taborn. Based on prior work, both musicians rate at the top of the class on their respective instruments, and this 2014 session only adds to their bona fides. Barber continues to expand on his inventive approach with classical guitar in a jazz setting. These four pieces are simultaneously meditative and excitable. Long interludes develop sequentially from the foundation of strong melodies, taking paths so far away from the opening sounds that it’s stunning when the duo return to the nest from which those melodies sprung. It’s the breathless creativity that carries long distances like a proud river from one melodic fragment to the next that signifies this album’s remarkable display of musicianship. Just outstanding.
Released on Sunnyside Records.
Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).
Worth noting that I’ll be publishing an overview of Barber’s entire catalog in January 2015, which will include a write-up of Tales. So, stay in touch.
*****
Tomorrow’s post reveals the 2014 Bird is the Worm Album of the Year.
Cheers.
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2014 Releases, Recap: Best of 2014 • 2 • Tags: Jazz - Best of 2014