Apr 4 2019
The Round-up: I nodded off and waited for the sun to rise
Here is some very good new music.
Human Feel – Gold (Intakt Records)
Some of this music still feels like I only discovered it yesterday. This comment is particularly useful in explaining my disbelief that Human Feel has been together for thirty years. Alto saxophonist Andrew D’Angelo, tenor saxophonist Chris Speed, guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel and drummer Jim Black, as a quartet and on their own separate projects, have been responsible for some of the more forward-thinking and adventurous music to rain down upon jazz territory in this century. This has been true for a while. And, yet, it still feels strange to be speaking of them as veterans of the scene. Some of this disconnect has much to do with how fresh and vital and forward-thinking their newest music is, sharing those same qualities that made past recordings so special on their own merits. Gold continues the musicians’ habit of eschewing genre conventions and standard expectations of the current day, and instead letting a melody go where it chooses and capturing a sound in the moment to coalesce around it and create something beautiful, something edgy, something that will always sound young and new and exciting. Music from NYC.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
Peter Hess – Falling (Diskonife)
There’s everything to like about this trio session from tenor saxophonist Peter Hess, vibraphonist Matt Moran and drummer Jeff Davis. The music dances with a light step, yet doesn’t refrain from touching down with a stomp. That contrast between motion and impact yields all kinds of riveting moments. So, too, does the limitless supply of endearing melodies that make it so easy to connect with everything that follows. This music hops, it smoulders, and it sometimes takes flight. This album really needs to be registering on people’s radars. Music from Brooklyn, NY.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Blessing in Disguise – Live Exchange (Lava Thief)
There’s all kinds of intriguing moments on this live improvisation session from Get the Blessing ensemble members. Trumpeter Pete Judge, bass guitarist Jim Barr, and saxophonist Jake McMurchie play both sides of the thunderstorm… there’s moments of intensity that swell up like lightning and rain crashing down upon the world, and then there’s those interludes when the electricity settles into a serene state of existence, and a certain peacefulness expands outward from that volatile core. Music from London.
No artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Træ – Træ (Self-Produced)
There’s an appealing dreamy presence to this trio set from guitarist Johannes Maikranz, saxophonist Simon Spiess and drummer Samuel Dühsler. They settle into a melody and then launch it skyward like a kite riding the wind on a calm, summer day. The album is retailing at Name Your Price, so it’s a nice opportunity to buy some good music that’ll fit your budget. Music from Basel, Switzerland.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Marco Moura Quartet – The Quadrant (Self-Produced)
This four track EP splits its time between old-school and new-school forms of expression, and while there’s plenty to like about the way Marco Moura‘s quartet expresses each jazz era, it’s when things shade to the modern day that the music really shines strongest. Music from both London, UK and Porto, Portugal.
No artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Apr 7 2019
Why, yes, the Friends & Neighbors show at The Kentucky School was even better than I’d hoped it would be
This language typically gets included with any show preview I put out there:
And this, then, is followed by an embedded track of a recent album.
For the Friends & Neighbors show at The Kentucky School in Lexington’s North Limestone (NoLi) neighborhood, this was especially true.
Their previous releases could be summarized as updated visions of an Ornette Coleman free jazz era. There are unconventional expressions that range from chaotic to whimsical, depending on your frame of mind while listening. The recordings are exciting and fun, and the general sense was, were one to hear it live, the band would radiate all kinds of energy.
Well, that last part was true of Saturday night’s show in the outdoor area behind Al’s Bar, where the Kentucky School is setting down roots. The wide open sky was filled with the quintet’s exuberance. But the sound was more spiritual than spasmodic, or, to carry forward the jazz giant analogy as presented… more Coltrane than Coleman.
There was a solemn tone to much of Friends & Neighbors quintet’s sound, even at ita most frenzied, a sort of reverential approach to melody instead of one more whimsical. There were a few exceptions to this in both the second piece of the night and the quintet’s finale. But for the most part, the music expressed more soul than smile, and the result was quite beautiful and a little bit awe inspiring at times.
EDITOR’S NOTE: CHECK OUT THE KENTUCKY SCHOOL’S FACEBOOK PAGE FOR SOME VIDEO FROM THE PERFORMANCE.
And it was a perfect fit for that outdoor stage. Spring has finally begun to make its presence felt in Lexington, and that cool evening marking the start of the weekend, in that neighborhood which has so much culture in its roots and the essential qualities to a community… residents walking about, sitting on front stoops, an abiding sense of Home… the sound of Friends & Neighbors music filling the air with that solemn tone, a resonant cry of sax, trumpet, keys, bass and drums, it became, on that night, a part of the fabric of the community, a part of that neighborhood’s lives… whether they were sitting in the crowd, walking their dog down the nearby street or just distant notes carried on the warm breeze, the quintet’s music became of part of all that. That the quintet calls themselves Friends & Neighbors couldn’t have been any more symbolic of their music’s presence that night.
The different sound is also reflected on their new album, What’s Next? Released on Clean Feed Records just a few months ago, the quintet’s focused lyricism reveals a different facet to an already interesting group. And where opening track “Influx” is symbolic of those changes to the groups sound, “WLB,” both in concert and on the new recording, show that their eccentricities and sense of humor haven’t gone anywhere. But even in this instance, there’s a different kind of locomotion to the tune, a driving intensity where their previous recording would be more likely to hop and sway and dart side to side. It’s always exciting to hear the evolution of a band, especially when the result is as rewarding as this one.
You can buy their new album on Amazon. You can also purchase it direct from Clean Feed Records.
The band is: Thomas Johansson (trumpet), André Roligheten (tenor sax, bass clarinet), Oscar Grönberg (piano), Jon Rune Strøm (double bass) and Tollef Østvang (drums).
Friends & Neighbors are currently touring the U.S.
Their Upcoming Shows (as best as I could find them):
But, again, please confirm for yourself where they’re performing and when. But here’s a link to a Facebook post on the artist’s site.
They are selling their current CD, previous recordings, and related side project recordings at their merch table. For me personally, this was pretty cool. Look, I have lived in the middle of nowhere Kentucky for the last ten years, so seeing an array of Clean Feed Records label recordings spread out on a table before me is no longer the (relatively) common experience it was for me back in Chicago. In addition to their new album, I also scooped up a copy of the ensemble All Included, which counts personal favorite Martin Küchen among its number. Go check out my write-up of this album, Satan in Plain Clothes.
And take note, this show is just the precursor of many other excellent shows coming through Lexington over the next sixty days. That list includes:
Details for all of the above shows to follow soon.
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By davesumner • Jazz in Kentucky, Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2019, Live Jazz • 0 • Tags: Clean Feed Records, Friends & Neighbors, Jazz in Kentucky