Aug 30 2017
Recommended: Jose Lencastre Nau Quartet – “Fragments of Always”
This album builds a momentum that obliterates any melody that steps in its path. Fragments of Always is separated into tracks and given separate song titles, but this is one long extended exhalation from the José Lencastre Nau Quartet, and as it picks up speed, it starts to come from all directions. It opens with a stated melody, but the rhythmic vortex, wild and free, tears it apart, sending out fragments from time to time, more as guideposts for the path than something to hold onto and embrace.
The six-part “Aphorism” sets the tone and frames the temper. The range runs from contemplative to chaotic, and it hits most stops in between. It is captivating even at its most ferocious. There is a slight pause for breath before the 17-minute title-track bubbles to life. It hits many of the same locales as the “Aphorism” suite, but charts a vastly different course. The result is music that keeps a consistent character, but reveals its personality in an entirely different fashion.
The album’s second half features five tracks that sound like reworkings of pieces sitting square in the quartet’s rear view mirror. The peaks and valleys of “Visible Wind” recall the more dissonant moments of the “Aphorism” suite, as well as the opening moments of the title-track, whereas the calm “Axis Mundi” is a reminiscence of where it all began, with a vague memory of a melody once envisioned so long ago.
A seriously compelling album.
Your album personnel: José Lencastre (alto sax), Rodrigo Pinheiro (piano), Hernâni Faustino (bass) and João Lencastre (drums).
Released on FMR Records.
Listen to more of the album at the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Music from Lisbon, Portugal.
Available at: Bandcamp
Aug 31 2017
Recommended: SMB3 – “Echoes From A Distant Past”
This is music that is simple catchiness and nuanced complexity. There’s a lively skip and hop to this music that recalls music where the crossover to hip hop occurs and melodic hooks that hit the sweet spot where post-bop jazz and indie pop find common ground. This debut by the trio SMB3 is yet more evidence of Robert Glasper’s enduring influence on the modern scene, that new generations of artists see his open door, run straight on through it, and then take off in whatever directions their heart and instrument desires.
The tempo typical to Echoes From A Distant Past is upbeat, cheerful even. But the rhythmic outbursts create a dynamic where sudden changes in the tides… and the ripples that shift along their surface… provide a number of misdirects and tension-release to keep the ear intrigued. At its core, SMB3 is a piano trio, but there are a number of guests that sit in to add a nifty dose of texture. The ease with which a saxophonist is able to melt right into their flow on “Bite” shows how the trio’s music is open and free, even when it’s wound tight. When it finally gets rolled out for some solos, the piano-bass-drums trio is just as deft at contributing some helpful accompaniment as they are at taking the lead. There are a number of interludes sprinkled throughout, and their mix of hip hop, gospel and jazz certainly don’t do anything to argue against the Glasper influence. And a groovy, hopping rendition of Coltrane’s “Giant Steps” is proof that the trio is seeking to develop their own unique voice.
Just a very fun, very friendly recording, and a seriously promising debut.
Your album personnel: Shahan Nercessian (piano, guitar, sequencing), Michael Siegel (bass), Benjamin Bornstein (drums) and guests: Alan Manos (trumpet), Yasunori Fukami (trombone), Timothy Greer (tenor sax), Mario Cerra (tenor sax) and Martin Haroutunian (zurna).
This album is Self-Produced.
Listen to more of the album at the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Music from Boston, MA.
Available at: Bandcamp
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2017 releases • 0