Oct 8 2012
Jean Lapouge – “Des Enfants”
The music of Jean Lapouge is quite unlike anything else around. His trio of guitar, vibes, and trombone is an unusual combination in and of itself, but it’s the music where the differentiation really sets in. Lapouge’s trio creates animated, charming tunes that are both heartwarming and strange. And on the heels of his 2011 release Temporare, he’s recorded some of the most pleasantly compelling music of the last two years.
Lapouge was influenced early in his guitar studies by both John McLaughlin’s work on Miles Davis’s Bitches Brew and the emergence of prog-rock pioneers Soft Machine. Later, in the 1980s, he helped found the Noetra Collective, a group that mixed jazz, rock, and chamber music. In many ways, that same mix informs his music of today.
This music is a mix of curious bursts of restrained dissonance and thick brush strokes of lullaby serenity. Trombone is hands-on with the melodies… long sonorous notes, syrupy and inviting. Guitar adds color, often gives some sharp twang to cut away at trombone’s syrupy thickness. Vibes deliver more of a percussive element, though with its inherently bright and shiny notes, vibes often act like fireflies in the dark forest. Oboe and bass flute make a guest appearance, adding flavor to an already unconventional profile.
The album opens with “Des Enfants,” and a beautiful statement of melody by trombone, and ends with guitar and vibes skittering around a restatement of the melody that is just too damn nifty.
Second track “13 Etrange” gets closer to the prog influence. Odd pulsing tempos, shiny effects, and deconstructed melodies. I also find it reminiscent of the Andy Summers – Robert Fripp duo album I Advance Masked.
“Two Days Before” is a jaunty tune of vibes and trombone playing leapfrog and guitar skips circles around them, and ends with rapid-punch combos from trombone.
Fourth track “Les Americains” rises up and down in a series of steps, sometimes clattering to the floor, sometimes taking launching up into the clouds. Poboeuf brings out the oboe, and its sharp calls matched the pretty sparkle of Lapouge’s guitar brings together two opposing sounds in one majestic rippling current.
“Demain il Fera Beau” has the comfort of immersion in a cocoon of darkness, and the uncertainty of feeling ones way through it without falling. It’s album tunes like these that evoke echoes of Bill Frisell’s equally curious album Quartet, which also featured guitar and trombone, with trumpet and violin and tuba as the collaborators.
Sixth track “Les Soldats” is a slight return to the melody of “Les Americains,” mirroring the pace and change in altitudes, but where the previous track focused more on the rhythmic aspect of the composition, this one explores the tune’s atmospheric possibilities.
The album ends with “Sombre, a muted piece that lets silence fill in the blanks with an appealing density,” giving it a sense of clouds thick with rain. Trombone emits bursts of whimsical phrases, repeating a motif while vibes and guitar hold hands and offer complementary notes that hang frozen in the air as trombone rises and falls with just a little bit of abandon. It ends with the same enchanting beauty with which it began.
This music was actually recorded between 2005 and 2007, not long before the Temporare session. For various reasons, Lapouge didn’t release it until this year. Thankfully, he did, and thankfully, it still sounds fresh and mysterious and sublime. Currently working with a trio of guitar, cello, and drums, Lapouge is looking to have a new release out with the new trio before long.
Your album personnel: Jean Lapouge (guitar, guitar synthesizer), Christiane Bopp (trombone), and Christian Paboeuf (vibes, oboe, bass flute).
Released on the Musea Records label.
Listen to more of the album at the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Jazz from the Sarrazac, France scene.
Available at: Bandcamp | eMusic | Amazon
And be sure to check out Lapouge’s last album, Temporare. It remains a personal favorite, and it as one of the best things to come out that year.
Oct 9 2012
Tiny Reviews: Rino Abore Quartet, Simcock/Garland/Sirkis, Tomer Bar Trio, Trio Sued, & Benjamin Faugloire Project
Tiny Reviews, featuring: Rino Arbore Quartet Suggestions From Space, Simcock, Garland & Sirkis Lighthouse, Tomer Bar Trio Local Groove, Trio Sued Space, and Benjamin Faugloire Project Diving.
*****
Rino Arbore Quartet – Suggestions From Space
Fascinating quartet that evokes images of early-period Bill Frisell and later-period ECM chamber jazz. Quite beautiful when it drifts on a melody, engaging when it gets more of a mind to deconstruct. Guitar adds a sense of mystery, trumpet a weightlessness of being. Drums work best when a soft hush. Arco action by the bass substantially elevates the quality of the music, though, admittedly, I’m an easy sucker for anytime the bassist gets the bow out. While those tunes which tackle dissonance and cut weird angles add needed diversity to the album’s overall sound, it’s the quiet late-night tunes that are the album’s points of strength. Good stuff, and the kind of album that might’ve (undeservedly) slipped under the radar.
Your album personnel: Rino Arbore (guitar), Roy Nikolaisen (trumpet & flugelhorn), Giorgio Vendola (double bass), and Gianlivio Liberti (drums).
(Note: slight pause of silence before and after embedded audio.)
Released on the No Flight Records label. Jazz from the Bari, Italy scene.
Available at eMusic.
Simcock, Garland & Sirkis – Lighthouse
The Lighthouse Trio reunite for a set of lyricism and bounce. Performing of a balancing act between jazz complexity and pop simplicity, the trio creates an album that is very listenable while remaining quite at home on the ACT Music label, which typically doesn’t release music that puts one foot in front of the other.
Your album personnel: Gwilym Simcock (piano), Tim Garland (reeds), and Asaf Sirkis (drums & percussion).
Available at eMusic.
Tomer Bar Trio – Local Groove
Nice straight-forward piano trio album. Light on its feet, with a pleasant bounce. Pianist Tomer Bar has a light touch on keys, matched well against some animated drumming. Some tracks come of as a bit scattered, though that’s not always a bad thing when it transitions to a subsequent, softer tune. Some vocals, which have a pleasant ease to them.
Your album personnel: Tomer Bar (piano), Uri Kutner (bass), and Ofri Nehemya (drums).
Released on the Spectra Jazz Records label. Jazz from the Tel Aviv, Israel scene.
Available at eMusic.
Trio Sued – Space
Intriguing album. Flurries of notes, interspersing moments of silence infrequently, but in just the right spots. For everything going on here, this still comes off as an introspective recording. It’s like a fairy tale about a lonely math equation.
Your album personnel: Heinrich Werkl (bass), Primus Sitter (guitar), and Michael Erian (sax).
Stream an album track at Werkl’s artist site.
Released on the Extraplatte label. Jazz from the Wein, Austria scene.
Available at eMusic.
Benjamin Faugloire Project – Diving
Moody piano trio that gets pretty evocative when it broods. Two feet full in the modern piano trio school. Nice follow-up to their 2008 release Premiere Nouvelle, which I still listen to from time to time. One of those artists who doesn’t get named in the same breath as an E.S.T. or Jacob Karlzon (and that may be appropriate), but Faugloire’s outfit should definitely be part of the discussion when talking about the better modern piano trio jazz recordings.
Your album personnel: Benjamin Faugloire (piano), Jerome Mouriez (drums), and Denis Frangulian (bass).
Released on the 3/6 Productions label. Jazz from the Paris, France scene.
Available at eMusic.
*****
Portions of these reviews were originally used in my Jazz Picks weekly article for eMusic, so here’s some language protecting their rights to that reprinted material as the one to hire me to write about new jazz arrivals to their site…
“New Arrivals Jazz Picks,“ reprints courtesy of eMusic.com, Inc.
© 2012 eMusic.com, Inc.
As always, my sincere thanks to eMusic for the gig. Cheers.
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2012 Releases • 0