Jan 22 2018
The Round-up: Dancing with distance
Here is some very good new music.
Barry Altschul & The 3dom Factor – Live in Krakow (Not Two)
For some musicians, the process to the performance is 1.) Pour gasoline, 2.) Light match. On this live set from drummer Barry Altschul, bassist Joe Fonda and saxophonist Jon Irabagon, the flames are unleashed on the city of Krakow, and there’s just no end to it. Even the brief reprieve of “Irina” barely serves as a breather with its insistent extrapolation of the blues. This album really only has gears that operate at high speeds, and that’s exactly the reason you want to scoop this one up.
Artist site | Buy: Amazon
Henrique Eisenmann – The Free Poetics Of (Red Piano Records)
That way in which a roomful of conversations can take on a life of its own, and achieve a unity that verges on a distinct dialog all to itself… that’s the sensation from this new release by Henrique Eisenmann. The crosscurrents of melody ripple across the dotted surface of multi-rhythmic expressions, and it crackles with life. Even during contemplative interludes, that electricity hums quietly just beneath the surface and gives off an animated charge. The pianist has soprano saxophonist Gustavo D’Amico, double bassist Jorge Roeder and percussionist Rogerio Boccato at his side. Music from Boston, MA.
Artist site | Buy: Amazon
Tony Burkill – Work Money Death (ATA Records)
Some soul, some bop and plenty of heat to drive it all ahead. This throwback recording to the old school when hard bop was looking inward at its soul and outward to other musics is plenty addictive. Saxophonist Tony Burkill finds a way to make the music catchy when at its most intense, and introspective when it’s time for the intensity to catch its breath. It’s a pattern he has on repeat, and it never grows old, not even a little bit. The rhythmic attitude of Work Money Death is let’s dance, and while the tempo might not point to any formal method of motion, it elicits a compulsion to move all the same. Music from Leeds, UK.
No artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
John McNeil & Mike Fahie – Plainsong (Destiny Records)
Nice straight-ahead set from the trumpeter John McNeil and trombonist Mike Fahie. They stick to the area where hard bop and post-bop can blend into the same crowd and remain relatively indistinguishable one from the other. “Rain Song, Plain Song” is one of a couple exceptions where the modern influence reigns supreme, and the decision to take this course gives the album its personality. This doesn’t stray far from the winning formula of McNeil’s Hush Point group. For this session, it’s pianist Ethan Iverson, bassist Joe Martin and drummer Billy Hart rounding out a quintet. Music from Brooklyn, NY.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp – Amazon
Giovanni Di Domenico & Abschattungen – The Ear Cannot Be Filled With Hearing (El Negocito Records)
This large ensemble performance led out by pianist Giovanni Di Domenico goes big and gives it everything they’ve got. They toe the line where sonic wildness becomes random dissonance, and so each of the four extended pieces of his 2017 release perpetually cycle between states of dispersal and reformation. The thing that triggers the transition back to structure is a groove. It’s as if it suddenly emerges from beneath the surface of the song, like the earth swelling up and grumbling out a heady tempo. It’s an arresting feature of an interesting album. Music from Brussels, Belgium.
Artist site | Listen | Buy: Bandcamp
Jan 19 2019
Best of 2018 #8: Roller Trio – “New Devices”
There are a very great many things to adore about the 2018 release from Roller Trio, but the most significant development is best viewed from the context of the band’s timeline. As I stated about this exciting electro-acoustic project when I first wrote about it for The Bandcamp Daily, “The mad experiments of the Roller Trio’s previous two recordings manifested a new kind of Frankenstein’s monster.” Roller Trio’s previous recordings were warmly received by this site, and each were enjoyable in their own way, but looking back on them now as stages that led up to the magnificent New Devices, there’s a certain post-excitement about the earlier works because of the hints and signs of what was yet to come. When I included this album in my Best Jazz Albums of 2018 column for The Bandcamp Daily, I believe I summed things up best when I concluded, “This is the sound of a band coming into their own.” It’s one of the most rewarding benefits of following the creative trajectory of an artist, to experience that growth in their work and the achievement of new plateaus as we go about living our own lives, and manifesting our own individual growth and achievements. This is how music becomes intertwined with our timelines, and becomes personal to us in the most ineffable ways. It is how art becomes timeless.
Released on Edition Records.
Music from Leeds, UK.
I wrote about this album for Bird is the Worm.
Available at: Bandcamp | Amazon
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By davesumner • Recap: Best of 2018 • 0 • Tags: Chris Sharkey, Edition Records, James Mainwaring, Jazz - Best of 2018, Leeds (UK), Luke Reddin-Williams, Roller Trio