Nov 29 2015
Recommended: Miho Hazama – “Time River”
What really drives home the particular beauty of Time River are the perpetual intersection points of meticulous construction and sweeping majesty, as if computer code originally tasked for international banking operations transformed its instructions to create Impressionistic oil paintings for the masses. The pulsing bursts of vibraphones on “The Urban Legend,” the finely detailed intertwining patterns from saxophones on “Cityscape,” the mixed messages of soloists superimposed on the prevailing straight-forward structure of “Dizzy Dizzy Wildflower”… these are the essential threads that vault the new big band recording from Miho Hazama to another level, and they are strong as steel support beams and they are the concurrent storylines converging mysteriously into the main plot. And there’s something appealingly happenstance about the way Hazama gets big band and chamber jazz ingredients to fall into place, a thing where the blind faith of leaping from the clifftops is revealed to be just the first step in the thoughtfully planned splash of music in the pool below.
A handful of the tracks lean heavily toward the big band sound, and judged on their own, they certainly stand up just fine, but they don’t stand out quite as special as those where the chamber music element is sharing the spotlight. There’s just no getting around that there’s a far greater vibrancy to a track like “Alternate Universe, Was That Real,” with the way Hazama matches the brooding intensity of a big band with a chamber music’s contemplative reverie… a mix of raw power and deep thought that is only hinted at, where the insinuation of power resonates so much more strongly than simply letting it strike. And when it does strike, a track like “Fugue” shows how some well-placed restraint provides both definition and shape to those passages where the ensemble just lets loose. It’s the difference between calm intensity and blithe melodrama, and it’s all the difference in the world. Title-track “Time River” astutely observes this dividing line, too.
This is a nice instance of something different getting reflected off the surface of something familiar, and where it’s not always easy to determine whether it’s the facets or the form that are the guiding hand that ushers one moment to the next.
Your album personnel: Miho Hazama (conductor, piano), Cam Collins (alto sax, clarinet), Ryoji Ihara (tenor & soprano saxes, flute), Sam Anning (bass), Jake Goldbas (drums), James Shipp (vibraphone) and guests: Gil Goldstein (accordion), Joshua Redman (soprano and tenor saxes), Andrew Gutauskas (baritone sax, bass clarinet), Matthew Jodrell (trumpet, flugelhorn), Adam Unsworth (French horn), Joyce Hammann (violin), Sara Caswell (violin), Lois Martin (viola), Meaghan Burke (cello), Sam Harris (piano) and Alex Brown (piano).
Released on Sunnyside Records.
Listen to more album tracks on Soundcloud and Bandcamp.
Jazz from NYC.
Jan 25 2020
Best of 2019 #43: Miho Hazama – “Dancer in Nowhere”
The compositions of Miho Hazama are a simultaneous view of the colors of a tree’s leaves and the entire forest in which it lives. Dancer in Nowhere often feels like an epic journey, a sense of an ever-changing landscape that reaches out the horizon and keeps on going. And, yet, there are so many junctions within the changes where Hazama makes it so damn easy to immerse oneself in a precise moment that its like time stops and every nuance is revealed. Her ensemble work is Exhibit A in the case of big band jazz having as much impact in the present day upon jazz as it ever has.
Your album personnel: Miho Hazama (conductor), Steve Wilson (alto & soprano saxophones, flute), Ryoji Ihara (tenor sax, clarinet, flute), Jason Rigby (tenor sax, clarinet), Andrew Gutauskas (baritone sax, bass clarinet), Jonathan Powell (trumpet, flugelhorn), Adam Unsworth (French horn), Tomoko Akaboshi (violin), Sita Chay (violin), Atsuki Yoshida (viola), Meaghan Burke (cello), James Shipp (vibraphone, guiro, shekere), Billy Test (piano), Sam Anning (bass), Jake Goldbas (drums), and guests: Nate Wood (drums), Kavita Shah (vocals), and Lionel Loueke (guitar).
Released on Sunnyside Records.
Music from New York City.
Listen | Read more | Available at: Bandcamp | Amazon
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By davesumner • Recap: Best of 2019 • 0 • Tags: Best Jazz of 2019, Miho Hazama, New York City, Sunnyside Records