Apr 5 2014
The North – “Slow Down (This Isn’t the Mainland)”
So, The North opens up Slow Down (This Isn’t the Mainland) as a nice enough modern piano trio recording. Easy-to-like melodies come out strong with a firm handshake and wide smile, and rhythms maintain a nice conversational chatter… nothing that gets too intricate as to incite a cerebral reaction and nothing too agitated as to become cluttered with unnecessary inflections and personal tics. And that’s how it proceeds for the first three tracks on this debut album of the trio of Romain Collin, Shawn Conley, and Abe Lagrimas, Jr.
But then fourth track “Join Us Jackson” begins, and the trio suddenly takes it down a gear, and they express their thoughts with a greater care, taking time to draw out the totality of the melody one breath at a time. It creates a provocative shift, though nuanced it may be, and from there, this likable recording really settles in.
“Join Us Jackson” has the satisfying brevity of a well-crafted pop tune, delivered with the solemn thoughtfulness of a gospel blues. Brushes insinuate a swaying motion, punctuated by the occasional tap of sticks. Piano brings the small but intense light of a brightly burning candle in darkness, with a slowly unwinding melody as a plume of smoke rising up from its flame. Bass is the shadow that accentuates the melody’s shape and direction. This is when the trio stamps their mark on the album.
“Dowsett Avenue” moves at a casual pace, too, though the soulful melody asks, and receives, a bit of a groove to bounce ideas off of, resulting in a slow shuffling cadence, nice and easy. The rendition of Monk’s “Light Blue,” as it turns out, is an odd transition piece from “Dowsett Avenue,” a contrast in styles though not necessarily of expression… the blues speak up on both, and the exaggerated stagger of “Light Blue” is an interesting shift from the casual stroll of the previous track. Unfortunately, it clashes with the album’s overall progression and stands out all by its lonesome… the kind of thing that cracks a recording built on a foundation of thoughtful melodic expressions.
This contrast becomes further evidenced by “Yann’s Flight,” which returns to an introspective state, even as it occasionally bursts into evocative form. The cover of Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” is made a melancholy little jingle. Collin wraps himself tightly around the melody, and the resulting sound of how it shifts and settles in his embrace illustrates how a little change can go a long way, and how simple sublime statements resonate just as powerfully as the most bombastic displays of sonic force.
“Northern Dreams” broods like mad. Piano and drums slowly pace the room while bass arco whips around them, warping notes… the insinuation of a melody only secondary to establishing a mood. It’s an approach that works well when sandwiched between the gratifying melodic treatment offered up by the Dylan cover and the album-closer “Stay With Me,” a love song that expresses as much heartbreak as it does hope… a sublime ending to an album that has many such moments.
Your album personnel: Romain Collin (piano), Shawn Conley (bass), and Abe Lagrimas, Jr. (drums).
The album is Self-Produced, released on the trio’s label Dowsett Records.
Available at: Amazon
Oct 16 2014
Recommended: Rafael Karlen – “The Sweetness of Things Half-Remembered”
Easily the best part of this gorgeous chamber jazz recording is the way in which compositions sculpt a supreme elegance while allowing improvisors the freedom to do their own thing. It blurs the lines between planned arrangement and spur-of-the-moment inspiration, and it’s why The Sweetness of Things Half-Remembered can spark with lively engagement while simultaneously crafting a structural beauty that results in one jaw-dropping moment after the next.
The musician who sets all this in motion is saxophonist and composer Rafael Karlen. And though his instrument is most often at the center of things, the roles played by pianist Steve Newcomb and the Rosenberg String Quartet are as essential to the foundation of this recording as is Karlen’s own contributions. It is where the subtraction or weakening of any ensemble member would cause the entire ball of loveliness to come unraveled into insubstantiality and mess.
Some tracks go with an impressionist’s touch. “Stark Colours” has strings painting with broad strokes and sax shading the edges with bold, thick lines. “Fade Slowly” are wind-blown ripples on the surface of a pond, forever spreading outward from the center. On “Outlines,” violins and piano travel disconnected but similar paths, providing both a sense of cohesion and detachment, as well as an essential contrast with those compositions that offer up clockwork-precise harmonies.
One such composition is “Clutch,” in which saxophone and strings take turns dancing in place as the other circles gracefully about, with the brightest moments coming when they fall into synch and reveal the heavenly melodicism hidden within their intoxicating motion. “Bounces Nicely” instigates an urgent tempo to which Karlen skips sunny phrases across. Opening track “If Not Now, When?” is a series of sweeping dance motions, with sax, piano and strings acting in unison.
And then there are those few tracks that incorporate both approaches. The two-part title-track does exactly this, opening with vague allusions to a cohesive harmonic structure, interspersed with brief asides to a possible melody. When the song transitions to Part 2, that melodic fragment takes bloom and expands into the basis for what is, arguably, the prettiest tune on the album. Melancholy and wistful, yet revealing a diverse array of glittering emotional hints that run deeper than mere sadness and longing. Karlen’s long saxophone sighs match those of strings, while Newcomb touches upon brighter tones and resurgent rhythmic patterns that imply that there’s plenty of life under the somber exterior. Strings and sax both modulate from long, slow expressions to ones with a furtive activity level… and then glide back into languorous motions that capture the essence of pure serenity.
This is a perfect album.
Your album personnel: Rafael Karlen (tenor sax), Steve Newcomb (piano), Rebecca Karlen (violin), Eugenie Costello-Shaw (violin), Alice Buckingham (viola), and Danielle Bentley (cello).
This Self-Produced album was released on Pinnacles Music.
Listen to more of the album on the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Jazz from the Brisbane, Australia scene.
Available at: Bandcamp | Amazon
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2014 Releases • 0 • Tags: Brisbane (Australia), Jazz with strings, Rafael Karlen, Self-Produced