Showing posts with label Miles Okazaki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miles Okazaki. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2024

Rush Hours, Part 1 - Nonet & Octet

 Lots of music yet so little time –– here begins a series of shorter reviews of the more exciting releases of the past several months. 

Commissioned by SF Jazz and the Hewlett Foundation, Miguel Zenón composed "Golden City" for sextet and a three-member trombone section (two of whom double on other brass - see below).  A musical history of San Francisco, the piece made it debut at SF Jazz in 2022 and was recorded a year later for the composer's Miel Music label.  Zenón makes sure each member of the ensemble has a feature, often at the beginning of the track. The album opens "Sacred Land" – the leader's sweet alto tone plays the intro alone before the brass enter for support and then the whole band arrives.  The story moves quickly to "Rush" (yes, the 1800s Gold Rush) to "Acts of Exclusion" (the 1862 law that curtailed the immigration of Chinese works) to "9066" (FDR's Executive Order that authorized the interment of Japanese Americans, the majority of who were already American Citizens).  One can sense the urgency and poignancy in the melodies and musicianship.

Photo: Herminio Rodriguez
Not only is the writing excellent but the performances stand out. Drummer Dan Weiss stands out as a master framer of the pieces and as a melodic presence. Pianist Matt Mitchell is the other "builder" of the foundation; along with bassist Chris Tordini, the two give the "front line" great support throughout. Percussionist Daniel Diaz creates rhythmical excitement but also adds colors that are necessary to the success of the music. Guitarist Miles Okazaki is solid in support and his ensemble work plus his solos stand out.  The three brass players – Diego Urcola, Alan Ferber, and Jacob Garchik – truly fill out the sound thanks to the splendid arrangements.  Perhaps the best part of this project is how Zenón gives so much room to the band that when his "voice" appears, his playing delights in flights of joy, power, sweetness, all while being highly melodic.

There's so much to like on "Golden City" from how Miguel Zenón tells the sprawling story to how the musicians give so much life and heart to the music to the wonderful playing over the course of 69 minutes.  Highly recommended! 

For more information, go to https://miguelzenon.com/. To hear more and to buy the music, go to  https://miguelzenon.bandcamp.com/album/golden-city

Listen to "Acts of Exclusion":



Personnel:

Miguel Zenón - alto saxophone
Matt Mitchell - piano
Chris Tordini - bass
Dan Weiss - drums
Miles Okazaki - guitar
Daniel Díaz - congas, tripandero and percussion
Diego Urcola - trumpet and valve trombone
Alan Ferber - trombone 
Jacob Garchik - tuba and trombone



Trombonist, composer, and band(s)leader Ryan Keberle is quite busy but he must have jumped at the opportunity to make this album for Marc Free and Posi-Tone Records. He's been doing a lot of smaller group work with Reverso (trio), Collectiv Do Brasil (quartet), and Catharsis (now a quintet) but it's been 14 years since his last Double Quartet album. "Bright Moments" is his first album as a leader on the label and, arguably, it's one of the 10 best Marc Free has ever released. Why?  Because Keberle had the opportunity to arrange the songs, all originals, to utilize the talents of a brilliant rhythm section – pianist Art Hirahara, bassist Boris Kozlov, and drummer Rudy Royston –  and have his melodies "sung" by the great "voices" of Pat Cornelius (reeds, flute), Diego Rivera (tenor sax, flute), Alex Norris (trumpet, flugelhorn), and Michael Dease (baritone sax).  All but one of the songs have appeared on previous albums – the new versions give both the composer and the audience a different perspective.

You can hear the influence of Keberle's immersion into Brazilian music on "Edu" – the music rolls forward on the power of the drums and the deep baritone sounds. The expansive melody is shared by the reeds and brass before Norris steps out for a handsome solo. "Despite the Dream", which the trombonist composed for Catharsis's 2020 "The Hope I Hold". This powerful ballad opens up in the middle as the tempo speeds up and short solos lines are created by Cornelius (alto sax) and Norris. Later, Cornelius and Dease (whose bari work is mighty impressive) take longer solos. "Sisters of Mine" was originally recorded by Reverso. Here, the tribute to the composer's two sibs serves as a vehicle for a lovely tenor solo from Rivera. To get there, the melody is presented by Cornelius (soprano sax), Norris, and Keberle (such a lovely tone).  Melody sharing abounds on this album.  The bass clarinet (Cornelius), trumpet, and flutes (Rivera and Cornelius) each introduce the melody on "All Ears", which is repeated twice without a solo. Yet, the piece is so satisfying because of how all the voices are utilized to make the piece so successful.

Photo" Anna Yatskevich
"Bright Moments" closes with the oldest piece in the collection. "When I'm Away" is from 2006 and was on the first of Keberle's two Double Quartet albums.  The arrangement is similar but the 2024 "voices" includes reeds whereas the older take has a four-piece brass section. Either way, it's a beautiful piece of music and features an excellent from the leader, brilliant backing from the great rhythm section.

If you're a Ryan Keberle fan, this is yet another gem in his growing discography (plus there's a new Catharsis album coming in October). Great music played by a great band – "Bright Moments" indeed!

For more information, go to https://ryankeberle.com/.  To hear more and purchase the album, go to https://ryankeberlejazz.bandcamp.com/album/bright-moments

Here's the opening track, "Quintessence":


Personnel:

Ryan Keberle - trombone
Alex Norris - trumpet; flugelhorn 
Michael Dease - baritone saxophone
Patrick Cornelius - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet, and alto flute
Diego Rivera - tenor saxophone; flute 
Art Hirahara - piano
Boris Kozlov - bass
Rudy Royston - drums

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

A Sonic Taste of "Thisness" + Classic "Thatness"

 

In 2015, guitarist, composer, and conceptualist Miles Okazaki built a new ensemble which, ultimately, took its name Trickster from its 2017 eponymous debut Pi Recordings. Utilizing the brilliant rhythm section, bassist Anthony Tidd and drummer Sean Rickman, from Steve Coleman's Five Elements plus pianist Craig Taborn (replaced in 2018 by Matt Mitchell).  The music couldn't help but be affected by the guitarist's many appearances with Coleman's group. But, the music has matured.

Okazaki's latest album with the quartet, "Thisness" (Pi Recordings), has a different feel from its three predecessors. Besides piano, Mitchell plays Fender Rhodes and Prophet–6 synthesizer and the four original pieces are the longest (all between 9:27 and 10:04). The song titles were adapted from the Sun Ra poem "The Far Off Place"; the music does have an exploratory feel throughout. Also, to get the full effect of the music, listen through headphones or in a room with really sensitive speakers. There is a lot going on over the course of these songs, overdubs of several guitars and keyboards that one will want to hear to get the full sonic picture.  The mix of the thick bass tones, the powerful percussion, the strong piano chords, and Okazaki's fascinating acoustic and electric guitar work keeps one's interest throughout.  The music feels "in the moment", spontaneous each time you listen.


"In Some Far Off Place" opens the album in subdued fashion. This listener is reminded of several ballads of Jimi Hendrix (as well as John Lennon's "Julia" later on) in the early moments as the leader's overdubbed guitars move gracefully through the aural landscape. Listen closely, there are wordless vocals that show up now and then.  Halfway through, the music changes direction, becoming more rhythmical (noticeable in the guitar solo and work of the rhythm section. Synth washes can be heard and then the tempo picks up with much more urgency. It's never overwhelming even as the guitars move around in the mix. The various trails of the music intersect as the band moves forward––kick back, enjoy the journey.


Musical magic can be heard on each track. The rock-solid rhythms beneath the guitar and rippling piano phrases on "Years in Space", the song powered by Tidd's hard-hitting bass lines clearing the path for the soloists while Rickman hits the snare, it pops! "I'll Build a World" literally jumps off the starting line but pay attention to the calming Fender Rhodes underneath the rapid-fire melody lines.  As the piece develops, the pace slows for a moment for a piano solo while Rickman (listed as co-writer) dances beneath.  Halfway through, the drummer instigates a musical call-and-response with the guitar and piano––such an invigorating interaction.

"And wait for you" truly kicks in on the strength of the funkified drums and pumping bass lines. The electric guitar and Fender Rhodes dance atop Tidd's solo phrases until Okazaki plays a rhythm figure that could easily have been created by Nile Rodgers (Chic) or Leo Nocentelli (The Meters).  The guitar solo moves back and forth into the groove until music changes directions for an acoustic piano solo that turns into an interaction between guitar phrases from several overdubbed guitars. 

"Thisness" is an album to play on repeat. Not only does the music sound alive but also, on subsequent listens, one begins to understand the pathways in these compositions. This music is never static; like a river, its current can be swift but the eddies are enthralling. Miles Okazaki continues to mature as a composer and musician while the Trickster ensemble is a wonderful vehicle for both his playing and conceptual adventures.

For more information, go to www.milesokazaki.com.  To hear more and purchase "Thisness" and other albums with this ensemble, go to https://milesokazaki.bandcamp.com/album/thisness

Hear Miles Okazaki & Trickster perform "I'll Build a World":





1970 was quite the year for Soft Machine. The trio of Mike Ratledge (Hohner pianet, Lowrey Holiday Deluxe organ), Robert Wyatt (drums, vocals), and Hugh Hopper (electric bass) continued its move towards electric jazz-fusion by adding Elton Dean (alto saxophone, saxello) and Lynn Dobson (soprano and tenor saxophones, flute, harmonica, vocals) as well as, for a very short time in late 1969, trombonist Marc Charig (as far as I know, there are no live recordings with him).  The new quintet's music sounded influenced as much by Miles Davis's move towards fusion on "In A Silent Way" as by American composer Terry Riley's mixture of electric instruments and improvisation on "A Rainbow in Curved Air". 

There are a slew of bootleg "live" albums of the band in 1970 but now Cuneiform Records has officially released "Facelift France and Holland". Both sets, the first recorded on January 17, 1970 at the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, the second on March 2, 1970, at the Théâtre de la Musique in Paris, feature the Quintet in full flower. Both the CD and vinyl versions have the full video of the later show. The 2-CD + DVD and the 2-Lp + DVD (this package won't be available until 12/31/2022) as well as the digital version are programmed with the March concert first.  The later show is longer (71:15) than the earlier one (44:36) but fans won't mind.  The sound quality on the January concert recording is fairly impressive (editing at the end of the first track is sloppy though) while the March show sounds a bit more distant at times (CD buyers get a third disc with a previously unreleased soundboard recording of the March program.

As for the music, four of the songs played in these concerts would appear on the Soft Machine's Columbia Records June 1970 debut "Third".  Those tracks include "Facelift", "Slightly All The Time", "Moon In June", and "Out-Bloody-Rageous".  The older album's "Facelift" does feature the Quintet as it was recorded on January 4, 1970, two weeks before the Paris concert version.  It's fun to hear the bigger group. Both Dobson and Dean play with abandon as does Wyatt. While his playful vocals would soon disappear from the band's repertoire as would he the following year. He was the right drummer for this music bringing the zany yet rhythmically strong performances this music called for.  The sounds that Ratledge gets out of the organ are often other-worldly, blending well with the soprano sax and the saxello (a Bb soprano sax). Hopper's electric bass lines help the music from flying totally out of control while his "fuzz" bass really thickens the sounds,.

Pieces such as "Mousetrap" and "Eammon Andrews" blend jazz and rock while the afore-mentioned "Facelift" and "Slightly All the Time" are prime examples of "electric jazz".  If you are curious about this most fertile time of jazz-fusion, "Facelift France and Holland" gives a particular English take. The Soft Machine would go on to influence distinctively British bands like Hatfield & The North, National Health, and Gilgamesh. Wyatt started Matching Mole after his departure continuing to mine his unique vocal style to adventurous music.  Ratledge, Hopper, and Dean would add drummer John Marshall, guitarist Allan Holdsworth, and reeds/keyboard player Karl Jenkins who would take over the group in 1976.   Still, this fascinating release illustrates just how impressive an ensemble the group was in 1970. 

The group still exists with Marshall on the drums, Holdsworth's replacement John Etheridge, young reeds player Theo Travis, and the newest member bassist Fred Thelonious Baker who joined in January 202 (replacing Roy Babbington who had replaced Hopper in the mid-1970s).  To find out more and get a history of the band, go to www.softmachine.org

For more information and to purchase "Facelift France and Holland", go to  https://cuneiformrecords.bandcamp.com/album/facelift-france-and-holland-3.

Here's a taste of "Moon in June" recorded 01/17/70 in The Netherlands:


Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Five by Twos

Photo: John Rogers
Believe it or not, the duo of Dan Weiss (drums) and Miles Okazaki (guitar) has been together for 25 years playing with other musicians in various combinations; saxophonist and composer Ohad Talmor just issued his latest album "Mise en Place" (Intakt Records) with the duo serving as his musical partners. Both Weiss and Okazaki were commissioned to compose pieces for their duo by John Zorn's Stone Commissioning Series in early 2020; only the guitarist's eight-part "The Memory Palace" received its performance debut (2/26/2020). The drummer's debut of "Middlegame" was set for late March but was postponed due to the pandemic. 
 

Now Cygnus Recordings has issued the two suites on CD, digital download, and as a two-Lp set.  Aptly titled "Music for Drums and Guitar", the music is a fascinating amalgam of the two musicians various interests and how they communicate in sound.  Okazaki's 36-minute piece,  has moments of sly funky beats, throbbing grooves, flourishes of folk and classical influences, prog-rock and more. Plus there's a feeling of playfulness that inhabits pieces such as "Part II" and "Part IV" –– the guitarist digs in to the groove Weiss lays down and the dance forward.  The melody of "Part VII" is long but flows atop a river of percussion that builds in intensity until a flurry of guitar notes rain down on the frenetic drums.  "Part VIII" closes the suite slowly at first but the circular guitar riff begins to expand –– note how the snare echoes the rapid-fire guitar riffs. As the performance builds to a fiery climax, Okazaki steps on the "fuzz' pedal and the proceedings explode right up to the final chord.

Photo: John Rogers
Weiss's seven-part suite "Middlegame" displays all of his strengths without the music turning into a mere display of technique. First and foremost, not only does the drummer "swing", he is quite a melodic player. Note how "Parts I and II" set up the template for the rest of the work.  Weiss leads the guitarist in, all the while creating rhythms that have power and depth.  "Part III" finds the drums up front with Okazaki as the support and melodic foil. By the last 90 seconds of the piece, the guitarist is locked into the beat, his percussive lines in step with Weiss. The longest piece in the suite and on the album (12:52), "Part V", is also driven by the rhythms with the guitarist being the "foundation" while Weiss steps up.  The drummer moves in and around the guitar switching from swinging the beat to being "conversational" on his kit.  

Dig deeply into "Music for Drums and Guitar" and you will find a world of endless possibilities.  As stated above, Dan Weiss and Miles Okazaki have history together so they know each other's strengths.  There are no 'dead" spots in this program; instead, the music continues to move forward, slowly down now and then to contemplate textures and introspective interactions.  There's much to discover!!

For more information, go to www.milesokazaki.com/. To purchase the album, CD, or digital download, go to https://mfdag.bandcamp.com/

Here's "Part II" from each suite:



 



The duo of Mary Halvorson (guitar, effects) and Sylvie Courvoisier (piano) first recorded together on 2017's "Crop Circle" (Relative Pitch Records), a collection of tracks that highlighted each musicians strengths as well as how they intuitively move through both composed and improvised material.  In June of this year, the duo got back together and recorded the 12 tracks that make up the two musicians second album and debut for Pyroclastic Records.  "Search for the Disappeared Hour" features five pieces composed by the guitarist, four by the pianist, and three improvisations.  The music draws in the listener while also challenging one's expectations. 

Ms. Halvorson's "Golden Proportion" opens the program; the opening melody is played by the guitar supported by powerful piano chords and rippling runs. On occasion, the musicians venture outside the stated rhythm yet never lose sight of the main thrust of the music.  Listen carefully and, right before the end, you'll hear a quote from Beethoven.  The pianist's "Mind Out of Time" finds Ms. Halvorson experimenting with sounds from the guitar while Ms. Courvoisier plays a dark, 20th Century style classical background.  The guitarist's "Bent Yellow" has a piano rhythm that references the music of Robin Holcomb; note how both musicians move in and out of blues patterns from the middle of the track forward. there are splashes of humor, the playful interactions of the duo creating a lightness that's hard to ignore. 

Photo: Self-portrait
Among the many delights on the recording is how the duo frame melodies so that they stand out. "Gates & Passes" is a ballad that builds up from the opening long melody into a long, dissonant, guitar solo. Note how Ms. Courvoisier never changes her pace or mood building her solo off the song's handsome chord structure. "Party Dress", an impromptu piece by the duo, has such a gentle feel even with the extended reverb on the guitar. "The album's closing piece, "Blizzard Rings", is also an improvisation that sounds like a dream, one in which someone is in a room full of wind-up toys –– the piano and guitar move in and around each other through to the soft finish.

"Searching for the Disappeared Hour" is quite an aural adventure through the creative minds of Mary Halvorson and Sylvie Courvoisier. If you are a fan of the two musicians, the music will delight and surprise you; if you are new to their explorations, keep an open mind and notice how the duo feeds off each others ideas, energy, and melodies.  


Here's the opening track:



Photo: Steve Mullensky
Does the end of Daylight Savings Time get you down?  Knowing that the evening starts earlier and the night lasts longer truly bother you?  My prescription for surviving the next several months is a healthy dose of "Reconvexo". No, it's not a new drug like the ones you might see on the nightly newscasts –– it's actually the new Anzic recording by the duo of Anat Cohen (clarinet, bass clarinet, voice) and Marcello Gonçalves (7-string guitar, voice). Recorded in January of 2020 while the duo was quarantined in Rio de Janiero, the nine-song program features songs from the Música Popular Brasileira songbook.  Their debut collaboration, "Outra Coisa: The Music of Moacir Santos", came out in 2017 so this time, they decided to play songs by some of Brazil's most popular composers.  

The album opens with the title track. Composed by Caetano Veloso for his sister Maria Bethânia for a 1989 album, the song has been covered by a slew of artists.  It's a bright melody that Ms. Cohen exults in while Gonçalves provides not only support but a percussive drive that pushes the song forward. Veloso and Milton Nascimento co-wrote "Paula e Bebeto", an episodic piece where the guitar and clarinets (Ms. Cohen overdubs bass clarinet) share the melody before the pace slows down for a lovely clarinet solo. The brightness of the guitar is expertly recorded so that you marvel at the brilliant accompaniment and how the piece moves organically.  Nascimento had his hand in composing two other songs on the album; he composed the words for Fernando Brant's lovely "Maria, Maria" which comes from a 1978 album about the legacy of slavery in Brazil while "Ânima" (composed with Zé Renato) is the title track for the singer's 1982 album.  The performance is truly beautiful with a melody that sounds like birds singing on a Spring morning. 

Other composers included in the program are Dori Caymmi, Gilberto Gil, the team of Antonio Carlos Jobim and Luis Bonfa, the 19th Century Venezulean composer Heraclio Hernandez, and the team of Stevie Wonder and Syreeta Wright.  "Never Dreamed You's Leave in Summer" is the tune that closes the album –– the sparkling arrangement of the Wright/ Wonder song does not sound out of place in this delightful collection.

"Reconvexo" is splendid from start-to-finish, sounding lovely at any time of day (early morning as the sun rises works for me) –– the duo of Anat Cohen and Marcello Gonçalves has created a delight-filled alternative to moping and negativity. One should feel cleansed after listening to this music!

For more information, go to www.anatcohen.com/index. To hear more and to purchase the album, go to https://anatcohen.bandcamp.com/album/reconvexo.

Here's "Ânima":



Photo: Whitney George
There is something soothing about two steel-string guitarists playing through their way through a set of songs that makes you long for sitting around a fire soaking in the sounds.  Cameron Mizell and Charlie Rauh have played together for a number of years but never like they have over the eight-plus months it took the duo to record its second album, "Local Folklore" (Destiny Records).  Both players contributed five songs to the program and both recorded in their own studios.  Despite the "remote" recording, this music sounds bright, collaborative, highly melodic and harmonic with a wistful quality permeating the songs.  Mizell and Ruah are busy leaders on their own yet when they come together, their musical conversations feel like a respite from the road, a quiet evening lost in melody and stories.


That's what "Local Folklore" is, a melody-laden journey into the heart.  Mizell's title song leads off the program on a uptempo note,, the strumming guitars setting the pace for the well-crafted melody and the fine, articulate, solos that follow. Rauh's "Petey & Kyle" follows with its Beatles-like melody just begging for words.  Yet, you can tell this is a story of two friends walking through life together   Still, Mizell's pieces also have stories connected to them whether. When you just sit and listen, you probably know people who the guitarists describe with their instruments and melodies.

Mizell switches to electric on several tracks mostly for the sustain and effects that add atmosphere and an orchestral feel to pieces such as Rauh's "A Forgiving Sort of Place" and lovely "Arolen".   The sounds are not intrusive; instead they add a sense of shimmering light off a mountain lake to the songs.  On he album closing "On Sundays I Walk Alone", the overdubbed electric plays both rhythm and the theme while Rauh's acoustic plays counterpoint.

"Local Folklore" is music for early in the morning and late in the evening.  The melodies are soothing, the musicianship impressive, a cooperative journey into the human heart and soul.  Cameron Mizell and Charlie Rauh may have had to curtail their "live" shows in the pandemic but, judging by the quality of their new album, both musicians made good use of their time.  

For more information, go to www.cameronmizell.com/ and www.charlierauh.com.  To purchase the album, go to https://destinyrecords.bandcamp.com/album/local-folklore

Here's the sweet "Greenwood Waltz":  

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Trios Magic

Three different trios, three varied approaches, and all three fascinating to explore! 

It's been over six years since Nicole Mitchell (flutes, electronics), Tomeka Reid (cello), and Mike Reed (drums, percussion) recorded "Artifacts" for 482 Music. The album was a celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the AACM, the Chicago, IL-based organization that all three are members of. The delightful album featured compositions by original members of the organization plus one by later member, guitarist Jeff Parker.  Ms. Mitchell, Ms. Reid, and Mr. Reed have all been very busy in the intervening years with the ladies joining the expanded Art Ensemble of Chicago while the drummer recorded AEC's Roscoe Mitchell.  They have also continued to play in their own various ensembles.

The trio has taken the name "Artifacts". Their new album, "...and then there's this" (Astral Spirits) features seven works by the band members plus one each by Muhal Richard Abrams and Roscoe Mitchell.  The music is, by turns, funky, earthy, improvisational, quiet, devotional, and emotionally rich.  Drummer Reed's "Pleasure Palace" opens the program on a dancing beat and raucous cello before Ms. Mitchell's tears her way through the melody.  "A. F. (dedicated to Alvin Fielder)" is a group piece built off the distorted flute sounds, the rhythm from the cowbell, and the hard-edge cello lines. The track and several others should remind the listener of the 1970s ensemble Air (Henry Threadgill, bassist Fred Hopkins, and drummer Steve McCall).  Ms. Reid shines on Ms. Mitchell's "Blessed", showing the influence of Abdul Wadud on her bluesy pizzicato lines.  

There's a large amount of aural variety on these tracks.  The cellist's "In Response To" swings with abandon featuring hearty solos from the trio while her "Song For Helena" is a stunning ballad, the rich tone of the flute meshing with the full-toned arco cello before the drummer sets a gentle pace with his brushes for Ms. Mitchell's graceful solo.  Muhal's "Soprano Song" jumps out over the solid rhythm section, the flute leaping atop the propulsive rhythms.

The program closes with the "get down funky" rhythms of Roscoe Mitchell's "No Side Effects"  – while Mr. Reed keeps the song the grooving, Ms. Mitchell and Ms. Reid dance around each other. Te music gets pretty "sweaty" in just 2:27.  "...and then there's this" is a delight from start to finish.  In just 39 minutes, Artifacts trio will make smile many times, maybe even get up and dance as well. Kudos to Nicole Mitchell, Tomeka Reid, and Mike Reed for creating one of the finest albums of the past several years!

To hear more and purchase the album, go to https://astralartifacts.bandcamp.com/album/and-then-theres-this.

Here's the opening track:


Here's a link to a live date from earlier in 2021: 


Guitarist Lionel Loueke hails from Benin in West Africa and first came to the United States in the mid-1990s. Since completing his studies at the Berklee College of Music (Boston, MA) and the Thelonious Monk Institute (Los Angeles, CA), he has been one of the busiest musicians on the planet. Not only did he co-found the trio Gilfema but also worked and recorded with Herbie Hancock, Jack DeJohnette, Terence Blanchard, Esperanza Spalding, Dave Holland, and Gretchen Parlato (and many others) plus he's recorded nine albums under his own name.

In 2017, Loueke went into the studio under the auspices of Newville Records to record an album of standards with bassist Reuben Rogers and drummer Eric Harland. Released in 2018 as vinyl-only, the recording (with three extra tracks) has now been issued on CD and as a download by Sounderscore.  The label, owned by bassist (and Gilfema member) Massimo Biolcati, hired David Darlington to do the mixing and mastering; the sound quality is suberb! The 11-song program features two tunes each by John Coltrane and Thelonious Monk as well as pieces by Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Wayne Shorter, Henry Mancini, Hoagy Carmichael, Richard Rodgers, Bernice Peterke ("Close Your Eyes"), and Johnny Green ("Body and Soul"). At times, the music sounds like a tribute to Jim Hall but the unpredictability of many of the arrangements plus the freewheeling rhythm section puts the album in a class by itself.   

Check out the Caribbean-inspired "Skylark", the percussive guitar playing the melody over bass counterpoint and playful percussion; the long fade reminiscent of Charles Lloyd's "Forest Flower".  There's an atmospheric take of "Moon River" with minimal drum backing as well as a lovely reading of "Body and Soul" –– Rogers's resonating bass accompaniment and Harland's hand drumming serve to set off the lyrical guitar playing.  The trio swing the daylights out of the album opener, "Footprints" followed several tracks later with a delightful romp through "Blue Monk". 

Come to "Close Your Eyes" for the strong guitar work of Lionel Loueke but chances are very good you'll really get into the inventive and fun playing of Reuben Rogers and Eric Harland.  O, what sounds await the eager listener –– dig in, dive in, and enjoy!

For more information, go to www.lionelloueke.com.  To purchase the album, go to https://lionelloueke.bandcamp.com/album/close-your-eyes

Go ahead, dig you some T. Monk:

:



Photo: Matt Marantz
Alto saxophonist and composer Aakash Mittal, born in Texas to a New Delhi native father and Nebraska-born mother, is a busy writer, educator, traveler, and musician.  His journeys has taken him throughout the United States, India, Mexico, and elsewhere. Mittal has won many commissions as well as fellowships, recorded with Amir elSaffar, Dennis Gonzalez, and Ravish Momin plus he has self-released four recordings as a leader.  He leads various groups including a Quartet and now the Awaz Trio. The latter ensemble includes Miles Okazaki (guitars) and Rajna Swaminathan (mrudangam and kinjara).

That trio has just issued its debut album. "Nocturne" (self-released); the program includes the five-part title track, a three-part "Street Music", and an "Opening".  The 82-second "Opening" starts with a lecturer speaking about oral tradition then Ms. Swaminathan enters;  the warbling alto sax line and expressive guitar play a short melody that leads directly into "Nocturne  I" –– the music for the album is based on Mittal's journey to Kolkata, India, to study Hindustani evening and night ragas. One can hear the influence of raga music in Mittal's linear phrasing while both guitar and murdangam (often spelled "mridangam") add the rhythmic base.  After that short piece fades (2:34), a field recording begins with hand-held percussion dancing through the speakers; the musicians do a short interpretation before the street musicians reenter.

As the album sweeps along, one can hear how the sounds of the Indian city influences the music.  While the title suite is more lyrical, it's not a typical Western classical nocturne but certainly a fine illustration of a warm evening in Kolkata or Mumbai.  "Nocturne IV" is a quiet three-way conversation, like three friends walking at 3 a.m. through the city streets.  There are moments of dissonance but, mostly, the piece draws the listener in and leads through unfamiliar yet friendly territory. Okazaki's solo shines while the often-quiet percussion follows the path of the melody. The last section of the suite ("V") jumps from the very start, featuring great accompaniment, powerful interactions, and a rippling saxophone solo that bounces atop the guitar's lower notes and the rapid-fire drumming.  Mittal's playing is alive, swift melodic phrases blended with short fragments.  

The album closes with the high-powered "Street Music III" with just the trio playing the music of the parade band moving through the streets. Mittal's melody is locked in with the percussion and the guitar chords, moving decisively and powerfully to the close.  When you listen to "Nocturne", you need to stow away your "Western Music" ears and surrender to a music that ties with serious roots in an ancient culture and the lively madness of contemporary life. Aakash Mittal has composed a number of pieces about Indian street life for previous albums; yet, these acoustic pieces illustrate how he has grown as composer, interpreter, musician, and human being.  

For more information and to check out his previous work (an earlier version of Awaz Trio featured Rez Abbasi on electric guitar), go to www.aakashmittal.com.  To hear more and to purchase the album, go to https://aakashmittal.bandcamp.com/.  

Here's "Nocturne I":

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Contemporary Music with Roots

Photo: Dimitri Louis
Guitarist and composer Miles Okazaki has proven to be quite an adept person in the Contemporary Music scene. His 2018 recording of "Work (the Complete Compositions of Thelonious Monk"), which is a solo guitar exploration of the man's oeuvre, was fascinating and still reveals new layers each time one returns to it.  Now, he's back with his Trickster quartet – Matt Mitchell (piano, Fender Rhodes, Prophet-6), Anthony Tidd (electric bass), and Sean Rickman (drums) – his "electric" adventure into and out of inner worlds and myths (if you want to understand the music's back story, go to www.milesokazaki.com/albums/the-sky-below-2019/ and read the "liner notes.")

Listening to this group's second recording "The Sky Below" (Pi Recordings), even without the notes, is a fascinating experience.  There are links to the "jazz-fusion" of the 1970s, e.g. Chick Corea's electric Return To Forever as well as to the sounds saxophonist-conceptualist Steve Coleman has been making with the M-Base Collective for the past three+ decades.  The Coleman connection also includes his current rhythm section of Tidd and Rickman, chosen for its ability to lay down the foundations plus be part of the melodic explorations.  Listen to the three-way dialogue on the opening cut "Rise and Shine" between Okazaki, Mitchell (who replaces Craig Taborn from the first album), and Tidd, how each musicians has a complimentary melody to what the other is playing.  When Rickman's expressive drums are added, the piece takes off in a different direction.  Notice how Tidd sets the pace on "Dog Star", how the melody is built off his bass line, and how the different keyboards of Mitchell move in and around Okazaki.

The blend of acoustic guitar and drums at the onset of "Seven Sisters", with the leader handling the melody (and the bassist the foundation) while Rickman s the "lead" voice is impressive.  The piece picks up intensity when the drums fall into the beat and Mitchell engages in a dialogue with Okazaki's electric guitar (note the acoustic piano is locked in with the bass while it's the Prophet-6 interacting with the leader).  The subtlety in the arrangements, even as the music moves from a roar to a whisper, stands out.

There is so much to take in as you listen to "The Sky Below"; note the use of layering keys and guitars and how the activities of the rhythm section add so much to how the music stands out.  Miles Okazaki, who has been touring Europe with his "Works" music as well as being part of Mary Halvorson's Quartet playing the music of John Zorn, produces music with Trickster that will not only challenge the listener but make them move their feet!

For more information, go to milesokazoki.com.

Here's the opening track:



Photo: Tayla Nebesky
Pianist and composer Marta Sánchez, born and raised in Madrid, Spain nonliving in New York City, is, like many of her contemporaries, a very busy musician.  She first came to the US and to New York in 2011 on a Fulbright Scholarship – she studied at New York University and soon formed her Quintet.  Ms. Sánchez had led a trio and quartet while living in Spain, recording several albums as well as working as a sideman for numerous projects. Her US group included the rhythm section of bassist Sam Anning and drummer Jason Burger plus saxophonists Roman Filiu (alto) and Jerome Sabbagh (tenor).  They released their first album in early 2015 on Fresh Sound New Talent.  By 2017 when the second album was issued (also on FSNT), the rhythm section now included bassist Rick Rosato and drummer Daniel Dor.

The Quintet, now with tenor saxophonist Chris Cheek instead on Sabbagh, now has its third album.  "El Rayo de Luz" (FSNT). On the second album, "Danza Impossible", Ms. Sanchez created much of the program to have the feel of dancing, swaying, and that trend is continued on the new recording.  Thete is also a touch of mystery to the stories the band tells on these eight songs. The mix of Filiu's alto and Cheek's tenor also gives the music, especially on the opening "Cascadas", a sense of urgency.  Pay attention to how easily the rhythm section moves as well as to how Ms. Sánchez "colors" in the background.  Her solo starts quietly and, while it does pick up in intensity, it's also a pleasure to hear how she expands the melody and her thoughts throughout the improvisation. The next track, "Parmesano", continues in that same vein but now Dor is responding to the soloists and pushing them forward.

Photo: Tayla Nebesky
"Nenufar" is a handsome ballad that on which Ms. Sánchez creates a lovely long solo.  Cheek continues along a similar road that the pianist created until Filiu reenters and the song moves to its close.  The combination of the saxes on the circular phrase that opens the title track is so seductive that the pianist and bassist pay a version of it. As the piece expands, the saxes move in and around each other, coming to together for unison and harmony lines.  As the dogs moves into the solo section, note the work of Rosato and Dor, the simple bass patterns (simple in that there are few notes) and the dancing cymbal work over the insistent piano creating a rhythm cushion for Fillies exploratory solo.  The bassist gets a short spotlight that is so melodic that it adda to the music rather than slows it down.

By the time the band and the listener reach the final track, one realizes how special this music is. Though the cut is titled "Unchanged", one cannot help but be changed by the music Marta Sánchez and the Quintet play here.  There's traces of Wayne Shorter and Guillermo Klein in the rhythms and melodies but neither the composer nor the musicians imitate anyone.  The Quintet are familiar with the material that Ms. Sánchez created for them; one can tell they truly listen to each other and are comfortable taking chances.  Try and see this ensemble live!

For more information, go to www.martasanchezmusic.com.

Here's the title track:




Since first coming to critical notice in 1990, Avram Fefer (alto, tenor, soprano, and baritone saxophones, clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, alto flute) has created music that can melt your speakers as well as pieces the can melt your heart. Fefer studied at Harvard, Berklee College, and the New England Conservatory of Music.  In his 20s, he moved to Paris, France, playing with numerous US ex-patriates such as Archie Shepp and Sunny Murray as well as groups from Senegal and the Arab world. He has worked with David Murray's Big Band, Go: Organic Orchestra, Greg Tate's Burnt Sugar, and bassist Michael Bisio.  His debut as a leader was issued by Cadence Jazz Recordings and featured bassist Eric Revis who has graced a number of his bands and recordings.

His new recording, "Testament" (Clean Feed Records), is his 15 or 16th album was a leader. It's credited to the Avram Fefer Quartet and features Revis, drummer Chad Taylor (who's been a member of Fefer's trio for over a decade), and guitarist Marc Ribot.  The eight tracks from the swinging "Dean St. Hustle" that opens to the album to drummer Taylor's prayer-like tribute to the late African bassist "Song For Dyani" (the only track on the album not composed by Fefer).  A West African feel permeates "Wishful Thinking", a piece that features splendid drumming by Taylor and foundational bass work from Revis.  The Quartet takes its time to get through the melody but then Fefer take off on a lengthy and playful solo, pushed forward and higher by the rhythm section. Ribot takes over and digs right into a loud solo that rides over the powerful beats. Fefer reenters for a wild moment dropping back to the bass and drums and the opening theme.

The title track roars forward on the interaction of the sax and guitar while Taylor thunders under them and Revis gets in on the melody.  The music never gets into a rhythmic flow which allows everyone to "attack" the piece. After the tenor sax solo, Ribot tears the speakers to shreds while Revis and Taylor go on a sonic rampage (the drummer must be in great shape as he never lets down through the entire song and that includes his interactions with the bassist that leads to the final moments of the song).  The final piece, "Essaouria", is named for the Moroccan coastal city on the Atlantic Ocean.  Taylor and Ribot set the sensual mood with Revis's insistent bass line moving the piece forward. Fefer's handsome melody sings out, not forced with the guitar chords ringing alongside. The intensity picks up during the sax solo yet the rhythm section takes its time.  Ribot's solo is quite rhythmical, having fun interacting with Taylor and Ribot. The music flows, often floats, and keeps its cool throughout.

"Testament" is an excellent collaboration between the four masters who make up the Avram Fefer Quartet.  Fefer, Marc Ribot, Eric Revis, and Chad Taylor play with fire, conviction, and plenty of joy. This, too, is a band worth seeing live but the album truly captures the essence of this powerful music.  Play it loud!!

For more information, go to www.avramfefer.com.



You'll note that all three of the music samples above come from Bandcamp.com.  You can buy the music and be assured that the artist gets a higher share of the profit than from other streaming services (especially if you use Spotify).




Saturday, November 3, 2018

"Thelonious The Onliest"

I can't claim the sobriquet "Thelonious The Onliest" for my own creation (there are numerous references to where it came from) but it is certainly a fitting description.  Thelonious Sphere Monk (1917-1982) first came to critical notice in the mid-1940s during the birth of bebop and stayed popular through the 1960s.  The native of Rocky Mount, North Carolina, created a unique style with references to the "rent party" piano of James P. Johnson, the rollicking stye of Thomas "Fats" Waller, and others but, really, nobody sounded like Monk. His splintered lines and fractured rhythms stand beside his fascinating melodies as a touchstone for pianists and other instrumentalists over the past seven decades and there is no reason to think that influence will ever dissipate. He played and recorded in many settings, from solo to trio to quartet to large ensembles yet his musical style never wavered.  Songs such as "'Round Midnight", "Mistersioso", "Crepuscule With Nellie", "Well You Needn't" and so many more, show up on set lists every night in clubs and on stages from Chicago to Shanghai, New York City to New South Wales with musicians continually trying to decode his compositions.

2017 was Monk's "Centennial Year" and 2018 is shaping up to be the year where artists are making recordings of Monk's oeuvre.. Before the end of December, there will be three albums on the market.  First out of the gate in mid-August was "Work: The Complete Compositions of Thelonious Monk", a solo gem from guitarist Miles Okazaki.  The guitarist, who has worked and/or recorded with Jane Monheit, Steve Coleman, and Jonathan Finlayson plus many more, started the project in early 2017 and discovered he needed to learn a slew of the songs before he recorded.  The album is only a digital form, available through Bandcamp, but Okazaki's liner notes (found on his website at www.milesokazaki.com/albums/work-2018/) tells the tale of how he came to record this project and why, what guitar he used, and about the importance of fellow guitarist Liberty Ellman in bringing this project to fruition.

If you are a long-time fan of the man and his music, it's a delight to hear what Okazaki does with the composition.  It's important to note what he doesn't do, including any overdubbing, changing melodies or even key signatures, never utilizing different guitars, just his trusting Gibson Charlie Christian archtop guitar.  What he does do is allow the listener to soak in each and every melody as well as expose the public to less often recorded Monk tunes ("North of the Sun", "Stuffy Turkey", and "A Merrier Christmas"). There is no shortage of rhythm on the album and the guitarist's approach truly brings out the influence of the blues on Monk. Plus, dig the bossa nova influence on "Bye-Ya", the flamenco-like lines of the title track, and the emotionally strong take of "'Round Midnight."    There are moments you might think you're hearing Mary Halvorson or Howard Roberts but comparisons disappear after two or three listenings.

You can purchase "Work" as one large digital file or as six separate files of approximately 50 minutes.  Whatever you choose to do, Miles Okazaki will, at turns, charm you, make you laugh, and become wistful.  All that's there is the music of Thelonious Monk - just listen!

For more information, go to www.milesokazaki.com.

Take a listen:



In the summer of 2017, pianist Frank Kimbrough was invited to perform in a Monk Centennial program to take place later that year at The Jazz Standard in New York City. He assembled a band that featured multi-reed master Scott Robinson, bassist Rufus Reid, and drummer Billy Drummond.  After the concert, a long-time friend suggested that Kimbrough and company record the entire Thelonious Monk songbook. The pianist felt it was possible and, with the help of another good friend plus the head of Sunnyside Records François Zalacain, the project was put in motion.  The band (minus Robinson) played 15 songs in April 2018 one night at Jazz at Kitano's in NYC and then 15 more the next night (with Robinson). The ensemble them headed to engineer Matt Balistaris's Maggie's Farm recording studio and, over the span of six days (May 22-24 and May 28-30), recorded 68 tunes (Kimbrough returned in June to record the two piano solos).

The result, to be released by Sunnyside on November 23, is titled "Monk's Dreams: The Complete Compositions of Thelonious Sphere Monk" - the album comes as an entire six-album set and each CD has a subtitle. The music is delightful throughout not just for the interactions of this fine group but also for the fact that Robinson is featured on tenor and bass saxophones, trumpet, echo cornet (a cornet with a fourth valve and a detachable second bell), bass clarinet, and contrabass sarrusophone! Once the listener gets over the sound of the lower reeds, you hear just how masterful Robinson is and how he can swing on absolutely every instrument he plays.  He even plays trumpet and tenor sax on one track ("Thelonious"). It's no gimmick - it adds to the joyous sounds emanating from the speakers.

The quartet does not mess around with the songs, no radical departures but also no rote repetition of the originals. Besides the two solo pianist pieces, there is a splendid piano-tenor sax duo on "Something In Blue" where the stride piano influence on the composer comes shining through. also, dig the bass - bass saxophone duo on "Reflections" for just how sweet both instruments sound and work together to tell Monk's story.  Kudos to all involved, from the four musicians to the excellent work of Balistaris to engineer, edit, and mix.  The sound is so fine and clear, the low notes of the contrabass sarrusophone and bass saxophone rumble in your gut, Reid's class bass work stands out, Drummond's cymbals shimmer at the sides of the spectrum, and the piano tones ringing out.

I have had the opportunity to live with this music for the past month so, listening to four or five tracks each time I sit down (more on several occasions), and, if you buy "Monk's Dreams", you'll want to do the same (even though bingeing seems to be the "in thing").  I recommend you do purchase this album (as I do with the Miles Okazaki digital album) - you'll come away with an even greater appreciation of Thelonious Monk and be blown away by the brilliant musicianship!

For more information, go to home.earthlink.net/~fkimbrough/.

Take a taste here:



Frank Kimbrough, Rufus Reid, Billy Drummond, and Scott Robinson (and his instrument menagerie) appears on November 27 and 28 at the Jazz Standard, 116 E. 27th Street, New York City, NY - call them at 212-576-2232 or go to jazzstandard.com.

I did mention that there three recordings that will be released before the close of 2018. The last one to reach the public is the work of pianist Jed Distler - go here to read more.