The 10 Best Jazz Albums Of 2023 (by Stereogum) |
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snobb
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Posted: 14 Dec 2023 at 3:20am |
2023 has been a transitional year for jazz. We lost one of the genre’s most brilliant composers and performers, Wayne Shorter; free jazz flamethrowers Peter Brötzmann and Charles Gayle; genteel pianist Ahmad Jamal; bassist, composer and Spike Lee’s father Bill Lee; singer Tony Bennett; trombonist Curtis Fowlkes; bassist Richard Davis; pianist and composer Carla Bley; saxophonist Mars Williams, known to some as a modern free jazz hero and others as the dude from the Psychedelic Furs; and some people I consider jazz-adjacent, like Brazilian singer Astrud Gilberto and guitarist Jeff Beck, who made a series of excellent fusion albums in the mid ’70s. And while Shabaka Hutchings is still alive, he announced his intention to quit playing the saxophone, and disbanded all of his current groups: Sons Of Kemet, The Comet Is Coming, and Shabaka And The Ancestors. The music’s boundaries seemed to grow more porous than ever. Drummer Kassa Overall signed to Warp Records and released ANIMALS, an album full of electronic collages and guest appearances from players like Vijay Iyer, Tomoki Sanders (Pharoah’s son), Theo Croker, as well as Lil B, Danny Brown, and J. Hoard. Saxophonist James Brandon Lewis released two albums, one a collection of gospel songs and the other a cranked-up, almost punk-rock disc that featured Fugazi’s rhythm section on one track. The Arooj Aftab/Vijay Iyer/Shahzad Ismaily album Love In Exile was a near-ambient collection of dreamlike, improvised music for trances. Trumpeter Chief Adjuah put down the horn and released Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning, an album on which he played a harplike instrument of his own invention and sang lyrics honoring his Mardi Gras Indian heritage. Even saxophonist JD Allen, known for his love of traditional trio play and bluesy song structures, made an abstract, questing electronics-soaked record. Other than calling out some excellent records, it seemed impossible to assess “the state of jazz,” so I asked a bunch of artists, all of whom put out music of their own in 2023, to share their favorite album(s) of the year. Here are the responses I got: Arooj Aftab, vocals2023 release: Arooj Aftab/Vijay Iyer/Shahzad Ismaily, Love In Exile (Verve) Vijay Iyer, piano2023 release: Arooj Aftab/Vijay Iyer/Shahzad Ismaily, Love In Exile (Verve) Camae Ayewa (aka Moor Mother), vocals and electronics2023 release: Irreversible Entanglements, Protect Your Light (Impulse!) Angel Bat Dawid, clarinet/vocals/bandleader2023 release: Requiem For Jazz (International Anthem) Isaiah Collier, tenor saxophone2023 release: Parallel Universe (Night Dreamer) Johnathan Blake, drums2023 release: Passage (Blue Note) Steve Lehman, alto saxophone2023 release: Ex Machina (Pi) Gard Nilssen, drums2023 release: Family (We Jazz) Thandi Ntuli, piano/vocals2023 release: Rainbow Revisited (with Carlos Niño) Kassa Overall, drums/programming2023 release: ANIMALS (Warp) Matana Roberts, alto sax and composition2023 release: Coin Coin Chapter Five: In The Garden (Constellation) Lakecia Benjamin, alto saxophone2023 release: Phoenix (Whirlwind) Sylvie Courvoisier, piano2023 release: Chimaera (Intakt) Lafayette Gilchrist, piano2023 release: Undaunted (Morphius) Mary Halvorson, guitar2023 release: Illegal Crowns, Unclosing (Out Of Your Head) Myra Melford, piano2023 release: Hear The Light Singing (RogueArt) Terell Stafford, trumpet2023 release: Between Worlds (Le Coq) Sherman Irby, alto saxophone2023 release: Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra & Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Wynton And now, here are the best jazz albums of 2023. 10 This album opens with a statement from feminist philosopher and political activist Angela Davis, and later tracks offer words from poet Sonia Sanchez and even a bit of enigmatic wisdom from Wayne Shorter. There are a lot of other guests, too, including Georgia Anne Muldrow, Patrice Rushen, Dianne Reeves, and trumpeter Wallace Roney Jr. Alto saxophonist Benjamin wrote this music during the waning phases of the pandemic, so it’s reflective of a lot of angst and swirling emotion. “New Mornings” features a repeated, vamping melody over a pulsing, high-energy rhythm that sounds like waking up and saying to yourself, “, here we go again.” But the relatively short solos — and the way the rest of the band gathers together supportively — winds up making it about resilience, not resignation. 09 Darcy James Argue's Secret Society - Dynamic Maximum Tension (Nonesuch)Composer Darcy James Argue’s fourth release with his ultra-adventurous big band, the Secret Society, is their first in seven years, following 2016’s Real Enemies. What he does with large ensembles — the Secret Society, on this record, includes five trumpets, four trombones, five wind instruments (saxophones and/or flutes), electric guitar, piano, bass, and drums — is simply some of the most exciting music being made right now. The pieces throb and roar, ebb and flow, swing and rock. Sometimes it’s quiet, but it rises to tremendous crescendos, and there’s always some little sound tucked in the corner to surprise you. Some big bands just riff; the music pulses and the drummer gives it the illusion of forward movement. But Argue’s music shifts and whirls like an entire galaxy in orbit around itself, and it’s breathtaking to listen to. I love this record. 08 Saxophonist Mats Gustafsson’s Fire! is a stripped-down trio with him on saxes and homemade electronics, Johan Berthling on bass, and Andreas Werliin on drums. Their music is grinding and heavy, pounding one-chord riffs into the ground like a pile-driver. Fire! Orchestra is those three dudes plus dozens of guests, and their music is lush, trance-inducing, and theatrical, featuring multiple vocalists, extra horns, strings and more. It swirls jazz, soul, and modern classical together into something that at its best reminds me of the work of the late Greg Tate’s improvising ensemble Burnt Sugar. This latest release, a 2xCD or 3xLP set, features 43 musicians in total, performing a single two-hour piece broken into seven movements and seven interludes with early ’70s blaxploitation movie soundtrack strings, a deep bass groove, plenty of singing, and some muscular soloing from Gustafsson. 07 James Brandon Lewis is constantly challenging himself and putting a new spin on his art — different bands, different contexts, but always recognizably him. On this record, one of two he released in 2023, he’s backed by cellist Chris Hoffman — playing a highly distorted electric instrument — and drummer Max Jaffe, with cornet player Kirk Knuffke and keyboardist Shahzad Ismaily popping up here and there and one track, “Fear Not,” featuring the Messthetics (guitarist Anthony Pirog and Fugazi’s former rhythm section of bassist Joe Lally and drummer Brendan Canty). There’s a version of Donny Hathaway’s “Someday We’ll All Be Free” that becomes a beautiful duo exchange between Knuffke and Lewis over a massive grinding roar from Hoffman and a kit-rattling backbeat from Jaffe. On “The Blues Still Blossoms” he takes big bites of a simple, emotionally resonant melody and his tone is so huge it recalls Albert Ayler’s Spiritual Unity. 08 Pianist Vijay Iyer first performed with bassist Shahzad Ismaily and singer Arooj Aftab in 2018. It was a fully improvised encounter, and when it was over they all knew they’d have to do it again. Their debut album, which followed maybe a half dozen shows, is a hushed, meditative, and extraordinarily beautiful studio session. Iyer plays piano and electronics; Ismaily plays bass and keyboards; and Aftab sings in Urdu. The shortest track lasts eight minutes, the longest nearly 15. Aftab’s low, prayerful vocals are balanced by Iyer’s florid piano, as Ismaily rumbles between the two of them. The first track, “To Remain/To Return,” reminds me of Alice Coltrane’s devotional music from the ’80s, crossed with one of Keith Jarrett’s darker solo ECM albums. But really, there’s nothing else out there like this music. Give yourself over to it for its entire 72-minute running time, and see how you feel when it’s over. 05 Wadada Leo Smith never seems to stop working. I’ve heard him in what feels like a hundred contexts, and his use of space and his piercing single notes allow him to cut through no matter who he’s playing with. On this digital-only album, he’s joined by guitarists Nels Cline, Brandon Ross, and his grandson Lamar Smith; bassists Bill Laswell and Melvin Gibbs; electronic musician Hardedge; drummer Pheeroan akLaff; and percussionist Mauro Refosco. The music has some of the same simmering, tiger-watching-you-from-the-shadows energy as portions of Miles Davis’ Get Up With It, but there’s a lot more going on here than just nods to the past. Smith and his collaborators bring electric jazz-rock (and dub, and ambient music) very much into the 21st century and even beyond. It’s a little disappointing that there’s no physical version of this record, but it’s a must-hear regardless. 04 James Reese Europe, born in Alabama in 1881, was a classically trained violinist, a composer and a bandleader. During World War I, he fought as part of the 369th Infantry Regiment, better known as the Harlem Hell Fighters, and led the regimental band, which performed all over France and recorded for the Pathé label before returning to the US. His arrangements combined ragtime and military band music, set to a highly syncopated rhythm that you can hear the roots of swing in. It’s not jazz, but it’s a key step on the way to jazz, and it’s an amazing piece of Black American cultural history. On this album, Moran arranges new versions of Europe’s compositions, making the ties to jazz explicit — “Ballin’ The Jack” is combined with the late pianist Geri Allen’s “Feed The Fire,” and the spiritual “Flee As A Bird To Your Mountain” transitions seamlessly into Albert Ayler’s “Ghosts.” It’s amazing. 03 Irreversible Entanglements have come a long way since saxophonist Keir Neuringer, trumpeter Aquilles Navarro, bassist Luke Stewart, drummer Tcheser Holmes, and vocalist/electronic musician Camae Ayewa first joined forces in 2015. After three albums on Chicago indie label International Anthem, they’re now signed to Impulse!, and their latest record was tracked in part at the legendary Rudy Van Gelder studio in New Jersey. Protect Your Light is their most positive record to date, offering tributes to fallen friends, mantras for creating sustainable and welcoming communities, and paeans to universal love. The music includes Caribbean parade rhythms, dub effects, and special guests on piano, cello and vocals. They haven’t lost their edge, though; on “Our Land Back,” the horns and Janice A. Lowe’s piano waver mournfully and Ayewa sneers “Clueless outdated on sale and made of plastic/ Well, at least we’ve been to the moon,” a line worthy of the late Gil Scott-Heron. 02 Jaimie Branch - Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((World War)) (International Anthem)Trumpeter jaimie branch’s third studio album, Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((World War)), was nearly complete when she died; her friends and bandmates finished it for her, and it’s an amazing record, showcasing her as a compelling and poetic vocalist and lyricist as well as a powerhouse trumpeter. She harmonizes with bassist Jason Ajemian on a version of the Meat Puppets’ “Comin’ Down” (retitled “The Mountain” here) that will bring tears to your eyes, and the album’s next-to-last track, “Take Over The World,” is a churning folk-punk eruption. Elsewhere, the arrangements are lush and carefully constructed, with additional instruments (flute, trombone, bass clarinet, marimba, timpani, conga and other percussion), some played by the group members and others by guests filling out the sound and making it the biggest, most colorful canvas Branch and her collaborators ever got to play with. She’ll be missed. 01
Matana Roberts - Coin Coin Chapter 5: In The Garden (Constellation)Matana Roberts’ Coin Coin series is one of the great works of art of the 21st century. Each volume sounds radically different from the others, but they all flow together as manifestations of a single creative impulse. The fifth volume tells the story of a relative of Roberts’ who died in the 1920s following an illegal abortion. Roberts has combined family stories with their own research and has created a harrowing piece of spoken-word narrative art set to some really beautiful music performed by a large group of collaborators including punk/jazz drummer Mike Pride, pianist Cory Smythe, violinist Mazz Swift, TV On The Radio synth player Kyp Malone, alto saxophonist Darius Jones, and others. Roberts chants over and over, “My name is your name/ Our name is their name,” and as the protagonist tells her story, it becomes disturbingly clear how much she has in common with present-day women, and therefore how little has changed. This is a heartbreaking record, but it’s also deeply inspiring, a tale of thwarted but nevertheless undeniable resilience and determination. from /www.stereogum.com Edited by snobb - 14 Dec 2023 at 3:25am |
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