Editor's Choice: April 2024 (by jazzwise) |
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snobb
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Posted: 14 Mar 2024 at 11:17am |
Melissa AldanaEchoes of the Inner ProphetBlue Note The enigmatic ‘Unconscious Whispers’ offers a new angle on what’s termed as ‘spiritual’ jazz and is a refreshing antidote to the current penchant for stylised regurgitations of the mid-1960’s ‘cosmic’ period. Echoes of the Inner Prophet is an album that succeeds in reinvigorating the jazz genre. Doncaster Jazz Alumni50 YearsUbuntu Twelve performances, a dozen charts, some by noted US writers, multiple lineups, varied soloists, but above all a zest in execution and a sense that whatever the challenges offered by these often-complex pieces, these players, old and new, have them sorted. Flo and The MurmursThe WavesLa Buissonne Virginia Woolf was an impressionist, with a stream-of-consciousness style that is part poetry, part prose - particularly striking in the novel that has inspired this work. As such, it lends itself well to musical interpretation. The compositions feel pastoral and sensual, dramatic and interior, and both voice and quartet are beautifully recorded. Ruth GollerSkylluminaInternational Anthem Goller's penchant for experimentation and collaboration might have its roots in the DIY punk scene she inhabited as a teenager but it is also unmistakably, liberatingly, jazz; this marvellously sucker-punching recording, just 44 minutes long, finds the London-based Goller - formerly a mainstay of outfits from Acoustic Ladyland and Melt Yourself Down to Bex Burch's glorious Vula Viel - augmenting every piece with a different, similarly inventive drummer. James Brandon Lewis QuartetTransfigurationIntakt The ensemble sound can be tough, grainy and heavy, but also lyrical and plaintive, as exemplified by the beautiful gospel-tinged closer, ‘Elan Vital’, which betrays the known interest Lewis has for the music of Mahalia Jackson among others. This latest release further strengthens the argument that Lewis really is a modern-day tenor titan. Kjetil MulelidAgojaOdin Norway’s jazz scene often sits happily out on its own limb – the native sound palette swirling with folkloric flourishes and breathy lyricism. Thus, it’s to burgeoning piano talent Kjetil Mulelid’s credit that he’s forged an intuitive link to more conventional sounds, making space for solos and collective improvisation on this wonderfully open-hearted set. Rufus Reid & Sullivan FortnerIt’s the Nights I LikeSunnyside Communications Heard live, Rufus is a mesmerising player, and this album comes close to communicating that. Despite the 40-something year age gap between them, Sullivan is completely on the same wavelength, and their mutual exploration of everything from the old standard ‘Sweet Lorraine’ to a version of Jimmy Rowles’s ‘The Peacocks’ (that has Reid soloing over a subtle piano background), shares their joyful investigations with us. Chris PotterEagle's PointEdition Potter injects a mix of both tough and tender aspects of his primary influences Rollins and Trane, and Patitucci and Mehldau are at the height of their storytelling powers soloing on ‘Cloud Message’, a sensuous swinger that fizzes with Patitucci and Blade’s driving yet feathery swing. Trio HLKAnthropometricksUbuntu Anthropometricks applies the same process that Trio HLK employed on their debut Standard Time. Shards of standards are slivered from the original then patterned and played around with (in every sense) to create a fresh newness. So ‘Concertinas (for Bill)’ may have bubbled free from ‘All Blues’ and be a backhanded compliment to Bill Evans, while ‘Flanagan’s Lament’ may allude to Tommy Flanagan chasing the ‘Trane across ‘Giant Steps’. from www.jazzwise.com |
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