Dec 16 2014
Recommended: Julien Wilson Trio – “Swailing”
The folksy charm and easy pace of Swailing is pretty damn enchanting all its own, but it’s the way in which the Julien Wilson Trio builds drama with tiny bursts of lyricism that represents the album’s most enthralling characteristic. The trio of saxophonist Wilson, guitarist Stephen Magnusson and accordionist Steve Grant create a motion that matches the outward shape of each song’s melody. It’s an approach that allows them the space to weave in additional melodic threads for emotional depth while also providing the music some individual flair outside the group dynamic. It’s why this calm album is able to display so much liveliness and activity without shattering its seaside ease.
“I Believe This Belongs to You” is the centerpiece of this approach. Wilson’s sax adopts a nonchalance as it sings the melody with crispness and clarity. Magnusson’s guitar does the same, while also joining accordionist Grant in laying down some fuzzy dissonance in the build to the dramatic finish. This is the convergence of tranquility and tension that pours from this recording.
From this starting point, Wilson manipulates slight variations of the theme. “Little Church” is a solemn murmur, while “Euge” is deeply introspective… not a song so much as a musing. “Trout River” runs deep with the blues, and is cloaked behind an attractive tunefulness. “Creole Rhapsody” works in some New Orleans threads. “Various” has a theatrical flair, of sudden curves and swerves and an attention to the detail and drama of every motion, whereas “Jitterbug Waltz” is a bubbling cauldron of activity that could, and does, end up everywhere at once.
Most of the pieces hint at a formlessness that adds a bit of mystery to their expressions. It’s a shared quality that interlocks the different facets into a cohesive whole. The result is compelling, and the methodology for bringing it all together doesn’t appear to be a simple one. The album ends with “Chanting,” a piece that speaks to this exact point, and by extension, to every track on the album. A high-pitched shriek, a low resonant drone, a drawled, lyrical melody cutting through its midst, and the slowly revealed shape that never fully materializes, remaining hidden just enough to compel the listener forward to see what the ear might be missing.
A very cool album, offering up plenty of intrigue and some stunning moments of beauty.
Your album personnel: Julien Wilson (tenor & soprano saxes, bass clarinet), Stephen Magnusson (guitars) and Steve Grant (accordion).
Released on Lionsharecords.
Nifty cover art by Dale Cox.
Jazz from the Melbourne, Australia scene.
Available at: Bandcamp | CDBaby
Dec 16 2014
Drifting, presently: The weekly recommendation column
So, I’ve got some bad news about my weekly Wondering Sound Jazz Picks column.
But first, did I ever write about how I got that gig?
I’ve put fragments of the story out there before. Some of this you’ll have heard previously, but never, perhaps, with all the dots connected.
The “New Releases Only” discussion thread on the AllAboutJazz forum is one of the best things ever. One day, a user who goes by the nick of Robmid decided to start a thread that focused on the jazz of today. As many of you know, jazz listeners tend to get caught in the music of the past. This is often purposeful. And why not? I mean, shit, there’s some amazing jazz created in the last century… some of the best ever. It’s the kind of stuff that got me hooked on the genre… Monk and Coltrane and Miles and McCoy and Dexter and Mingus… all familiar names with hundreds of albums to their names to dig through. And that’s just a tiny fraction of all the great music from back in the day.
But Bill Frisell was another musician who got me into jazz. He was a modern voice making modern music. I was only beginning to dig into the jazz of today when Robmid began that thread. It was a simple thing: Talk about the new releases that are floats your boat. Not music from the past getting reissued or archival footage of old concerts from old musicians… hell, not even modern jazz that was released a couple years ago. TODAY. What’s happening today?!
Well, the more I discovered, the more it incited me to discover even more. It seemed like there was no trail that didn’t lead to excellent new releases. I spent a lot of time on the internet tracking leads down and just wandering the halls to see what I might stumble upon.
I started keeping lists. It was a way to stay organized and a way to remind myself those names to further check out later. I shared the names on those lists, both on the AAJ forum and also the eMusic (dot com) and eMusers (dot org) forums. AAJ asked me to put those lists to work and become their Download of the Day editor. I did that for a year. I also kept sharing news of the music I was discovering on the various forums.
One day, on the eMusic forum, the user AMCLARK2 suggested in a discussion thread that eMusic should hire me to write a weekly recommendations column. I was supremely flattered to see that others were cosigning his proposal. Much to surprise, I received an email from Joe Edward Keyes, eMusic’s (and later, Wondering Sound’s) editor-in-chief. He wanted to hire me to write a weekly jazz recommendations column. This became the Jazz Picks column.
It’s been a great experience. I’ve been able to share news of so much great new jazz, much of it quite obscure. Joe was great. He left me to my own devices. Never once in the 3+ years that I wrote that weekly column did Joe ever demand that I write (or not write) about a particular album. There was no editorial or commercial pressure whatsoever. This was a good thing, especially taken in the light that many of the musicians I wrote about weren’t well known outside of their immediate family and tight fan base.
Back near the start of 2014, the eMusic editorial function was spun off to create Wondering Sound. It’s where my Jazz Picks column currently resides.
Unfortunately, that is over.
As you may have heard, Wondering Sound is scaling back… way back. A result of that action is my weekly jazz recommendations column will no longer be appearing on their site.
I can’t emphasize often enough how appreciative I am that J. Edward Keyes gave me a regular gig these last three years. Both the platform, first on eMusic and then on Wondering Sound, was a great opportunity to spread the news far and wide of all this excellent music that deserved time in a big spotlight. The fact that it was a regularly paying gig is no less important, because my budget never could’ve afforded the massive amount of time and effort it takes to compile that weekly column (to my own satisfaction) without that income. I can’t believe it lasted for three years. It seems like longer. And now, looking back on it, it feels like just yesterday. Joe, my sincere thanks and appreciation. It was a huge statement for you to dedicate budget to a weekly column about modern jazz. There are a lot of musicians who benefited from the spotlight you provided me to shine on their excellent music. Thank you.
So, about that column…
The good news is that, for the time being, I’ll be hosting the Jazz Picks column, here, on Bird is the Worm. I’ll be posting one tomorrow, in fact. Not sure I’ll be calling Jazz Picks anymore, but whatever, y’know. If you have ideas (polite ones) for what I should call the recommendations, please feel free to leave a comment. I’ll be running the weekly column on BitW through the end of January. During that time, I’ll be looking for a new home for the column. If you’re a reputable publication and would be interested in hiring me to write a weekly recommendations column, please contact me at my site email (see bottom of About Me page). I can be hired at reasonable rates, and I’ll be bringing a proven, established following. I’ve got traffic stats and social media numbers to back it up.
During that same span of time, I’ll be investigating the possibility of running a crowd-funding project by way of creating a subscription service for the recommendations… a weekly newsletter, ‘zine, something. It would be an expanded version of the current column and the preference would be to make it dirt cheap (no more than a dollar a month, preferably less) so that more people sign up at a cheaper price and, individually nobody is spending any serious cash for my column that could, instead, be used to purchase music. Considering the value my recommendations column currently brings, plus the added features I’m envisioning, one dollar a month doesn’t seem like an offensive sum to request, y’know?
And we’ll pretty much have to see how all that goes before I start making other plans. Much of this is new to me. I know I’ve been at this for three years, but most of that time has been spent on what I do best- listening to everything that comes through the new releases listings and trusting my ear to pick out the music that has something to say. Pitching articles, creating ‘zines, crowdfunding, networking… I’ll be taking my first steps on that. It should be fun. Painful at times, I’m sure, but fun.
Regardless of what I ultimately decided about my weekly recommendations column, Bird is the Worm will continue on as normal. I’m not going anywhere. It’s just a question of how I’m able to allocate my time.
Okay. That’s it. Next post will be tomorrow’s Jazz Picks column (or whatever I decide to call it). Things will be a bit different and it’ll have a new home, but I’ll still be finding music that might just be your new favorite album. Let’s begin…
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By davesumner • Announcement - Music • 8 • Tags: news, Wondering Sound news