Bird is the Worm Best of 2014: Albums 21-25

 

Today’s post reveals the 21st through the 25th Bird is the Worm Top 30 jazz albums of 2014.

*****

BitW square avatarA Best Of album has to hit me right in my heart and provoke a strong emotional reaction.  A Best Of album has to engage my head and elicit a cerebral connection.  Give me some intrigue.  Show me your music has got personality.  Extra points are awarded for doing Something Different.  I want to hear music that embraces the best qualities of creativity.  Strong musicianship alone is not enough.  Many excellent albums fall short of earning a slot on the list.  It literally pains me when I see some of the albums that aren’t included on my Best Of lists.  But I listen to a lot of music, and one of the rare downsides to encountering so much great Jazz is that some of it won’t receive the recognition it deserves.  So there you have it.

No matter how diligent a listener is and no matter how thoroughly that person covers the music scene, there will always be albums that slip through the cracks.  It’s a matter of the scarcity of time vs. the overflow of music.  It’s also a matter of subjectivity.  I try to instill an objectivity into the affair, judging each album’s qualities without consideration for my own personal preferences… at least, as much as I am able.  I can say for certain, my Best of 2014 list looks different than my personal Favorites of 2014 list.  No attempt to encapsulate the 2014 jazz album landscape will be fully comprehensive, but I humbly offer up my list with a confidence that these albums represent the best that 2014 had to offer.  But it’s a list that’s likely to gain a few addendums with the passing of time.

What you’ll read below are not reviews.  They are simple thoughts, reminiscences, fragments of recollections, and brief opinions about how each album struck me both now and when I first heard it.  There is a link to a more formal write-up following each entry… that’s where you go to find out what’s what about each recording.  Those write-ups are accompanied with embedded audio of an album track, as well as personnel and label information, links to artist, label, and retail sites, and anything else that seemed relevant at the time I wrote about the album.  Follow those links.  They might just lead to your next most favorite album ever.

So, with all that out of the way:  Let’s begin…

*****

 

21.  Copenhagen Art Ensemble – Reuterswärd

Copenhagen Art Ensemble - "Reutersward"The premise of this recording is the work of multi-medium artist Carl Fredrik Reuterswärd.  The Copenhagen Art Ensemble embraces his work both in the spirit of the expressions but also by incorporating his poems and writings into the fabric of the music.  This bit of meta experimentalism is all kinds of intriguing, but, ultimately, it’s the spirit of the project that leads to the greatest rewards on Reuterswärd.  The free improvisations, the orchestral jazz passages, the beer hall hymns and the European jazz constructs all blend seamlessly together like sections of a dream, building an inexplicable cohesiveness between songs that is as comforting as a lullaby before a restful night of sleep… sections that scatter freely into cryptic patterns of dissonance and those that coalesce into the lovely, succinct expressions of heartbreak and humor.  The Ensemble makes the work of Reuterswärd intimately familiar even if this album is the first time a listener has encountered his name.  It’s a hell of an achievement to take on the lofty goal of encapsulating the many art forms of a particular artist with the result being music that is challenging yet so endearing that a connection is simple to forge between instrument and ear.  Intelligent, whimsical, and undeniably beautiful.

Released on ILK Music.

Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).

*****

22.  Danilo Perez – Panama 500

Danilo Perez - "Panama 500"When you boil it all down, it’s simply a beautiful album.  However, there’s nothing particularly simple about Danilo Perez’s expansive take on the history of his native Panama.  The pianist tackles the subject from a music standpoint as well as from factual and metaphorical perspectives.  But the wide lens doesn’t preclude his ensemble from drawing gorgeous tones from the details and expanding nuance into profound statements.  Indigenous musics come together with later Panamanian musics as well as those from Cuba, Africa, Europe and NYC.  The concept is a fascinating one, but it’s not required reading in order to enjoy this thoroughly engaging… and beautiful… album.

Released on Mack Avenue Records.

Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).

*****

23.  Friensemblet – El Aaiun: Across the Border

Mathilde Grooss Viddal - "El Aaiun Across the Border"I’m still quite taken with this live performance from Friensemblet, the large ensemble led by Mathilde Grooss Viddal.  A nifty mix of old-school ECM folk-jazz and 1970s Alice Coltrane soul-on-the-sleeve spiritual adventurism, Viddal’s ensemble cycles through a spinning mix of free improv fervor, spiritual jazz drift-and-groove, minimalist drone, Indian raga and Nordic folk… and, undoubtedly, a few other things in the mix.  It’s a thrilling performance that deftly balances the qualities of a serious intellect and a fun disposition.  There aren’t a lot of ensembles that set out to build just such a construct, and there are even fewer doing it this well.

Released on Viddal’s Giraffa Records.

Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).

*****

24.  Otis Brown III – The Thought of You

Otis Brown III - "The Thought of You"This album is a classic Blue Note 1960s hard bop recording, set to swing with an abundance of warmth.  This album is a modern post-bop session, loaded with melodic excursions, cross-genre rhythmic approaches and electronic flourishes.  Otis Brown III‘s debut are all of those things, but they are only elements to something much more individualistic.  It’s not uncommon for jazz musicians to borrow from old and new, but it is rare for it to lead to something greater than those individual influences, of an algebra where past+present=one step ahead into the future.  The Thought of You is a singular expression, a statement of vision that recognizes the roots of the music without allowing it to define where that music ultimately ends up.  It’s why the electronics and sampling sounds right at home with the straight-ahead bop and the modern infusions of post-bop and gospel and blues.  And putting all those considerations to the side, what matters most is that this album is full of warmth and genial energy and very easy to embrace… even as it crafts something very new from the materials of past and present.

Released on Blue Note Records and Revive Music.

Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).

*****

25.  Hans Lüdemann Trio Ivoire – Timbuktu

Hans Ludemann Trio Ivoire - "Timbuktu"There’s something intriguingly straight-ahead about Hans Lüdemann‘s trio of piano, balaphon and percussion.  He doesn’t attempt to blend European Jazz and West African folk; he’s just seeking out the points of connectivity and launching off from that point… like a chef that doesn’t necessarily have a finished meal in mind as he carefully picks the ingredients that stoke his creativity.  The communication between piano, drums, and balaphon is remarkably unhindered, as if these instruments had been collaborating as a jazz trio for decades.  It’s inspired music, and that he’s able to synthesize it down to relatively straight-forward, seemingly simple tunes is a hell of an accomplishment.  It’s an album capable of creating an environment conducive to just kicking back and drifting off.  It’s an album capable of engaging the listener in a cerebral exercise.  Heart and head are both targets for this lovely, charming album.

Released on Intuition Music.

Read more at Bird is the Worm (LINK).

*****

 

Tomorrow’s post reveals the 2014 Bird is the Worm #16#20 albums of the year.

Cheers.