Oct 12 2012
Nadje Noordhuis – “Nadje Noordhuis”
This album has been ten years in the making. Bringing together compositions that she has written over the last decade, trumpeter Nadje Noordhuis has created an enchanting musical biography of the seminal events of her life during that span. But it’s not the biographical facts surrounding the compositions that makes this album so compelling. There is a hint of the epic emanating from many of these tunes, though not so much in the universal story sense, but in that way time can make a microcosm out of the important moments of our lives and give them a weightiness that, perhaps, we only barely felt as they occurred.
It’s this quality that drew me to the album.
Your album personnel: Nadje Noordhuis (trumpet, flugelhorn), Sara Caswell (violin), Geoffrey Keezer (piano), Joe Martin (bass), Obed Calvaire (drums), James Shipp (cajon, pandeiro, aux. percussion), and Rupert Boyd (classical guitar).
These are tunes that sway with conviction. Yet even with their graceful ease, there is potent emotion bubbling just beneath the surface. Tracks like “Magnolia,” which rides the wings of violin and trumpet from start to finish, and “Waltz For Winter,” which follows a trail struck out on piano, possess a gravity that prevents the tune from simply becoming atmospheric and flighty.
And the up-tempo tunes have no less an abiding regard for the momentous. “Le Fin” has a thriving pulse that emanates Big Things Happening, of memories in the making, and “Mayfair” opens with bold pronouncements on trumpet, but it’s the torrential piano lines that brings the storm down from the sky.
Even the placement of tracks on the album add to the story-like ambiance. Opening track “Water Crossing” has an Anything Is Possible exuberance, and the album ends with the demure “Open Road,” a duet of piano and flugelhorn, a tune which is pure resolve and reminiscence.
Noordhuis’s debut album gives us plenty of reason to look forward to when she sits down and composes the next chapter in her life.
Released on Little Mystery Records, which appears to be Noordhuis’s own label.
Originally from Australia, this is now jazz from NYC.
Noordhuis gives a pretty detailed run-down of the inspirations behind each track on her site HERE.
Of interest to me, and perhaps to some of you, Noordhuis is a member of Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society (big band), which I’m very thankful to have just discovered, because my head was about to explode with frustration at not being able to place from where I recognized Noordhuis’s name. I hope to have spared you similar pain.
You can stream the entire album on Noordhuis’s Bandcamp page. It can also be purchased there.
Available at Amazon: MP3. Physical CD and MP3 available at CDBaby. If it becomes available at eMusic, I’ll add a link then.
Oct 15 2012
Tiny Reviews: Olivier Bogé, Joe Chambers, Trio Enchant(i)er, & Christian Escoude
Tiny Reviews, featuring: Olivier Bogé Imaginary Traveler, Joe Chambers Joe Chambers Moving Picture Orchestra, Trio Enchant(i)er Les Composantes Invisibles, and Christian Escoude Plays Brassens Au bois de mon coeur.
*****
Olivier Bogé – Imaginary Traveler
Saxophonist Olivier Boge has created one of those albums.
Your album personnel: Olivier Bogé (sax), Pierre Perchaud (guitar), Tony Paeleman (piano, Rhodes), Nicolas Moreaux (bass), and Karl Jannuska (drums).
There is a relaxed ease to this album. It is unhurried as it makes its point. Guitar matches well with Fender Rhodes. Sax blends in and out of the mix with a casual air. Guitar alternates between sun and shade, and while there’s nothing wrong with the electric guitar sections, it’s when the steel string comes out that the tunes really shine. Rhodes does a pretty decent facsimile of vibes, sending out bright notes for sax and bass to twirl around. Drums keep up a pleasant chatter, more tick than thump.
Just an all-around enjoyable album.
Released on the Fresh Sounds New Talent label.
Jazz from the La Garenne Colombes, France scene.
Available at eMusic. Available at Amazon: CD
| MP3
Joe Chambers – Joe Chambers Moving Picture Orchestra
Your album personnel: Joe Chambers (drums, vibes) with the Joe Chambers Moving Pictures Orchestra: Sharel Cassity, Tim Green (flute, clarinet, sax), Craig Handy (flute, sax), Sam Dillon, Frank Basile (sax), David Weiss , Josh Evans, Greg Gisbert, Frank Greene (trumpet), Conrad Herwig, Max Siegel , James Burton , Steve Davis (trombone), Xavier Davis (piano), Dwayne Burno (bass), Steve Berrios (percussion), and guest: Nicole Guiland (vocals).
Released on the Savant Records label.
Jazz from NYC (though Chambers does make Wilmington, NC his home).
Available at eMusic. Available at Amazon: CD
| MP3
Trio Enchant(i)er – Les Composantes Invisibles
Your album personnel: Gregory Sallet (saxophones), Olivier Jambois (guitar), and Kevin Lucchetti (drums).
Stream a couple album tracks at the artist site.
Released on the Naive label. Jazz from the Grenoble, France scene.
Available at eMusic.
Christian Escoude – Plays Brassens Au bois de mon coeur
Your album personnel: Christian Escoude (guitar), Fiona Monbet (violin), Andre Villeger (clarinet), Jean Baptiste Laya (electric guitar), Pierre Boussaguet (acoustic bass), Anne Paceo (drums), Bireli Lagrene (acoustic guitar), Swan Berger (acoustic guitar), and Valerie Duchateau (classical guitar).
Stream an album track on the Sunnyside Records blog.
Released on Sunnyside Records label.
Available at eMusic.
*****
The Olivier Boge and Joe Chambers reviews are original to Bird is the Worm, but portions of the other reviews were originally used in my Jazz Picks weekly article for eMusic, so here’s some language protecting their rights to that reprinted material as the one to hire me to write about new jazz arrivals to their site…
“New Arrivals Jazz Picks,“ reprints courtesy of eMusic.com, Inc.
© 2012 eMusic.com, Inc.
As always, my sincere thanks to eMusic for the gig. Cheers.
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By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2012 Releases • 0