Dec 13 2011
New jazz recommendations article up at eMusic
As mentioned previously, every Tuesday, I contribute to a weekly article on emusic giving a rundown of the more interesting new arrivals in jazz.
Well, it’s up.
Here’s a link to where you can read the New Arrivals article on emusic. My jazz contribution to the article (which covers all genres) is about half-way down. You can also access the article on emusic’s own blog “17 Dots”, linked to here.
In about 30 days, I’ll reprint those recs here on this blog, modifying the descriptions where appropriate, adding album art, embedding sound clips when I can, and making them look all spiffy like you’ve come to expect and appreciate in the long history we’ve all had together since I began this blog last week.
You can probably expect that Tuesdays on my blog will be a bit slow. Emusic keeps me pretty busy then.
Cheers.
-Dave
Dec 15 2011
Tiny Reviews – Recapping the Best of 2011 (Part 1)
Featuring Tiny Reviews of Best of 2011 Jazz Albums by: Marcin Wasilewski Trio, Susana Santos Silva, Steven Lugerner, Francis Drake, Jean Lapouge, Omer Avital, and Fabrice Sotton.
*****
Hey.
So, I’m gonna briefly hit on some of the albums that were standouts for 2011. There were a lot, and those are just the ones I know about, so this series may not end for awhile. Tentatively, I’m thinking I’ll keep this series limited to seven tiny reviews per post, an album for every day of the week.
Let’s begin…
Marcin Wasilewski Trio – Faithful
It’s a fine line between serene and sleepy, and Wasilewski has displayed a talent at keeping things interesting. Even at its quietest moments, Faithful has a tiny fire lit under the composition that keeps the brain anchored on the tune.
Released on the ECM label. Over an hour of serene modern piano trio jazz. Jazz from Poland.
Available at Amazon: CD
MP3
Susana Santos Silva – Devil’s Dress
Your album personnel: Susana Santos Silva (trumpet), Zé Pedro Coelho (tenor sax), Andre Fernandes (guitar), Demian Cabaud (bass), and Marcos Cavaleiro (drums).
Santos’s sound on trumpet is so warm, even when she’s warping a melody into some indescribable shape. I’ve been listening to this album since it came out in April, and I still find it as compelling and fun as the first time. Fans of Ben Allison and Todd Sickafoose, who also employ inventive compositions to incorporate the sounds of rock and indie music into their tune, should take to Devil’s Dress pretty easily.
Released on the Toap label.
Here’s a link to a free download from the album on the AllAboutJazz site, courtesy of the artist.
Available at Amazon: MP3
Steven Lugerner – Narratives
Your album personnel: Steven Lugerner (soprano & alto saxes, clarinets), Lucas Pino (tenor sax & flute), Itamar Borochov (trumpet & flugelhorn), Angelo Spagnolo (guitar), Glenn Zaleski (piano), Ross Gallagher (bass), and Michael W. Davis (drums).
It’s an aptly titled album, as the recording has the intimate feel of a good epic novel. Lots of ebb and flow of emotional intensity. The layering of sounds is just phenomenal, really keeps my attention wanting to linger on every detail. Lugerner has a nice light touch on the sax and it serves him well as he binds all the various part of the ensemble together with his notes. Has sort of a Guillermo Klein meets Brian Blade feel to it.
Narratives is Self-Produced.
Jazz from the Brooklyn scene.
A free track from the album is available at AllAboutJazz, courtesy of the artist.
Available to stream, and purchase, at the artist’s Bandcamp page.
Available at Amazon: CD
Francis Drake – Stories
Fans of modern releases on the ECM label will probably like this, as would fans of Christope Pays album Ellipse. On the Double Moon Records label, fifty two minutes of modern jazz trio. Jazz from Germany.
Here’s where you can stream three songs from the album on Max’s site.
Available at Amazon: CD
MP3
Jean Lapouge – Temporare
There is a palpable tension in the harsh calls of Lapouge’s guitar against the skittering vibes, and against the backdrop of blaring trombone notes. But then guitar grows gentle and the trombone is a friendly word in the ear and the vibes are bright and warm, and an odd serenity sets in. As dreams can be both serene and terrifying, Temporare shows no inclination to draw a dividing line between the varied emotions this album evokes.
Lapouge, a founding member of the Noetra Collective (would fit right in with early ECM world-jazz like Oregon and Terje Rypdal), may not have seen much commercial success from his music, but the development of his sound has resulted in a genuinely unique voice. Tempoare, a 2011 release on the Musea Records label, is gonna appeal to fans of Bill Frisell’s Quartet. It is an album of eerie music that happens to also be quite beautiful.
A free download from the album is available on the AllAboutJazz site, courtesy of the artist.
Available at Amazon: CD
MP3
Omer Avital – Free Forever
I’m still amazed to be reminded that it’s only a quintet date; the sound is rich that at times I’d guess there were twice that many musicians on the bandstand. I’m gonna stop there, since I plan to write a more detailed review in the very near future. But let me leave it that this was truly a top album of the year.
Released on the Smalls Records label, approximately 70 minutes of pure unadulterated jazz.
Here’s a link to Omer’s site, where you can stream a few songs from the album and a whole lot of other music he’s involved with.
Available at Amazon: CD
MP3
Fabrice Sotton – L’attente
Just a series of fun and pretty tunes. A few solo pieces, some duo with percussion, flourishes of South African style jazz, a bit of neo-classical and a little bit of funk. Sotton mixes the sounds up without ever losing the albums center; or said differently, it doesn’t sound like a compilation of songs from various albums.
Self-Produced, fifty minutes of piano jazz. Jazz from France.
Here’s a link to Fabrice Sotton’s site, which seems to be hosted on a french music site platform. Basically, if you give them an email, you can stream all his stuff.
Available at Amazon: MP3
Like this:
By davesumner • Jazz Recommendations, Jazz Recommendations - 2011 Releases, Recap: Best of 2011 • 2 • Tags: Recap: Best of 2011