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Article: Album Review

Umbra: West

Read "West" reviewed by Ian Patterson


American road trips have long inspired writers, from Jack Kerouac, John Steinbeck and Tom Wolfe, to Hunter S. Thompson, Robert M. Pirsig and Bill Bryson. Fewer are the extended works, similarly inspired, written by musicians. Some things, it seems, may be easier put into words. Umbra's West is inspired by founding member Chris Guilfoyle's 2017 road ...

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Article: Album Review

Yellowjackets: Raising Our Voice

Read "Raising Our Voice" reviewed by Chris Mosey


Named after a rather unpleasant insect, founded by a guitar superstar to back him but then dropped, the Los Angeles-based Yellowjackets--despite it all--continue to forge ahead. There's something of the MJQ about them: they dress well (if casually) and play a brand of jazz that is discreet and refined, sometimes almost to the point of becoming ...

7

Article: Album Review

Morten Haxholm: Vestigium

Read "Vestigium" reviewed by Friedrich Kunzmann


The world of bass players in modern and post-bop jazz can be divided into two currents. On the one hand, you'll find the dominant character who leads the compositions with a decisive hand and frequent moments of striking ostinatos. On the other, one finds a personality who seems to walk through the composition and, like camouflage, ...

3

Article: Album Review

Tony Joe White: Bad Mouthin'

Read "Bad Mouthin'" reviewed by Doug Collette


If Tony Joe White's seventeenth album, Bad Mouthin', proves anything, it's how deeply evocative of his Southern heritage are his own songs, even as they stand next to--and sound of a piece with--those of Jimmy Reed, Lightnin' Hopkins, John Lee Hooker and Charlie Patton. Appropriately, virtually all twelve tracks on this LP find the author of ...

16

Article: Album Review

Wayne Shorter: Emanon

Read "Emanon" reviewed by Mark Sullivan


Saxophonist/composer Wayne Shorter is a living jazz legend--his career includes stints with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, with trumpeter Miles Davis (including his last great quintet, as well as foundational fusion albums), and with fusion icon Weather Report--any one of which would be enough to give him a significant place in the history of the music. Throughout ...

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Article: Album Review

Balazs Balogh: Borderline Inspirations

Read "Borderline Inspirations" reviewed by Hrayr Attarian


Hungarian drummer Balázs Balogh leads a multinational group on his intelligent and charming debut Borderline Inspirations. For it he has also penned seven elegant, poetic and sometimes provocative originals. Balogh has been leading an award-winning quintet since 2014 that includes several of those who appear on this captivating album which also showcases Balogh's noteworthy compositional skills. ...

Article: Album Review

Calvano, Actis Dato, Lodati, Robbins, Costantini: No Mads

Read "No Mads" reviewed by Neri Pollastri


Progetto fondamentalmente del percussionista Stefano Calvano, questo No Mads gioca sul titolo per mettere in scena una musica lucidamente folle che omaggi la varietà stilistica resa possibile dall'ibridazione culturale legata al nomadismo. La musica, in larga misura improvvisata, è il prodotto di un quartetto di musicisti ben affiatati che non si sono mai sottratti ...

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Article: Album Review

Thelonious Monk: Mønk

Read "Mønk" reviewed by Karl Ackermann


Closely following the release of John Coltrane's Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album (Impulse!, 2018), this year brings us another previously unreleased gem from the golden age of jazz. The status of Thelonius Monk in the early 1960s, is indisputable and this recently discovered session recorded at a live performance in Copenhagen's Old Fellow Palæet, ...

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Article: Album Review

Morten Haxholm: Vestigium

Read "Vestigium" reviewed by Chris Mosey


Other nationalities find the double bass a cumbersome instrument. But, perhaps because they are, in the main, tall, healthy and strong and thus can handle it with relative ease, Danes love it. Since its introduction by the great native American bassist Oscar Pettiford in the late 1950s, it has come to play a major role on ...

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Article: Album Review

Human Element: You Are In You

Read "You Are In You" reviewed by Mike Jacobs


Seeking to expand upon the stylistic legacy of Joe Zawinul... Only a group of pretty heavily respected musicians could pull off a mission statement like that. Yet that's pretty much what keyboardist Scott Kinsey, bassist Matthew Garrison, drummer Gary Novak, and percussionist / vocalist Arto Tuncboyaciyan declared when they formed Human Element.


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