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Amen

By Joy Guidry
Label: Whited Sepulchre Records
Released: 2024
Track listing: Psalm 138:7; It's Okay To Let Me Go; Pick and Choose. Members Don't Get Weary; Day By Day; Angels; I Will
Always Miss You; Revelations 7:16-17.
Tomasz Stanko, Tomasz Dabrowski and Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre

by Maurice Hogue
Two never-heard-before albums are featured in this edition of OMJ. The first is from a saxophonist many considered overlooked for the list of great saxophonists: Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre whom Anthony Braxton considered the next great saxophonist after Coltrane. The album features Kalaparusha and quartet playing a set at Studio Rivbea in New York during the Loft ...
Joy Guidry, Álvaro Torres, Tom Skinner, The Early Planets & More

by Ludovico Granvassu
Guitar/bass/drum trios for the win, the endless relevance of Max Roach, Abdul Wadud and Morphine, and more, through six remarkable albums! Happy listening! Playlist Ben Allison Mondo Jazz Theme (feat. Ted Nash & Pyeng Threadgill)" 0:00 The Messthetics & James Brandon Lewis The Time Is the Place" The Messthetics and James Brandon ...
Mazz Swift: The 10000 Things: PRAISE SONGS for the iRiligious

by Gareth Thompson
The writer and critic Amiri Baraka (1934-2014) spoke of free jazz in terms of an essential and spiritual Blackness. Further, he described a return to collective improvisation as the all-force put together." More vitally he suggested that free jazz reinforced the valuable memories of a people while at the same time creating new forms. This reasoning ...
Joy Guidry: Amen

by Gareth Thompson
Along with the soprano saxophone, the bassoon in the right hands and mouths can invoke whatever spiritual visions one places faith in. Maybe it lies in the promise of divine warmth, conjured by Eastern or Indian reed instruments with similar qualities. As often noted, the word oboe" sounds like something a bassoon might emit. With a ...
Louis Sclavis, David León, Roby Glod & Joy Guidry

by Maurice Hogue
Reed players have taken over the house this week. The eminent clarinetist Louis Sclavis stars in an excellent quartet using music, text and spoken word to create a moody sonic landscape out of short stories, poems and aphorisms by French and African authors. Other European saxophonists heard are Luxembourg's Roby Glod in a familiar setting with ...