Thursday, December 6, 2018

Tim Pledger: Bohjass - Beautiful Question (December 2018)


Tim Pledger is a Melbourne musician and the founder and leader of spiritual jazz band Bohjass.
Beautiful Question is the 10th album.


Mick Power - guitar
Daniel Brates - drums
Belinda Woods - flutes
Chris Lewis - percussion
Oscar France - keyboard
Luigi Portararo - percussion
Brae Grimes - trumpet and cornet
Ali Watts - double and electric basses

1. The Dry Idea 10:25
2. O'rother Kissed ér 06:08
3. N.S.W. Jumper 09:35
4. Swimming Pool 07:48
5. The Badness Madrigals 09:38
6. The Beautiful Question 07:15
7. Zafferino Del Aquila 06:19
8. One for G and One for Me 06:24

Music written, mixed and mastered by Tim Pledger
Recorded at Soundpark Stutio by Andrew (Idge) Hehir
Painting by Uncle Damien, Orien Pharoah & Orpheus Pledger
Photo and design by Belinda Woods

Black Acid Arkestra - Sketches (December 6, 2018)


Jake Cleveland - guitars
Alex Arnold - trumpet, synths, fx
Rileaux Marx - alto saxophone
Eric Arnold - rhodes keyboards
Quinn Sternberg - electric bass
Charles Roldan - drumset/percussion

All songs composed by Jake Cleveland/Alex Arnold except "Eric's Groove" composed by Eric Arnold.
Recorded and mixed at Timeghost Studios by Alex Arnold.
Mastered by Aaron Marshall.

1. Sketches 05:46
2. Bat Country 06:08
3. Eric's Groove 05:04
4. Blue Mesa 04:35
5. Ethereum 05:45
6. Black Reef 05:36

Textures such as effected trumpet, blistering sax solos, virtuosic bass lines, prog-rock guitar licks, classic rhodes keys and digital sampling all come together to create the other-worldly sound of Black Acid Arkestra's debut album Sketches, which showcases a concise presentation of the weirder sides of jazz, simultaneously an homage to the past and a step into the future.

The idea for Black Acid Arkestra formed in the winter of 2016 when Alex Arnold and Jake Cleveland decided to create a fusion project encompassing the darker sides of jazz harmony and the more exciting sides of progressive rock. After a few shows and practice sessions, the tunes that became Sketches were written and recorded at Timeghost Studios, a cabin on the outskirts of the southern Indiana town of Bloomington.

Matt Moran Trio - Play Ball (2018)


The debut release of Matt Moran's organ trio featuring Gary Versace (Hammond B3), Tom Rainey (drums), and Matt Moran (vibraphone).


1. Play Ball 06:31
2. Fever Dream Blue Machine 08:00
3. Counterpoint 03:25
4. Dig Your Own Groove 13:51
5. Get Rich Quick 04:00
6. Try 04:04
7. That's What You Think 04:27

Peter Hess Trio - Falling (December 6, 2018)


First record from this trio of tenor saxophone, vibraphone, and drums, building towers out of scaffolds. Diskonife 002.


Peter Hess, tenor saxophone
Matt Moran, vibraphone
Jeff Davis, drums

1. Bluebells 06:06
2. Move to Mars 06:55
3. Falling 05:25
4. Subduction 03:44
5. Earlier 05:23
6. Gone Lights 05:09
7. Call Ahead 04:38
8. Follower 07:09
9. Everything Goes 03:27

Recorded 9/13/17 and mixed by Peter Hess at Fort St Marks
Mastered by Don Godwin at Tonal Park
Photo by Reuben Radding, design by Amy Saidens

James Brandon Lewis - An UnRuly Manifesto (February 1, 2019)


An Unruly Manifesto is an album dedicated to Charlie Haden & Ornette Coleman and Surrealism. Lewis describes this album as a call to action. “ Everyday is a chance to discover the truest version of your self and charge after that relentlessly”.


Jaimie Branch - Trumpet
Luke Stewart - Bass
Anthony Pirog - Guitar
Warren Trae Crudup III - Drums

1. Year 59 : Insurgent Imagination
2. An UnRuly Manifesto
3. Pillar 1: A Joyful Acceptance
4. Sir Real Denard
5. The Eleventh Hour
6. Pillar 2: What is Harmony
7. Escape Nostalgic Prisons
8. Haden is Beauty
9. Pillar 3:New Lived, Authority Died


Allison Au Quartet - Wander Wonder (January 11, 2019)


"...engaging, carefully crafted jazz.”
- Glen Hall, Exclaim! Magazine

"Canada has found a new jazz ambassador!
- Lance Liddle, Bebop Spoken Here

Featured on the list “10 Rising Female Instrumentalists You Should
Know”
- Rusty Aceves, SF Jazz


Wander Wonder opens with ‘The Valley,’ a lush sonic amuse-bouche that features keyboardist Todd Pentney front and center on the Prophet Rev2 while the other band mates attentively weave in and out of the background. The following track, ‘Future Self,’ begins with a hypnotic vamp that eventually blossoms into Au’s angular melodic statements on the saxophone. ‘The Rest Is Up To You’ is an amalgamation of influences; a sort of Wayne Shorter-esque composition that also draws much inspiration from Brazilian pop music of the ‘70s. ‘Looking Up’ showcases some of Au’s strongest penmanship as a composer as it highlights the ensemble’s ability to transition seamlessly between rich contrasting sections.

The pensive ballad, ‘Morning,’ establishes an atmosphere of repose and calm as the instruments are slowly, yet thoughtfully layered in. The album continues with ‘The Lie That Saves Us All’, a contemporary swing tune of changing meter and harmonic textures. ‘Red Herring’ emerges as an exploration of asymmetric melodies and equally jagged counter parts deftly executed by the rhythm section. ‘Grounds’ serves as an eloquent interlude to the robust exposition ‘Force Majeure’ that showcases Ragnelli’s apt drumming sensibility in a concluding solo. ‘A Trick of the Moonlight’ is a fitting finale; a introspective ballad that draws inspiration from a novel by British author Zadie Smith.   

Juno-award winning Jazz Saxophonist, Composer and Arranger, Allison Au refuses to be defined. Born to a Chinese father and Jewish mother, and raised in the multicultural metropolis of Toronto, Allison found music as a young child. Exposed to a wide array of musical styles, she was captivated by the unhinged freedom of Jazz. Jazz became Allison’s lab for self-expression, exploration, and musical experimentation. Her work weaves a mosaic of influences into a seamless and soulful sound, a concoction steeped in the tradition of Jazz but skillfully laced with elements of Classical, Pop, R&B/hip hop, Latin, and world music. 


Au’s music transports you to a place where instrumentals ring bold and emotions run free. Melodies cascade and collide, highlighting Au’s gift for layering voices and rhythms. Her writing showcases the color and character of each instrument, while providing ample room for her band mates to push her compositions to new heights.  

Au earned her first Juno nomination for her debut album, “The Sky Was Pale Blue, then Grey” in 2013, and in 2016 seized the Juno for "Best Jazz Album of The Year: Group" for “Forest Grove.” 

Formed in 2009, the Allison Au Quartet has toured extensively in Canada and the US. The group was awarded the TD Jazz Fellowship Scholarship (2011), The Alfred and Phyllis Balm Scholarship (2012), and The Margareta and Benno Nigg Scholarship (2013) for three consecutive artist residencies at the Banff Centre.


Most recently the Allison Au Quartet has won the 2017 Montreal Jazz Festival TD Grand Prix de Jazz, received the 2017 Halifax Jazz Festival Sting Ray Rising Star Award, and was named a 2017 Finalist for Toronto Arts Foundation Emerging Jazz Artist Award.

Allison Au will be releasing Wander Wonder on Friday, January 11th, 2019.

Todd Pentney Piano, Prophet Rev2
Jon Maharaj Bass, Electric Bass
Fabio Ragnelli Drums

Produced by Todd Pentney
Recorded August 6-7 2018 by David Hermiston at
Inception Sound Studios, Toronto
Mixed by David Hermiston
Maststered by João Carvalho

1. The Valley (2:09)
2. Future Self (6:19)
3. The Rest Is Up To You (6:26)
4. Looking Up (5:09)
5. Morning (5:42)
6. The Lie That Saves Us All (6:04)
7. Red Herring (5:07)
8. Grounds (3:02)
9. Force Majeure (8:00)
10. A Trick Of The Moonlight (5:24)


Monday, December 3, 2018

Satoko Fujii's "Diary 2005-2015: Yuko Yamaoka plays the music of Satoko Fujii" (LIBRA RECORDS 2018)

Satoko Fujii Turns 60!

Composer-pianist Satoko Fujii Unearths Hidden Gems from Her Daily Composition Diary

Classical Pianist Yuko Yamaoka Brings Fujii’s Compositional Musings to Life


The pianist’s compositional talents certainly match her improvisational ones…” 
― Andy Hamilton, Jazz Review (UK)

“Fujii is simply one of the most important composers of our time: she gives new meaning to the term ‘panstylistic.”
― Alan Young, Lucid Culture

Jazz critics voted Fujii into four categories of the 66th Annual DownBeat International Critics Poll in 2018 as one of the world’s top pianists, composers, arrangers and big band leaders


Writer Mike Chamberlain once said of pianist-composer Satoko Fujii, “The woman is bursting with musical ideas.” After over 100 albums as a leader or co-leader, if any further evidence of her rich imagination is needed, Diary 2005–2015: Yuko Yamaoka plays the music of Satoko Fujii provides it.  Available November 30, 2018 via Libra Records, the double album overflows with musical ideas—118 of them to be exact. Selected by Fujii from a decade’s worth of composition notebooks, this collection of more than 100 very short pieces offers a unique and fascinating window into the creative process of one of the most fertile minds in modern jazz. Classical pianist Yuko Yamaoka’s vivid performance brings every facet of these little compositional jewels to sparkling life. 

Every time Fujii sits down to practice piano, she begins by practicing composing for 15 minutes. She’s done this since 2005. Some of these exercises grew into compositions that she recorded. For example, “052013” became “Ichigo Ichie,” the title track of her 2015 Orchestra Berlin CD. “012707” evolved into “Tokyo Rush Hour,” recorded on her 2008 duet CD with Natsuki Tamura, Chun. But the vast majority of these hundreds of short pieces simply accumulated on her piano top and in boxes.

At the urging of her husband, trumpeter Natsuki Tamura, Fujii sat down and reviewed the first ten years of her diary compositions, each one identified by the date on which it was written. From this vast trove of music she selected highlights for classical pianist Yuko Yamaoka to perform. Fujii has known Yamaoka since her student days at New England Conservatory and enlisted her to perform on Fujii’s New York Orchestra debut South Wind.


Many of the pieces are constructed using a single idea, upon which Fujii elaborates. For instance, “062605” is a melody made using only the interval of the perfect 5th. On “020505,” the left hand plays only on the black keys of the piano, the right hand only on the white keys. Of course it’s what she does with the initial idea that makes the music so intriguing and attractive. 

The clarity of Yamaoka phrasing lets Fujii’s creativity shine through. She highlights the tensions created by the unusual bass note rhythm of “091209,” and the smooth, almost classical, counterpoint of “091309.” She effortlessly follows the flowing logic of the single line in “032313” and the unexpected melodic turns of the lovely “123106.” Her bright, nuanced touch gives shades of feeling to each miniature, whether it’s the wistful lilt of a waltz in “050509” or the sensual slink of the tango in “041514.” The longest of the compositions lasts a mere two minutes, which makes the album something like a book of aphorisms—the compositions’ brevity is actually the soul of their appeal.

“I still continue composing like this everyday,” Fujii says. “It is now more like my life! I think doing it has helped me expand my ideas. I don’t want to repeat myself; I don’t want to make the same music over and over. Writing everyday makes me push myself to think of new ideas. But at the same time, I have found I do have a style, I discovered that even new ideas have something in them that makes them sound like mine. Sometimes I don’t know if this is good or bad. But Natsuki thinks this is good because it shows I have some originality.”


After 11 months and 11 releases, Fujii’s remarkable and unprecedented kanreki year concludes in December with Kikoeru: Tribute to Masaya Kimura, the explosive sixth release from the Satoko Fujii Orchestra Tokyo. 

Critics and fans alike hail pianist and composer Satoko Fujii as one of the most original voices in jazz today. She’s “a virtuoso piano improviser, an original composer and a bandleader who gets the best collaborators to deliver," says John Fordham in The Guardian. In concert and on more than 80 albums as a leader or co-leader, she synthesizes jazz, contemporary classical, avant-rock, and Japanese folk music into an innovative music instantly recognizable as hers alone.

Over the years, Fujii has led some of the most consistently creative ensembles in modern improvised music, including her trio with bassist Mark Dresser and drummer Jim Black, the Min-Yoh Ensemble, and an electrifying avant-rock quartet featuring drummer Tatsuya Yoshida of The Ruins. Her ongoing duet project with husband Natsuki Tamura released their sixth recording, Kisaragi, in 2017. “The duo's commitment to producing new sounds based on fresh ideas is second only to their musicianship,” says Karl Ackermann in All About Jazz. Aspiration, a CD by an ad hoc band featuring Wadada Leo Smith, Tamura, and Ikue Mori, was released in 2017 to wide acclaim. “Four musicians who regularly aspire for greater heights with each venture reach the summit together on Aspiration,” writes S. Victor Aaron in Something Else. She records infrequently as an unaccompanied soloist, but Solo (Libra), the first of her 12 birthday-year albums, led Dan McClenaghan to enthuse in All About Jazz, that the album “more so than her other solo affairs—or any of her numerous ensembles for that matter—deals in beauty, delicacy of touch, graceful melodicism.”

As the leader of no less than five orchestras in the U.S., Germany, and Japan, Fujii has also established herself as one of the world’s leading composers for large jazz ensembles, leading Cadence magazine to call her, “the Ellington of free jazz.” 


Sunday, December 2, 2018

Chris Jentsch: Jentsch Group No Net – Topics in American History



Live recording of Chamber Music America commission hits all the right notes

Jentsch’s all-star Jentsch Group No Net features flutist Michel Gentile, clarinetist Michael McGinnis, saxophonist Jason Rigby, trumpeter David Smith, trombonist Brian Drye, pianist Jacob Sacks, bassist Jim Whitney, drummer Eric Halvorson, conductor JC Sanford

“(Jentsch) writes lavish suites – which he then plays with remarkable terseness and attention to detail. His narratives are vivid and often very funny. His latest, Topics in American History, couldn’t be more relevant.”
— New York Music Daily

 “Chris Jentsch’s Brooklyn Suite was one of last year’s most satisfyingly ambitious jazz efforts.”
— Richard Gehr, Village Voice


On his new album, acclaimed guitarist and composer Chris Jentsch pairs his extraordinary skill at writing long form musical suites with his expertise in history. Jentsch earned a B.A. in history from Gettysburg College, but his approach to expressing his knowledge through music is anything but academic. Topics in American History (out November 30, 2018 on Blue Schist Records), featuring jazz interpretations of seven historical events and concepts, takes listeners on an emotionally exhilarating, compellingly thoughtful journey through selected corners of our nation’s past. “In learning about music there is always the historical facet,” says Jentsch. “Aspects of classical music, world music, jazz, and now even rock music have their backgrounds of decades or even centuries past. With the Topics project, for the first time, to express my present I have merged what I have learned from the chronicles of music with my general interest in American history.” 

The hour-long Topics, a result of a Chamber Music America/Doris Duke New Jazz Works commission, follows Jentsch’s previous highly-acclaimed large ensemble works including Miami Suite, Brooklyn Suite, and Cycles Suite. The new CD is a live recording of the Topics premiere, presented on December 2, 2016 at ShapeShifter Lab in Jentsch’s hometown of Brooklyn. Combining the immediacy and excitement of in-the-moment performance with Jentsch’s masterful musical vision, the recording features Jentsch Group No Net’s roster of extraordinary musicians: flutist Michel Gentile, clarinetist Michael McGinnis, saxophonist Jason Rigby, trumpeter David Smith, trombonist Brian Drye, pianist Jacob Sacks, bassist Jim Whitney, drummer Eric Halvorson, and conductor JC Sanford.

Jentsch’s large group music generally invokes contemporary improvisation with an eclectic mix of influences ranging from jazz to rock and world to classical, always striving for a careful balance between lyricism and dissonance, and a deliberate combination of complexity and simplicity. “1491,” the CD’s first track, brings us into Jentsch’s vision with the ensemble producing airy, gently percussive bell and bird-like sounds that capture a Caribbean beach at the dawn of European entry. 

As the piece develops with a walking bass ostinato, interweaving horn lines, and plaintive, wandering flute, the sense of change to come is unmistakable. “Manifest Destiny” explores ideas about America’s spread across North America with a harmonically rich expansiveness that gives the soloists plenty of room to stretch out and explore. An animated full band statement announces “Lincoln-Douglas Debates,” which features raucous, spirited interplay between trumpet and trombone—the clear winner is the listener. 



“Tempest-Tost,” which takes its title from an inscription on the Statue of Liberty, captures the weariness, hope, and awe of the huddled, yearning masses making their way through Ellis Island. It also offers poignant connections to the present day, drawing inspiration from Jentsch’s sympathy for the plight of refugees and his gratitude for his own citizenship status. “Suburban Diaspora” delves into the idea that a shared cultural heritage exists among American middle class Baby Boomers who were raised in the burbs then migrated to urban and rural areas. With its tight cluster chords, fascinating harmonies, searching solos, and staggered entrances, the gripping “Dominos” evokes the dread and uncertainty of the Cold War and McCarthyism.

The suite closes with “Meeting at Surratt’s,” an homage to Mary Surratt, the first woman executed by the United States government after Abraham Lincoln’s assassins plotted their crime at her boarding house. From the opening march cadence of the snare drum to the powerful anthem-like build that follows, the piece is a fitting conclusion to a superior jazz suite. The band is in top form throughout, with notable solos from the horns, flute, piano, and bass. Jentsch’s exemplary guitar playing presides over it all, with stunning effects, muscular lines, and consummate musicality.

Topics in American History by Christopher Jentsch and Jentsch Group No Net has been made possible with support from Chamber Music America’s 2015 New Jazz Works Program funded through the generosity of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.


JENTSCH GROUP NO NET
Michel Gentile, flutes
Michael McGinnis, clarinets
Jason Rigby, saxophones
David Smith, Trumpet, flugelhorn
Brian Drye, tromboneJacob Sacks, piano
Jim Whitney, acoustic bass
Eric Halvorson, drums, percussion
JC Sanford, conductor

1 1491 11:36
2 Manifest Destiny 11:36
3 Lincoln-Douglas Debates 09:37
4 Tempest-Tost 09:12
5 Suburban Diaspora 07:26
6 Dominos 09:24
7 Meeting at Surratt’s 06:23


Chris Jentsch is a Brooklyn-based composer, bandleader, and guitarist working primarily in jazz and contemporary improvisational forms. Based in NYC since 1999, his main ensemble is Jentsch Group in its trio, quartet, nonet, or large configuration. As a composer he has been the recipient of grants, commissions, or fellowships from the Maelstrom Percussion Ensemble, the Penfield Commission Project, American Composers Forum, the Composers Assistance Program of the American Music Center, New Music USA, Meet the Composer, New York State Council on the Arts, Ucross Foundation, the Commission Project, the New Music Collective, the Donald Knutson Memorial Faculty Development Fund, and Chamber Music America/Doris Duke New Jazz Works.

As a bandleader and sideman Jentsch has worked with such diverse musical personalities as George Russell, John Cage, Maria Schneider, and Chris Wood. He appears as a guitarist on the CD John Cage, Volume 11. He is also featured in Scott Yanow’s book The Great Jazz Guitarists. All About Jazz says, “Jentsch is more than just a seasoned musician; he’s a composer who can convey his ideas on a grand scale.” Of Brooklyn Suite, DownBeat said that Jentsch “created a contrasted and kaleidoscopic patchwork with marvelous melodies, splendid voicings, and a skillful use of dynamics.” Jentsch has released five CDs as a leader: Media Event (1998); Miami Suite (1999); Brooklyn Suite (2007); and Cycles Suite (2009). Fractured Pop, a CD/DVD production featuring Jentsch’s jazz quartet was released in 2017. Jentsch attended the Berklee College of Music and has liberal arts and jazz guitar degrees from Gettysburg College, the New England Conservatory, and the Eastman School of Music. 

He earned the Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the University of Miami in 1999 and is published by the University of Northern Colorado Press, Advance Music, and Fleur de Son Records.

Jeff Ballard - Fairgrounds (EDITION RECORDS January 25, 2019)


Honest, inventive and adventurous, Fairgrounds is the embodiment of Jeff Ballard’s ceaseless desire and energy to move people emotionally, physically and intellectually. His second album as a leader, sees the US drummer set on a new trajectory of increased recorded output, focus as a bandleader with a new home at British label, Edition Records.


“The only direction or concept I imposed on the players in this group was to feel an absolute freedom to play (or not) whatever they want at any given time. Totally freedom was the only restriction. Structures came from content, or sometimes the structure was already there if we happen to play a specific song but it would be a very new version each time. The music and how we played it came from the moment we all shared then and there, always.” JEFF BALLARD


Jeff Ballard ranks among the most inventive and adventurous drummers of his generation. He makes music that feels like the 21st century – open, fluid, ever-developing; a sound informed by jazz but truly coming to life where musical worlds collide: acoustic and electric, swinging and ambient, analogue and digital, accessible and experimental.

The virtuoso drummer, who made his name playing with Ray Charles, Chick Corea, Pat Metheny and Brad Mehldau, is not inhibited by convention. His music is honest, original and adventurous with a ceaseless desire and energy to move people emotionally, physically and intellectually. Jeff’s latest project and album ‘Fairgrounds’, released on Edition Records, provides a freedom to explore and to express himself with musicians who are close to his heart and mind.

The result is highly captivating and bursting with energy. With a rich and flexible musical language, embracing influences as diverse as Jazz, Rock, Pop, Electronica and West African music, ‘Fairgrounds’ is a unique insight into the distinctive sound world of Jeff Ballard.


LIONEL LOUEKE guitar, vocals
KEVIN HAYS piano, keyboards, vocals
REID ANDERSON electronics
PETE RENDE piano, fender rhodes

Guest appearances: 
CHRIS CHEEK tenor saxophone (track 5 and 11)
MARK TURNER tenor saxophone (track 6 and 8)

All songs written and arranged by Fairgrounds
except for:
Hit The Dirt by Kevin Hays
Miro by Reid Anderson
Cherokee Rose by Chris Cheek

1. Grounds Entrance
2. YEAH PETE!
3. The Man's Gone 03:56
4. I Saw A Movie
5. Hit The DIrt
6. Twelv8
7. Marche Exotique
8. Grungy Brew
9. Miro
10. Soft Rock
11. Cherokee Rose

Recorded live between March 1 and 20, 2015 while on tour in Europe (Amsterdam, Berlin, Dublin, Munich, Molde, Odense, Paris, Rome, Tours, Terrassa, Vienna, Zurich)

Mixed by Pete Rende
Mastered by Nate Wood

Hey! Today's early Cuneiform classic $5.00 album is...