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Nail Trio - Roger Turner (dr), Alexander Frangenheim (b), Michel Doneda (ss)

September 2025, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe

Michael Greiner (d) & Jason Stein (bc)

September 25, Soweiso, Berlin, Germany

Exit (Knaar) - Amalie Dahl (as), Karl Hjalmar Nyberg (ts), Marta Warelis (p), Jonathan F. Horne (g), Olaf Moses Olsen (dr), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b)

September 25, Schorndorf, Germany

The Outskirts - Dave Rempis (ts, as), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b), Frank Rosaly (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, March 2025

Monday, November 10, 2025

Anna Webber, Matt Mitchell & John Hollenbeck - Simple Trio2000 (Intakt, 2024)

By Stef Gijssels

This brilliant trio of Anna Webber on saxes and flutes, Matt Mitchell on piano and John Hollenbeck on drums treat us to a fantastic rhythm fest, full of complexities, surprises and well-arranged twists and turns. It’s been ten years since the trio dropped their debut album Simple, and their long-awaited follow-up is finally here. This is not free jazz, yet it's hard to call it mainstream too. It's actually hard to put it into any musical category, and at times classical avant-garde comes even to mind, with long repetitive phrases, or even some jazz fusion with its unison lines at lightning speed. 

All three musicians rank among the finest on their instruments—fully at ease with the technical demands of Webber’s compositions, and bringing even more to the table: inventive creativity, joyful expression, and an infectious energy. The music itself is anything but simple, yet the trio delivers it with such natural ease that it almost feels effortless. More impressively, the music truly shines in their hands—radiant and alive—without ever drawing undue attention to its underlying virtuosity.

The music is so meticulously crafted that it leaves little space for improvisation, which in turn slightly diminishes its emotional depth. Even so, listening to it evokes a sense of wonder and admiration—perhaps even joy and delight at its sheer precision and wild inventiveness. It's less about deep emotional expression and more about the playful exuberance of making music itself. And of course, those are meaningful emotions too.

Anna Webber is in a category of her own, and that's a great place to be. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp.


Watch a video from a recent performance at the Bop Stop

Sunday, November 9, 2025

Camila Nebbia and Ryan Sawyer @ Downtown Music Gallery 9-30-25

It's always fun for us to drop in on the Downtown Music Gallery in New York City to check the pulse of the ever changing avant-garde scene there. The DMG is located in a basement space in lower Manhattan and offers a refuge from the world above, where people attracted to adventurous music can meet. Every week, the one-of-a-kind record store offers free gigs that attract both well known and up and coming musicians. Here, we check out saxophonist Camila Nebbia and drummer Ryan Sawyer, two musicians who have already made more than a splash on the international avant-garde music scene. 

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Das B - Love (hanatosis / Corbett vs. Dempsey, 2025)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

An ideal Mt. Rushmore of jazz should certainly show “A love supreme” as one of the figureheads carved in the rock: not even a primate (no disregard towards our ancestors…) would raise an eyebrow about and here is the last spot on earth to explain why. Along the decades, some mavericks took up the gauntlet, deciding to climb the Nanga Parbat on heels, or, in other words, to cover such a monster milestone: Alice Coltrane on World Galaxy (1971) and Live at Jazz Jamboree (1987), surely the most meaningful for obvious reasons, then, as come to mind, Ganavya, Wynton Marsalis, Turtle Island Quartet, Santana/McLaughlin, Toshiyuki Miyama. Different backgrounds, different feelings, different results. The pretty recent (2021) A Love Supreme. Live in Seattle is the last and ultimate evidence of what a hellish task it is to handle with that record. Someone else drew on the map a wholly peculiar route, subverting the didascalic notion of the tribute or songbook, but rather taking structural and dynamic cues from the original record, utilizing free improv in their own way. We’re talking of Das B and its second album, recorded and mixed at Brief Sand Studios, Berlin, in 2022, jointly released by the Swedish Thanatosis Records and Corbett vs. Dempsey. 

The lineup is deployed as follows: 

Magda Mayas, piano. Living in Berlin, she developed a vocabulary utilizing both the inside as well as the exterior parts of the piano. Using preparations and objects, she explores textural, linear and fast moving sound collage. She has recently been performing on a clavinet/pianet, an electric piano from the 60s with strings and metal chimes, where she engages with noise and more visceral sound material, equally extending the instrumental sound palette using extended techniques and devices. She has collaborated with the likes of John Butcher, Andy Moor, Zeena Perkins, Joelle Leandre, Paul Lovens, Ikue Mori, Phill Niblock, Peter Evans, Andrea Neumann, Burkhard Stangl, Christine Abdelnour and Axel Doerner. 

Mazen Kerbaj, trumpet. Born in Beirut in 1975, Berlin based now, is a musician, comics author and visual artist, widely considered as one of the initiators and key players of the Lebanese free improv and experimental music scene. He played his trumpet with Alan Bishop, Nate Wooley, Joe McPhee, Peter Evans, Pauline Oliveros, The Necks, Michael Zerang, The Ex, among others, “pushing the boundaries of the instrument and continues to develop a personal sound and an innovative language, following in the footsteps of pioneers like Bill Dixon, Axel Doerner and Franz Hautzinger”, as per his bio notes. 

Mike Majkowski, bass. Born in Australia, based in Berlin, active across a wide range of contemporary, improv and experimental music since the early 2000s, he developed a highly innovative playing style, extending and refining technical possibilities for the double bass. His musical work ranges from purely acoustic to electro-acoustic to electronic and explores relationships between stillness and pulse, spectral qualities of resonance, duration and perception of listening. He lent his fat strings to Oren Ambarchi, Marshall Allen, Tim Barnes, Han Bennink, Peter Brötzmann, Mats Gustafsson, Silke Eberhard, Satoko Fuji, Evan Parker, Sven-Ake Johansson, Alexander von Schlippenbach. 

Tony Buck, drums. From The Necks’ fame, he certainly doesn’t need to be introduced. 

As a rule, it’s always fruitful to get the primary source, and that's what they say about this project: “We are not attempting to recreate the album. Rather, we took the original album’s track timing and instrumental structure, as well as some other technical aspects, like balancing and panning, the occurrence of overdubs and timbral relationships within the original, to create our tribute. This was our process and our idea was to link our music-free improv-to its roots in jazz and free jazz”. The final outcome is amazing and puzzling. If, on one hand, we have the philological approach explained above, on the other, we see the raw material, grinded and pulverized until the molecular state, reassembled in urban, daunting, gloomy minimal textures, reminding us the likes of Burial or Kode 9 dealing with a free and improv recipe. The music is surely bringing traces of “A love supreme” but you’d need a DNA profile to track them and this makes “Love” a challenge that needs and deserves to be accepted: Trane would approve it, sure thing.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Bloomers - Cyclism (Relative Pitch, 2025)

By Hrayr Attarian

The work of the Copenhagen-based trio Bloomers, named after the American women’s rights activist Amelia Bloomer, is a heady melange of chamber music and free improvisation. Consisting of three wind instruments, the collaborative group boasts a captivating inner synergy. This is heard on its Cyclism that comprises 15 short pieces each named after a place and date of historical significance in the fight for gender equality.

The less-than-a-minute “Homer, May 27th, 1818,” named after Bloomer’s birthday and location, is a perfect exercise in brevity, like an instrumental haiku. Trumpeter Anne Efternøler blows soft, muted notes against which the woodwinds of Carolyn Goodwin and Maria Dybbroe undulate gently in a lullaby-like dialogue.

The impressionistic tunes are sometimes melodic and fluid, while at others angular and delightfully dissonant. The “Stockholm, December 10th, 1905”, dedicated to novelist Bertha von Suttner winning the Nobel Peace Prize, starts with an angular repartee. Efternøler contributes clusters of high notes that, together with Goodwin and Dybbroe’s resonant clarinets, build a crystalline sonic structure that, at times, especially with Efternøler’s staccato horn, sounds a bit like a deconstructed march. As the interplay evolves, Goodwin's reverberating bass clarinet creates a pensive rhythmic backdrop. Over it, Efternøler and Dybbroe play a serene and lyrical duet.

The simmering “Cyberspace, October 15th, 2017”, honoring the day the # MeToo movement started to raise awareness of sexual harassment, opens with somber notes from all three musicians. Long, mournful passages overlap and weave a captivating harmonic tapestry. The playful three-way conversation that follows, “Venice, June 5th, 1646”, uses pops, hisses, and squawks together with melodic shards coalescing into a joyful tune. The track’s title refers to Venetian Elena Cornaro Piscopia’s birthday. Cornaro Piscopia was the first Western woman to earn a university degree.

Another highlight of this uniformly superb album is the two-part “Tehran, September 16th, 2022” inspired by the Woman, Life, Freedom movement. Efternøler lays down a melancholic and solemn melody with long, wistful lines, while Goodwin and Dybbroe woody resonant phrases add an expectant mood. The result is quite dramatic and poignant.

Cyclism is a demanding yet immensely satisfying listening experience. It is a timely release that has impeccable artistry and an urgently relevant social message. Because of this it will surely stand the test of time. 

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Stay Off Limits - Stay Off Limits I (self-released, 2025)

By Martin Schray

Recently, based on the release of Lampen’s Würgeengel, I confessed my soft spot for guitar/drum duos. And what could be better than that? Right: two guitars and drums. Stay Off Limits are Zafer Habasch (electric guitar, effects), Cornelius Veit (electric guitar, effects), and Klaus Wallmeier (drums, percussion). As is often the case, we don’t always notice the gems right on our doorstep and instead look out into the wider world. Cornelius Veit has been part of the free improv scene in Karlsruhe for years and often uses extended playing techniques and is interested in sound experiments. I haven’t seen him much in rock music so far, but he himself is quite open to it and describes his music as “somewhere caught between all stools”. Stay Off Limits is indeed a mixture of dreamy ambient sounds, psychedelic world music moments, and hard jazz rock.

“SOL 3”, for example, is an almost eleven-minute prog rock killer based on a monotonous riff that inevitably carries you high into the air. Wah-wah effects, variable drums, tempo changes, the layerings of the second guitar, and the subtle tectonic shifts in general create incredible tension. In fact, it’s the rock tracks that make the album so appealing. In “SOL 10” the guitars strum relentlessly against the rimshot storm of the drums; it’s like sitting next to an airplane taking off. In “SOL 7” the rock riff even develops a groove that you could easily headbang to - the melody sprinkled in toward the end of the piece then carries you away. To keep things from getting too catchy, however, the drums like to change the beat and provide the necessary roughness. All of this is more reminiscent of King Crimson, Nels Cline Singers, Bushman’s Revenge, or the Hedvig Molestad Trio. But that’s only one side of this album. “SOL 9”, also almost ten minutes long, thrives on the finely chiseled interplay of the two guitars and offers space for beautiful, psychedelic, rambling moments. Almost classically, the guitars share rhythmic support and solo elements, while the drums linger darkly on the toms. Folk elements are also incorporated. Again and again, sound waves are built up and then broken off again. Only towards the end of the piece is a climax reached through clever chord changes, and then they ride the riffs into the sunset.

Stay Off Limits I is the surprise of the year for me. I came across the album rather by chance. It’s better to keep an eye on the scene right in front of you. Check it out and play it loud.

Stay Off Limits I is available as a download. You can listen to it and buy it here: https://stay-off-limits.bandcamp.com/album/stay-off-limits-i

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Introducing Experimental Sax Player and Sound Artist Tom Solovietzik

By Eyal Hareuveni

Tom Soloveitzik is an Israeli soprano and tenor sax player and sound artist based in Paris, who has spent the recent years, his most fertile era, in Tokyo. He works and researches the materiality and vulnerability of sound - in its most delicate aspects of resonance and decay -and in an austere manner corresponding with the experimental, minimalist Wandelweiser scene, as well as the practice of listening, often as a philosophical kōan dealing with the inherent imperfection of our lives.

Hannes Lingens / Tom Soloveitzik / Toshimaru Nakamura / Atsuko Hatano / Naoto Yamagishi - Play (Hitorri, 2025)

 

 PLAY is a game-piece by German, Berlin-based composer-percussionist Hannes Lingens (of Die Hochstapler quartet) with a set of 100 cards with instructions for ensembles of any size and instrumentation. The individual instructions vary from precise to vague, sometimes requiring a high degree of interpretation, but eventually seek to have as many different sounds as there are people in the room. The first version of this work was recorded in Jerusalem (and titled as “Jerusalem”) with a sextet, with Lingens and five Israeli musicians, including Soloveitzik, in 2022 (Play, Hitorri, 2023).

Soloveitzik, who wrote the liner notes to the original release and knew that this game-piece resembles practices used in Noh theatre, produced a Tokyo version of this work on the occasion of the release of the first Play at the space of Ftarri record store and label in Tokyo in Tokyo in November 2023, with him playing the soprano sax, no-input mixing board pioneer Toshimaru Nakamura, Atsuko Hatano on five-string viola, and percussionist Naoto Yamagishi. The outcome is much longer (80 minutes) than the original “Jerusalem” version, but it is charged with similar, unpredictable, enigmatic, and poetic tension. It beautifully realizes Lingens’ vision by not making things too tight or loose, yet in control and with generous silences, and thus offering a stimulating space for projection where music lies between people and ideas.


Takashi Masubuchi / Wakana Ikeda / Tom Soloveitzik / Yoko Ikeda - Microcanonical Ensemble (Rombed Visions, 2025)

The Microcanonical Ensemble is Soloveitzik on tenor and soprano saxes, Takashi Masubuchi on acoustic guitar, Wakana Ikeda on flute and harmonica, and Yoko Ikeda on violin and viola da gamba, all associated with the Ftarri label and its faithful circle of experimental musicians. This acoustic ensemble echoes the minimalist music of Morton Feldman, Jürg Frey, and the composers of the Wandelweiser scene. The three extended pieces weave subtle paradoxes, balancing stasis and movement, delicate interplay between sound and silence, resonance and decay, improvisation and composition. The thoughtful yet austere sonic images, often employing the simplicity of one note, suggest slowly changing landscapes that transform like the seasons, and melt into a seductive and intimate, rippling sound. These reductionist pieces were partially captured at the Ftarri shop and venue, and are performed with patience, grace, and restraint, stressing the essence of human imperfection.

Tom Soloveitzik & Microcanonical Ensemble - two waves, drawn on paper (Sawyer Spaces, 2025)

two waves, drawn on paper is Soloveitzik’s composition for the Microcanonical Ensemble (and dedicated to it), and recorded at the banks of the Tama river (which divides the greater Tokyo area into Tokyo and Kanagawa prefecture), in November 2023. Soloveitzik employs the intimate, delicate, and minimalist dynamics of the Ensemble to reflect and mirror his own feelings and thoughts as a visitor - and a stranger - but being part of a place, still, completely unimportant to the surrounding instances. Or, being present in the field - literally - of infinite occurrences, musical and otherwise, and by deep listening, absorbing the place in the most physical sense. Soloveitzik wanted him and the Ensemble to take part in this endless, transient cycle around the Tama River, exploring unseen and unpredictable relations, blending in, and “being played by it”. The album was released by American composer Kory Reeder’s label, Sawyer Spaces, focusing on art and place: the intersections of experimental music, field recordings, and soundscape.


Sun Yizhou / Tom Soloveitzik - Light Industry International Co. (Ftarri, 2025) + Yinshan Pagoda Forest 银山塔林 (Presses Précaires, 2025)

 

Two sound art adventures of Soloveitzik and Chinese, Beijing-based young conceptual and sound artist Sun Yizhou, both were recorded on the same day, in March 2024.

Soloveitzik toured Beijing and Shanghai in late March and early April 2024 and had a recording session with Sun Yizhou (credited with noise floor and audio cables). Light Industry International Co. features three pieces - a brief one and two extended ones from the studio session. Soloveitzik’s ethereal, whispering, and meditative tenor sax resonates and is extended by Sun Yizhou’s subtle, noisy electronics, and both sounds are punctuated by numerous silences of changing lengths, but sound perfectly attuned to each other. This austere architecture of reductionist sounds is intensified by the cover artwork, an original image from the iconic Radford's Architectural Drawing (1912).

 The Yinshan Pagoda Forest (银山塔林) is a sacred Buddhist site near Beijing from the Liao (916-1125) and Jin (1115-1234) dynasties, and was one of the "Eight Views of Beijing" - the picturesque and historically significant sites in and around Beijing - during the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1912) dynasties. Soloveitzik recorded three sparse, ethereal solo sax solos in this historical site, and was answered on the other four pieces by Sun Yizhou, credited with “jumping, clapping, shaking, and atmospheric radio receiver”. Sun Yizhou offers a completely different perspective of the historical site from the meditative and reserved one of Soloveitzik, one that is clearly distant and detached, punctuated by sudden percussive and mechanical noises.


Tom Soloveitzik - 麻布 diaries (Aloe, 2024)


麻布 diaries - Azabo diaries, titled after the Azabo neighborhood in central Tokyo where Soloveitzik has lived. 麻布 also means linen in Chinese, as Sun Yizhou, who released the album by his label, Aloe, told Soloveitzik. This album documents Soloveitzik’s daily solo practice between November 2022 and December 2023. The music is quiet and subdued, focused and with great restraint, but intimate, intriguing, and nuanced. Soloveitzik is blending in, absorbing, and responding to the small space vibrations. The saxophone becomes an abstract sound generator that shifts air in transparent densities and different material states. The last piece, “[蔵王温泉] thousand eyes”, is a field recording from Zao onsen, a popular ski resort north of Fukushima, where Soloveitzik placed the recording machine inside the sax bell, making the instrument a witness to a completely surprising social phenomenon, including the background playing Paul Desomnd’s ballad, “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes”..



Tom Solovietzik - Views from the Seven Ionian Islands (Suppedaneum, 2025)

This album borrows its title from Edward Lear’s 1863 visual travelogue, and began with the Soloveitzik family's visit a decade ago to the Greek island of Kythira. The images, sounds, and memories from this island resurfaced during Soloveitzik’s trip to Japan, so he concluded that these Views, which kept moving between the present and the past, are embedded in his life. This realization led Soloveitzik to think that the “best recording is the memory of listening, of the image(s), of contact, and of change”. He quotes Marcel Duchamp’s epigraph that captures the elusive essence of this work: “One can look at seeing: / one can’t hear hearing”.

 Views from the Seven Ionian Islands focuses on our ever-evolving perception of the past and present, and what are the nuances that distinguish past from present, near from far, and memory from perception, or perhaps, most importantly, the person one once was from the person one has become, especially in a world increasingly characterized by a profound sense of dislocation - geographic, temporal, moral, aesthetic, and political. This philosophical, meditative work consists of two suites. The first, a six-movement contemplative one with a nine-musician ensemble recorded in Jaffa in August 2023, and the second is a series of fifteen field recordings made in 2015 in Kythira, interwoven with brief, abstract interludes. It is accompanied by a book with Soloveitzik’s impressions of the island, a conversation with painter Masha Zusman, who relocated to the island, and an essay on the work by the writer and composer Derek Baron.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

John Zorn - Suite for Piano (Tzadik, 2022), Ballades (Tzadik, 2024), Impromptus and Nocturnes (Tzadik, 2025)

By Lee Rice Epstein

Recently, David Adler took to JazzTimes to exclaim about the large amount of excellent guitar music composed by John Zorn from 2017–2024, performed beautifully on a series of duo and trio albums by Julian Lage, Gyan Riley, and Bill Frisell. At that time, I was already anticipating the October release of Nocturnes, with a plan to write about his current leading piano trio with much the same perspective: Can you believe some of the best piano trio music is going, more or less, unrecognized by the quote-unquote jazz world? I sure can.

Yadda yadda yadda, Zorn releases a lot of music, insert argument about onus on critics to keep up, and so on, etc., ad infinitum, ad nauseam, ad absurdum, ad astra. This feels like a required insert for any and all reviews of Zorn’s music for the past 20 or so years, as if we can’t just accept that he’s working on his own timeline, with a dozen different groups, interwoven concepts, and new books of music every couple of years. If you’re not paying attention, that’s on you, in other words; you’re imposing a set of ground rules he didn’t agree to: record one album, make the press circuit, tour the festivals, record a follow up two years later, rinse and repeat, it could be a brilliant career. Or, make the music you want, when, how, and why you want, with whom you want, call it independent music, a lone bastion in whatever passes for the wilderness today.

And to get here, beginning sometime around 2021, Zorn and pianist Brian Marsella made a slight pivot with the go-to piano trio for recording these works. Up until then, Marsella’s trio with bassist Trevor Dunn and drummer Kenny Wollesen had been the prime unit. They recorded a two-part set of music, 2019’s The Hierophant and 2021’s Meditations On the Tarot , the took as its prime material the cards of the Tarot deck, and a rapid-fire firecracker of an album, Calculus, which was released in 2020. This somewhat mini-expedition across parallel paths seems to have set the table for what came next. The first move was to form a second piano trio, with Marsella, bassist Jorge Roeder, and drummer Ches Smith, that would record one book of music drawing inspiration from Baroque and Romantic forms alongside a series of albums exploring jazz piano through a variety of lenses. While the second set has so far produced only two albums— The Fourth Way, which is influenced by Georges Gurdjieff’s writings, and Ou Phrontis, which takes its name from a Greek phrase, meaning something like “who cares,” that was written above the door of T.E. Lawrence’s cottage home at Clouds Hill, a place of respite where he felt no pressure, no bounds or bonds placed upon him—the albums derived from classical forms are already at number four.

Brief sidebar: in 2022, this piano trio also became the basis for another new group, know as Incerto, named for its eponymous debut album. That group adds Julian Lage on guitar and moves through genres and references at a speed closest to the earliest Naked City albums. The guitar, piano, bass, and drums lineup reflects some of the mid-1950s Blue Note and West Coast ensembles, and Incerto expertly revels in that era’s freewheeling excitement for new sounds. Additionally, Roeder, and Smith backed Petra Haden for Love Songs Live, which saw Jesse Harris penning lyrics to to accompany some of Zorn’s impeccable melodies, a case where even Zorn’s multitudes contain multitudes. If you ever want to convince the most skeptical person you know to listen to John Zorn, try one of the sets of music created with Harris.

With all these ideas in motion, after decades of myriad orchestral and chamber compositions and settings, Zorn seems to have found fresh inspiration in the piano trio as a classic jazz ensemble that can take on classical forms from 1600–1950, give or take a few decades. Where the suite goes back in some ways to the 15th and 16th centuries, its structure seems to have been formalized in the Baroque period, where movements like those appearing in Suite for Piano, emerge: “Allemande,” “Sarabande,” “Scherzo,” “Passacaglia,” and “Gigue.” Traditionally, each of these uses different meters and tempi to reflect what are basically dance forms from Germany, France, England, and Spain. Here, they are infused with voicing and phrasing that summons players like Hasaan Ibn Ali, Sonny Clark, Kenny Drew, Freddie Redd, and Elmo Hope. Following Suite for Piano, in rapid succession the group has released Ballades, Impromptus, and Nocturnes , which showcase specific song styles, as opposed to an overarching compositional structure.

Ballades is, without a doubt, one of the most beautiful collections of songs I’ve heard in the past five years. Roeder’s bass recalls legends like Sam Jones, Paul Chambers, and Cecil McBee, with his deep tones and often surprising phrases. Call Smith the Billy Higgins or Tootie Heath of the band to round out the midcentury touch points, with the melodic sensibility of Tony Williams and Pete “La Roca” Sims, represented by that paradoxical balance of gentle surging Smith brings to the album). Within the ballad form, Zorn crafts 11 songs that use variable tempi, shifting meters, and some of his most compelling harmonies to great effect.

On Impromptus, the trio approaches a form typically reserved for solo performance. As a tight, working unit, Marsella, Roeder, and Smith excel at moving with uniform purpose. Throughout the set, references to previous Zorn works ebb and flow, with melodic quotes stretching into lengthy group improvisations. Marsella’s piano playing has developed a number of unique characteristics he elevates Zorn’s music into a notably personal performance (it would be amazing to see another piano trio record any part of this classically inspired series, the opportunities for individual expression appear broad and well suited to multiple interpretations). As with the impromptu form in its generally recognized, albeit slightly out of fashion, style, the trio mixes a number of different musical structures and contexts. Roeder’s driving bass lines flow steadily alongside Marsella’s occasionally bright, singsong runs.

Nocturnes, per its traditional style, is a fascinating blend of the impromptus and ballades, with a warmth and lushness that feels like a natural outgrowth of the trio’s years of working closely together. In eight nocturnes over 40 minutes, many of the familiar touchstones for Zorn’s classically leaning work show their influence, Alexander Scriabin, Claude Debussy, and the master of the form Fredéric Chopin. Personally, after spinning these four albums nonstop, I’d add elements of Francis Poulenc and Gabriel Fauré to the list (for both Impromptusand Nocturnes , truthfully), influences that have been less overtly prevalent in Zorn’s music in the past, but the depth in the piano-bass voicing recalls early 20th century French explorations. Deep into the album, “Nocturne Nr. 6” and “Nocturne Nr. 7” shimmer, with Roeder playing some gorgeously inventive bass counterpoint.

I haven’t yet seen what more might be coming in this book of music, though one can reasonably guess there will likely be an album of sonatas, serenades, divertimenti, or perhaps a collective of singular forms like toccata or rondo. Zorn previously composed and released a set of études, The Turner Études, with pianist Stephen Gosling, which, for those who want to go deep into Zorn’s compositional language, works almost like a Rosetta Stone, with its quotes and recursions of various melodic snippets from previous albums and books of music. With this ongoing book of music for piano trio, however, Marsella, Roeder, and Smith are playing music that feels less moored to the past, ironically, instead striking out to a challengingly melodious future.

Sute for Piano

https://www.tzadik.com/index.php?catalog=8389

Ballades

https://www.tzadik.com/index.php?catalog=9310

Impromptus

https://www.tzadik.com/index.php?catalog=9322

Nocturnes

https://www.tzadik.com/index.php?catalog=9326

Monday, November 3, 2025

Satoko Fujii & Natsuki Tamura - Ki (Libra, 2025)

By Stef Gijssels

This year we are blessed with several trumpet-piano albums. There is the excellent duet between Sylvie Courvoisier and Wadada Leo Smith on "Angel Falls", and the excellent duets between Satoko Fujii and Natsuki Tamura. 

I guess that "Ki" is their tenth duo album, out of the few dozen on which they perform in other ensembles. Over the years, their art has become more precise, more symbiotic, as if playing as one. "Ki" in Japanese means 'energy' or 'life force', but it can also mean 'wood'. All the title tracks on this album refer to trees, so we could assume that the two meanings of the word are possible, and they are penned by Tamura, except for the last track - "Dan's Ocean Side Listening Post" - which obviously does not refer to a tree and which is composed by Fujii. 

The music on this album is quiet, meditative, intimate. And in contrast to "Aloft", reviewed below, Tamura does not use extended techniques on his trumpet, staying well within the clarity of tone you expect from the instrument. Tamura explains: “This time, I wanted to play the entire album with the same atmosphere. The image of that atmosphere was of standing dignified in clear air. I wrote my seven songs in two days, so I was able to maintain that image. I just thought about the world I wanted to create.

The atmosphere is further created by Fujii's sparse piano playing. It is less dense, with less dramatic energy as on her other albums. Like Japanese drawings, the sparsity of the sounds and the silences in between are an integral part of the whole. Fujii comments: “It was not easy for me to play it because the music forces me to play less than I usually do. At first, I wasn’t comfortable playing that way because it was so new to me!” There are even long moments when the trumpet is the only instrument to be heard. 

The album's strength is the wonderful coherence of all compositions, their lyrical and poetic quality and of course the excellent playing and interaction of both artists. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp.


Natsuki Tamura & Satoko Fuji - Aloft (Libra, 2024)



"Aloft" is a different album from "Ki", and could almost be its mirror image. Even if all tracks are improvised, it is often Fujii's piano that sets the tone, builds the structure and brings the pieces to their closing. Her skills at composing on the spot are exceptional, and for some tracks it truly is hard to believe that they are improvised. While Fujii's compositional freedom gives the foundational structure, Tamura's trumpet playing acts as like a bird being kept aloft in the wind. His trumpet soars, yet he also resorts to many extended techniques, muffled sounds, squeezed sounds, stuttering sounds, oppressed and whispering sounds, as well as shouting and singing through his brass. 

All tracks have received titles referring to bird flight, and it's an apt imagery for the music, even if the titles were not used for inspiration but were added to the music many months later, once a selection of their improvisation session had been made. Fujii once told me that her music was not inspired by visual imagery, after I said to her that this was my impression, as you can easily picture natural sceneries when listening to her music, and this album is not different, but who is right: the artist or the art lover? 

We just decided to play something,” says Fujii. “Natsuki listens to me very carefully and respects my playing so much but he has a very different sensibility and means of expression.” Tamura adds, “We listen carefully to each other, but at the same time we both understand that contrast and surprise are also important.” The liner notes add: "After being married for 36 years and sharing countless projects, they didn't even need to plan for it or bring any written material. They just let inspiration guide them through various improvisations."

The music was recorded on December 13, 2023 at Samurai Hotel, New York City, which is actually a recording studio and not a hotel.

Listen and download from Bandcamp.


Satoko Fujii & Natsuki Tamura - Kazahana (Libra, 2025)


"Kazahana" - their eleventh duo album - brings us two fully improvised lengthy pieces, the first clocking at 18 minutes, the second at 33 minutes. Maybe because of their length, or maybe because they're fully improvised in a live environment, the sound is much rawer than on the two other records in this review. The music expands, there's tension, contradictions in style and mood, and the length of the pieces allows for developments, for unfolding narratives that need not be contained to a structure or a pattern. There are long moments of solo time for each of them, not in the sense to show off their skills, but rather as natural evolutions of the music itself. 

Both artists are deeply attuned to each other's styles, preferences, and responses, resulting in an interaction that is not only remarkably coherent but also a joy to witness in its spontaneous co-creation. Interestingly, near the end of the second piece, it is Tamura who introduces a repetitive phrase, offering a steady framework over which Fujii improvises with a distinctly modern classical sensibility.

The music was recorded during a live performance on December 25, 2024 at Koendori Classics, Shibuya, Tokyo. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp




Sunday, November 2, 2025

Jung-Jae Kim's Shamanism 4tet

A intriguing new group from Berlin, the Shamanism 4tet is presented here at a show in late September at the at Kühlspot Social Club. The group is Jung-Jae Kim on tenor saxophone, Chris Heenan on soprano saxophone and the fantastic contrabass clarinet, Andreas Voccia on synthesizer and Marcello S. Busato playing drums. The group has a debut album out on Relative Pitch Records.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Steve Beresford, John Butcher, Max Eastley - Some Uncharted Evening (scatterArchive, 2025)

By Martin Schray

I’ve been listening to a lot of John Butcher’s music lately, his entire repertoire. But when I heard this trio with Steve Beresford (piano and objects) and Max Eastley (electro-acoustic monochord, friction drum, percussion, piston flute), I was reminded of the discourse launched by Wynton Marsalis and the late musician and critic Stanley Crouch, who described free jazz as a dead end, whose experiments had damaged real jazz because the musicians simply weren’t virtuosic enough to carry on the jazz legacy. Especially Crouch claimed that free jazz was actually more European new classical music, mixed with a few bits and pieces of Ellington, Monk, and Bud Powell (he mentioned that as to Cecil Taylor’s music). He probably wouldn’t have been able to relate to this trio’s music, but the musicians wouldn’t have cared about his restrictive attitude either, because they simply are not interested in how their music is labeled. A certain beat might be foreign to them, but improvisation is not, because its spirit - along with all kinds of sound explorations - defines this album, recorded on September, 22nd in 2023 at Ferme-Asile in Sion/Switzerland, as part of the first edition of the Biennale Son.

“Part 1“ is indeed an excursion in new sounds; advanced, angular ambient music, so to say. Eastley’s flute hints a melody, the sounds from inside the piano rumble away, Butcher’s distorted saxophone tries to find its way. The music is more oriented towards the sounds of nature than jazz. However, when jazz does shine through, it’s as a distant echo in a piano line or a saxophone lick. And even then, only perhaps. In general, the use of silence and contrasts seems to be more important: the counterpoint of glockenspiel sounds and extreme bass noises, or the abrupt stopping of the briefly accelerated tempo.

“Part 2“ in particular exudes this spirit even more: power, accentuation, tumbling sequences of notes, dark monochrome drones, creaking noises, birdsong. One gets the impression that each of the three is at peace with himself, close to the others and yet distant at the same time. Changes in tempo, a wide range of dynamics out of nowhere - these accompany the progression of the music without becoming nervous or even affected. Max Eastley seems to capture the babble of voices from the piano and saxophone, especially when he lets his instrument (the aforementioned two-metre long electroacoustic monochord arc, which he developed from an Aeolian harp in the 1970s) howl like a monstrous animal in the middle section of the piece, before the trio almost lapses into a small folkloric passage. In general, the three comb through their material, freely and spontaneously, while at the same time being sensitive to all clichés, especially those of free jazz and new music. Throughout the set, it becomes increasingly clear that three kindred spirits are throwing themselves into the creative process of momentary music with enormous enthusiasm. Spurred on by bursts of energy, formulated with a striking sound language and - of course - with the utmost ability to listen to each other. In this trio, there is no single effervescent source of initiative; it is a collective process of the highest order that structures the discharges, the contrasts, the originality.

 An Uncharted Eveningis full of seething, mercurial layers of sound and highly differentiated ramifications. Perhaps the evening began “uncharted,” but after an hour, the sonic research has progressed very far. Jazz purists may not know what to make of it; for them, it will perhaps always remain uncharted territory. For open ears, it’s a feast.

Steve Beresford, John Butcher, Max Eastley: An Uncharted Evening is available as a download. You can listen to it and buy it here: https://scatterarchive.bandcamp.com/album/some-uncharted-evening