By Nick Ostrum
Since launching in 2018, Out of Your Head records has quickly emerged as a cornerstone label of the next wave of free jazzers, especially those circulating around New York. Mean Reds features a few of the label’s mainstays (and founders), Scott Clark on drums and Adam Hopkins on bass, as well as saxophonist John Lilley and trumpeter Bob Miller. More prominent in this session is the quintet’s leader and vocalist, Laura Ann Singh. A vocalist of many styles, she shone brightly on Clark’s 2023 Dawn & Dusk , which was one of her first recorded forays into this the freer musics. Mean Reds is her first headliner.
The first phrases of the opener, River, are a repeated four-note drift on trumpet, and light splatters of string and percussion. Then, Singh matches the now drafty trumpet lines with her proposition, “Maybe our love is a river.” From there, the song – and really the album – unfold into a series of imagist mediations and poetic propositions that link the human condition, nature, technology, and a range of other concerns both pressing and playful. Her lyrical style and delivery veers between the heyday jazz divas and a slightly less gruff Chrissie Hynde. Comparisons with Hannah Marks’ overlooked gem from 2023 Outsider, Outlier, also on OOYH, are also in order in those moments when Singh’s group taps its inner aggression and outrage and spill over into wails, declamations, and other noise.
Take one of the standouts, Monster. It is scorcher, which drags the listener through a storm as Singh repeats the question “Is this the American dream?,” a phrase which morphs in the second verse into “This is my American scream.” This is as much punk rock and raucous Björk as it is jazz. Toward the end, the song clarifies itself as an indictment of our current age of obsessive (and seemingly inescapable) petromodernity, as Singh asserts “The highway is a monster.” Here, of course, the highway is metaphor as well object, doubling as a warning about the suicidal direction the world seems to be veering. The backbeat is an insistent drum and bass staccato pulse that seems to repeat endlessly with just minor embellishments as the band breaks out into full fanfare around Singh’s proclamations.
Monster is just one among the variety Mean Reds presents. For the few punk bangers (Monster, She Said, the playful bedroom indie track Counting), there are smoky ballads that, even when at their most direct, are just distorted enough to sound subversive. As Strange as It Is is a fine example. It embraces Ornette’s harmolodics, if not the system itself then at least the feeling that comes through so powerfully in pieces such as What Reason Could I Give. In that, it soars. One other important note is the band. These guys can tear, but they rarely do. Instead, this album showcases their ability to play an incredible backing band. Never is there tension between musicians elbowing for space or filling the air with too much sound. They are stand-out in those moments when they do break out into bop runs and blares. But, in a sense, they stand out most by holding to the background and laying the solid but unassuming basis on which Singh can realize her vision. And what a colorful (or maybe just many perplexing and divergent shades of red?) and engaging vision it is.
Mean Reds is available as vinyl and download via Bandcamp:
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