We rarely review big bands, or mini big bands, and we wish we could get more of those. They are rare because it requires money to set them up and to maintain them. Often they can only last within subsidised structures, yet once in a while those bands escape the monetary logic and survive. We will review some of them here, even we do not do them justice by the succinct nature of the reviews, but better short reviews than no review at all. I hope that the links will give you a better idea of the bands' sounds.
Free Art Ensemble - Cap De Toro (Discordian, 2015) ****½
Wild, rhythmic, free, highly enjoyable from this fantastic Spanish tentet. What they play is composed, with a clear structure, lots of variation, dark menace, powerful uptempo moments and ominous slow moments. It's everything you want to hear from a big band : great themes, powerful soloing and incredible rhythms. It's intelligent music and very compelling. The wonderful Goya painting of "Cronos Eating His Children" fits the music well. Unfortunately I could not find a video to demonstrate their approach, but check the link below to hear the music.
Highly recommended!
The band :
Iván González: Trumpet, Gong, Bells, Percussion, Bird Call, Horn
Julián Sánchez: Trumpet, Percussion, Bird Call, Horn
Pol Padrós: Trumpet, Sea Shells, Percussion, Bird Call, Horn
Oriol Fontclara: Alto & Baritone Saxophones, Bird Call
Tom Chant: Soprano & Tenor Saxophones, Bird Call
Albert Cirera: Soprano & Tenor Saxophones, Flute, Bird Call
Àlex Reviriego: Doublebass & Electric Bass, Percussion, Bird Call
Marc Cuevas: Doublebass, Percussion, Bird Call
Ramon Prats & Arnau Obiols: Drums, Percussion, Bird Call
Listen and order from Bandcamp.
Filthy Habits Ensemble - Gruesome Routines (Discordian, 2014) ****
From the same label, now a nonet. This album was released last year, and is equally worth looking for. It's a little more maverick but sometimes surprisingly gentle.
Pablo Selnik: Flute, Euphoric Pig Noises
El Pricto: Clarinet
Agustí Martínez: Alto Sax and Clarinet
Don Malfon: Alto Sax
Tom Chant: Tenor Sax
Jo Miramontes: Synthesizer
Director Wlkins: Electric Guitar
Sebi Suarez: Electric Bass
Vasco Trilla (Thriller): Drums
Listen and order from Bandcamp.
Orchestre National De Jazz - Europa Berlin (OnJazz, 2015) ****
The "Orchestre National De Jazz" is something of an icon in France, with lots of upcoming young musicians joining forces under the leadership and in the company of established musicians.
In this band, under the leadership of Olivier Benoît on guitar, we have Bruno Chevillon on bass, Jean Dousteyssier on clarinet and bass clarinet, Alexandra Grimal on tenor sax, Hugues Mayot alto, Fidel Fourneyron on trombone, Fabrice Martinez on trumpet, Théo Ceccaldi on violin, Sophie Agnel on piano, Paul Brousseau on keyboards, Sylvain Daniel on electric bass, and Eric Echampard on drums.
The music is not free, but composed modern jazz with some strong improvisational moments. The first album by the band "Europa Paris" was inspired by the French capital, now the attention shifts to Berlin, the German capital. As the liner notes say : "A strange Berlin, still clutching to its breast the scars of a 20th century that symbolizes all its errors, but which grasps the remains of this heavy, omnipresent past with ever-increasing strength in order to underline its reunification, its desire for freedom, and its openness to the world". The compositions are quite fresh and memorable, and the playing is tightly arranged at times, with a band that really enjoys playing this music. As you can expect from a young band, but maybe also because of the inspiration of Berlin itself, the music is quite open to other subgenres such as free jazz, rock and electronic music, albeit within limits. It evokes the city in all its aspects, and that can lead to exuberant music, but also to more intimistic, minimal or even mysterious moments. The great thing about the arrangements are the fact that the whole band is not playing the whole time, and the shifting line-ups also lead to completely different sounds, which gives lots of variation.
Orchestra Of The Upper Atmosphere - Θ2 (Discus, 2014) ****
Martin Archer – organ, electric piano, electronics, Eb saxophones, clarinets, voice, VST trumpet
Chris Bywater – organ, synthesizers & electronics, samples, percussion, voice, electric violin
Steve Dinsdale – drums, floor percussion, synthesizer
frostlake – voice, electronics, glockenspiel
Yvonna Magda – electric violin, loops & electronics
Walt Shaw – percussion, voice, electronics
Terry Todd – bass guitar, effects, voice
Mick Somerset – concert, alto and bamboo flutes, Bb saxophones
Chris Bywater – organ, synthesizers & electronics, samples, percussion, voice, electric violin
Steve Dinsdale – drums, floor percussion, synthesizer
frostlake – voice, electronics, glockenspiel
Yvonna Magda – electric violin, loops & electronics
Walt Shaw – percussion, voice, electronics
Terry Todd – bass guitar, effects, voice
Mick Somerset – concert, alto and bamboo flutes, Bb saxophones
with
Paul Schatzberger – violin
Heather Cordwell – violin
Aby Vulliamy – viola
Angela Rosenfeld – cello
Heather Cordwell – violin
Aby Vulliamy – viola
Angela Rosenfeld – cello
Juxtavoices - choir
Listen and download from Bandcamp.
Francesco Chiapperini Extemporary Vision Ensemble - Our Redemption (Rudi, 2015) ****
An eclectic effort of jazz, rock and classical music in a tribute to the late Italian saxophonist Massimo Urbani. They do not shy away from complexities or dissonance. This is a strong avant-garde band playing solid and highly varied compositions. The only downside is that it may be too overly ambitious and/or self-centered.
The band :
Francesco Chiapperini: alto sax, flute
Andrea Jimmy Catagnoli: alto sax
Gianluca Elia: soprano and tenor sax
Eloisa Manera: violin
Simone Quatrana: piano
Luca Pissavini: cello
Marco Rottoli: double bass
Filippo Sala: drums
Filippo Monico: drums and percussions
Sin Anestesia - The Transdimensional Seduction Handbook (Discordian, 2014) ****
We're back in Spain, and again on Discordian, now with Sin Anestesia, which means as much as "without anesthetics", a nice name that will make listeners expect the worst, but if the music is adventurous and special, you can indeed listen to it without being sedated upfront. This is possibly the most open-ended and most free jazz album in the entire list, and then one where the weight of the size of the band is not actually felt. All musicians participate in the great developments of themes and activities, but respecting the floor to others by stepping back once in a while. A wonderful balance between the power of tightly arranged big band, and the minimalist timbral explorations by the various sax-players, offer an equally good balance between subtlety and power. Too bad I could not take the time last year to give the album some more space.
Teresa Gómez Ramírez: Soprano sax
Xavier Díaz Herrera: Soprano and baritone sax
Don Malfon: Alto and baritone sax
Agustí Martínez: Alto sax
El Pricto: Alto sax
Luiz Rocha: Tenor sax
Pep Pascual: Tenor sax
Luís Vallès: Baritone sax
Ferran Besalduch: Bass sax
Núria Andorrà: Marimba and percussion
Ildefons Alonso: Vibraphone and percussion
Listen and download from Bandcamp.
Daniele Cavallanti & Milano Contemporary Arts Ensemble - Sounds Of Hope (Rudi, 2015) ***½An eclectic effort of jazz, rock and classical music in a tribute to the late Italian saxophonist Massimo Urbani. They do not shy away from complexities or dissonance. This is a strong avant-garde band playing solid and highly varied compositions. The only downside is that it may be too overly ambitious and/or self-centered.
The band :
Francesco Chiapperini: alto sax, flute
Andrea Jimmy Catagnoli: alto sax
Gianluca Elia: soprano and tenor sax
Eloisa Manera: violin
Simone Quatrana: piano
Luca Pissavini: cello
Marco Rottoli: double bass
Filippo Sala: drums
Filippo Monico: drums and percussions
Sin Anestesia - The Transdimensional Seduction Handbook (Discordian, 2014) ****
Teresa Gómez Ramírez: Soprano sax
Xavier Díaz Herrera: Soprano and baritone sax
Don Malfon: Alto and baritone sax
Agustí Martínez: Alto sax
El Pricto: Alto sax
Luiz Rocha: Tenor sax
Pep Pascual: Tenor sax
Luís Vallès: Baritone sax
Ferran Besalduch: Bass sax
Núria Andorrà: Marimba and percussion
Ildefons Alonso: Vibraphone and percussion
Listen and download from Bandcamp.
The band :
Daniele Cavallanti, tenor sax
Riccardo Luppi, alto & soprano sax, flute
Gianluca Elia, tenor sax (bass sax on Braxtown)
Massimo Falascone baritone & sopranino sax, (contrabass sax on Braxtown)
Francesco Chiapperini bass clarinet, alto sax, flute
Luca Calabrese, trumpet
Beppe Caruso, trombone
Paolo Botti viola, cornet
Gianluca Alberti, bass (right channel)
Valerio Della Fonte, bass (left channel)
Toni Boselli, drums (right channel)
Tiziano Tononi, drums, percussion, gongs (left channel)
Orquestra Jazz de Matosinhos - Jazz Composers Forum (Tone Of A Pitch, 2014) ***
The band :
Josée Luis Rego, Joao Pedro Brandao, Mario Santos, José Pedro Coelho, Rui Teixeira on woodwinds;
Gileno Santana, Javier Pereiro, Rogério Ribeiro, Susana Santos Silva, Ricardo Formosa on trumpets and flugelhorns;
Daniel Dias, Alvaro Pinto, Andreia Santos, Concalo Dias on trombones;
André Fernandes on guitar;
Carlos Azevedo, Pedro Guedes on keyboards
Damian Cabaud on bass;
Geoclandio Monteiro: percussion;
Marcos Cavaleiro: drums
The name that strikes me here is Susana Santos Silva : again! We keep finding her back these days in totally different musical environments. And that is good!
The Awakening Orchestra - Volume I - This Is Not The Answer (Innova, 2014) **
This is just an ambitious album, that may please some, and the technical quality is good, both of the musicians and the sound. Yet it misses all the qualities that you would expect from 'great' music.
Kyle Saulnier: composer/conductor; Rob Mosher: soprano saxophone; David Dejesus: alto saxophone; Samuel Ryder: tenor saxophone; Andrew Gutauskas: baritone saxophone; Felipe Salles: tenor, baritone saxophones; Seth Fruiterman: voice; Daniel Urness: trumpet; Seneca Black: trumpet; Nadje Noordhuis: flugelhorn, trumpet; Philip Dizack: trumpet; Michael Boscarino: trombone; Matthew Musselman: trombone; Benjamin Griffin: trombone; Max Seigel: trombone; James Shipp: vibraphone; Michael Macallister: guitar; Aaron Kotler: piano, keyboards; Joshua Paris: bass; Will Clark: drums; Nathan Hetherington: voice.
Michael Mantler - The Jazz Composers Orchestra Update (ECM, 2014) *
On this album we have the Nouvelle Cuisine Big Band Conducted by Christoph Cech, featuring Michael Mantler on trumpet, Harry Sokal on tenor saxophone, Wolfgang Puschnig on alto saxophone, Bjarne Roupé on electric guitar, and David Helbock on piano. Mantler thought the time was ripe for an update, because he thought the music had so much possibilities and still sounded so fresh after all these decades, that he wanted to have another go at it.
Unfortunately, it's not an "update", it's a burial.
It is pretentious, meaningless and unnecessary. Don't waste your money on it.
5 comments:
Yesterday I read a review of "Chamber 4". I wanted to read it again this morning, but it has disappeared... Or is life a dream?
That was posted by mistake. It will be published shortly.
Thanks so much for these reviews. I love this kind of music and i'm always looking for new big bands pushing the envelope.
Hello Stef,
I'm one of the composers of the Sin Anestesia album, and as your piece makes it sound like the whole thing was improvised, please allow me to note that this album is one of the most thoroughly-written records Discordian has released to date; being a three-composer affair, every second was due to design and the musicians respecting others by stepping back once in a while didn't have anything to do with on-the-fly courtesy, although they are sterling folk each and every one of them. Perhaps you could make mention of the composers too?
Thanks so much and I'm delighted you enjoyed the record.
All the best!
"... it is as rare an achievement as Carla Bley's historic Escalator Over The Hill" was how I had described the Awakening Orchestra's album. I was not making a direct musical correlation between the two works and made that point specifically. Just as Bley brought together multiple genres with great success, Awakening Orchestra managed a similar feat.
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