By
Nick Metzger
Norberto Lobo – Estrela (three:four records, 2018) ****
Gorgeous, surreal Tropicalia-inflected avant-garde jazz from the prominent
Portuguese guitarist Norberto Lobo’s quartet, consisting of Yaw Tembe on
trumpet, Ricardo Jacinto on cello, and Marco Franco on percussion. While
not his first foray into a group setting (he’s had a long standing duo with
the drummer João Lobo and is a frequent collaborator in the Portugeuse
music scene), this marks his first group recording under his own name and
his third for the excellent three:four label. His warbling, crystalline
guitar flights are accompanied here by Tembe’s muted trumpet and the
atypical shimmer of the cello/drums rhythm section provided by Jacinto (who
plays pizzicato throughout) and Franco. The music is warm and gentle,
perfect for winding down, but still engaging enough to satisfy the most
ardently cerebral jazz fan. His haunting melodies are satiating, and you’ll
find yourself humming them long after the needle has lifted.
Tiger Hatchery – Mind’s Eye (self-released, 2018) ****
This is the first we’ve heard from Tiger Hatchery, the kings of Chicago’s
sub-underground, since their excellent 2015
Live in New Haven
release with Paul Flaherty. At only two tracks it comes as a brief but
welcome deluge in the midst of a 3-year drought from the trio of Andrew
Scott Young, Ben Billington, and Michael Forbes (Bass, Drums, Sax,
respectively). Their increase in overall maturity and discipline shows on
this brisk and lively set, which I’d characterize as their most controlled
and synergetic since 2013’s
Sun Worship. However, gone is the
veneer of harsh noise (not that it was ever a bad thing), replaced with a
renewed concentration on group interplay and dynamics. Let’s hope a full
length offering isn’t far behind.
Michael Foster, Ben Bennett, Jacob Wick – Glove Issues (Palliative
Records, 2018) ***½
I have a lot of respect for what Foster (sax), Bennett (drums), and wick
(trumpet) are doing here, and I’ll admit that this album genuinely
challenged me at first. The salival expressions utilized during the
introduction were initially, for me, like sitting through a playground
loogie-hacking competition. But like all albums that are challenging,
repeated listening really opened this up. It’s one of those albums on which
the traditional characteristics of the instruments are subverted in favor
of a timbrally rich palette of unconventional sounds. The interplay on
these live improvisations is fantastically sympathetic, and it’s definitely
entertaining to hear them communicating in this collective language that
are so fluent in. If you’re looking for something thought-provoking, this
might be right up your alley.
Laurence Pike – Distant Early Warning (The Leaf Label, 2018) ****
This highly original album by the Australian drummer Laurence Pike finds
him integrating a drum pad sampler into his kit, with which he augments his
deft free jazz improvisations with samples that harken back to 70’s
kosmische music and electronic minimalism. This is a most satisfying
combination as traditionally drums either aren’t utilized in these genres,
or even worse, when they are its over-the-top stadium-rock-style drumming
that completely wrecks the atmosphere intrinsic to such productions.
Hearing Pike’s skittering free-jazz-style percussion integrated with the
atmospheric electronics is a revelation; it provides a much needed human
element to what is customarily an icy machine-driven music. The album art
is the perfect metaphor for the album, showing the form of human hands
engaging with the bleak sci-fi landscape.
Skerebotte Fatta – Riders from the Ra (Creative Sources Recordings,
2018) ***½
The debut recording from this Polish duo finds them utilizing a more
European free-improv approach to the classic sax/drums format. A study in
sonic frugality, the duo wrings a great deal from their limited
instrumental arsenal, providing both long, probing, sparse structures and
short ecstatic bursts of energy. Both players show a great deal of
diversity, as they provide a bevy of ideas without ever resorting to
mindless shtick. The album overall has a good flow and provides an
effective variety of sounds. This is classic free jazz with minimal
trimmings; a very meat-and-potatoes release of thoughtful fire music.
2 comments:
Michael Foster is making some of the most innovative music around.I've been listening to him for hours on end lately;great music!
I agree, his playing on the Barker Trio's 'Avert Your I' is amazing as well as his duos with Ben Bennett.
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