By Nick Metzger
With Contemporary Chaos Practices the celebrated saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock has provided a conclusive highpoint of creative music in 2018. The album combines Laubrock’s excellent orchestral scores with improvisations from soloists Mary Halvorson, Kris Davis, Nate Wooley, as well as from the composer herself. I didn’t have the chance to listen to this album properly before I submitted my year end list, as it should certainly have been included (it would have been an impossible task though, to choose one to drop, what a year!). According to Steve Smith’s excellent liner notes Vogelfrei was written for the 2014 second Jazz Composers Orchestra Institute Reading, while Contemporary Chaos Practices was written for the 2017 Moers Festival, making both of recent vintage. Smith writes that Laubrock’s initial inspiration for writing orchestral scores came from seeing Anthony Braxton and Walter Thompson at The Irondale center in Brooklyn. The trifecta of composition, improvisation, and conducting was a natural progression for Laubrock, who was already mixing composition and improvisation in her smaller ensembles and had been exposed to the creative functions of conducting via the London Improvisers Orchestra. On Contemporary Chaos Practices her combination of inspirations is seamless, drawing from classical, jazz, and experimental streams of expression and weaving them into a wonderfully strange and multifaceted whole.
'Contemporary Chaos Practices (Part 1 and Part 2)' begins with
Halvorson’s hiccupping, pitch shifted, guitar psychedelics bookended by
powerful orchestral forays and resonant brass figures. Hovering over
this are flute and woodwinds that flutter in quickening runs like
dragonflies over the surface of a pond. The strings become more
assertive, pushed along by the brass and the liquid guitar playing,
culminating in the rapid arco of the contrabass, slowly dimming and
taking on gravity as it goes silent. Laubrock takes skirting runs at
the edges of the icy string playing, stirring up drama on soprano
saxophone. At around nine minutes there begins a wonderful passage of
orchestral dialogue that is quite cinematic in spirit, that slowly
dissolves into almost pure texture over the second half, utilizing a
broad palate of sounds to spectacular effect. 'Contemporary Chaos
Practices (Part 3)' begins as the previous track finished, with high
pitched textures from the instrumentalists that simultaneously suggest
wind chimes, distant playground swings, and insect calls. Around the
midpoint, the jaunty contrabass clarinet and trombone precede the
return of the orchestra, which delivers powerful galloping passages
interspersed with short colorful responses of strings. The shortest
piece, 'Contemporary Chaos Practices (Part 4)', begins with a somber
introduction from the brass and woodwinds, which carefully builds and
grows into something large, dark, and slightly menacing before fading
back into the silence. Vogelfrei begins probingly over bowed string
harmonics, combining gorgeous orchestral swells with more pointillist
playing from the soloists. A little after 7 minutes the orchestra is
augmented with vocalists, who provide choral underpinnings for the
piece. Kris Davis comes to the fore, dueling with the strings as Josh
Sinton makes use of amplified contrabass clarinet to provide a
dissonant and subtle counterpoint. The finale utilizes driven
percussive statements with chorale accents to establish a churning
undercurrent over which the brass and woodwinds combine in a discordant
commotion that peels away and leaves a lone scratching fiddle bow.
What I enjoy the most about this album is its ability to surprise, as
none of these songs evolved in a manner that was obvious to me. The
soloists are also incorporated in a unique way as well. Rather than
being provided a break to solo over, they’re generally left to their
own devices over specific portions of the arrangement, making them feel
less like solos and more like organic outgrowths of the whole. This is
a brilliant record in both concept and execution, and the recording
quality is vivid, catching all of the subtleties furnished by the
musicians across a large dynamic range. Perhaps the most exciting
revelation of all is that Laubrock is just getting started with
orchestral compositions, leaving a wake of excitement for what’s to
come.
Contemporary Chaos Practices Teaser:
Bandcamp:
2 comments:
Agreed, Nick. Consistently inventive and full of colour, Laubrock manages to weave composition and improvisation together in a seamless fashion. It’s in my top 10.
I was glad to see that you and some of our other colleagues had it in your lists. It definitely belongs in the New Ears poll.
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