Most of the music reviewed yesterday was still in the realm between modern jazz and free jazz. Today, we give you an overview of solo sax albums that go beyond style and genre, integrating electronics and studio effects.
Bendik Giske - Cracks (Smalltown Supersound, 2021)
Listen and download from Bandcamp.
Colin Webster - Castle (Superpang, 2021)
Listen and download from Bandcamp.
José Lencastre - Inner Voices (Burning Ambulance, 2022)
This is not a pure solo album, since José Lencastre plays alto and tenor with many overdubs, sounding like a quartet or more, with electronic alterations made during production. The focus is on the harmonic structures, and 'edifice' might even be a better word, because the relatively short pieces are sonic constructions with sounds produced by one musician, carefully crafted, finalised with precision. The melodies and themes have a naive quality, and could often come from simple folk songs, rather than jazz, yet they bring the polyphonic complexity of modern classical music (at times Michael Nyman comes to mind).
The last two tracks bring a complete change in the musical environment. If the first eight tracks are compact musical jigsaw puzzles, the the last two present more open-ended improvised music that has become electronically altered with additional synth sounds. By itself both pieces are worth listening to, but the stylistic break with the rest of the album is too big to make the whole a coherent endeavour. It can be that it shows the difference between "Inner Voices" that are rational and organised (Appolonian in nature) whereas other 'inner voices' can be emotional and chaotic (Dionysan in nature).
Whatever the reason, it is an album worth looking for.
In light of his career in improvised music so far, this is an outlier.
1 comments:
Great series, Stef! I listened to the Lencastre just by chance and fell in love with it, but that is a jarring shift towards the back half.
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