Freitag, 5. September 2014

THE GUARDIAN: review HARRY SOKAL DEPART

Harry Sokal: Depart Refire CD review – the kind of dynamic jazz that creates converts

(Intakt)

Harry Sokal
Indecently funky … Harry Sokal. Photograph: Francesca Pfeffer
For anyone familiar with Swiss label Intakt’s frequently cutting-edge output, this trio set by Austrian saxophonist Harry Sokal might seem indecently funky. But Sokal, who played in star American trumpeter Art Farmer’s group for 20 years and is a key figure in the Vienna Art Orchestra, plays a very capricious kind of what he describes as “groove music” on the latest from his 30-year-old Depart trio. Seven of the 13 tight pieces here are by Sokal’s longtime bassist, Heiri Känzig, and the prodding bass riff, in 5/8 time, and wah-wah-assisted sax of the opening Talking 58 is typical of the pair’s direct-sounding but seductively knotty music. Chambers’ Room sounds like bebop over a rocking jazz-funk riff, but played on a bowed acoustic bass. Funky Straight has a catchy, twisting melody against Martin Valihora’s slamming drums. The folksy Erzherzog-Johann-Jodler, meanwhile, could almost be a Sonny Rollins feature – but one delivered in electronically generated sax chords. On the gently curling Peace on My Mind, Sokal shows what a subtle player of an unadorned acoustic ballad he can be. It’s the kind of dynamic jazz set that creates converts.

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