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Sonntag, 12. April 2015

THE TELEGRAPH's best jazz album 2015 (so far): SCHLIPPENBACH TRIO (INTAKT)

11 best jazz albums of 2015

Your guide to the best jazz albums of 2015. Updated weekly

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5 out of 5 stars
 Preservation Hall Jazz Club
Preservation Hall Jazz Club Photo: Alamy
The best jazz albums of 2015 will be regularly updated with picks from jazz critic Ivan Hewett and culture editor Martin Chilton. You can get more jazz news and reviews on our Telegraph Jazz Facebook Page.

KENNY WHEELER: SONGS FOR QUINTET (ECM)
The fine trumpeter Kenny Wheeler died in September 2014 and this lovely album was recorded at Abbey Road nine months before he died. There is some sweet flugelhorn from the Octogenerian and particularly fine support from tenor saxophonist Stan Sulzmann. John Parricelli (guitar), Martin France (drums) and Chris Laurence (bass) complete the classy quintet.
The CD comes with two impressive booklets with photographs of the quintet and of Wheeler's time with ECM. The album's nine tracks are full of sensitive ensemble playing and supple rhythms, and it finishes with the poignant Nonetheless. Songs for Quintet is an excellent testament to a Canadian-born star who did so much for jazz in the UK.
  Martin Chilton

JACK DeJOHNETTE: MADE IN CHICAGO (ECM)
Jack DeJohnette brings together colleagues of 50 years standing – pianist Muhal Richard Abrams, sax players Roscoe Mitchell and Henry Threadgill and young cellist and bassist Larry Gray – and the range of expression these five players draw from their instruments is astonishing.
  Ivan Hewett

BOB DYLAN: SHADOWS IN THE NIGHT (COLUMBIA RECORDS)
Bob Dylan pays tribute to the jazz songs of Frank Sinatra, as he takes beautiful material written by such greats as Rodgers and Hammerstein and completely inhabits them, reimagining Some Enchanted Evening with the wistful intimacy of someone peering back through the mists of time. Neil McCormick
 

TROYKA: ORNITHOPHOBIA (NAIM JAZZ RECORDS)
Ornithophobia is full of many-layered soundscapes which are often suggestive and aurally seductive, if somewhat chilly in emotional tone. Pianist Kit Downes, guitarist Chris Montague and drummer Josh Blackmore make the line-up, but often it seems as if we’re hearing half-a-dozen players, thanks to the clever guitar loops and over-dubbed synth lines. Adding his own touch of suggestive magic to all this is producer Petter Eldh, but thankfully he doesn’t sap the energy and drive of the playing, which is considerable.
This energy comes from the deliberate mismatch between the hectic, pattering drum patterns and the repeating riffs, which are always arithmetically ingenious, if as hard and angular as steel girders. When heaped up into layers they almost defeat the ear’s attempts to unscramble them. It could all be too much, but there’s usually a moment when the pieces break out of their self-created labyrinth – as in the opening number Arcades, where the music emerges unexpectedly into a wide-open harmonic space. In the closing number Seahouses (the Northumberland coast is another theme in this album), the pattern is reversed. Gentle synth. chords fade into one another, like layers of mist on an early morning sea, but over the horizon something threatening and super-fast eventually approaches. Overall this album is musically intriguing, and full of ear-tickling sounds, but only rarely loveable.
  IH

AARON GOLDBERG: THE NOW (SUNNYSIDE RECORDS)
The Now is a very polished album, divided between Aaron Goldberg's own compositions, a few jazz standards, and some delightful reworkings of Brazilian songs.
  IH

EMILY SAUNDERS: OUTSIDERS INSIDERS (MIX SOUNDS)
There's no doubting the strong vocal technique of Emily Saunders, who trained in Jazz Voice at Trinity Conservatoire, and her phrasing is one of the pleasures of her second album. The nine original jazz numbers, which range across jazz ballads and Sixties soul jazz, allow for strong instrumental solos from a band comprising the excellent Byron Wallen on trumpet along with Trevor Mires (trombone), Bruno Heinen/Steve Pringle (keys), Dave Whitford /Paul Michael (bass) Jon Scott (drums) and Fabio De Oliveira/ Asaf Sirkis (percussion). Highlights include the crisp voice-and-piano ballad You With Me and the optimistic Summer Days. Those who like their jazz sultry and languid will enjoy the album although it will be interesting to see if Saunders brings more fire into future work.
  MC

REBECCA FERGUSON: LADY SINGS THE BLUES (RCA RECORDS)
Rebecca Ferguson's run through of Billie Holiday classics could have been bolder but she sings with sass and feeling.
  NM

JOE ALBANY: AN EVENING WITH JOE ALBANY (STEEPLECHASE RECORDS)
Something of a rarity. There are 17 tracks on this concert recorded at the Cafe Montmartre in Copenhagen in May 1973, when American bebop pianist Joe Albany (who died in 1988) was 49. April in Paris shows off his skill for embellishing a tune; I Can’t Get Started is less assured. Nevertheless, a welcome chance to hear an original jazz musician, who played Charlie Parker.
  MC

PETE OXLEY AND NICOLAS MEIER: CHASING TALES (MGP RECORDS)
Guitar duos are reasonably rare in jazz yet the difference in styles from Pete Oxley and Nicolas Meier is the strength of the album as they come together in a mostly acoustic album. Chasing Tales shows off their elaborate, harmonically rich melodies and clever solos. Two masterly guitarists creating an array of changing moods.
  MC

WILD CARD: ORGANIC RIOT (TOP END RECORDS)
Wild Card are a fine live jazz act and they manage to capture their gig energy on Organic Riot. The album blends hard-bop, Afro, Latin and Funk, all held together by producer and French-born guitarist Clément Régert. He and organist Andrew Noble (and drummer Sophie Alloway) are joined by some strong guests, including Graeme Flowers on trumpet and Roberto Manzin on tenor saxophone. Natalie Williams sings well on Feeling Good and Wash Him Out. The longest track, at more than eight minutes, is Flood and it's full of treats.
  MC

ALEXANDER VON SCHLIPPENBACH TRIO: FEATURES (INTAKT RECORDS)
This CD must be in the running for the Least Appealing Title for a Jazz Album prize, but fortunately the contents are livelier than the packaging. The ponderous liner notes tell us the album is a summary of how far the trio has come in 45 years playing together, which is evidently a very long way indeed. The three players – pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach, saxophonist Evan Parker and drummer Paul Lovens – are veterans of the ‘free jazz’ scene. Some devotees of free jazz make a fetish of holding any echoes of ‘normal’ jazz at arm’s length. These three have been around too long to be dogmatic, and much of the pleasure of this album lies in savouring the little hints of blues and vamping stride patterns and old-fashioned ‘licks’ that flit across the music’s surface.
The opening meditation from von Schlippenbach sounds like his take on 1950s classical modernism, but lurking inside the star-like points of sound is the ghost of a ‘jazzy’ seventh chord. Each of the following fourteen ‘Features’ is like a little character study, launching off with an idea – a repeated note, a whirling figure on the sax or cymbals – and allowing it to wander where it will. Several times a number ends with a descent down into the bass, so neatly contrived it might have been arranged in advance. The most haunting Feature is the eleventh, where Parker’s long multiphonic sound, like a bird that never needs to breathe, is framed in delicate piano and percussive commentaries. Free jazz can never be 'easy listening', but the witty, relaxed interplay on this album comes close to it.
 IH

Freitag, 17. Oktober 2014

So long, Eric - A tribute to ERIC DOLPHY

DAILY TELEGRAPH, 17th OCTOBER 2014

Aki Takase and Alexander von Schlippenbach, So Long, Eric!, review: 'joyous'

These new arrangements of Eric Dolphy's work contain just the kind of compositional jazz ingenuity he would have admired, says Ivan Hewett

4 out of 5 stars
'His recorded legacy is tantalisingly small, but its power to inspire gets stronger': free jazz pioneer Eric Dolphy
'His recorded legacy is tantalisingly small, but its power to inspire gets stronger': free jazz pioneer Eric Dolphy Photo: Don Schlitten
Eric Dolphy’s star just keeps on rising. The life of this great pioneer of free jazz was cut cruelly short in 1964, when he died of diabetic shock, and the recorded legacy is tantalisingly small. But its power to inspire gets stronger, particularly amongst the more avant-garde players in Europe. Earlier this year the power couple of European free jazz, pianists Aki Takase and Alexander von Schlippenbach, put together a festival in Berlin dedicated to Dolphy’s memory. It culminated in a gathering of some of Europe’s finest players, plus American vibes player Karl Berger. Takase and von Schlippenbach made new arrangements of a dozen or so of Dolphy’s finest pieces for the final concert, and nine of them appear on this CD.
It must have been a joyous evening. The applause is warm, and the players get carried away too, as the frequent whoops and shouts show. The band of 12 players is much bigger than the ones Dolphy led, and the arrangers seize on the opportunities this offers for new colours and combinations. Everything is brilliantly re-imagined, and infused with quick-witted humour. Most importantly the music-making keeps touching base with Dolphy and the tradition he sprung from, however wild and free it often becomes. The extreme points are certainly far apart – compare the austere, written-out five-part counterpoint of Serene with the happy, burgeoning anarchy of Miss Ann. Yet the whole thing coheres.
Dolphy’s wonderful Hat and Beard, a tribute to Thelonious Monk, is the best thing on the CD. It launches off with an astonishing polymetric mash-up for the two pianists, before seizing hold of Dolphy’s ingenious repeating bass pattern and making it misbehave. This pattern shoves its way into the melody line, and is eventually reharmonised in a way that offers a hidden hommage to the original – just the kind of compositional ingenuity Dolphy would have admired. In all the CD is a joyous thing, which should convert even a hardened free-jazz sceptic.
So Long, Eric! is out now on Intakt Records

Mittwoch, 4. September 2013

Schlippenbach Trio in the UK in December


SCHLIPPENBACH TRIO

Alexander von Schlippenbach: piano / Evan Parker: sax / Paul Lovens: Drums
19. & 20. December London, Vortex

The Rollings Stones of the jazz world - creative improvisation since 1970