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James Brandon Lewis: An Unruly Manifesto
ByJames Brandon Lewis
saxophone, tenorb.1983

Luke Stewart
bass, electric
Anthony Pirog
guitar, electricb.1980

Jaimie Branch
trumpet1983 - 2022
It's clear that Lewis has a concept in mind, even beyond the album's dedication to

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
However the first highlight arrives very quickly with the magnificent title cut which deposits a slow burning anthemic theme atop a hypnotic lilting guitar riff. Lewis preaches with impassioned hollers, as Pirog, Stewart and Crudup modulate the vamp and play around the nonetheless insistent beat. Only slightly less uplifting, "The Eleventh Hour" inhabits similar celebratory territory. It contains a wonderful trumpet offering from Branch in duet with Stewart's electric bass, in which her artfully placed smudges of sound recall

Bill Dixon
trumpet1925 - 2010

Archie Shepp
saxophone, tenorb.1937

Dewey Redman
saxophone, tenorb.1931

Frank Lowe
saxophone, tenor1943 - 2003
Lewis ups the ante on a couple of tracks, where the influence of Coleman's electric Prime Time band can be felt, as well as the free funk that Lewis explored on his Days of Freeman (Okeh, 2015) LP that featured Prime Time bassist

Jamaaladeen Tacuma
bassb.1956
The punchy "Sir Real Denard" (Coleman's given name was Randolph Denard Ornette Coleman) showcases first Stewart's popping bass and then Pirog with FX panned into two channels, as electronic beeps compete with fuzzed fretwork, as well as another bustling turn from the leader. After a blaring unison "Escape Nostalgic Prisons" leads into a knotty tumult over roiling drums, with rhythm duties handed back and forth between guitar and bass, while drums embellish. It sounds like everyone is soloing all the time.
"Haden Is Beauty" provides the final high point. Stewart begins with an acoustic bass folk blues ode which strongly evokes the dedicatee. Thereafter the drums kick off a slow dirge-like tune of drifting loveliness in which the loose interweaving of trumpet and tenor blurs the boundary between lead, support and counterpoint.
It's always refreshing to find a young artist who professes keen links back to the tradition, but is determinedly taking it to new places. With his blend of adventurous funk, electric free-jazz and indomitable spirit, Lewis seems set fair for the future. ">
Track Listing
Year 59: Insurgent Imagination; An Unruly Manifesto; Pillar 1: A Joyful Acceptance; Sir Real Denard; The Eleventh Hour; Pillar 2: What is Harmony; Escape Nostalgic Prisons; Haden Is Beauty; Pillar 3: New Lived, Authority died.
Personnel
James Brandon Lewis
saxophone, tenorJames Brandon Lewis: tenor saxophone; Luke Stewart: bass; Warren Trae Crudup III: drums; Jaimie Branch: trumpet; Anthony Pirog: guitar.
Album information
Title: An Unruly Manifesto | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: Relative Pitch Records
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About James Brandon Lewis
Instrument: Saxophone, tenor
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