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Mary Halvorson's Code Girl: Artlessly Falling
By
Mary Halvorson
guitar
Michael Formanek
bass, acousticb.1958

Tomas Fujiwara
drums
Susan Alcorn
guitar, steel1953 - 2025
Artlessly Falling, the second release by Halvorson's Code Girl, is another window into Halvorson's unfailing instincts for finding the right people for the right project. The group's outstanding self-titled debut in 2018 (Firehouse 12) teamed Halvorson, Fujiwara, and Formanek with trumpeter

Ambrose Akinmusire
trumpetb.1982

Amirtha Kidambi
drums
Adam O'Farrill
trumpetb.1994

Maria Grand
saxophone, tenor
Robert Wyatt
drumsOne detects Grand's role from the opening track onward, as her voice harmonizes skillfully with Kidambi as a backdrop to Wyatt's fragile vulnerability on "The Lemon Trees." There's a somewhat more buoyant feel to this music than what is found on the group's debut, and this is largely due to the way Halvorson has brought Grand into the group. Although her vocal presence is sometimes subtle, and she doesn't get any show-stopping saxophone solos, the ensemble passages in which her tenor complements O'Farrill's lyrical trumpet are powerful, as one hears on "Bigger Flames," a lovely vehicle for Wyatt made all the more compelling by O'Farrill's and Grand's entwined lines. The two-horn harmonies on "Mexican War Streets (Pittsburgh)" are just as effective, lending a gentle grace to the music. If the music is somewhat less fluid and more tautly constructed than the freer feel of the debut, it's certainly just as captivating and perhaps even more addictive. And for those craving some tough-edged riffs, the album offers that too, on the relatively brief but memorable "Walls and Roses," where the guitarist unleashes a furious burst of distortion-laden heaviness over the band's punishing groove.
Halvorson's lyrics reflect her trademark care and attention to detail, using a variety of structures and methods that somehow conform perfectly to the musical shape of each piece. The themes tend to be rather dark"daggered hands," "muzzling unwashed thoughts," "charred Russian dolls" and the like conjure bleak worlds indeedwhich makes it all the more remarkable that the music typically stays so light on its feet. Halvorson even ventures into political territory on the disarming "Last-Minute Smears," a clever appropriation of testimony from the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings, in which Kidambi's inimitable hyper-expressive delivery captures all the madness of that troubled episode (and Fujiwara's tongue-in-cheek "beer can" percussion provides additional ambience).
Knowing Halvorson's collaborative modus operandi, it's not at all unlikely that she'll have some new surprises in store for the next release from Code Girl. As this has become one of her most exciting and creative outlets, that will be good news indeed. ">
Track Listing
The Lemon Trees; Last-Minute Smears; Walls and Roses; Muzzling Unwashed; Bigger Flames; Mexican War Streets (Pittsburgh); A Nearing; Artlessly Falling.
Personnel
Mary Halvorson
guitarAmirtha Kidambi
drumsAdam O'Farrill
trumpetMaria Grand
saxophone, tenorMichael Formanek
bass, acousticTomas Fujiwara
drumsAdditional Instrumentation
Robert Wyatt: vocals (1, 3, 5).
Album information
Title: Artlessly Falling | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Firehouse 12 Records
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