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August 2022
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Dream Like A Dogwood Wild Boy
Gearbox Records
2022
A place where folk, gospel and jazz meet in tuneful harmony with each other is a place where the likes of

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

Binker Golding
saxophone, tenor
Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947
Billy Adamson
guitar
Sarah Tandy
harp
Daniel Casimir
bass
Sam Jones
bass, acoustic1924 - 1981
There's steel-guitar, bottle-neck playing, acoustic strumming, electric blues riffing and everything in between, honing in on the band in stereo, including the occasional overdub, which unfortunately tends to stiffen the group's interplay and overall dynamics. Beyond that little flaw, however, the record leaves little to be desired, with the band seamlessly tying multiple folkloric idioms together to a coherent, immaculately-delivered whole. Towards the end of "My two Dads" Golding even introduces a galloping Scottish folklore. And are we sure Jarrett didn't at least partially write "With What I know Now"? Very fine musicianship throughout.

Interpret It Well
Pyroclastic Records
2022
A continuation and expansion of 2016's The Bell (ECM, 2016), the trio of

Craig Taborn
pianob.1970

Mat Maneri
violab.1969

Ches Smith
drums
Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
The trio settles on a quiet, hypnotizing pattern in 9/8-time before Smith switches to drums and the entire group works towards a loud, hard-hitting climax. With four improvisation-heavy compositions at over the ten-minute mark, Interpret it well boasts with avant-garde creativity, extended passages of blissful dissonance and instances of noisy minimalism, with patters, rhythms and harmonies being repeated over and over again, but rarely with the same outcome. "I Need More" for example, sees the quartet turning the recipe upside-down, with one of the song's most extreme sections at the beginning and the group winding down the energy to a concentrated middle-part with several three-note motifs being handed through the ranks as Maneri embellishes the tonally ambiguous foundation with his engaging arco swells. Frisell distorts his guitar to the max for a heavy-metal coda.
This is an album of discoveries, as is Ches Smith's entire output, which obviously ignores any ties to genre or idioms, but relies solely on pure sound and uncompromising communication.

Time To Mind The Mystics
Shifting Paradigm Records
2022
"Mind The Mystics," bandleader and guitarist

Daniel Bruce
guitarb.1976

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Paco de Lucia
guitar1947 - 2014

Al Di Meola
guitarb.1954
The seamless way styles from different periods of music are interwoven throughout the program is impressive, to say the least, and the high level of musicianship that comes to the fore in these genre-melting pots makes for an engaging experience. The :Beta Collective is equipped with three horns (two saxophones, one trombone), a vibraphone, keys and bass, plus the odd job for synthesizer. Bruce leads with elegance, pulling soloist punches without show-boating in one moment, and in the next delicately moving back to an accompanying role when other players come into the limelight. "You Vs. You" is a quaint tribute to

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951

Park Blues
Losen Records
2022
A mainstream date out of Norway with bebop guitar-speak twisting around walking bass lines, swinging drum workouts and the occasional female vocal contribution. The latter, however, doesn't do anything to elevate the music, for the trio of guitarist
Bård Helgerud
guitar
Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021
Fusion aesthetics enter the floor with "Innen klokken sl?r ?tte," as the trio picks up the pace and constructs another tight groove around elaborate guitar exercises. Apart from the questionnable vocals, "Ekte Kjaerlighet" proves one of the most interesting compositions on the record, producing the most inspired playing by Helgerud as well. Park Blues won't leave the listener humming catchy refrains after it's over, but the music does set a comfortable atmosphere.

Heatmap
Imani
2022
Saxophonist

Caleb Wheeler Curtis
saxophoneb.1985

Orrin Evans
pianob.1975

Eric Revis
bassb.1967

Gerald Cleaver
drumsb.1963

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
Breathers are rare, and when things do cool down, they cool down with all the subtlety and elegance of the cool jazz and post pop groups of the '60s, as exemplified on the stunning "Trees for the Forest." There's real grit and undoubtedly much natural musicality to Curtis' playing and writing, making Heat Map a real winner in today's contemporary jazz. The loudness and excitedness of it all shouldn't turn anyone offit's about what happens above, beyond and beneath the notes, between the musicians.

Mesmerism
Yeros7 music
2022
One wouldn't know what to expect next from the ambitious musical explorer that is

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980

Aaron Diehl
piano
Cecile McLorin Salvant
vocalsb.1989

Matt Brewer
bassb.1983

Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011
Everywhere else the trio moves in strictly tonal territory, tossing motifs on their heads, swirling rhythms around as in a cocktail and elegantly paying tribute to the masters that came before them.

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
Tracks and Personnel
Dream Like A Dogwood Wild BoyTracks: (Take Me to The) Wide Open Lows; Love Me Like A Woman; My Two Dads; Drinking In God's Own Country; 'Til My Heart Stops; With What I Know Now; All Out Of Fairy Tales.
Personnel: Binker Golding: saxophone, tenor; Sarah Tandy: piano; Billy Adamson: guitar; Daniel Casimir: bass.
Interpret It Well
Tracks: Trapped; Interpret It Well; Mixed Metaphor; Morbid; Clear Major; I Need More; Deppart.
Personnel: Ches Smith: drums; Craig Taborn: piano; Mat Maneri: viola; Bill Frisell: guitar, electric.
Time To Mind The Mystics
Tracks: Time to Mind the Mystics; Blueprint; Insignificance (A Love Song); Slant; The Walk; You Vs. You; Not Knowing; Moth Flame Blues.
Personnel: Daniel Bruce: guitar; Chris Coles: saxophone; Brad Wagner: saxophone; Caleb Smith: trombone; Will Wedmedyk: vibraphone; Theron Brown: keyboards; Aidan Plank: bass; Anthony Taddeo : drums; Joel Negus: synthesizer.
Park Blues
Tracks: Hvittingfoss Skyline; Park Blues; Manic Minor; Endelig hjemme; Innen klokken sl?r ?tte; Ekte kj?rlighet; Vinter; P? stylter gjennom Kardamili.
Personnel: B?rd Helgerud: guitar; Andreas Dreier: bass; Magnus Sefaniassen Eide: drums; Live Foyn Friis: vocals (6,7,8).
Heatmap
Tracks: Heatmap; Tossed Aside; Surrounding; Limestone; Splinters; Trees For the Forest; Trembling; Whisperchant; C(o)urses; Spheres.
Personnel: Caleb Wheeler Curtis: saxophone, alto; Orrin Evans: piano; Eric Revis: bass; Gerald Cleaver: drums.
Mesmerism
Tracks: Enchantment; Detour Ahead; Autumn Leaves; From Time To Time; Two Over One; Rem Blues.
Personnel: Tyshawn Sorey: drums; Aaron Diehl: piano; Matt Brewer: bass.
Tags
Six Picks
Pat Youngspiel
Gearbox Records
Keith Jarrett
pat metheny
Binker Golding
Jan Garbarek
Billy Adamson
Sarah Tandy
Daniel Casimir
Sam Jones
Pyroclastic Records
Craig Taborn
Mat Maneri
Ches Smith
Bill Frisell
Shifting Paradigm Records
Dan Bruce
john mclaughlin
Paco de Lucia
Al Di Meola
Losen Records
B?rd Helgerud
Pat Martino
Imani
Caleb Wheeler Curtis
Orrin Evans
Eric Revis
Gerald Cleaver
Ornette Coleman
Yeros 7 music
Tyshawn Sorey
Aaron Diehl
Cecil McLorin Salvant
Matt Brewer
Paul Motian
Horace Silver
Bill Evan
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