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Believers: Believers
By
John Hadfield
drums
Nguyen Le
guitar, electricb.1959

Lenny Pickett
saxophone, tenorb.1954

Sam Minaie
bass
Tigran Hamasyan
piano
Melody Gardot
guitar and vocalsb.1985

Brad Shepik
guitar
Gary Versace
piano
Mark Ferber
drumsEach player brings one or more original compositions to the table, which are joined by the Armenian traditional "Mona Mona" as closer and two

Ralph Towner
guitarb.1940
The two Towner compositions performed live are the ones that have ended up on the album, paired together as its centerpiece. Originally a classical guitar and synthesizer exercise found on Towner's solo outing (at times sparsely accompanied by

Peter Erskine
drumsb.1954
Hadfield's contributions belong among the more rhythmically engaging cuts of the spectrum. First ostinato-based, then loudly improvised, "Seven Crotales" unveils groovy bass lines and spacey guitar work which is elaborated on again later, throughout "Nomadic Days." Here an ostinato-vamp meets lush guitar spreads and percussive juggling by Hadfield. Plus, guitar overdubs.
Shepik-penned "Rêve Pour Louis" is a hypnotizing meditation based on a major root with pentatonic colorations spreading through the room like tiny particles, set in motion by a soft breeze. One is reminded of Shepik's ambitious Human Activity Suite (Songlines, 2009) here and elsewhere on the album, especially when the individual parts of the trio grow into one single motion, propelling the trio forward through different sound spheres with conviction and authenticity. On "Baraye Shoma," bass and guitar join forces in a unison exercise that uses vocabulary reminiscent of the Arabic maqams. The irregular structure and linear movements of the piece recall the manner with which other contemporary jazz artists integrate Middle Eastern and Asian dogmas in a Western jazz environment, as can be found in much of guitarist

Rez Abbasi
guitar, acousticb.1965
There's a lot to marvel at on Believer's self-titled debut record. Within the expansive canon of world music-meets-jazz studies that have been explored many times over the past decades, the trio is still able to find its own voice and introduce a unique perspective on how to merge these different musical worlds and influences. At the end one can't help but wonder, whether a more organic sound and conservative recording situation with less post- production would have given the set even more liveliness. But maybe that's something that could be explored on a follow-up album? ">
Track Listing
Seven Crotales; Baraye Shoma; Nomadic Days; The Sigh; Waterwheel; Rêve Pour Louis; Fractured Water; Mona Mona.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Believers | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Orenda Records
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