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John Sharpe's Best Releases of 2020
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Angelica Sanchez
piano
Marilyn Crispell
pianob.1947
How To Turn The Moon
Pyroclastic
While piano duets have a checkered history, the wide open sound and clear separation on this recording ensures that there is no hint of either redundancy or murkiness. Instead the session presents a fertile meeting of two personalities who just happen to share the same instrumental outlet. Sanchez may be more direct in terms of lyricism and rhythmic impulse, while Crispell perhaps works with fuller voicings and more readily at the extreme ends of the keyboard, but both are totally empathetic and at the top of their game here. Whatever gambit they pursue, the outcome supplies the intense pleasure of eavesdropping on two kindred spirits communing in a richly transporting narrative.


Mary Halvorson
guitarArtlessly Falling
Firehouse 12
Not content with having scaled the heights of the guitar pantheon, with the second release from Code Girl,

Mary Halvorson
guitar
Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Robert Wyatt
drums

Evan Parker
saxophone, sopranob.1944

Barry Guy
bass, acousticb.1947

Paul Lytton
drumsb.1947
Concert In Vilnius
No Business Records
At this stage of an existence spanning some 38 years and counting, the superlative British trio of saxophonist

Evan Parker
saxophone, sopranob.1944

Barry Guy
bass, acousticb.1947

Paul Lytton
drumsb.1947


Anna Webber
saxophone, tenorb.1984
Rectangles
Out Of Your Head
Canadian saxophonist

Anna Webber
saxophone, tenorb.1984

Anna Hogberg
saxophone, altoLena
Omlott
It's a time-honored trope to start an album with one of its strongest tracks. But it must have been a difficult choice for Swedish band leader and saxophonist
Anna Hogberg
saxophone, alto
Elin Forkelid
saxophone, tenor

Steve Swell
tromboneb.1954
The Center Will Hold
Not Two Records
Unusual instrumentation inspires NYC-based trombonist

Steve Swell
tromboneb.1954

Andrew Cyrille
drumsb.1939

Ariel Bart
harmonicab.1998


Ingrid Laubrock
saxophoneb.1970

Kris Davis
pianob.1980
Blood Moon
Intakt
Saxophonist

Ingrid Laubrock
saxophoneb.1970

Kris Davis
pianob.1980


Alexander Hawkins
pianob.1981

Tomeka Reid
celloShards And Constellations
Intakt
By placing two works from the AACM canon amidst eight spontaneous creations, Hawkins and Reid fashion a near perfect balance between form and abstraction. Between repeated passes at the gorgeously questioning refrain of

Muhal Richard Abrams
piano1930 - 2017

Leroy Jenkins
bass, electric1932 - 2007


Satoko Fujii
pianob.1958

Natsuki Tamura
trumpetb.1951
Pentas
Not Two
Prolific Japanese husband and wife pairing trumpeter

Natsuki Tamura
trumpetb.1951

Satoko Fujii
pianob.1958


Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974
What If?
Rogue Art
While Shipp's place as one of the pre-eminent piano stylists in contemporary jazz is assured, Wooley is as much a key to the success of this date as the pianist, as he delivers a masterclass in adventurous trumpet. It's pitched towards the jazzier end of the spectrum Wooley inhabits, not quite as in the tradition as his work with his own Quintet, but even so a far cry from his more experimental solo and group situations. Part of the attraction of the album is how different it is to much of both men's previous output. A delicious feeling of unexpected maneuvers pervades the disc. Even after multiple listens, they do what all the best music does: consistently astonish. Among a plethora of other discs, Shipp's outing with

John Butcher
saxophoneb.1954
Thomas Lehn
synthesizer

Borah Bergman
piano1933 - 2012

Wilber Morris
bass, acoustic1937 - 2002

Sunny Murray
drums1937 - 2017
Monks
Somerealmusic
For free jazz aficionados, it is much like excavating a hitherto unknown archaeological treasure. For the ordinary listener, dulled by all the Monk retreads, there has been little to prepare him/her for this dramatic reinvention. Recorded in 1996, it's taken a while to surface. Bergman, who died in 2012, was an astoundingly gifted pianist, who through intense practice had become near ambidextrous to the extent that he could improvise free counterpoint with either hand at unconscionable speed. So much so that it often sounds as if there are two accomplished pianists on the date. But he also had enough ideas to mean that technical fluency was never just an end in itself.
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