Just Released: "Clockworks" (Songlines Recordings) Featuring Patrick Zimmerli Quartet with Ethan Iverson, Chris Tordini, John Hollenbeck

Kevin Hays
pianob.1968

Larry Grenadier
bass, acousticb.1966

Tom Rainey
drumsb.1957
The very structure of Clockworks is a reflection and summary of Zimmerli’s artistic path, an attempt to unveil the process whereby music can retain its message even as its technical means become simplified. Compared to Shores his style has modulated into something that a broader swath of the listening public could relate to, and the new release integrates the earlier ideas into the later style. “My main concern back then was in forging a new path that had a foundation in the jazz tradition but that was completely original. Newness is less of a priority as I grow older than simply taking listeners on a varied and satisfying emotional journey.” Then and now he considers his ultimate musical message to be optimistic and positive: “That might be the biggest thing that sets my music off from ‘mainstream’ avant-garde jazz.”
Clockworks (a Chamber Music America commission) was written specifically for

Ethan Iverson
pianob.1973

John Hollenbeck
drumsb.1968
About his musical collaborators Zimmerli says, “This whole project can be seen as a testament to what an amazingly good sport Ethan is. He understands and accepts me with all my offbeat artistic sense of humor. Proof can be found all over the album, where he takes the extravagant forms I’ve concocted for him and plays over them in a style that fits them hand in glove. His improvisations are effectively internal compositions in themselves, full of wit and charm and purpose. My favourite example of this is the absolutely loving treatment he gives to “Harmonic Variation”, where he plays that gorgeous opening chorus before playing the written portion. As for John, he is like the composer’s-best friend-drummer, he makes your compositional ideas sound better than they are, and he effortlessly does things that not only fit but enhance the compositions themselves. And I really love

Chris Tordini
bass, acousticClockworks, as Zimmerli discusses in his liner note, “uses time as its basic material, it is an attempt to give time the kind of satisfying shape it so often lacks”. From another point of view, though, “Clockworks can be seen as a kind of elaborate justification of my stylistic evolution. There’s an overall progression from the abstract to the melodic that takes place over the course of the piece, just as there has been over the course of my career. The evolution involves a series of permutations of the main theme, which is heard in its most explicit form on the last track. The exact same notes are used in the first movement, which is not very melodic-sounding and might even seem freely-composed. I used the melody itself as a series and made it the basis of “Linear Variation”, which is another of the more “out” pieces on the CD. Gradually the theme settles—it matures—into its singable self.”
Clockworks was produced Grammy award-winner Seth Abramson (Jazz Standard).
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Track Listing
A Scattering of Stars (Distension Variation) Pendulum Metric Variation Waltz of the Polyrhythmic Palindrome Linear Variation The Center of the Clock Entropic Variation Boogaloo of the Polyrhythmic Palindrome Harmonic Variation Windup A Scattering of Stars (Theme)
Personnel
Patrick Zimmerli
saxophoneAdditional Instrumentation
Patrick Zimmerli (tenor saxophone), Ethan Iverson (piano), Christopher Tordini (bass), and John Hollenbeck (drums)
Album information
Title: Clockworks | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Songlines Recordings