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The Most Exciting Jazz Albums since 1969: 2009-2011

The six jazz thrillers for this week are widely diverse–from a big band outlier, a soaring two-sax front line and an expression of the ideas from an esoteric teacher.
72 Thrilling Jazz Albums, Part 8: 2009-20011
43

Darcy James Argue
New Amsterdam
2009
Thrilling jazz albums are rarely an accident; they emerge from dedicated jazz leaders, composers and musicians.

Darcy James Argue
composer / conductorb.1975
"Phobos," the opener, is a panoramic sweep of the emotional moods of the time. It's exciting, dark, daring and boldly creative. It feels a lot like right now. Where "Phobos" was an emotional panorama, "Zeno," is a chase to the future, an intensely passionate journey of the mind and heart. "Transit" then gears it up a notch to a wildly grooving dance of joy with the soaring, dramatic trumpet of

Ingrid Jensen
trumpetb.1966
"Redeye" speaks of long, passionate, creative work and the weariness and joy that often accompanies it delivered with intense conviction by guitarist

Sebastian Noelle
guitarb.1973
44

Billy Fox's Blackbirds and Bullets
Clean Feed
2010
Although

Billy Fox
composer / conductor"Tatsin" starts the second half with a mournful trumpet playing over a bass groove, then the sax enters, and they play in unison before things kick into a hard-driving organ-sax quartet that grooves into outer space. "Elisha & the She Bears" opens with a slow, evocative groove by a campfire, and suddenly we're in a very cool jazz club channeling

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
45

Chris Lightcap's Bigmouth
Clean Feed
2010
With the cover of Deluxe featuring a 1950's chrome-plated convertible cruiser, it conjures images of wide- open highways and wind in your hair. The two-sax frontline of

Chris Cheek
saxophoneb.1968

Tony Malaby
saxophone, tenor
Craig Taborn
pianob.1970

Chris Lightcap
bassb.1971

Gerald Cleaver
drumsb.1963
"Ting" again opens with the rhythm section in a livelier workout, joined by the dynamic duo of Cheek and Malaby soaring once again like massive clouds sweeping over the great plains. Lightcap's bass takes center stage on "The Clutch" with a driving, funky groove, shadowed by Taborn on piano as the saxophones dance with rapturous ecstasy. This thrilling album may quicken your pulse as if you were hurtling down a wide-open road at 100 mph.
46

Dave Morgan
Being Time Records
2010
Despite this being the only album released under the name of bassist Dave Morgan, it's a thriller that revolves around an unusual themethe esoteric teachings of G.I. Gurdjieff. He employs a crack team of 12 jazz musicians (keyboard player,

Dan Wall
organ, Hammond B3The remaining songs capture the essence of various states, demonstrating what jazz is capable ofthe expression of deep feelings and ideas. The music is immersive, uplifting and brilliantly performed, and like all of the jazz thrillers in this series, it is an album you can return to again and again and still keep hearing something new. For this particular album, I'd encourage you to read the original review by Matt Marshall that captures its essence perfectly.
47

The Kandinsky Effect
SNP Records
2010
This American/European trio has recorded four albums since 2010 and this, their freshman release, has an informal spontaneity that is infectious. It soars and grooves with a full, resonant sound not typical of a sax-bass-drums trio. At the same time, it feels both relaxed and vibrantly alive. "Sad Novi" feels like a personal sketch of someone with a very complex emotional inner life. "Photo Book" is a melancholy, yet dynamic glimpse of places and friends. Try listening to this while paging through your online photos, and you'll get the idea.
"Patterns" is a mournful lament. "Girl/boy Song" applies their resonant, singing tone to its full advantage. The songs vary from upbeat and playful to downbeat and thoughtful, but they all find a groove, and the soaring sax of " data-original-title="" title="">Warren Walker turns each of his solos into a compelling story. And this is what makes this album so thrilling. Each song inhabits its own unique world with an emotional message that communicates deep truths.
48

Dmitri Tymoczko
Bridge Records
2011
On his website, Dmitri Tymoczko says, "I am a composer and failed former philosopher who loves to think about how music works." Apparently, he did a lot of thinking about this album, his only jazz work amongst three other releases. He says, "I am currently developing a number of games, compositional utilities, and electronic instruments, most of which involve geometry in some way." We might wish he had applied his talents to more jazz albums like this one, but we'll have to settle for this excellent piece of music of which he says: "Beat Therapy combines the sounds and rhythms of jazz with a classical sense of form and development. Ideas change and grow and return in unexpected ways, with literal repetition being rare."
But make no mistake, this album's concept might be heady, but the octet he's assembled here grooves like mad. When classical music and jazz collide, the results can be stilted, with the classical elements suppressing the jazz groove. But not here. The jazz is front and center, while the classical structure keeps things dynamic and multi-textured. The opener, "Loop & Swing" starts hesitantly with a hi-hat and bass groove that evolves into a full-blown, joyous celebration. "Katrina Stomp" conjures images of dancers on a Harlem stage. And the finale, "Sayonara" is a Japanese- tinged road songyet another unique jazz thriller.
Next week
The Jazz Thrillers of next week span the years of 2011-2014 with a saxophone statesman and a budding guitarist, a trumpet masterpiece of bounding joy, a sublime piano trio, and an album each from the UK and New Zealand. Thrilling jazz knows no boundaries.To see all the albums in this series, scroll down the page and click on the blue MORE button.
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72 Jazz Thrillers
Robert Middleton
Darcy James Argue
Ingrid Jensen
Sebastian Noelle.
Miles Davis
Wayne Shorter
Chris Cheek
TONY MALABY
Gerald Cleaver
Dan Wall
Warren Walker
Dmitri Tymoczko
Craig Taborn
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About Darcy James Argue
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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