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The Most Exciting Jazz Albums Since 1969: 2011-2014

Two joyous albums are followed by troubles, grace, exultation and deep sadness.
72 Thrilling Jazz Albums, Part 9: 2011-2014
49

Gilad Hekselman
Le Chant du Monde
2011

Gilad Hekselman
guitarb.1983

Mark Turner
saxophone, tenorb.1965
On "One More Song," Turner soars with abandon on his first solo, followed by a sly, bouncing solo by the leader that builds in intensity and then passes the baton to Turner again, for a long (five minutes) spiraling solo full of joy, light and passion. One of the most thrilling sax solos of all time. The titular song, "Hearts Wide Open" is a love story in six acts: first, the tender meeting, then the joy of togetherness, followed by some mild discord, a resolution with a gentle flow, the frantic step of a very busy life and then into a darker period of intensity. Hearts Wide Open is an album of great maturity and depth with wonderful melodies and feelings that tug at your heart.
50

Matthew Halsall
Gondwana
2011
On "Music for a Dancing Mind," The pulsating five-note bass line segues into a rolling piano solo and then

Matthew Halsall
trumpet
Nat Birchall
saxophone, tenorb.1957

Adam Fairhall
pianob.1976

Randy Weston
piano1926 - 2018

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972
"Song for Charlie" is a mournful dirge for a life that meant something. "The End of Dukka" is a stately march to the infinite. "Samantha" is a deep and gentle love song. "The Journey Home" is a dancing ride of carefree play and adventure where Halsall, Birchall and Fairhall scale dizzying heights. "The Move" revisits the five-note bass opening of "Music for a Dancing Mind" as Halsall's trumpet sketches out a panoramic adventure. An album as rich and expansive as the sky.
51

The Troubles
Rattle Records
2012
The Troubles are a ragtag ensemble of wild and crazy musicians from New Zealand who, the liner notes explain, "developed and honed their quasi-anarchistic brand of meticulously composed music. From the crass to the sublime, the emotive to the absurd, their music is inventive, passionate, honest, and wholly life-affirming." Its opener, "Eastern Promises," feels like a nightclub in the Casbah with undulating dancers, and hazy hookah smoke. Then, the three horns and three strings soar with the intensity of

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
What makes this music so striking, so fun, so thrilling is its loose and spontaneous feel, while never losing the thread of the exuberant melodies and undulating rhythms. We travel from a sultan's tent to a crackpot military pageant. In "It Starts With Silence," the melodic symphony unfolds with the delicate chirps and cries of woodland creatures seamlessly converging into a harmonious ode, reverently celebrating an enchanted forest realm.
"Aspasia" is a slinky tango led by a sinuous sax, backed by stirring strings. "Yekannywackit" sounds exactly like that and just as funny. Imagine a line of drunken dancers stumbling in perfect time. The finale, "Breadline Blues" finds a deep primitive groove, the horns swaying so perfectly and wildly that you are transported to a world oscillating between the sublime and the ecstatic, painting a canvas of elevated delirium. A blues for the ages and as thrilling as jazz can get.
52

Carla Bley
ECM
2013
How can such a low-key album be so thrilling?

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023


Steve Swallow
bassb.1940

Andy Sheppard
saxophoneb.1957
On "Utvilingssang" Carla's funereal melody resonates vividly, each member delivering compelling solos on a song as sad and deep as life itself. "Vashkar" finds a wonderful, sinuous groove, in a South Asian-inspired melody full of intrigue and mystery. It's one of those songs you are compelled to revisit again and again. "Wildlife" is a languid, yet poignant journey, a suite humorously subtitled, "Horns/Paws Without Claws/Sex with Birds." It gives some insight into Bley's wacky imagination. The lively finale "The Girl Who Cried Champagne," conjures images of a debutante on Park Avenue with a penchant for indulgence and a flair for drama. Carla, we miss you sorely.
53

Nat Birchall
Soul Sound and Spirit
2014
Nat Birchall first gained attention on Matthew Halsall's first three albums, whereupon he started spinning out his own alums in rapid succession, 15 since 1999. The fifth album in that series is Live in Larissa, possibly one of the best

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Fittingly, the opening, "John Coltrane," that first appeared on

Clifford Jordan
saxophone, tenor1931 - 1993

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007
54

Sarah Manning
Posi-Tone
2013

Sarah Manning
saxophone
Eyvind Kang
violab.1971

Jonathan Goldberger
guitarb.1976
The story here is deep, conflicted emotions, that flow from the depths of despair to the melancholy longing for a better future. "Grey Dawn, Red Fox" has a sense of drama, exploration and adventure into the unknownexperiencing both joy and fear simultaneously. Pure beauty. "Radish Spirit" is a song whose title is a mirror image of the song itself in its spicy-hot energy. The stark return of a three-note figure marks a change in tempo and direction over four wonderfully poignant movements seamlessly woven togethermy pick for the most thrilling composition and performance on this astounding album.
The album as a whole might be experienced as a kind of divine jazz opera of both deep tragedy and triumph. Dark passions dominate light ones, and deep longing infuses everything. But when the light makes an appearance, it is often of the ecstatic variety. An album to be savored for decades.
Next week
The Jazz Thrillers of next week span the years of 2015-2017 with four very different albums from Europe, a spiritual jazz modern classic from Canada and one from an American bassist.To see all the albums in this series, scroll down the page and click on the blue MORE button.
Tags
72 Jazz Thrillers
Robert Middleton
Gilad Hekselman
Mark Turner
Matthew Halsall's
Nat Birchall
Adam Fairhall
Randy Weston.
The Troubles
carla bley
Manfred Eicher
Steve Swallow
andy sheppard
Sarah Manning
Evyind Kang
Jonathan Goldberger
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