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Rob Brown: Walkabout
ByWilliam Parker
bassb.1952

Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

Rob Brown
saxophone, altob.1962

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
A number of names come to mind after a first spin of Walkabout:

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Clifford Jordan
saxophone, tenor1931 - 1993

Eddie Harris
saxophone, tenor1934 - 1996

Brandon Lopez
bassb.1988

Juan Pablo Carletti
drumsb.1973
In the ensuing three tracks, such riotous showmanship is allowed to slow down, complicate and fester, like an open wound smarting under some rubbing alcohol. "Zephyr" is orchestrated at first around Brown's droning horn and an expressive percussive line from Carletti, before leaving room for a vociferous solo cello. Lopez is sharp, mean, endlessly intuitive. He is never satisfied with a single quality, simultaneously percussive and droning. In "Neural Pathways," he is spidery underneath Brown's toots and shrieks. It is rather easy to describe a bass performance as 'haunting,' but in Lopez's case the word is used literally. The bow is like an interpreter, some hallowed funnel from which Brown and Carletti's rowdiness is exploited for their darker, plaintive undertones. Like a ghost, his character is faint enough to cast doubt on its intention, blending with the sonic waters flowing from his peers, but distinct enough to grow his shape into a palpable malice.
The final track, "Tousled and Jostled," mirrors the collaborative assault of "Microcosm," but thoroughly unified into an undulating cliff of improvisation. Brown relishes in boppier progressions, while Lopez and Carletti scatter into jumbled masses of creaks and splashes. The listener is passed between two abrasive soundscapes and left to fend for themself whatever path they choose. It can be a challenging 10-minute stretch, yet when the cliff begins to crumble, there is a strange reward in the more contemplative, almost classical, duet between horn and bass as Carletti's rubble begins to soften.
It is this endless stylistic expansion between performers that allows Walkabout to excel. There is no album in recent memory that rewards so much in frequent re-listens, as if to get just a bit closer to that elusive quality of Brown's playing. If none of the artists can boast wider fame among jazz connoisseurs, it is because they have no interest in defining their sound, their style or themselves. There is the air of pure freedom all about the record, the freedom not only to interpret the acts of your colleagues, but to describe something unseen, unheard in every new experimentation. ">
Track Listing
Microcosm; Zephyr; Neural Pathways; Tousled And Jostled.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Walkabout | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Mahakala Music
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