Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell: Streams
Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell: Streams
ByYuma Uesaka
saxophone, altob.1991

Marilyn Crispell
pianob.1947
He can be heard in saxophonist

Anna Webber
saxophone, tenorb.1984

Colin Hinton
drumsb.1988
Uesaka's writing provides attractive frameworks within which the pair can interact. Whether or not inspired by Rushi Vyas' poems of the same names reprinted on the sleeve, the pieces vary from darkly mysterious on "Meditations" to a dashing flourish on "Torrent." Uesaka invokes the Japanese notion of ma (space) as the title for the elegiac final cut, but it is a trait which also manifests frequently elsewhere.
A case in point is the title track which is one of the highlights of the album, where Uesaka's pure-toned clarinet combines with Crispell's skeletal accompaniment to create a delicate pastoral. As they move into more open terrain, Crispell waxes positively hymnal, while Uesaka, now on alto saxophone, plays a sorrowful dirge. They slowly loose their moorings, drifting into a raggedy volatile exchange, until subsiding into a slightly more unsettled mirror of the opening.
Even on the most animated numbers, Crispell balances control and expression, to keep within the parameters of the composition. "Iterations I" begins with a bright alto and piano accord which recalls her tenure with

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945
Uesaka shows that he has arrived with a mature conception, and the tools to execute it, all promising more to savour in the future. ">
Track Listing
Meditations; Iterations I; Streams; Capillarity; Torrent; Ma/Space.
Personnel
Yuma Uesaka
saxophone, altoMarilyn Crispell
pianoAdditional Instrumentation
Yuma Uesaka: saxophones, clarinets, compositions.
Album information
Title: Streams | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Not Two Records
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
