What are you listening to? July 2017

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Lotus Ash - The Evening Redness
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Rich Brown - Abeng _2016_

AllAboutJazz said:
though Brown's use of his fretless electric bass as a lead voice favorably recalls Jaco Pastorius' tenure in Weather Report, Abeng is more intensely colored by the music of Brown's past and current associates, namely Rudresh Mahanthappa, Dapp Theory, and Steve Lehman (to name a few). These 21st Century influences are most evident in the brainy, plugged-in nu-fusion of "The Etymology of Ouch," "Achilles and the Tortoise," and "Mahishmatish." Drummer Larnell Lewis' playing on these tracks, and really throughout the entire album, is utterly astounding.
 
Steven Bernstein ~ Diaspora Blues (2002) [Tzadik]



The Jew demanded that the chazzan, through his music, make him forget his actual life, and that he elevate him on the wings of his tunes into a fantastical paradisiacal world.... The main basis of Semitic and Jewish music is the minor scale which, at a very late date, came to be considered of a melancholy character by the Anglo-Saxon only. ~ Abraham Idelsohn

Steven Bernstein: trumpet and slide trumpet
Sam Rivers: tenor sax, soprano sax, flute
Doug Mathews: acoustic bass, bass clarinet
Anthony Cole: drums, tenor sax

I set myself up not to like this, but it won me over quickly. It is avant-garde, it is modal, it is elegiac. It is never tawdry or cliched. Of special note is the percussion of Anthony Cole, who holds everything together with measured beats and sparse fills, if that makes any sense.

I actually give it :3.75: stars, with an option for higher stars. It is reminiscent of ECM New Jazz.
 
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