Sunday, March 24, 2024

Jazz | Pint | A Night of Variety


Craftwork Brewery

Usually I just sit back and listen to a single album when I write one of these posts, but tonight I changed it up. The theme for next month’s listening session we’ll be sharing recordings from 2010-present (we’ve been working our way through the decades). So, tonight I’ve been playing selections from a bunch of albums to try and narrow down a track or two to play to the group. Usually I take along a few recordings so I have a couple of things up my sleeve based on what others bring along.  It won’t necessarily be something I like (it might be though!), but it might be related to another recording played that night or something that adds variety to the evening or a stimulant for discussion – maybe all of the above. Sometimes my selection might on the fringe of the tastes of others in the group, but I figure the idea is to introduce them to artists and recordings they otherwise may not have listened to without a prompt. Of course there was no chance I’d get through this pile of albums tonight, but I’ve made a start. There are plenty of names that the crew up the coast won’t be that familiar with James Brandon Lewis, Masabumi Kikuchi, Tomeka Reid, Michael Formanek, so it’s tempting to take that route. I played a Fieldwork track last month so they’ve had a very brief intro to Vijay Iyer and Steve Lehman... it didn’t go down well, but I’m tempted to play something from Iyer’s sextet album 'Far From Over' as perhaps that is a bit more approachable. But Thumbscrew’s Anthony Braxton Project is nagging away at me too as is Trio Tapestry. And after a bit of listening tonight, other names keep popping into my mind....Mette Henriette is another that I’ve marked down as another possibility....Tim Berne's 'Snakeoil' is another. If I was going down the ‘favourites’ path, Evan Parker’s 'As The Wind' would be right up there... so who knows where I’ll end up at this stage. Anyway, I have a few weeks before I need to have an idea of what to play. There’s a very real chance that on the train ride out I’ll still have no idea – but that’s part of the fun I guess.

It was all washed down with a bottle of Craftwork and another round was accompanied by some ooloong tea. 




Thursday, March 14, 2024

Jazz | Pint | West Coast Live

Craftwork Brewery
I have bouts of listening to Stan Getz… most recently (late last year) it was the 3 disc set East of the Sun – The West Coast Sessions ….that, and pretty much the rest of his albums I have are from the 1940s - early 60s… and the 2 disc West Coast Live is no exception. Considering it’s a live recording from 1953/1954 the sound is really nice. Getz was subbing on the gig for Mulligan, and the quartet (with Carson Smith on bass and Larry Bunker on drums) stick to standards from the great American songbook and a few bop lines. No complaints there. It’s all about the horns out front really.... and that’s why I grabbed this disc. So no complaints there either. Considering Baker and Getz were known not to get on, there are moments when they really hit it off musically.. ‘Strike Up The Band’ has some wonderful swinging intertwined lines. But they don’t always gel (and I don’t think either are consistently at their best) but that’s one of the things that make this recording interesting and also speaks to the nature of live performance – it is what it is in the moment. Just in this case, we get to have a listen again over 70 years later. Maybe eventually I’ll get around to listening to Stan Meets Chet from later in the 50s and see how they fared in the studio. But I have a feeling that these 2 live discs will fill my Chet with Stan needs.

While listening tonight I’ve been sipping on Scotch Bonnet from Craftwork.

Monday, March 04, 2024

Jazz | Pint | Return From The Stars

 

Peppermint Tea
For whatever reason, Mark Turner was on my mind recently so I picked up a couple of his albums when I was up in Auckland - Year Of The Snake, and tonight’s listening, Return From The Stars. Often the slickness of contemporary jazz from the likes of Turner and his associates isn’t really my thing so I just dip in and out on the odd occasion. As a result, I haven’t really kept up with Turner’s recordings – just keeping an eye what's happening without giving things more than a cursory ear. Looking back, I think part of it had to do with so many tenor players chasing after Turner that it put me off a little, which seems a little stupid as I reflect on it. But maybe that break has been a good thing as I’ve really been enjoying this disc. Jason Palmer (trumpet) is not someone I’m familiar with but he and Turner and work well together and get a nice blend (the unisons/melody on “Bridgetown” and “Nigeria II” leapt out at me), and there’s some nice interaction on “Terminus” too. I like the way the album eases into things as the leader steps aside and the bass of Joe Martin gets the first solo spot. I’ve enjoyed the space that the piano-less quartet brings, especially given so much contemporary jazz can be rather cluttered. Let’s face it, Turner’s a pretty notey player (“It’s Not Alright With Me”) but I’ve noticed on this recorded that he paces himself a bit more than I remember from earlier recordings. Maybe that’s a more recent development in his playing but I have plenty of gaps in his discography... even if it’s something he’s done all along, I noticed it this time and I like it. At times I wanted Jonathan Pinson (drums) to settle down a little too (like at the start of Turner’s solo on “Bridgetown”) and that would have brought that sense of space more to the fore.

I have a feeling there will be more some Mark Turner getting a spin around here. Return From The Stars made me want to check out his previous piano-less quartet album Lathe of Heaven, and earlier in the day I gave the debut FLY album a run for the first time in I can’t remember how long. I picked it up in NYC shortly after it was released, and perhaps it will make an appearance at an upcoming 2000s themed listening session... I’m still wading through some tracks to decide what to play. I’m tempted to hold off listening to Year Of The Snake until I get my hands on Sky & Country so I can run through the FLY albums in order of appearance.

The pint tonight took the form of peppermint tea.