05 Mark HaneyMark Haney – Placentia Bay: Summer of 1941
Meaghan Williams; Various Artists (plus string quartet, string orchestra and vocal ensemble)
Independent (markhaney.bandcamp.com)

Concept albums, historically more the domain of rock and pop than terrifically performed and recorded symphonic music with a storytelling narrative, and a Canadian historical focus, can be somewhat polarizing creations. Not only does one have to like the music, but there is also the issue of the narrative that needs to be compelling enough to thread throughout an entire recording, hueing thematic coherence to all the sounds contained within. Add to the mix the fact that, as it was in my case, you are jumping in at the final installment of a storytelling trilogy that began with 2010’s Aim for The Roses and is ending here with Placentia Bay: Summer of 1941, exploring the secret meeting between Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt off the coast of Newfoundland that resulted in the “Atlantic Charter,” one might be forgiven for thinking this to be a difficult entry point.

But not so when you are in the skilled musical hands of composer, creative community builder, and interdisciplinary artist Mark Haney, with excellent contributions by the Vancouver double bassist Meagan Williams, a small orchestra of first-rate west coast musicians and the vocal ensemble musica intima. The recording stands on its own as a satisfying musical achievement and fine symphonic musical artefact.Should you be inspired (as I was) to go back to the beginning of the trilogy, a musical coherence emerges, despite the differences of theme and subject matter, that only adds luster to this recording and its creative brain trust. 

06 Magnus LindbergMagnus Lindberg – Viola Concerto, Absence, Serenades
Lawrence Power; Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra; Nicholas Collon;
Ondine ODE 1436-2 (ondine.net/index.php?lid=en&cid=2.2&oid=7270)

If “tradition” was ever a prison for Magnus Lindberg, then he has broken free by scaling its inner dynamic with this remarkable Viola Concerto. He has cast the instrument, often presumed to be in “no-man’s land… between the dazzle of the violin and the warm sonority of the cello” (from the booklet notes) to become an almost new instrument, increasing the scope of its authentic sonority with new malleability in tone textures. 

Just as Lindberg’s Viola Concerto delights in testing the soloist’s virtuosity to the limit – a challenge that Lawrence Power successfully negotiates with aplomb, the two other works on this disc – Absence and Serenades – test the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra by manipulating rhythmic intricacies and dense harmonies, also mining a vein of lyricism that opens up unexpected possibilities for something akin to melody. 

Absence characterizes the orchestra as one massive voice with myriad individual protagonists each with its own particular character. This generates the work’s momentum. 

Serenades puts the ensemble at the centre of gravity of Lindberg’s sense of light, shade, energy and lyricism. With Nicholas Collon at the helm the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra appears to have lived this – and the rest of this music – for decades.

07 Sophia GubaidulinaSofia Gubaidulina: Triple Concerto for Violin, Cello and Bayan; Rejoice! Sonata for Violin and Cello
Baiba Skride; Harriet Krijgh; Elsbeth Moser; NDR Radiophilharmonie; Andrew Manze
Orfeo C230121 (orfeomusic.de/CatalogueDetail/?id=C230121)

Sofia Gubaidulina has described herself as “the place where East meets West,” which is as accurate a categorization as any. Her Tartar-Slavic background and the influence of Eastern philosophies is clear in many of her attitudes towards spirituality and its expression. Whether writing for small ensembles, large orchestras or even solo instruments her work explores a wide range of sonorities in order to create music that is extraordinarily still and serene, leaving the listener with a sense of timelessness rare in Western music.

Among her most radiantly contemplative chamber works are Rejoice! and Triple Concerto for Violin, Cello and Bayan. The former work features a hauntingly beautiful setting in which Gubaidulina offsets her vast landscape with spare, orchestral writing that soars with mystical impressionism. 

In her Triple Concerto Gubaidulina creates an unusual, yet enthrallingly beautiful sound-world using all the resources of the three featured instruments – violin, cello and a traditional Russian bayan or button accordion – embedded in a symphonic orchestra. Here the solo instruments  play beautiful lamenting melodies and strange, agitated, wheezing sounds over chant-like passages from the ensemble. 

In this repertoire both Rejoice! and the Triple Concerto stand out for their radiant beauty. This rapturous  performance by Harriet Krijgh, Elsbeth Moser and Baiba Skride and the North German Radio Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Andrew Manze  is consistently sensitive to the works’ intricate subtleties.

08 Crossroads AccordionCrossroads
Ksenija Sidorova; Sinfonietta Riga; Normunds Šnē
ALPHA 1090 (outhere-music.com/en/albums/crossroads)

Latvian accordionist Ksenija Sidorova’s Crossroads features arrangements J.S. Bach’s music and later works by composers influenced by that master. She plays both solo and in ensemble with Sinfonietta Riga under conductor Normunds Šnē. Her accordion pictures show a right-hand piano keyboard. The left-hand button side appears to have a switch activated traditional chord stradella bass, and free bass multi octave single note bass buttons.

Bach’s famous three movement Concerto in D Minor, BWV1052 opens. Bach’s first 1720’s version featured solo organ and 1730’s version solo harpsichord, both with orchestra. Future arrangements by others include solo piano, violin, recorder and heavy metal guitar! Sidorova’s accordion arrangement has wide-pitched contrapuntal lines for both hands, colourful blending with orchestra, and tight accordion and orchestra contrasts in alternating sections. 

Composer Sergei Akhunov’s solo accordion Sketch III has lyrical broken chords and single note lines. His Bach-inspired five movement Concerto Chaconne Bach has SO much to listen to from an opening mysterious low orchestral feel, high-pitched held accordion notes “squealing” above repeated orchestral chords, modernizing percussion hits and reflective calms. Dobrinka Tabakov’s virtuosic Baroque style The Quest: Horizons for solo accordion and orchestra features wide-ranging volumes with touches of contemporary sounds. Solo works Beyond Bach by Gabriela Montero, arranged by George Morton and Sidorova, and Sidorova’s arrangement of her childhood favourite Bach’s Ich Ruf Zu Dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 639, highlight Sidorova’s impressive musicianship and breathing bellows control.

This is accordion and orchestra at their very best. A standing ovation for all!

09 Vijay IyerVijay Iyer – Trouble
Jennifer Koh; Boston Modern Orchestra Project; Gil Rose
BMOP Sound 1099 (bmop.org/audio-recordings/vijay-iyer-trouble)

I like it when a composer admits they have trouble finding their way to what they eventually write. While the product in no way betrays difficulty, if the search is somewhat successful, it’s there anyway, because no doubt what provoked them to write the piece is indeed troubling. Such is the case with Vijay Iyer’s new release (in italics this time), Trouble. He approaches the role of orchestral composer as something of an outsider, but one who brings vital new material inside. 

Asunder (2017) opens the disc with worrisome momentum (the first movement is called Agitated), a pulsing major third that passes from voice to voice. I grew more and more anxious as his ideas provoked me to see the worst outcomes, to fear the things to come. But I also just enjoy hearing his textures play out, an urgent though mindless race, all the voices like commuters on the same narrow path. Written for and premiered by the Orpheus Ensemble, it travels quite a way from its opening unease through subsequent movements Patient & Mysterious, Calm & Precise and Lush. Iyer found inspiration in the collaborative non-hierarchic ensemble’s working method; Asunder evolves.

Once more for everyone in the back, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project led by Gil Rose is fantastic. As is the violinist soloist Jennifer Koh in the title work, an alien voice within a landed chorus. Guiding Iyer towards rethinking the genre (he admits to having had doubts about writing a typical concerto form), Koh shared her experience of being an “artist of color in the U.S… nearly a year in the making, Trouble (2017) remains, for me, one of my most layered... intense works,” the composer writes in his liner notes.

Crisis Modes (2018), a work for strings and percussion, closes the disc. It’s simply gorgeous, while still infused with the unease that colours the whole disc. Iyer wrote all three works in the years of Trump’s first administration, as an American of Colour aware of the suddenness with which things can turn. It’s no surprise that the themes are of dysphoria and doubt.

10 PercussiaPlucked & Struck
Percussia
Neuma 197 (neumarecords.org/home/ols/products/percussia-plucked--struck)

Anything recorded can go astray, especially if the music purports to be from a group “… a mash-up of classical, modern, popular, and global music styles….” This excellent album plucked & struck, for instance, might easily be construed as an elegant railway system linking all of the aforementioned (styles) as chamber music coming from an ensemble born of a 21st century post-serialist conservatoire. Of course, to describe the ensemble Percussia as such would give the impression of overcooking when, in fact, the whole project is a masterpiece of subtlety.

The duo’s take on things plucked and struck – Ingrid Gordon’s Orff xylophone and other small percussion and Susan Jollies’ Celtic harp – summon magical sounds from notes that whirl and twirl, and dance in graceful arcs and leaping parabolas that float benignly around each other. Each note adds a rich and not entirely predictable foundation to this music, as does Melissa Fogarty’s luminous soprano to the lyrics of Cuando El Rey Nimrod ai Compo Salia

The surprises, when they come, are effective, but discreet: gamelan-like riffs are often played as pizzicato harmonics, a delicate curlicue of a bassline underpins what sounds like a Gaelic lament on Fogarty’s Ladino lyrics. Everywhere close-knit ensemble passages develop from single magical phrases. In the music of plucked & struck Percussia have pierced music’s mysterious skin. Kudos to them for having done so.

Listen to 'Plucked & Struck' Now in the Listening Room

11 David LangDavid Lang – Composition as Explanation
Eighth Blackbird
Cedille CDR 90000 230 (cedillerecords.org/albums/composition-as-explanation)

This album is serious fun. As an adaptation of Gertrude Stein’s seminal 1926 lecture, David Lang’s multi-disciplinary work showcases the creative and technical prowess of this Pulitzer-prize winning composer. Adding to the marriage is the dedication to the work of Grammy-winning sextet Eight Blackbird, who bring us a solid performance of an interesting and dynamic work. And a performance it is, as the piece was written to be presented on stage, with the composer asking the musicians to be stage performers, to learn acting, diction and the art of theatre, to produce an integrated and seamless work. 

The lecture by the iconic Stein, Composition as Explanation, was a description of what she is doing in her writing. “…in her same repetitive, plainspoken and circular format that she uses in her writing…” (Lang). Lang paints the lecture’s writing as billboard-sized enactments, blurring the lines between text and performance, while also stretching the musicality of his writing to showcase the versatility, technical skill and group dynamics of Eighth Blackbird. Each track of the composition reads as a small chapter of the lecture, which includes nearly all of Stein’s writing word-for-word, and the complex music never overshadows the text. As an illustration of Stein’s work, it is a colourful, theatrical exposition, a larger-than-life performance allowing the listener to discover the lecture in more detail, giving it new meaning and relevance today. It is a work one would wish to see live, but the album does well to impart the flavour of a stage performance, and the album booklet’s inclusion of photos from the performance does well to set the scene.

12 MetalofonicoNew Music for Brass and Percussion
Metalofonico
New Focus Recordings FCR413 (newfocusrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/metalofonico)

What happens when you mix 16 brass players, seven percussionists, electric guitar and synthesizer? A sonic wallop, here courtesy of trumpeter Jon Nelson, University at Buffalo professor and his ensemble Metalofonico, named after Brazilian Dimas Sedicias’ rowdy, big-band dance piece, included in this CD. (Sedicias’ bluesy tuba solo, Raymond My Friend, played by Raymond Stewart, comes midway through the disc, a brief respite from the mostly clamorous goings-on.)

This newly-released CD was recorded back in 2001-2002. Responding to my email query, Nelson explained that it was originally manufactured in 2003 to serve as a limited-distribution promotional item – “I decided last year to put it out ‘for real’ in the hope of giving new life to the pieces.”

Four world-renowned composers are represented – Charles Ives’ From the Steeples and the Mountains, memorably evoking overlapping, reverberating church bells; Iannis Xenakis’ Khal Perr (Greek for “Walking Dance”), a kaleidoscopic compendium of percussion-braced sonorities; Milton Babbitt’s atonal, amorphous Fanfare for Double Brass Ensemble; Giovanni Gabrieli’s noble Canzona XXV, from the first golden age of brass.

The disc’s longest piece, Tom Pierson’s 11-minute Music for a Solemn Occasion, is predominantly slow and introspective. In marked contrast are Nelson’s pounding, jazz-rock Insomnio and his rollicking arrangement of Perez Prado’s 1950 hit, Mambo No.5, Brian McWhorter’s industrially pile-driving Lucre Iota and David Felder’s Two Tuttis – Incendio and Shredder, the latter, writes Felder, “meant to be ferocious fun.” There’s ferocity and fun aplenty on this CD.

Listen to 'New Music for Brass and Percussion' Now in the Listening Room

01 No Codes The QuestUsual Suspects
No Codes
(benjamindeschamps.bandcamp.com/music)

No Codes’ sophomore release pulls no punches, and constantly proves that less is more. Exhibit A is the title track, which drops a single eighth note during the second phrase of the head, making an already irresistibly danceable syncopated rhythm feel subversive and lively. From there, the groove seamlessly transitions into a half time feel, Louis-Vincent Hamel’s open hi-hat providing emphatic weight to every snare hit. Returning to the original pattern and back again, that bar of seven offsets the listener’s expected arrival point of the next section, gripping them with a feeling of constant momentum. The track is just over two minutes long, but it feels dense and eventful nevertheless. 

All this profound power, generated from the mere omission of one beat, is a testament to the cohesion of this wonderful combo. Exploring many points on the musical spectrum while embracing dissonance and allowing each musician their own improvisational space, there is nary a dull moment to be found across these ten sprawling tracks. It is not only easy to find one’s self in awe of the two-piece rhythm section’s pas de deux, but also how consistently both saxophonists sound like an extension of this bond, playing percussively and interpretively while contributing to the overall driving pulse of each respective composition. Usual Suspects is a singular blend of being accessible and thought-provoking and is an absolute joy to listen to.

Listen to 'Usual Suspects' Now in the Listening Room

02 Neil SwainsonNeil Swainson – Here For A While
Neil Swainson Sextet
Cellar Music CMF022024 (neilswainsonquintet.bandcamp.com/album/here-for-a-while)

Bassist Neil Swainson is taking a playful, back-handed swipe at us (Canada and others alike) saying that he’s been Here For A While. He has been here for quite a while. In fact, bass-playing associate Steve Wallace informs us that Swainson has contributed mightily to music played by “Woody Shaw, George Shearing, and Roberta Gambarini…” Which leaves you wondering how this can only be Swainson’s third album as leader, especially as he has been celebrated in that music community by such leading aficionados as Don Thompson while passing like a ship in the night elsewhere. 

And so, here is Swainson and his Sextet – comprising pianist Renee Rosnes, drummer Quincy Davis, trombonist Steve Davis, saxophonist Kelly Jefferson and trumpeter Brad Turner. The focus ought to be – and it surely is – not only on the fine playing by one and all, but also Swainson as an exquisite composer. That, of course, and his consummate, undefiled virtuosity and inspirational leadership. 

Swainson’s sextet is in cracking shape throughout this set. The leader’s playing is both vibrant and urgent. This pays huge dividends in the pulsating, swinging opener The End of the Day and in the rest of the fare. But the composer’s artistry is hardly one dimensional. He has a deep feeling for bluesy work (cue Jerry’s Blues) and his balladry (as In the Path of Angels) evolves in fine-spun rhapsodizing that make this recording one for the ages.

03 MosaicMosaic
Stefan Bauer; Terry Clarke; Matthew Halpin; Matthia Akeo Nowak
Cornerstone Records CRST-CD169 (cornerstonerecordsinc.com/pages/cat169.html)

Improvising musicians from several generations would give a lot to perform with Terry Clarke, the éminence grise of Canadian drumming. He is one of the celebrated rhythm-twins (the other being Don Thompson, who plays bass, vibraphone or piano). Thompson and Clarke, some may remember, were effectively head-hunted by the celebrated alto saxophonist John Handy in the early 1960s and played in Handy’s seminal ensemble at the 1965 Monterey Jazz Festival. That ensemble released Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival (Columbia, 1966). For the unfettered and ingenious nature of the musicians’ improvisatory performance, Ralph J. Gleason (on album notes) called it “an exciting group and one that will make jazz history.” 

It is this same epic excitement that Clarke & Co. evokes on Mosaic. The main story here is what Clarke calls “the sound of surprise,” quoting the legendary music critic Whitney Balliett. That brief quote is characteristic of the usually taciturn drummer. He is infinitely better at letting his drumsticks and brushes do the talking with a swinging rattle and roll on the shells and skins of his snare and tom-toms, punctuated by the depth charges on the bass drum and the sizzle and bop of the cymbals and high-hat. Indeed, Clarke gives us a drumming masterclass supported by bassist Matthias Akeo Nowak, vibraphonist Stefan Bauer and tenor saxophonist Matthew Halpin – together embodying “the sound of surprise” indeed.

Listen to 'Mosaic' Now in the Listening Room

04 Eric St LaurentDarn, That Band
Eric St-Laurent; Chendy Leon; Magdelys Savigne; Calvin Beale
Independent (eric-st-laurent.bandcamp.com/album/darn-that-band)

Excellent arrangements of timeless classics. Patient, cyclical grooves that subtly develop and then find their way back home. A four-piece band where half the group plays percussion and the other half plays percussively. Dedication and faithfulness to the originals that will leave familiar listeners satisfied, but also a penchant for exploration and experimentation that allows for catharsis from unexpected places. 

Take for example, what El Cumbanchero metamorphoses into leading out of Magdelys Savinge’s conga solo. As guitar and cajon syncopate each other’s syncopations, all three instruments coalesce into one wall of sound, building in density but not noise. After this hushed swell hits a certain point, Calvin Beale comes in with three chromatic bass notes, and a new cycle is born, as the synthetic becomes merged with the acoustic once and for all. 

This consistent interplay, decisiveness and willingness to embrace dissonance makes for an equally engaging exercise in exactness and freedom. Because of all the percussion and rhythmic playing it feels like every inch of the time feel spectrum is always accounted for, but never in an overbearing way. It also feels like there are multiple ways to listen to this, and they’re all equally fruitful. If one allows themselves into a trance, they will emerge in a completely new location. If oneclosely listens the whole way, they will glean an entire universe. Also, the end credits (Darn Credits) are hilarious, and a wonderful touch. 

05 Christopher ParnisChristopher Parnis – Everything You Could Be
Christopher Parnis; Brian Dickinson; Christian Antonacci; Matt Greenwood; Aaron Blewett
Independent CDP001 (christopherparnis.com)

Young Peterborough-born double-bassist Christopher Parnis has quickly and steadily climbed the ladder within the jazz world in these past few years. Once you’ve performed and recorded with the likes of Reg Schwager, Robi Botos and Terry Clarke, I think it’s quite safe to say that you’ve made it. And so, this latest recording by Parnis shows just what he’s capable of, not only as a composer and musician but also an accomplished bandleader. Featuring a stellar lineup with musicians such as Brian Dickinson on piano, Matt Greenwood on guitar and Christian Antonacci on trumpet and flugelhorn, there’s no doubt regarding the high calibre of Parnis’ compositional talents. The entire album is loaded with original works penned by the bassist himself, as well as his bandmates. 

Canadian jazz legend Don Thompson has praised the record highly, calling it, among other things, “hauntingly beautiful.” There’s really no better way to describe the essence of these tunes, how they meander through jazzy soundscapes that differ from note to note. From contemporary jazz to a more traditional sound, this album has something for everyone. Take Opportunity for example: the moving drum rhythms of Aaron Blewett accompanied by a soaring horn melody doubled up by the electric guitar is just the right balance of nostalgia and modernity that appeals to many. A highly recommended addition to the collection of any jazz aficionado looking for a foray into the world of contemporary jazz.

06 Paloma SkyHold on to Me
Marie Goudy’s Paloma Sky
Independent (mariegoudy.bandcamp.com/album/hold-on-to-me)

Debut recordings can be haphazard; a slew of disparate ideas held by a slender thread and nary a cohesive theme. But certainly not Hold On To Me, a beautifully crafted vivid love letter, as if written from one character to another, where both characters come alive. It is no matter that there are subplots with secondary characters entering the landscape, it makes for a brightly coloured and multi textural soundscape. 

There may be more viscerally exciting contemporary ensembles around, who write and perform more daringly imaginative original work. But in Paloma Sky the wonderful Marie Goudy (vocals, trumpet, compositions) leads a group of musicians who are unfailingly musical. And where others may dazzle with gratuitous pyrotechnics Paloma Sky replaces such musical egotism with compelling narrative performed with deeply lyrical intensity. 

Goudy leads with poetics redolent of exquisitely sculpted phrases, often rendered in molten curved shapes. The basis for all of this are her compositions themselves, which radiate heat from characters who are cast in the slow burn of emotional warmth. Vocalist Jocelyn Barth makes these stories come alive as if she has lived them herself. She and Goudy give thoughtful interpretations that allow the space for musicians – pianist Stu Harrison, bassist Nick Arsenault, drummer Andrew Scott (and saxophonist Alison Young on Mexico) – to excavate rich details of articulation and tone colour. The producing hand of the celebrated Elizabeth Shepherd is felt everywhere.

07 Greg AmiraultA Change of Pace
Greg Amirault Trio
Independent (gregamirault.bandcamp.com)

Greg Amirault is a Montreal based jazz guitarist and A Change of Pace is his fourth album as leader; it contains six original compositions and three standards. One of this album’s strengths is how well Amirault plays with the other members of the trio (Adrian Vedady, bass and Andre White, drums) partly because they have been hosting a weekly jam session in Montreal for over a year.

I am immediately impressed by the clarity of Amirault’s tone whether he is swinging, voicing gorgeous chord solos or playing lyric melodies. All the jazz pieces are performed with assurance and style by everyone in the trio. Two originals stand out: Ballade pour La Butte is a beautifully rendered folk-influenced homage to the Acadian village where Amirault grew up and Ancestral Roots which is similarly inspired by his Acadian and Aboriginal roots. Both works offer a space for Vedady to present his sensitive solo bass playing. The top-notch performances, the mixture of standards and original jazz tunes, plus the folk influences, make A Change of Pace a unique and engaging album.

08 Jeannette LambertPortrait Landscape
Jeanette Lambert; Various Artists
Independent (jeannettelambert.bandcamp.com/album/portrait-landscape-2)

The liner notes say “my biggest fans are visual artists,” and that makes perfect sense. Lambert is a painter with words, every quiver of her voice, and these incredible suites of endlessly rewarding concepts and dazzling stylistic convergences, illustrate this. Everything from the phrasing to the melodies feel like they’re conversational, existing almost independently from their surroundings and yet also such an integral piece of the landscape.

Frankly, one might think their computer is glitching, they accidentally opened another tab, or they’re hallucinating by the time the programmed drums (and the spoken word of Lambert’s young son beamer!) come in on Away from the Wildfire, but Lambert is expertly striking that delicate balance between discordance and harmony, in a way where the listener knows deep down that the image fits together, even if they have not adjusted their gaze quite yet. This dream-like, hyper specific balance feels like something entirely unique to Lambert’s music, and yet it permeates this entire album. There are lyrical gems that will give you pause, especially out of context, (“air-conditioner looming like a benevolent robot” is a wildly hilarious bar that is also incredibly evocative). If you follow the vignettes Lambert sketches, every breath, emphasized syllable and illustration feels incredibly meaningful. Each room feels inviting and lively, the shifting perspectives colouring in all the lines around us. The instrumentation has a simultaneous lushness and intimacy to it, allowing for gaps unfilled while letting every emotion hit like a truck.

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