10 Don MacdonaldShort Stories
Don Macdonald; David Restivo; Mike Rud; Jill McKenna; Joel Fountain
Independent (donmacdonald.bandcamp.com/album/short-stories)

In-your-face instrumentation from the first few chords, sweet velvety delivery from MacDonald with great rhythmic finesse, lyrics that are direct and concise. There is a prevailing immediacy to proceedings here, making it no trouble at all to feel immediately anchored to the presentness of the here and now. 

The mere recording quality of a session is not something often worth remarking on, but there is staggering definition given to the absolute tippy-top of each and every piano voicing, each pizzicato pluck, every brushstroke, the tail end of each fricative consonant. The listener is never left with anything but a fulsome image of the combo, never yearning for the further prominence of any single element. Due to the album title, one might notice the various forms of storytelling at play here. MacDonald’s syllabic placement, time feel and seamless use of emphasis grants these words a unique emotional quality. Then there are the words themselves, intimate and making spellbinding use of perspective. Lastly, brevity itself is as effective a narrative tool as anything else here, almost acting as its own character. 

Seven originals, three re-interpretations – and the less versed when it comes to the Great American Songbook would hardly hear the difference – these songs just have that classic quality about them. Oh, and that Bob Dylan rendition? Exquisite.

11 Winnipeg Jazz OrchestraForgotten Stories Suite
Winnipeg Jazz Orchestra; Sean Irvine
Chronograph Records CR-118 (winnipegjazzorchestra.bandcamp.com/album/forgotten-stories-suite)

This is, simply put, big band music as a creative medium done justice. 

Sean Irvine provides the poetry, lyrics and music for the entire suite, and really achieves something special. There is multi-disciplinary artistry where each arrow in one’s quiver is given its own treatment, its own time of day, its own level of care. This is another kind entirely, one where Irvine completely renders distinctions between these artforms unimportant, or even obsolete, showing that one can indeed be an extension of another. 

Music provides colour to these words as organic as the act of breathing. The Winnipeg Jazz Orchestra is more than a mere mouthpiece for one person’s vision too. Quinn Greene’s recitations give the text heft and impact. Karly Epp’s vocals act as a translator from English to the sublime. The dynamism and interplay of the horns act as punctuation, spiritual grammar, and they offer moments that speak for themselves, such as the low brass hit prior to the line “...fear of the unseen” in 2 Brothers

The rhythm section switches up the groove enough times to make one’s head pirouette. As the suite consists of five distinct yet profoundly interrelated movements, Irvine’s brush strokes trawl and traverse the continuum between macro and micro narrative gestures. At its core, this is music about resilience through trauma, and stands as a towering testament to the healing powers of community. Big band music done justice, because it is about justice.

12 Raquel MarinaKind Words
Raquel Marina
Independent n/a (raquelmarina.bandcamp.com/album/kind-words)

Raquel Marina’s artistry holistically shines through on her debut collection of all-original music. The songs are immensely intricate, vivid paintings of language, harmony and tone that constantly reward every additional detail the ear may pick up on repeat listenings. 

There is an incredible equilibrium struck between sonic cohesion and track-for-track diversity, with the entire spectrum of emotive and melodic expression feeling blanketed by the time the needle finally lifts. Thoughts of You being sequenced second in the tracklist might exemplify this effect the most, with its building tension around a one note pedal and mesmerizing horn figures echoing the peaks of Marina’s phrasings coalescing to give a strikingly heavy mournful feeling, the kind of watershed moment that might more typically cap off an album side. 

Even at a lean seven songs however, this album has no shortage of these instances that feel drenched in meaning. The soloing throughout is top notch, and each improviser comes across almost verse-like in their approach to being in dialogue with Marina’s songwriting. Julien Bradley-Combs’ guitar solo on May You Know is for all intents and purposes, a tonal continuation of the inquisitive, conversational themes established in the lyrics. My Bohemian Hour deserves a special mention for being a show-stopping ballad, a soberingly minimalistic performance and an incredibly lucid piece of poetry.

Listen to 'Kind Words' Now in the Listening Room

13 PresenciaPresencia
Nebbia / Banner / Andrzejewski
ears&eyes records EE 25-245 (camilanebbia.bandcamp.com/album/presencia)

A truly integrated trio, Presencia’s nine group-composed tracks highlight the interactive skills of Berlin-based young veteran improvisers: Argentinean tenor saxophonist Camila Nebbia, UK bassist James Banner and German drummer Max Andrzejewski. They combine without artifice in perfectly timed sequences that move from dissonant to delicate. Although Nebbia’s reed textures are most upfront with tropes ranging from honking wallows to thinning whistles and note bending smears, Andrzejewski’s paradiddles, ruffs and cymbal splashes constantly expand the tracks’ rhythmic centre, while Banner’s resounding strums and occasional arco thrusts solidify low-pitched evolution while sketching out clenched string stains that colour the trio’s interactions.  

String thumps and clunking drum smacks frame shaking acrid reed whistles that define the widening interface on Plateau/Her Name Causes Shudders for instance, while on Arid a wallowing exposition is defined by the saxophonist’s stentorian buzzes and whistles, with bass string pumps underlying the few brief pivots to straight-ahead open-horn sound elaborations.  

Lyrical or treble toned sequences are secondary to note-bending and percussive narratives from the trio members. As well, unexpected taut string bowing, slippery elevated reed tones and slick percussion accents throughout confirm the individuality and versatility of the group. Plus the three’s determined and unambiguous presence provides an introduction to, or another instance of, talent confirming from musicians who will definitely have more to communicate from now on.

“With strings” has always been a loaded expression when it comes to jazz and improvised music. Except for a few exceptions – Stuff Smith and Stéphane Grappelli among them – the original idea of adding string players to a project invariably suggested sweetening harsher sounds by diluting them with clouds of measured catgut tones. Sometime late in the last century as rhythmic affinity and serious improvisation became options for those playing every instrument, that stigma began to dissipate. Today when someone who is mainly an improviser interacts with those whose primary instruments are string-attached, it’s in the spirit of mutual sound exploration as these discs demonstrate.

01 Joe McPheeA long-time innovator as well as a multi-instrumentalist, American Joe McPhee has been involved with every type of configuration in a career going back to the mid-1960s. On We Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (RogueArt ROG-0141 rogueart1.bandcamp.com/album/we-know-why-the-caged-bird-sings), he  plays tenor saxophone, intones rhetoric that plays on Maya Angelou’s 1969 autobiography I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and generally creates a 12-track piece of sonic art that illuminates Angelou’s prose. His associates are three American string players: violist Mat Maneri, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm and bassist Michael Bisio. Only vocalizing on the title track, McPhee expresses his other variations on racism and trauma with the occasional guttural scream slotted alongside extended reed techniques which are in turns knife-sharp, gatling-gun speedy and truncheon smacking resonating. 

Although there are instances, such as on Low Seas when the arco stress from the string trio’s instruments is so pressurized that it seems about to split the wooden bodies, singly or together most of their expositions create droning ostinatos or layer top-to-bottom clenched responses to reed expressions which bottom scoop or altissimo cry in profusion. Throughout and especially on the five-part Singing Birds suite contrapuntal sequences are divided, though parallel. The violist moves from hard stops to infrequent melodic formalism; the cellist adds to the narrative with shaking staccato thrusts or reflective twangs with guitar-like facility; and the bassist preserves the horizontal flow with prominent pizzicato crunches or concentrated arco sweeps. Discordant timbres are more prominent than dulcet ones throughout, with stop time and elevated sweeps concentrated to up the excitement level. But Maneri’s smoother motifs and McPhee’s saxophone trills individually prevent the narratives from becoming too weighty.  

New Forms, New Sounds, the most extended piece, illuminates many tropes most prominently. Here McPhee’s heraldic reed exposition takes on a strained oboe-like tone as broken octave projections dig out maximum invention. Surrounding that sequence prolonged string sawing from the others is soon replaced by individual motifs that are affiliated but not harmonized. Alongside the saxophonist’s prolonged smears and tongue stops, the Maneri adds spiccato strokes, Lonberg-Holm horizontal vibrations and Bisio a low-pitched continuum. Stretched but almost linear the sequence is completed as string glissandi and reed lowing move past cacophony to propel the four tones to a profound interaction.

02 Kris Davis SolastalgiaFar more formal and precise than Joe McPhee and Strings’ production is Kris DavisThe Solastalgia Suite (Pyroclastic Records PR 44 krisdavis.bandcamp.com/album/the-solastalgia-suite). The Canadian pianist performed it during a Wrocław concert alongside members of the Polish Lutosławski String Quartet: violinists Roksana Kwaśnikowska and Marcin Markowicz, violist Artur Rozmysłowicz and cellist Maciej Młodawski. 

Davis’ eight-part suite was created by concern about the climate emergency. However, throughout it’s often the quartet’s turn towards harmonized and tender timbres which make some sequences more commonly soothing and pretty than ones emblematic of impending ecological disasters. That often means that when string swells turn elegant or even melancholy, the keyboard responses involve delicate chording or intermittent tremolo formalism as well. More generic to the theme are interludes when group vibrational timidity is replaced by strained string stops or squeaky runs along with prepared piano plinks and patterns that bring a sense of urgency to the program. 

Propelled group glissandi up and down the scale by the quartet is answered with hard driving comping and soon the quartet’s intermittent string stops and rubs, replacing equanimity with energy. The most obvious instances of this occur on the concluding Degrees of Separation and the mid-point Ghost Reefs. Ghost Reefs also has the pianist’s most prominent jazz-like implementation, using antiphonic and contrapuntal motifs that propel piledriver sequences from both Davis and the quartet. Spiccato variations from clenched string movements join with keyboard pitter patter to suggest a threnody to endangered underwater limestone structures.  

The longest and speediest section, Degrees of Separation has its share of sul ponticello string swabs and slices overlaid with emphasized piano motion that judders alongside the quartet’s contributions. But once a midpoint crescendo is reached descending keyboard elaborations and layered string cushioning create animated motifs yet also preserve a linear framework for a satisfactory resolution. Positive as it might be, The Solastalgia Suite may appeal more to those more comfortable with modern notated music rather than free improvisation. 

03 Satoko FujiiWith a somewhat similar set-up to Davis and the Lutosławski quartet, the GEN sextet headed by Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii on Altitude 100 Meters (Libra 206-077 satokofujii.bandcamp.com/album/altitude-1100-meters-2) advances a much different variation of a string-focused performance. Part of this may be that while the Fujii-composed suite referencing Nagano prefecture’s highlands also features her piano, the violins of Yuriko Mukoujima and Ayako Kato and the viola of Atsuko Hatano. Instead of a cellist the group includes bassist Hiroshi Yoshino and drummer Akira Horikoshi. 

It’s not just the bass and drum contributions that make Altitude 100 Meters so distinctive but how Fujii’s pieces encompass inspired improvisational sequences integrated within the lyrical and horizontal narratives. A track like Part 3 Early Afternoon for instance, embodies jazz-like tropes including drum ruffs, rumbles and rebounds, double bass plucks and concentrated keyboard strums. These not only persist as higher-pitched string plucks suffuse the exposition, but also egg on the violins and viola to speed up from andante to presto in tandem with the other three players. Climax creates a distinctive aural afterimage. Still, after balancing light and dark, flexible and firm motifs throughout earlier parts of the suite, lyrical output from the intertwined string trio is as prominent as drum rumbles and double bass buzzes on the concluding Part 5 Twilight as all six reach a conclusive crescendo. 

At the same time, while there are interludes that focus on the pianist’s sophisticated note clusters, in-and-out of time sense and speedy leaps to equally emphasize both sides of the keyboard, the arrangements bring in other voices as well. Mukoujima takes up a good chunk of solo space on pieces like Part 2 Morning Sun and the nearly 20-minute Part 4 Light Rain for instance. Her concentrated sweeps stacked on top of darkened string group glissandi define on Morning Sun’s dramatic build up as succinctly as bassist Yoshino’s sprightly string strops and pumps until string pressure moves the theme down to earth. Then on Light Rain, Mukoujima’s doubled squeaky bow swipes boost the track’s intensity alongside percussive keyboard comping and the bassist’s clean stops and strums. Additionally, textures from the string trio move from distant sweetening to the forefront with pitch ascending spiccato swipes, and then in the track’s penultimate minutes, join with piano cadences and measured drum thumps to confirm the suite’s vitality and urgency.

04 Death of KalypsoIf vitality and urgency are at a premium on Altitude 100 Meters, imagine how the dynamics and pressure were organized on The Death of Kalypso (Thanatosis Produktion THT 32 anglesellekari.bandcamp.com/album/the-death-of-kalypso), a jazz-opera composed by Swedish saxophonist Martin Küchen. Throughout, sequences mix textures from his seven-piece Angles group, augmented by a four-piece string section, with string and wind arrangements from Angles keyboardist Alex Zethson and featuring voice and vocal arrangements by Swedish vocalist Elle-Kari (Sander). 

With a libretto based on Homer’s Odyssey, the story relates how the nymph Kalypso, more commonly spelled Calypso, who detained Odysseus, whose more familiar Roman name was Ulysses, for seven years and later killed herself because he spurned her love. Happily, this modern retelling avoids the more lachrymose aspects of the tale, with the singer’s emotionalism reflected only in her lyrical, but straightforward bel canto dramatization. More importantly the 12-part suite depends as much on Elle-Kari’s interaction with the instrumentalists as her story telling. Sorrowful expressions for instance pair her soprano utterances with My Hellgren’s mournful cello swipes; while a track such as Kalypso in Karlsbad, haunted by dreams uses multi-tracking to back her solo with numerous harmonized voices as well as elevating her breathy passionate tones even higher by contrasting her voice with similar sympathetic responses from the string quartet’s vibrations, Magnus Broo’s plunger trumpet lines and slick metal bar dusting from Mattias Ståhl’s vibraphone. 

In fact Ståhl is as much a presence on The Death of Kalypso as the vocalist. Not only do his measured pings provide a commentary on the singer’s sometimes strained expositions, but he adds weightless sparkles to the purely instrumental tracks. Cutting the woods for instance could easily stand on its own as it mates piano and vibe rebounds, swift smacks from drummer Konrad Agnas, Broo’s elevated triplets and finely accelerated velocity from all 12 players surmounted by baritone saxophonist Fredrik Ljungkvist’s measured reed pumps. 

There may not be room in the standard repertoire for another jazz opera, but the creativity of Küchen – who limits himself to a few, brief pinpointed reed asides – and his associates offer a proper place for the inclusion of a string section in this work. Added at points for middle European romanticism, the string group also provides integrated thrusts and judders to define the narrative as obviously as tick-tock drumming, metronomic keyboard pulses and brass and reed obbligatos do elsewhere.

Stretching the definition of “with strings” in as many directions as possible, each of these productions shows how intrinsically any group of instruments can fit into improvised and jazz-affiliated music.

01 Caity Gyorgy with StringsCaity Gyorgy With Strings
Caity Gyorgy; various artists
La Reserve Records (caitygyorgy.bandcamp.com/album/caity-gyorgy-with-strings-arranged-and-conducted-by-mark-limacher)

Back in the heyday of popular singers like Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole it was standard practice for record labels to release albums for their artists every year or even multiple times a year. (Fun fact: Doris Day recorded more than 650 songs from 1947 to 1967.) And these weren’t thrown together bare bones records – they were fully orchestrated and replete with horns, woodwinds and strings. Caity Gyorgy is throwing back to that time with this latest release (her sixth in about as many years) and she references that era in her liner notes, saying how labels used to “crank ‘em out.” 

But this sounds like anything but a rushed job, with its beautiful production and full orchestra on each track. All ten songs are original and penned by Gyorgy and Mark Limacher or by Gyorgy alone. Most of the songs clock in around the three-minute mark, and there’s no soloing to speak of, and that all adds to the nostalgic feel of the album and puts it more in the crooner category than jazz. Limacher’s gorgeous arrangements give the record a generally upbeat tone, despite some quite poignant lyrics from Gyorgy, and on several of the tunes the orchestrations really take centre stage. 

Standout tracks for me are Gyorgy’s own Next Time and There Goes, and the collaboration That Doesn’t Matter where the melody is the star and the arrangements complement and support it. Overall, this record is quite an accomplishment and Gyorgy and Limacher should be very proud. Bonus: the cocktail recipes included in the liner notes are a lot of fun!

Listen to 'Caity Gyorgy With Strings' Now in the Listening Room

02 Kate WyattMurmurations
Kate Wyatt Trio
Independent (katewyatt.bandcamp.com/album/murmurations)

It’s truly beautiful when you can almost hear an artist’s thoughts unfolding within their compositions. Pianist and composer Kate Wyatt’s latest release takes influence from nature, specifically the murmuration of starlings, an elaborate, unifying behaviour. It unfolds like a living organism, constantly shifting shape while maintaining an inner logic. 

The album captures the beauty of collective motion – ideas circling, separating, and reconvening – without ever losing its sense of purpose. All pieces are penned by the members of the trio; Wyatt, bassist Adrian Vedady and drummer Louis-Vincent Hamel. 

Central to the album are Wyatt’s piano melodies, agile and conversational. She lets the phrases breathe and take on a life of their own. Vedady and Hamel round out the compositions perfectly, encouraging the music to soar to new heights. Instead of spotlighting virtuosity for its own sake, the record emphasizes interaction. 

Coming back to the concept of murmuration, the music has a communal feel to it, shaped by trust and a shared curiosity. The trio feels as if it’s truly breathing as one being, ebbing and flowing as nature does, progressing through the pieces together. Sonically, a satisfying balance between warmth and clarity is achieved, with each note and nuance crystal clear, bringing the emotion and feeling within the music to the forefront. 

Murmurations is thoughtful, elegant, and quietly adventurous, reflecting a mature artistic voice confident enough to let the music evolve naturally, on its own terms, with utmost grace.

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