04 Ella The Moment Of TruthMoment of Truth - Ella at the Coliseum
Ella Fitzgerald
Ume 602475454267 (shop.ellafitzgerald.com/products/the-moment-of-truth-ella-at-the-coliseum-digital)

Now this right here is a true discovery! On June 30, 1967 at the Oakland Coliseum Arena, Ella Fitzgerald appeared with her trio, members of the Duke Ellington Orchestra, and entertained a rapturous audience that inspired her deeply.

While the First Lady of Song’s voice was a few years beyond the peak of her powers, it was still a magnificent instrument at the time of this recording. She still had the bell-like tone for ballads (You’ve Changed), the sensational ability to swing like a gate (The Moment of Truth), and a childlike imagination in her scat singing (In a Mellow Tone). Most impressive is her adventurous phrasing throughout; the coda on Don’t Be That Way stretches the title phrase effortlessly into upwards of 40 notes, in what is just one of several jaw-dropping moments in the set.

The inclusion of songs never before heard in Fitzgerald’s discography make this album particularly exciting, especially the pitch-perfect version Alfie, which of course was a big hit the year before this concert, and Music to Watch Girls By, a great example of her ability to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. Bye Bye Blackbird is loose as a goose with the delicious spontaneity of a late-night jam session.

Audiophiles should know that the mixing and mastering of this album are very impressive – it feels like you are right there in the audience, cheering on one of the greatest artists in jazz history.

Only a vanity project if designed that way, multiple recordings from a single artist can offer more than collating obscure or famous souvenirs of a storied career or celebrating a brace of hits. When it comes to creative music, multiple discs give the creator more space to showcase original music in one package and a chance for the listener to hear in complete detail perspectives the individual innovator wishes to present. Dealing with musical auteurs here, each of these sets serve a different purpose. One is new music attached to receiving an important artistic honour. Another presents different tranches of a musician’s oeuvre as he celebrates an important age milestone. The third collects idiosyncratic performances of wholly original music.

01 Joelle LeandreHonouring her as the first non-American recipient of the Lifetime Achievement award presented annually by New York’s Vision Festival Lifetime Rebel (RogueArt ROG-0137 rogueart1.bandcamp.com/album/lifetime-rebel) assembles concerts from French bassist Joëlle Léandre. Three CDs recorded during the 2023 festivities feature her with her Tiger Trio of flutist Nicole Mitchell and pianist Myra Melford; on another with her Roaring Tree group with pianist Craig Taborn and violist Mat Maneri; and a third matches her bass and voice with the spoken words of Fred Moten. Another disc, presenting her Atlantic Ave. Septet, was recorded six months later in France with trombonist Steve Swell, tenor/soprano saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, violinist Jason Hwang, violist Maneri, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm and guitarist Joe Morris. Interestingly enough, every other player featured is American. These international connections and her unique role in the music world are touched on, along with other subjects in the included DVD where Léandre, who will be 74 this year, is interviewed about her long career with first notated and then improvised music, interspaced with bass solos. 

While the interaction with Moten gives Léandre a chance to demonstrate her immediate response to poetic prompts, Moten’s citing of various jazz heroes within his stream of consciousness, seemingly disjointed tales about neighborhoods, travel and relationships don’t really connect to Léandre’s sounds. His poetics seem more fanciful than logical. Moten singing a snatch of Lush Life comes across as less musical than the yells and yodels Léandre appends to her string improvisations that reach an early climax as she mumbles and string bumps to underline his salute to other bass playing avatars. 

More balanced, the Tiger Trio improv is swifter and tougher with pieces starting from a connective centre and moving outwards. Mitchell’s transverse arabesques growl and trill with the same finesse; her highest notes resembling human vocals while her thickened quavers balance the bassist’s sul ponticello strokes, which sometimes appear to slice the strings and wood like a sharp axe blade. Melford’s measured comping means that connection and expression are never lost and her quick key clips and tingles are dynamic enough to cement forward motion even as Mitchell peeps and Léandre vocally whoops, mumbles and pants. 

The Roaring Tree trio’s set of improvised chamber music is involved in contrapuntal expositions involving intense keyboard leaps on one side and buzzing pitches from the bass and viola on the other. Maneri’s strident clipping and spiccato slashes decorate the four tracks’ top layer while Léandre’s responsive buzzes maintain the bottom. Everything comes to a head on Roaring Tree #4 where the set’s finale involves moving a portamento piano turnaround into pedal point with vital arco extensions from the others, as the exposition moves from andante to allegro to prestissimo. 

Latterly, the Atlantic Ave. Septet’s nearly 43-minute performance of Atlantic Ave. #1 captures a fully realized composition by the bassist which uses the ensemble's capabilities to broaden the piece which reflects aspects of her musical persona. Bisected by several tutti interludes during which the players ascend the scale with confidence, the polyphonic movement encompasses harmonized, almost romantic sequences with space for individual expression. Although the five string players sometimes move as a block, a jazz-like walking bass line and harsh col legno string banging arise solely from the cellist and bassist. Hwang and Maneri alternate between swelling unison strokes and aviary squeaks. Swell’s plunger tones roughen up any string cushioning as do Laubrock’s thin soprano sax squeaks. Despite sections of cacophony, Léandre and Swell combine for a break that’s almost baroque, while the saxophonist’s tenor contributions inject an element of modern jazz into the piece. Beside her distinctive tough wood smacks and pizzicato pacing, by the conclusion the bassist vocalizes her now familiar Bedlam-style grumbles and faux operatic bel canto cries. Confirming the individuality of her composition, this quirk is manifest seven-fold at the beginning, the end and at mid-point as all the musicians vocally mutter, yell, gurgle, laugh and hector before circling back to their instruments. 

02 Burkhard BeinsSignificant birthdays can also be a reason for exploratory musicians to reflect on their legacy. To celebrate his 60th birthday last year Berlin-based composer/improviser Burkhard Beins has released Eight Duos (Ni Vu Ni Connu LP 053-055 nivuniconnu.bandcamp.com/album/eight-duos), whose eight selections feature his collaboration with a cross section of the city’s other sound makers. Beins, who also creates sound installations, has for decades been involved in the German capital’s evolving Echtzeitmusik or real-time music scene. Here he varies his instrumentation on every track bringing out an amplified cymbal, bass drum, snare drum, drum kit, analog synthesizers, walkie talkie and samples at various times, with his partners playing acoustically or heavily involved with electronics. Unleash with pianist Quentin Tolimieri, is probably the closest to jazz. Using a full kit Beins’ echoes and rattles complement the pianist’s linear dynamics that slide down the scale and then reverse in such a manner that Tolimieri’s sudden stops and hammered keys end up as percussive as Beins’ beats. In contrast Transmission, where Beins’ synthesizer and samples are interlaced with the antennas, receivers and tape machines of Italian Marta Zapparoli, is solely affiliated to voltage. The rugged oscillations by both distend to mirrored affiliations which centre on extensive textures that commingle as widening electric lawnmower-like drones and unvarying rumbles are only infrequently pierced by suction-like projections, muffled rocket-launching explosions, airy whooshes and backwards flanges and shakes. The result is almost opaque until the final dissolve. Still the most characteristic duets involve two individual Echtzeitmusik theoreticians: idiosyncratic trumpeter Axel Dörner and Andrea Neumann, who plays inside piano and mixing board. Initially low key, Expansion blends board hisses and reverb with Neumann’s careful string slides that meld tolling, buzzing and clipped timbres. Beins’ isolated cymbal vibrations and strained scratches end with reverberations sounding like distant thunder. The joint murmurs simultaneously suggest vibrant colours and crepuscule. A variant of this, Dörner’s technique on Unlock is to never emphasize a whole note but instead create brass architecture from half valve spits, hollow strains, toneless breaths, growly smears and distant whistles. Occasionally side snare scratches and foreshortened drum top rubs match up with trumpet strategy combining tongue and palm percussion sizzles.

03a ArmstrongVolOneThe oddest sessions here are the two-volume four-disc Louis Armstrong’s America Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 (ESP 5109/5110 allenloweesp.bandcamp.com/album/louis-armstrongs-america) performed by tenor saxophonist Allen Lowe & the Constant Sorrow Orchestra. Despite what the title may suggest this isn’t a salute to Satchmo’s music, but instead 69 unique tunes composed by Lowe that mix the styles of jazz created during Armstrong’s lifetime (1901-1971). Played by a total of 24 musicians in different small groups, the postmodern performances feature variations of every style from Classic Jazz to Free Jazz, with pivots into blues and tinges of rock.

03b ArmstrongVolTwoA writer as well as a musician Lowe whose career sideline for cancer treatment is referenced throughout with multiple versions of the non-sentimental ballad I Should Have Stayed Dead, reflects his POMO orientation in quirky song titles which are inside jokes for jazz fans. Duke Ellington’s Black and Tan Fantasy becomes Black and White Fantasy and a jolly march with Ray Suhy’s clanking banjo, Aaron Johnson’s slippery clarinet and Frank Lacy’s muted trumpet prominent. Hello Dali, a contrafact of Hello Dolly, joins synthesizer gurgles, some bebop licks and ends with the famous few notes from Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. Under the Weather, a take off on Armstrong and Earl Hines’ Weatherbird, rolls along with pianist Loren Schoenberg emulating Hines’ swift and splattering patterns and Lowe’s slippery Swing Era sax solo. A salute to an early ragtime popularizer Mr. Harney Turn Me Loose has pianist Matthew Shipp melding his free jazz timing to a raggy beat; while Shufflin’ The Deck (Take 5, Please) turns the Dave Brubeck quartet’s Take Five into a simple shuffle as Johnson languidly and pianist Jeppe Zeeberg vigorously create a Bizarro version of Brubeck/Paul Desmond duets. When Dave Schildkraut Goes Marching In blends When The Saints featuring slap bass and banjo with hard tenor sax riffs and bass drum accents in the style of the obscure bop saxophonist of the title. Meanwhile guitarist Marc Ribot adds his searing rock-blues flanges on tunes like Riot On The Sunset Strip – named for the 1967 drug exploitation film – where Lowe quotes Lonely Avenue within his slurpy, honking solo. Trombonist Ray Anderson comes across as the session’s MVP, adding modernized gutbucket slurs and rippling tailgate extensions mated with Johnson’s clarion Trad clarinet on Back Home Rag; and contrasts his basement plunger tones with tap-dancing like drumming on Mr. Jenkins Lonely Orphan Band a take off on both Sgt. Pepper's and the New Orleans orphanage band where Louis Armstrong learned to play cornet. There’s even a sly salute to modern notated music with John Cage Turns the Page (or: 3:02) where Lowe and company burlesque Cage’s infamous “silent” piece by shaking loosened strings, slapping piano wood, muffle drum pops, advance brief reed cries and above all noisily shred and crunch paper.

Multiple sets can be used by musicians to celebrate honours, notable age milestones or to express multiple ideas without having to précis a musical vision. All are equally valid.

01 Scott Grant 5Horizon Song
Scott Grant 5
Cellar Music CMR221123 (scottgrant5.bandcamp.com/album/horizon-song)

Horizon Song by the Scott / Grant 5 offers tasty twists to a detail-oriented listener, while being palatable and polite enough to put on over dinner. A friend described a track they’d heard on the radio as “smooth,” but this was a positive nod to the group dynamic rather than an accusation of innocuousness. 

The album is right at home within the Cellar Music Group catalog, and with excellent casting. Scott and Grant are guitarist Andrew Scott and trombonist Kelsley Grant, with Amanda Tosoff, Neil Swainson and Terry Clarke rounding out the quintet. This rhythm section gives Horizon Song’s nine tracks the ample swing and groove they require, while sounding current and interactive enough to appeal to a contemporary audience. This might just be the through-line of the album: embracing classic aesthetics, but never trapped in a time capsule. 

All of Horizon Song’s tracks are originals, with Scott penning seven tunes and Grant contributing two beautiful waltzes. The tracks go together seamlessly and feature each member of the quintet. The album’s title track might just be the aforementioned “smooth” sounding piece, and there’s plenty of contrast from the snappy Punctuality to the groovy The Problems of Your Future.  

Scott breaks up his guitar sound with nylon-strings on a few tracks, and Tosoff doubles on electric keyboard, all captured beautifully at the Gordon Wragg Recording Studio in Toronto. I have critiqued an album or two from this studio for sounding “cold” while precise, but there is grit and warmth to Horizon Song that brings to mind recordings from the 60s and 70s. Whatever your usual listening tendencies, you’ll find something here to enjoy.

02 Samuel Bonnet Trio LIVE IN HARMONYLive! In Harmony
Samuel Bonnet Trio
Divertissement Mercier (samuelbonnetguitar.bandcamp.com/album/live-in-harmony)

Samuel Bonnet is a jazz guitarist currently living in Montreal. Born in Israel, he studied classical and jazz guitar in France, graduating in musicology at the University of Paris. In 2009 he moved to Montreal to study classical guitar. Bonnet’s unique jazz sound relies on using a nylon stringed classical guitar amplified to produce a rich and nuanced sound. Jazz has a history of including classical guitar: for example in the bossa nova tunes of Carlos Jobim and the legendary New York guitarist Gene Bertoncini who, decades ago, studied classical guitar to reinvent his jazz playing.

Live! In Harmony is Bonnet’s second trio recording and the performances are from the Jazz Room (Waterloo, ON) and Rucher de Bolton (Quebec). This album shows jazz at its essential elements: a clean amplified acoustic guitar, upright bass (Jonathan-Guillaume Boudreau) and drums (Simon Bergeron) playing unique arrangements of eight standards. All the arrangements are thoughtful and original. For example, the Nardis cover is quite beautiful beginning with a swishing drum intro which introduces the delicate guitar melody, where Bonnet throws in a few harmonics, and includes a contrapuntal interplay with the bass. The audience’s applause on all tracks adds to a sense of immediacy. The trio’s performances of these and other tunes can also be found on Bonnet’s YouTube Channel.

Listen to 'Live! In Harmony' Now in the Listening Room

03 Alain BedardParticules Sonores
Alain Bedard Auguste Quartet
Effendi FND174 (alainbedardauguste.com)

For the nearly 20 years, in six albums and numerous tours that have taken this ensemble throughout the globe, Alain Bédard and his storied Auguste Quartet have been considered one of Canada’s most prestigious quartets. Now, with their latest release, the ensemble helmed by bassist/composer Bédard explores the nature of particle physics and music. The compositions have been penned by quartet members Bédard, Marie Fatima Rudolph and Michel Lambert The quartet is comprised of these stellar, primarily Quebec-based musicians, along with Mario Allard on saxophones. 

There are ten envelope-pushing tracks here, all at once challenging, innovating and thrilling, including Bédard’s inveigling Profumo Chaneleone. It features a visceral, facile piano solo from Rudolf and superb drumming from Lambert, while Bédard’s solid bass lines anchor what chooses to be anchored and propels the rest through this complex, modal composition. Also, Lambert’s A Goose Story captures both the delight and horror of fairy tales, incising us with percussive arrows and mesmerizing us with his dynamic percussion. 

Another delight is the light-hearted Il Cappello de mia Sorella (My Sister’s Hat), which steps out of the stratosphere for a bit, bringing us a thoroughly lovely track, filled with the highest possible musicianship. Celestes (adapted by Bédard) deep dives into bebop heaven, replete with a ridiculous tenor solo from Allard and another dose of stirring piano from Rudolf. The closer, Bis du Gras Mollet  (Bédard) is another example of divine quantum entanglement and the power of music-driven sound particles to communicate, calm, thrill and amaze within the organized chaos of jazz.

04 Diane RoblinBreath of Fresh Air
Diane Roblin & Life Force
Zsan Records ZSAN2415 (dianeroblin.com)

Diane Roblin is one of our most gifted and creative jazz pianists and composers. She is well respected on both electronic and acoustic keyboards, as well as for her penchant for genre blending, and expressing her ideas through compositions and motifs that cover the gamut from free, avant-garde jazz modalities into the realms of soul, fusion, rock and everything in between. Her latest salvo (produced by composer/bassist extraordinaire, George Koller) finds Roblin in an expansive musical wonderland, drawing on her many diverse influences, and performed by her expert, dynamic ensemble featuring Kevin Turcotte on trumpet and flugelhorn; John Johnson on soprano and alto sax; Jeff LaRochelle on tenor sax and bass clarinet; George Koller on acoustic and electric bass and Tim Shia on drums.  

First up is, Ladyfinger, funky cool, rhythmic and chordally complex. Roblin never over-plays here and is always focused on the conversation with her ensemble, while Koller provides a lush spine for Roblin to slide up and down. A tight, sibilant horn arrangement is the perfect contextual partner, as well as the beautifully rendered and articulated solo from Johnson. The title track has Roblin’s pianistic dynamism and facility at the forefront, while Turcotte’s trumpet moves sinuously throughout – his lovely tone infusing every note with musical eloquence, segueing into a fine tenor solo from LaRochelle.  

Another gem is Drifting into Dreamland, again underscoring Roblin’s special skill for constructing challenging melodic lines. On Renewed on Thanksgiving Day, LaRochelle’s bass clarinet intro seems to carry a veil of nostalgia and melancholy which is also reflected by the arrangement. This superb recording closes with Cadenza – a solo offering from Roblin that takes the listener on a trip through the vistas and valleys of her pianistic skill as well as her natural communicative abilities. A breath of fresh air, indeed.

Listen to 'Breath of Fresh Air' Now in the Listening Room

05 Russ BrannonRuss Brannon – Sojourn
Russ Brannon; Various Artists
Independent (russbrannon.com)

Cruising, nocturnal, tasteful, groove-laden, melodic and velvety in equal measure, Sojourn is a pleasure to sit through, and then sit through again, and then again. The ensemble Russ Brannon recruits here is on the larger side, and yet rather than a wall of sound, what greets the listener is more like a warm breeze. 

Consisting entirely of Brannon’s original compositions, the subtleties are what arrest and surprise the most here. Pauline’s shuffling beat gives way to a buoyant waltz, one that feels lighter than air while also being on the looser side, hanging back nicely in the beat. Thistle Street moves effortlessly through unison lines between the guitar and saxophone, into more open sections that give the piece time to breathe. Soloing is nicely paced, while the actual blowing has a feeling of palpable intent (not to be mistaken for sounding contrived, there is still much freedom here) behind it, as if each catchy melody was contending with the others for real estate in the listener’s mind. 

When the band arrives in a spot together, it feels like second nature, even down to every last premeditated rhythmic hit. Adding considerable richness to these arrangements are a full string section and Lori Cullen’s voice; the former uplifting numerous sections with ambient swells while the latter provides a unique ethereal quality to the more harmonic passages. To sojourn is to stay temporarily, but Sojourn will remain with you for a while.

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