12 Nicola Miller Living ThingsLiving Things
Nicola Miller
Cacophonous Revival Recordings CRR-025 (cacophonousrevivalrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/living-things)

Nicola Miller is an Ontario-born, Nova Scotia-resident alto saxophonist and composer who has taken a circuitous route to her first recording as leader, earning a BA in jazz performance from a Toronto college nearly 20 years ago, teaching fiddle to children in Mohawk territory near Montreal and getting an MA from the Jazz Institüt Berlin. Based on Living Things, it was all worth it. It’s as impressive a debut as one might want to hear – mature, thoughtful, passionate work in the company of masters.

She’s assembled a fine Canadian band (trombonist Doug Tielli, as witty as he is exploratory, drummer Nick Fraser, both precise and energetic, and bassist Nicholas D’Amato, a sensitive bulwark of form), topped off by her German mentor Frank Gratkowski, playing mostly bass clarinet here with just a single turn on his more usual alto saxophone. Loading a debut with stellar sidemen can conceal a neophyte’s virtues, but that doesn’t happen here. Miller‘s conception may be rooted in Ornette Coleman’s mercurial voice, but hers is lighter, a voice that is engaged in its own discoveries. 

Her compositions welcome elastic interpretation, but they also have strengths of their own, summoning up the soundscape of Miller’s Maritime home. The opening Barge Is a night-time description of dock, water and whistles, while Seaweed and Seagulls are similar tone poems, but all go beyond programmatic atmosphere to summon a sense of teeming life, a continuum between sonic subject and the quintet’s creative impulses.

13 Brûlez les meubles Folio 5Folio #5
Brulez les meubles
(tourdebras.bandcamp.com/album/folio-5)

Electric bassist Éric Normand is best known for somehow making Rimouski, Quebec a national hotbed of improvised music with his improvising orchestra GGRIL and frequent international guests. Normand has also developed a far gentler (and composed) side with Brûlez les meubles (Burn the furniture), his duo with electric guitarist Louis Beaudoin-de la Sablonnière. Here they are joined by special guests: tenor saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, pianist Marianne Trudel and vibraphonist Jonathan Huard.   

There are seven pieces here, with compositions contributed by Normand, Beaudoin-de la Sablonnière and Trudel, but the effect is virtually that of a linked suite, a series of ethereal nocturnes, often with moonlight glittering in Beaudoin-de la Sablonnière’s sustained lyricism, whether subtly lifted or trailed by Normand’s muted bass lines. The ensemble shifts through multiple combinations, sometimes reduced to just the essential duo, at other times in permutations that range to full quintet. The guitarist’s Conscience de tragique is particularly multi-hued, with Laubrock, generally emphasizing her pastoral side here, beginning with a contrasting a capella explosion that dances between Stan Getz-like lyricism and expressionist multiphonic pitch-bending. Trudel’s opening exposition of her La vie commence aujourd’hui is as limpidly graceful as flowers floating on water, her long solo piano exploration gradually opening to ringing electric guitar and gauze-like saxophone. 

The concluding Folio is serenely beautiful, its suspended melody passing evocatively among Laubrock, Trudel and Beaudoin-de la Sablonnière in a final performance that’s at once spectral and sublime.

14 Dan PittHorizontal Depths
Dan Pitt Quintet
Independent DP005 (danpitt.bandcamp.com)

This album’s oxymoronic name, Horizontal Depths, exemplifies the quirky and playful nature of the Dan Pitt Quintet. This band plays hard, as in the opener 27 Hours which spends a couple of minutes getting its funk on with a solid ensemble riff before a ripping tenor sax solo from Patrick Smith brings us to a sputtering and rockingly distorted guitar solo from Pitt himself. Eventually everyone returns to the opening riff and slams it home. Naomi McCarroll-Butler’s bass clarinet provides some excellent background texture and Nick Fraser’s drums are, as always, solid, intelligent and innovative. Let’s not forget the great bass work from Alex Fournier which is a solid, and often contrapuntal underpinning for the rest of the hijinks. 

On This is Fine, Fournier shows off some nice bowing work. Horizontal Depths - Part One is a shorter and more delicate piece displaying nice jazzy minor scale runs from Pitt’s guitar. The Sorrow shows off the cleaner, more traditional jazz side of Pitt’s guitar chops before a languorous bass clarinet solo. All the tunes on Horizontal Depths were composed by Pitt and display his combination of inventiveness and effortless groove and the players excel in their interpretations.

15 Sophie Agnel John ButcherRare
Sophie Agnel; John Butcher
Victo CD 138 (lesdisquesvicto.bandcamp.com/album/rare)

French pianist Sophie Agnel and British saxophonist John Butcher are among the most distinguished members of the European free improvisation community. Agnel is  one of the elite musicians featured on the soundtrack of The Brutalist – winner of the 2025 Academy Award for best original soundtrack (Daniel Blumberg). Butcher is a sonic creator with few peers, exploring for over three decades the specific resonances of his tenor and soprano saxophones, creating compound sounds, sometimes investigating hyper-resonant spaces (a mine, a gasometer, caves). The duo’s music is a model of close listening and multi-dimensional response, their continuously shifting roles expanding the moment’s potential.

Rare documents their first North American performance at the 2024 edition of Festival International Musique Actuel Victoriaville (FIMAV), Canada’s premier festival of “outside” music. Attending the concert was a significant experience, but the detail of the recording adds more sonic subtext and microscopic detailing. From the outset, one Is in an exalted acoustic world. The grand piano can suggest an enormous ukulele or a steel mill; the saxophone’s multiphonic burble passes from woodland birds to a bank of oscillators. Instruments’ interiority becomes our interiority. Then, at any moment, not birds but intense free jazz takes flight. 

The longest of the five improvisations, the 18-minute rare ii, is both tour de force and Odyssey, stretching between looming terror and impending revelation, then moving to microscopic details, reveries of air and materiality, wind and touch, memory and futurity.   

Rare validates an essential possibility of free improvisation: no matter what you’ve heard, you haven’t heard this.

16 TemporalTemporal Driftness
Floris; Bauer; Hertenstein
Evil Rabbit ERR 3738 (matthiasbauer.bandcamp.com/album/temporal-driftness)

Still innovating at 72, veteran Greek reedist Floros Floris has created this 11-track program of abstract improvisation with the same zeal and confidence he’s exhibited since recording Greece’s first free jazz LP in 1979. On Temporal Driftness he’s joined by slightly younger players, bassist Matthias Bauer and percussionist Joe Hertenstein, in Berlin where he now lives.

Floris, who also composes film music, and the others, make each of the tracks as distinctive as individual movie scenes. Overall, they harmonize enough to make the equivalent of a feature film.  Moving among clarinet, bass clarinet and alto saxophone Floris will frequently mate chalumeau register bass clarinet tones with double bass thumps to toughen the low pitch textures of the improvisations. Elsewhere squeaky bites from one of the higher-pitched reeds amplify Bauer’s clenched arco slides. Meanwhile Hertenstein adds tom-tom slaps, bass drum pounding or cymbal scratches accenting the unrolling sound picture. 

Some of the most spectacular scenes occur as Floris alternates his actorly persona as on Drift 7 where his continuous flutters move from arched trills to strained honks and double-tongued bites with the timbres surrounded by the bassist’s spiccato buzzes and the drums measured patter. A track like Drift 3 on the other hand abstracts the thematic scenario further and faster connecting comb-and-tissue paper-like reed strains, string strops and boiling drum ruffs. 

As cinema this CD wouldn’t be standard popcorn fare, but would be appealing as well-wrought experimental film making.

A mainstay of so-called classical music since its creation in the 16th century, the cello is prominent in orchestral, string ensemble and solo settings. Innovators like Oscar Pettiford and Fred Katz created roles for the four-string instrument in mainstream jazz during the 1950s, but it was only with free improvisers’ acceptance of new sounds and instruments about 20 years later that cellos became almost as common on bandstands as guitars and double basses. Today while the cello is most often found in small ensembles, numerous musicians are finding new ways to use the instrument.

01 Open FinderOne outfit that presents a variant of improvised chamber music consists of German cellist Ulrich Mitzlaff and two Portuguese, flutist Carlos Bechegas and bassist João Madeira, although the four tracks of Open in Finder (4DaRecord  4DRCD 009 joaomadeira.bandcamp.com/album/open-in-finder) are anything but standard concert hall fare. Complementing the bassist’s thick pizzicato throbs and woody arco strains and the flutist’s transverse trills and peeps, Mitzlaff’s timbres slide between the extremes. At points his connection is with Madeira as he doubles the woody sul ponticello emphasis. Elsewhere his kaleidoscopic angling extends the flutist’s turn towards refinement, mating mid-range cello slices with Bechegasaviary flutters. Nowhere is the disc background music though. The flutist’s range encompasses circular-breathed whines and shallow stop time, and for every segue into linear advancement there are interludes where the strings’ strategy is both staccato and spiccato. On the extended Drag After Two for instance, Bechegas mines unexpected metallic tones from inside his instrument as the string players extend the line at a speedy pace while working up and down the scale. Sequences are unexpectedly cut off or extended and during the introductory Stream for One percussive and prestissimo horizontal movement is interrupted by one player vocally yodelling, scatting and mumbling rhythmically before a jab on the strings below the cello’s bridge wraps up the track.

02 ThuyaAnother trio, but with a more conventional chamber music line up is the Quebec-Berlin String Trio. On Thuya: Live @ the Club (Creative Sources CS 378 CD creativesources.bandcamp.com/album/live-the-club), Germans, violinist Gerhard Uebele and bassist Klaus Kürvers plus Québecois cellist Remy Belanger de Beauport perform two multi-part instant compositions recorded at the same place but a half year apart. Throughout both dates de Beauport too plays the mediator’s role, creating thick double stops and mid-range slides that knit together Uebele’s frequent squeaky sul ponticello stings and Kürvers’ buzzing string stops. With the three players unleashing scrapes, plinks and squeaks as often as intertwined glissandi, May 6 is the climax of the first set. Working up to prestissimo with prods from the bows’ frogs as well as a pinched interface, apogee is reached as elevated violin tones arch over the undulating lower strings with an interlude of swelling hoedown-like phrasing from the cellist. More aggressive and confident six months previously, November’s track doubles down on the trio’s cohesion at the same time as raucous fiddler screeches frequently interrupt linear evolution. Although this is quickly countered with warm drones from the lower pitched strings. Again before completing the sequences with layered rubs from all, the penultimate November 10 finds this mid-range interlude alternating fragmenting and connecting as the trio members swop sweetened sul tasto affiliations with wood-rending strains and stops from the bassist, string bounces from the violinist and biting mandolin-like strokes from the cellist.

03 Clement Janinet WoodlandsA more expanded identity for the cello is expressed by Bruno Ducret during the ten tracks that make up Woodlands (BMC CD 314 bmcrecords.hu/en/albums/la-litanie-des-cimes-woodlands), One third of violinist Clément Janinet’s all French La Litanie des Cimes  – clarinetist Elodie Pasquier is the other member  – the group’s blend of folkloric melodies, reiterated minimalist pulses and the rock music-like thrusts wrapped in creative improvisation, has Ducret replicating the sounds of a double bass, a 12-string guitar or percussion at various points. Janinet’s super spiccato string stabs are also splayed to resemble tones that could come from a Medieval vielle, a Bluegrass fiddle or the most contemporary electrified four-string instrument. Pasquier who mostly sticks to clarion emphasis usually provides the linear stasis. With thumps midway between those of a doumbek and a conga drum the cellist become a percussionist on Shadows for example as the violinist exuberantly piles notes upon notes from his string set until a sudden stop when he and the cellist suddenly appear to be playing guitars. It takes broken-chord reed snorts to wrap up the track. Alternately on Quiet Waltz – which is neither quiet nor a waltz – the cello snakes around stops and slides and replicates walking bass plucks as soaring violin glissandi frame the clarinet’s andante horizontal line. Narrowly missing screech timbres at points, Pasquier’s most notable expression is on With The New (Tribute To Bina Koumaré) where her evolution from simple flutters to precise double tonguing presents a contrapuntal challenge to Janinet’s ecstatic strokes which vibrate at twice the speed of her output in this tribute to the West African fiddle master. Eventually it takes Ducret’s double bass emulation to steady the disparate parts.

04 KairosEnlarging a band and its affiliated timbres even more is the Kairos quartet (Label Rives 7 labelrives.com). On Fragments de temps the basic duo of French cellist Gaël Mevel and drummer Thierry Waziniak is joined by fellow Gaul trumpeter/flugelhornist Jean-Luc Cappozzo and American violist Matt Maneri. The result is inventive and invigorating improvised chamber-jazz. With nods towards classic traditions some tunes are contrafacts of Ravel or Rodgers & Hart lines, while at the disc’s centre are two affiliated pieces called Bach 1 and Bach 2. Slyly beginning the first with a delicate meld of flugelhorn flutters and well-tempered string smoothness, drum clips and low-pitched cello slides soon chip away at the pseudo-Baroque delicacy. Half-valve and toneless brass explorations, double bass-like throbs from Mevel and Maneri’s mandolin-like strums create a polyphonic lamination that is resolved on Bach 2. Sustained sharp strokes from the cello (andante) and the viola (adagio) coupled with irregular drum smacks maintain the exposition as bass bites and Maneri’s staccato jabs transform the narrative. With themes expressed by motifs including cello-trumpet harmonies or viola-cello refractions, the quartet additionally maintains horizontal expressions even as pivots and note bending fragment the time.

05 Tom JacksonAlthough much of the cello’s appeal over the centuries has been melodic tones that can be created with its four strings, the instrument’s percussive and discordant qualities can also be featured. More so than on the other discs this happens on Parr’s Ditch (Confront CORE 41 confrontrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/parrs-ditch). Brooklyn-based cellist T.J. Borden highlights many of these barbed timbres in this duo with clarinetist Tom Jackson of London, England. Heard during three lengthy improvisations are a few linear and lyrical interludes. But the key idea of the duo is to express as wide a variety of rugged and pointed strokes with a bow, fingers and a minimal number of strings as the clarinetist can produce with his reed and multiple keys. While Jackson’s collection of altissimo squeaks, watery trills and intensified breaths set up the challenge from the first sequences, Borden’s exposition of sul ponticello stabs and strident string whistles match tones with similar aggression. Often these spiccato slices also cut through the clarinetist’s clarion calls. By the time Parr’s Ditch 2 arrives, stop-and-start reed elevation is supplemented by equally belligerent arco timbres which are sourced from below-the-bridge strings and often sound as if they’re lacerating the wood itself. Additionally, as Borden’s col legno stops and Jackson’s flutters intertwine they reach such prestissimo affiliations that if the program was visual the result would be a blur. Later the clarinet’s transverse slobber and the cello’s harsh flanges almost meld. Until more generalized reed puffs and descending string vibration mark a final concordance, strained ruggedness has defined the interaction.

The crafts people who evolved the cello from the viola de gamba and bass violin centuries ago to become the instrument it is today, likely couldn’t imagine the multiple roles exemplified by the sounds on these discs. But we can hear them.

01 Peggy Lee Cole SchmidtForever Stories of Moving Parties
Peggy Lee; Cole Schmidt
Earshift Music (peggyleecoleschmidt.bandcamp.com/album/forever-stories-of-moving-parties)

Cellist Peggy Lee and guitarist Cole Schmidt have been playing together since 2017 and their deep trust and easy communication naturally extend to their community of exceptional improvisors, many of whom add their voices to the conversations on this album. “The initial concept for the record had to do with hosting a party,” remarks Schmidt, “[one] that included all kinds of people and characters connecting on different conversations in different rooms of the house.”

 Lee and Schmidt have a way of being lyrically tight compositionally while at the same time being flexible and open to new ideas. Their generous co-leadership has resulted in them structuring compositions which leave lots of room for improvisation. The result is exactly what the album describes it to be; a group of friends getting together to float through the album like conversations at a house party, no two being alike. Many of the tracks were made remotely between studios in Vancouver, Melbourne, Montreal and home recordings, retaining the album’s genuine feeling of collaboration and conversation, as well as allowing for multi-tracking and effects. 

It Will Come Back features the vocals and electronics of Sunny Kim with exquisite backing from the band. Lisen Rylander Löve’s vocals on Dr. Dawn is a breathless standout and flows freely with experimental and layered cello. The melodic and dreamy for Ron Miles (featuring bassoonist Sara Schoenbeck) is gorgeous. Wayne Horwitz’s Wurlitzer on the seamless funk-out of Gloop stealthily creeps up inside the tune to a gloried end, and Dylan van der Schyff’s knockout drumming in Sungods is a whole trip on its own.  

The final track Coda, featuring only Lee and Schmidt, feels like the exhausted end of a house party, when everyone has gone home, and two good friends finally have a sit-down on the sofa and feel warm and satisfied for having hosted a great gathering.

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