Wednesday, 17 April 2019

Joe Harriott & Amancio D'Silva Quartet ‎– Hum Dono (1969)

Style: Fusion, Post Bop
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Columbia

Tracklist:
1.   Stephano's Dance
2.   Spring Low, Sweet Harriott
3.   Ballad For Goa
4.   N.N.N.T.
5.   Hum Dono
6.   Jaipur

Credits:
Alto Saxophone – Joe Harriott
Bass – Dave Green
Drums – Bryan Spring
Flugelhorn – Ian Carr
Guitar – Amancio D'Silva
Vocals – Norma Winstone
Producer – Denis Preston

All credit to Dutton Vocalion for making Hum Dono available again. It's open to question, of course, whether the record should be seen as a Harriott date at all. The Goan guitarist, Amancio D'Silva, is certainly more than a junior partner here and provides five of the record's six tunes, as well as shaping its whole vibe. The only track credited to Harriott is the short improvised duet with drummer Bryan Spring, "Sping Low, Sweet Harriott." Perhaps Hum Dono is better seen as a partner to D'Silva's own, and truly lovely, Integration, which features members of the Rendell-Carr Quintet.  
D'Silva had a unique style. Imagine if Wes Montgomery, or maybe Tal Farlow, had played sitar rather than guitar and you may have some idea of his sound. He died in 1996 and it seems tragic that he left so little recorded music behind. It is that, as much as Harriott's superlative playing, that makes Hum Dono so very special.  
"Stephano's Dance," written for the guitarist's son -also a guitarist, who provides some highly informative sleeve notes—opens with an underlying 4/4 pulse but with a counter rhythm in 6/8 on top. The flavour is immediately that of the sub-continent, its sense of exoticism amplified by Norma Winstone's wordless vocals. Spring and bassist Dave Green provide a rapid, propulsive beat before Harriott enters with a solo that tugs away at the melody relentlessly. Ian Carr's trumpet seems more in line with the raga-like melody but the contrast between his playing and Harriott's provides the tune with its dynamic force. The tune is three-quarters over before D'Silva takes his solo. His presence has been evident throughout comping in the background but now he spins out long, twisting melodies rich in invention and eastern swing.

The guitarist starts "Ballad For Goa" with a brief cadenza before stating the melancholy rhythm with gently stroked chords. Then it shifts pace, as it opens out with a blues-tinged contribution from Harriott. Winstone picks up beautifully from Harriott's final notes, as her voice seems to span both the occident and orient, one moment bluesy and jazzy, the next something more folk-like. D'Silva's solo is almost a duet with Dave Green, with intriguing out of time passages before the group returns to the opening theme. "N.N.N.T." is quite different and were it not for the uniqueness of D'Silva's east-meets-west stylistic approach would count as pure bebop. It's the least Indian-influenced piece here, delivered at a fast pace and with a different intensity compared to the other tracks. 
Both "N.N.N.T." and the title track features the quartet on its own. "Hum Dono" itself makes you wish that Harriott and D'Silva had had more opportunities to record together, as the saxophonist achieves a level of empathy with the music that he never quite achieved with John Mayer and Indo-Jazz Fusions. It's best described as a wild, swirling dance with Harriott and the guitarist circling each other against a background that seems to include hand drums from Bryan Spring. D'Silva's own solo builds on both the tune's raga scale and on a repeated motif. Simply, it's a tour de force and exemplifies an approach to the instrument that fuses both the Indian and jazz influences perfectly.  
And finally, there is the much-sampled "Jaipur" with both Winstone and Carr added and in great voice. I can never listen to this track without imagining the scene in the recording studio. First, D'Silva's spidery lines spun from his guitar, then the sheer delight that must have resulted from Carr and Winstone's bravura duet over the bouncing, pulsating rhythms of Green and Spring and then Harriott playing not just for himself but for the band and, as always, for the music. "Jaipur" is one for that "desert island" list and as the theme returns just imagine these six musicians knowing instinctively that this was a genuinely special date. Five stars? I'll give it six! 
Duncan Heining / All About Jazz

The Joe Harriott Quintet ‎– Abstract (1962)

Style: Free Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Capitol Records, Columbia, EmArcy, Doxy

Tracklist:
1.   Subject
2.   Shadows
3.   Oleo
4.   Modal
5.   Tonal
6.   Pictures
7.   Idioms
8.   Compound

Credits:
Alto Saxophone, Leader – Joe Harriott
Bass – Coleridge Goode
Bongos – Frank Holder
Drums – Bobby Orr, Phil Seamen
Piano – Pat Smythe
Trumpet – Shake Keane

This album is famous for having received the first ever five-star review for a jazz album  from Harvey Pekar in Down Beat. Harriott was always keen to communicate his ideas, be it on stage, in interviews or album liner notes. In 1962, he wrote in the liner notes for his Abstract album, “of the various components comprising jazz today – constant time signatures, a steady four-four tempo, themes and predictable harmonic variations, fixed division of the chorus by bar lines and so on, we aim to retain at least one in each piece. But we may well, if the mood seems to us to demand it, dispense with all the others”. 
It’s worth remembering. Retaining at least 1 of the basic elements of jazz means this album never strays far from its roots. For lovers of trad, who don’t really care for all that Sun Ra ra ra ra – this is a perfect accompaniment to the segue between work and home. It’s a little more Mingus or Coleman. 
The first three tracks are up beat free flow jazz wit enough be-bop still left over to keep conservatives happy. By the time we hit ‘Modal’, that sultry sexy jazz that we all know and love is there to lull us into relaxed mode. ‘Pictures’ takes us back to haunting and slow, and with ‘Idioms’ we’re back to the bee-bop beat with some late time salsa style drumming bringing up the rear in ‘Compound’.  While this is an excellent example of early free jazz style, don’t expect high level experimentation. This is a perfectly knit unit playing jazz in a comfortable style with a little bit of first time radical thrown in for excitement.  For the most part this beautiful album is all about jazz. The jazz we know, love and trust. 
Harriott blows it all away in Oleo, though he is always focussed, always one with the music. More consistently lyrical is Shake Keane, whose trumpet playing can move from nervous mobility to a kind of cirro-cumulus softness. The best of the L.P. is side two where the ambiguities are tied together tightly and the drums are strongly in control. 
A certain view of jazz history has us believe that responsibility for the evolution of the music lies exclusively in American hands. This is both too deterministic and a slight upon the music’s power to move and to influence. As early as the late 1930s European players were making innovations of their own at the same time as some Europeans were regarding jazz as akin to the spawn of Satan; the guitarist Django Reinhardt for example was contributing greatly to the jazz vocabulary of his chosen instrument. The same is true of bop, hard bop and the ‘cool school’, all of which had their fluent and capable European acolytes in the 1950s; the Swedish baritone saxophonist Lars Gullin made a name for himself in the last of these. 
The West Indian-born alto saxophonist Joe Harriott was one of the most convincing boppers outside of the USA at a time when the music was still fresh, though by the end of the 1950s he was exploring freer musical pastures, and the quintet with which he undertook the exploration was an outgrowth of the hard bop band with which he’d made a name on the British scene. As the 1960s progressed, Harriott also proved himself to be something of a pioneer in the fusion field, in the way he fused jazz and classical Indian music in collaboration with the violinist John Mayer.

Often in the past the group’s music, in which trumpet and flugelhorn player Shake Keane figured alongside Harriott in the front line, has been compared with that of the early Ornette Coleman quartets. Such labelling does justice to neither group’s work, and also overlooks the fact that Harriott’s band included a pianist, Pat Smythe, who proved himself highly conversant with Harriott’s different methodology. 
Coleridge Goode, the bassist in Harriott’s band, has written of how much headway the band made with the new music once drummer Phil Seaman arrived on the scene(1) The music the group produced on both the Free Form and Abstract albums has little in common with Coleman’s. Here it’s far more interactive, a fact borne out most obviously by the lack of soloists. This makes for a far more organic music than anything Coleman’s group was putting out at the time. This is most pronounced on Calypso from the Free Form album, where the rhythm of that indigenously West Indian form is extraordinarily maintained in the midst of characteristic group exchanges. 
I found it difficult to get some sound bites of this album for some reason. I’ve added two tracks from Free Form, the album Harriott made just before Abstract that has a similar sound. 
Lisa Thatcher

Joe Harriott Quintet ‎– Free Form (1961)

Style: Free Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: JAZZLAND, Doxy, EmArcy

Tracklist:
1.   Formation
2.   Coda
3.   Abstract
4.   Impression
5.   Parallel
6.   Straight Lines
7    Calypso Sketches
8.   Tempo

Credits:
Alto Saxophone, Composed By – Joe Harriott
Bass – Coleridge Goode
Drums – Phil Seamen
Piano – Pat Smythe
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Shake Keane
Mastered By – Erhard Melda

One of the great jazz albums of the last five decades also has one of the great sleeves. On the front there is an idiosyncratic construct of tree trunk, open shelf and figurines of various sizes and colours while the back sports an ink motif of riotous invention. The images are meaningful. They stand as a metaphor for the constant union of seemingly disparate creative elements that nonetheless cohere. In fact, the stylistic ground covered in the piece ‘Coda’ alone stands as an ambitious integration of idioms from outside as well as within jazz; fleeting classical motifs; a snatch of Caribbean folk melody; an understated bop progression; a modal ostinato. All of which is presented in a tempo that stretches like the elastic in a young rascal’s catapult. This extreme flexibility with the speed and weight of the music is another enormous part of its appeal. The band sound gets thinner and fatter from one chapter of a composition to the next, the breathing and heartbeat of the score increasing and decreasing as the thin man-fat man ensemble negotiates a harmonic spiral staircase. Although the frontline of Harriott, Keane and Smythe is mesmerising in its rhythmic-melodic gymnastics, the multiplicity of accent and attack provided by drums and bassmeisters Seamen and Goode is no less important. The former’s use of mid-range toms to create an almost rock ’n’ roll effect on some pieces is yet another sound of surprise, an astutely “exotic” ingredient thrown into the bouillabaisse. Then again Free Form is quintessentially about a musical dish in which the large number of spices is somehow calibrated so as to not overwhelm the palette. Harriott conceived this music as polyphony and metamorphosis yet it is also precise structure and tightly gripped manipulation of idea. One can theorise limitlessly about parallels between Harriott and Ornette Coleman but at the end of the day it is the presence of both Charlie Parker and Ornette Coleman that frames this work. It’s all in the title; it’s not free music but free form music that has evolutionary, liberating DNA, a score that unfetters improvisation without losing its galloping shape. Look at the sleeve again, the construct is multi-faceted but it’s standing straight. 
Kevin Le Gendre / Jazzwise Magazine

Tuesday, 16 April 2019

Mop Mop ‎– Lunar Love (2016)

Style: Funk, Soul, Contemporary Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Agogo Records

Tracklist:
(The Journey)
01.   Alfa
02.   Adhara
03.   Totem
(The Awakening)
04.   Spaceship: Earth
05.   Omega
06.   Lunar Love
(The Experience)
07.   The Barber feat. Anthony Joseph
08.   Habibi
(Close Encounters)
09.   Plato
10.   The Serpent
11.   Supreme
12.   Foreign Correspondent

Credits:
Congas, Surdo, Bendir, Udu, Shaker, Rattle, Talking Drum, Percussion – Danilo Mineo
Drums, Vocals, Drum Machine, Percussion – Andrea Benini
Electric Bass, Double Bass – Salvatore Lauriola
Electronics, Synthesizer (Moog) – Nicola Peruch
Guitar – Davide Angelica
Idiophone – Christoph Matenaers
Piano, Electric Piano, Bass, Synthesizer – Alex Trebo
Steel Drums, Kalimba – Max Castlunger
Synthesizer (ARP) – Telonio
Vibraphone, Marimba, Glockenspiel, Balafon – Pasquale Mirra
Arranged By, Producer – Andrea Benini

Mop Mop ‎– Isle Of Magic (2013)

Style: Funk, Soul, Contemporary Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Agogo Records

Tracklist:
01.   Jua Kiss
02.   Let I Go
03.   Kamakumba
04.   Heritage
05.   Phantom Of The Panther
06.   Run Around
07.   The Golden Bamboo
08.   Loa Chant
09.   Black Ivory
10.   Damballah
11.   Mojomamy
12.   Afro Jojo Part One
13.   Afro Jojo Part Two

Credits:
Acoustic Guitar – Lutz Schlosser
Baritone Saxophone – Johannes Schleiermacher
Clarinet, Flute – Guglielmo Pagnozzi
Congas, Bongos, Talking Drum, Djembe, Bells, Drums (Dununba), Shaker – Lorenzo Gasperoni
Congas, Surdo, Karkabas], Bendir, Udu, Cowbell, Shaker– Danilo Mineo
Double Bass, Cello – Bruno Briscik
Drums, Percussion, Vocals – Andrea Benini
Electric Bass – Lorenzo Ternelli, Salvatore Lauriola
Electric Guitar – Simon Rainer
Idiophone– Emanuel Valentin
Piano, Electric Piano, Clavinet, Synthesizer (Moog) – Alex Trebo
Steel Drum, Kalimba, Shaker– Max Castlunger
Trombone – Fred Wesley
Vibraphone, Marimba – Pasquale Mirra
Vocals – Anthony Joseph, Sara Sayed
Arranged By, Producer – Andrea Benini

Mop Mop ‎– Ritual Of The Savage (2010)

Style: Future Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: INFRACom!

Tracklist:
01.   The Return Of The King
02.   Destination
03.   Ash
04.   Mr. Know It All
05.   So High
06.   Outerspace
07.   Blue Soul
08.   African Freedom
09.   Ritual Of The Savage
10.   Naja Haje (Omaggio A Don Cherry)
11.   Hot Pot
12.   Aria

Credits:
Piero Bittolo Bon - Clarinet (Bass), Flute, Sax (Alto)
Bruno Briscik - Double Bass
The Duke of Neverland String Quartet - Strings
Alan Farrington - Composer, Lyricist, Vocals
Salvatore Lauriola - Bass (Electric)hy
Danilo Mineo - Percussion
Virgen Montalvo - Vocals
Baby N'sola - Composer
Alberto Oliva - Trombone
Guglielmo Pagnozzi - Clarinet, Sax (Alto)
Gabriele Pesaresi - Double Bass
Gianluca Petrella - Trombone
Lazzaro Piccolo - Guitar
Federico Poggipollini - Guitar
Marco Pretolani - Flute, Sax (Tenor)
Mirco Rubegni - Trumpet
Alessandro Scala - Sax (Tenor)
Beppe Scardino - Sax (Baritone)
Pasquale Mirra - Arranger
Alex Trebo - Clavinet, Composer, Piano, Piano (Electric), Synthesizer
Andrea Benini - Arranger, Composer, Drum Machine, Drums, Engineer, Lyricist, Percussion, Producer

Mop Mop ‎– Kiss Of Kali (2008)


Style: Future Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: INFRACom!, Nebula, Obi

Tracklist:
01.   Living Beat
02.   Locomotive
03.   The Lowered Flag
04.   Jazzdancer
05.   The Round Table
06.   KIss Of Kali
07.   I Wish I Was In Hell
08.   Crunk
09.   Get Into It
10.   Soul Call
11.   Last Trip

Credits:
Bass Clarinet – Piero Bittolo
Clarinet – Guglielmo Pagnozzi
Double Bass – Bruno Briscik, Gabriele Pesaresi
Drums – Andrea Benini
Electric Piano – Alex Trebo
Human Beatbox – Andrea Benini
Percussion – Andrea Benini, Danilo Mineo), Max Castlunger
Piano – Alex Trebo
Piano – Alex Trebo
Saxophone (Alto])– Guglielmo Pagnozzi
Saxophone (Baritone) – Beppe Scardino
Saxophone (Tenor) – Alessandro Scala
Trombone – Alberto Oliva
Trumpet – Diego Frabetti, Mirco Rubegni
Vibraphone – Pasquale Mirr
Written-By – Alex Trebo, Andrea Benini
Arranged By – Andrea Benini
Producer – Andrea Benini

Sunday, 14 April 2019

The Cinematic Orchestra ‎– To Believe (2019)

Style: Contemporary Jazz, Downtempo, Soul-Jazz
GFormat: CD, Vinyl
Label: Ninja Tune

Tracklist:
1.   To Believe
2.   A Caged Bird / Imitations Of Life
3.   Lessons
4.   Wait For Now / Leave The World
5.   The Workers Of Art
6.   Zero One / This Fantasy
7.   A Promise

Credits:
Bass – Kaveh Rastager, Sam Vicary
Double Bass – Kevin Abdella
Drums – Luke Flowers
Guitar – Kevin Abdella, L D Brown
Keyboards – Dominic J Marshall
Orchestra – Metropole Orchestra
Organ – Dennis Hamm
Percussion – João Parahyba
Piano – Aleks Podraza, Dennis Hamm
Saxophone – Tom Chant
Strings – Miguel Atwood-Ferguson
Synthesizer – Dennis Hamm
Vocals – Dominic Smith
Backing Vocals – L D Brown
Performer, Producer, Arranged By, Written-By – Dominic Smith, Jason Swinscoe

I’ve always found the Cinematic Orchestra too pretentious, too austere, a band whose ambitions outran their abilities. With this fourth album, 12 years after their last, that austerity is over. To Believe is heartbreakingly brilliant: a collection of exquisitely assembled songs that appear delicate from a distance before revealing a close-quarters core strength. Band leaders Jason Swinscoe and Dominic Smith have loosely arranged seven lightly jazzy tracks around the themes of belief and what it means to believe. Much as the pair attempt to make movies with their music, the best song has no dialogue: the meandering instrumental Lessons is a glorious balm, nine minutes of murmuring conversation between the players, dominated by Luke Flowers’ gently military drums. It has depth and meaning without context, the ideal soundtrack to a film that doesn’t exist. The sweeping grandeur of A Caged Bird/Imitations of Life is another cinematic collaboration with the always articulate and engaging Roots Manuva, a sort-of sequel to the epic All Things to All Men, and just as good. Every song here could easily be five or 10 minutes longer. A triumph. 
Damien Morris / The Guardian

Joe Harriott And John Mayer Double Quintet ‎– Indo-Jazz Fusions I & II (1998)

Style: Fusion, Free Improvisation, Easy Listening
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Redial, EMI, Double-Up, EmArcy

Tracklist:
1.   Partita
2.   Multani
3.   Gana
4.   Acka Raga
5.   Subject
6.   Raga Piloo
7.   "Song" Before "Sunrise"
8.   Purvi Variations
9.   Mishra Blues

Credits:
Alto Saxophone – Joe Harriott
Bass – Coleridge Goode
Drums – Alan Ganley, Jackie Dougan
Flute – Chris Taylor
Harpsichord – John Mayer
Piano – Pat Smythe
Sitar – Diwan Motihar
Tabla – Keshav Sathe
Tambura – Chandrahas Paigankar
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Kenny Wheeler, Shake Keane
Violin – John Mayer
Composed By, Directed By – John Mayer
Mastered By – Erhard Meldau

Filho Da Mãe ‎– Água​-​Má (2018)

Style: Acoustic, Blues Rock, Experimental
Format: CD, Vinyl, FLAC
Label: Lovers & Lollypops

Tracklist:
01.   Praia
02.   Não Me Voltes Atrás
03.   Os Meus Ombros Chumbaram a Geografia
04.   Nem Chuva, Nem Cães
05.   Não, Não Danço
06.   Perseguição De Bananas
07.   Camelos Nas Levadas
08.   Poncho Como O Vento
09.   Marraram As Ondas, Partiu-se O Pontão
10.   Casa

Credits:
Mastered By – Nuno Monteiro
Producer, Songwriter – Rui Carvalho
Recorded By, Producer, Mixed By – Hugo Valverde

Filho da Mãe já é um sedimento na música portuguesa - ao longo dos anos, o rio que Rui Carvalho evoca com a própria música criou o pós-hardcore dos If Lucy Fell, os caos acústicos de Palácio e Cabeça e o Mergulho no pouco convencional, não esquecendo ainda colaborações com artistas como Ricardo Martins. Apesar da jornada ter sido longa e variada, o guitarrista de Lisboa regressa à complexidade que usou para fazer o seu primeiro álbum a solo, Palácio, e infunde-lhe uma dose extra de americana e primitivismo. 
Agua Má - o resultado de uma residência na Madeira - é já o quarto álbum de estúdio que Filho da Mãe edita em nome próprio em apenas 7 anos e revela-se como um exercício mais sóbrio sobre velhas tendências. Melodias e harmonias bem pensadas são reforçadas por uma produção minimal, em que as respirações que pautam e marcam o compasso humano de cada tema são tão musicais como a música em si. Rui Carvalho continua a impingir a sua impaciência musical nas pequenas variações que incute às frases que constrói à volta de cada tema, sendo possível, como sempre, respirar a mesma substância que certamente também terá inspirado Norberto Lobo, suada pelos grandes nomes da guitarra primitiva de John Fahey, Robbie Basho e Sandy Bull, entre outros.

Surpreendentemente, a empunhar o típico instrumento mais cliché possível e a fazer apenas uso dele, Filho da Mãe consegue ser ainda dos artistas portugueses mais refrescantes da atualidade, não precisando de esquemas complexos ou de sonoridades caricatas para fazer render as 6 cordas que enchem salas e corações. Por todo o disco há uma sensibilidade musical característica, ressoando ao logo da primeira metade de Água Má. Somos levados por linhas orelhudas que, por breves instantes, se ausentam para abrirem desarmonias - um caso catedrático é "Não, não danço", com uma melodia quasi-pop, a tornar imprevisível a agradável sensação de estranheza que acordes mais dissonantes causam. 
"Perseguição de bananas" marca a entrada no lado mais ambicioso do disco. Abandona-se o pop mas retém-se a sensibilidade, com o "pós-folk" de "Camelo nas Levadas", o dedilhar incessante e incansável de "Poncha como o vento", e as reverberações exageradas e sinuosas de "Marraram as ondas, partiu-se o pontão", uma epopeia em menos de 7 minutos àquele que é Filho da Mãe - um tema que nos deixa ao abandono para mais tarde nos vir buscar, um tema que é perder para de novo encontrar, um tema que castiga para mais tarde abraçar e que se destaca como o melhor momento deste disco. De uma maneira pouco comum, "Casa", a última "música" do disco é talvez a que nos soa mais familiar, uma gravação de campo com lugar que chegue para o íntimo. 
Como não há maneira de o pôr sem soar bajulador, digo-o de uma só vez: este é o melhor trabalho que Rui Carvalho, em todas as suas incarnações, produziu. É simultaneamente sensível e agressivo, com uma premonição sobre-humana para saber o que é preciso em cada momento para que as frases musicais se concretizem em temas concretos. Esta água pode não ser boa de nome, mas faz-nos tão bem. 
thresholdmagazine.pt