* Hesperion XXI (Savall): Spirit Of Armenia (Alia Vox SACD)
* Andrew Hill: Change (Blue Note CD)
* Charlie
Haden/Jan Garbarek/Egberto Gismonti: Magico (ECM LP)
* Dave Holland: Prism (Dare2 CD)
* Dave Liebman: Lookout Farm (ECM LP)
* Keith Jarrett: The Survivor’s Suite
(ECM LP)
* Keith Jarrett: Into The Light (ECM
2LP)
* Keith Jarrett/Jan Garbarek:
Luminescence (ECM LP)
* Jan Garbarek/Kjell Johnsen:
Aftenland (ECM LP)
* Jan Garbarek: Places (ECM LP)
* Jan Garbarek Group: Photo With… (ECM
LP)
* Art Lande/Jan Garbarek: Red Lanta
(ECM LP)
* Ralph Towner: Solstice (ECM LP)
* Egberto Gismonti / Nana Vasconcelos:
Duas Vozes (ECM LP)
* Eberhard Weber: The Following
Morning (ECM LP)
* Enrico Rava Quartet: Enrico Rava
Quartet (ECM LP)
* Terje Rypdal: Odyssey In Studio
& In Concert (ECM 3CD)
* Shankar: Vision (ECM LP)
* Manfred Schoof Quintet: Scales (ECM
LP)
* Richard Beirach: Elm (ECM LP)
* Weather Report: Procession (Columbia
LP)
* Weather Report: Domino Theory
(Columbia LP)
* Taylor Ho Bynum Sextet: Apparent
Distance (Firehouse 12 CD)
* Taylor Ho Bynum Sextet: Navigation
(Possibility Abstracts X & XI) (Firehouse 12 2LP/MP3)(†)
* Taylor Ho Bynum 7-tette: Navigation
(Possibility Abstracts XII & XIII) (Firehouse 12 2CD)(†)
* Book Of Three (T.H. Bynum/J. Hebert/G.
Cleaver): Continuum 2012 (Relative Pitch)
* Tom Rainey Trio: Cornelia St. Café,
Brooklyn, NY 2012-12-30 (AUD WAV)
* Tom Rainey Trio: Cornelia St. Café,
Brooklyn, NY 2013-10-19 (AUD WAV)
* Dawn of Midi: First (Accretions CD)†
* Dawn of Midi: Live (Dawn Of
Midi/iTunes MP3)†
* I Am The Center: Private Press New
Age Music in America, 1950-1990 (d.1) (Light in the Attic 3LP)
* Frank Ocean: Channel Orange
(Island/Def Jam CD)†/‡
* Shelby Lynne: Just A Little Lovin’
(Lost Highway LP/CD)(†/‡)
* Edgar Froese: Macula Transfer (Brain
LP)
* Daryl Hall & John Oates: Do What
You Want, Be What You Are (RCA/Legacy 4CD)
* Jansen/Barbieri: Worlds In A Small
Room (Pan East LP)
* Earth: Earth 2: Low Frequency Version (Sub Pop 2LP)
* Earth: Phase 3: Thrones And
Dominions (Sub Pop 2LP)
* Boards Of Canada: Twoism (Warp EP)
* Boards Of Canada: In A Beautiful
Place Out In The Country (Warp EP)
* Boards Of Canada: Trans Canada
Highway (Warp EP)
* Sunn O))): Black One (Southern Lord
2LP)
* Zombi: Escape Velocity (Relapse LP)
* Lumbar: The First & Last Days of
Unwelcome (Southern Lord LP)
* Wild Nothing: Nocturne (Temporary
Residence CD) †
* Wild Nothing: Empty Estates
(Temporary Residence CDEP)†
* Chris Forsyth: Solar Motel (Paradise
of Bachelors LP)
†=iPod/iTunes
‡=car
Commentary:
In his liner
notes to his new release on the Firehouse 12 label, Taylor Ho Bynum repeats a common
criticism of recorded music – and in particular, improvisatory music—lamenting
“the inherent contradiction of creating a permanent document of an ephemeral
moment.” Indeed, the transformation of a spontaneous and unique moment in time
into something fixed and commoditized is a troubling aspect of modern musical
aesthetics, leading some artists disdain recordings altogether as, at best, a
necessary evil. Bynum addresses the issue head on with Navigation, an ambitious
four-album set released last week on multiple formats, with different performances of the
same composition recorded both live and in the studio. By presenting four
iterations of the extended, multi-segment work, the listener is invited to
“consider the composition as a set of possibilities” (hence the subtitle, Possibility
Abstracts X, XI, XII & XIII) and “to enjoy the mutable nature of the music
in multiple realizations rather than focusing on one particular performance.”
Fortunately,
the composition (and performances thereof) warrants such in-depth scrutiny. Navigation is a fittingly descriptive title, as the ensemble "navigates" its
way through its six interchangeable movements: “ISH,” “WUK,” “ZADE,” “TRIST,” “MANCH”
and “KID.” While the musical materials within each movement are pre-composed (to one degree or another),
the order of performance and resulting structure is modular and
improvisational, left to the ensemble to decide in real-time. As Bynum points
out in his notes, “this only works with artists of exceptional creativity and
musicianship” and his Sextet, with Bynum on cornet, Jim Hobbs on alto
saxophone, Bill Lowe on bass trombone and tuba, Mary Halvorson on electric
guitar, Ken Filiano on acoustic bass and Tomas Fujiwara on drums and vibraphone, is made up of
some of the most interesting jazz musicians in New York. Their commitment and boundless inventiveness makes the four
performances uniquely satisfying, each illuminating a different aspect or variegated
approach to the material.
The complete Navigation
consists of two different releases on two different formats: Possibility
Abstracts X & XI is available only as a limited edition two-LP vinyl edition
and was recorded live on December 7, 2012 while
Possibility Abstracts XII & XIII was recorded in the studio on the following day and is
available only on a two-CD set. Either way, a download coupon is
included for the entire four-volume set, which is a nice touch (not everyone has a turntable these days—though they should!). Interestingly, none of the
performances include all six movements and some of them are repeated, an
indication of just how mutable these Navigations can be. And while you could
say the live performances have the edge in terms of energy and intensity, the
studio recordings (which add second percussionist Chad Taylor) sound more
cerebral yet more vividly realized in a way, as if the performers had by then become so fully
comfortable with the material they allowed themselves to dig in even deeper. Of
course, savoring the subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) differentiation between various
versions is the whole point of this mammoth, four-disc set and amply rewards
careful and repeated listening.
The music
ranges from the old-timey blues feel of “MANCH” to the spiky
pointillism of “ISH”; from the outright rocking riffage of “TRIST” to the linear
post-bop of “KID"—with plenty of opportunities for exuberantly free, group
improvisation and densely textured avant-gardism along the way (“ZADE,” “WUK”).
A wide variety of notational strategies are explored, from conventional to graphic to
“cartographic,” and while the influence of Anthony Braxton is palpable, Bynum
has developed his own organic compositional approach by this point and Navigation is by far
his most coherent and fully integrated work to date. But, for me, what is exciting about these recordings is hearing how his Sextet (and 7-tette)
has come together as a working band. There are moments on here that remind me of
nothing more than the Grateful Dead at their most intuitive, as melodic
fragments and rhythmic motifs are tossed around during the elongated transitions,
gradually coalescing into the movement’s notated arrangements. This is the
sound of a real group-mind thinking its way through music in way that only a
well-seasoned band is capable of. The penurious economics of jazz usually dictate
ad hoc groupings and a lack of rehearsal so it is really a treat to hear how
this group has developed into a supple and adventuresome ensemble—a real band.
With Navigation, Bynum has created his first magnum opus, a large-scale masterpiece that demands your attention and thoughtful response. While any one of these performances
would have sufficed to cement Bynum's reputation as both a player and composer, having four—in two different formats—offers the listener
an opportunity to experience the multitude of possibilities inherent in
this (and any) recording. Rather than presenting the work as fixed in
time, self-contained and permanent, Navigation documents the evanescent yet transformative power of improvisational music. Not just highly recommended—Navigation is essential listening for anyone interested in state-of-the-art musical expression.