After reedist Ken Vandermark's residency at The Stone in 2016, he went into the studio with improvisers Nate Wooley on trumpet, Sylvie Courvoisier on piano, and Tom Rainey on drums to record this spectacular album of forward-reaching jazz using stunning technique and wonderful lyrical complexity, as they run through compositions from Wooley, Vandermark and Courvoisier.
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2018 Country: Switzerland Packaging: Jewel Case Recorded at Oktaven Audio, in Mount Vernon, New York, on August 17th, 2017, by Ryan Streber.
"It was only during Ken Vandermark's residency at the Jazz club The Stone in January 2016 that Vandermark found himself in the same vicinity as Nate Wooley, Sylvie Courvoisier and Tom Rainey. A year later they went into the studio with nine compositions - three each by Courvoisier, Vandermark and Wooley. These four musicians have well-documented, distinct personalities which, in this context, results in performances full of surprises, rich contrasts and shared responsibilities. The music sounds thoughtful, but never over-wrought. They play by intuition, yet retain a vivid complexity. Their composing is transparent and uncliched; their improvising provided with a remarkable coherence and openness. And perhaps it is exactly this - a fresh collective unity that keeps their respective personalities and idiosyncrasies intact - that brings them success in this bold and collaborative performance. Art needs to pique and renew your interest, take you on inspiring and surprising journeys and sometimes even confront your own biases. Creating, not reviving as a way to evolve and to keep going forward in all directions."-Intakt
"This summit of talent actually delivers what the title promises. The quartet creates an all-encompassing portrait of the state of the art, in which what might be thought noise is adroitly recontextualized in a musical situation. In a way that's what the members have been doing throughout their illustrious careers. Given their daunting skills as improvisers, perhaps the surprise here is that they do so through the medium of composition.
While Chicago reedman Ken Vandermark has forged connections across the world, his links with the New York scene have only really taken flight since his residency at The Stone, documented on Momentum 1: Stone (Audiographic Records, 2016). All three of the other participants appeared alongside him there, although trumpeter Nate Wooley already formed half of an inspired duo with the reedman. Pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and drummer Tom Rainey prove a similarly excellent fit in what could be seen as an avant-garde supergroup.
All but Rainey each contribute three concise but event-filled charts to the 44-minute program. Courvoisier supplies a cracking opener, repurposing her tune "La Cigale," here named "Checkpoint," as the setting for a series of adventurous solos. The cut begins in spectacular fashion with an explosive Vandermark soliloquy, before the ensemble kicks in.
In the tracks that follow, the compelling and diverse compositional frameworks allow the foursome to demonstrate their flair by all manner of means, from unaccompanied features like Wooley's swooshing exclamations and vocalized mutters on "VWCR," to duets such as that between Vandermark's squalling tenor and Rainey's tappy clip on "Tag," to striking juxtapositions exemplified by the silences scattered amid the deconstructed flow of "Truth Through Mass Individuation."
The palpable bond between the horn players shines during their spirited interplay on "Sparks" (a reimagining of Courvoisier's "Eclats For Ornette"). But it's just one strength among many. Rainey's flexible yet precise drumming, another major asset, performs a critical role in providing the connective tissue which unifies the nine pieces. He also forms a cohesive unit with Courvoisier, especially showcased in the sudden but stylistically varied piano/drum interjections which spice the horn drone in Wooley's "The Space Between the Teeth."
Vandermark's processional "Simple Cut" with its tolling minor key piano melody, serves as a wonderful, elegiac closing statement, its impact all the greater given the richness and density of what has come before."-John Sharpe, All About Jazz