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Volume 21 Issue 3 - November 2015

"Come" seems to be the verb that knits this month's issue together. Sondra Radvanovsky comes to Koerner, William Norris comes to Tafel as their new GM, opera comes to Canadian Stage; and (a long time coming!) Jane Bunnett's musicianship and mentorship are honoured with the Premier's award for excellence; plus David Jaeger's ongoing series on the golden years of CBC Radio Two, Andrew Timar on hybridity, a bumper crop of record reviews and much much more. Come on in!

"Come" seems to be the verb that knits this month's issue together. Sondra Radvanovsky comes to Koerner, William Norris comes to Tafel as their new GM, opera comes to Canadian Stage; and (a long time coming!) Jane Bunnett's musicianship and mentorship are honoured with the Premier's award for excellence; plus David Jaeger's ongoing series on the golden years of CBC Radio Two, Andrew Timar on hybridity, a bumper crop of record reviews and much much more. Come on in!

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Subcontinental Drift and the more folksy<br />

A Place to Call Home. It is their strength of<br />

vision that welcomes Khurshid’s musicianship<br />

to all the tracks. Rakes of Mallow is an<br />

ancient Irish fiddle tune introduced to India<br />

and taught to local musicians during the<br />

English rule. Sung passionately by Kurshid, it<br />

is followed in medley form by the rollicking<br />

original Rouge River Valley. Bob Dylan’s<br />

Blowin’ in the Wind is given a timeless<br />

world beat cover. Journey to Freedom is an<br />

uplifting positive song/anthem sonic blend<br />

tracing Kurshid’s journey from Pakistan to<br />

Canada. Other special guests lending their<br />

signature sounds to specific tracks include<br />

Ravi Naimpally, Shweta Subram, Waleed<br />

Abdulhamid and a backing choir.<br />

The production qualities feature a balanced<br />

mix and live off the floor clear tone quality.<br />

Subcontinental Drift is simply great music for<br />

all to enjoy and respect.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

Shadow Trails<br />

Linda McRae<br />

Borealis Records BCD237 (lindamcrae.<br />

com)<br />

!!<br />

This stirring roots/<br />

folk/country project<br />

is the inspired brainchild<br />

of Canadian<br />

vocalist/composer/<br />

multi-instrumentalist<br />

Linda McRae and<br />

her husband, retired<br />

rancher and poet, James Whitmire. The<br />

material (nearly all original) is inspired by the<br />

Nashville-based couple’s life-affirming work<br />

with incarcerated, nascent writers being held<br />

in the notorious New Folsom Prison, as well<br />

as their important work with at-risk youth<br />

– many of whom contribute moving lyrics<br />

and their personal stories to this recording.<br />

Perhaps best known as a member of the platinum-selling<br />

band Spirit of the West, McRae<br />

brings to the table her well-lived-in contralto<br />

and infallibly honest delivery. Well-produced<br />

by guitarist Steve Dawson (who also serves<br />

as frequent co-writer), each tune tells a story<br />

of love, loss, regret, poverty, isolation, injustice<br />

and also grace. In addition to Dawson and<br />

Whitmire, McRae’s talented collaborators also<br />

include bassist John Dymond, drummer Gary<br />

Craig, keyboardist Steve O’Connor and an<br />

array of guests including fiddler Fats Kaplin<br />

and Ray Bonneville on harmonica.<br />

The music here is unflaggingly authentic,<br />

deeply satisfying, refreshingly acoustic<br />

and imbued with a big dose of soul and a<br />

skilled musicality. Of special note are Linda’s<br />

biographical reverie, Can You Hear Me<br />

Calling; also Flowers of Appalachia, with<br />

lyrics by Ken Blackburn – an inmate in New<br />

Folsom Prison who became a poet and lyricist<br />

through the Arts in Corrections program –<br />

and finally Singing River, the heartrending<br />

tale of Te-lah-nay and the dehumanizing<br />

treatment of Yuchi Native Americans and<br />

their brutal relocation away from their<br />

beloved “Singing River” in Muscle Shoals,<br />

Alabama. Whether roots music is your cup<br />

of tea or not, this standout recording is a<br />

consciousness-raising journey through a<br />

challenging emotional landscape that also<br />

embraces hope and redemption.<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

Something in the Air<br />

Honouring More Than The Few Famous Jazz Greats<br />

With music like the other arts increasingly focused on known<br />

quantities, recorded salutes to jazz greats have almost become<br />

a subcategory of their own. If the world needs another record<br />

of Beethoven, Mozart, Elvis or Sinatra, then saluting Ellington, Trane<br />

or Miles one more time shouldn’t be a dilemma. But more erudite<br />

improvisers realize the music’s wider reach, and if they opt to honour<br />

innovators, as on the CDs here, choose lesser-known but equally<br />

important stylists.<br />

Prize of the group is saxophonist Roscoe<br />

Mitchell’s Celebrating Fred Anderson (Nessa<br />

ncd-37 nessarecords.com). Here, one of the<br />

founders of Chicago’s influential Association<br />

for the Advancement of Creative Musicians<br />

(AACM) honours another of its founders,<br />

tenor saxophonist Fred Anderson (1929-2010)<br />

by playing two of Anderson’s and four of his<br />

own compositions. Backed by other AACMers,<br />

cellist Tomeka Reid, bassist Junius Paul and drummer Vincent Davis,<br />

Mitchell, 75, a more experimental stylist than Anderson, uses the<br />

narrow, near-Oriental timbres of sopranino to liberate Anderson’s<br />

Bernice and Ladies in Love from the older saxophonist’s freebop<br />

conceptions. As Davis’ cymbal smacks sprinkle intermittent tones<br />

like flowers on a tombstone, Mitchell uses the natural melancholy<br />

from Reid’s instrument plus his sax’s nipped tones to convert Bernice<br />

into an effective threnody. In contrast, Ladies in Love moves from a<br />

respectful moderato melody to Morse code-like beeps, expressed by<br />

near replication of infant cries from Mitchell plus staccato counterpoint<br />

from the cello. Emphasized is the rainbow-like expressiveness<br />

of the theme’s powerful colours. Hey Fred is the session’s highlight.<br />

During its 17-minute length Mitchell expels staccato alto saxophone<br />

timbres with the ferocity of a lightning storm, while Paul’s thundering<br />

stabs and slants pace his string tones. As laboratory scientistlike<br />

Mitchell exposes melody permutations, Reid contributes arco<br />

KEN WAXMAN<br />

extensions and Davis a continuous pitter patter. Crucially, the climax<br />

is reached when circularly breathed saxophone pitches blend with<br />

distinctively scattered arco swipes from both string players. Confirmed<br />

is the abiding power of, plus the continued sonic research involved in<br />

creating, the sounds that Anderson and Mitchell helped nurture.<br />

Cello, soprano, bass and drums are also<br />

featured in a salute to another deceased<br />

saxophonist, also using a combination of<br />

his compositions and others written especially<br />

for the date. But soprano saxophonist<br />

Rob Reddy’s Bechet: Our Contemporary<br />

(Reddy Music RED 003 robreddy.com) resembles<br />

neither Celebrating Fred Anderson nor<br />

a reproduction of the music of New Orleansborn<br />

soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet<br />

(1897-1959). Like theatre companies which perform modern variations<br />

on Shakespeare’s plays, Reddy re-orchestrates the timeworn<br />

pieces into something contemporary. Case in point is Chant in the<br />

Night expanded from Bechet’s rickety-tick, under-three-minute reed<br />

showcase to a 15-minute exercise in counterpoint between trombonist<br />

Curtis Fowlkes’s protracted slide smudges and hard-punching<br />

almost rural licks from Marvin Swell’s guitar. Encircled by flashing<br />

swipes from violinist Charles Burnham and cellist Marika Hughes<br />

plus amalgamated horn riffs, the end result piles burnished tones<br />

atop one another creating a unique structure that’s both traditional<br />

and futuristic, especially when a Theremin-like twinge signals the<br />

end. Trombone and trumpet vamps predominate on Petite Fleur. But<br />

like a ballet dancer who surprises by executing a faultless cha cha,<br />

rather than the familiar theme coming from Reddy’s soprano, it’s<br />

instead given a memorable reading by Burnham. Two other Bechet<br />

tunes are strutting expositions, although Pheeroan akLaff’s Gene<br />

Krupa-like hollow wood block smacks on Broken Windmill may be<br />

more trick than tribute. Reddy’s portion of the tunes is as high class,<br />

74 | Nov 1 - Dec 7, <strong>2015</strong> thewholenote.com

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