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Volume 23 Issue 6 - March 2018

In this issue: Canadian Stage, Tapestry Opera and Vancouver Opera collaborate to take Gogol’s short story The Overcoat to the operatic stage; Montreal-based Sam Shalabi brings his ensemble Land of Kush, and his newest composition, to Toronto; Five Canadian composers, each with a different CBC connection, are nominated for JUNOs; and The WholeNote team presents its annual Summer Music Education Directory, a directory of summer music camps, programs and courses across the province and beyond.

In this issue: Canadian Stage, Tapestry Opera and Vancouver Opera collaborate to take Gogol’s short story The Overcoat to the operatic stage; Montreal-based Sam Shalabi brings his ensemble Land of Kush, and his newest composition, to Toronto; Five Canadian composers, each with a different CBC connection, are nominated for JUNOs; and The WholeNote team presents its annual Summer Music Education Directory, a directory of summer music camps, programs and courses across the province and beyond.

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Music for Jazz Orchestra<br />

Brian Dickinson<br />

Addo Records AJR036 (briandickinson.ca)<br />

!!<br />

Music for Jazz<br />

Orchestra, a new<br />

big band album<br />

on Addo Records<br />

from pianist/bandleader/composer<br />

Brian Dickinson,<br />

is in part a tribute,<br />

although not a<br />

tribute album. The disc is anchored by The<br />

Gentle Giant Suite, an original three-part<br />

homage to the late Kenny Wheeler, written<br />

following Wheeler’s passing in the fall of<br />

2014. Dickinson and Wheeler share a long<br />

history, collaborating both with other musicians<br />

(including drummer Joe LaBarbera and<br />

vocalist Norma Winstone) and on the duo<br />

album Still Waters, recorded in 1998 at Glenn<br />

Gould Studio in Toronto.<br />

Dickinson’s exemplary compositional and<br />

arranging skills – which are on full display<br />

throughout The Gentle Giant Suite – are<br />

matched by his sophisticated piano playing,<br />

both as a soloist and as a member of the<br />

excellent rhythm section, which features<br />

bassist Jim Vivian, drummer Ted Warren, and<br />

guitarist Sam Dickinson, who shares his father’s<br />

harmonic maturity. Beyond the suite, the<br />

medium-slow 3/4 Gil (written for Gil Evans)<br />

is a beautiful, texturally rich piece that showcases<br />

the sensitivity of the horn section; it<br />

also features compelling solos from Brian<br />

Dickinson, saxophonist Kelly Jefferson, trumpeter<br />

Kevin Turcotte, and an especially strong<br />

showing from Sam Dickinson. Orion, written<br />

for Wayne Shorter, is perhaps the album’s<br />

most bombastic offering – the ferocious shout<br />

chorus alone is worth the price of admission<br />

– but it also contains a powerful, perfectly<br />

paced piano solo from Dickinson. Overall,<br />

an excellent album: confident, nuanced and<br />

captivating from beat one.<br />

Colin Story<br />

Rites of Ascension<br />

Nick Maclean Quartet<br />

Browntasauras Records NCC-1701K<br />

(nicholasmaclean.com)<br />

!!<br />

Rites of<br />

Ascension, the<br />

debut album from<br />

the Nick Maclean<br />

Quartet, is a tribute<br />

to Herbie Hancock’s<br />

elemental 1960s<br />

Blue Note era<br />

recordings, and<br />

a daring original musical statement on its<br />

own. Formed in 2016 under the leadership of<br />

Maclean, the group salutes the great improvisers<br />

while generating original tunes that are<br />

crisp and cognizant.<br />

These four musicians – Maclean (piano),<br />

Brownman Ali (trumpet), Jesse Dietschi<br />

(acoustic bass) and Tyler Goertzen (drums)<br />

– have a great synergy and drive, and some<br />

serious chops. Their renditions of Hancock’s<br />

four classics are full of energy and forward<br />

momentum while managing to retain the<br />

unhurried character of the earlier compositions.<br />

The original tunes (six by Maclean<br />

and one by Ali) are both intimate and global,<br />

touching upon themes from mythology and<br />

history to personal growth and the critical<br />

mind. Maclean’s creative mind and aesthetics<br />

are obvious in every aspect of this album,<br />

his piano solos both lyrical and invigorating,<br />

supported by a stellar rhythm section. The<br />

album features fiercely strong trumpet solos,<br />

indicative of Freddie Hubbard’s style at times<br />

and distinctively unique.<br />

Elasticity of Time and Space is a standout<br />

– I loved the opening theme, metric modulations<br />

and tempo changes, as well as playfully<br />

robust solos. Feral Serenity, a haunting and<br />

intimate ballad, unfolds a soulful bass and<br />

piano exchange. The liner notes, describing<br />

each tune in depth, allow the listener to<br />

peek behind the curtains of the album in<br />

the making.<br />

Ivana Popovic<br />

Departure<br />

BC Double Quartet<br />

Cellar Live CL091517 (cellarlive.com)<br />

!!<br />

Bill Coon, JUNOnominated<br />

guitarist<br />

and composer, is<br />

the mastermind<br />

behind BC Double<br />

Quartet’s new<br />

release Departures.<br />

The music on this<br />

album is refreshingly<br />

innovative and engaging. In the words<br />

of the composer: “Jazz quartet meets string<br />

quartet on this new recording, and each<br />

quartet has their unique universe of possibilities.<br />

As a writer, the gleeful rush for me is<br />

to explore the potential of these intersecting<br />

universes.”<br />

Here we can hear several different (sub)<br />

genres, all blended together, sometimes in the<br />

same piece. The jazz quartet doesn’t deviate<br />

from their genre while string quartet writing is<br />

more varied – sometimes classical, sometimes<br />

cinematic, and when not densely lyrical, full of<br />

rhythmic life with groovy hooks and textures.<br />

Bill Coon is a clever arranger and a masterful<br />

guitar player, and the rest of the musicians are<br />

just superb. The ensemble has a wonderful<br />

chemistry. The title song, featuring splendid<br />

strings, a solid rhythm section and alluring<br />

solos, was conceived at the Banff Centre for<br />

the Arts. I truly enjoyed Coon’s arrangement<br />

of Chorando Baixinho by Abel Ferreira<br />

– the beautiful melody is enriched with pizzicato<br />

string textures, mellow guitar over the<br />

bass lines and a sultry trumpet solo. Another<br />

favourite is Zattitude, a catchy, lively number<br />

that exudes the infectious feeling of joy and<br />

charming zest. The liner notes offer short<br />

musings on each piece. Highly recommended.<br />

Ivana Popovic<br />

Boule Spiel<br />

Magda Mayas; Éric Normand; Pierre-Yves<br />

Martel<br />

Tour de Bras TDB 9025 (tourdebras.com)<br />

!!<br />

An enthralling<br />

sonic landscape<br />

encompassing<br />

mercurial harshness,<br />

unexpected<br />

contours and cultivated<br />

accents, Boule<br />

Spiel is an affirmation<br />

of the textural<br />

cooperation among German pianist Magda<br />

Mayas and two Québécois musicians, electric<br />

bassist Éric Normand of Rimouski, where<br />

the session was recorded, and Montreal viola<br />

da gamba player Pierre-Yves Martel. Those<br />

instruments, along with “feedback, snare<br />

drum, objects and speaker” are the only<br />

sound-makers listed. But the minimalist tones<br />

which blend to create this two-track journey,<br />

including keening whistles, string plucks,<br />

bell peals, percussive thumps, feedback flutters<br />

and oscillated hums, not only make individual<br />

attribution unlikely, but at the same<br />

time highlight the constant unexpected shifts<br />

within the understated unrolling sequences.<br />

Emphasizing atmosphere over narrative<br />

or instrumental virtuosity, the trio’s<br />

blended output, especially on the more-than-<br />

30-minute introductory Lancer, contains<br />

enough processed drones, electric bass stops,<br />

keyboard patterning and inner-piano-string<br />

plucks to vary the aural scenery enough to<br />

create a sense of harmonic and rhythmic<br />

progress, but without jarring interludes. By<br />

the time the concluding Spiegelbildauflösung<br />

or “mirror image resolution” fades away,<br />

the three confirm how carefully each can<br />

reflect the others’ cerebral improvisations. An<br />

enlightened sound journey has been reflected<br />

and completed, but the details of what transpired<br />

individually are impossible to accurately<br />

analyze.<br />

Ken Waxman<br />

All Can Work<br />

John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble<br />

New Amsterdam NWAM094<br />

(newamrecords.com)<br />

! ! Drummer<br />

John Hollenbeck<br />

convened 20 of New<br />

York’s most accomplished<br />

improvisers<br />

to interpret<br />

his newest compositions<br />

and arrangements.<br />

Concerned<br />

mostly with the harmonic relationship among<br />

instrumental sections and textures which<br />

blend into pastel billows, Hollenbeck’s conception<br />

is horizontal and flowing, with limits on<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>March</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 77

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