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Volume 23 Issue 9 - June / July / August 2018

PLANTING NOT PAVING! In this JUNE / JULY /AUGUST combined issue: Farewell interviews with TSO's Peter Oundjian and Stratford Summer Music's John Miller, along with "going places" chats with Luminato's Josephine Ridge, TD Jazz's Josh Grossman and Charm of Finches' Terry Lim. ) Plus a summer's worth of fruitful festival inquiry, in the city and on the road, in a feast of stories and our annual GREEN PAGES summer Directory.

PLANTING NOT PAVING! In this JUNE / JULY /AUGUST combined issue: Farewell interviews with TSO's Peter Oundjian and Stratford Summer Music's John Miller, along with "going places" chats with Luminato's Josephine Ridge, TD Jazz's Josh Grossman and Charm of Finches' Terry Lim. ) Plus a summer's worth of fruitful festival inquiry, in the city and on the road, in a feast of stories and our annual GREEN PAGES summer Directory.

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stunning compositions include Ultestakon/<br />

Shaker Lullaby, which has a simply gorgeous<br />

melody and sonorous percussion that evokes<br />

a comforting heartbeat; and also Love Song,<br />

which is arranged with angelic and complex<br />

vocals that act as sonic waves of uplifting<br />

awareness and oneness.<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

ID<br />

MAZ<br />

Bleu 44 BLEUCD-4445 (mazworld.ca)<br />

!!<br />

Montreal group<br />

MAZ has many<br />

accolades under<br />

their belt. With this,<br />

their third album,<br />

there should be<br />

many more to come<br />

as the group tastefully<br />

takes Québécois traditional music in a<br />

new direction, as the group self-describes, “in<br />

a flow of trad, jazz and electro.”<br />

Each member is a superb performer/<br />

composer. Leader/electric guitarist/banjoist<br />

Marc Maziade plays and sings with confidence<br />

and originality. His opening zippy clear vocals<br />

in the traditional tune La guenille foreshadow<br />

what the future tracks will bring, with a fastdriving<br />

bass groove by Hugo Blouin, great<br />

fiddling by Pierre-Olivier Dufresne, and<br />

Roxane Beaulieu on keyboards. The rest are<br />

original tunes which feature interesting style<br />

developments. Love the club dance feel of<br />

Projet 4, as a touch of folk is supported by<br />

solid low-end bounce and electro music. Le<br />

fléau moves at a nice walking pace as traditional<br />

music is modernized with a nice accelerando,<br />

bouncy melody, instrumental solos<br />

and closing squeaks. Le cercle dives into more<br />

contemporary sounds with its larger interval<br />

leap melodic lines, multi-rhythms and quasiatonal<br />

harmonic changes. The fun upbeat<br />

closing of ID 4/4 – reel du chemin moves<br />

subtly from pop vocals and grooves to a more<br />

traditional reel so we can all remember where<br />

their music came from!<br />

MAZ members are so respectful of each<br />

other that the multi-genre styles they are<br />

transforming and combining never feel<br />

contrived and produce fresh, accessible,<br />

inventive Québécois world music.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

Three Rivers<br />

Jordan Officer<br />

Spectra Musique SPECD-7866<br />

(spectramusique.com)<br />

!!<br />

Perhaps like<br />

many outside of<br />

Quebec, I first<br />

discovered guitarist<br />

Jordan Officer by<br />

way of his association<br />

with vocalist<br />

Susie Arioli. First<br />

impacted by the<br />

authenticity of his guitar playing and by how<br />

deeply he had drunk from the well of Charlie<br />

Christian, Carl Kress and Django Reinhardt,<br />

Officer established a high bar of excellence<br />

for guitarists in Canada, playing meaningfully<br />

and without unnecessary sentimentality<br />

in what I might describe as “roots” music; a<br />

performative style that foregrounds acoustic<br />

timbres, period-piece instruments and nondigitally<br />

mediated sounds to conjure up a<br />

place and space of yesteryear.<br />

Said commitment continues here on Three<br />

Rivers, but, like many broad musical thinkers,<br />

Officer is now beyond genre in his approach.<br />

While there are clear flourishes of jazz<br />

throughout, this recording is an expansive<br />

musical undertaking that employs the blues,<br />

country, a connection to hymns, and gospel<br />

singing with whimsically expressive lyrics<br />

scattered throughout. It sounds like a road<br />

album or a travelogue with sights and sounds,<br />

all quintessentially American, created sonically<br />

or in the mind’s eye. I was not familiar<br />

with Officer as a singer before this recording,<br />

but am not surprised to discover that he is<br />

talented, expressive and, most of all, musical<br />

in his delivery. This is a thoroughly enjoyable<br />

recording, both musically and sonically,<br />

and one that should earn Officer heightened<br />

accolades and fans.<br />

Andrew Scott<br />

7 Billion<br />

Kiran Ahluwalia<br />

Independent KM<strong>2018</strong> (kiranmusic.com)<br />

!!<br />

Steeped in the<br />

vocal traditions of<br />

India and Pakistan,<br />

Kiran Ahluwalia<br />

has, in the course<br />

of six albums, restlessly<br />

explored<br />

world music genres<br />

featuring collaborations<br />

with Celtic fiddler Natalie MacMaster,<br />

Malian group Tinariwen, Portuguese fado<br />

masters and jazz guitarist Rez Abbasi. Her<br />

discs have garnered her two JUNO Awards<br />

and other significant accolades.<br />

Over six songs, with music and lyrics<br />

by Ahluwalia, 7 Billion explores yet more<br />

musical crossroads in search of the human<br />

condition with the help of her five-piece band<br />

of electric guitar, electric bass, keyboards,<br />

tabla and drum kit. “When you take different<br />

styles and merge them together… then you’re<br />

really developing a new hybrid genre,”<br />

Ahluwalia says. “For me it’s important to<br />

blur the musical boundaries between my<br />

Indian background, influences from Western<br />

sounds and… Mali. It’s incredibly invigorating<br />

when I feel a connection in expressions<br />

from different cultures and then figure<br />

out ways to connect them seamlessly in my<br />

music,” she states. Her lyrics speak of realizing<br />

female desire without shame, the perils<br />

of love, and raging against the institutionalization<br />

of religion.<br />

Recorded in a Toronto studio, Ahluwalia’s<br />

We Sinful Women caps the album. Its<br />

lyrics use a 1991 Urdu feminist poem by<br />

Kishwar Naheed (translated by Rukhsana<br />

Ahmad, the Pakistani novelist, playwright<br />

and poet). A powerful indictment of male<br />

oppression of women, it’s also a rocker<br />

with a hook-y chorus, with room to feature<br />

driving jazz breaks by electric guitarist<br />

Abbasi and organist Louis Simao. It’s worth<br />

another listen.<br />

Andrew Timar<br />

Something New<br />

Michael Kaeshammer<br />

Linus Entertainment 270337<br />

(linusentertainment.com)<br />

! ! There can be<br />

no question that<br />

talented pianist and<br />

vocalist Michael<br />

Kaeshammer has<br />

been on a trajectory<br />

of excellence<br />

since his first JUNO<br />

nomination in 2001.<br />

Having entered the jazz world as a wunderkind,<br />

Kaeshammer is now a fully realized<br />

mature artist, and with his latest release<br />

(which he also produced) he has plumbed<br />

the depths of the New Orleans sound. He is<br />

bolstered on this heady trip down South by<br />

some of the finest jazz musicians on either<br />

side of the Mason-Dixon Line, including Cyril<br />

Neville, George Porter Jr., legendary drummer<br />

Johnny Vidacovich, Mike Dillon, the New<br />

Orleans Nightcrawlers Brass Band and bassist<br />

David Piltch. Other noted guests include<br />

Colin James, Randy Bachman, Curtis Salgado,<br />

Jim Byrnes, Amos Garrett and Chuck Leavell<br />

of the Rolling Stones.<br />

Of the original 11 tracks on this CD, ten<br />

were penned by Kaeshammer and all were<br />

recorded at the historic Esplanade Studios,<br />

located in the heart of New Orleans’ Treme<br />

District. Kaeshammer has unapologetically<br />

blurred the musical lines here between<br />

boogie-woogie, trad jazz, blues, straight<br />

ahead jazz, Zydeco and more. The CD kicks<br />

off with Scenic Route. On this groovy cooker,<br />

Kaeshammer sings with a new depth and<br />

intensity. The tight horn section and relentless,<br />

skilled drumming from Vidacovich make<br />

this track a standout.<br />

Also wonderful is Do You Believe – where<br />

meaty vocals and harmonica from Salgado<br />

and the brilliant horn arrangement by saxophonist/pianist<br />

Phil Dwyer ensure that this<br />

track is a thing of beauty. Also of note is the<br />

melancholy Weimar, which parenthesizes the<br />

project, and puts Kaeshammer’s lyrical and<br />

romantic piano chops firmly on centre stage.<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

88 | <strong>June</strong> | <strong>July</strong> | <strong>August</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com

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