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Volume 26 Issue 8 - July and August 2021

Last print issue for Volume 26. Back mid-September with Vol 27 no 1. And what a sixteen-month year it's been. Thanks for sticking around. Inside: looking back at what we are hoping is behind us, and ahead to what the summer has to offer; also inside, DISCoveries: 100 reviews to read, and a bunch of new tracks uploaded to the listening room. On stands, commencing Wednesday June 30.

Last print issue for Volume 26. Back mid-September with Vol 27 no 1. And what a sixteen-month year it's been. Thanks for sticking around. Inside: looking back at what we are hoping is behind us, and ahead to what the summer has to offer; also inside, DISCoveries: 100 reviews to read, and a bunch of new tracks uploaded to the listening room. On stands, commencing Wednesday June 30.

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for viola, is a better fit for clarinet, maintaining<br />

the gentle mood of the title track in<br />

the opening of the first movement, <strong>and</strong> never<br />

straying far into the upper range, even as the<br />

mood darkens. The second movement has pop<br />

<strong>and</strong> energy; to my ear Higdon shows some of<br />

the tonal style of Hindemith.<br />

Hawley is not a showy player; elegance <strong>and</strong><br />

understatement mark his performances. An<br />

instance of flutter tonguing in the Clarinet<br />

Sonata by Pierre Jalbert is subtle, even tidy.<br />

Joan Tower’s Wings for solo clarinet is a tourde-force;<br />

Hawley nails it. His sound is icy<br />

smooth up high, <strong>and</strong> warm in the chalumeau.<br />

His musicality is honest <strong>and</strong> reliable. Hanick<br />

meets him on an equal footing; the duo plays<br />

with verve <strong>and</strong> excellent communication.<br />

Max Christie<br />

Scott Wollschleger – Dark Days<br />

Karl Larson<br />

New Focus Recordings FCR287<br />

(newfocusrecordings.com/catalogue)<br />

! “Spells of<br />

hushed, cryptic<br />

beauty… freefloating<br />

grace.” So<br />

wrote Alex Ross<br />

in The New Yorker<br />

about the music<br />

of Brooklyn-based<br />

Scott Wollschleger<br />

(b.1980). The ten pieces on this CD, dating<br />

from 2007 to 2020, share with the stylistically<br />

very different piano works of Erik Satie<br />

austere economies of means, eschewing<br />

virtuosic displays <strong>and</strong> overt emotionalism, yet<br />

achieving remarkably individual <strong>and</strong> expressive<br />

results.<br />

The opening Dark Days, prophetically<br />

composed in January 2017 during Trump’s<br />

inauguration, appropriately rumbles <strong>and</strong><br />

grumbles in the piano’s lowest register.<br />

Shifting to the treble, the diaphanous Tiny<br />

Oblivion reflects what Wollschleger calls<br />

“black humour acceptance [of] the fact that<br />

our ultimate fate is to die <strong>and</strong> then eventually<br />

to turn into particles that will forever break<br />

down into smaller particles…”<br />

Music without Metaphor, Blue Inscription<br />

<strong>and</strong> Lyric Fragment are slow, sombre, haltingly<br />

paced, directionless peregrinations.<br />

In Brontal Nos.2, 6 <strong>and</strong> 11, single notes<br />

intermittently drip or spray; occasionally,<br />

chords splash. (Brontal: a coined word<br />

Wollschleger employs for “discovery within<br />

the unfamiliar.”) Finally, Secret Machine<br />

Nos.4 <strong>and</strong> 6 are surprisingly cheerful, their<br />

shimmering trills <strong>and</strong> rippling arpeggios<br />

marking the CD’s gradual emergence from<br />

the “dark days.”<br />

In his detailed booklet notes, pianist Karl<br />

Larson describes Wollschleger’s synaesthetic<br />

pairing of different harmonies with<br />

specific visual colours; non-synaesthetic<br />

listeners must content themselves with the<br />

aural colours of Wollschleger’s tenebrous<br />

keyboard palette.<br />

Wollschleger’s enigmatic compositions are<br />

ideal accompaniments for sipping wine on a<br />

late wintry evening, but you shouldn’t wait<br />

for winter to hear them!<br />

Michael Schulman<br />

JAZZ AND IMPROVISED<br />

Montreal<br />

Holly Cole Trio<br />

Rumpus Room Records 8088910067<br />

(hollycole.com)<br />

! Recorded live<br />

during a four-day<br />

stint at the intimate<br />

Lion d’Or during<br />

the 2019 Festival<br />

International de<br />

Jazz, Montreal is a<br />

succinct six tracks.<br />

I don’t know if it’s<br />

because my attention span has deteriorated<br />

in this information-overloaded age we live in,<br />

but I quite enjoyed this shorter album size.<br />

I also enjoyed the energy that a live<br />

performance lends. So although the majority<br />

of the tracks are Cole classics that most fans<br />

will have heard before, these renditions have<br />

slight differences from the studio versions<br />

as well as a unique presence <strong>and</strong> spontaneity<br />

that’s difficult to achieve in studio. The<br />

sound recording is so good (thanks to Ken<br />

Friesen) that you might not even know it’s<br />

live until the appreciative audience makes its<br />

presence felt.<br />

Cole is in top form, doing what she does<br />

best: delivering great songs with style, wit<br />

<strong>and</strong> heart, starting with the atmospheric<br />

Whatever Lola Wants. A singer’s dream,<br />

Cole’s longtime b<strong>and</strong>mates – Aaron Davis,<br />

piano, David Piltch, bass, Davide DiRenzo,<br />

drums <strong>and</strong> John Johnson, woodwinds –<br />

deliver their usual imaginative, tasteful<br />

support. Each b<strong>and</strong> member has a chance to<br />

shine – Piltch on the stripped down Little Boy<br />

Blue, a playful duet with just bass <strong>and</strong> voice.<br />

Davis solos beautifully on Girl Talk <strong>and</strong> Talk<br />

To Me Baby <strong>and</strong> Johnson’s evocative clarinet<br />

playing strikes just the right note on You’ve<br />

Got a Secret.<br />

Cathy Riches<br />

Celebrations!<br />

Swing Shift Big B<strong>and</strong>; Jackie Richardson;<br />

Larisa Renėe; Dave Statham<br />

Palais Records SSBB<strong>2021</strong>CD<br />

(swingshiftbigb<strong>and</strong>.com)<br />

! The homegrown,<br />

nationally<br />

acclaimed Swing<br />

Shift Big B<strong>and</strong><br />

has been operating<br />

for 25 years<br />

<strong>and</strong> in these tough<br />

times has released<br />

a wonderful album<br />

full of all-time favourites from the genre that<br />

are sure to get any listener toe tapping right<br />

along. Led by multi-instrumentalist Jim John,<br />

through interesting <strong>and</strong> unique arrangements<br />

of well-known pieces, the b<strong>and</strong> does<br />

a great job of breathing new life into a genre<br />

that can often get pushed slightly to the background.<br />

The listener is taken on a time-travelling<br />

journey of sorts, one that is just the<br />

perfect getaway paired with warmer weather<br />

<strong>and</strong> quickly approaching summer.<br />

The record starts off with a bossa nova<br />

classic Summer Samba, a sultry <strong>and</strong><br />

rhythmic piece with scintillating solos by<br />

tenor saxophonist <strong>and</strong> musical director<br />

Jeff Pighin, as well as lead trombonist Rob<br />

Williams. Compared to the original, Swing<br />

Shift’s version may even become the preference<br />

for some due to the organ melody being<br />

replaced by a softer <strong>and</strong> mellower combination<br />

of trumpets, alto saxophones <strong>and</strong> trombones<br />

in this rendition. In Here’s to Life,<br />

renowned vocalist Jackie Richardson lends<br />

her rich <strong>and</strong> soulful voice to bring a melodious<br />

jazz ballad to new heights; the subtle<br />

yet poignant big b<strong>and</strong> accompaniment<br />

pairing perfectly with her timbre. For any jazz<br />

fans looking to renew their interest in the big<br />

b<strong>and</strong> subgenre or for new listeners alike, this<br />

album is a definite must.<br />

Kati Kiilaspea<br />

We Want All the Same Things<br />

Erin Propp; Larry Roy<br />

Chronograph Records CR-079<br />

(erinpropp.com)<br />

! From the first<br />

downbeat of this<br />

fine recording, the<br />

listener is immediately<br />

drawn<br />

into Erin Propp<br />

<strong>and</strong> Larry Roy’s<br />

refreshing blend<br />

of folk <strong>and</strong> jazz, a<br />

bright world chock-full of catchy melodies,<br />

thoughtful lyrics <strong>and</strong> great musicianship.<br />

On this collection of 12 songs, mostly<br />

originals, the Winnipeg-based singer highlights<br />

her ongoing collaboration with Roy, one<br />

of Canada’s finest guitar players. The creative<br />

partnership has been a fruitful one, encompassing<br />

their 2012 Juno-nominated album<br />

Courage, My Love, as well as performances<br />

with the Winnipeg Symphony.<br />

On this new recording, the duo continue to<br />

develop <strong>and</strong> deepen their artistry. Highlight<br />

tracks such as Farther On, The Light <strong>and</strong><br />

Give Me More feature some exemplary songwriting,<br />

with Propp’s thoughtful, highly<br />

personal singing <strong>and</strong> lyrics matched alongside<br />

Roy’s distinctive arranging <strong>and</strong> harmonic<br />

approach.<br />

Propp’s versatility <strong>and</strong> strong affinity with<br />

the music of Brazil <strong>and</strong> Brazilian songstress<br />

Luciana Souza is highlighted on Recomeçar,<br />

a memorable melody composed by Humberto<br />

Piccoli. She also displays great vocal <strong>and</strong><br />

48 | <strong>July</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2021</strong> thewholenote.com

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