28.09.2023 Views

Volume 29 Issue 2 | October & November 2023

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

work Lewis was introduced in childhood by<br />

his grandmother, is even stronger – at once<br />

impassioned, reverent and nuance-alert<br />

throughout its 71-minute-playing time. The<br />

homage may extend to saxophonist Albert<br />

Ayler’s similar recording from 1964, Swing<br />

Low, Sweet Spiritual, with Lewis frequently<br />

referencing Ayler’s distinctive tone and<br />

phrasing.<br />

Lewis is intensely expressive here, in part<br />

through his taut control, holding his lines<br />

in check until they explode. Trumpeter Kirk<br />

Knuffke is a brilliant foil, on theme statements,<br />

solos and counter melodies, while<br />

cellist Chris Hoffman, bassist William Parker<br />

and drummer Chad Taylor supply stellar<br />

support, from a certain formal but empathetic<br />

rigour to the haunting bowed strings<br />

that introduce Calvary. The quintet’s special<br />

closeness comes through in extended theme<br />

statements that are simultaneously loose,<br />

collective improvisations, melodic components<br />

passed among the instrumental<br />

voices, for example, Were You There and<br />

Precious Lord.<br />

The limited first edition CD comes with an<br />

additional CD, These Are Soulful Days, Lewis’<br />

eight-part composition for his tenor saxophone<br />

and string quartet, performed with the<br />

Lutosławski Quartet<br />

of Poland. It’s a lucid work imbued with<br />

the spirit of gospel music (Wade in the Water<br />

emerges at one point). Its spacious melodic<br />

clarity suggests the compositions of another<br />

American master, Virgil Thomson.<br />

Stuart Broomer<br />

POT POURRI<br />

Starlighter<br />

Kinan Azmeh; Brooklyn Rider<br />

In A Circle Records<br />

(kinanazmehbrooklynrider.bandcamp.<br />

com/album/starlighter-icr026)<br />

! Okay, this is the<br />

stuff. There’s this<br />

guy who writes<br />

music for strings<br />

and percussion and<br />

his own voice (a<br />

clarinet that sometimes<br />

passes for<br />

the best alto flute<br />

you’ve ever heard). His name is Kinan Azmeh<br />

and the string quartet is Brooklyn Rider (look<br />

‘em up); plus there’s a percussionist Mathias<br />

Kunzli adding to the mayhem.<br />

I get carried away when clarinet tone<br />

colour doesn’t assault my ears with plangent<br />

“listen to me!” swipes left and right.<br />

Azmeh can certainly invoke that strident<br />

animal, the upper register, but he shows true<br />

restraint. Mostly his velvet colour floats across<br />

the strings’ texture like syrup on waffles,<br />

like gravy on poutine, like tahini on falafels.<br />

Who’s hungry? The quintet-plus-one fires<br />

up dance rhythms straight out of the very<br />

Near East. Alongside “exotic” modalism and<br />

dance figurations, Azmeh draws on contemporary<br />

rhythmic complexity and dissonance.<br />

His writing is lyric, kinetic and narrative<br />

too. The disc opens with the three movements<br />

of In the Element, written in 2017-<br />

2018; Run and Rain describe themselves, and<br />

Grounded (the third movement added a year<br />

after the first two were written), narrates feelings<br />

from his recent return visit to his home<br />

city of Damascus. His other work, Dabke on<br />

Martense Street for string quartet, describes<br />

an imagined round dance on the street where<br />

he lives in Brooklyn.<br />

Brooklyn Rider violinist Colin Jacobsen’s<br />

title track Starlighter was inspired by the<br />

magical transference of energy into matter<br />

known as photosynthesis. It takes more than<br />

one listen to get inside, but it’s worth the<br />

effort. The final track is a work adapted for<br />

the same quintet plus percussion by Ljova<br />

(aka Lev Zhurbin). Originally written for the<br />

Silk Road Ensemble, Everywhere is Falling<br />

Everywhere (a Rumi reference) makes an apt<br />

bookend to the disc. A different version of<br />

similar language, more latkes-and-applesauce<br />

than falafels-and-tahini, but delicious as well.<br />

Max Christie<br />

El Swing Que Yo Tengo<br />

Alex Cuba<br />

Caracol Records (open.spotify.com/<br />

album/0IHxZjy8PyE5I5CBwF0JlW)<br />

! Ever since we<br />

first became aware<br />

of the music of the<br />

Juno and Grammy<br />

Award-winning<br />

Alex Cuba, we have<br />

always known that<br />

the elements of<br />

music – melody,<br />

harmony and, especially, rhythm – have<br />

throbbed and pulsated through his veins.<br />

And like the celebrated album Mendó that<br />

came just before this one, El Swing Que Yo<br />

Tengo, continues to buck every trend while<br />

remaining true to the glorious rhythms of the<br />

island from which he takes his name.<br />

In the repertoire of the latter album Cuba<br />

pushes the proverbial envelope even further,<br />

including electronic elements in music that is<br />

steeped, as much in traditional Cuban dance<br />

forms as in funky and hip-hop-inspired<br />

rhythmic flavours.<br />

Cuba’s lustrous tenor swoops and soars<br />

fuelled by seductive romantic lyricism, often<br />

entwined with harmonies that he has overlaid<br />

on these delicious melodies. This is true even<br />

when – as on songs such as El Swing Que Yo<br />

Tengo and Son Para Tu Boca – more adventurous<br />

vocal elements and styles such as rap<br />

and other localized Caribbean song elements<br />

intervene.<br />

On this album Cuba plays all the instruments,<br />

including those powered by electronics,<br />

blending superbly with the<br />

percussion and he even treats us to an<br />

elegantly slapped-on bass. The apogee of<br />

the album, hands down, is Agüita de Coco,<br />

a song that is powered by Cuba’s eloquent<br />

voice together with the chocolate-and-chillicoated<br />

vocals of the Rwandan music sensation,<br />

Butera Knowless.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Maelstrom<br />

Duplex<br />

ARC Music Productions EUCD<strong>29</strong>59<br />

(duplexmusic.be)<br />

! Respected<br />

Belgian musicians,<br />

accordionist Didier<br />

Laloy and violinist<br />

Damien Chierici,<br />

worked together the<br />

first time in 2018 on<br />

a Nirvana musicbased<br />

project.<br />

They continued working together forming<br />

Duplex, incorporating Laloy’s internationally<br />

renowned diatonic accordion explorations<br />

in traditional world/folk styles and Chierici’s<br />

violin in non-classical styles like pop and<br />

rock. The 2020 COVID outbreak/lockdown<br />

forced them to change their touring plans<br />

to recording imaginary world travels with<br />

music inspired by books, personal experiences<br />

and such. Invited drummer Olivier Cox<br />

and keyboardist Quentin Nguyen join them,<br />

with guest trumpeter Antoine Dawans on one<br />

track, in this debut Duplex release of Laloy/<br />

Chierici folk, rock, world, electro-pop, jazzy<br />

and cinematic compositions.<br />

The duo “visit” global countries on the 14<br />

tracks. The opening track Cast Off has fast<br />

short repeated ascending and descending<br />

intervals emulating boat sails in the wind.<br />

Magic House, in winter Saint Malo, features<br />

a violin-interval melody, diatonic accordionchordal<br />

rhythms, a sudden slower section<br />

returning to upbeat loud electronics and<br />

banging drums. Off to London in Bakerloo<br />

Circle. Love the rumbling opening sound<br />

like a subway train entering the underground<br />

station. Trumpet melodies create a<br />

sense of London transit and street buskers.<br />

Great accordion in the fast Cuban dance,<br />

Cabestan’go. Enjoy New York City clubs in<br />

Vera, with louder more jazzy intense, full<br />

instrumentals. A detached beat opening,<br />

repeated diatonic accordion melody<br />

throughout with gradual instrumental and<br />

drums entries add to the wonder of the<br />

Rockies in Wapta Falls, especially emotional<br />

now during the BC wildfires.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

74 | <strong>October</strong> & <strong>November</strong> <strong>2023</strong> thewholenote.com

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!