Showing posts with label Empirical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Empirical. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Review: Archie Shepp/ Joachim Kuhn plus Empirical

Arche Shepp at LJF11
Drawing by Geoffrey Winston. All Rights Reserved

Archie Shepp at LJF11.
Photo credit: Edu Hawkins

Archie Shepp and Joachim Kühn with Empirical at Queen Elizabeth Hall, (Thursday 17 November 2011. Review by Geoffrey Winston)

Archie Shepp and Joachim Kühn have been crossing paths for over 40 years, and their duet at the London Jazz Festival was the fruit of a collaboration that they have been building on for two years.

Shepp is an imposing figure onstage - there is something of the elder statesman about him, not only in his elegant suit and fedora, but also in his playing and choice of material. He's lost none of the vitality that has always marked out his raw, robust delivery. There's a sharp, piercing edge to his flowing tenor - an imperative to seek out half-tones and discords. Ever since his associations with Coltrane, whom he's described as "perhaps the greatest radical of the avant-garde"* and Cecil Taylor - "I was right on the frontier, on the cutting edge of music with him" - both with the music and in the political arena, it's never been in his nature to throw in the towel and to coast.

In Joachim Kühn he has a kindred spirit. Kühn is no stranger to the piano-sax duet, having notably recorded with Ornette in 1997 in his native Leipzig. His long-standing admiration for Shepp, whom he saw at the Village Vanguard in 1967, was realised first in live duets in 2009 which led to their recent album, 'Wo!man', on Shepp's Archie Ball label for Harmonia Mundi.

Kühn's Transmitting opened the set, mixing classical structures with Shepp's irrepressible, vigorous tonal play and they held a tension through the perpetual statement and restatement of the melodic core. Shepp drove this disturbed, glitchy flow to segue into Ornette's Lonely Woman which he filled out with a deeply harrowing beauty.

The standards, Sophisticated Lady and Harlem Nocturne, which saw Shepp's only flirtation with the soprano sax, and their own offerings from Wo!man - were explored with a rigorous, improvised approach, and dipped in to unexpected areas which drew on on Kühn's classical background to create a strange sense of dislocation, as though they were holding on to jazz in a non-jazz context. The tempos and pace would change on a sixpence; the intensity would be ferocious, perspiration flowing off Kühn, stabbing at the keyboard, then florid with the deftest of accents from Shepp. When quirky discord collided with delicate, haunting arpeggios, it created a happily disconcerting feeling that Liszt had met Monk or Coleman Hawkins.

The blues figured strongly in an extended piano solo which Kühn built up uncompromisingly, to the delight of Shepp and the audience. They shared the chunkiest of blues that was the natural successor to an earthy, but also lightly langorous 'Nina' dedicated to Nina Simone.

They kept up this glorious momentum for over ninety minutes, and there was the sense of having been present at an intense musical masterclass.

Worthy of the highest plaudits, too, were the tremendously tight, yet expansive quartet, Empirical, supplemented by pianist Robert Mitchell. Their music was as sharp as their threads - alto saxophonist Nathaniel Facey continuing, with impressive confidence, his pursuit of Dolphy and Sanders, Lewis Wright bringing in glass-like chimes in Hutcherson's footsteps,  bassist Tom Farmer offering compositions with flair and freshness, and Mitchell's elastic fingered runs in duet with artful drummer Shane Forbes, conjured up a crisp and provocative statement of which Shepp, one is sure, would have approved.

*Scott Cashman: 'A dialogue with Archie Shepp' (Spit: A Journal of the Arts, December, 1990)

londonjazzfestival.org.uk

Monday, November 14, 2011

CD Review: Empirical - Elements of Truth


Empirical - Elements of Truth
(Naim naimcd 168. CD Review by Chris Parker


Following up their acclaimed Eric Dolphy-inspired Out'n'In, Empirical's Elements of Truth builds on the central musical relationship (Nathaniel Facey's alto/Lewis Wright's vibes) of that album to create a more varied, multi-textured soundscape on this one, the band sound tellingly augmented by guest pianist George Fogel's discreet but vital fills and embellishments.

The band's material, too (mostly compositions by bassist Tom Farmer, but with two by Facey and one by Wright), draws on a wider variety of styles than their previous effort, embracing everything from (cultured) hip-hop to contemporary classical music (Messiaen – as with many new-millennium jazz musicians – namechecked by Farmer in recent interviews) and post-bop jazz (pianist Vijay Iyer ditto).

The result is a many-hued, subtly shifting, pleasingly restless and absorbing set, driven by the vibrant, precise drumming of Shaney Forbes (as adept at relatively straight-ahead jazz rhythms as he is at rattling out hip-hop beats) and Farmer's lithe bass, all spearheaded by the searing alto of Facey and given memorable atmosphere and texture by the versatile and dexterous Wright (who also provides one of the most striking mood-setting introductions to an album you're likely to hear this year).

Another elegant, polished but sparky album from one of UK jazz's most sophisticated bands.

Empirical at Naim Label

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

MOBO Awards - Best Jazz Act nominations




Empirical winning Best Jazz Act at the 2010 MOBO Awards
Photo Credit: William Ellis. All Rights Reserved 

The 2011 MOBO awards nominations were announced last night. The nominees for best jazz act are:

DENYS BAPTISTE
GWILYM SIMCOCK
KAIROS 4TET
MATTHEW HALSALL
USONIC

The Awards Ceremony is at the SECC in Glasgow on October 5th

Kairos 4tet are playing as part of the Edition Records showcase at the Kings Place Festival on Sept 10th. Gwilym Simcock's trio will open the new The Base season at Kings Place on Sept 17th
Full list of nominees at Mobo.com