Monday, April 28, 2025


Music Week

April archive (closed).

Music: Current count 44107 [44070) rated (+37), 25 [24] unrated (+1).

Last Monday I could anticipate, and to some extent dread, a full schedule of forthcoming events. We did finally get some help with the yard, and got quite a lot done, not that much feels finished. I saw my eye doctor, who seemed much more pleased with the surgery results than I am. I can drive without glasses for the first time ever, and driving at night is much improved. I still have a bit of astigmatism, so he wrote me a new prescription which he says will be "amazing," but I haven't filled it yet. For reading and computer he suggested I try over-the-counter "readers," which I already had, but so far they aren't much help. The computer distance is by far my worst case now, and it remains very frustrating -- not so much when I'm just typing words in, as I'm doing now, as when I need to read and copy information. That especially impacts time-wasting activities like listmaking and blogging, which it what I tend to do when I can't figure out what else to do.

There was a very nice memorial service for Francis Davis on Friday, which we were able to follow on Zoom. One of the speakers there was Allen Lowe, who later posted this on Facebook. He starts with "I'm not going to say much here," then goes on for seven paragraphs. [PS: Also on Substack: A Tribute to Francis Davis.] I've also just seen this screed on Facebook. I'm not finding this particular one on his Substack, but I am finding this (knocking Phil Freeman for his "Trumpian approach to music writing" -- whatever that's supposed to mean) and this (disparaging most other critics, except for a list of eight, at least two departed, and three I've never heard of). I've subscribed, unpaid, which I understand means I'll only get to read every other post. His pieces are so scattershot that's probably just as well.

I'm sitting on an invitation to write something of my own re Davis, but for now am beset by more than the usual FUD (fear, uncertainty and doubt, an acronym I heard a lot in business management circles). One thing I have noted is the extraordinary consistency among the various obits I've read. I don't disagree with anything I've read, but I've been trying to figure out if I have anything more to add, and thus far I don't have much. One thing for sure is that I have very little to contribute in terms of personal anecdotes. We've had a long relationship, but it's mostly been focused on poll business, so if/when I do start writing, it's likely to be more on what the poll does, how it works, and why we value it.

I got one question about whether I'd be taking over the poll. The obvious answer is that I already did that, a couple years ago, when Francis became too ill to keep it going. The question now is whether we continue it, and the answer there seems to be yes, at least for now. I've been wanting to do some website work, but like so many of my projects, that's just been hanging in limbo.

I won't go into the long list of things I should work on this week, but for now I'll just note that I have enough pent-up Loose Tabs for a post. Further out is another Books post, which is probably good because I haven't updated the index for the previous one yet. In terms of indexing drudgery, I'll note that I did manage to add February to the 2025 Streamnotes index, but with the closing of the April 2025 file, I'm still two months behind.

I should note the death of David Thomas, of Pere Ubu. Of all of the late-1970s punk-era bands, they were the one I felt closest to, and the loss of Thomas seems to be affecting me most personally. Still, I haven't started replaying records yet, although that may well happen next week. (My most played record this past week was Have Moicy!, although I didn't start with it until a week or two after Michael Hurley's death.) One thing I could see myself indulging in is Pere Ubu's Bandcamp, which has several dozen bootleg show tapes. Any suggestions of where to start?

I don't have much to add on this week's music, other than to note that the 1970s Strata-East catalog is being reissued, and I expect to look much deeper into it. I also wound up looking at Craft's reissues from the Prestige/Bluesville catalog, which in one case led me back to an old Yazoo collection I had missed. I should look deeper into both of those catalogs.


New records reviewed this week:

Archer: Sudden Dusk (2024 [2025], Aerophonic): Another group led by Chicago saxophonist Dave Rempis (soprano, tenor, baritone), this one with Terrie Ex (guitar), Jon Rune Strøm (bass), and Tollef Østvang (drums). Rempis has been producing 3-5 outstanding albums every year, and this is another, with the guitar especially energizing. A- [cd]

Charlie Ballantine: East by Midwest (2024 [2025], Origin): Guitarist, albums since 2015, has a metallic tone that is neither here nor there, but not without interest. B+(**)

Ludovica Bertone: Migration Tales (2023 [2025], Endectomorph Music): Italian violinist, based in New York, second album, composed most songs, sings some, backing group includes Milena Casado (trumpet), Julieta Eugenio (tenor sax), and Marta Sanchez (piano). B+(***) [cd]

Blockhead: It's Only a Midlife Crisis if Your Life Is Mid (2025, Future Archive): Hip-hop producer Tony Simon, from New York, prolific since 2004, both on his own and with others like Aesop Rock. Six tracks, 35:05. B+(**) [sp]

Marilyn Crispell/Thommy Andersson/Michala Østergaard-Nilsen: The Cave (2022 [2025], ILK Music): Pianist, originally from Philadelphia, was an essential part of Anthony Braxton's famed 1980s quartet, has a long list of records on her own, but I was surprised to find nothing else in my database under her name since 2018 -- I've missed a few albums, and others are filed under other names. With bass and drums here. Despite the billing order, the drummer is the composer and "visionary." B+(*) [sp]

Korham Futaci: Heavyweight Rehearsal Tapes (2024 [2025], PUMA): Turkish saxophonist, a founder of the avant group Konstrukt, leads his own quartet here with Baris Ertürk (reeds), bass, and drums. The title is both on point and a bit too modest, as these pieces are powerful, with bits of rock and folk in the foundation, and the improv is polished enough. A- [sp]

Rhiannon Giddens & Justin Robinson: What Did the Blackbird Say to the Crow (2025, Nonesuch): Subtitled "Fiddle and Banjo Music of North Carolina," both started out in Carolina Chocolate Drops, he on fiddle, she on banjo. This is a purist throwback. B+(***) [sp]

Ghais Guevara: Goyard Ibn Said (2025, Fat Possum): Rapper Jaja Gha'is Robinson, from Philadelphia, fifth album since 2020. B+(***) [sp]

Phil Haynes/Ben Monder: Transition[s] (2024 [2025], Corner Store Jazz): Drummer, started in late 1980s, has a wide range of interesting work. Duo here with guitar, tends toward mild-mannered drone, which you don't notice much and remember even less. B [cd]

Phil Haynes: Return to Electric (2024 [2025], Corner Store Jazz): Drummer, leads a trio with Steve Salerno (guitar) and Drew Gress (bass). B+(**) [cd]

Daniel Herskedal: Movements of Air (2023 [2025], Edition): Tuba player from Norway, well over a dozen albums since 2010. Trio with piano (Eyolf Dale) and drums (Helge Horbakken). Pretty mild, atmospheric even. B [sp]

Hiromi's Sonicwonder: Out There (2025, Telarc): Japanese pianist, surname Uehara, 18th album since 2003, a flashy performer with some crossover potential, but unclear how well that's worked out. Much more unclear here, like the label (Discogs says Telarc but other sources Concord Jazz), artist credit (with, without, or "feat." Sonicwonder), who (probably Adam O'Farrill on trumpet), where, when, or why -- questions that mostly fall below my level of indifference. B [sp]

Larry June, 2 Chainz & The Alchemist: Life Is Beautiful (2025, The Freeminded/ALC/Empire): Rapper from San Francisco, Larry Hendricks III, dozen-plus albums since 2010, joined here by Atlanta rapper Tauheed Epps and producer Alan Maman. B+(**) [sp]

Nancy Kelly: Be Cool (2024 [2025], Origin): Standards singer, half-dozen widely separated albums since 1988, picks some memorable songs and sings them with style and verve. Also, two with Houston Person. B+(**) [cd]

Alison Krauss & Union Station: Arcadia (2025, Down the Road): Bluegrass fiddler and singer, first album 1985 (when she was 14), adopted band name in 1989, bestselling albums are two with Robert Plant, but was a Grammy favorite long before. Some vocals by Russell Moore. B+(**) [sp]

Medler Sextet: River Paths (2024 [2025], OA2): Bassist Ben Medler and tenor saxophonist Michelle Medler lead a postbop sextet through six original compositions (5 by Ben), with a nod to Mingus, George Russell, and Gil Evans. With Paul Mazzio (trumpet), John Moak (trombone), Clay Giberson (piano), and Todd Bishop (drums). B+(**) [cd]

Tobias Meinhart: Sonic River (2024 [2025], Sonic River): German saxophonist (tenor, soprano, alto flute), several albums since 2015, backed by piano-bass-drums, plus guitar (Charles Altura) on half, with Sara Serpa singing two tunes. B+(**) [cd]

Leszek Możdżer/Lars Danielsson/Zohar Fresco: Beamo (2023 [2025], ACT Music): Polish pianist, many albums starting 1996, in a trio with bass (or cello/viola da gamba) and drums (frame drum/percussion). Quite nice, but I could do without the singalong. B+(*) [sp]

Napoleon Da Legend & Giallo Point: F.L.A.W. (2025, Legendary): Rapper Karim Bourhane, born in Paris, later based in DC, couple dozen albums since 2013. Discogs has a long list of albums by Giallo Point (since 2014), but nothing more. Title an acronym for "Following Lies Always Wounds." B+(***) [sp]

Arturo O'Farrill/The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra: Mundoagua: Celebrating Carla Bley (2022 [2025], Zoho): Pianist, born after his parents left Cuba but he's carried the national legacy to America. His connection to Bley was that he played in her big band 1979-83. He's recorded three commissioned suites here, one ("Blue Palestine") written by Bley shortly before her death, and first recorded here, along with two of his own, which fit together into a coherent whole. B+(***) [sp]

Alberto Pinton's Relentless: Allt Större Klarhet (2024 [2025], Moserobie): Baritone saxophonist, originally from Italy, moved to Sweden in 1984, Discogs only credits him with three albums but there are dozens more behind group facades, including this one, a quartet with piano (Alex Zithson), bass (Vilhelm Bromander), and drums (Konrad Agnas). Nice resonance on his main instrument, I'm a bit less pleased with the clarinets and flutes. B+(***) [cd]

Pitch, Rhythm and Consciousness: Sextet (2024 [2025], Reva): Originally Tony Jones (tenor sax) and Charles Burnham (violin), they added Kenny Wolleson (drums) for 2011's Trio, and Marika Hughes (cello) for 2019's Quartet. This time they've added Jessica Jones (tenor sax) and Rashaan Carter (bass). B+(**) [cd]

Private Property: Private Property (2025, Kraakeslottet Platekompagni): Norwegian trio of Guro Kvåle (vocals/trombone), Nicolas Leirtrø (bass), and Øyvind Leite (drums), first album. Vocals run punk-to-hardcore, everything else just free jazz intense and sometimes nasty. B+(***) [bc]

Michael Sarian: Esquina (2024 [2025], Greenleaf Music): Trumpet player, half-dozen albums since 2020, quartet with Santiago Leibson (keyboards), Marty Kenney (electric bass), and Nathan Ellman Bell (drums), on three pieces stretched out to 51:24. B+(**) [sp]

Ray Suhy/Lewis Porter Quartet: What Happens Next (2023 [2025], Sunnyside): Guitar and piano, backed by Joris Teepe (bass) and Rudy Royston (drums), both frequently on Allen Lowe albums, with Porter going back to 1993 in Aardvark Jazz Orchestra. Third group album. B+(*) [sp]

Unity Quartet [Helio Alves/Guilherme Monteiro/Gili Lopes/Alex Kautz]: Samba of Sorts (2022 [2025], Sunnyside): Piano, guitar, bass and drums, the first two from Brazil, the group filled out in Brooklyn, for a nice program of samba standards, with one original song credit for each. B+(**) [cd]

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

Scrapper Blackwell: Mr. Scrapper's Blues (1962 [2025], Craft): Blackwell and Leroy Carr recorded their last session together in February, 1935, and split up on bad terms. Carr died a couple months later, and Blackwell didn't record again until 1958, when the rediscovery of long dormant blues singers like Skip James, Son House, and Mississippi John Hurt was just getting underway. This is his best-preserved session, shortly before his own death, a solo performance which nicely shows off his distinctive guitar and vocals, and includes a bit of him on piano. A- [sp]

Blind Gary Davis: Harlem Street Singer (1960 [2024], Craft): Blues singer-guitarist (1896-1972), from South Carolina, lost his eyesight as a child, moved to North Carolina in the 1920s, was ordained as a Baptist minister in 1933, with most of his later recordings credited to Reverend Gary Davis, a title reinforced by his uniquely oratorical style of singing. His early recordings are worth seeking -- see The Complete Early Recordings of Rev. Gary Davis (1935-40, Yazoo) -- but he recorded some in the 1950s (Pure Religion and Bad Company, from 1957, is perhaps his most famous) and much more in the folk-blues boom of the 1960s. This was the first of several albums on Prestige's Bluesville label, and he's in especially imposing form here. A [sp]

Vince Guaraldi Trio: Jazz Impreassions of a Boy Named Charlie Brown (1964 [2025], Craft, 2CD): Jazz pianist (1928-76), started in the early 1950s with Cal Tjader, went on to release his first Trio album in 1956. In 1964, he got the job of writing music for a documentary based on the Peanuts comic strip, and produced this album (now greatly expanded with outtakes), which led to many more. His trio included Monty Budwig (bass) and Colin Bailey (drums). A nice piano jazz collection, with or without back story. B+(**) [bc]

Music Inc. [Charles Tolliver/Stanley Cowell/Cecil McBee/Jimmy Hopps]: Music Inc. (1970 [2025], Strata-East): First album released on the label, which was founded in 1971 by Tolliver (trumpet) and Cowell (piano), at a time when previously dominant labels were dropping like flies, and young musicians who had just come of age on the late-1960s avant-garde were desperate for an outlet. The label ultimately released 50+ albums -- an important catalog in American jazz history which has long been neglected. Recently, Mack Avenue picked up the catalog and have started reissuing records, starting here. Group (with a different bassist) dates back to Toliver's 1969 album, The Ringer, and can be credited here, but the musician names are also on the cover, so I would normally credit them. I wound up with this credit line based on a later album. But while Toliver and Cowell used Music Inc. for various quartets from 1969-76, here they're joined by a "supporting orchestra" that turns this into a big band (plus a little extra brass, including Howard Johnson on tuba). It's a bit overkill for my taste. B+(**) [sp]

Music Inc. [Charles Tolliver/Stanley Cowell/Cecil McBee/Jimmy Hopps]: Live at Sluggs' Volume I & II (1970 [2025], Strata-East): Trumpet/piano/bass/drums quartet, originally released on two separate LPs, total 6 tracks, 68:09, now reissued on one CD or 2-LP, the digital adding 3 bonus tracks (41:29, so 109:38 total). B+(***) [sp]

The Soul and Songs of Curtis Mayfield: The Spirit of Chicago (1958-64 [2024], Craft): Twenty-seven songs written or co-written by Mayfield, the co-writes are with Jerry Butler, who sings most of the songs, either solo or in the Impressions. I went with the various artists designation because none were released under Mayfield's name -- Butler also has duets with Berry Everett, and there are two sides each by Gene Chandler and Wade Flemons. One of my all-time favorite albums is Anthology, a 2-CD set from 1993 that fortifies Mayfield's solo work with a bunch of Impressions hits. I recognize a few of them here (and they're simply fabulous), but mostly this is less familiar material, and not nearly as great. B+(**) [bc]

Old music:

Scrapper Blackwell: The Virtuoso Guitar of Scrapper Blackwell (1925-34 [1991], Yazoo): Blues guitarist and singer (1903-62), born in South Carolina but grew up in Indiana, most remembered for his 1928 "Kokomo Blues," like many bluesmen his career splits into a classic period (1928-34, documented here) and a late revival (1958-62, when he was shot and killed in an unsolved mugging). Much of his early work was done with pianist Leroy Carr, who generally got top billing, leaving this as the main entry under his name. Fourteen songs -- eight originally released under his name, two credited to Carr (but with Blackwell vocals), three to Black Bottom McPhail, one to Tommie Bradley. Robert Santelli listed this at 44 in his top 100 blues albums, and I see little reason to disagree. A- [sp]

Dean & Britta: L'Avventura (2003, Jet Set): Originally credited to Britta Phillips & Dean Wareham, they played bass and guitar in Luna, both sang, got married in 2006, this the first of five albums through 2024 (plus three EPs and three soundtracks, plus more albums in Luna. She had been in a couple other bands before Luna, and she wrote two songs here (to Wareham's three). Best cuts have a touch of Go-Betweens. B+(**) [sp]

Dean & Britta: Back Numbers (2007, Rounder): Second duo album, most songs co-written (plus covers from Donovan and the Troggs, among others), the vocals divided evenly, the songs so unassuming they slip past you a bit too readily. B+(*) [sp]

Dean & Britta/Sonic Boom: A Peace of Us (2024, Carpark): "A holiday season bonanza of winter songs for modern times," which is to say this is mostly a Christmas album minus the crass commercialization: first side ends with "Stille Nacht," second side with "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)." Sonic Boom is British producer Pete Kember, whose old groups were Spacemen 3 (1980s) and Spectrum (1990s), although more recently he's mostly been working with Panda Bear. B+(*) [sp]


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Jon Gold: Chasing Echos (Entropic) [04-28]
  • Joel Harrison: Guitar Talk Vol. 2: Classical Duos (AGS) [04-18]
  • KnCurrent: KnCurrent (Deep Dish) [05-01]
  • Le Vice Anglais: Vas-y (4DaRecord) [03-21]
  • Carol Liebowitz/Nick Lyons: The Inner Senses (SteepleChase LookOut) [06-01]
  • Mira Trio: Machinerie (4DaRecord) [03-14]
  • Billy Mohler: The Eternal (Contagious Music) ** [03-07]
  • James Moody: 80 Years Young: Live at the Blue Note March 26, 2005 (Origin) [05-16]
  • Simona Premazzi/Kyle Nasser Quartet: From What I Recall (OA2) [05-16]
  • Ches Smith: Clone Row (Otherly Love) [06-06]
  • Julia Úlehla and Dálava: Understories (Pi) [05-02]
  • Inés Velasco: A Flash of Cobalt Blue (self-released) [06-06]
  • Michael Waldrop: Native Son (Origin) [05-16]
  • Dan Weiss Quartet: Unclassified Affections (Pi) [06-06]

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