Streamnotes: March 31, 2025


Most of these are short notes/reviews based on streaming records from Napster (formerly Rhapsody; other sources are noted in brackets). They are snap judgments, usually based on one or two plays, accumulated since my last post along these lines, back on February 28. Past reviews and more information are available here (24416+ records).


New Music

Nils Agnas: Köper Sig Ur En Kris (2023 [2025], Moserobie): Swedish drummer, leads a quartet with Max Agnas (on two pianos) and Mauritz Agnas (bass) -- relationship unspecified but likely [cousins; they, but not Nils, are in a group called Agnas Bros.] -- and saxophonist Jonas Kullhammar, in his usual very fine form, playing four jazz tunes (Ornette Coleman, Joe Henderson, two from Carla Bley) and "Over the Rainbow." Quaint line on the hype sheet: "The only foreign musician he has performed so far with is the great Zoh Amba" (who's all of 24 now). A- [cd]

Yazz Ahmed: A Paradise in the Hold (2025, Night Time Stories): British trumpet player, born in London, father from Bahrain, fourth album since 2011, billed as "spiritual jazz," draws on Arabic elements, has many vocals, is hugely ambitious. I like parts of it (especially the trumpet), but have little interest in others (vocals, of course, but also ponderous instrumental sweeps). B [sp]

Ambrose Akinmusire: Honey From a Winter Stone (2023 [2025], Nonesuch): Trumpet player, from Oakland, debut 2008, landed on Blue Note in 2011 and quickly emerged as a top-rated player, his fame further extended by a guest spots with Kendrick Lamar. Second album since his move to Nonesuch, ambitious in his use of strings and vocals (notably Kokayi's freestyles). B+(**) [sp]

Steve Allee Big Band: Naptown Sound (2024 [2025], Jazzville): Pianist, released his first album in 1979, not a lot since then (aside from his The Bob and Tom Show work). I know him mostly through trios, but he co-led a big band in the late 1990s, and is back with another one here. Or maybe the same one? Sounds very run of the mill. B [cd] [03-15]

Marshall Allen: New Dawn (2024 [2025], Mexican Summer): Alto saxophonist, joined Sun Ra's Arkestra in 1958, has led the ghost band since 1995, started work on this shortly after his 100th birthday, also playing kora and EWI, leading a large band with a string section and guest vocalist Neneh Cherry. I'm seeing hype for this as his "debut" album, although I have eight previous albums under his name in my database, not all co-credited to Sun Ra Arkestra. B+(*) [sp]

Russ Anixter's Hippie Big Band: What Is? (2024 [2025], self-released): Arranger and conductor, started playing bass in a Grateful Dead tribute band, leads a scraggly commune of 11 musicians -- 3 reeds, 4 brass (including French horn), vibes/xylo/congas, guitar, bass, drums -- through what will pass for hippie standards, including "Dixie Chicken," "Free Man in Paris" (segueing into "Freedom Jazz Dance"), "She Said She Said," "Saint Stephen" (paired with what I recognize as the theme music to Treme), "Uncle John's Band" (which slides into some James Bond movie music), "Into the Mystic," "Whipping Post," "What Is Hip?" This music is less recent than the Berlin, Porter, and Arlen show tunes were in the 1950s when they became jazz staples, so why not have fun with them now? Note guest spots for Stephen Bernstein and Oz Noy. A- [cd]

Annie & the Caldwells: Can't Lose My (Soul) (2023 [2025], Luaka Bop): Singer Annie Brown Caldwell and her family band, from West Point, Mississippi, no previous records I can find, but they've playing and shouting this gospel/blues revival for a long time -- "twenty years" is suggested, which makes sense because the shot of disco is fully incorporated into their legacy. A- [sp]

Ichiko Aoba: Luminiscent Creatures (2025, Hermine): Japanese folk singer-songwriter, Discogs lists 15 albums since 2010. She plays guitar, electric piano, chimes and shells, with various backing including piano/guitar (Taro Umebayashi), strings, bits of harp and flute. B+(*) [sp]

Artemis: Arboresque (2025, Blue Note): Third group album from this "female supergroup," which I've been filing under pianist Renee Rosnes (although maybe I shouldn't, as the group writing is, and always has been, pretty widely divided). Now down from seven to six to five, with founders Ingrid Jensen (trumpet), Norika Ueda (bass), and Allison Miller (drums) joined by Nicole Glover (tenor sax, who replaced Melissa Aldana on the 2nd album). (The clarinet/alto sax slot, with Anat Cohen on the 1st album, Alexa Tarantino on the 2nd, has been dropped, and vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant only had two songs on the 1st.) Postbop of a high order, something I respect more than enjoy. B+(**) [sp]

Willow Avalon: Southern Belle Raisin' Hell (2025, Assemble Sound/Atlantic): Country singer, presumably writes her own songs, second album. B+(**) [sp]

Bad Bunny: Debí Tirar Más Fotos (2025, Rimas Entertainment): Puerto Rican rapper/singer, big star in his niche ("Spotify's most streamed artist of the year, 2020-2022"), sixth studio album. I've listened to, and enjoyed, most of them, without ever quite graduating to fan, which may be chalked up to my incomprehension of the language, or could suggest that the rhythm falls just short of making such concerns academic. B+(***) [sp]

Bag of Bones: No One Gets Saved (2023 [2024], 577): British avant-jazz quartet: Riley Stone-Lonergan (tenor sax, from QOW Trio), Rick Simpson (piano), Oli Hayhurst (bass), Will Glaser (drums), first group album. B+(**) [sp]

Banks: Off With Her Head (2025, Her Name Is Banks): Singer-songwriter from Los Angeles, goes by her last name, first is Jillian, sixth album since 2014. B+(**) [sp]

Barry Can't Swim: When Will We Land? (2023, Ninja Tune): Scottish electronica producer Joshua Mainnie, first album after several EPs (starting 2021). Half is really terrific. Made the Mercury Prize short list. B+(***) [sp]

Bdrmm: Microtonic (2025, Rock Action): From Hull, UK, dreampop/shoegaze band, third album since 2020, following EPs back to 2016. Appealing sound, seems to have come together nicely. B+(***) [sp]

Tim Berne/Tom Rainey/Gregg Belisle-Chi: Yikes Too (2024 [2025], Screwgun/Out of Your Head, 2CD): Alto sax, drums, and guitar trio, one studio album from April, following a live set a month earlier in Seattle. Some fine stretches here, but slips and slides a bit. Slight edge to the live disc (which I accidentally played first). B+(***) [cd]

Towa Bird: American Hero (2024, Interscope): British pop/rock singer-songwriter, born in Hong Kong, "half-Filipino, half-English" started on Tik Tok playing "guitar riffs over other artists' songs," first album. B+(***) [sp]

Michael Bisio: NuMBq (2024 [2025], Mahakala Music): Bassist, Discogs credits him with 121 albums since 1983, I tend to associate him with Matthew Shipp but 45 of those have his name on the slug line. Title seems to refer to Nu Michael Bisio Quartet, with Melanie Dyer (viola), Marianne Osiel (English horn), and Jay Rosen (percussion). Intense interaction here, very intricate. B+(***) [bc]

Black Milk & Fat Ray: Food From the Gods (2025, Computer Ugly/Fat Beats): Detroit rapper Curtis Cross, 18 or so albums since 2002, including a previous with producer Ray Boggues from 2008. B+(**) [sp]

Robert Sarazin Blake: Let the Longing Run Wild & Free (2025, Same Room): Singer-songwriter, dozen-plus albums since 1996. B+(**) [sp]

Benjamin Booker: Lower (2025, Fire Next Time/Thirty Tigers): Singer-songwriter from New Orleans, third album since 2014, defies categorization. B+(**) [sp]

Booker T & the Bleeds: Ode to BC/LY . . . And Eye Know BO . . . Da Prez (2022 [2025], Mahakala Music): Saxophonist (alto/tenor), b. 1949 in Seattle, last name Williams, not the more famous MGs organ player, but I remember him from a 1988 album, Go Tell It on the Mountain, one of those rarities that makes you wonder whatever happened to him? Hehas a few more side credits (Saheb Sardib, Dennis Charles, Roy Campbell, William Hooker, Jean-Paul Bourelly), but not much lately. Featuring credit for Gary Hammon, another tenor saxophonist from Seattle, plus Mark Franklin on trumpet, and some of the label's regulars, including Christopher Parker on piano and a Kelley Hurt vocal. Mixed results: sound a bit harsh, music too. B [bc]

Anouar Brahem: After the Last Sky (2024 [2025], ECM): Oud player from Tunisia, has a dozen albums on ECM since 1991, jazz rooted in his native folk and classical music. Quartet, names on the cover: Anja Lechner (cello), Django Bates (piano), Dave Holland (bass). Very nice. B+(***) [sp]

Brother Ali: Satisfied Soul (2025, Mello Music Group): Minnesota rapper, originally Jason Newman, albino, converted to Islam, 10th album since 2000, produced by Ant (of Atmosphere). Gets personal: "I got a platinum soul, a solid-gold heart, a steel-trap mind and that's a damn good start," but beware the ego. And philosophical: "human beings are mysterious things" and "the truth isn't always what it seems." A- [sp]

Booker T & the Bleeds: Ode to BC/LY . . . And Eye Know BO . . . Da Prez (2022 [2025], Mahakala Music): Saxophonist (alto/tenor), b. 1949 in Seattle, last name Williams, not the more famous MGs organ player, but I remember him from a 1988 album, Go Tell It on the Mountain, one of those rarities that makes you wonder whatever happened to him? Hehas a few more side credits (Saheb Sardib, Dennis Charles, Roy Campbell, William Hooker, Jean-Paul Bourelly), but not much lately. Featuring credit for Gary Hammon, another tenor saxophonist from Seattle, plus Mark Franklin on trumpet, and some of the label's regulars, including Christopher Parker on piano and a Kelley Hurt vocal. Mixed results: sound a bit harsh, music too. B [bc]

Anouar Brahem: After the Last Sky (2024 [2025], ECM): Oud player from Tunisia, has a dozen albums on ECM since 1991, jazz rooted in his native folk and classical music. Quartet, names on the cover: Anja Lechner (cello), Django Bates (piano), Dave Holland (bass). Very nice. B+(***) [sp]

Brother Ali: Satisfied Soul (2025, Mello Music Group): Minnesota rapper, originally Jason Newman, albino, converted to Islam, 10th album since 2000, produced by Ant (of Atmosphere). Gets personal: "I got a platinum soul, a solid-gold heart, a steel-trap mind and that's a damn good start," but beware the ego. And philosophical: "human beings are mysterious things" and "the truth isn't always what it seems." A- [sp]

Rob Brown: Walkabout (Mahakala Music (2023 [2025], Mahakala Music): Alto saxophonist, first album was a duo with Matthew Shipp in 1988, many side credits with William Parker, but has a couple dozen albums as leader. This is a trio with Brandon Lopez (bass) and Juan P. Carletti (drums). B+(**) [bc]

Jarod Bufe: Brighter Days (2024 [2025[, Calligram): Tenor saxophonist, has a previous (2018) album on OA2, label seems to have taken over the Chicago department of Seattle-based Origin (Calligram founders Geof Bradfield and Chad McCullough both had records on Origin/OA2). Mainstream/postbop quartet, with Tim Stine (electric guitar), Matt Ulery (bass), and Jon Deitemyer (drums). All originals, rich tone, sinuous groove, nicely done. B+(***) [cd]

Burnt Sugar/The Arkestra Chamber: If You Can't Dazzle Them With Your Brilliance, Then Baffle Them With Your Blisluth Pt. Two (2022-24 [2025], Avant Groid Musica): A compilation of live performances from the year after founder Greg Tate died, recycling a title from a 2004 collection. Credits, as best I can decipher: Jared Michael Nickerson (leader, electric bubble bass), Bruce Mack (vocals), Leon Gruenbaum (keyboards), Andre Lassalle (electric guitar), Shelley Nicole (vocals), Marque Gilmore (drums), Ben Tyree (electric guitar), Lewis Barnes (trumpet), "et al," which seems to include (at least on some cuts): JS Williams (trumpet), Anthony Arington (sax), V. Jeffrey Smith (sax), Dave Smith (trombone), Paula Marcus (drums), Chris Eddleton (drums), Vernon Reid (directed four tracks). Focus seems shifted to funk, and more covers (including some rework on "Summertime"). Sample lyric: "The world's gone crazy, the least you can do is dance." B+(**) [bc]

Ethel Cain: Perverts (2025, Daughters of Cain): Alias -- or maybe fictional personage is better? -- for Hayden Anhedönia, who released three EPs 2019-21 and a 2022 album, Preacher's Daughter, and announced this as an EP, but at 89:20 (9 tracks) that's one bit of confusion we can avoid. Although this wouldn't lose much but tedium if it were edited much shorter. Little happens. There are few words. The drone is mild enough for background, but doesn't offer much. B [sp]

Frank Carlberg: Dream Machine (2023 [2025], Red Piano): Finnish pianist, has a couple dozen albums since 1992, was inspired by a 1959 sci-fi gadget to compose four "Dream" suites (13 pieces in all), with complementary keyboards from Leo Genovese (organ, farfisa, synths), outstanding tenor sax from Hery Paz, backed with bass (John Hébert) and drums (Dan Weiss). A- [cd]

Alan Chaubert: Just the Three of Us: Me, the Trumpet and the Piano (2021-23 [2025], Pacific Coast Jazz): Swiss trumpet/piano player (video shows him playing left-hand piano while fingering the trumpet with his right), studied at Berklee, recorded this trio -- seems to be his first album -- in NJ, backed with bass (Belden Bullock) and drums (Jon Di Fiore), playing jazz standards, where Monk and Evans figure prominently. B+(**) [cd]

Charly Bliss: Forever (2024, Lucky Number): Power pop group from New York, Eva Hendricks the singer, third album, the others from 2017 and 2019 -- long enough ago that I had forgotten how much I liked Young Enough (about as much as I like this one). A- [sp]

The Chills: Spring Board: The Early Unrecorded Songs (2025, Fire): The late Martin Phillipps wrote the songs in the early 1980s, probably before the New Zealand group's 1988-92 breakthrough albums. No recording dates given, but Phillipps, who died at 61 in 2024, is credited with electric guitar and vocals on all songs, along with four others who joined the 2021 edition of the band, so these versions are not old demos. At 20 songs, they arguably went overboard, but half are remarkable, and we're unlikely to get more. A- [sp]

Chlöe: Trouble in Paradise (2024, Parkwood/Columbia): Last name Bailey, started at 11 in the sister duo Chloe x Halle (two albums 2018-20), second solo album. [sp]

Nels Cline: Consentrik Quartet (2024 [2025], Blue Note): Jazz guitarist, albums start around 1990, but has played in the rock band Wilco since 2004, and this is his first jazz album since 2020. Quartet, with Ingrid Laubrock (sax), Chris Lightcap (bass), and Tom Rainey (drums). Cline wrote all the pieces, his guitar laying down a foundation for the sax, in particular, to build on. A- [sp]

Clipping.: Dead Channel Sky (2025, Sub Pop): Hip-hop group from Los Angeles, fifth album since 2014, Daveed Diggs is the rapper (he has a couple solo albums, as well as an acting career, but is probably best known as Thomas Jefferson in Hamilton). Guitar and drums, as well as electronics, amp up the noise level, which sounds terrific as the words fly by. A- [sp]

Alex Coke & Carl Michel Sextet: Situation (2024 [2025], PlayOn): Third group album, leaders play flute/sax and guitar, filling out the group with harp, pedal steel, bass, and vibes, so let's call this "chamber jazz," and file it away. B [cd]

Liz Cole: I Want to Be Happy (2024 [2025], self-released): Standards singer, from Los Angeles, first album, doesn't spoil indelible standards nor redeem Brazilian pieces (although faster beats slower), wrote a bit of lyric to an Errol Garner composition, ends with Tom Waits. B [cd]

Sylvie Courvoisier/Mary Halvorson: Bone Bells (2024 [2025], Pyroclastic): Swiss pianist, albums since 1997, this a duo with the famous guitarist. Engages slowly, but pays off in the end. A- [cd] [03-14]

Charley Crockett: Lonesome Drifter (2025, Son of Davy): Country singer-songwriter, from Texas, claims Davy as an ancestor, songs come easy to him, allowing him to crank out 2-3 decent quality albums per year, with decent-enough neo-trad backing. This one includes a song about a country singer, going "baby I'm just me, no more or no less." He's not one to stretch himself, or to let you down. B+(**) [sp]

Helene Cronin: Maybe New Mexico (2025, self-released): Previously unknown country singer-songwriter from Texas, fourth album since 2013 (per Discogs; website has the first of those as an EP, along with a couple more). "We're story tellers and ocean walkers," striking ones about wastes of people and land, from a war-addled rifleman to a stripped mine. A- [sp]

Ermelinda Cuellar: Under a Lavender Sky (2024 [2025], self-released): "Texan-Peruvian" vocalist (Houston-based, of Peruvian descent, sings mostly in Spanish), wrote a couple songs, covers more -- including "Poinciana," "Song for My Father," and some Jobim -- quite ably. B+(*) [cd]

Cumgirl8: The 8th Cumming (2024, 4AD): New York post-punk band and "multi-media collective," "their style and artistic practice are shaped by an opposition to patriarchy and capitalism," debut album 2020, this their second (although I've seen it billed as their first). B+(*) [sp]

Cymande: Renascence (2025, BMG): British funk band, mostly musicians with Afro-Caribbean roots, released several albums 1972-74, was revived in 2006 and again in 2012, this their sixth album overall (first since 2015, second since 1981). Protest songs over sinuous grooves, something that never seems to go out of style. B+(**) [sp]

Jonah David: Waltz for Eli (2024 [2025], Swish Tap): Drummer, first album as leader, side credits back to 2004 but mostly with Matisyahu. Varied lineups, most with sax, piano (or organ), and bass, guitar on three tracks, vocals (Anna Perkins) on two, trumpet (Jeremy Pelt) on one. B+(*) [cd]

Marie Davidson: City of Clowns (2025, Deewee): Canadian electronica producer, from Montreal, half dozen albums since 2014. Mostly spoken vocals over sharp beats with synth frills, gaining momentum as you go. A- [sp]

Deepstaria Enigmatica: The Eternal Now Is the Heart of a New Tomorrow (2022 [2025], ESP-Disk): Quintet from Memphis named for a rare deep-sea jellyfish, listing Chad Fowler (sax), David Collins (guitar), Alex Greene (keyboards), Khari Wynn (bass, credited as Misterioso Africano), and Jon Scott Harrison (drums). I found another group that latched onto the same name, with somewhat similar cosmic speculation (If Life on Earth Is to Abscise Than I Have Forever Been Quantized), but this one adds a bit of Memphis boogie to the free jazz fusion. A- [cd]

Dengue Dengue Dengue!: Agita2 (2024, Club Romantico, EP): Peruvian DJ duo, Felipe Salmon and Rafael Pereira, a couple albums but mostly singles/EPs since 2012. Discogs abbreviates the group name here as "DNGDNGDNG," which in lower case seems to be top slugline on the Bandcamp page. Five tracks (20:40). B+(**) [sp]

The Devil Makes Three: Spirits (2025, New West): Bluegrass trio with roots in Vermont, formed in Santa Cruz with their debut album in 2002, singer-songwriter Pete Bernhard moved back to Vermont while banjo player Cooper McBean moved to Ausin, but they kept working together, picking up bassist Morganve Swain for this album. B+(*) [sp]

Jorrit Dijkstra: PorchBone (2023 [2024], Driff): Dutch alto saxophonist, based in Boston, debut 1992, was a leader in the Steve Lacy tribute band Whammies, seems to mean this title as a group name (per Discogs; Bandcamp credit is Jorrit Dijkstra's PorchBone). Only group album, preceded by Porch Trio -- with Nate McBride (acoustic/electric bass) and Eric Rosenthal (drums) -- joined here by a trombone trio (Jeb Bishop, Michael Prentky, Bill Lowe). B+(***) [bc]

Kenyon Dixon: The R&B You Love (2023, self-released): R&B singer-songwriter from Watts, seems to have been lurking in the background at least since 2015, although Discogs doesn't have most of what's in Wikipedia, and even Google doesn't shed much light on the shift from this 17-track, 44:24 digital album to two evidently related EPs released in 2024. B+(**) [sp]

Doodlebug and 80 Empire: A Galactic Love Supreme (2025, Gladiator): Craig Irving, part of the jazzy rap trio Digable Planets, best known for their two 1993-94 albums (several reunions only produced a 2017 live album), not much on his own, but here teams up with Toronto-based producers, brother Adrian and Lucas Rezza. Some of this works well, and some falls flat. B [sp]

Doseone/Steel Tipped Dove: All Portrait, No Chorus (2025, Backwoodz Studioz): Rapper Adam Drucker, from Idaho, got some notice recently for an album with Buck 65, but has a long history with Anticon (Buck 65's first label). Steel Tipped Dove is producer Joseph Fusaro, who has close to 20 albums since 2014. B+(**) [sp]

Paul Dunmall: Red Hot Ice (2024, Discus): British avant-saxophonist, has over 200 albums since 1986, impossible for me to keep up with, but often worth the efforth. He plays tenor and C soprano here, in a nonet -- with trumpet, trombone, baritone sax, guitar, two keyboardists, bass, and drums -- plus a few more for handclaps and electronics. B+(**) [sp]

Paul Dunmall/Kevin Figes: Duos (2022 [2024], Discus): Saxophone duets, both also playing a range of clarinets and flutes. Figes, also British, has many fewer albums as leader, but has side credits back to 1994. Interesting within its limits. B+(*) [sp]

Mathias Eick: Lullaby (2024 [2025], ECM): Norwegian trumpet player, sixth album on ECM since 2009, also credited with voice and keyboard, backed with piano (Kristjan Randalu), bass (Ole Morten Vĺgan), and drums (Hans Hulbćkmo). B+(**) [sp]

Joe Elefante: Joe Elefante's Wheel of Dharma (2024 [2025], self-released): Pianist, Discogs only has a couple side-credits, Google thinks he's a singer, website shows five albums, including a big band and The Elefante Family Just in Time for Christmas. This is basically a hard bop album, with trumpet (Freddie Hendrix), sax (Erena Terakubo), bass, and drums. B+(*) [cd]

Amir ElSaffar/Lorenzo Bianchi Hoesch: Inner Spaces (2025, Kuroneko): Trumpet player, born in Chicago of Iraqi parents, debut 2007, also credited with vocals here (presumably in Arabic). Hoesch is based in Paris, plays live electronics. B+(*) [sp]

Ensemble C: Every Journey (2024 [2025], Adhyâropa): British pianist Claire Cope, second album, features vocalist Brigitte Beraha, the group expanded from 7 to 11 members. While there is much to be impressed with here, I find myself enjoying very little of it. [PS: Cites Maria Schneider, Pat Metheny, and "Michael Brecker's Grammy-winning 2004 Quindectet album" as inspirations.] B [cd]

Peter Erskine & the Jam Music Lab All-Stars: Vienna to Hollywood: Impressions of E.W. Korngold & Max Steiner (2024 [2025], Origin): Drummer, best known for Weather Report but he has a lot more range than that, with his most memorable early albums as leader being piano trios, and considerable side-work in big bands. Large group here, short of a big band on horns but long on strings, playing hackneyed movie themes arranged by Erskine and Danny Grissett. B+(*) [cd]

Ex-Vöid: In Love Again (2025, Tapete): British power pop band, second album, principally Lan McArdle and Owen Williams, previously in the band Joanna Gruesome (2013-15). B+(*) [sp]

FACS: Wish Defense (2025, Trouble in Mind): Chicago post-punk band, name a tribute to Factory Records, so think Joy Division/New Order with edges less honed, or if you remember them (as I do) the 2007-15 band Disappears, where all members of this trio -- Brian Case (guitar/vocals/keybs), Jonathan van Herik (bass), and Noah Leger (drums) -- got their start. My main caveat is that their sound is so consistent it's hard to pick the better albums out from the also-rans, not that I'm sure there really are any. A- [sp]

Lorraine Feather: The Green World (2022-24 [2025], Relation): Jazz singer, father was famous jazz journalist (and more) Leonard Feather (1914-94), recorded her first albums in 1978 but didn't really get her career going until after 2000. She wrote lyrics here, mostly to music by co-producer Eddie Arkin (guitar) or Russell Ferrante (piano), with strings prominent (Charlie Bisharat on violin), and a bit of Marcus Strickland saxophone. It took me a little while to let this develop. B+(***) [cd] [03-28]

Sam Fender: People Watching (2025, Polydor): English singer-songwriter, from near Newcastle, third album since 2019, all big UK hits, not so much elsewhere, gets tagged as "heartland rock," which is to say compared to Bruce Springsteen, Bob Seger, and Tom Petty -- not without reason, but I'm not sure of the point. B+(*) [sp]

R.A.P. Ferreira: Outstanding Understanding (2025, Ruby Yacht): Rapper, initials for Rory Allen Phillip, released his first albums as Milo, started using this moniker around 2019, with 2-3 albums/mixtapes per year since. B+(**) [bc]

FKA Twigs: Eusexua (2025, Young/Atlantic): British electropop singer-songwriter Tahliah Barnett, third album since 2014, all sizable hits, also has a mixtape and three EPs. B+(*) [sp]

Flagboy Giz and the Wild Tchoupitoulas: Live From the French Quarter Fest 2023 (2023 [2024], Injun Money): New Orleans MC, took over the venerable New Orleans Indian group, best known for their Meters-backed 1976 eponymous LP. B+(**) [sp]

Sullivan Fortner: Southern Nights (2023 [2025], Artwork): Pianist, from New Orleans, debut 2015, got quite a bit of attention for his Solo Game in 2023, returns here with a trio, backed by Peter Washington (bass) and Marcus Gilmore (drums). B+(**) [sp]

Satoko Fujii GEN: Altitude 1100 Meters (2024 [2025], Libra): Japanese pianist, tons of albums since 1995, this a sextet with two violins, viola, bass, and drums (also some electronics from the violist), which lands it near the heavy end of the scale. B+(***) [cd]

Satoko Fujii Tokyo Trio: Dream a Dream (2024 [2025], Libra): Super-prolific Japanese pianist, this one a trio with bass (Takashi Sugawa) and drums (Ittetsu Takemura), drags a bit in spots, but is brilliant often enough. A- [cd]

Funkrust Brass Band: Make a Little Spark (2024, self-released): New York band, 20-piece group (at least at one point), "mixes post punk, disco, EDM, metal, funk, Balkan brass and New Orleans second line, with snazzy uniforms, choreography, megaphone vocals, and all-original music." Two earlier (2017-19) albums fall short of LP-length, and their collection of demos and remixes isn't much longer, but this one counts, and I'm a sucker for a good tuba section. A- [sp]

Future: Mixtape Pluto (2024, Freebandz/Epic): Atlanta rapper Nayvidius Wilburn, 17 mixtapes since 2010, first studio album was Pluto in 2012. I've never quite understood the difference, nor can I tell you what distinguishes trap from hip-hop, but if you set up a 2x2 plot on those two axes even I could assign this to the trap/mixtape quadrant. B+(**) [sp]

Daniel Garbin: Rising (2023 [2025], 6x20): Guitarist, also plays sitar, from Romania, teaches at CUNY (Queensborough Community College), website has sections on mathematics and photography as well as music, seems to be his first album, originals (some co-written by Simona Pop), groove pieces I was perhaps too readily inclined to dismiss. B+(*) [cd]

Andreas Gerth & Carl Oesterheit: Music for Unknown Rituals (2023 [2024], Umor Rex): German musicians, have fairly substantial credits since early 1990s, but not much more than their two duo albums as leaders. One of the best albums I've heard in the Hassell-Eno "4th world" domain. A- [sp]

Freddie Gibbs: You Only Die 1nce (2024, ESGN): Rapper, actual last name Tipton, debut 2013, sixth solo studio album. Title refers back to his 2017 album, You Only Live 2wice. B+(**) [sp]

LP Giobbi: Garcia (Remixed) (2024, Round): Jerry Garcia remixes, Discogs gives him co-credit, some vocals I could or should recognize, revived with hopping new rhythm tracks. B+(**) [bc]

John Glacier: Like a Ribbon (2025, Young): British rapper, second album, has an underground vibe that slips past you a bit too easily. B+(*) [sp]

Philip Glass: Philip Glass Solo (2021 [2024], Orange Mountain Music): Major minimalist composer, b. 1937, range includes soundtracks and operas, some relatively popular. This is solo piano, as was his 1989 Solo Piano. Very nice. B+(***) [sp]

Glorygirl2950: Queen of the Land (2024, self-released): Not much on her, some suggestion that her self-released label is UK-based, but Pitchfork review pegs this as "a welcome blast of rowdy Atlanta rap." Accent favors Atlanta. B+(*) [sp]

Brad Goode Polytonal Big Band: The Snake Charmer (2023 [2025], Origin): Trumpet player, called his first (1988) album Shock of the New, recorded four albums (2001-03) with Von Freeman titled Inside Chicago, career since has been vigorously eclectic, including a 2008 anticipation of this group called Polytonal Dance Party. Conventional big band, conducted by John Davis, playing six original compositions and two new arrangements ("Ornithology" is one) by Goode. B+(**) [cd]

Rose Gray: Louder, Please (2025, PIAS): British pop singer-songwriter, first album after singles (since 2019), EPs, and a mixtape (2021). Fine dance beats, party themes. B+(***) [sp]

Muriel Grossmann: MGQ Live in King Georg, Köln (2022 [2025], Powerhouse): Austrian saxophonist (tenor, soprano, alto here), a "spiritual jazz legend" -- which mostly means she's moved by the holy spirit of John Coltrane -- with her quartet: Radomir Milojkovic (guitar), Abel Boquera (organ), and Uros Stamenkovic (drums). B+(***) [sp]

Keiji Haino/Natsuki Tamura: What Happened There? (2024 [2025], Libra): Guitar and trumpet duo, the former gets top billing, possibly for raw vocal power, and possibly for pushing this over the edge, and scraping it bloody in the process. Most often I shy away from records this harsh, but here I'm convinced. Probably helped that it's just one 35:43 piece, so not only didn't wear out its welcome, but got a couple extra plays. A- [cd]

Billy Hart Quartet: Just (2021 [2025], ECM): Venerable jazz drummer, Discogs credits him with playing on 763 albums since 1963 (Jimmy Smith, although he appears on a couple later-released Wes Montgomery albums from 1961), including 88 albums as leader or co-leader (since 1977). I figure he was 81 here, writing 3 (of 10) songs, and leading a quartet with Mark Turner (tenor sax, wrote 3 songs), Ethan Iverson (piano, wrote 4 songs), and Ben Street (bass). B+(**) [sp]

Tim Hecker: Shards (2020-22 [2025], Kranky): Electronica (mostly ambient?) producer from Canada, 20+ albums since 2001, presents this one as a stopgap compilation, "all material written 2020-22 for the Projects Infinity Pool, The North Water, Luzifer and La Tour" -- i.e., soundtrack work. Seven pieces, 31:09, some sparkly, some subdued, nice enough. B+(**) [sp]

Jake Hertzog: Ozark Concerto (2024 [2025], Zoho): Guitarist, started in rock, has a half-dozen albums since 2009, I've heard a couple, not that I recall much but nothing that prepared me for this move into classical music with a 23-piece string-heavy orchestra (description is: "for guitar, jazz big band and string quartet," credited on spine as Ozark Jazz Philharmonic), conducted by Susumu Watanabe. B- [cd]

Hieroglyphic Being: Quadric Surfaces (2024, Viernulvier): Chicago electronica producer Jamal Ross, prolific since 2008, soundtrack bits for "an abstract animation film by visual artist Gabriela González Rondon," pleasantly bleepy. B+(***) [sp]

Patterson Hood: Exploding Trees and Airplane Screams (2025, ATO): Drive-By Truckers singer-songwriter, released three solo albums 2004-12 along with group albums, this his fourth (not counting the pandemic-filler Heathen Songs). Too quiet to keep my attention, but interesting enough when I do notice. B+(***) [sp]

William Hooker: Jubilation (2023 [2025], ORG Music): Avant-drummer, many records since 1977. Credits are sketchy, but this one opens solo, but also includes: Matt Lavelle (trumpet), Stevie Manning (alto sax), On Davis (guitar), and/or Adam Lane (bass), from a live date. B+(**) [sp]

Horsegirl: Phonetics On and On (2025, Matador): Indie rock band from Chicago, made up of Nora Cheng, Penelope Lowenstein, and Gigi Reece, singles from 2019, second album, produced by Cate Le Bon, spine title adds an extra "And On" for good measure. B+(**) [sp]

Jon Irabagon: Server Farm (2023 [2025], Irabbagast): Saxophonist (tenor and sopranino here), got big here, leading a 10-piece group with only one member -- Levy Lorenzo (kulintang, laptop, electronics, vibraphone) -- not previously well-known to me. Big and bold, although I don't care for the vocal. B+(***) [cd]

Vijay Iyer/Wadada Leo Smith: Defiant Life (2024 [2025], ECM): Piano and trumpet duo, Iyer also playing electric and electronics, follows a similar album from 2016. Much to notice here if you take the time, but it goes slow, and it's hard to get excited. B+(**) [sp]

Erik Jekabson: Breakthrough (2024 [2025], Wide Hive): Trumpet/flugelhorn player, from Bay Area, side credits from 1996, debut album 2003, eighth own album, has a long list of supporting musicians on most tracks here, including strings, flute, oboe, and some vocals (two tracks). Quite lovely, for the most part, as far as that goes. B+(**) [cd]

Jennie: Ruby (2025, Columbia): K-pop singer-rapper Jennie Kim, from Blackpink, first solo album. I'm impressed by the rhythmic sense on the raps, less so on the production overkill on the sung numbers. B [sp]

Jessica Jones Quartet: Edible Flowers (2020 [2025], Reva): Tenor saxophonist, actually two in the group as husband Tony Jones also plays, as well as sharing most writing/arranging credits, backed here by Stomu Takeishi (bass) and Deszon Claiborne (drums). Free jazz, solid and poised. B+(***) [cd]

Rodney Jordan: Memphis Blue (2020 [2025], Baxter Music): Bassist, one previous album in my database, side credits from 1999, especially with Marcus Roberts and René Marie. Quintet with trumpet (Melvin Jones), sax (Mark Sterbank), piano (Louis Hervieaux), and drums (Quentin E. Baxter), mostly blues, a mix of jazz tunes (Gigi Gryce, Mulgrew Miller, "Autumn Leaves") and originals (last one is called "The Art of Blakey"). B+(***) [cd]

Anthony Joseph: Rowing Up River to Get Our Names Back (2025, Heavenly Sweetness): British poet and novelist, originally from Trinidad, started recording spoken word jazz albums with the Spasm Band in 2007. His 2021 album is a favorite, not only for its title (The Rich Are Only Defeated When Running for Their Lives). This was less immediately appealing, but the bounty of words has few peers, and in the end that's also true for the music. A- [sp]

Jupiter & Okwess: Ekoya (2025, Airfono): Congolese group led by Jean-Pierre (Jupiter) Bokondji, who grew up as a diplomat's son in East Berlin before returning to Kinshasa to organize his band, which lately has been big in Europe. B+(*) [sp]

Laura Jurd & Paul Dunmall: Fanfares & Freedom (2023 [2024], Discus): Trumpet player, best known for her group Dinosaur, and long-established avant saxophonist, both British, leading a nonet through a piece commissioned by the Cheltenham Jazz Festival. B+(***) [sp]

Lola Kirke: Trailblazer (2025, One Riot): Born in London, father was drummer for Free and Bad Company, moved to New York when she was five, has several albums, and a substantial career as an actor. Her 2024 EP Country Curious got her some attention from country music fans. She doesn't have the twang so common in Nashville, but her songwriting can pass -- especially "Mississippi, My Sister, Elvis & Me." B+(***) [sp]

Benjamin Lackner: Spindrift (2024 [2025], ECM): German pianist, divided time between Berlin and New York, several albums since 2008, recorded this in France, a quintet with Mathias Eick (trumpet), Mark Turner (tenor sax), Linda May Han Oh (bass), and Matthieu Chazarenc (drums). B+(***) [sp]

Lady Blackbird: Slang Spirituals (2024, Foundation Music Productions/BMG): Jazz singer-songwriter Marley Munroe, based in Los Angeles, second album, has muscled up the production to the point where it's no longer recognizable as jazz, but so far she's making the power work. B+(***) [sp]

Lady Gaga: Mayhem (2025, Interscope): Hugely successful pop singer-songwriter, sixth album since 2008, not counting her duets with Tony Bennett and her soundtrack ventures, the latter tied in with an acting career that has overshadowed her music, setting this up as something of a comeback, or maybe this just reveals an even greater ambition as an arena touring star. This is a bold, loud, big budget production, which puts her squarely in the top tier of mega-corporate juggernauts. I can close my eyes and imagine really getting into this, but when I wake up, I wonder whether it's worth it. I also wonder whether the copyright lawyers were consulted on "Killah," which has no words nor music but phrasing that is even more Prince. B+(***) [sp]

Karl Latham: Living Standards II (2024 [2025], Dropzone Jazz): Jazz and rock drummer, side credits back to 1988, album title refers back to a 2016 album (which Discogs probably has the label wrong on), a guitar-bass-drums trio covering rock tunes like "Day Tripper," "Low Rider," "White Rabbit," and "White Room." Same concept here, the group expanded to include keyboards, extra percussion, and vibes ("special guest" Wolfgang Lackerschmid -- much of Latham's jazz discography is on his albums). The songs strike me as more obscure, but I've never paid much attention to Stephen Stills or Adrian Belew (of course, I do still recognize the Doors, Led Zeppelin, and Steppenwolf). B+(*) [cd]

Steve Lehman Trio + Mark Turner: The Music of Anthony Braxton (2024 [2025], Pi): While I've rated 69 Braxton albums -- looking at the list suggests I still have a lot of work to do -- I've never gotten a good sense of him as a composer, while having no doubts as to his chops, especially on his marvelous standards albums. On the other hand, several of his students have made superb albums from his compositions, and Lehman's own work, both as alto saxophonist and composer, over the last 20+ years has few peers. He wrote two pieces here, to go with five Braxtons and one Monk, and added the tenor saxophonist to his trio with Matt Brewer (bass) and Damon Reid (drums). A- [cd]

James Brandon Lewis Trio: Apple Cores (2025, Anti-): Tenor saxophonist, two-time poll winner, backed by Josh Werner (bass/guitar) and Chad Taylor (drums/mbira), on a rock label I get no publicity from, both LP and CD already marked "Sold Out." Terrific, as always. A- [sp]

Jeffrey Lewis: The Even More Freewheelin' Jeffrey Lewis (2023 [2024], Don Giovanni/Blang): Folkie singer-songwriter from New York, or "anti-folk," probably not a distinction that needs existence, started 20+ years ago drawing comics and singing "crass songs," has much more of a bond with Peter Stampfel than with Dylan, so the title and album cover here seem like misdirection, or maybe just a temporary lapse of ideas. Good thing the songs come with a surplus. Also that the band rocks harder than Dylan ever did, but the two soft/slow ones at the end ("100 Good Things" and "The Endless Unknown" are if anything better. A- [sp]

Damon Locks: List of Demands (2024 [2025], International Anthem): Sound and visual artist, vocalist for post-hardcore Trenchmouth, joined Exploding Star Orchestra and founded Black Monument Ensemble, spoken word and electronics here on his fourth album (first as solo leader). I can't say that I've followed the words close enough for them to really speak to me, but I get the gist, and the music may bring me back for more. A- [sp]

Lolo [Mamah Diabate/Jabel Kanuteh/Stefano Pilia/Marco Zanotti]: Lolo (2025, Black Sweat): Two African griot names on the cover (Diabate, from Mali, plays djeli ngoni; Kanuteh, from Gambia, plays kora), with two Italian names (guitar/bass and percussion). B+(***) [bc]

Loot: Loot (2023 [2025], ICP): Quartet led by Dutch pianist Oscar Jan Hoogland, who composed all the pieces, with Ab Baars (tenor sax/clarinet), Uldis Vitols (bass), and Onno Govaert (drums). The label reminds us of the lamentably passed Mengelberg, and so does the opening piano, a playful trickiness that lifts everyone's spirits. A- [bc]

Brandon Lopez: Nada Sagrada (2023 [2025], Relative Pitch): Bassist, has been very busy since 2017 or so, rounded up an unruly septet of various strings (including electric harp and gayageum), electronics, and two drummers (Gerald Cleaver and Tom Rainey) for one 39:12 piece. B+(***) [sp]

Doug MacDonald: Santa Monica Session (2024 [2025], DMAC Music): Guitarist, many albums since 1981, quartet with piano, bass, and drums; three originals, five covers, closing with "Perdido." B+(*) [cd]

John Mailander's Forecast: Let the World In (2024 [2025], self-released): Nashville-based fiddle/mandolin player, seems to have started in bluegrass (Molly Tuttle, Billy Strings, Bruce Hornsby) but "moved beyond." Group name from a 2019 album, reused in 2021. Stringed instruments, drums, some sax, one vocal, feels rural but nothing that yells hoedown. B+(**) [cdr]

Ben Markley: Tell the Truth (2024 [2025], OA2): Discogs credits him with three 1976-81 albums, but another source has him born in 1981, and when you click on "Credits" those three albums vanish (replaced by two others from 1975-77), with his plausible credits starting in 2007, and own albums in 2009. He has six of the latter, including a couple big band efforts, plus one by Live Edge Trio. He's a pianist, and composed all originals, for this postbop quintet with Wil Swindler (alto sax) and Steve Kovalcheck (guitar), plus bass and drums. B+(*) [cd]

Jako Maron: Mahavélouz (2025, Nyege Nyege Tapes): Electronica producer from Réunion, a French island in the Indian Ocean, has a rep for building on local folklore, both on his own and in the group Force Indigčne. Rhythm tracks, simple repeated figures with a bit of dissonace. B+(***) [sp]

Branford Marsalis Quartet: Belonging (2024 [2025], Blue Note): Saxophonist, mostly tenor, major figure since he (and his brother) left Art Blakey in the early 1980s. Quartet with Joey Calderazzo (piano), Eric Revis (bass), and Justin Faulkner (drums), together since 2012 (when Faulkner joined, otherwise since 1998). Music is by Keith Jarrett, all six tracks from his 1974 album -- possibly his best ever (with Jan Garbarek, and sure, I've always been partial to saxophone) -- expanding on their 2019 cover of "The Windup." As with their previous cover of A Love Supreme, they add something of their own without challenging the original. On the other hand, he reaches further here, and comes up with more. If one took this at face value, it would be one of his best. So why not just enjoy it as such? A- [sp]

Tate McRae: So Close to What (2025, RCA): Pop singer-songwriter from Canada, third album, started as a dancer, winning awards and a ballet scholarship. Mostly upbeat dance fare. Sounds fine to me, as far as that goes. B+(***) [sp]

Michi: Dirty Talk (2025, Stones Throw): Pop/r&b singer from Los Angeles, first album. B+(*) [sp]

MIKE: Showbiz! (2025, 10k): Rapper Michael Bonema, tenth studio album since 2016, sounds great at first, then just seeps into the background until you realize it's over. B+(**) [sp]

Mdou Moctar: Tears of Injustice (2025, Matador): Tuareg singer-guitarist from Niger, steady stream of albums since 2013, started getting some notice after Matador signed him/them in 2021, especially for the 2024 album Funeral for Justice. This is an acoustic remake, recorded after a coup made return problematical for touring musicians. I've made no effort to decipher the words or politics -- the coup itself was notable here for sending US troops in Niger packing, which I took to be good news all around, but I have no idea what the actual impacts there are. In any case, the words mean nothing to me, but slowing them down and quieting the guitars seems as valid as ever. B+(***) [sp]

Mogwai: The Bad Fire (2025, Rock Action): Scottish post-rock band, 11th album since 1995, last 4 cracked top-10 in UK but little chart action in US. Mostly instrumental, a bit of shoegaze lustre but not too heavy, some vocals, pleasant enough, but for what? B+(*) [sp]

Caili O'Doherty: Bluer Than Blue: Celebrating Lil Hardin Armstrong (2025, Outside In Music): Lil Hardin played piano, joining King Oliver when he came to Chicago, met and married Louis Armstrong, reportedly convinced him to step out as a leader, and played with him on the first round of Hot Fives, contributing a few classic songs. She then left the band, then left him, and eventually (1938) they got divorced, but she kept the name, and capitalized on it. Tribute here includes vocals by Michael Mayo and Tahira Clayton (I much prefer her), and Nicole Glover on tenor sax (big solos). B+(**) [sp]

Isabelle Olivier: Impressions (2024 [2025], Rewound Echoes): French harpist, a dozen albums since 1997, takes title and inspiration from Coltrane, but her "genre melding" touches on folk themes filtered through euroclassical. B+(**) [cd] [03-21]

Panda Bear: Sinister Grift (2025, Domino): Noah Lennox, a co-founder of Animal Collective, eighth solo album since 1999. I've often had trouble with their records, but this one is too easy-going not to just enjoy. I've seen it tagged as "tropical rock," and other references to beaches. This time I get the vibe. B+(*) [sp]

Jeremy Pelt: Woven (2024 [2025], HighNote): Mainstream trumpet player, couple dozen albums since 2002. Backed with vibes, guitar, bass, and drums, with guest synth on four tracks, vocal on one. B+(*) [sp]

Juan Perea: Lightkeeper (2022-24 [2025], Zoho): Pianist, based in Chicago, seems to be his debut at 68, kicks off with "Oye Como Va," followed by seven originals and a reprise. Eric Marienthal plays notable alto sax on three cuts. B+(*) [cd]

Ivo Perelman/Ken Vandermark/Joe McPhee: Oxygen (2025, Mahakala Music): Saxophone trio, the former on tenor, the others credited with "winds." B+(***) [bc]

Polyfillas: Rude Boys of England E.P. (2024, self-released, EP): Brit band from Sunderland (on the North Sea, near Newcastle), Ava and Jamie Dangerous sing, play guitar, wrote the songs, backed with bass and drums: two old-fashioned punk anthems, the "reggae-tinged" 8:30 title track, and "two acoustic numbers" -- total 21:37. Experiments, I figure, each with a small measure of promise. B+(*) [bc]

Jackson Potter: Small Things (2024 [2025], Shifting Paradigm): Guitarist, from Minnesota, debug album in 2021 seems to have vanished, new one is a quintet with dueling horns -- Alex Ridout (trumpet) and Troy Roberts (tenor sax) -- plus bass and drums, with voice and extra alto sax (Jaleel Shaw) on one track. B+(**) [cd]

Praktika: Balani Factory (2023 [2024], Blanc Manioc): Electronica duo from Finland, Heikki Rinkinen and Risto Eskolin, debut album 2016, impresses with a cornucopia of beats. A- [sp]

Noah Preminger: Ballades (2024 [2025], Chill Tone): Tenor saxophonist, from Brooklyn, debut 2011, hype sheet suggests a connection to John Coltrane's 1963 Ballads, but unclear what that is, beyond the piano-bass-drums backing, and the slow, gorgeous crawl through a different set of songs. B+(***) [cd]

PremRock: Did You Enjoy Your Time Here . . . ? (2025, Backwoodz Studioz): Rapper Mark Debuque ("perhaps best known as one half of ShrapKnel"), but has previous albums more/less under this name back to 2010. B+(***) [sp]

Redman: Muddy Waters Too (2024, Gilla House): Rapper Reginald Noble, from New Jersey, debut 1992 went gold, as did next four albums through 2001 (or six with collaborations, including one with Method Man). Fifth album since (including another with Method Man), this first since 2015 runs 32 songs, 81 minutes. B+(**) [sp]

Noah Preminger: Ballades (2024 [2025], Chill Tone): Tenor saxophonist, from Brooklyn, debut 2011, hype sheet suggests a connection to John Coltrane's 1963 Ballads, but unclear what that is, beyond the piano-bass-drums backing, and the slow, gorgeous crawl through a different set of songs. B+(***) [cd]

Redman: Muddy Waters Too (2024, Gilla House): Rapper Reginald Noble, from New Jersey, debut 1992 went gold, as did next four albums through 2001 (or six with collaborations, including one with Method Man). Fifth album since (including another with Method Man), this first since 2015 runs 32 songs, 81 minutes. B+(**) [sp]

Rick Roe: Tribute: The Music of Gregg Hill (2024 [2025], Cold Plunge): Pianist, has albums from 1994 and 2005, both Monk-themed, has side credits on a couple other tribute albums to Hill, a composer based in Michigan with no real discogrpahy of his own, but nearing a dozen tribute albums of late. Trio with Robert Hurst (bass) and Nate Winn (drums). B+(**) [cd]

Saba & No I.D.: From the Private Collection of Saba and No I.D. (2025, From the Private Collection): Chicago rapper Tahj Malik Chandler, four albums 2014-22, working with Chicago producer Ernest Wilson, who started in 1992 with Common Sense, moving on to Nas, Jay-Z, Kanye West, and stray cuts with Ghostface Killah, Rihanna, and Beyoncé. Title is very offhand, suggesting there's so much more behind it they can't bother with real titles. Beats are super, flow is terrific, lots of ideas. A- [sp]

Moonchild Sanelly: Full Moon (2025, Transgressive): South African (Xhosa) dance-pop singer, touches kwaito and amapiano but in her long list of genres -- her own preference seems to be "future ghetto funk" -- reminds me most of dancehall. I ascribe no import to her "trademark teal hair" or garish makeup, but as dance pop this is pretty otherworldly. A- [sp]

Gina Saputo: Daydream (2024 [2025], GSJQ Productions): Standards singer, based in Los Angeles, several albums since 2003, backed by piano/bass/drums, with guest horns on several tracks. Opens with "You're No Good," but everything else is more standard (give or take a Monk). B+(**) [cd] [04-18]

Mark Scott III: Soft Light (2024 [2025], Miller Three Publishing): Guitarist, studied at UNT, based in Austin, first album, trio backed by bass (Ben Triesch) and drums (Mike Gordon). Has a light, steady touch. B+(**) [cd]

Sentient Beings: Truth Is Not the Enemy (2024, Discus): Quartet, album title from a 2023 album originally filed under John Butcher, replaced here by John O'Gallagher (alto sax), joining Faith Brackenbury (violin/viola), John Pope (bass), and Tony Bianco (drums). B+(***) [sp]

Dave Sewelson/Gabby Fluke-Mogul/George Cartwright/Anthony Cox/Steve Hirsh: Murmuration (2023 [2025], Mahakala Music): Bandcamp page attributes this to the label, but since the cover lists five names, and they're all pretty well known -- baritone sax, violin, alto sax/guitar, bass/cello, drums -- we should credit them. B+(**) [bc]

Shygirl: Club Shy Room 2 (2025, Because Music, EP): British electropop singer-rapper Blane Muise, has a 2022 album and a bunch of EPs, including 2024's Club Shy, a remix thereof, and now this 6-song sequel (14:46), all but the first with its own "Feat." -- Bambii, Jorga Smith, and PinkPantheress are the ones I recognize (although Yseult is one I should check out). B+(***) [sp]

Six Sex: X-Sex (2025, Dale Play, EP): Francisca Cuello, from Argentina, no albums but fifth EP since 2019, "combines elements of reggaeton, dance hall and electronic music, by mixing sensual urban rhythms with ecstatic beats." Six songs, 17:24. I was tempted to hold out for more, but came around with multiple plays. A- [sp]

Skaiwater: #gigi (2024, GoodTalk/Capitol): British rapper, Jamaican descent, non-binary, based in Los Angeles, first album, 34:23, stutter-step beats that stumble here and there. B+(**) [sp]

Skaiwater: #mia (2025, GoodTalk/Capitol, EP): Eight track, 22:42 sequel to debut album #gigi. B+(*) [sp]

Jim Snidero: Bird Feathers (2024 [2025], Savant): Alto saxophonist, 28th album over 40 years, decided to mark the occasion with a collection of Charlie Parker tunes, although he slipped four standards into the mix: "These Foolish Things," "Embraceable You," "The Nearness of You," "Lover Man" -- not songs I associate with Parker, but the liner notes explain the connections. Trio with Peter Washington and Joe Farnsworth, an exemplary mainstream rhythm section, as rooted in swing as in bop. Very nicely done, without a hint of danger or irony. B+(***) [cd]

Songhoy Blues: Héritage (2025, Transgressive): Saharan blues band from Timbuktu in Mali, moved to Bamako when a jihadi group took power there, and wound up recording Music in Exile in 2015. Fourth album. Steady going. B+(***) [sp]

Squid: Cowards (2025, Warp): British band, Ollie Judge the lead singer/drummer, third album, says "post-punk" or "experimental rock" but is pretty eccentric, in ways that alternately attract or repel me. B+(*) [sp]

Dayna Stephens: Hopium (2022 [2025], Contagious Music): Saxophonist, tenor mostly, has a dozen-plus albums since 2007 plus a lot of side work. Postbop quartet with Aaron Parks (piano), Ben Street (bass), and Greg Hutchinson (drums). B+(*) [sp]

Stress Eater: Everybody Eats! (2024, Silver Age): Czarface spinoff, from 7L & Esoteric with Kool Keith in lieu of Inspectah Deck, longtime denizens of a comic/cosmic underground, this time with a focus on food. A- [sp]

Thomas Strřnen: Relations (2018-22 [2024], ECM): Norwegian drummer, best known for his group with Iain Ballamy, Food (8 albums, 1999-2015), including in the 76 credits Discogs lists. This was recorded in several places over several years, and it's not clear who plays where, but the credits are: Craig Taborn (piano), Chris Potter (soprano/tenor sax), Sinikka Langeland (kantele/voice), Jorge Rossy (piano). Mixed bag, but Potter (for one) doesn't disappoint. B+(**) [sp]

Omar Thomas Large Ensemble: Griot Songs (2024 [2025], Omar Thomas Music, 2CD): Composer/arranger, Brooklyn born, parents Guyanese, studied at NEC, Maria Schneider protégé, third album (none I can find on Discogs, although they have one credit from 2013). My eyes can't decipher the print I have, so I'll just let this one run. Big for sure, or is grandiose the word? B+(*) [cd]

Mitch Towne: Refuge (2024 [2025], Cross Towne): Organ player, Discogs lists 8 side credits back to 1999, but this seems to be his first album as leader, a trio recorded in Omaha with Tetsuya Nishiyama (guitar) and Jeffery Johnson (drums), playing six originals and a piece by Kenny Kirkland. B+(*) [cd] [04-04]

Trio Glossia: Trio Glossia (2024 [2025], Sonic Transmissions): North Texas trio of Matthew Frerck (bass), Joshua Cańate (tenor sax/drums), and Stefan Gonzalez (vibes/drums), first album (although Gonzalez has a bunch of side-credits, starting with his father, and Cańate appears with him in a very good Dennis Gonzalez Legacy Band album last year). B+(***) [sp]

University of Nevada Las Vegas Jazz Ensemble 1: Let the Good Times Roll (2024 [2025], Vegas): Chances are pretty much any music school in the country could assemble a band like this (I've run across similar efforts from UNT and Toronto). No real reason to search them out, or to get snippy about talented students playing repertory (or their first stabs at originals). But this one is pretty enjoyable, thanks largely to song selection (starting with the title). I wouldn't even mind hearing more vocals, at least from ringer guest Laura Taylor, whose "Alright, Okay You Win" is a highlight. B+(**) [cd]

Valknee: Ordinary (2024, TuneCore): Japanese rapper, released an album in 2019, not sure what else. Jumps pretty hard to start with. Still, short as it is (10 songs, 26:42) it doesn't quite sustain. B+(**) [sp]

Sharon Van Etten: Sharon Van Etten & the Attachment Theory (2025, Jagjaguwar): Singer-songwriter, guitarist, from New Jersey, based in Los Angeles after a stretch in New York, seventh studio album since 2009, first to name a band. B+(*) [sp]

Chris Varga: Breathe (2024 [2025], Calligram): Vibraphonist, from Chicago but moved to Seoul in the 1990s, recording this, his second album, on a return visit, a postbop quintet with Geof Bradfield (tenor sax), Dave Miller (guitar), Clark Sommers (bass), and Neil Hemphill (drums), playing eight of his own pieces. B+(*) [cd]

Vincenzo Virgillito: Precondition (2017 [2025], self-released): Italian bassist, born in Sicily, based in London, side credits since 1994 but this is his first as leader, and for that matter his first solo album. B [cd]

Sunny War: Armageddon in a Summer Dress (2025, New West): Singer-songwriter Sydney Ward, born in Nashville, grew up in Los Angeles but returned to hawk her unique Afro-Americana. Fifth album since 2014, second on the label. B+(*) [sp]

Warmdüscher: Too Cold to Hold (2024, Strap Originals): British post-punk group, name is German for "warm showerer" ("a derogatory term referring to somebody who is perceived as a wimp, or as not tough enough for life"), fifth album since 2015. B+(*) {sp]

Reggie Watkins: Rivers (2024 [2025], BYNK): Trombonist, from Pittsburgh, debut album 2004, only a few more since, including tributes to Maynard Ferguson and Jimmy Knepper. Thirteen original pieces, backed by piano-bass-drums, for a very nice presentation of his horn. B+(***) [cd] [03-28]

Wavy Bagels With Driveby: A Carfull (2024, Break All): Queens rapper Jackie Mitchell and producer Oscar Torres Jr., each with one other recent album. B+(**) [sp]

WDR Big Band: Bluegrass (2025, MCG Jazz): Westdeutscher Rundfunk, founded 1956 when the Köln radio station split off from Hamburg's NDR (Norddeutscher Rundfunk) and pivoted to jazz, where they've proven a ready source for big band backing. Discogs credits them -- usually as WDR Big Band Köln (or Cologne) -- with 104 albums since 1981, many under the names of guest directors (most prominently: Lalo Schifrin, Vince Mendoza, and Bob Mintzer -- at the helm here) or guest stars. Mintzer arranged ten more or less recognizable bluegrass tunes here, and solos on tenor sax and EWI, with Darol Anger (violin) and Mike Marshall (mandolin) guest stars. A nice exercise unlikely to have any lasting impact in either world. B+(*) [cd]

Jesse Welles: Middle (2025, self-released): Folkie singer-songwriter, from Ozark, AR, debut 2012 as Jeh Sea Wells, went by just Welles 2018-23, reverted to actual name for 2024's Hells Welles. Title song is antiwar. B+(**) [sp]

Rodney Whitaker: Mosaic: The Music of Gregg Hill (2024 [2025], Origin): Mainstram bassist, from Detroit, many side credits since 1985 (Roy Hargrove, Orrin Evans, Wynton Marsalis), over a dozen own albums, in 2019 he kicked off a now extensive series of albums of the compositions of Gregg Hill, back here with what may be the best one yet, largely thanks to stellar performances by Terell Stafford (trumpet/flugelhorn) and Tim Warfield (tenor/soprano sax), with Rick Roe (piano) and Dana Hall (drums). Also four vocals by Rockelle Whitaker, which I'm less enthusiastic about but they do add another dimension to Hill's work. B+(***) [cd]

Simón Willson: Bet: Live at Ornithology (2024 [2025], Endectomorph Music): Bassist from Chile, based in New York, side-credits since 2016, second album as leader, quartet with Neta Raanan (tenor sax), Evan Main (piano), and Kayvon Gordon (drums), recorded live. Raanan got some Debut notice in the 2024 FDJCP, and gets pushed even harder here. B+(***) [cd]

Michael Wollny Trio: Living Ghosts (2024 [2025], ACT): German pianist, 30+ albums since 2002, ninth trio album, live from Saarländischer Rundfunk, four 12-20 minute sets, with Tim Lefebvre (bass) and Eric Schaefer (drums). Varied, but very present. B+(***) [sp]

Jeong Lim Yang: Synchronicity (2023 [2025], Sunnyside): Bassist-composer, from South Korea, based in New York since 2011, has a previous (2017) album. Quartet here, focus on viola (Mat Maneri) and piano (Jacob Sacks), with Randy Peterson on drums. Enchanting. B+(***) [cd]

YHWH Nailgun: 45 Pounds (2025, AD 93): NYC-based experimental rock quartet (post-punk, but even more post-no wave), first album, very short at 21:04 but 10 songs. Electronics expand the sonic palette, and the rhythm splinters into countless shards. I tend to devalue short albums, but this is remarkable, and I'm not sure how much longer it could go on and still retain its impact. A- [sp]

Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek: Yarin Yoksa = If There Is No Tomorrow (2025, Big Crown): Anatolian rock group, which is to say Turkish but based in Berlin, where orientalism passes as neo-psychedelia, fifth album since 2019. B+(**) [sp]

The Young Mothers: Better If You Let It (2022 [2025], Sonic Transmissions): Founded by Norwegian Thing bassist Ingebrigt Hĺker Flaten after he moved to Austin, originally a free jazz group but with "hard-hitting punk energy, and hip-hop rhythms," even some rap-song on this third album, with Jawaad Taylor (trumpet), Jason Jackson (tenor/baritone sax), Jonathan F. Home (guitar), Stefan Gonzalez (vibes/drums/voice), and Frank Rosaly (drums). The jazz component is sharper than the hip-hop. B+(**) [sp]

Adrian Younge & Ali Shaheed Muhammad: azz Is Dead 22: Ebo Taylor (2025, Jazz Is Dead): Hip-hop producers back with another installment (7 songs, 26:06) in their anti-jazz series, each new volume featuring someone semi-famous from way back when (usually the 1970s), in this case the now 86-year-old Ghanaian highlife star (who also appeared on last year's various artists sampler, JID 21). B+(*) [sp]

ZA!/Tomás De Perrate: Jolifanto (2024, Lovemonk): Barcelona band, active singe 2006, combines "African beats, noise, thick distortions, vocal loops, free jazz, sounds from the shepherds of Tuva, Balinese polyrhythms, math rock, dadaism, drones," etc. De Perrate is a flamenco singer of some note. Sounds, indeed, like all that got dumped into the blender. B+(**) [bc]

Recent Reissues, Compilations, Vault Discoveries

Paul Dunmall/Paul Rogers/Tony Orrell: That's My Life (1989 [2023], 577): British saxophonist, plays soprano here, Discogs credits him with 201 albums since 1986 (325 credits), so this is a fairly early set, a live tape from Albert Inn in Bristol, backed by bass and drums. I've only sampled him lightly (18 albums, 4 A-), so don't have much sense of how consistent he is, but this one sizzles all the way. A- [sp]

William Hooker: A Time Within: Live at the New York Jazz Museum, January 14, 1977 (1977 [2025], Valley of Search): Live set, previuosly unreleased, where the drummer relentlessly hacks his way through the frenzied cacophony thrown up by a pair of saxophonists, Alan Braufman on alto and David S. Ware on tenor. This was early for all of them, with Hooker senior at 30, and Ware still a decade away from his great run as a leader from 1988 to his death in 2012. Only Braufman, the youngest at 26, had a significant album already released, 1975's Valley of Search (on India Navigation), but he quit shortly, only reissuing the album in 2018 (hence his label name, and this record) when he relaunched his career at 77. B+(***) [sp]

Ginger Johnson and His African Messengers: African Party [Deluxe Edition] (1967 [2025], Innovative Collective/BBE Music): Percussionist from Nigeria (1916-75), moved to London after WWII, played with jazz musicians like Ronnie Scott, recorded some singles and this 1967 album (slightly expanded here). Intense drums, wailing sax, chants, lives up to its title. A- [sp]

The Laws of William Bonney Saxophone Quartet: 1993-2007 (1993-2007 [2023], Acheulian Handwave): Saxophone quartet of Jeffrey Morgan (alto), Martin Speicher (sopranino/alto), Stefan Keune (sopranino/tenor), and Joachim Zoepf (soprano/baritone) -- each with fairly substantial discograpies (Morgan's possibly longest, but least known to me; Zoepf was in Kölner Saxophon Mafia, long on my shopping list but never found). Eleven tracks from four dates, no group records released. (Their namesake was better known as Billy the Kid, 1859-81). B+(***) [sp]

Music Is a Message From Space ([2025], Corbett vs. Dempsey): Various artists, but the subject is Sun Ra, who leads off with a 1:56 snip of solo vocal, "recorded by Ra at home in Chicago during the 1950s," the first side filled out with solo covers of Sun Ra tunes from Raymond Boni (guitar) and Jason Adasiewicz (vibes). Second half starts with Wolfgang Voigt's remixes of Sun Ra loops, then a solo piece by Joe McPhee (from 1970, the only solid date given here). Grade here excludes the vinyl-only bonus track from Spaceways Inc. + Zu, presumably from the album that was my first Jazz CG Pick Hit (2003's Radiale). B+(*) [bc]

Plastikman: Musik (1994 [2024], Nova Mute): British techno producer Richie Hawtin, third album under this moniker (his most common alias, preceded by F.U.S.E. and his own name). Space vibes, with a couple of false finishes. B+(**) [sp]

Studio: West Coast (2006 [2025], Ghostly International): Swedish electronica duo, Dan Lissvik and Rasmus Hägg, reissue of their only album, although they had singles 2001-07 and a couple of compilations. Album proper has six very strong songs (57:45), on CD or vinyl, with the digital tacking on six bonus tracks -- mostly redundant versions. Just judging the former. A- [sp]

Yo La Tengo: Old Joy (2006 [2025], Mississippi, EP): Short soundtrack (6 songs, 25:56) for a 2006 film by Kelly Reichardt, although there is some suggestion that this is a new recording, with Smokey Hormel playing guitar, pretty much solo. Nice, as far as it goes. [PS: Moved to reissues, as it appears this music was released in 2008 as part of They Shoot, We Score.] B+(*) [sp]

Neil Young: Oceanside Countryside (1977 [2025], Reprise): Another archival release, presented as a lost album in his "Analog Originals" series, the title (with different takes?) appeared in his Archives Vol. III: 1976-1987, reflecting an LP division into ocean (solo) and country (band) sides. But the songs are familiar: three from Comes a Time (1978), two from Rust Never Sleeps (1979), three more from Hawks & Doves (1980), and remakes of two older songs (one from Harvest, the other a non-album cover. No surprise that much of this sounds great -- those are some of my favorite albums -- but this seems like an unnecessary remix, the variations fine but far from revelatory. [PS: Surprised to find this on Spotify, after Young's publicized removal of his music there back when they cut their big Joe Rogan podcast deal.] B+(***) [sp]

Old Music

Bantou Mentale: Bantou Mentale (2019, Glitterbeat): Liam Farrell, born in Dublin, based in Paris, started out as a rock drummer, moved toward hip-hop in the 1990s, and later to African music, mostly plays bass and guitar synth here, a group with three expats from Kinshasa, including a vocalist identified as Apocalypse. First of two group albums. Electroclash seems the right word here. B+(**) [sp]

Bantou Mentale: Congo Animal (2020, Glitterbeat): Less clash here, that disorienting sense of glass and metal crashing against walls to form sheets of sound. That allows the rhythm tracks to come to the fore, where they belong, a steadiness that holds all the other sounds in balance. A- [sp]

Helene Cronin: Restless Heart (2014, self-released, EP): First album, six songs, 22:28. Sounds nice enough, but no songs really stand out. B+(*) [sp]

Helene Cronin: Belong to the River (2015, self-released, EP): Second album, just a bit longer (7 songs, 24:43), but her sound is striking from the start, as are several of the songs -- including a couple I might object to on politico-philosophical grounds but are too observed to get upset over ("Dangerous," on hazards as childhood learning experiences, and "Lucky Me," on how soldiers make you free). B+(**) [sp]

Helene Cronin: Old Ghosts & Lost Causes (2019, self-released): First full album, 11 songs, 42:23. Good songwriter, but tends to stay understated. B+(*) [sp]

Helene Cronin: Landmarks (2023, self-released): Second full album, 12 songs, put extra effort into the songs, and developed a real band sound. B+(***) [sp]

Jorrit Dijkstra/François Houle/Karlis Silins/Kenton Loewen: Coastlines: Music of Steve Lacy, Volume I - Quartets (2022 [2023], Afterday): The alto saxophonist previously recorded three volumes of Lacy tunes in the Whammies, returns here with a Canadian clarinetist who also has a long history with Lacy, who recruited the bassist and drummer (mostly associated with Gordon Grdina, but like Houle based in Vancouver). B+(***) [bc]

Jorrit Dijkstra/François Houle: Coastlines: Music of Steve Lacy: Volume II - Duos (2022 [2023], Afterday): Same idea, but loses a critical step without the rhythm section. B+(*) [bc]

Paul Dunmall Sun Ship Quartet/Alan Skidmore/Julie Kjćr/Stĺle Liavik Solberg/Mark Wastell: John Coltrane 50th Memorial Concert at Cafe OTO (2017 [2019], Confront): English tenor saxophonist, not generally known as a Coltrane afficionado, but he did release two tribute albums in 2012-13, so had some prep going into this live set, recorded on the 50th anniversary of his death. Opens with the trio of Kjćr (flute), Solberg (bass), and Wastell (drums) on a long 21:22 title, followed by Dunmall's Quartet (with Howard Cottle on tenor sax, Olie Brice on bass), and Tony Blanco on drums) playing the album Sun Ship (37:07; recorded 1965, released 1971). Finally, the two groups merge, with Skidmore (a third tenor sax) piling on for three more tracks (44:16), ending with a bit of "Ascension." I should admit that late Coltrane gave me a lot of discomfort when I first heard his records -- Sun Ship is still a C+ in my database, and while Ascension is an A-, that was certainly a much later regrade. These days this music is still not quite easy listening, but for me at least it does go down much smoother. My caveats have more to do with sound, but I can't fault the sentiment. B+(***) [bc]

FACS: Negative Houses (2018, Trouble in Mind): After a pretty impressive 2010-16 run, Disappears bassist Damon Carruesco departed, breaking up the band. But the other three musicians regrouped, with second guitarist Jonathan van Herik moving over to bass, adopting this new name connected to Factory Records -- UK home of Joy Division, which rather more dramatically turned into New Order. This first album preserves their sound, but it's mired in trauma. B+(*) [sp]

FACS: Lifelike (2019, Trouble in Mind): Second album, unless 6 songs, 29:22 demotes it to EP status (as Spotify thinks). A bit slow off the mark, but the last song holds up for 8:21. B+(*) [sp]

FACS: Void Moments (2020, Trouble in Mind): Third album, 7 tracks, 30:34. Solid sound, doesn't develop much. B+(*) [sp]

FACS: Present Tense (2021, Trouble in Mind): Fourth album, 7 tracks, 35:14. Having commented above on how consistent the appeal of Disappears was, and noting the continuity of their latest album, I now have to admit that they fell into a sustained rut -- although their previously heard fifth proper album, Still Life in Decay (2023) did start to step back up. B+(*) [sp]

FACS: Maggot Brain 020324 (2024, self-released): Back cover reads: "Smashed Plastic Anniversary 20192024." Live set as dated, celebrating their 5th anniversary, released as a "Bandcamp exclusive," which included a limited vinyl run. I found this first when looking up "Wish Defense" -- the title song of their 2025 album, which first appeared here. Good dry run for the new album. B+(***) [bc]

Funkrust Brass Band: Dark City (2017, self-released): First album, or EP if you're bothered by the 26:57 run time for seven songs. Not sure how many musicians are in this edition, but the concept is fully evolved, backed with ample brass. B+(***) [sp]

Funkrust Brass Band: Bones and Burning (2019, self-released, EP): Second outing for the "20-piece post-apocalyptic disco-punk brass band playing all original music with megaphone vocals, heavy tuba bass lines, thundering percussion and searing brass melodies." But with just four songs, 18:10, we'll count it as an EP. B+(***) [sp]

Andreas Gerth & Carl Oesterhelt: The Aporias of Futurism (2021, Umor Rex): I was so struck by Music for Unknown Rituals, I went back to the previous album, which more clearly shows their roots in avant-electronica, minus the acoustic touches and rhythmic quirks that made the later album so appealing. This has its own, more somber, appeal, almost industrial. B+(*) [sp]

Patterson Hood: Killers and Stars (2004, New West): Drive-By Truckers singer-songwriter since 1998, they were just taking off when he released this modest solo effort. B+(*) [sp]

Kölner Saxophon Mafia: Die Saxuelle Befreiung (1984, Jazz Haus Musik): German saxophone sextet (at least at this point), founded 1981, so a few years after World Saxophone Quartet (1977) and ROVA (also 1977). First studio album, after 1982's Live. They seem less focused on harmonics, and more on the intricacies of composition and flow, although results are mixed. B+(**) [sp]

Kölner Saxophon Mafia: Unerhört - Stadtklänge (1984 [1985], Jazz Haus Musik): Third album, the second side a 4-part suite. More ambitious, but also more refined. B+(***) [sp]

Six Sex: Fantasy (2019, Dale Play, EP): Dance-pop singer-songwriter from Argentina, Francisca Cuello, "combines elements of reggaeton, dance hall and electronic music," plus sex appeal, of course, but still working on that. First EP, 5 songs, 11:38. B+(*) [sp]

Six Sex: Area 69 (2022, Dale Play, EP): Still a work in progress, but has a video. Six songs, 12:30. B+(**) [sp]

Six Sex: 6X (2023, Dale Play, EP): Some new beats and filler, stretching six songs to 15:10, to mixed effect. B+(**) [sp]

Six Sex: Satisfire (2024, Dale Play, EP): Six songs, 15:24. Stronger dance beats with fewer glitches. B+(***) [sp]

Laura Taylor: Cry Me a River: A Tribute to Julie London (2000 [2001], Quicksilver): Standards singer, based in Las Vegas, details scarce, but after hearing her as an emeritus guest on the UNLV big band album I wanted to hear more. Discogs lists backing vocal credits back to 1978 (mostly with Diana Ross), but no jazz until 1989-90 with Steve Kuhn. AMG co-credits this to guitarist Joe Lano, but his name doesn't appear on the cover. Back cover has him under "featuring," along with Tom Warrington (bass). The songs are taken at a crawl, which suits them all. B+(**) [sp]

Laura Taylor: My Funny Valentine: Memories of Chet Baker (2002, Staying Power): Not as memorable a songbook, but enough to work with, especially with Steve Kuhn (piano), Eddie Gomez (bass), and Lewis Nash (drums). She makes no effort to match Baker's voice or phrasing, other than by taking even the slightest songs slow, which she can do because her own voice is so exquisite. B+(***) [sp]

Laura Taylor: Mountain Greenery (2006, Staying Power): I'm not finding any credits for this (even the duet partner in "Straighten Up and Fly Right") but the arrangements are varied, including drenching strings for the "Porgy and Bess Medley" -- one suggestion is that she picked out instrumentals for her Vegas act, making this some kind of ritzy karaoke. I didn't recognize the title song, but Rodgers & Hart wrote it, with Mel Tormé and Ella Fitzgerald covers. Nothing else, least of all "One Note Samba," got past me. B+(**) [sp]

Laura Taylor: Have Mercer on Me: Laura Taylor Sings Johnny Mercer (2010, Staying Power): A great and varied song book, which she handles with considerable aplomb. No idea who plays on this, but there is some nice sax, as well as piano trio. B+(***) [sp]

Laura Taylor: Dancing in My Feet (1979, Good Sounds): Evidently she did start off as a disco singer, with the title single the theme song for a TV show, Disco Magic. This was produced by T.K. Productions in Florida, presumably related to Terry Kane's TK Records label -- best known for KC & the Sunshine Band and George McRae's "Rock Your Baby" -- although this came out on another Miami-based label. This is a better-than-expected disco obscurity, with the title song recommended for anthologistsm, but I'm also impressed with the ballad "Sad Is the Song." B+(**) [sp]

Grade (or other) Changes

Sometimes further listening leads me to change an initial grade, usually either because I move on to a real copy, or because someone else's review or list makes me want to check it again. Also some old albums extracted from further listening:

John Coltrane: Sun Ship (1965 [1971], Impulse!): The great, and hugely influential, saxophonist -- tenor, but his soprano on "My Favorite Things" led most later tenor saxophonists to double up -- led what was quite possibly the most acclaimed quartet of all time from 1961-66, making stars out of McCoy Tyner (piano), Jimmy Garrison (bass), and Elvin Jones (drums). They reached a pinnacle with 1964's A Love Supreme, after which Coltrane's searches wandered deep into the avant-garde and beyond: a year later to the mass ecstasy of Ascension, and just before his death in 1967 (he was 40) to his duo with Rashied Ali. When I first encountered this music, I intensely disliked like what often registered as cacophony, but over time I've grown to tolerate and occasionally to enjoy the legacy he created. This was one of many albums that only appeared after his death. For better or worse, this is one of his last quartet sessions: better because Tyner's solos are often brilliant, and the bass and drums follow him perfectly; worse because they don't seem all that much in sync with the leader, who seems to want to go places the group isn't ready for. Still, they're good enough, and he's great enough, that this almost works. [was: C+] B+(***) [sp]

John Coltrane: Sun Ship: The Complete Session (1965 [2013], Impulse!, 2CD): Probably not a good idea checking this out after two spins of the original album -- the outtakes aren't necessarily inferior, but the false starts are bound to be annoying, and there isn't that much really great stuff in the first place (written as I'm listening to some, which I'm pretty sure was in the first release). B+(**) [sp]

Music Weeks

Music: Current count 36534 [36534] rated (+0), 149 [149] unrated (+0).

Excerpts from this month's Music Week posts:

Notes

Sources noted as follows:

  • [cd] based on physical cd
  • [cdr] based on an advance or promo cd or cdr
  • [lp] based on physical lp (vinyl)
  • [dvd] based on physical dvd (rated more for music than video)
  • [bc] available at bandcamp.com
  • [r] available at napster.com (formerly Rhapsody)
  • [sc] available at soundcloud.com
  • [sp] available at spotify.com
  • [yt] available at youtube.com
  • [os] some other stream source
  • [dl] something I was able to download from the web; may be freely available, may be a bootleg someone made available, or may be a publicist promo

Grades are probably self-explanatory, aside from B+, which is subdivided 1-2-3 stars, because most records that come my way are pretty good, but they're not all that good.