Saturday, July 18, 2026


Music Week

July archive (in progress).

Music: Current count 46299 [46249] rated (+50), 10 [15] unrated (-5).

Advance Music Week appeared here on Substack. (Thank you for subscribing. It means a lot to me.) It is also archived here.) Once again, I slipped up and sent the email out before I pasted the album covers in. I need some kind of checklist process.

I failed to get my essays done, so the Francis Davis Jazz Critics Mid-Year Poll will have to wait until next week. I've heard complaints about why don't you just post the results already? Sorry. They're tabulated, and if you're anxious just ask me. But the essay is my one chance to write the first draft of history, and I have things I want to say. And no, I'm not going to wait until I say everything I have to say. I expect to write more about the poll later. And I'd like to encourage you all to send in any questions or comments. While I have my own ideas about what's important, I'm open to discussing any aspect of the poll, or what it tries to cover, or even what it fails to cover.

Lots of records below. I'm still very much focused on jazz. As I've noted, before I started counting, I had only heard of about half of the 600 albums that received votes this half-year. Not easy to figure out how many of those 600 albums I had heard before I started counting, but I'm up to 420 rated 2026 jazz releases in my tracking file.

Lots of stuff I've neglected over the last six weeks. First up will probably be to start (yes, I mean start) compiling a Loose Tabs. Hopefully not much has happened, and what has happened isn't too aggravating, but I suspect not. Taking a break tomorrow to cook for friends. That I'm looking forward to.


New records reviewed this week:

Ricky Alexander: Ragology (2025 [2026], Turtle Bay): Clarinet player, third album since 2018 (plus one with singer Sweet Megg), "takes an emphatic dive into the roots of ragtime and tangentially related genres that morphed into jazz." Conal Fowkes plays piano, along with banjo, bass, and drums. B+(***) [sp]

Zoh Amba: Eyes Full (2026, Matador): B. 2000, made a big splash in 2022-23 with a flurry of astonishing free jazz saxophone albums, reinvents herself as a guitar-playing, Dylanesque singer-songwriter, but lower-fi and occasionally dissolving into some kind of detuned Sonic Youth postpunk. Not a direction I'd like to encourage, but fairly unique even if the signposts are easily recognized. A− [sp]

Florian Arbenz Feat. Bill Frisell/Greg Osby: Quiet Lights (2026, Hammer/Conversation Lab): Swiss drummer, started in the trio Vein, started remotely piecing together his "Conversations" during the pandemic, originally by passing tapes back and forth. This started with the drummer's soundscapes, but was recorded in a studio session without overdubs. B+(***) [sp]

Ran Blake & Dominique Eade: Roots & Byways (2023 [2026], Sunnyside): Pianist, debut 1965, won a MacArthur in 1988 (along with Max Roach, the first jazz musicians so honored), many records, I haven't done the math but roughly speaking they fall into three fairly equal bins: solos, trios, and duos with singers (starting with Jeanne Lee in 1966). (Although as with all generalizations, there are exceptions: my favorite of his albums is a piano duo with Clare Ritter, Eclipse Orange, and I very rarely fall for piano duos.) Eade has 9 albums since 1990, this her 3rd with Blake. She is one of those soprano divas I rarely react well to, but Blake brings out the best in her. B+(***) [cd]

Cheer-Accident: Your Smile / The Song Is Over (2026, Cuneiform): Prog rock group, founded 1981 by Thymme Jones, released their first album in 1986, hype sheet says this is their 27th without specifying when, but it is packaged (at least with my download) with two 2022-23 live shows, offered separately on Bandcamp. This hardly seemed worth the trouble until "The Blue Lie," a 9:37 hard groove piece, marred by unnecessary vocals. B [dl]

Cheer-Accident: CheerAx Basement, Chicago 4/2/22 // Reggie's Chicago 9/26/23 (2022-23 [2026], Cuneiform): Two live sets, available separate or bundled with the new album, the first expanding the septet to nine with an extra singer and drummer. It's not unfathomable that they would have a cult following, but this is an awful lot of not so very much. [PS: I left this hanging overnight, then finished it the next morning. When I was fresher, I found myself more amused and less annoyed, so nudged the grade up a bit, while doubling down on my summary line.] B+(*) [dl]

Alexander Claffy: Alive in Philadelphia Vol. 1: At Chris' Jazz Cafe (2025 [2026], Cellar): Bassist, has several albums since 2016, more side credits, mostly mainstream. Leads a veteran quintet with two saxophonists — Seamus Blake (tenor) and Jaleel Shaw (alto) — piano (Kevin Hays) and drums (Bill Stewart). Strong set, especially for Blake. B+(**) [sp]

Mike Clark: Kuon Ganjo (Time Without Beginning) (2025 [2026], Wide Hive): Drummer, made his mark in the 1970s with Herbie Hancock, and has been central to all the later Headhunters revivals. Returns here with a funk-oriented hard bop group: Eddie Henderson (trumpet), Craig Handy (sax), Patrice Rushen (piano/rhodes), Esiet Okon Essiet (bass). My wife thought this sounded familiar, and indeed half of the pieces are, with the others close enough. B+(**) [cd] [08-07]

Paul Cosentino's Boilermaker Jazz Band: Everything Is Jumpin' (2025, self-released): Clarinet player, leader of a trad jazz group with over a dozen albums back to 1995 (most just under the band name). This one is subtitled "Plays the Artie Shaw Songbook," so mostly hits from 1937-39, with vocals by Erin Keckan. B+(**) [sp]

Dominique Cravic Et Les Primitifs Du Futur: Les Crimes Du Musette (2026, Buda Musique): French guitarist, fondly remembered for two albums Sunnyside released in 2006-08 (World Musette and Tribal Musette, the former dating back to 1999). The booklet (scanned on Discogs) includes two pages of credits, and a gallery of 77 pics, which presumably map to the credits. French chanson, many singers, most offhand as is the fairly minimal music, booklet has notes on the 27 songs but no recording dates, cover art by R. Crumb. B+(***) [sp]

Marilyn Crispell/Anders Jormin: Memento (2025 [2026], ECM): Brilliant pianist, emerged in the 1980s in Anthony Braxton's quartet and on her own outstanding albums. Landed on ECM in 1997 with an Annette Peacock tribute I didn't think much of at the time, probably because I suspected the label of trying to tame her and tone her down, although 2003's The Storyteller and 2008's One Dark Night I Left My Silent House overcame my misgivings. Approaching 80, these are mild, measured duets with bass. Probably too mild. B+(*) [sp]

Caroline Davis: Fallows (2025 [2026], Ropeadope): Alto saxophonist, born in Singapore (parents British and Swedish), moved to Atlanta when she was 6, then to Texas. Eighth album since 2012, solo over electronics (something called the Organelle, which looks to be an open source patch processor and/or sampler). John Surman has done similar things, but never pushed the electronics this far. A- [bc]

Adam De Lucia: The Man Who Would Be King (2025 [2026], self-released): Guitarist, seems to be his first album, but talks about his "path to jazz fusion" starting in 1995 with "a decade of one-on-one study." His compositions, although some feature Oz Noy on guitar, most with Henry Hey (keyboards), Tim Lefebvre (electric bass), and Jordan Perlson (drums), some with sax (Donny McCaslin or Michael Ghegan), vocals (Ghegan and Chrissi Poland), one track with string quartet. One problem is that fusion often sounds heavy, even when the metal is flimsy. Then there's the problem of trying to do much. Maybe he should have aimed a bit lower, like Prince. B [cd] [08-07]

E'DU & Judgitzu: Nuku (2026, Nyege Nyege Tapes): E'DU is a traditional voudou ensemble from Togo. Judgitzu is French producer Julien Hairon. This appears to based on a 2023 recording of the group, a dense thicket of percussion and chant, with a veneer of electronics. [PS: Bandcamp only makes offers the 31:24 remix track, "Edu & Judgitzu," and that's all I've heard; the 29:55 second track, "Edu," appears to be the original, unheard 2023 track. The label usually presents all tracks, so this case is unusual.] B+(**) [bc]

Maria Grand: Both Sides (2026, Lilaila): Swiss saxophonist (tenor/soprano), sings some, half-dozen albums since 2017; first side with bass-drums-percussion; second side with piano (Angelica Sanchez), voice (Jasmine Wilson), and alto sax on two tracks (Immanuel Wilkins). The spoken word is interesting. B+(***) [bc]

Miho Hazama: Frames (2025 [2026], Edition): Japanese composer/conductor, based in New York, tenth album since 2012, has been leaning on European big bands since 2018, here with the Danish Radio Big Band (who Discogs gives a co-credit to, but Bandcamp doesn't). She's very good at this, and they're good enough, but I don't feel like figuring out exactly how much. B+(**) [sp]

Gerry Hemingway: Live at Bau 4 (2025 [2026], Hat Hut): Drummer, part of Anthony Braxton's famous 1980s Quartet, also of the long-running BassDrumBone trio, with several dozen albums on his own. This one features Izumi Kimura (piano) and Frank Gratkowski (clarinet/bass clarinet/alto sax/alto flute), who turn in exemplary solos, and Christian Weber (bass). A− [cd]

House of the Black Gardenia: Mazurka in Jazz (2026, HOTGB): Trad jazz nonet, led by bassist Neil Hopper and vocalist Elise Rana Hopper, second album after a 2020 debut. Mostly original songs, which shifts them from nostalgia act to some kind of cabaret sophistication. A− [sp]

I Compani: Basta! 7-Tet [The Last Concerts 2025] (2025 [2026], I Compani): Dutch group, led by saxophonist Bo van de Graaf, founded in 1985, decided to call it quits after a series of "last concerts" in December 2025. Throughout their career, they've mostly recorded film music, in the circus style that seems peculiar to the Dutch avant-garde (cf. ICP Orchestra and Willem Breuker Kollektief) and is often deliriously wonderful. Core group here includes no household names, so I'll just list instruments: oboe/english horn/duduk, violin, bandoneon, piano/keyboards, bass, drums. A companion volume squeezed another 18 friends onto the stage, and both CDs are reportedly available as Basta! The Last Concerts 2025, but they are split up for streaming, and further information is hard to come by. [NB: Last song glitched out, which I'll assume is Spotify's fault.] B+(**) [sp]

I Compani: Basta! Extended [The Last Concerts 2025] (2025 [2026], I Compani): The Dutch group's farewell concert at Bimhuis in Amsterdam, the Septet-minus-drummer joined by 9 friends (including a replacement drummer) to start, 3 more briefly on the second track, then another 6 for tracks 8-9 (of 13). The vocalists add an element of cabaret to the circus. B+(***) [sp]

Randy Ingram: Sound Within: A Celebration of Bill Evans (2025 [2026], Chill Tone): Pianist from Alaska, eighth album since 2009, trio "featuring" Rufus Reid (bass) and Joe LaBarbera (drums), both with direct links to Evans, adds two originals to two Evans songs, and a batch of standards common to all, done with the care and touch Evans was famous for. B+(***) [cd]

Mike Khoury: For Hind Rajab (2025 [2026], Relative Pitch): Violinist, based in Detroit, has a couple dozen albums since 2001, found this when I was looking for a forthcoming album with Jason Kao Hwang and two drummers. This is solo, a sound that often gets on my nerves, but nonetheless a tour de force. Hind Rajab was a five-year-old girl in Gaza, killed in the genocide, but unlike most anonymous victims remembered for her recorded calls desperately pleading for help after her family was killed by an Israeli tank (see the Oscar-nominated film, The Voice of Hind Rajab). I'm reminded of The Diary of Anne Frank as one more instance where focus on an individual helps dissolve the mass dehumanization that allowed such mass slaughter to happen. A- [sp]

Andrew Kim: Lineage (2025 [2026], Origin): Trombonist, studied at Michigan State, and draws heavily on their faculty and alumni for his debut album: Sharel Cassity (alto/tenor sax, flute), Xavier Davis (piano), Rodney Whitaker (bass), Ulysses Owens Jr. (drums), with Michael Dease producing and playing baritone sax on two tracks, and Randy Napoleon playing some very tasty guitar on two more. Five originals, two more from the band, new arrangements of JJ Johnson and Curtis Fuller. Perhaps tries to do a bit too much. B+(***) [cd] [07-24]

Kiri Ra!: Nen (2026, We Jazz): Finnish trio, second album, all three play piano, keyboards, balafon, and other instruments — Linda Fredriksson also plays sax and flutes. No recording dates, but "it took 10 years to combine the right pieces for the album." Intricate and slightly exotic music closer to ambient than to jazz, which doesn't mean it isn't. B+(**) [sp]

Knats: A Great Day in Newcastle (2026, Gearbox): "Geordie jazz" group from Newcastle, started by Stan Woodward (electric bass) and Kind David-Ike Elechi (drums), expanded to a quintet for their first album — trumper (Ferg Kilsby), tenor sax, keyboards — expanded much more here, with extra horns, strings, vocals, and Geordie Greep (from Black Midi) on guitar. Seems like another case of the "great" overwhelming the "good." B [sp]

Elan Mehler: Renee Said (2025 [2026], Newvelle): Pianist, based in Brooklyn, eleven albums since 2007, most of his Discogs credits are for producing records on Newvelle, which he co-founded. Originals plus one song each by Paul Motian and Frank Kimbrough. With Scott Robinson (tenor sax), Loren Stillman (alto sax), Ben Monder (guitar), Tony Scherr (drums), and either or both drummers (Francisco Mela and Matt Wilson). B+(**) [sp]

Sei Miguel: Viva! (O Carro De Fogo De Sei Miguel) (2023 [2026], Clean Feed): Portuguese trumpet player (1961-2025), first album 1988. This offers two improv sets (54:56 + 52:24) of an octet with trombone, alto sax, electric guitar, electric bass, organ, drums, and extra percussion, nicely spaced out with plenty of food for thought. This is being billed as the label's final new release, after 25 distinguished years. (A quick check reveals I have 639 of their records in my database: 6 A, 70 A-.) They will be missed, but the music will continue. B+(***) [sp]

Nils Petter Molvær: Be Quiet (2026, Edition): Norwegian trumpet player, a major player in the development of jazztronica in the 1990s, first in Masquelero and then in a series of albums for ECM and Thirsty Ear. This dispenses with the beats, offering a series of ambient duos (one trio), most with electronics or exotica, but also piano (John Paul Jones), cello (Anja Lechner), percussion (Marilyn Mazur), voice (Imogen Heap). Quiet as advertised, which I don't find very engaging. B [sp]

Nolatet: Somethin' to Relax With (2025 [2026], Royal Potato Family): New Orleans quartet, third album since 2016, names on cover: Brian Haas (piano), Mike Dillon (vibes/percussion), Johnny Vidacovich (drums), and James Singleton (bass). Closer to MJQ than anything I associate with New Orleans. B+(*) [sp]

Onilu: Jakuta's Dance (2025 [2026], 577): Group name is Yoruba for drummers, was used as title in 2025 for an album attributed to Joe Chambers, Kevin Diehl, and Chad Taylor. I filed that one under the first-listed Chambers, but Diehl (ex Sonic Liberation Front) is the evident leader here, with Taylor out and two more percussionists added: Craig McIver and Daniel Villarreal. While all four know their way around a drum kit, Chambers' first credit is for vibraphone, and McIver's is for marimba. Diehl favors bata drums, and Villarreal adds conga and cajon to all of the above. B+(***) [dl]

Ivo Perelman/Matthew Shipp/William Parker/Bobby Kapp: Synesthesia (2024 [2026], Defkaz): Avant-saxophonist from Brazil, has hundreds of albums since 1989, many with the pianist, quite a few with the bassist. The drummer's discography is down around 30 credits, but it goes way back to 1967, and includes separate duo albums with Perelman and Shipp, as well as two previous quartet albums. B+(***) [sp]

Brooks Prumo Orchestra: Good Bait (2025 [2026], self-released): Austin-based guitarist, third group album, a 13-piece big band plus singer Alice Spencer, wants you to dance. B+(**) [sp]

Olivia Rodrigo: You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love (2026, Geffen): Pop star, was groomed from a very young age, with vocal, acting, and piano lessons, which got her on screen by 7, and into Disney roles in her teens. Her platinum (6X) debut album in 2021 was one of the year's best, and her sophomore effort topped my 2023 list (if only 3X). First couple songs sound great, but the "girl so in love" side is certain to beat out the "you seem pretty sad" side. But I'm less concerned with the narrative these days than with the sound. So while the hooks get subtler, they're still pretty satisfying. A− [sp]

Armand Sangalang: Waypoints (2025 [2026], Calligram): Tenor saxophonist from Chicago, second album, quartet with Dave Miller (guitar), Ethan Philion (bass), and Devin Drobka (drums). Mostly originals, but takes a swing at "Body & Soul" that could earn a spot if Gary Giddins ever updated his list. B+(***) [cd] [08-07]

Helen Sung Big Band: Oracles (2024 [2026], Sunnyside): Pianist, from Houston, parents from China, 10th album since 2003, first big band venture, conventional plus extra percussion. Note songs dedicated to Clark Terry, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and Jimmy Heath. Also a section called "Pianism" that name-checks Barry Harris, Kenny Barron, and Herbie Hancock. B+(*) [sp]

Tyler "Twerk" Thomson: Plays in Bands (2026, self-released): New Orleans bassist, "young" by one account, no dates given but earliest side credit I can find, either under Tyler or Twerk, is 2013, but album cover is in the style of the old Bunk Johnson anthologies, and the music dates back a century (more or less). Five tracks with Thomson's Starting 7, followed by five with Charlie Halloran's Quality 6 and 4 with Tommy Mack's Band. Nothing spectacular, but exactly what this classic music should sound like. A− [bc]

Tierra Whack: Whack's Museum (2026, Interscope): Rapper, from Philadelphia, went viral with a 15-songs-in-15-minutes video, Whack World (2018). New mixtape is slightly less economical (12 songs, 27:07), slightly less striking. B+(***) [sp]

Håvard Wiik/Antonio Borghini/Tim Daisy: One Brief Cure (2025 [2026], Relay): Norwegian pianist, side credits since 1996, especially with Atomic, gained some note in Chicago at least in Ken Vandermark groups, notably Free Fall (named for the Jimmy Giuffre trio with Paul Bley and Steve Swallow). With the Italian bassist and Chicago drummer (ex-Vandermark Five), both with previous Wiik duos. B+(***) [bc]

Wrens: Live @ Nublu (2025 [2026], Out of Your Head): Quartet, fronted by rapper Ryan Easter (also trumpet), mostly dense electronics from Elias Stemeseder and Lester St. Louis (also cello), with Jason Nazary (drums), following up a very interesting debut album (Half of What You See) with a rather rough improv live set. B+(***) [os]

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers: Jazz Messengers '70 (1970 [2026], Good Time): The drummer's definitive hard bop group left Blue Note after 1964, and his stars split as well. Blakey's label work petered out, but he kept touring, and had a knack for finding young talent. This live album was released in Japan in 1970. The group: Bill Hardman (trumpet), Carlos Garnett (tenor sax), Joanne Brackeen (piano), and Jon Arnet (bass). They're mostly playing his hits — starts with "Moanin'" and "Blues March," ends with "A Night in Tunisia" — with only one new piece (by Garnett, the most interesting thing here). B+(**) [sp]

Art Blakey & the New Jazz Messengers: Buttercorn Lady (1966 [2026], Elemental Music): Another live set, released at the time on Limelight (a Mercury subsidiary). This particular group featured Chuck Mangione (trumpet, also wrote 3 of 6 songs), with Frank Mitchell (tenor sax), Keith Jarrett (piano), and Reggie Johnson (bass). Mangione started in the Jazz Brothers (aka Mangione Brothers) in the early 1960s, and went on to commercial success in the 1970s, leaving this as his only album with Blakey. While he is central here, Mitchell, Jarrett, and Blakey himself leave stronger impressions. B+(*) [sp]

Dollar Brand/Don Cherry/Carlos Ward: The Third World-Underground (1972 [2026], Wewantsounds): South African pianist, soon changed his name to Abdullah Ibrahim, debut album in 1963 "presented by Duke Ellington," soon became known for his integration of township jive with jazz, up to his death in 2026. With trumpet and alto sax (and everyone tapped for vocals and percussion), recorded live in Copenhagen, and released (until now) only in Japan. Strong ideas, somewhat harshly achieved. B+(**) [sp]

Mick Goodrick/Fred Hersch: Feebles, Fables and Ferns (1988 [2026], ECM): Guitar and piano duo. Goodrick (1945-2022) recorded his excellent debut album, In Pas(s)ing, for ECM in 1979; he worked with Gary Burton, Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, and others, recording a few more albums, but mostly teaching. This was Hersch's session, previously unreleased. B+(**) [sp]

Thelonious Monk: Live in Paris, 1967: Volume One (1967 [2026], Rhythm-a-Ning): Estate-authorized bootleg, the Nov. 3 concert was released on France's Concert in 1988 (as Thelonious Monk Nonet: Live in Paris, 1967), running 68:49, then remastered and reissued in 2002 by Thelonious Records. This version, aimed at vinyl junkies, is trimmed to an introduction and four songs, 38:33, with a second volume promised. The original order opened with Monk's Quartet (Charlie Rouse on tenor sax, Larry Gales on bass, and Ben Riley on drums), then added horns, starting with Ray Copeland (trumpet), then saxophonists Phil Woods (alto) and Johnny Griffin (tenor), Jimmy Cleveland (trombone), and finally Clark Terry (trumpet). This version moves the nonet tunes to Side A, the smaller groups to Side B. I have reservations about the business proposition, but Terry's solo reminds me that his previous encounter with Monk on In Orbit (1958) was one of his best albums. B+(**) [sp]

Jimmy Scott: Falling in Love Is Wonderful (1963 [2026], Tangerine): Jazz singer (1925-2014), originally "Little" due to his diminutive stature and high voice, recorded singles early, three albums for Savoy 1955-60, then this album for Ray Charles, which has been long out of print. His voice takes some getting used to, but he picks great songs, and puts his mark on them. Bigger problem for me is the string arrangements, which I've always gagged on. B+(*) [sp]

Sun Ra: East Two + 7 (1972-73 [2026], Cosmic Myth): Two previously unreleased sessions, named for the first track ("East Two") plus extra tracks (5 for the LP, 7 for the CD; the difference is extra live tracks from 1984-85). B+(**) [sp]

McCoy Tyner: Extensions (1970 [2026], Blue Note): Pianist (1938-2020), from Philadelphia, played briefly in the Jazztet (with Benny Golson and Art Farmer) before joining John Coltrane's legendary quartet (1961-65). Started recording his own albums in 1962, and went on to have a major solo career, notably with Blue Note (1966-70, although this one was held back to 1973). This sounds like it popped out of a Coltrane time capsule, spacey and spiritual but not burdened by the ambitions and delirium of Trane's last years. With two saxophonists (Gary Bartz on alto, Wayne Shorter on tenor/soprano), Ron Carter on bass, Elvin Jones on drums, and Alice Coltrane on harp. A- [sp]

McCoy Tyner: Asante (1970 [2026], Blue Note): Another leftover from Tyner's Blue Note period, released in 1974, makes more explicit the pianist's interest in Africa, with Andrew White (alto sax), Ted Dunbar (guitar), Buster Williams (bass), Billy Hart (drums/African percussion), Mtume (congas), and vocals on the first two tracks (Songhai, aka Sandra Smith). The 1998 CD reissue added three tracks from an earlier session, with Gary Bartz and Hubert Laws, that had appeared on Cosmos, a 1976 2-LP that also picked up two earlier sessions. (Cosmos was part of "The Blue Note Re-Issue Series," an attractive series I bought several of at the time, as they looked like useful intros to major artists. Most, like the Tyner, were actually previously unreleased sessions. I didn't buy the Tyner, but I did pick up sets by Sonny Rollins, Jackie McLean, and most importantly Herbie Nichols.) The new Tone Poet vinyl reverts to the original four tracks, but streaming includes the extras. The extra tracks don't add much (well, Bartz, and more good piano). I suspect that LP consumers will heavily favor the first side (the one with the vocals, which delight in the groove). B+(**) [sp]

McCoy Tyner: The Seeker: Live at Umbria Jazz Festival (1993 [2026], Red): Previously unreleased live album, a quartet with Bobby Hutcherson (vibes), Avery Sharpe (bass), and Aaron Scott (drums), a few months before Tyner and Hutcherson recorded their duo album, Manhattan Moods. Their careers intersected as far back as 1966 (on Hutcherson's Stick-Up!) and 1968 (on Time for Tyner). But the rhythm section really helps here. A- [sp]

Old music:

House of the Black Gardenia: The New Lowdown (2020, HOTGB): I didn't notice this above, but this is a British group, from Newcastle. First album. Singer Elise Rana hadn't yet taken bassist-arranger Neil Hopper's name. Hopper also plays sousaphone and washboard. I'm not seeing song credits, but I'm pretty sure the one about sexting is new. B+(***) [bc]

L'Afrique Danse No. 1 (1965-68 [1969], African): French label, started compiling albums of Congolese hits with this volume, extending this numbered series at least to No. 11, although there are other titles, and other labels, including Sonodisc (which picked up the catalog in 1980). This is mostly O.K. Jazz (Franco) and Ensemble Conga Succčs (Jean Bokolo). I didn't feel up to tracking down the singles, but Google says 1965-68, despite "some sources citing an initial 1966 pressing" (e.g., Discogs). Nor do I know how much of this duplicates the piles of Franco I already have. But Bokelo (d. 1995) may warrant further research. And chances are that the rest of the series are worth hearing — after No. 3, they move to feature artists (Rochereau on No. 4, Docteur Nico on No. 5, Franco on No. 6, and Bokelo on No. 7. A− [sp]

Twerk Thomson: Plays Unpopular Songs (2017, Twerk-O-Phonic): New Orleans bassist, seems to be his first album, various groups credited as Twerk Thomson Trio, Twerk's Dance Band, Twerk Thomson's 5, and Twerk & Maria (Dixon, trumpet and vocals, with Thomson on tenor guitar). Designed to sound as ancient as possible ("recorded live with one microphone into a Presto K8 lathe, cut directly to acetate discs at 78rpm, and edited only for volume"). I'm no fan of the sound, but the last set, in particiular, does sound like ancient lost treasure. B+(**) [bc]

McCoy Tyner: Expansions (1968 [1969], Blue Note): Album before Extensions, with Woody Shaw (trumpet) joining saxophonists Gary Bartz (alto) and Wayne Shorter (tenor), Ron Carter moving over to cello, with Herbie Lewis (bass) and Freddie Waits (drums). B+(**) [sp]


Limited Sampling: Records I played parts of, but not enough to grade: -- means no interest, - not bad but not a prospect, + some chance, ++ likely prospect.

Art Ensemble of Chicago: People in Sorrow (1969 [2026], Play Loud!): Early album (first one listed by Discogs, but a 5-CD box of 1967-68 recordings was later issued on Nessa), recorded in France (where they cranked out 14 albums in 23 months) and released by Pathé Marconi there. Just snippets available. ++ [bc] (4 snippets, 8:14)

Art Ensemble of Chicago: Les Stances ā Sophie (1970 [2023], Play Loud!): Recorded toward the end of their Paris stay, a bit of soundtrack with Fontella Bass vocals. ++ [bc] (8 snippets, 5:01)

Jason Moran: Plays Duke Ellington (2026, Yes): Pianist, became a star during his 1998-2014 run at Blue Note, won the Jazz Critics Poll and a MacArthur in 2010, slipped back into obscurity after he retreated to his own label (although his 2023 album, From the Dancehall to the Battlefield, got consideable attention). + [bc] (7/12)


I tried combining the separate I Compani reviews above into one for Substack. I didn't figure my reservations about the 7-Tet grade sufficed to bring the Extended grade down. More likely, with multiple plays either or both could rise. But we're not there yet.

I Compani: Basta! The Last Concerts 2025 (2025 [2026], I Compani): Dutch group, led by saxophonist Bo van de Graaf, founded in 1985, decided to call it quits after a series of "last concerts" in December, 2025. Throughout their career, they've mostly recorded film music, in the circus style that seems peculiar to the Dutch avant-garde (cf. ICP Orchestra and Willem Breuker Kollektief) and is often deliriously wonderful. My understanding is that packages 2 CDs, which are available on streaming as separate albums. One is their core 7-Tet. The other is "Extended," where an additional friends or hangers-on drop in for a song or two or more. The latter includes more vocalists, who add a cabaret air. Of the digitals, I prefer the latter, but I wasn't able to give either nearly enough time. Maybe if the CDs exist, and could somehow be obtained? B+(***) [sp]


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Gerry Hemingway: Live at Bau 4 (Hat Hut) [04-24]

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