Music Week (7:3)

A few select reviews from week 3 of month 7 (July).

I've been desperately trying to finish up the essays for the Francis Davis Jazz Critics Mid-Year Poll. I had hoped to get them done mid-week, but now it's Friday and, well, they're almost but not quite done. If anyone wants to do some serious proofreading, let me know right away. (I ask things like that all the time, but almost never get any response, so maybe that's just a rhetorical question.) What I have is long, and tries to draw many interesting points from the data. Given the state of the data, that's error-prone. But given the amount of data, it's also an impossible dream to get more than a trivial share of the points.

Adding to the delay is that I have other things to do this weekend, so what I don't get done by Saturday afternoon won't get addressed until Monday. Still, I'm hoping to deliver three essays to Arts Fuse by Tuesday. If they're as quick as they've been in the past, the poll should be up by Thursday. That's been my big project for the first half of Summer 2025. I have considerable unwinding to do. But my first project will most likely be to try to knock out a quick Loose Tabs. I've collected very little since the one on June 14, but I'm sure there's lots to write about.

I've been listening to recent (and sometimes ancient) jazz like crazy, so there is a lot in the file this week: 50 albums, 10 A-list. This is just a sample. For the rest, you'll need to check out the full Music Week, whenever I get around to posting it (probably tonight, maybe tomorrow).


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−

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−
[Bandcamp]

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−
[Bandcamp]

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+(***)

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−
[Bandcamp]

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+(***)
[Bandcamp]

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−

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−
[Bandcamp]

Notes on Everyday Life, 2026-07-17