Wolfgang Muthspiel,
whom The New Yorker has called "a shining light" among today's jazz
guitarists, returns to the trio format with Angular Blues, his fourth ECM album
as a leader, following two acclaimed quintet releases and his trio debut. Like
Driftwood - the 2014 trio disc that JazzTimes dubbed "cinematic" and
"haunting" - Angular Blues finds the Austrian guitarist paired with
long-time collaborator Brian Blade on drums; but instead of Larry Grenadier on
bass, this time it's Scott Colley, whose especially earthy sound helps imbue
this trio with its own dynamic. Muthspiel plays acoustic guitar on three of the
album's tracks and electric on six more. Along with his characteristically melodic
originals - including such highlights as the bucolic "Hüttengriffe"
and pensive "Camino" - he essays the first standards of his ECM
tenure ("Everything I Love" and "I'll Remember April"), as
well as his first-ever bebop rhythm-changes tune on record ("Ride").
Angular Blues also features a single guitar-only track, "Solo Kanon in
5/4," with Muthspiel's electronic delay imbuing the baroque-like rounds
with a hypnotic glow.
Muthspiel,
Colley and Blade recorded Angular Blues in Tokyo's Studio Dede after a
three-night run at the city's Cotton Club. The album was mixed with Manfred
Eicher in the South of France at Studios La Buissonne, where Muthspiel had
recorded his two previous ECM albums, Rising Grace and Where the River Goes
(both of which featured pianist Brad Mehldau and trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire).
Each of the groups that Muthspiel has put together for his ECM recordings has
had a special rapport. About his new trio, the guitarist says: "Scott and
Brian share my love of song, while at the same time there is constant musical
conversation about these songs."
The
Louisiana-born Blade has been a member of the Wayne Shorter Quartet since 2000,
along with recording with artists from Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Daniel Lanois
and Norah Jones to Charlie Haden, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea and Joshua
Redman. Since the mid-'90s, Blade has also co-led the gospel-infused Fellowship
Band. Regarding the subtly virtuoso drummer, Muthspiel says: "Brian is
famous for his sound and touch, that floating way of playing, how he creates
intensity with relatively low volume. It's also a great pleasure for me to
witness how sensitively Brian reacts in his playing to whether I play acoustic
or electric guitar. I've done a lot of concerts and productions with him over
the years, including in our guitar-drums duo, Friendly Travelers, as well as on
Driftwood and Rising Grace. He always offers complete interaction and
initiative, as well as his individual sound. To play uptempo swing on something
like 'Ride' with Brian was really luxurious, a gift."
After being
mentored by Charlie Haden, Colley was the bassist of choice for such jazz
legends as Jim Hall, Andrew Hill, Michael Brecker, Carmen McRae and Bobby
Hutcherson, along with appearing on albums by Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, Pat
Metheny, John Scofield, Chris Potter and Julian Lage. Colley, a native of Los
Angeles, has released eight albums as a leader. "Scott and Brian have also
played a lot together over the past few years, so they know each other
well," Muthspiel notes. "I performed with Scott in New York in the
'90s, and I've always felt that he was an extremely giving musician, who - with
his warm tone and his flexible, dancing rhythm - simultaneously animated and
supported the music. I wrote the bass melody of the new album's first tune,
'Wondering,' especially for him. His sound develops a flow and harmonic
movement that is inviting to play on."
After
"Wondering" - which includes extended soloing by Colley that
embroiders on Muthspiel's melody beautifully - comes the album's title song,
the highly trio-interactive "Angular Blues," so titled for its
"rhythmic modulations and strange breaks," the guitarist explains.
"Somehow Chick Corea's album Three Quartets was an association, but so was
Thelonious Monk." Those first two tracks, as well as the album's third, "Hüttengriffe,"
feature Muthspiel on acoustic guitar, his sound on the instrument both warm and
extraordinarily fluent. After that - on "Camino," "Ride,"
"Everything I Love," "Kanon in 6/8," "Solo Kanon in
5/4" and "I'll Remember April" - he plays electric. Muthspiel's
ever-liquid electric phrasing buoys both an emotionally rich original such as
"Camino" and the two different turns on his kaleidoscopic
"Kanon," the trio version in 6/8 and the solo, mostly improvised
rendition in 5/4.
About his
first-time inclusion of jazz standards on one of his ECM albums, Muthspiel
says: "I was inspired to record standards with this trio because
everything about the way the group plays feels so free, open and far from
preconceived ideas, but at the crucial moment a jazz language is spoken, what we
do does justice to these tunes. I learned 'Everything I Love,' the Cole Porter
song, from an early Keith Jarrett album, and I first came to know 'I'll
Remember April' from a Frank Sinatra recording. In that latter song, I hardly
play solo. It's more about the head and the vamp-like atmosphere that prevails
from the start and is savored again in the end. As in many moments with this
trio, it's about playing with space: leaving it, creating it, filling it."
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