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Nail Trio - Roger Turner (dr), Alexander Frangenheim (b), Michel Doneda (ss)

September 2025, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe

Michael Greiner (d) & Jason Stein (bc)

September 25, Soweiso, Berlin, Germany

Exit (Knaar) - Amalie Dahl (as), Karl Hjalmar Nyberg (ts), Marta Warelis (p), Jonathan F. Horne (g), Olaf Moses Olsen (dr), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b)

September 25, Schorndorf, Germany

The Outskirts - Dave Rempis (ts, as), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b), Frank Rosaly (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, March 2025

Saturday, November 29, 2025

AMM and Sachiko M - Testing (Matchless Recordings, 2025)

By Stuart Broomer

I first wrote about AMM at some length about 25 years ago. The most durable sentence in the piece (further expanded at length ten years ago and since supplemented with regular reviews) might be “AMM deserves hearing in inverse proportion to which it can be talked about successfully.” While I still believe that, I’ve learned nothing from it, and continue to try, if only to alert fellow listeners to the availability of new releases.

David Ilic once wrote in The Wire that “With AMM, their albums are as alike or unalike as trees.” That may be truer of some editions of the group than others, with Eddie Prévost as the sole constant in the group’s nearly sixty-year history, and that allusion to trees may take on special significance in the performance under discussion: Testing documents a concert at the Museum of Garden History in Lambeth, London. The concert took place on December 13 th 2004 when AMM existed in one of its duo forms, with EddieP révost here playing tam-tam, stringed barrel drum and other percussion and John Tilbury playing piano. They’re joined by guest Sachiko M, who plays sinewaves. Testing is a single piece, running to 1:07:33. The work is sufficiently subtle, the sonic materials so spacious and mysterious, that some identities here attributed to the sounds might well be mistaken.

In addition to Tilbury’s gifts as an improviser, he is also one of the most distinguished interpreters of recent piano compositions, with a special affinity for the work of Morton Feldman, those works that are at once minimalist in gesture and vastly expansive in time. Testing begins as a study in the ineffable. Prévost’s initial rumbles of bass percussion give way to his scraped and bowed cymbals, inviting Sachiko M’s high-pitched sine waves and Tilbury’s spare contribution of isolated piano tones, initially in the bass register.

There is no slight intended in suggesting that there’s a fundamental resemblance between Tilbury’s luminous, floating and concentrated inventions and the depth of resource that he brings to the music of Feldman and others. Prévost’s usual instruments are here, his use of resonating surfaces and varied materials often as sustained as they are percussive. He has a special instrument here, a barrel drum replete with strings, that he explores with sustained ferocity at one point in the piece, plucking at the strings that hold it all together, suggesting the presence of a particularly rugged string bass. The vast and vibrating space of the piece suits Sachiko M perfectly, her sinewave generator adding sustained fields of organizing tones to the enterprise, resulting in a trio that feels perfectly orchestral.

A note on Testing’s liner essay: Testing is a work that might challenge any commentator—vast, subtly shifting, dream-like, a reverie that’s outside language’s capacity to describe, a spacious sound world for which words might seem particularly ill suited. However, Seymour Wright has contributed a liner note to Testing that seems perfectly apt. Wright has recently written highly insightful essays on jazz and free improvisation, notably on Horace Silver and John Butcher, and he has a long association with both Prévost’s workshops and various bands. His contribution here, as an attendee at the 2004 performance, explores relationships between the Museum and its gardens, as well as the music’s unfolding in time. It’s a telling enrichment, a complementary reverie that somehow fuses the setting with the music itself. It’s the kind of thing that has long made the associated materials of Matchless recordings, usually Eddie Prévost’s own writings, among the most enlightening and expansive documents in the arena of improvised music.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Recent Releases of Elias Stemeseder and Christian Lillinger

By Eyal Hareuveni

 

Experiencing a collaborative project by the idiosyncratic producer-composer duo—Austrian keyboard player Elias Stemeseder and German drummer Christian Lillinger—live or as a recording, throws you into an exploratory, inquisitive, multilayered, kinetic-sonic, electroacoustic journey. They suggest a post-genre utopia that draws inspiration from modern jazz, contemporary music, and sound art practices, equipped with a telepathic interplay of an inseparable sonic organism, a wealth of compositional strategies, instruments, production methods, and an everlasting process of creating an uncompromisingly personal sonic idiom through this complex synthesis of disparate modes of musical thought. They act like a sonic lab that questions common playing techniques, exploring, expanding, and rediscovering the sonic palettes of their instruments. On their live performances, the music becomes an arresting, constantly shifting, three-dimensional choreography of sounds. 

Stemeseder / Lillinger - PENUMBRA II (Plaist, 2025)


On their UMBRA and ANTUMBRA projects, Stemeseder and Lillinger hosted like-minded improvisers such as Craig Taborn, Peter Evans, and DoYeon Kim. PENUMBRA II, which follows PENUMBRA (2023, both released by Lillinger’s label, Playlist), offers a further insight into the Stemeseder-Lillinger core duo’s work. conceived, developed, and manifested in real time, free of templates but rich in references. The Penumbra mode expands into radical sonic research methods and production processes, encompassing acoustic, electroacoustic, and electronic settings. Stemeseder plays the piano, spinet, synths, and electronics; Lillinger plays the drums, percussion, synth, and electronics, and mixed the album, which was recorded live at Schwere Reiter art center in Munich in September 2023. 

Each of the seven pieces offers a distinct, inquisitive approach to acoustic and physical space, signal processing strategies, self-manipulated samples, reciprocal feedback systems, composition, performance posture, aesthetics, and texture. All are articulated with structural precision. Each piece suggests its own musical environment and demonstrates how Stemeseder and Lillinger can instantly create a rich and layered musical universe out of a disparate, fleeting musical idea, being possessed by it but without attaching themselves to it. Surprisingly, despite the complex and dense dynamics, non-linear nature, and urgent kinetic energy, Stemeseder and Lillinger’s music flows in the most organic manner . Most likely, you will need a few focused sessions of listening to figure out what, and on how much level Stemeseder and Lillinger do at any given moment. But each listening guarantees more enlightening insights about the intriguing music.

Lillinger’s video work, projected onto their bodies and instruments, intensified the live performances with a visual dimension. This work acts as another aesthetic impulse for each piece, influencing posture and spatial arrangement, and offering new insights and perspectives.

These pieces stress the complex sonic-visual discourse of the Stemeseder-Lillinger duo and the synesthesia-like, utopian experience they seek to share. Sound and image, as structure and movement, are inseparable, and together they allow a renewed understanding of the duo’s transformative artistic process. Stemeseder-Lillinger seeks to create a unified experience of electroacoustic instruments, performances, and the distinct space, as all are part of the spontaneous audio-visual process that keeps negotiating the charting of its own topology, moment to moment.

 

Algol - Algol (Buh, 2025)

 

Algol is an electroacoustic detour of the Stemeseder-Lillinger duo with Peruvain. Mexico City-based flutist Camilo Ángeles alternates between self-made aerophones, synths, and electronics. Algol is a solar system called "the demon star”, or an early algorithmic Language, and both meanings correspond with this trio’s aesthetic. The debut self-titled of this trio was recorded during a tour in Latin America at Estudios Noviembre in Mexico City in February 2024. Lillinger mastered the album.

Ángeles fits perfectly into Stemeseder-Lillinger’s sonic vision. He is interested in the hybridization of aesthetics and searches for his own aesthetic vision through a deconstructed approach to the flute and its conventional musical language. He uses extended breathing techniques, preparations, hyper amplification, and electronic processing.

Algul takes the Stemeseder-Lillinger’s open system of real-time sonic construction, which operates at the intersection of composition, improvisation, and electroacoustic experimentation, but twists it with ethereal, percussive vibrations. Algol dynamics juggle seamlessly between atmospheric textures punctuated with fragmented, sometimes even explosive pulses, methodical timbral research, and microtonal sensibility. Like the Penumbra mode, Algol’s multilayered textures emerge and dissolve instantly within its post-genre equilibrium, but with surprising playful dynamics and with mathematical precision. 

Argentine “undisciplinary” composer and sound artist Julián Galay, who wrote the liner notes, observed that Algol seems to compress the historical time of its traditional instruments - piano, drums, and flute, as well as its hybrid instruments - self-made aerophones, spinet, synthesizers, and samplers, just as stars compress their gravity until it concentrates into a single bright point. “That gravitational force dismantles any linguistic boundary: baroque, contemporary, experimental, jazz, and electroacoustics all become blurred. The result alters the past—like a great red giant star that, though long dead, continues to radiate light—the present, and therefore the future”. 

Stemeseder-Lillinger’s music, just like Algol’s music, may be the free music of the future, always in motion, and always redefining anew its restless, expansive, and exploratory aesthetics.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Vinny Golia in Focus

Vinny Golia / Ken Filiano / Michael TA Thompson - Catastasis (Nine Winds Records, 2025)

 
An absolute album of the year. This trio exudes not just technical brilliance, but a raw, responsive musical empathy. The interplay of West Coast woodwindist Vinny Golia and  New York's Ken Filiano (on bass) and Michael TA Thompson (on drums) feels like a intense conversation -- full of risk, wit, and experience. 
 
Catastasis is simply full of musical ideas as the trio engages in a sonic dialogue that defies genre and expectation. With Golia’s multi-reed wizardry, Filiano’s resonant bass explorations, and Thompson’s sculptural approach to rhythm, their music unfolds dense with texture, alive with lyrical tension, and charged with dynamic abstraction. Each piece feels both meticulously fractured and spontaneously whole, as composed fragments dissolve into free-flowing improvisation. The result is a captivating soundscape where all the best avant-garde impulses collide, cohere, and reconfigure in real time.
 
The amount of music is also quite generous, the first track "NY-1" is 40 minutes, "NY-2" is 33 and "NY-3" is 30. This is a lot of time to work through the rich multifaceted ideas on Catastasis. 'NY-1' is a slow, well, medium paced, build up. The tension mounts decidedly through Thompson's color drumming and Filiano's full ungirding. They make it (seemingly) easy for Golia to layer jam-packed melodic ideas on top. 'NY-2' finds the group in slighlty more spacious territory, and on 'NY-3', Golia starts on clarinet, giving the piece a different sonic texture, leading eventually to fraught, arcing lines.
 
The catastasis, in dramatic terms is the fourth and fifth part of a classical tragedy, the climax before the tragedy. This is the intense part of the work, and trusting that true catastrophe was avoided, Catastasis, the album, presents simply the best parts.

 

Vinny Golia Chamber Quintet - New Chamber Idiom (Sonic Action, 2025)


This ensemble operates at the intersection of chamber jazz and free improvisation, where compositional restraint meets expressive abandon. Vinny Golia’s reed work anchors the group’s work, threading through contrapuntal textures and spontaneous harmonic shifts. The music is both light and rich, with the rooted elements supporting ephemeral moments. 
 
The instrumentation, as one may expect is full of vibrant, organic timbres. Golia brings from LA a cross section of his instrument arsenal: Ab (piccolo) and Bb clarinets, soprano and baritone saxophones, and flute. Neil Welch, a Seattle based improvisor and educator contributes bass and tenor saxophones, while another Washington based musician, educator and sonic explorer Steph Richards plays trumpet and flugelhorn, Aniela Perry, also hailing from the Seattle area (this time from a nearby island), is on cello and Seattle's Kelsey Mines plays bass and provides vocals.
 
New Chamber Idiom is full of shifting, shimmering sounds. It mixes challenging but accessible melodic forays that sport atonal off-shoots and exploratory excursions. Comprised of two tracks - a cohesive 44 minute piece entitled 'no maps for the Interior' followed by presumably the encore aptly entitled piece 'a little something to remember us by.' The former piece begins with Golia on clarinet and most prominently Mines' bass and very faint vocalizations, and is soon enriched by Perry's cello, which moves the piece in a classical direction. In due time, Richards and Welch make their presence felt.
 
 New Chamber Idiom is a recording that grows, each listening revealing new details. 

 

*A quick disclaimer, Sonic Action is run by Free Jazz Blog contributor Gregg Miller. 

Kelsey Mines & Vinny Golia - Collusion and Collaboration (Relative Pitch, 2025)

Continuing the collaboration with bassist and vocalist Kelsey Mines from the Chamber Quintet, this duo outing is an stripped back, intimate affair that explores similar classical-like abstractions. The focus here is, obviously, much more on Golia's woodwinds and Mines' bass, with her vocalizations filling in the space between the outlines they make. The music is both gentle and sharp - to be listened to with care. The cover image, a drawing by Emile Quanjel entitled "Eternal Now (for Charles Gayle)" is a perfect visual for the sounds with in - abstract but figurative, the outlines of a man made by lite pen strokes is accentuated with splashes of color reacting to the shapes. The music does just this, hardly taking on a set structure, actual musical shapes do emerge into fully comprehensible forms. A perfect example is 'Improv 8,' in which Golia paints with a thick, but light, tone that Mines underscores. The legato lines stretch and encircle, forming a something just beyond tangibility. 

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (Exit) Knarr - Drops (Sonic Transmissions, 2025)


By Nick Metzger

The (Exit) Knarr project by esteemed Norwegian composer, bassist, bandleader and apparent Austin, TX local Ingebrigt Håker Flaten has been putting out some tremendous music over the past couple of years. Ingebrigt is very well known here for his work with Atomic, School Days, The Thing, and The Bridge among so many other fantastic groups and projects in addition to organizing the annual Sonic Transmissions Festival in Austin. The (Exit) Knarr released two stunning albums in late 2024 - one studio, one live - that I unfortunately didn’t get around to really listening to until earlier this year.

Their sophomore album Breezy - named in tribute to his friend and collaborator, the inimitable Jamie Branch - is an unbelievably good amalgam of free jazz, noise, and electronic music that left me with a singular urge to hear it all again immediately and struck me as a wonderful homage. There’s also the live album Live at artacts ‘22 which documents a great performance at the Alte Gerberei in St. Johann in Tirol. Captured during the last stop of their 2022 EU tour, the album also features the last performance of the band’s previous lineup with Mette Rasmussen and Atle Nymo on saxophones and Oddrun Lilja Jonsdottir on guitar. For this version of the (Exit) Knarr the ensemble has been reconfigured as a sextet with Ingebrigt and drummer Olaf Olsen the only remaining members from the original line-up. Here the saxophones are played by Amalie Dahl and Karl Hjalmar Nyberg (returning from last year’s “Breezy”) with Jonathan F. Horne on guitar and the revelatory Marta Warelis on piano and electronics.

The first piece is a rendition of the Wayne Shorter composition “Deluge” from his classic 1965 album “JuJu” - one of Shorter’s best Blue Note releases along with “Night Dreamer” and “Speak No Evil” - with Rasmussen and Veslemøy Narvesen back on alto and drums, respectively. The piece starts off with the original melodies' last two descending notes voiced as tinny guitar chords and played like match strikes - igniting a swell of horns as the percussion abruptly skitters to form like bugs crawling from under a flipped rock. The saxophones play homage to the composer with long bluesy lines that act to briefly stabilize the piece against its jerky foundations until pointillist guitar flourishes and chaotic electronics usher in its unraveling. A unique and dramatic take on the original that strikes the perfect balance of paying homage and stretching the piece to new places. “Drops” is a graphical score realized via wispy lyricism in reserved gestures, tip-toeing from behind the curtain. The bass and piano engage in a short dialogue of pulled arco notes and twinkling key work that draws in rustles of percussion as a bed for the horns. An intriguing piece that is concise but unhurried.

The next track might be my favorite of the set - dubbed “Kanón” and dedicated to Paul Nillsen-Love, it’s a good old fashioned throw down of sorts. The extended, staccato intro explodes into a quickening and angular riff, building momentum beneath the saxophones. Electronics wash the canvas clean and the group begins anew with Ingebrigt’s walking bass line ushering in more solos and engaging group interplay. Warelis really shines on the track, delivering an intense solo as the ensemble periodically coalesce into a vamp and then burst with aggressive, electronics and guitar squall. The last piece is “Austin Vibes” which was post processed by saxophonist Karl Hjalmar Nyberg into something like an audio fever dream. It starts off sounding like a skipping CD, flickers of the ensemble shift through fragmented audio streams. The piece reassembles and the band is in full swing, trading solos against a deft group melody. The track is a microcosm of their shifting, dynamic sound and experimental leanings and closes the album on a dense, energetic note.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Stian Larsen/Colin Webster/Ruth Goller/Andrew Lisle - Temple of Muses (Relative Pitch, 2025)

By Hrayr Attarian

The provocative Temple of Muses is a collaborative effort among four master improvisers who also share an artistic vision. Norwegian guitarist Stian Larsen joins two of his past collaborators, Englishmen Andrew Lisle on drums and Colin Webster on saxophone, for this session. Italian-English bassist Ruth Goller is new to the group, yet she is completely in sync with the others. Consisting of six fiery pieces, the album is equal parts raw emotion and intelligent, intricate harmonic constructs.

The explosive intro “Haunts of Crows”, clocking only a bit over two minutes, sets the mood for the recording. Lisle’s thunderous polyrhythms mix with Goller’s muscular bass lines, creating a riotous cadence. Webster wails with abandon, coaxing out of his horn agile and angular phrases while Norwegian guitarist Stian Larson contributes blistering chords to the group conversation. The performance reaches a climax just before it concludes with a rapid and elegant decrescendo.

Elsewhere, “Vivid Aspects” is contemplative with Lisle’s rustling percussion, Goller’s expectant reverberations, and Larsen’s tolling strings creating a haunting ambience. Webster punctuates the music with soft pops and fluttering notes. The collective improvisation is simultaneously captivating with its cinematic soundscapes and angst-producing with the undercurrent of dark tones. As with the rest of the pieces, the quarter here functions as a single unit, yet one that does not sacrifice the individual voices of its members. The tune ends with a furious expression of hope.

The title track in length and breadth forms the core of this stimulating release. Opening with sparse drum beats and resonant basslines, it evolves into a dramatic repartee. Larsen enters with a pensive, introspective melody while Webster blows with languid melancholy. Slowly, the ensemble refrains pick up in tempo, becoming more crystalline and complex without abandoning the use of silent pauses entirely. Passionate and cerebral, the music brims with a primal spirituality. Here, yet again, the musicians demonstrate sublime camaraderie in a setting brimming with spontaneity and delightful dissonance.

Calling the Temple of Muses gripping is an understatement. The ensemble deftly demonstrates the power and beauty of extemporized music. It is a taut and thrilling work that satisfies and moves from the first note to the last.

Monday, November 24, 2025

Sophie Agnel - Learning (Otoroku, 2025)

By Stuart Broomer

Sophie Agnel has released a bevy of brilliant releases in recent years, including the solo CD Song (Relative Pitch, 2025); two duos with John Butcher, la pierre tachée (Ni Vu Ni Connu, 2022) and Rare (Victo, 2025); the exploratory quartet recording Quartet un peu Tendre with saxophonist Daunik Lazro and the electronic duo of “Kristoff K. Roll” (Fou Records, 2024); a luminous duet, Draw Bridge, with percussionist Michael Zerang (Relative Pitch, 2024); and the brilliant archival LP Gargorium, recorded in 2008/2009 by a trio with Lazro and guitarist Olivier Benoit (Fou, 2023).

Learning further extends that body of work. It is Agnel’s first solo recording to be released on LP, each side devoted to a single improvisation, but with a certain symmetry. Side A was recorded on June 6, 2023 and runs 18:42; Side B was recorded on June 4, 2024 and runs 18:47, each from an event at Café Oto. It’s stunning playing, each side a work of continuous evolution in which Agnel mines the piano’s every resource, whether adding materials to the strings, plucking the interior, or producing thunderous explosions at the keyboard. That title Learning might refer to the voyage of discovery undertaken at the piano’s multiple continents, its exterior, Interior and combinations thereof, its compound identity an embodiment of her deeply traditioned and yet infinitely extensible and divisible art.

There’s an insistence here on the significance of the piano’s whole and original name, pianoforte, the instrument as soft and loud, as sweet and harsh as it might ever be, evident throughout 'Learning A,' whether its factory-strength, brutalist machine sounds from prepared bass register, subtle glissandi whispering on upper register strings, or voice-like murmurings drawn on the middle register. One feels the whole of the piano’s varied (and potential) resources. In one extended quiet passage there’s a mix of keyboard articulations and violin-like sustained notes from the strings themselves, likely owing to an e-bow. Another quiet passage has consonant clusters oscillating in the upper register.

'Learning B' is more of the same and yet utterly different, another deep dive into the instrument’s resources, bass clusters roaring against insistently sweet middle-register tremolos, the quiet twittering of birds, saw-like carpentry noises and even sounds that can only be described as the flotsam and jetsam, lagan and derelict, that is, the varied categories of debris of the piano’s oceanic potential. There are instances of the piano’s mystery and sweetness, hitherto undreamt of, yet arising here, coming into audition. There’s a lovely drone passage that might be achieved with two e-bows, a middle register drone and a high one. The piece ends in a beautiful assortment of little sounds, whispering, tinkling, drawing out to silence.

This is special music, all of it profound, open, glowing, generous, empathetic, reaching.



Sunday, November 23, 2025

Sylvie Courvoisier - Chimaera

Last year, Sylvie Courvoisier's "Chimaera" was one of our favourite albums. 

The video below gives the full album, recorded live at the Bimhuis in Amsterdam in July 2024. The band are Nate Wooley on trumpet, Wadada Leo Smith on trumpet, Sylvie Courvoisier on piano, Christian Fennesz on guitar/electronics, Drew Gress on doublebass, Kenny Wollessen on drums/vibraphone, Nasheet Waits drums. 

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier – Angel Falls (Intakt Records, 2025) *****

By Don Phipps

Dissonance. Abstraction. Tonal clusters. Flurries. Rolling ostinatos. Ornate and defiant piercings. These are some of the various musical elements of Angel Falls, a striking masterpiece of space and sound generated by two of the best – the legendary Mississippi-born Wadada Leo Smith on trumpet (now 83) and the always fascinating Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier. The duo draws on a range of influences and idioms to construct their tone poems. From the formal classical side, one can hear degrees of impressionism, Messiaen abstractions, and Charles Ives. Then there are bouncy, jagged blues passages (the ending of “Naomi’s Peak”) and of course plenty of improvisatory and experimental jazz.

From this diverse palette, Smith and Courvoisier deliver striking and challenging explorations that boggle and intrigue. To illustrate, listen to the album’s longest piece, “Angel Falls” and its shortest piece, “Sonic Utterance.” On “Angel Falls,” Courvoisier creates a dissonant barely audible opening by stroking the inside of the piano. The duo proceeds to fashion a dark meditative impression that evolves into a rolling stormy motif. Smith always finds just the right note to craft his reflective mood while Courvoisier goes from pianissimo to forte on the keys in short order, creating sparkling color and deep textures. Both explore the highest and lowest notes on their respective instruments – creating a sense of awe, yearning, and other moods and expressions. There is a point where Courvoisier constructs a full-blooded harmonic maelstrom and Smith responds with hard blowing high notes to produce dramatic effect. The soul-searching continues, as Courvoisier’s passages build into a cliff like peak underneath Smith’s sostenuto responses.

On “Sonic Utterance,” Courvoisier generates precise jarring attacks with tonal clusters while Smith demonstrates his breathing technique, uttering low volume blues phrases above Courvoisier’s back and forth splashes. The music alternates between peaceful interludes and explosions until Courvoisier develops a wandering, repeating motif underneath Smith’s muted trumpet. A roller coaster ride ensues, and Courvoisier really brings it towards the end – with fierce abstractions that seem to explode off the keys like fireworks.

The high degree of formalism found on Angel Falls does not detract from the spontaneity and openness found within the music. It enhances it, giving the music the foundation necessary to develop and explore impulsively and creatively. Art can be representative and exist beneath conscious reality. And this album most certainly is a work of art. Enjoy!

Wadada Leo Smith & Sylvie Courvoisier – Angel Falls (Intakt Records, 2025)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

Last quarter of the year and the top seeded players enter the court: Sylvie Courvoisier and Wadada Leo Smith together on Angel Falls, out for Intakt Records. Should someone need to get acquainted with these two Aces, the simple, right move to be done is to check the Free Jazz Blogs’s past pages where both of them are hugely covered, especially Stef’s peerless reviews of Wadada, making him the Supreme Cantor of the trumpeter. For what is worth, our cups of tea are America along with the late Jack DeJohnette and Sacred Ceremonies with Milford Graves and Bill Laswell but get what you prefer, even by chance, and after a couple of notes it will be perfectly clear for you that the trumpet of our 84 years old hero is a prism refracting the sound, opening sonic worlds or better to say, sonic galaxies. Madame Courvoisier, Swiss born and New York based, for the sake of our sheer, infinite pleasure, delivered in the last years a body of astonishing music, showing to old and new listeners her palette of piano ammunitions, be alone (To be other-wise), with her trio (Free Hoops), with Mary Halvorson (Bone Bells) or in a larger ensemble such as Chimaera, an absolute 2024 masterpiece that sees Sylvie teaming up with Wadada, Nate Wooley, Christian Fennesz, Drew Gress and Kenny Wollesen.

The pianist and the trumpeter first played together in 2017 at a concert organized by John Zorn and as Courvoisier recalls: “Right after he asked me for my number and a couple of months later we did a recording in New Haven, in trio with Marcus Gilmore”. The outcome of that session has yet to see the light of the day but there have been regular collaborations since, including further trios with drummers Kenny Wollesen and Nasheet Waits, a Smith ensemble with two pianos. Given the love of Wadada for duos with piano (see the works with Vijay Iyer, John Tilbury, Angelica Sanchez, Aruan Ortiz and Amina Claudine Myers), and his admiration for Sylvie (“Whenever I’ve played on stage with her, it’s always been a journey that has been mutual and creative. She’s got courage and you can see it when she’s at the piano, when she is inspired to go toward something, she doesn’t just go near it, she advances as if she’s going there to save creation”, from the liner notes) it wasn’t a matter of “If” but of “When” the two would have entered a studio together. This happened in October 2024 at Octaven Audio, Mount Vernon, NY for an output of 8 magnificent compositions that sound as the perfect epitome of such top notch musicians. Wadada spacious notes don’t hide their blues roots, while Sylvie combined upbringing of classical and jazz studies allows her to draw sonic textures that are a real, unmatched trademark; together they’re building a shadowplay of sounds, designing perfectly balanced geometries around and dissolving them into the fire soon after. 

As per the creation process of the album, let’s listen to what Courvoisier says in the liner notes: “We just played right through exactly the order of the CD and exactly the amount of music on the CD, with no edits. We probably did that in two hours and after we mixed it. The same day we recorded and mixed. We started at noon and at 5 pm it’s finished”. Are you thinking about a labour of genius? We are, too. It’s absolutely interesting to read Smith in the liner notes about the composition process: “In composing, you got the inspiration that comes to you as you construct the page. That inspiration comes throughout the process, even if it takes 5 years or 27 or 37 years to complete it. It comes off and on throughout that process. In a performance the same thing happens. The difference is that in performance you’re allowing those moments of inspiration to come directly through”. This record delivers all that and more and we let Sylvie conclude about the chemistry they’ve been able to create together: “With Wadada I feel we’re creating in the moment and I feel something very joyful. We’re like kids discovering things. I feel I can hear harmonically where he wants to go. Basically, I try to erase myself and try to make him sound great”. And there is still someone wondering why this music is floating in our bloodcells…

Sylvie Courvoisier & Wadada Leo Smith - Angel Falls (Intakt, 2025)

By Stef Gijssels

Wadada Leo Smith likes duets with pianists. He's performed and released albums with this format for many decades, and with great success, and with great musicians: Vijay Iyer, Matthew Goodheart, Angelica Sanchez, John Tilbury, Tania Chen, Amina Claudine Meyers. 

Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier adds her own touch to Smith's music. Both musicians performed for the first time together in 2017, at a concert organised by John Zorn. Several unissued performances followed, in duos, trios or with two pianos. Of course, Smith is one of the two trumpeters on Courvoisier's brilliant "Chimaera". 

Courvoisier's natural feeling of creating mysterious yet gentle sounds match perfectly with Smith's jubilant spiritual tone. On "Whispering Images", she adds an unexpected rhythm with muted piano strings, and a bluesy theme that reminds of "Chimaera". It gives me goose bumps. 

Despite the incredible quality of the music and its beauty, it was recorded in one take: “We just played right through exactly the order of the CD, and exactly the amount of music on the CD, with no edits. We probably did that in two hours. And after, we mixed it. The same day we recorded and mixed. We started at noon and at five p.m. it’s finished.” says Courvoisier in the liner notes. It makes the whole process sound cheap and sloppy, yet the exact opposite is true. It says a lot about the skills of the artists, their natural symbiosis and the authenticity of their music: there is no need to change anything if it comes straight out of your very nature, if it flows organically and spontaneous, as it does here. 

The title, "Angel Falls" refers to the world's highest waterfall in Venezuela, but it of course also has a double meaning of a falling angel. 

Smith has always refused to be boxed into any musical category or genre, and so is Courvoisier: it's classical, free music, expansive and intimate, deeply human but with a level of abstraction that holds the compositions together. Neither Smith nor Courvoisier are iconoclasts or real avant-gardists, preferring a welcoming sonic environment that has deep roots in many musical traditions, yet lifting to a level rarely heard before. 

What they present us here, is again among the best things I've heard this year. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp


Below is a video of another duo performance in early 2025 at The Stone.