Tag Archives: Satoshi Takeishi

So Jazz review by Thierry Lepin

Time Out Lisboa review by José Carlos Fernandes

Michael Attias – Twines of Colesion (CF 188 )****
Como é Lisboa vista da América? Abre com solo de contrabaixo, a que se sobrepõe uma elegia para dois saxofones, depois contrabaixo e bateria iniciam uma marcha cambaleante, aqui e ali, há cintilações de piano, a melancolia sobe do rio e infiltra-se até aos ossos. O saxofonista Michael Attias pode não conhecer os cantos a Lisboa mas provavelmente conhece a poesia de Pessoa, pois o seu tema “Lisbon” é abúlico, repassado de tristeza e dado a mergulhar em meditações metafísicas enquanto contempla “o cais negramente reflectido nas águas paradas” (Ode Marítima).

Os intervenientes são todos músicos que se conhecem de diversas formações e já fazem parte da prata da casa Clean Feed – Attias, Malaby e Hébert têm discos em seu nome na editora. Pode ver-se este quinteto como uma expansão do trio Renku, de Attias com John Hébert (contrabaixo) e Satoshi Takeishi (bateria), por incorporação de Tony Malaby (sax) e Russ Lossing (piano). Aliás, Twines of Colesion foi registado ao vivo em três dias consecutivos no Salão Brazil, de Coimbra, durante o festival Jazz Ao Centro de 2008, ou seja, no mesmo local e pela mesma altura em que o trio gravava o recomendável Renku in Coimbra (também na Clean Feed).

A delicadeza e melancolia de Renku in Coimbra (e um dos temas, “Fenix Culprit”) transitam para Twines of Colesion, mas este é mais denso e tem assomos de vitalidade mais frequentes, muito por “culpa” de Malaby, que se inflama em solos arrebatadores, nomeadamente em “(New) Loom”, “Fenix Culprit”, “Hunter” e “Le Puits Noir”. Um disco variado, intenso e fluido, com um final que soa atabalhoado: após um prelúdio para dois saxofones enlaçados, o brevíssimo “The Maze and the Loom” termina quando dava ideia de que iria alçar voo.

JazzMag review by Philippe Méziat

All About Jazz Italy review by Libero Farnè

Michaël Attias – Twines of Colesion (CF 188 )
Appena tornato dal festival di Saalfelden mi è capitato di riascoltare su Radio 3 un paio di brani da Saxophone Colossus di Sonny Rollins (1956) e poi di dover recensire per AAJ Staying on the Watch di Sonny Simmons (1966). L’imbattermi involontariamente nella rivoluzionaria vitalità di quei dischi mi ha fornito la riprova di alcune considerazioni che andavo rimuginando fra me e me mentre sui palchi di Saalfelden, vetrina imperdibile dell’attualità, si andavano susseguendo i concerti dei vari gruppi.
Vale a dire che, salvo rari casi, con le espressioni di oggi ci troviamo di fronte a tanti manierismi, magari sublimi, ma manierismi. Sull’urgenza espressiva prevale la consapevolezza, sulla centralità della cultura jazzistica l’incrocio fra culture, sulla potenza generatrice del sound e dell’improvvisazione la priorità della struttura, sull’invenzione di un linguaggio inedito la sofisticata rielaborazione d i idiomi… Tutto questo ha a che fare ovviamente con il postmodernismo e con la globalizzazione che almeno da un trentennio influiscono in modo determinante anche su qualsiasi branca del fare artistico.

Questa lunga premessa per arrivare a dire che Twines of Colesion, registrato dal vivo nel giugno 2008, è appunto un tipico esempio, non dei più convincenti, dell’attuale ricerca jazzistica più impegnata e “colta”.
Il quarantenne contraltista Michaël Attias, attivo a New York dagli anni Novanta, è al suo terzo CD per l’etichetta portoghese (dopo Credo e Renku in Coimbra). È autore di tutte le composizioni, o sarebbe meglio dire degli andamenti strutturali dei brani, che alternano passaggi obbligati e improvvisazioni, ora prudenti e diafane ora concitate; e non necessariamente queste ultime costituiscono gli sviluppi dei primi, ma anzi più spesso gli elaborati temi emergono, gradualmente o repentinamente, dalle parti improvvisate. Il quintetto procede con un interplay attento, in cui si mettono in evidenza il robusto contributo del contrabbasso di John Hebert e le voci strumentali dei sassofoni del leader e di Tony Malaby, spesso intrecciate fra loro.

La musica austera, riflessiva e coriacea che si materializza è inappuntabile, ma non riesce ad emozionare: qualche passaggio sa di compitino accademico e a volte il modo di fraseggiare risulta ormai risaputo. Se dunque consideriamo questo CD nel panorama strettamente attuale lo dobbiamo giudicare puntualmente mirato, pienamente attendibile, anche se allineato su direttrici impostate in precedenza da altri; se lo consideriamo in una prospettiva più ampia, di decenni, ha invece ben poche probabilità di rimanere nella storia.
http://italia.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=5682

Music and More review by Tim Niland

Michael Attias – Twines of Colesion (CF 188 )
Recorded live during a jazz festival in Portugal, this album develops in a slow and thoughtful manner as the musicians expand themes and improvisations in a deeply artistic manner. Attias plays alto saxophone, joined by Tony Malaby on tenor saxophone, John Hebert on bass, Russ Lossing on piano and Satoshi Takeishi on drums. “(New) Loom” opens the album with the instruments widely spaced, building slowly as the tension of the horns increases. The lengthy performance builds to a section of strong free-ish horn playing before Malaby steps out with a powerful solo statement. Hebert leads into “Lisbon” with a extensive and subtle bass solo, joined after a while by subtle smeared horns and spare piano, creating a poignant sound-scape. “Fenix Cluprit” begins with light saxophone and spare piano, developing a faster rolling pace, spurring saxophones to a flight of nimble fancy. “Hunter” finds the saxophones making inquiries over dark toned piano, slowly developing the spacious atmosphere in gentle waves of sound. “Le Puits Noir” has a light and spacious percussion foundation, with Takeishi sounding nimble and dexterous. Strong, swirling saxophone, fast tenor with the drums rising to the challenge build to a deep and powerful conclusion. Quiet and atmospheric development mark “The Very Thing” with breathy saxophone joining gentle piano, bass and drums. The music develops to a faster and more vibrant conclusion. “Vitesse De Laumiere” features percussive piano and strong twin saxophones with thick bass providing a strong foundation for a sweeping alto solo, before Attias bows out and Malaby takes the music into strong and vibrant territory. “The Maze And The Loom” ends the album on a quiet note, with gentle swirling horns that swirl and twist like a strand of musical DNA. The musicians play throughout this album in a very thoughtful and patient manner, allowing the music to develop organically. The breadth of their musical vision is inspiring, as they work to widen and expand the nature of the music.
http://jazzandblues.blogspot.com/

Free Jazz review by Stef Gissels

Michael Attias – Twines Of Colesion (CF 188 ) ****
Last year I praised alto saxophonist Michaël Attias’ “Renku In Coimbra”, a trio with John Hébert on bass and Satoshi Takeishi on drums. This album was recorded live at the same Coimbra festival in Portugal but some years later, and this time with Tony Malaby on tenor and soprano, and Russ Lossing on piano, to form a quintet.

This is modern jazz at its best, with solid themes and rhythms, with excellent improvisations, rich in overall ideas and timbral nuances and texture.The additional horn and the piano add to this overall wealth of sound, especially because of the natural sensitivity of both players, which is very much in line with Attias’s own lyricism.

Pieces like “Fenix Culprit”, which start with vibrant slowness, like heat hovering over a deserted road, yet gradually pick up speed and momentum without losing the overall sensitivity and core concept, really demonstrate the band’s power.

This power is also the result of the band’s willingness to be vulnerable and fragile. Listen to “Hunter”, on which Malaby and Lossing get the floor for a long introductory duet of extreme beauty and sensitivity before the theme sets in.

On the downside, I wonder about the editing of the performance. This live performance again sometimes has applause at the end, sometimes not, which is a disturbing experience as I’ve mentioned before. One can also wonder about the last piece, which starts with a two minute duet between the two saxes, then the band joins for fourty seconds to bring the theme once before the track stops, as if aborted.

Don’t let this spoil the fun.

PS : For those of you living in New York, the CD will launched at a concert next week, August 19, at the Cornelia Street Café.
http://freejazz-stef.blogspot.com/

JazzWord review by Ken Waxman

Michaël Attias – Renku in Coimbra (CF 162)
Oleś Brothers with Rob Brown – Live at SJC (Fenommedia Live Series)
Double bass and drums power and patterns are the reason for the success of both these trio CDs which also feature – and in one case is lead by – an alto saxophonist. Nonetheless, these cohesive qualities would likely be present no matter who was the third partner.

Poland’s most notable rhythm section, twin brothers, bassist Marcin Oleś and drummer Bartłomiej “Brat” Oleś are a lot more than the Paul Chambers and Jimmy Cobb of Eastern Europe. Although their skills as close-knit accompanists have benefited musicians ranging from German woodwind player Theo Jörgensmann to American cellist Erik Friedlander, they also produce sessions and – as in this case – compose the music. Not only has Brat Oleś in particular supplied memorable tunes for this CD, but the two spur New York saxophonist Rob Brown to his most impressive soloing on record. Considering Brown travels in the company of players such as bassist William Parker and pianist Mathew Ship that’s high praise.

Although bassist John Hébert and drummer Satoshi Takeishi together have been Israeli-American saxophonist Michaël Attias’ rhythm section since 2003, they’re also busy with a variety of other projects. Takeishi has also worked with Anthony Braxton as well as Brown and Friedlander, while Hébert plays with trombonist Joe Fielder and pianist Benoît Delbecq. More tellingly, the bassist contributed four of the eight tunes on this session and his thick thumps and walking keeps everything balanced. Meantime Takeishi uses a variety of percussion implements to add novel coloration and shore up Attias understated style. The Haifa-born saxophonist, who was raised in Paris and Minneapolis was also mentored by Braxton and has paid sideman dues with drummer Paul Motian and cornetist Taylor Ho Bynum.

Recorded in a Gliwice jazz club in 2008, Live at SJC could be the 21st Century equivalent of Art Pepper Meets the Rhythm Section from 1957. Although Brown’s sharp and piercing tone is closer to Jackie McLean’s, “Brat” Oleś constant clatter, rumbles and rolls plus cymbal sizzles as well as his brother’s slippery plucks, strums and reverberations provide the necessary impetus for the saxophonist as Chambers and drummer Philly Joe Jones did for the saxophonist on the Pepper LP.

Not that Brown needs much prodding during the CD’s more than 75½ minutes. Gritty runs flutter tonguing and glissandi extensions are just a few of the ways he exposes every note pattern nuance to the audience. During the three-part “Here & Now Suite” for instance, his wet trilling, high-pitched split tones and node extensions are prominent during nearly every solo. The Oleś’ responses to his nearly ceaseless mutiphonic playing are circular cross pulsing from the drummer and curvaceous string pumping from the bassist.

Each man also has suitable solo showcases, with Marcin Oleś at one point slip-sliding timbres up the strings; at another doubled string slapping; both of which leads to andante walking. Meanwhile, blunt drum-top strokes and cymbal prestidigitation characterize some of Brat Oleś’ rhythmic thrusts. But if Brown frequently seems to be wrenching every last sweaty ounce of rippled trills from his horn, the drummer’s strategy is more indulgent.

Although Brown’s reed-biting and note squishing is tautly expressed most of the time, he relaxes enough on “Ash Tree” to assay what in these circumstances is a melancholy mid-range ballad. Spreading harsh, altissimo timbres, he links up with low-pitched bowed bass strokes and unattached cymbal rustles. Reaching a climax with intense tongue vibrating in unison with Brat Oleś’ subtle patterning, Brown exits with trumpet-like timbres as every wisp of air is squeezed from his horn.

If Brown’s reed technique on Live can be compared to the use of a steak knife, then Attias’ on Renku in Coimbra is more like that of a butter knife. That isn’t a putdown. Each piece of flatware has a particular function, and Attias’ style is as languid and relaxed as Brown’s is tense and agitated.

Note this particularly during Hébert’s “Universal Constant” which showcases the saxman’s discursive, yet lyrical trilling. Meantime the bassist scrubs and plunks his strings, while Takeishi could be using knitting needles to sound thinner vibrations from cymbals and other parts of his extended kit. Although he’s consistently melodic, his indolent runs are durable as well, and infrequently reflect harsh vibrations.

This track and others are traditional enough to feature a recapping of the theme at the end. Before that there’s plenty of solo room – both during the almost obligatory turnaround and elsewhere. Pianist Russ Lossing even makes a brief, but potent, appearance on one track, recorded like the others at a studio in Coimbra, Portugal, about 3½ months before the Brown-Oleś Brothers CD.

Attias says that Lee Konitz and Jimmy Lyons were two of his earliest influences on alto saxophone. Konitz’s graceful and unhurried stylings are evident on more than the one Konitz composition recorded here. Instructively, the trio’s energetic reading of the latter’s “Sorry” doesn’t differ markedly from how they – and Attias in particular – treat Hébert’s “Wels” or the saxophonist’s own “Do & the Birds”. The latter is almost a rhythm section demonstration, with Takeishi’s mismatched nerve beats, cymbal shakes and wood-block strokes evolving in broken-octave concordance with guitar-like twangs from below the bridge of Hébert’s bass. By the time the saxophonist enters with a mellow texture, the resulting rubato coloration and textural echoes could also be ascribed to the bull fiddler’s almost identical harmonies.

As for his own “Wels”, Hébert’s role is slinky and secondary as the drums bounce and rebound while the altoist hooks onto the treble melody, rubs and caresses it and moves it away from eccentric timbres. Nonetheless, the piece is cantilevered by hard rim shots and fleet-fingered bass string twangs before the lightly accented head is recapped.

Involving musicians of varied backgrounds, both trio sessions demonstrate how, with improvised music a particular, circumstantial alignment can produce first-class music, which can be captured in usual places.
http://www.jazzword.com/review/127175

All About Jazz-New York review by Stuart Broomer

Michaël Attias – Twines of Colesion (CF 188 )
This is the second Clean Feed release by alto saxophonist Michäel Attias from a three-day stand in 2008 at the Jazz ao Centro festival in Coimbra, Portugal. A previous studio session featured his trio, with bassist John Hébert and drummer Satoshi Takeishi, called Renku after a collaborative form of Japanese poetry. If the band name wasn’t already in use, Attias could apply it here. The group heard in performance recordings here is a quintet with tenor saxophonist Tony Malaby and pianist Russ Lossing as well as Hébert and Takeishi, a collection of musicians that appear regularly in various permutations and settings. One of the most notable is Hébert’s Byzantine Monkey, a band including Attias, Malaby and Takeishi. The musicians share a positive and open affiliation and what may be most remarkable is the very different feel of this band from Hébert’s, with genuine contrasts in compositional styles. While the bassist is more of a melodicist, Attias creates complex, multi-part themes that are tonally elusive and develop shifting layers of harmony and rhythm. The group takes these themes and turns them into fluid, intense music, evanescent works that seem to weave in and out of form and focus with an unusual organic unity. The long opening “(New) Loom” moves through rubato ruminations to angular freebop, feeding the central stylistic contrast between Attias’ clear, linear, singing alto and Malaby’s gruffly vocalic, omni-directional tenor with its sudden multiphonics and barnyard squawks. Another notable composition is “Lisbon”, which develops tremendous internal tension with an extended theme statement that’s at once dirge-like and abstract. A sense of individual voice and collective dialogue appears throughout the band, whether it’s Hébert’s subtle glissandos in his introduction to “Lisbon” or Takeishi’s control of pitch bends on small cymbals on “Le Puis Noir”. Lossing adds a rich orchestral dimension as well as some explosive solos. While Attias is clearly an inspired improviser, Twines of Colesion also emphasizes his significant talents as a bandleader and composer.

Master of Small House review by Derek

Michaël Attias – Renku in Coimbra (CF 162)
New York-based saxophonist Michaël Attias has a sound steeped in a somewhat unexpected amalgam of sources. He’s obviously enamored of the free jazz canon and players like Jimmy Lyons and John Tchicai, but there’s also a feathery, aerated inflection to his phrasing that obliquely recalls the Cool and West Coast schools of 50s jazz and specifically players like Lee Konitz and Art Pepper. This set, recorded during a three-night stand in Portugal by his quintet in the summer of 2008, pares that group down to a trio for an exploration of six originals as well as Konitz’s “Thingin’” and Lyons’ “Sorry”. 

The collaborative Japanese poetry form referenced in the disc’s title is a handy analogue to the ensemble’s dynamic and sound. Bassist John Hébert is Attias’ shadow, his accompaniment and counterpoint so closely aligned with the saxophonist that borders on the extrasensory. Drummer Statoshi Takeishi plays his kit with an ear and touch aligned towards nuance and pacing. Gongs, shakers and other percussion regularly inform the foreground of his patterns, enhancing with color and shading the supple rhythms he sculpts with sticks. The pair’s repartee in the initial minutes of “Do & the Birds” coalesces into a loping processional of bulbous and brittle bass manipulations and muted percussion play that Attais eventually glides across.

Pianist Russ Lossing pops up on fleeting “Fenix Culprit”, changing the chemistry quite dramatically with increased density and momentum. Attias hardens his attack as Takeishi and Hébert work up a heavy rhythmic froth, but the four retreat into pallid tension and release in the piece’s finale. That taste of more aggressive interplay also informs the comparatively tumultuous Lyons’ cover and a genuine groove builds out of the lush back and forth that propels “Universal Constant” but much of the set adheres to a conversely temperate itinerary. Tenorist Tony Malaby, the last member of the quintet, is absent and it’s hard not to pine for his presence given the spark Lossing brings with a brief cameo. Summing up this appraisal with a superficial sports metaphor, the set’s not a slam-dunk, but rather a solid basket from the post.
http://masterofasmallhouse.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2010-02-24T10%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&max-results=7

All About Jazz Italy review by Vincenzo Roggero

Michael Attias – Renku in Coimbra (CF 162)
La presenza di due brani targati Lee Konitz e Jimmy Lyons non è casuale. Del primo Michael Attias possiede l’eloquio dai toni astratti del secondo l’esuberanza controllata. Volendo completare il quadro dei riferimenti potremmo dire che nel contralto di Attias si ritrovano pure la morbidezza e la nonchalance di Wayne Marsh e la logica matematica di Anthony Braxton. Insomma Attias è un sassofonista che ha assimilato appieno il linguaggio di alcuni maestri del sassofono e lo ha rielaborato in maniera originale e funzionale alla sua visione musicale.
Registrato in un pomeriggio nel 2004, durante una three-night residency del quintetto con Tony Malaby e Russ Lossing al JACC Festival, Renku in Coimbra è la classica seduta nata quasi per caso, come momento di relax tra le fatiche di un tour. Solo che quasi magicamente tutti i dettagli che concorrono alla riuscita di una registrazione sembrano andare ciascuno al proprio posto, come guidati da una mano invisibile. Ne risulta così una musica che rispecchia l’assoluto comfort dei musicisti, che suonano con grande intensità e altrettanta scioltezza, prediligono le atmosfere calde e rilassate, smussando gli angoli e spianando le asperità delle improvvisazioni che normalmente contraddistinguono le loro esibizioni.

Il lavoro di Satoshi Takeishi, impegnato spesso alle spazzole, abile nel creare sequenze stranianti con i metalli riducendo al minimo la pulsazione delle pelli, e il poderoso contrabbasso di John Hebert, autore di alcuni strepitosi interventi solistici, completano un triangolo musicale che mette in mostra un lato della personalità artistica di Michael Attias non sempre valorizzata.
http://italia.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=4935