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December 2020
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Listening Listfully 2021

Man ray jazz 1919

Near as I can parse it, I first posted a year-end Music List here fifteen years ago, in 2006. Some few folks seem actually to look forward to it, and it gives me a chance to think a bit more about what I have liked and why I have liked it, so I have gone and done it again.

The ordering principle this year is no more consistent than in any prior year. Ostensibly there are 60 entries, but the total album count is slightly higher as a result of combining multiple releases from any given principal artist as a single entry. The entries have been collected in six groups of ten, and the groups are arranged in descending order of preference, i.e., the first Ten does qualify as a personal Top Ten. Within each group, including the first, the selections are listed quasi-alphabetically by first name. Many of the comments are adapted from Twitter entries (@foolintheforest), others are hand-crafted just for the List. I grew tired of the process and stopped at #50, which should not reflect poorly on my enthusiasm for the remaining ten.

Whenever possible, I have linked to Bandcamp. I will not nag you again to buy your music and to support artists by buying as close to the source as possible (commonly via Bandcamp), because you already know that it is meet and right so to do.

In a year of strains and sorrows and aggravations for everyone, everywhere, at least the music was still good. Here is my personal assessment of the most-good.

 

1-10

  • Arooj AftabVulture Prince

If I Did It, i.e., if I ranked individual selections on this list, there is a fair and genuine chance that this would be #1, and not just alphabetically. It surprises and astounds me at every turn every time, even though I have heard every turn each time before. I think the secret here is Arooj Aftab's voice, which is absorbable through every pore and porch of entry. I wish her well, and then some, with the Grammy nominations, especially New Artist: they gave it to Esperanza Spalding in her year, so there's hope. "Mohabbat" has rightly garnered the most attention, but I have a secret tooth for the reggae number, "Last Night."

Time suspended is time regained.

  • Artifacts… And Then There’s This

A state of Chicago-school Creative Music report from Artifacts, which is to say Nicole Mitchell, Tomeka Reid, Mike Reed.  If "Pleasure Palace" does not drag you in, there's just no reasoning with you.

  • Caroline DavisPortals, Volume 1: Mourning
    PedwayVitalic
    My Tree (Maitri)Where the Grace Is

Three Caroline Davis releases this year, each a treat. Portals, on the theme of mourning, is shot through with veins of unanticipated joy.  Vitalic is a burner for improvising trio. My Tree's Where the Grace is serves vocal-forward, hip-troppy, engaged and engaging R&B. Arcing sparks for thinking hearts.

  • Dave EasleyByways of the Moon

Swinging and beyond virtuosic, pedal steel-centric covers of Carla Bley, Coltrane, Monk, Plant & Page, ending on a blissful merger of Zawinul with Brian Wilson. Pleasures galore.

  • Emily D’Angeloenargeia

Speaking of voices, as I did above: this. A perfect mesh of singer and repertoire. Emily D'Angelo makes it new again, particularly in selections from Sarah Kirkland Snider and Missy Mazzoli. 

  • Irreversible EntanglementsOpen the Gates
    Moor MotherBlack Encyclopedia of the Air
    Black Quantum FuturismMmere Dane: THE BLACK TIME BELT

First and last, she is a poet and a voice, is Moor Mother: a sifter of histories and a prodder at the sore spots and wrongs those histories bear forward, and a seeker after every possible outlet for that voice and that sifting and that prodding. Solo, in a band [as in Irreversible Entanglements], or in collaboration, she is a force.  The new Irreversible Entanglements is my clear personal favorite here, because I track to jazz/creative improvised music as a genre over rap-centric hip-hop just now, but Black Encyclopedia is a strong strong instance of the latter and a must-hear of its own.

  • James Brandon Lewis / Red Lily QuintetJesup Wagon
    James Brandon Lewis QuartetCode of Being

Jesup Wagon - variations on the theme of George Washington Carver - is one of the great longform jazz/creative improvised music albums, certainly of our time and likely to be judged so long term. Immersive and subversive and full of depths to be plumbed.

  • Maurice LoucaSaet El Hazz (The Luck Hour)

Kind of flat out amazing, this one. I am somewhat at a loss to describe it, but it got in my head and would not let go, which marks it as an obvious top-ten item with me.

  • Sons of KemetBlack to the Future

Maybe the angriest album on this list, though Moor Mother [who guests here] would surely compete. Everything that is striking about current London-based jazz, particularly the amalgamation of musics from the worldwide imperio-colonial shadow, in one potent and dangerous package. Roars and growls and rocks and shocks to glory.

  • WildUpJulius Eastman Vol. 1: Femenine

Between my preexisting love of the piece and my preexisting love for these musicians, I was solidly presold. And yet I was unprepared for the leagues by which this manages to outstrip those high expectations. A wonderment, this is. A wonderment. The cover photo of the composer, awash in the world, is superbly spot-on for the occasion.

 

11-20

  • Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Cantus DomusSediments We Move

Finest progg-y thing in a dog's age. It rocks, it jazzes, it choralizes, and it rules. Savor, please, its infinite variety.

a n

  • Emma Jean ThackreyYellow

Expansive positivity in a messed up world: Kindness, Joy, Love, Happiness, Peace, more Love, also Understanding; guest appearances by divers gods, planets, stars and other celestia. Did I mention it grooves? And it grooves nonstop.

  • Field MusicFlat White Moon

The Brewis brothers crafty writing and arrangements never let me down, and this is their finest until the next one. Just listen. If it's not for you, that's fine. If it is for you, you'll be back to it again and again.

  • Gabriella Smith, Gabriel CabezasLost Coast

Gabriella Smith is one of the most constantly interesting of the current 'rising young composers,' and a true voice of California. Her work here with cellist Gabriel Cabezas [yMusic] is a mutual absorption and exchange of ideas in a paean and elegy for the Golden State's seemingly endless northern Pacific Coast. Layered cello and voice, and extended techniques for tea strainer. All overseen by violist and new music evangelista Nadia Sirota, in what I do believe is her first credit in the role of producer; she has entirely nailed it.

  • Giménez López / Bass / Suarez / ScampinoReunión en la granja

Young, Argentine, 75% woman-driven quartet dives enthusiastically into a potful of Ornette Coleman, with side jaunts into Albert Ayler and Paul Motian, and not a wind instrument in earshot, and it's an earfulfilling feast.

  • Ill ConsideredLiminal Space

After several years of essentially-live releases, the first studio rendition of this raucous ball of jazz momentum. 

  • LowHEY WHAT

A smooth sweet courtly metal death dance with bluebirds on basalt. All praise, for each prize it prises from the dark.

  • Molly HerronThrough Lines

An antique sound world - violas da gamba - brought to bear in of-the-moment ways, with a marvelous variety of the sober and the antic. Insufficiently noticed, I thought, so you'll be extra hip, and rewarded, if you give it some attention.

You don't have to watch Dynasty
To write a rad etude

  • Shanique MarieGigi’s House

A pure pleasure play, combining Ms. Marie's irresistible vocals - sweetness, but also a will with which one ought not to trifle - atop reggae, hip-hop, jazz, occasionally spiked with the post-minimalist melodicism of composer Michael Vincent Waller (as himself and as MVW, the persona behind his own venture into classical trap music (see below)).

  • Stephanie NillesI pledge allegiance to the flag – the white flag

Selected works of Charles Mingus retooled for vicious barrelhouse piano and nasty barroom vocal stylings. The cadenza on "Faubus" is👌.

 

21-30

  • Cha WaMy People

Undiluted New Orleans.

  • Christopher CerroneThe Arching Path

A compilation of previously unreleased Chris Cerrone pieces, mostly emulating times and places of importance to the composer with a moving but muscular sympathetic delicacy.

  • Jaimie BranchFly or Die Live

Carry water, chop wood, run for cover.

  • John DepewJohn Depew

Windblown bone-cold prairie heartsickness, that is Americana. Look it in the eye, reach out to shake its hand, glance away, inhale, repeat. No flinching.

  • MVW [Michael Vincent Waller]Classic$

Michael Vincent Waller has been a recurring presence in high places on this Fool's lists. Here, he launches out of the picture plain to conjoin his modal, Satie-an aesthetic with a serious and committed connection to trap beats, in the company of producer Lex Luger. I know nothing of that world, but it sings true here and sits with surprising comfort beside its hoity-toity classical forebears-become-compatriots, all in a way not easily dismissed.  

  • Natural Information Society w/ Evan Parkerdescension (Out of Our Constrictions)

Blazing raga energies roil beneath swirling saxology.

  • Nico Muhly & Michael HurleyReliable Sources

The things that have endeared Nico Muhly's music to me from the start flare and thrive in abundance in this bassoon concerto. Reminiscent of the Tempest themes from "I Drink the Air Before Me," with particularly direct invocations of the English sacred music that so often nourishes this composer.

  • Pino Palladino, Blake Mills – Notes With Attachments

Plentiful guest spots for Sam Gendel's saxophones on this. Lounge-y, but hard edged relaxophonics.

  • R. Andrew LeeScott Blasco: One Day As a Thousand Years

The hopefully-nearly-post-pandemic return of Andy Lee is more action-packed than the super-minimalism on which his reputation rests, but the underlying optimism of this suite of meditations on holy days is truly welcome.

  • Sō Percussion, MEDIAQUEER, Adam Tendler, Alex Sopp, Beth Meyers, Shelley Washington, Grey McmurrayJulius Eastman: Stay On It

The rockin'-est version yet of Julius Eastman's most rockin'-est piece.

 

31-40

  • Alexander Hawkins feat. Evan Parker + Riot EnsembleTogetherness Music (for Sixteen Musicians)

The Floating Points/Pharoah Sanders collaboration [which appears farther down on this list than on many another] got all the attention and it is certainly easeful and lovely to listen to but, as stream-crossing Creative Improvised Music meets Classical/NewMusic projects go, this for my money was the sweet and prickly, steep and deeper, realer dealer. 

  • Arushi JainUnder the Lilac Sky

A superb modular synth album, in the spirit of '70s Germans such as Michael Hoenig, tht isonly improved by the application of deep distillations of classical raga.

  • Attacca QuartetReal Life\

The "string quartet with beats" thing could have been an empty crossover stunt, but it escapes that ignominy. Particularly on the non-video'd selections, the engagement between superb technique and vestiges of clubland and chillout is not at all trivial in its effects. [To be honest, while I recommend this album, the better example of this Quartet working in this zone is the under-noted, Vonnegut-inspired Oak & the Ghost from 2019, which I will not cease from recommending.]

  • Chris Schlarb & Chad TaylorTime No Changes
    Mind Maintenance [Chad Taylor & Joshua Abrams]Mind Maintenance

If a single musician appears most frequently on this list, it is almost certainly drummer/percussionist Chad Taylor. He is up there in the top 10 on Dave Easley's pedal steel imaginarium and grounding or igniting both James Brandon Lewis sessions; also in Jaimie Branch's band, and I'm convinced I am missing at least one more. Here he is in his own right, in two duo formations. On both of these, whether working off of Chris Schlarb's guitar or Joshua Abrams' guimbri. His playing is louder and more openly forceful elsewhere, but his focus and attention to detail pack an equal punch in these sessions, and beneficent world-embracing spirits, the like of Don Cherry or Alice Coltrane, can be sensed smiling over it all.

  • Cucina PoveraLumme

There is an ambience, and it never goes out.

  • Jeff ParkerForfolks

Frisell meets Fahey meets Eno meets Reich meets the face to face the people that you meet. Mostly solo guitar, containing multitudes.

  • Matthew E. WhiteK-Bay

Music from the South of juke joints, gospel choirs, juice and sweat and sweet harmony and love surpassing suppression. No, not that other South.

  • Nadje NoordhuisGullfoss

 Spare, clean, sparkling, luxe and lovely as can be.

  • St. VincentDaddy’s Home

St. Vincent music.

 

41-50

  • William ParkerPainters Winter
    William ParkerMayan Space Station

Quietly or loudly, permanently heavy stuff.

  • Arthur Russell24 to 24 Music Live at the Kitchen

A jam-fest of Downtown scene notables from 1973. None other than Julius Eastman at the helm of the nasty, nasty organ.

  • Chris LaurenceKen Wheeler: Some Gnu Ones

The fulsome spirit and sweet creation of the late Kenny Wheeler, missing only Kenny Wheeler himself.

  • LiselMycelial Echo

There is an ambience, and it, too, never goes out.

  • Luke Gulickson TrioPhaedrus

Three worthy trios with Greco-titles, from Albuquerque's Luke Gullickson.

  • Michael HarrisonSeven Sacred Names

A gallery of velveted and scintillant spaces.

  • Miguel Zenón, Ariel Bringuez, Demian Cabaud & Jordi RossyLaw Years: The Music of Ornette Coleman

Just what it says: a tribute to Ornette Coleman by playing Ornette Coleman's music gimmick free, straight up, and really well.

  • NOW EnsembleSean Friar: Before and After

  • Spektral QuartetAnna Þorvaldsdóttir: ENIGMA

Icelandic string drones are your only drones. A most compelling almost-final gesture from the Spektrals.

  • Theon CrossIntra-I

Tuba man Theon Cross, an important Son of Kemet, on his own terms, slaking his thirst for Caribbean grooves.

  • Tyshawn Sorey; Alarm Will SoundFor George Lewis

I wander about at differing distances from Morton Feldman, but he is a still point to which I regularly reorient. Tyshawn Sorey's immensely fine "For George Lewis" builds gorgeously on that Feldman sound world.

 

51-60

  • Andrew McIntoshA Moonbeam is just a filtered sunbeam.

  • Ben GoldbergEverything Happens to Be

  • CARMCARM

  • Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders & The London Symphony OrchestraPromises

  • Jacob Cooper and Steven BradshawSunrise

  • MeropeSalos

  • Mr. Twin SisterAl Mundo Azul

  • Rosie TurtonExpansions and Transformations, Parts I and II

  • "Steely Dan" – Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live

  • TAK Ensemble & Taylor BrookStar Maker Fragments

 

~~~

Illustration: Man Ray, Jazz (1919). Public domain, baby.