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422: DAVID MURRAY QUARTET. Francesca

Intakt Recording #422 / 2024

David Murray: Tenor Saxophone and Bass Clarinet
Marta Sanchez: Piano
Luke Stewart: Acoustic Bass
Russell Carter: Drums


Ursprünglicher Preis CHF 12.00 - Ursprünglicher Preis CHF 30.00
Ursprünglicher Preis
CHF 30.00
CHF 12.00 - CHF 30.00
Aktueller Preis CHF 30.00
Format: Compact Disc
More Info

Der Tenorsaxofonist David Murray, der Gigant des modernen Jazz, verschmilzt, was die schwarze Musik an Grossem hervorgebracht hat: Gospelsounds, Free Jazz, Afrokaribisches, Blues, Soul sowie die wunderschönen Standards des klassischen Jazz. Murrays farbenprächtige Tongebung, seine unübertroffene Intonation, sein Gespür für Swing, seine melancholischen Tönungen sowie seine improvisatorische Kraft und sein Einfallsreichtum machen ihn zu einer der wichtigsten Stimmen heutiger Musik. Sein neues Quartett, das mehrheitlich Kompositionen von ihm selbst spielt, gibt den drei jungen Musiker*innen viel Raum. «Jazz legend David Murray is back with the next generation of geniuses», schreibt die Washington Post zum neuen Quartett. Und Derek Schilling schreibt in den Liner Notes zum fantastischen Album Francesca: "David Murrays Handschrift als Komponist liegt heute in der Verbindung verschiedener Stile, deren Zusammentreffen für klangliche Überraschungen sorgt. Die spezifische Wahl dieser Stile (und der entsprechenden Metren bzw. Texturen) ist sicherlich von Bedeutung. Noch entscheidender jedoch ist die Art und Weise, wie Murray den Übergang von einem Stil zum anderen natürlich, ja sogar notwendig erscheinen lässt. Wenn man mit Leichtigkeit von Funk zu Latin-Rhythmen, vom Walzertakt zu Four-on-the-Floor, von R&B zu Free und wieder zurück wechseln kann, dann deshalb, weil Musik keine Grenzen kennt. Wenn sie richtig gespielt wird, geht sie über sich selbst hinaus, auch wenn sie die Kontinuität der Traditionen bekräftigt. Die klangliche Überraschung entsteht, wenn Musiker, im Moment, diese Einheit in der Vielfalt schmieden. Das ist das einzig Wahre." Ein Meisterwerk!

Album Credits

Cover art and graphic design: Jonas Schoder
Liner notes: Derek Schilling
Photo: Francesca Cinelli Murray (Band) and Jules Allen (Francesca)

All compositions by David Murray except “Richard’s Tune” by Don Pullen (Andredon Music). Recorded November 26, 27, 2023, at Hardstudios Winterthur by Michael Brändli. Mixed January 21, 2024, by David Murray, Michael Brändli and Florian Keller at Hardstudios Winterthur. Produced and published by Intakt Records. Executive Producer: Florian Keller.

Customer Reviews

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K
Ken Waxman
The New York City Jazz Record

Apparently there comes a time when avant garde tenor saxophonists turn into Coleman Hawkins. They don't become slavish imitators, but although exploratory impulses remain, swing, melody and a deeper sound become paramount. That transformation first affected Archie Shepp, who transitioned to blues and ballads by the late 20th century. Now the same metamorphosis has affected David Murray. Unlike Shepp, who arguably changed to mask a failing lip, Murray's skill is still on full display and Francesca is a high-quality mainstream release. One reason for that is the New York-based saxophonist-bass clarinetist (who returned to NYC in 2016) surrounds himself with younger, accomplished musicians, as heard in the last few years on tour and on the quartet's new album: Marta Sanchez (piano), Luke Stewart (bass) and Russell Carter (drums).

Murray also continues to play bass clarinet, and on "Richard's Tune" he takes out that horn and balances chalumeau burps and clarion squeaks. Interestingly enough, the Don Pullen composition, which also features Sanchez' leaping piano chording and Stewart's slithering double bass thumps, mixes wallowing reed scoops and vibrations plus what seems to be a contrafact of "Jitterbug Waltz". On tenor, the passion and power Murray has always displayed is still upfront, alongside slurs, splashes and smears -sometimes expressed unaccompanied -as on the title track. More often than not he plays in tandem with Sanchez' keyboard bounces and swirls, measured drum smacks that take on bop and Latin articulations and occasionally the bassist's string slides. Among the allusions, Murray's expositions encompass interludes where he stutters, swallows and stings tones into expanded doits that meet piano stops and trade fours with the drummer as on "Am Gone Get Some". Torque linear altissimo motions into clenched snorts speed up as they squeal into a nearly endless exposition on "Come And Go". Murray also ups the excitement as constant overblowing and triple tonguing introduce Carter's ruffs and cracks on "Cycles and Seasons". Throughout the album foot-tapping rhythms mostly recap the heads.

Francesca can be heard as one of the most outside mainstream albums or, conversely, the most inside avant garde session. And it can and should be appreciated by those who favor one or both of these genres.

K
Ken Waxman
The New York City Jazz Record

Apparently there comes a time when avant garde tenor saxophonists turn into Coleman Hawkins. They don't become slavish imitators, but although exploratory impulses remain, swing, melody and a deeper sound become paramount. That transformation first affected Archie Shepp, who transitioned to blues and ballads by the late 20th century. Now the same metamorphosis has affected David Murray. Unlike Shepp, who arguably changed to mask a failing lip, Murray's skill is still on full display and Francesca is a high-quality mainstream release. One reason for that is the New York-based saxophonist-bass clarinetist (who returned to NYC in 2016) surrounds himself with younger, accomplished musicians, as heard in the last few years on tour and on the quartet's new album: Marta Sanchez (piano), Luke Stewart (bass) and Russell Carter (drums).

Murray also continues to play bass clarinet, and on "Richard's Tune" he takes out that horn and balances chalumeau burps and clarion squeaks. Interestingly enough, the Don Pullen composition, which also features Sanchez' leaping piano chording and Stewart's slithering double bass thumps, mixes wallowing reed scoops and vibrations plus what seems to be a contrafact of "Jitterbug Waltz". On tenor, the passion and power Murray has always displayed is still upfront, alongside slurs, splashes and smears -sometimes expressed unaccompanied -as on the title track. More often than not he plays in tandem with Sanchez' keyboard bounces and swirls, measured drum smacks that take on bop and Latin articulations and occasionally the bassist's string slides. Among the allusions, Murray's expositions encompass interludes where he stutters, swallows and stings tones into expanded doits that meet piano stops and trade fours with the drummer as on "Am Gone Get Some". Torque linear altissimo motions into clenched snorts speed up as they squeal into a nearly endless exposition on "Come And Go". Murray also ups the excitement as constant overblowing and triple tonguing introduce Carter's ruffs and cracks on "Cycles and Seasons". Throughout the album foot-tapping rhythms mostly recap the heads.

Francesca can be heard as one of the most outside mainstream albums or, conversely, the most inside avant garde session. And it can and should be appreciated by those who favor one or both of these genres.

// SCRAMBLED //