Rolling Jazz 2026

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Toast of the Nation 2026's sets are already posted, though I've just come in on the broadcast: what I've so far heard from Nicole Zuraitis & Friends upwas pretty tensile---the kind of Friends who could upstage a lesser vocal stylist without necessarily meaning to, but it didn't happen here. Took a while to warm up to some of Kassa Overall's musos, but it all came together. Sofia Rei's crew are the ones who are killing meee--never heard of her before! Still ahead:

Toast of the Nation takes note of a few magical live performances to emerge in 2025. We begin in New York, where drumming royalty Marcus Gilmore makes an auspicious Village Vanguard debut as a leader. Tyreek McDole serenades festival goers in Marciac, France. Amir ElSaffar reveals a new quartet in Berlin. Then we head to Philadelphia for the visionary Marshall Allen and his small group, Ghost Horizon. The set concludes with inspired performances from Kokayi at Big Ears in Knoxville and one of the last performances featuring Jack DeJohnette with George Colligan's Trio.

https://www.npr.org/2025/12/29/g-s1-102814/toast-of-the-nation-2026

dow, Thursday, 1 January 2026 04:51 (five months ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-nXegyTyuI

If, like me, you were upset that Kamasi Washington's soundtrack to the anime Lazarus (which stands up really well as a KW album) was only going to be available on vinyl, good news! They made a CD version for Japan. I've got a copy on the way to me, along with reissues of two grails from the BYG-Actuel catalog: Frank Wright's One For John (with Noah Howard on alto sax, Bobby Few on piano and Muhammad Ali on drums, also never before available on CD) and Alan Silva's Seasons (with the Celestrial Communication Orchestra, a 22-member group that included the whole Art Ensemble of Chicago, three pianists, multiple bassists, and a slew of horns - it's a triple LP now reissued as a 2CD set).

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Monday, 5 January 2026 01:25 (five months ago)

The Small's jam session ruiner/guitar guy debacle has been all over my social media (jazz jams often bring out the real weirdos, but I guess it's notable for going down at jazz jam central).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35tBA_5SlNY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ropCaQu2jLU

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Monday, 5 January 2026 16:00 (five months ago)

Can't bring myself to watch the second one.

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 5 January 2026 16:38 (five months ago)

Although it seems like the guy requested "Sunny" and they maybe played a Sonny Rollins tune instead ;)

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 5 January 2026 16:39 (five months ago)

xxxpost Kamasi is also on Saul Williams Meets Carlos Nino & Friends at TreePeople, the first International Anthem album to be nominated for a Grammy, and both tenors, Aaron Shaw as well as KW, are especially appealing in this overall bubble of live clarity---spoken word seems no prob here: Williams's voice fits in well, though the only lines that have grabbed me are about how Wall St. got its name. (Tenor may be mainly KW; it's one of several instruments played by Shaw).

dow, Monday, 5 January 2026 20:39 (five months ago)

Scrolling through the Smalls/Mezzrow email makes me think I've gotta get over there soon.

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 5 January 2026 21:12 (five months ago)

lol @ the dude crashing the Small's jam with a giant acoustic guitar

budo jeru, Monday, 5 January 2026 23:56 (five months ago)

it is like some kind of Andy Kaufman performance

budo jeru, Tuesday, 6 January 2026 00:00 (five months ago)

lol

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 6 January 2026 00:52 (five months ago)

tbh I feel bad for the guy

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 6 January 2026 00:52 (five months ago)

Jazz Legacies Fellowship Honors All-Star Concert was at Lincoln Center in NY last night. I was not there but read about it. the Jazz Legacies Fellowships provide unrestricted $100,000 grants to jazz elders. Performing last night were Valerie Capers, Amina Claudine Myers, George Coleman, Akua Dixon, Tom Harrell, Billy Hart, Bertha Hope, Roger Humphries, Carmen Lundy, Roscoe Mitchell, Johnny O’Neal, Shannon Powell, Julian Priester, Herlin Riley, Michele Rosewoman, Dom Salvador and Reggie Workman. The Mellon Foundation and Jazz Foundation of America fund this

curmudgeon, Saturday, 10 January 2026 04:25 (four months ago)

That new Pat Metheny "Side EYE III" is pretty good. Some of the keyboard/synth stuff on that kinda echos sound wise some of those early ECM synthy touches with 2025 sounds (with the loops etc).

I was checking that out last night. I listened to the Side EYE I which was just the trio a while back and that has some cool stuff on it too.

earlnash, Saturday, 10 January 2026 15:27 (four months ago)

What a great lineup, curmudgeon! Just made me think of Rudy Lawless, who played drums with Valerie Capers for many years and was a really great person to be around.

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 10 January 2026 15:41 (four months ago)

Honestly makes me so happy to see Shannon Powell & Herlin on there, and Roscoe Mitchell. Good job, rich people.

I need to check out those Metheny records, I love Joe Dyson.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Saturday, 10 January 2026 16:35 (four months ago)

End of an era: The Bad Plus (aka Reid Anderson, Dave King, and your gran on bongos) are hanging it up at the end of this year, after a tour featuring Craig Taborn and Chris Potter on which they'll play the music of Keith Jarrett's American Quartet.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Monday, 12 January 2026 18:28 (four months ago)

might actually see this tour

ICE = Tonton Macoute (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 12 January 2026 18:29 (four months ago)

Ben Monder came and went?

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 12 January 2026 18:30 (four months ago)

They're doing a couple of dates with Monder and Chris Speed in St. Louis this week, and a festival in June. The Potter/Taborn shows are in March and April.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Monday, 12 January 2026 18:36 (four months ago)

The annual Francis Davis Jazz Critics' Poll is out. My label did quite well on the "Rara Avis" (reissues and archival releases) list; the Anthony Braxton Quartet (England) 1985 set was #4, and the Cecil Taylor/Tony Oxley album Flashing Spirits was #9.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Monday, 12 January 2026 23:04 (four months ago)

concur on the new Metheny -- super good

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 02:03 (four months ago)

I don't connect with Metheny's music very often. I've tried - and I've interviewed him; he seems to be a genuinely good dude. But what he does is Not For Me. That said, if his taking control of his post-ECM catalog means Zero Tolerance For Silence is coming back into print, I'm all for that.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 04:08 (four months ago)

Have you gone back to Trio->Live recently? That's sneakily become my fave Metheny, just burning.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 15:43 (four months ago)

I love this concept - Chris Weisman and Pablo Held wrote each other an album's worth of music on paper, then each arranged and recorded the other's music however they wanted to, and then they each released the album of the other person playing their new compositions:

https://pabloheld.bandcamp.com/album/chris-weisman-plays-my-music
https://chrisweisman.bandcamp.com/album/pablo-held-plays-my-music

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 15:44 (four months ago)

I struggle with Metheny myself, but some of his stuff is pretty great. Honestly, my favorite single disc Metheny thing might be Works II.

better than ezra collective soul asylum (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 15:47 (four months ago)

His album of John Zorn compositions — Tap: Book Of Angels Vol. 20 — is really good. I listened to that last night. I also like his album From This Place, and a few other 21st century things. I think it's mostly the Pat Metheny Group stuff that sets my teeth on edge.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 16:29 (four months ago)

Yeah, haven't kept up with him in this century, but I always preferred some of the non-Group ventures, like with Haden and Ornette---also unexpectedly enjoyed [Fictionary, by Group mainstay Lyle Mays. One of my friends swears by some of his albums with Gary Burton, and. I've liked radio tracks from his album with Scofield.

dow, Tuesday, 13 January 2026 20:15 (four months ago)

Will have to check out his Zorn covers!

dow, Tuesday, 13 January 2026 20:16 (four months ago)

The Gary Burton album with Metheny, Roy Haynes, and Dave Holland is a classic, but the trio albums with Larry Grenadier and Bill Stewart are *fire* (esp. the live one).

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 20:18 (four months ago)

Speaking of Metheny, can anyone tell me if this has been an official release or a streaming-only thing? It's pretty good.

Also pretty good is the Tales from The Hudson concert with Michael Brecker, Jack DeJohnette, Joey Calderazzo and Dave Holland . Metheny's solo in "Slings and Arrows" is stunning.

EvR, Tuesday, 13 January 2026 20:33 (four months ago)

Heard two tracks from an upcoming Shabaka Hutchings album (coming out in March) and they both suuuuucked.

The second James Brandon Lewis/Messthetics record, also out in March, rips, though.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Wednesday, 14 January 2026 03:15 (four months ago)

Yeah, this Shabaka is not great. The last one was a bit too bougie wellness jazz for my liking, so I was intrigued by the idea of him making his own beats, but the production is pretty tame, with generic ambient jazz synth sounds. There's some potentially interesting stuff going on rhythmically on the back half, but as with all his electronic projects, it needs to go harder. As for the rapping, his delivery is pretty monotonous. He's been playing live with Pat Thomas lately, so I'm hoping something more exciting will come out of that.

Composition 40b (Stew), Wednesday, 14 January 2026 10:46 (four months ago)

The thing with Shabaka is that he's a good player, particularly on clarinet, but he's never really lived up to the hype of being the UK's golden boy. His artistic curiosity is admirable, but Sons Of Kemet aside, I don't think he's really landed on anything truly distinctive or vital. I enjoyed The Ancestors record, but they felt like group efforts, and I think that he's probably at his best when he has collaborators who can inspire and challenge him.

Composition 40b (Stew), Wednesday, 14 January 2026 11:25 (four months ago)

Of the two that have been made public, Future Untold is a twinkly ambient blandfest, but the beat on this is quite fun, and I like the way the sax gets a bit spicier after the chromatic breakdown. But as with a lot of his stuff, I want him to take it a bit further, freer, weirder.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkV4FsZi-i8

Composition 40b (Stew), Wednesday, 14 January 2026 11:38 (four months ago)

art is cool for sure

budo jeru, Wednesday, 14 January 2026 15:40 (four months ago)

I like that Shabaka track, the Baile funk-esque beat, the weird calliope-sounding flutes, bringing back the SoK rhythmic sax...

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Wednesday, 14 January 2026 16:57 (four months ago)

Just heard syndicated Jazz In The New Millenium's hour of Craig Handy: starts with version of "Watermelon Man" on Headhunters' live 2025 alb, then back to early 90s for live Mingus Big Band, forward a few years to "I Left My Baby," from the Kansas City soundtrack: Handy as Coleman Hawkins, with Curtis Fowlkes, David Fathead Newman, Kevin Mahogany, others; also with group 2nd-Line Smith, which is organ jazz meets New Orleans street, parade etc. elements (organist isn't trying to be the frontman here, wisely); The Latin Side of McCoy Tyner, with Conrad Herwig, and (great finale) James Brown's "Aint It Funky Now," with German combo BAM, back to 2025.

dow, Monday, 19 January 2026 02:35 (four months ago)

All of that really worked, plus some more with annotations I didn't take in (must start recording this show: there's no archive of any kind, much less downloads)

dow, Monday, 19 January 2026 02:40 (four months ago)

Here's that Kansas City track; Mark Whitfield's on there too:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvYiRl6-FY8

dow, Monday, 19 January 2026 03:16 (four months ago)

That was arranged by Steven Bernstein, whose long-part-time band with Charlie Hunter, ", Bobby Previte, and Skerik (Omaha Diner) finally released its s/t album in 2025. Name is ironic tribute to where a guy got the idea for Top 40, on which all of the songs covered were originally No. 1, "at least briefly." Think some were Top 20, or other formats officially, but all are the unmistakably well-preserved, processed goods, though not too familiar, not as done here. Also not like the Mothers assaulting "Louie Louie," but witty, lithe, charming, hell maybe it's gay, I wouldn't know:https://charliehunter1.bandcamp.com/album/omaha-diner

dow, Monday, 19 January 2026 03:34 (four months ago)

(Also don't know why that ", is between Hunter and Previte.)

dow, Monday, 19 January 2026 03:36 (four months ago)

Cecil Taylor's final live performance — at the Whitney Museum on April 23, 2016, with Harri Sjöström on saxes, Okkyung Lee on cello, Jackson Krall on drums and Tony Oxley on electronics — will be released on CD by the Fundacja Sluchaj label. I was there, and wrote one of the two liner note essays.

https://sluchaj.bandcamp.com/album/words-and-music-the-last-bandstand

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 23 January 2026 01:09 (four months ago)

cecil is an automatic purchase for me

Gentler Death Squads Please (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 23 January 2026 01:13 (four months ago)

The show was fascinating - it's 80 minutes long, and about 30-35 minutes of that is him reading what starts out as a poem but becomes a long lecture on biology, human prehistory, and all kinds of other stuff. It's wild. (And the quality of the recording is great, btw.)

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 23 January 2026 01:27 (four months ago)

Utterly lost touch with jazz last year— couldn’t find myself excited by much on offer, with a few exceptions. One goal this year is to get back into it!

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Sunday, 25 January 2026 12:52 (four months ago)

Just saw The Naked Gun last night, which I found to be moderately enjoyable trash– I mean good fun! – but now recalling the parody of jazz singing sequence that kind of bugged me.

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 25 January 2026 15:15 (four months ago)

Utterly lost touch with jazz last year— couldn’t find myself excited by much on offer, with a few exceptions. One goal this year is to get back into it!

Catch up last year with anything involving Luke Stewart (esp Silt Remembrance Ensemble), the Otherlands Trio (w/Darius Jones), anything with Mary Halvorson

Gentler Death Squads Please (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 25 January 2026 15:47 (four months ago)

I am utterly baffled by love for Halvorson. Totally unmoved by everything I have heard from her.

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Sunday, 25 January 2026 16:05 (four months ago)

i’m a sucker for digital delay

Gentler Death Squads Please (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 25 January 2026 16:08 (four months ago)

Artlessly Falling is still the one Halvorson album I've really gotten into----from RJ 202i:

eah we were digging AF over on Robert Wyatt: Classic or Dud?:

He's good on that Code Girl album--sounds old, but vivid, to lingering impression after tracks are over---and alb is all good, by far the best Halvorson set I've heard so far, maybe because she's an accompanist here, to singers and instrumental "chamber" (but non-antiseptic) jazz combo & soloists.

― dow, Tuesday, 5 January 2021 19:45 (one month ago) link

i was a little cooler on the album overall, maybe it needs a few more spins to grow on me, but agree that Wyatt is fantastic on it

― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open)

t's a great setting for him and he sounds perfect on it even if I am not as high on as I was the first Code Girl record, but agreed I need some more time with it

― chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 5 January 2021 20:47 (one month ago) link

I thought Amirtha Kidambi's vocals were very strong too, think she's the main singer other than Wyatt, although tenor saxophonist Maria Grand also gets voice credit on the bandcamp page. MH writing and picking but not singing is okay by me; People was like a Portlandia take off on jazz school nerds, although as such, could be entertaining, but it goes on a while. Anyway, this one is soooo much better, and whole thing is here:
https://maryhalvorson.bandcamp.com/album/artlessly-falling

― dow

Grand must be doing backing vocals e.g. on the refrain of "Mexican War Streets (Pittsburgh)". Kidambi was the only credited vocalist on the previous Code Girl and the non-Wyatt lead vocals on this album sound like the exact same voice to me.

― to party with our demons (Sund4r)

dow, Sunday, 25 January 2026 19:34 (four months ago)

that's 2 new ones then, because also there is Monochromatic Light (Afterlife)

calzino, Friday, 3 April 2026 14:09 (two months ago)

Oh yeah, that one is stunning too.

Composition 40b (Stew), Friday, 3 April 2026 18:44 (two months ago)

Oh hey, new Gregory Hutchinson album (of Miles tunes) with Ambrose, Ron Blake, Gerald Clayton, Joe Sanders, and Emmanuel Michael.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 3 April 2026 19:05 (two months ago)

Man, the Flea album is getting a full court press in the Jazz press (as well as rock press)

Mollusk, Virginia (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 April 2026 19:45 (two months ago)

should be buried (under a bridge)

calzino, Friday, 3 April 2026 19:49 (two months ago)

Man, the Flea album is getting a full court press in the Jazz press (as well as rock press)

Yeah, the way jazz mags are going "OMG they're looking at us!" is kinda embarrassing. I write for DownBeat, and the cover story they did with him is weeeeeak. (The album is a B+ IMO. 3 stars. I saw someone calling it "smooth jazz" and that's simply not true. It's somewhere between L.A. scene jazz — I mean, the band is basically Jeff Parker's ETA group — and, like, The Smile or Atoms For Peace.)

wipes chooser (unperson), Friday, 3 April 2026 19:53 (two months ago)

The trumpet playing is the weak part, that's the only thing that puts it into the Andre 3K category. Like, I love that he's been working on it for years and loves doing it, but this record with these players would not exist if he weren't famous for doing other things well.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 3 April 2026 20:06 (two months ago)

The trumpet playing is fine. It's perfectly adequate to the music. If you pressed play on Flea's solo album expecting Woody Shaw or Freddie Hubbard, that's on you. And I think that's exactly what's going on - people are setting up false expectations and then shitting on the record for not meeting them.

wipes chooser (unperson), Friday, 3 April 2026 21:26 (two months ago)

It's fine for a bass player. But even though he's just playing melodies, I think there would be a different standard for any trumpet player with the likes of Jeff Parker and Deantoni Parks on a jazz record. But #2, yeah, I do agree that "jazz" is the wrong lens to view this record through, it's more in that L.A./Chicago/ambient vibey instrumental world for the most part, not improvised music.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 3 April 2026 21:35 (two months ago)

"L.A./Chicago/ambient vibey instrumental" music is definitely having a moment, and I kinda can't wait for that moment to be over

Paul Ponzi, Friday, 3 April 2026 22:15 (two months ago)

Saw Maurice Louca's Fera earlier tonight at little Rhizome in DC. For this US tour the Egyptian Maurice Louca was on guitar and electronics, Ayman Asfour also from Egypt on violin, Dylan Greene, Asian American jazz and global music player on drums and percussion, and jazz musician Luke Stewart on double bass (plus clarinet & some other hand held percussion) Louca's music melds psychedelic rock trance drone, Egyptian shaabi, and jazz. Louca also plays in Alan Bishop's Dwarfs of East Agouza. Bishop was in the Sun City Girls .

jazz musician Tomeka Reid was in the audience

curmudgeon, Thursday, 9 April 2026 16:46 (one month ago)

You guys know Flea plays trumpet right? Flea plays trumpet. He is in the Red Hot Chili Peppers and plays bass but he plays trumpet too. Flea plays trumpet. Do you know Flea, from Red Hot Chili Peppers plays the instrument known as trumpet? Flea plays trumpet. He's actually a trumpet player. He's in the Red Hot Chili Peppers but he's the one who isn't a sex pest. Well, actually he is, but he plays trumpet. Flea plays trumpet. Rick Beato told me Flea plays trumpet.

chr1sb3singer, Thursday, 9 April 2026 16:54 (one month ago)

Listening to the new Ahmed album Play Monk. I have never connected with Ahmed's music, not even a little bit, but maybe this one will succeed where all their previous works have failed.

wipes chooser (unperson), Thursday, 9 April 2026 17:20 (one month ago)

Oh new Ahmed, it isn't out yet is it?

chr1sb3singer, Thursday, 9 April 2026 17:23 (one month ago)

next month

Mollusk, Virginia (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 9 April 2026 17:29 (one month ago)

I have never connected with Ahmed's music, not even a little bit

what do you dislike about it? If dislike too strong a word, what about it leaves you cold? I'm a little surprised a Cecil fan would not find something to like about Pat Thomas, at the very least

Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 9 April 2026 18:35 (one month ago)

I just... don't like it. It's one of those things where yeah, I like lots of things like this, but this particular version does nothing for me. And honestly, I've never heard anything from Thomas that I really liked; not his solo piano work, not his electronic stuff, none of it. I think ultimately it's that Thomas comes out of European improv, not jazz, so his music lacks the cohesion of Taylor's. Taylor's music had rigorous discipline and his improvisations were much more structured (in the architectural sense, not the "worked out beforehand" sense) than people think. Thomas always sounds like he's flailing around to me, and his music has a very static energy as a result - I find myself thinking, Oh, is he still going?

wipes chooser (unperson), Thursday, 9 April 2026 19:13 (one month ago)

I mean, I'm not a musicologist, and words are just words, but Pat Thomas's playing strikes me as quite "rigorously structured" in a very nearly a Taylorian way

Cattedrale metropolitana di Santa Maria de Episcopio, Thursday, 9 April 2026 20:20 (one month ago)

It's not a binary. Thomas comes out of jazz, he comes out of European improv, and he also comes out of European classical and Caribbean diaspora traditions, from calypso to reggae to dub to jungle. But when it comes to jazz, the man knows more about the music's history and the way it works than any of us ever will. The way he gets inside Ellington, Monk, Herbie Nichols, Cecil Taylor et al is just stunning.
Last year in Chicago, he played an ad hoc trio set at Hungry Brain with Joshua Abrams and Mike Reed and they absolutely swung. I really hope they can get together again and tour/record, because that felt like a consummate jazz trio from the off.
I've never had the sense he's flailing about. He's got incredible technique and plays with total intention and precision, even at his most abstract. He is extremely rigorous in everything he does - he really puts in the hours practicing - and there's a very clear architecture to his compositions, eg The Solar Model of Ibn Al-Shatir. Just beautiful and profound solo piano music.
He does like to lock into a chordal motif, particularly in [Ahmed], but it's anything but static - he's always stretching the forms, the metre, the dynamics.
Maybe you need to see him in person. Hopefully he'll make it back over to the States soon.

Composition 40b (Stew), Friday, 10 April 2026 11:28 (one month ago)

The perils of not downloading your Bandcamp purchases: I bought the first Ahmed album and without warning it was deleted from BC (and my collection) and another version is now available for purchase, but the one I paid for is gone.

Mollusk, Virginia (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 13 April 2026 17:49 (one month ago)

Do you mean the box set? I know they've repressed that one a few times but the earlier version should still be available on the page if you bought it! otoh, If you mean one of the earlier two, I wonder what they changed for the new versions - they appear to be the same (I check this page often hoping they will repress the first two albums on CD)

Paul Ponzi, Monday, 13 April 2026 19:56 (one month ago)

Ah, I see - just got the email about the "new" version of New Jazz Imagination, which looks identical to the one that was on there before. Strange!

Paul Ponzi, Monday, 13 April 2026 19:58 (one month ago)

yeah it was New Jazz Imagination

Mollusk, Virginia (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 13 April 2026 20:52 (one month ago)

That has happened to me, too, and I bought a cassette. It's a bummer. In my case, an email to the label got 'em to send me the files, but I wish I could stream the album straight from Bandcamp, and I can't.

alpine static, Monday, 13 April 2026 22:18 (one month ago)

Jon Irabagon, Ingrid Laubrock, James Brandon Lewis and Linda May Han Oh all got Guggenheim fellowships this morning. Emailing them all now to see if I can borrow twenty bucks...

wipes chooser (unperson), Tuesday, 14 April 2026 15:14 (one month ago)

I’m a huge fan of Laubrock, nice to see

The New Blockader (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 14 April 2026 15:59 (one month ago)

I'm less of a fan of Irabagon's work than the other three, but they're all ambitious composers deserving of institutional support.

wipes chooser (unperson), Tuesday, 14 April 2026 19:46 (one month ago)

Absolutely. Really great choices for the fellowships.

Composition 40b (Stew), Thursday, 16 April 2026 10:57 (one month ago)

Grant C Weston posted photos today of him and Amin Ali visiting an ailing James Blood Ulmer. I guess Ulmer was doing better today but didn’t realize he was ill. No idea from what but hope it’s something he can recover from.

birdistheword, Sunday, 19 April 2026 05:15 (one month ago)

We actually like the Flea album a lot! (Although I can do without Nick Cave singing Wichita Lineman). Other two recent good ones: Miroslav Vitous and Irreversible Entanglements.

mike t-diva, Sunday, 19 April 2026 15:14 (one month ago)

I mean... Ulmer's 86. Even if he gets past this specific bout of illness, you don't really recover from being 86.

wipes chooser (unperson), Sunday, 19 April 2026 16:28 (one month ago)

two weeks pass...

Man, those Immanuel Wilkins Vanguard records are great (vol 1 anyway, haven't gotten to vol 2 yet).

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Monday, 4 May 2026 15:40 (one month ago)

brilliant track: from forthcoming album by Akusmi

track: Anima

groovy 7 minute track reminds me of Triosk and Peter Gabriel track San Jacinto.

Described as French composer Pascal Bideau blends post-classical with Spiritual jazz and Afrobeat influences, complete with electronic production

Akusmi - Terra Incognita
https://akusmi.bandcamp.com/album/terra-incognita

Due
July 3rd 2026

Tags
afrobeat electronic electronica global jazz highlife jazz instrumental minimalism modern classical world music London

djmartian, Tuesday, 12 May 2026 19:06 (three weeks ago)

nice album artwork:

PREORDER: 'Terra Incognita' by Akusmi

French composer Pascal Bideau blends post-classical with Spiritual jazz and Afrobeat influences, complete with electronic production.

On LP, CD, and coloured vinyl.https://t.co/zUS1eADm5T pic.twitter.com/YIqJYXxc00

— Norman Records (@normanrecords) May 6, 2026

djmartian, Tuesday, 12 May 2026 19:12 (three weeks ago)

that is very cool

rob, Tuesday, 12 May 2026 19:33 (three weeks ago)

Into it!

Strait of Merzbow (Eazy), Tuesday, 12 May 2026 19:52 (three weeks ago)

Another interesting 2026 electronic jazz album:

Church Andrews & Matt Davies - TILT
https://churchandrewsmattdavies.bandcamp.com/album/tilt

Church Andrews and Matt Davies return with Tilt, a pinpoint collection of skewed microtonal and discordant compositions for percussion and digital synth.

Tones ascend but don’t resolve, rhythms loop, collapse and reassemble, patterns wriggle with geometric precision, sounds tilt, the edges fray.

Kinetic, elastic, wonky without being obtuse, Church Andrews (aka Kirk Barley) and Matt Davies new LP Tilt is the culmination of six years of creative collaboration, refining and redrawing the relationship between Davies’ virtuoso percussive practice and Barley’s off-kilter synthesis.

releases May 29, 2026

Tags
electronic experimental hip hop dub techno jazz microtonal minimalism United Kingdom

djmartian, Thursday, 21 May 2026 14:23 (two weeks ago)

I've been stumping for them for years, their records are always good (not jazz-based I would say, but they do record live as far as I know).

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Thursday, 21 May 2026 14:41 (two weeks ago)

Immanuel Wilkins has just put out vol 3 of those live at the Village Vanguard albums. Vol. 3 is supposedly the last one. The 1st one was on vinyl, cd and digital; 2 & 3 are digital only I read

curmudgeon, Thursday, 21 May 2026 20:38 (two weeks ago)

I interviewed Wilkins back in March; he wants to put them out as a boxed set and is trying to talk Blue Note into it. I guess it'll depend how well Vol. 1 sold. They are a really good series.

wipes chooser (unperson), Thursday, 21 May 2026 21:09 (two weeks ago)

One of the best shows I ever saw at the Vanguard was a few years ago when Wilkins played with Kenny Barron's trio, making it a quartet. (R.I.P. Kiyoshi Kitagawa) My partner and I were seated right under Wilkins's horn and it was pretty astonishing to watch him that close. It can also be a little awkward to sit that close to a horn player because often times they'll look you right in the eye as they're playing and something about that breaks my focus - irrationally, I'll think I'm a distraction somehow and disrupt whatever they're playing - so most of the time I just stared at their fingers.

birdistheword, Thursday, 21 May 2026 22:50 (two weeks ago)

Bobby Previte has a new band that includes Wendy Eisenberg, Angelica Sanchez, Jerome Harris and Matt Bauder. Eisenberg in particular shines on their first album 'Second Arrow'.

EvR, Friday, 22 May 2026 16:56 (two weeks ago)

Didn't mention this before, but I caught the Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis for the very first time at LPR and they were awesome. (Only the second time I've seen Lewis perform, but he just did a residency at the Vanguard as part of Dave Douglas's Gifts Quintet and he'll be back the week of July 4th leading his own group.) They're done with the East Coast but the West Coast leg of their tour is coming up.

birdistheword, Friday, 22 May 2026 20:05 (two weeks ago)

Lewis has a new album with his quartet coming out in June; I'm listening to it as I type this and it's really good. The similarities to the David S. Ware quartet remain strong, and he's got a real ear for a big, hooky melody.

wipes chooser (unperson), Friday, 22 May 2026 20:20 (two weeks ago)

New album announced today:

Ezra Collective - Here Because of Hope
https://ezracollective.bandcamp.com/album/here-because-of-hope

releases September 18, 2026

djmartian, Thursday, 28 May 2026 18:34 (one week ago)

On July 3, my label Burning Ambulance Music will release At Iridium 2004, a digital-only (for now...) set containing 14 complete performances by Cecil Taylor's 15-member Orchestra Humane, recorded at NYC jazz club Iridium from March 23-28, 2004.

Beginning in 2003, Taylor and his orchestra — which changed name over time from the Orchestra Humane to the Ubuntu Orchestra to the AHA! Orchestra — performed once and sometimes twice a year at Iridium, creating music of stunning beauty. Some footage of the ensemble rehearsing and performing can be seen in the 2010 documentary Cecil Taylor: All The Notes, but none of the music has ever been released in full... until now.

The first set from March 25, 2004 (Taylor's 75th birthday) is streaming now:

https://ceciltaylor-bam.bandcamp.com/track/march-25-2004-set-1

At Iridium 2004 is available exclusively on Bandcamp, and will not be on any streaming service.

wipes chooser (unperson), Monday, 1 June 2026 15:28 (five days ago)

just purchased!

The Immortal Bird of Avon (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 1 June 2026 15:39 (five days ago)

I was there at almost the whole run!

The Immortal Bird of Avon (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 1 June 2026 15:39 (five days ago)

Really? That's amazing. Listening to these sets, I can't believe the range the orchestra displays. Some parts are incredibly quiet and gentle, some parts are blaring free jazz like you'd expect, there's poetry from Cecil and another member of the ensemble, saxophonist Elliott Levin, he's playing inside the piano for a lot of it... it's really some of the most beautiful music I've ever heard him make. People are gonna be blown away when the whole thing is out next month.

wipes chooser (unperson), Monday, 1 June 2026 15:49 (five days ago)

Every set was basically the same composition. Bobby Zankel took a major solo at every set that must have been partly composed

The Immortal Bird of Avon (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 1 June 2026 16:10 (five days ago)


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