The Best Jazz Albums of 2023

Started by ando, December 29, 2023, 12:18:26 PM

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ando

You got me. Very few of the lists I've perused have more than 3 of the same jazz titles. So, perhaps it's better to ask "What are are some of your favorite jazz releases of 2023?" Just for the record I'm posting the New York Times Top 10 Jazz Albums of 2023 and an interesting YouTube review by Norman Maslov which includes his top 15; including some of the best reissues of the year. But please, chime in with your suggestions as well!  8)

"That thing we keep calling "jazz" refuses to stop overrunning its borders, reworking itself, showing up in new forms identifiable only by the most basic strands of their DNA. All of its subcultures churned out inspired work this year; many show up below."
- Giovanni Russonello

1. Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah, 'Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning'
It's fitting, in this moment, that the hardest-hitting album on this list would be a celebration of Indigenous identity, resilience and resistance. For Chief Adjuah (formerly Christian Scott), "Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning" is also his first hard break from jazz, a category he has been trying to slip his entire career. Here he sits with the other tradition that raised him: the "maroon" community of New Orleans's Black masking Indians, commonly known as Mardi Gras Indians. This is Adjuah's first LP without any trumpet. Instead he circles up with a group of family and longtime collaborators, revisiting classics from the call-and-response Black Indian repertoire and adding his own, newfangled rallying cries over plucked kora strings and charging drums.

2. Jaimie Branch, 'Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((World War))'
Jaimie Branch had nearly finished mixing this album — the third studio record from her trumpet-cello-bass-drums quartet, Fly or Die — when she died suddenly in 2022. It would be hard to imagine a more rousing and generous parting gift. Branch (like Adjuah) was a declarative trumpeter who had only recently embraced her unrefined-but-rewarding singing voice. With it she entreats us to love, to agitate and to put ourselves on the line.

3. Kassa Overall, 'Animals'
Sharing a common ancestor, jazz and hip-hop ought to be a natural fit — but nobody has ever quite made this fusion feel like theirs. Enter Kassa Overall, the soft-spoken drummer, producer and M.C., who plays a different game: He's asking hard, analytical questions about romance and selfhood; social programming; mental health in an anxious world. He's also working with an uncanny cast of peers: Danny Brown, Nick Hakim, Laura Mvula, Wiki. That jazz and contemporary hip-hop are at the core of Overall's style is simply incidental. Which is also why it seems essential.

4. Ambrose Akinmusire, 'Owl Song'
It's been a transformative year for Ambrose Akinmusire, who became the artistic director of the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz at U.C.L.A., left his longtime home on Blue Note Records and released a pair of spellbinding albums. (The other is "Beauty Is Enough," a fully improvised solo LP.) On "Owl Song," he brings together two master musicians who had hardly ever played together — the guitarist Bill Frisell and the drummer Herlin Riley — for a cozy but unadorned session, leaving plenty of open air in these eight original tunes.

5. Zoh Amba, Chris Corsano, Bill Orcutt, 'The Flower School'
Moving no more than three notes at a time, holding them steady and thinning them out, Zoh Amba plays tenor saxophone from inside the four walls of a rattling heart. Less billowy than Charles Gayle, not as wild as Gato Barbieri, slower footed than David Murray, her playing contains elements from each of these avant-garde saxophonists. She recorded this dense, 30-minute workout of mordant electric guitar and pummeled drums alongside two trusted elders from the grungier edge of the free-improvising circuit.

6. Jonathan Suazo, 'Ricano'
The Boston-based saxophonist and composer Jonathan Suazo is compelled equally by Kenny Garrett's soul-bop and Miguel Zenón's Puerto Rican jazz hybrids. On "Ricano," he leads a steel-toed Latin orchestra replete with hefty vocals, a forceful horn section and, over the course of the album, no fewer than seven percussionists playing Dominican and Puerto Rican instruments.

7. Mendoza Hoff Revels, 'Echolocation'
It's not a question of precision here, or a neat balancing act. The guitarist Ava Mendoza, the bassist Devin Hoff, the saxophonist James Brandon Lewis and the drummer Ches Smith are playing at peak intensity, with heavy focus and a lot of spillover. Pulling pages from Sonny Sharrock, Fred Frith, Glenn Branca and Tony Iommi, Mendoza holds the band together by blasting it apart.

8. Micah Thomas, 'Reveal'
Micah Thomas, an energetic and ambidextrous pianist known for his work in the saxophonist Immanuel Wilkins's quartet, was bound to make a big statement of his own. Still, the pianist's third LP arrives with characteristic modesty: an acoustic trio record on which he often turns up the action without raising the volume. Actually, when the rhythm section (Dean Torrey on bass and Kayvon Gordon on drums) escalates, Thomas seems most inclined to pull back.

9. Matana Roberts, 'Coin Coin Chapter Five: In the Garden'
Matana Roberts's "Coin Coin" series has been going for more than a decade, a continuing practice of exhuming and honoring and inheriting. The hymn-like songs on this LP are drawn from the annals of the artist's maternal ancestors, but Roberts, a saxophonist and self-described "sound quilter," gives these speakers a modern vocabulary and self-conception. Underneath is a mix of strings, horns and percussion, along with occasional synths from Kyp Malone, the album's producer.

10. Enji, 'Ulaan'
Don't beat yourself up too hard for missing this one when it came out in July, but don't let it pass you by: the third release from a young Mongolian-born, Munich-based singer with a voice pitched just above a whisper. Enji mixes cool jazz registers with echoes of her home country's "long song" (Urtiin Duu) tradition. Cafe-style jazz singers like this rarely sound so unpretentious, original and free.


ando


KevinP

I'm not one of those people who thinks jazz died with John Coltrane or whoever, but in all honesty, the only jazz album I've heard from 2023 is Brandee Younger's latest, and even that's been hampered by turntable woes (which I can fix but just haven't yet) and so I've only spun it once.

Long sentence, that.

AnotherSpin

Quote from: KevinP on January 12, 2024, 05:29:32 AMI'm not one of those people who thinks jazz died with John Coltrane or whoever, but in all honesty, the only jazz album I've heard from 2023 is Brandee Younger's latest, and even that's been hampered by turntable woes (which I can fix but just haven't yet) and so I've only spun it once.

Long sentence, that.

The question arises: what is better, to be dead and great or alive and worthless?

AnotherSpin

Quote from: ando on December 29, 2023, 12:18:26 PMYou got me. Very few of the lists I've perused have more than 3 of the same jazz titles. So, perhaps it's better to ask "What are are some of your favorite jazz releases of 2023?" Just for the record I'm posting the New York Times Top 10 Jazz Albums of 2023 and an interesting YouTube review by Norman Maslov which includes his top 15; including some of the best reissues of the year. But please, chime in with your suggestions as well!  8)

"That thing we keep calling "jazz" refuses to stop overrunning its borders, reworking itself, showing up in new forms identifiable only by the most basic strands of their DNA. All of its subcultures churned out inspired work this year; many show up below."
- Giovanni Russonello

1. Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah, 'Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning'
It's fitting, in this moment, that the hardest-hitting album on this list would be a celebration of Indigenous identity, resilience and resistance. For Chief Adjuah (formerly Christian Scott), "Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning" is also his first hard break from jazz, a category he has been trying to slip his entire career. Here he sits with the other tradition that raised him: the "maroon" community of New Orleans's Black masking Indians, commonly known as Mardi Gras Indians. This is Adjuah's first LP without any trumpet. Instead he circles up with a group of family and longtime collaborators, revisiting classics from the call-and-response Black Indian repertoire and adding his own, newfangled rallying cries over plucked kora strings and charging drums.

2. Jaimie Branch, 'Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((World War))'
Jaimie Branch had nearly finished mixing this album — the third studio record from her trumpet-cello-bass-drums quartet, Fly or Die — when she died suddenly in 2022. It would be hard to imagine a more rousing and generous parting gift. Branch (like Adjuah) was a declarative trumpeter who had only recently embraced her unrefined-but-rewarding singing voice. With it she entreats us to love, to agitate and to put ourselves on the line.

3. Kassa Overall, 'Animals'
Sharing a common ancestor, jazz and hip-hop ought to be a natural fit — but nobody has ever quite made this fusion feel like theirs. Enter Kassa Overall, the soft-spoken drummer, producer and M.C., who plays a different game: He's asking hard, analytical questions about romance and selfhood; social programming; mental health in an anxious world. He's also working with an uncanny cast of peers: Danny Brown, Nick Hakim, Laura Mvula, Wiki. That jazz and contemporary hip-hop are at the core of Overall's style is simply incidental. Which is also why it seems essential.

4. Ambrose Akinmusire, 'Owl Song'
It's been a transformative year for Ambrose Akinmusire, who became the artistic director of the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz at U.C.L.A., left his longtime home on Blue Note Records and released a pair of spellbinding albums. (The other is "Beauty Is Enough," a fully improvised solo LP.) On "Owl Song," he brings together two master musicians who had hardly ever played together — the guitarist Bill Frisell and the drummer Herlin Riley — for a cozy but unadorned session, leaving plenty of open air in these eight original tunes.

5. Zoh Amba, Chris Corsano, Bill Orcutt, 'The Flower School'
Moving no more than three notes at a time, holding them steady and thinning them out, Zoh Amba plays tenor saxophone from inside the four walls of a rattling heart. Less billowy than Charles Gayle, not as wild as Gato Barbieri, slower footed than David Murray, her playing contains elements from each of these avant-garde saxophonists. She recorded this dense, 30-minute workout of mordant electric guitar and pummeled drums alongside two trusted elders from the grungier edge of the free-improvising circuit.

6. Jonathan Suazo, 'Ricano'
The Boston-based saxophonist and composer Jonathan Suazo is compelled equally by Kenny Garrett's soul-bop and Miguel Zenón's Puerto Rican jazz hybrids. On "Ricano," he leads a steel-toed Latin orchestra replete with hefty vocals, a forceful horn section and, over the course of the album, no fewer than seven percussionists playing Dominican and Puerto Rican instruments.

7. Mendoza Hoff Revels, 'Echolocation'
It's not a question of precision here, or a neat balancing act. The guitarist Ava Mendoza, the bassist Devin Hoff, the saxophonist James Brandon Lewis and the drummer Ches Smith are playing at peak intensity, with heavy focus and a lot of spillover. Pulling pages from Sonny Sharrock, Fred Frith, Glenn Branca and Tony Iommi, Mendoza holds the band together by blasting it apart.

8. Micah Thomas, 'Reveal'
Micah Thomas, an energetic and ambidextrous pianist known for his work in the saxophonist Immanuel Wilkins's quartet, was bound to make a big statement of his own. Still, the pianist's third LP arrives with characteristic modesty: an acoustic trio record on which he often turns up the action without raising the volume. Actually, when the rhythm section (Dean Torrey on bass and Kayvon Gordon on drums) escalates, Thomas seems most inclined to pull back.

9. Matana Roberts, 'Coin Coin Chapter Five: In the Garden'
Matana Roberts's "Coin Coin" series has been going for more than a decade, a continuing practice of exhuming and honoring and inheriting. The hymn-like songs on this LP are drawn from the annals of the artist's maternal ancestors, but Roberts, a saxophonist and self-described "sound quilter," gives these speakers a modern vocabulary and self-conception. Underneath is a mix of strings, horns and percussion, along with occasional synths from Kyp Malone, the album's producer.

10. Enji, 'Ulaan'
Don't beat yourself up too hard for missing this one when it came out in July, but don't let it pass you by: the third release from a young Mongolian-born, Munich-based singer with a voice pitched just above a whisper. Enji mixes cool jazz registers with echoes of her home country's "long song" (Urtiin Duu) tradition. Cafe-style jazz singers like this rarely sound so unpretentious, original and free.


I listened to Akinmusire album and liked it. That's all folks. I do not care even to check the rest of the list, descriptions are telling enough.

ando

Quote from: AnotherSpin on January 12, 2024, 07:46:51 AMI listened to Akinmusire album and liked it. That's all folks. I do not care even to check the rest of the list, descriptions are telling enough.
Thanks for resurrecting the thread - and the Akinmusire rec. I've been meaning to check out all of these. Diggin the Micah Thomas lp. Laid back but intense straight ahead playing. My wheelhouse, so to speak.