Streams (Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell album)
Streams | |
---|---|
Studio album by Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell | |
Released | 2021 |
Recorded | November 29, 2018, and March 12, 2019 |
Studio | Nevessa Production, Woodstock, New York and The Buddy Project, Queens, New York |
Genre | Jazz |
Label | Not Two Records MW1010-2 |
Streams is an album by saxophonist and clarinetist Yuma Uesaka and pianist Marilyn Crispell. It was recorded on November 29, 2018, at Nevessa Production in Woodstock, New York, with additional recording taking place on March 12, 2019, at The Buddy Project in Queens, New York. The album was released in 2021 by Not Two Records.[1][2]
Streams is the pair's first recording as a duo, and was conceived by Uesaka as a continuation of Crispell's previous duo encounters with reed players Anthony Braxton (Duets Vancouver 1989) and Joseph Jarman (Connecting Spirits).[3] The album's final track features guest artist Chatori Shimizu on shō, and reflects the musicians' interest in traditional Japanese music.[4]
According to Uesaka, he and Crispell visited Nevessa studio with the intention of simply playing together. When they arrived, he "asked Marilyn, since we were already going to be in a recording studio, if we could hit the record button... That is kind of how the recording happened."[4]
Reception
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
All About Jazz | [5] |
In a review for All About Jazz, John Sharpe wrote: "Uesaka's writing provides attractive frameworks within which the pair can interact... Even on the most animated numbers, Crispell balances control and expression, to keep within the parameters of the composition... Uesaka shows that he has arrived with a mature conception, and the tools to execute it, all promising more to savour in the future."[5]
Tyran Grillo, writing for The New York City Jazz Record, commented: "this meeting of minds is about connecting moments as one would a constellation: each piece is minimally indicative of its title and, over time, seems to take on those characteristics as if by default." He praised the musicians' "willingness to move wherever the winds of inspiration blow—this, despite the through-written nature of every melody Uesaka offers on the altar of improvisation."[6]
The Big Takeover's Michael Toland stated: "the pair balance composition with improvisation, elegant lyricism with jagged chaos... there's little doubt you'll be happy to float along these Streams."[7]
In an article for Making A Scene, Jim Hynes remarked: "Streams... is 'out there' but much of it is accessible enough to warrant listens from those who love improvisational work and are not necessarily avant-garde devotees... Crispell and Uesaka play brilliantly. It's all here – lyricism, angular rhythms, judicious use of space, tension, calm. Listen freely and often."[8]
Writing for Jazz Trail, Filipe Freitas called the album "an explorative duo session that merges their modern free universes," and commented: "Although belonging to different generations, the musicians display a formidable sense of unity that makes their music a genuine pleasure to listen to... Don't sleep on this record because there's plenty of detail to be admired and enough sagacity and enchantment to make it notable."[9]
Eyal Hareuveni of Salt Peanuts wrote: "Streams is intimate and meditative, intellectual but emotive, and clearly a highly poetic and spiritual musical meeting of kindred spirits... The title of the album reflects the essence of this meeting. An organic and subtle flow of sounds, silences, ideas and gestures."[10]
Reviewing the album for Jazz Word, Ken Waxman remarked: "the intersections move closer to Chamber Jazz feeling with extended ballad-like changes on some tracks and straight-ahead elaborations on others. Still enough sound shards and bent notes are emphasized to keep the program fluid, accurate and innovative."[11]
Track listing
All compositions by Yuma Uesaka.
- "Meditation" – 2:46
- "Iterations I" – 6:17
- "Streams" – 11:085
- "Capillarity" – 7:58
- "Torrent" – 3:51
- "Ma / Space" – 8:59
Personnel
- Yuma Uesaka – saxophone, clarinet
- Marilyn Crispell – piano
- Chatori Shimizu – shō (track 6)
References
- ^ "Streams: Yuma Uesaka, Marilyn Crispell". Not Two Records. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ "Streams by Yuma Uesaka, Marilyn Crispell". Bandcamp. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ "Yuma Uesaka & Marilyn Crispell". Fully Altered Media. 2022. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ a b Shepherd, Rob (November 2, 2021). "Density and Space: A Conversation with Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell". PostGenre. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ a b Sharpe, John (March 1, 2021). "Yuma Uesaka And Marilyn Crispell: Streams". All About Jazz. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ Grillo, Tyran (March 2021). "Yuma Uesaka/Marilyn Crispell (Not Two)". New York City Jazz Record. p. 16.
- ^ Toland, Michael (October 15, 2021). "Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell - Streams (Not Two)". The Big Takeover. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ Hynes, Jim (October 14, 2021). "Yuma Uesaka and Marilyn Crispell: Streams". Making A Scene. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ Freitas, Filipe (October 11, 2021). "Yuma Uesaka / Marilyn Crispell: Streams". Jazz Trail. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ Hareuveni, Eyal (November 23, 2021). "Yuma Uesaka / Marilyn Crispell". Salt Peanuts. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- ^ Waxman, Ken (August 8, 2021). "Latest Reviews". Jazz Word. Retrieved July 2, 2022.
- v
- t
- e
- And Your Ivory Voice Sings (with Doug James, 1985)
- Gaia (1987)
- Nothing Ever Was, Anyway: Music of Annette Peacock (with Paul Motian and Gary Peacock, 1996)
- Amaryllis (2000)
- Storyteller (2003)
- Vignettes (2007)
- One Dark Night I Left My Silent House (with David Rothenberg, 2008)
- Marilyn Crispell, Mark Dresser, Gerry Hemingway Play Braxton (with Mark Dresser and Gerry Hemingway, 2011)
- Azure (with Gary Peacock, 2011)
- In Motion (with Richard Poole and Gary Peacock, 2014)
- Dreamstruck (with Harvey Sorgen and Joe Fonda, 2018)
- Dream Libretto (with Tanya Kalmanovitch and Richard Teitelbaum, 2018)
- Streams (with Yuma Uesaka, 2018 & 2019)
- How to Turn the Moon (with Angelica Sanchez, 2019)
- With Grace in Mind (with Joe Fonda and Harvey Sorgen, 2021)
- Spirit Music (1981 & 1982)
- Live in Berlin (1982)
- Rhythms Hung in Undrawn Sky (1983)
- A Concert in Berlin (1983)
- Quartet Improvisations, Paris 1986 (1986)
- Labyrinths (1987)
- For Coltrane (1987)
- Live in San Francisco (1989)
- Duets Vancouver 1989 (with Anthony Braxton, 1989)
- Live in Zurich (1989)
- The Kitchen Concert (1989)
- Duo (with Gerry Hemingway, 1989)
- Circles (1990)
- Overlapping Hands: Eight Segments (with Irène Schweizer, 1990)
- Piano Duets (Tuned & Detuned Pianos) (with Georg Graewe, 1991)
- Highlights from the Summer of 1992 American Tour (1991 & 1992)
- Hyperion (with Peter Brötzmann and Hamid Drake, 1992)
- Inference (1992)
- Santuerio (1993)
- Cascades (1993)
- Destiny (with Fred Anderson and Hamid Drake, 1994)
- Band on the Wall (1994)
- Spring Tour (1994)
- Live at Yoshi's (1995)
- Live at Mills College, 1995 (1995)
- The Woodstock Concert (1995)
- Dark Night, and Luminous (with Agustí Fernández, 1995)
- Connecting Spirits (with Joseph Jarman, 1996)
- Red (with Stefano Maltese, 1999)
- Blue (with Stefano Maltese, 1999)
- Complicité (with Paul Plimley, John Oswald, and Cecil Taylor, 2000)
- Collaborations (2004 & 2007)
- Sibanye (We Are One) (with Louis Moholo, 2007)
- This Appearing World (with Richard Nunns and Jeff Henderson, 2008)
- Affinities (with Gerry Hemingway, 2010)
- ConcertOto (with Eddie Prévost and Harrison Smith, 2012)
- Table of Changes (with Gerry Hemingway, 2013)
- The Adornment of Time (with Tyshawn Sorey, 2018)