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Ches Smith, Craig Taborn, Mat Maneri – The Bell (2016) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Ches Smith, Craig Taborn, Mat Maneri – The Bell (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:08:08 minutes | 1,16 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: Qobuz | Digital Booklet | © ECM
Recorded: June 2015, Avatar Studios, New York

The Bell features dynamic chamber music compositions written for masterful improvisers. “The best thing I caught all weekend,” said critic Peter Margasak of the 2014 New York Winter Jazzfest, “was a superb trio led by drummer Ches Smith with pianist Craig Taborn and violist Mat Maneri, which expertly infused seductively narcotic writing with a mixture of brooding melody and rich texture.” Since that NY debut, the trio has become a priority project for all participants and in June 2015 Smith, Taborn and Maneri recorded The Bell at Avatar Studios with Manfred Eicher as producer. Ches Smith’s first album as a leader for ECM follows appearances for the label with Tim Berne’s Snakeoil and with Robin Williamson. Ches has worked a very wide range of music in the course of his career, playing with musicians from Terry Riley to Wadada Leo Smith to Marc Ribot and his own groups have been informed by his far-reaching experience. His early biography included studies in composition with Pauline Oliveros and Alvin Curran and his taut writing for the trio on The Bell triggers inspired contributions from Taborn and Maneri, in an album which gradually builds in intensity. “The Bell” is issued on the eve of a major tour with concerts in the US, Canada, Portugal, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway through January and February. In March the trio heads to South America.

Despite appearing on more than 50 recordings since the beginning of the 21st century, drummer/percussionist Ches Smith has led only a handful of dates. His credits sprawl across the catalogs of indie rock acts such as Xiu Xiu, Mr. Bungle, and Carla Bozulich as well as modern jazz artists John Zorn, Marc Ribot, Wadada Leo Smith, and Mary Halvorson, and he’s a member of Tim Berne’s Snakeoil. (The saxophonist also plays in Smith’s These Arches.) The Bell is his ECM debut as a leader. Smith chose pianist Craig Taborn and violist Mat Maneri as his companions into this foray of composition and improvisation. Taborn and Maneri have worked together before on the pianist’s Junk Magic set for Thirsty Ear in 2004. Smith originally formed the group for a lone New York gig, but the collective language they discovered on-stage led him to write specifically for them in the studio. Produced by Manfred Eicher, The Bell is steeped in mystery but it is focused, cohesive, rife with risky maneuvers. Some pieces are more thoroughly composed than others, but it’s difficult to know which. Smith, who plays timpani and vibraphone in addition to drums, is content as a member of the ensemble rather than its soloist/leader. The title track opener is, for most of its nine-and-a-half-minute length, nearly speculative. But Maneri’s viola offers enough of a lyric frame for Taborn to build on with texturally engaging, pulsing chords. Smith’s various instruments build a bridge inside this subtle, insistent tension-building force. The trio finally cuts loose in the final moments and delivers the full measure of surprise. “Isn’t It Over?” offers the barest hint of a compositional guideline, revealing confidence in the group’s intuition in a gradually ascendant trajectory along hairline harmonic lines. Their discourse blossoms in the final third amid dark, seductive rhythmic interplay. “I’ll See You on the Dark Side of the Earth” is also initially deceptive. The first half is filled with angular questions posed by Maneri and Taborn before Smith, riding a striated rock beat, answers with declarative authority. The circular movement in “Wacken Open Air” offers a more poignant dialogue with fleet arpeggios from Taborn and cymbal dances from Smith. “It’s Always Winter Somewhere” begins in ether yet quickly finds rotational movement via Taborn’s left-hand bassline annotations and colorful upper-middle-register chord patterns. Smith’s snare and hi-hat flourishes encourage and underscore Maneri’s timbral staccato phrasing. The engagement with post-bop occurs between Taborn and Smith, but like everything else here, it’s an elusive moment; it exists as simply another woven thread in The Bell’s labyrinthine space. Though all three men are expansive improvisers, in this intimate environment they are masters at discovering and articulating melody no matter how marginal or tenuous the origins. The Bell is not only an auspicious beginning for Smith as a leader, but for the possibilities of this trio going forward. ~~AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek

Tracklist:
1. The Bell 09:29
2. Barely Intervallic 07:44
3. Isn’t It Over? 13:11
4. I’ll See You on the Dark Side of the Earth 10:47
5. I Think 09:31
6. Wacken Open Air 05:16
7. It’s Always Winter Somewhere 05:32
8. For Days 06:38

Personnel:
Ches Smith, drums, vibraphone, timpani
Craig Taborn, piano
Mat Maneri, viola

Download:

mqs.link_ChesSmithCraigTabrnMatManeriTheBell2016Qbuz2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_ChesSmithCraigTabrnMatManeriTheBell2016Qbuz2496.part2.rar


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