Andy Milne and Unison, Time Will Tell, Sunnyside ****

Another great release around at the moment and priority listen, dear readers… best known still for his early career work with Steve Coleman and later Dapp Theory, 55-year-old Canadian pianist Andy Milne's Juno award winning The reMission with …

Published: 29 Apr 2024. Updated: 19 days.

Another great release around at the moment and priority listen, dear readers… best known still for his early career work with Steve Coleman and later Dapp Theory, 55-year-old Canadian pianist Andy Milne's Juno award winning The reMission with Unison was his first landmark piano trio release. It arrived following a tumultuous period in the pianist-composer's life and three years after he by now long since in remission was diagnosed with cancer. Drummer Clarence Penn and bassist John Hébert joined Milne on that release also on US indie Sunnyside - and such a tight unit as they certainly proved return again on Time Will Tell plus the extra very well curated input in the additional ingredients instrumentally of avant saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock on four tracks and koto player Yoko Reikano Kimura again on four of the 10 tracks. The biographical theme the album is shaped around ties in with Milne's efforts to uncover his family history finally meeting his birth mother in 2022. The material is strong and highlights include magnificent pianism on 'Solotude' and a stunning track featuring Laubrock, 'Beyond the Porcelain Door'. The koto textures work extremely well in context particularly as you listen in sequence flowing on from 'Solotude' to 'Kumoi Joshi'. The reprise of the 'Lost and Found' theme is even more fascinating than its comrade track that crops up earlier on the album - because after two minutes there are intimations - although it's not we stress the same tune just sublimations of it thereof subjectively to these ears - of Sting's much covered 1980s song 'Fragile': the motif developed persuasively by Laubrock after a few minutes. Laubrock and Milne have relevantly also undertaken further explorations concerned with the word ''Fragile'' on an earlier album for the Swiss Intakt label - and in that regard do check out 2022's 'Equanimity.'

Andy Milne, photo: University of Michigan

Tags: Reviews

Charles McPherson, Reverence, Smoke Sessions ***1/2

Just as free as a bird and as good as his word That's why everybody loves him so. From 'Old Folks'. There are various points of entry here - what attracted us to Reverence most was thoughts of alto sax master Charles McPherson's work on the …

Published: 29 Apr 2024. Updated: 19 days.

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Just as free as a bird and as good as his word

That's why everybody loves him so.

From 'Old Folks'.

There are various points of entry here - what attracted us to Reverence most was thoughts of alto sax master Charles McPherson's work on the soundtrack of classic Clint Eastwood 1988 film Bird starring Forest Whitaker.

The drummer on this fine record is the great Billy Drummond heard live last year playing with his wife Tessa Souter down at the Pheasantry venue on the King's Road in London. Anything with Drummond on it is a must and he does not disappoint in the least on Reverence. McPherson's band is completed by trumpeter Terell Stafford (who proved more than a magnetic presence on BrotherLee Love), bassist David Wong who was excellent with Naama Gheber on 2020's Dearly Beloved and by pianist Jeb Patton. Best thing by far here is the version of the classic 'Old Folks' and we have playlisted that track numerous times over the past few weeks on the marlbank playlist.

The evocative Willard Robison 1930s tune has been recorded many times both in vocals versions using the words of Dedette Lee Hill and in standalone instrumental treatments - and we are thinking most of all deferring to the latter approach of Jackie McLean's version released by New Jazz in 1959 on the McLean's Scene recording and listen to it again with pleasure inspired by the manifold delights of Reverence that also include an ode to Barry - Barry being the Detroit pianist Barry Harris (1929-2021) who mentored the Joplin, Missouri born McPherson now in his eighties and playing so very well on this Smoke Sessions release recorded at the New York club Smoke last year.

Charles McPherson, photo detail from the Reverence cover art