Top in 20 live album: Gerald Clayton, Happening: Live at the Village Vanguard, Blue Note

Top and best live album of 2020 by a mile. One of marlbank's most revered areas of focus is the idea of a live album, in a club, in front of people, seemed at the time of release a little preposterous due to Covid. But this is no curiosity and …

Published: 26 Nov 2020. Updated: 3 years.

Top and best live album of 2020 by a mile. One of marlbank's most revered areas of focus is the idea of a live album, in a club, in front of people, seemed at the time of release a little preposterous due to Covid. But this is no curiosity and joins an illustrious line of albums recorded at New York club the Village Vanguard. Trigger alert: contains applause.

Pianist Clayton is with Logan Richardson on alto saxophone, Walter Smith III on tenor saxophone, Joe Sanders on bass, and Marcus Gilmore on drums. The horns are beautifully voiced on 'Rejuvenation Agenda' (what an excellent piece of naming given current circumstances) one of four Clayton originals. A softly delivered 'Body and Soul' plus Ellington and Bud Powell classics are also on the record so it's a hearty mix of the new and the unknown. It is the kind of record where high level virtuosity, and there is plenty of it, does not get in the way of spirit and the joy of performance. You also can't approach it as an example of one style or another. Some of the harmonies are very avant garde and yet the whole shape of the album seems to ride on the coat tails of the mainstream so I suppose fans from a number of styles within jazz will get what this is about. Above all there is a lot of life on the record. Gilmore, best known for his work with Vijay Iyer, contributes a great sense of attack and the record has the sort of rhythmic bite you need on a live record.

marlbank albums of the year will be published on Thursday 31 December round midnight

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Top in 20 quintet album: WOJTEK MAZOLEWSKI QUINTET, WHEN ANGELS FALL, WHIRLWIND

Be moved. Best and top quintet album of 2020 is by the Wojtek Mazolewski quintet and their Whirlwind album When Angels Fall. The Polish jazz scene is one of the most advanced in Europe and paved the way futurewards out of the catacombs when the …

Published: 26 Nov 2020. Updated: 3 years.

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Be moved. Best and top quintet album of 2020 is by the Wojtek Mazolewski quintet and their Whirlwind album When Angels Fall.

The Polish jazz scene is one of the most advanced in Europe and paved the way futurewards out of the catacombs when the nation lay in rubble after the devastation of the second world war and the subsequent cruelty of Moscow before the Khrushchev thaw that eventually the Poles overthrew decades later thanks to that great Polish patriot Lech Wałęsa. Anyone with even a passing knowledge of jazz in Poland knows all the above.

A new generation of players still possesses the ability to stimulate in the face of dark socially conservative forces at home, they are like painters as the great film makers in Poland after the second world war had been and who first loved jazz and often used it in their films as a motif of freedom.

The beacons of light of Komeda (referenced all over the album quietly stunning on the beautiful 'Sleep Safe and Warm') and Tomasz Stańko always burn bright and cast a giant shadow urging creativity and a journey to the inner truth as Coltrane and Miles Davis did in their own ways.

Wojtek Mazolewski stands on the shoulders of giants, the double bassist leader's sound a very romantic heart on sleeve approach (think the approach of Jacek Niedziela a bit, certainly his technique is up there with that revered but little known beyond his native land Polish bassist). The sheen of Joanna Duda particularly on Wurlitzer is a poetic presence amid the hum and quiet riot of the instrument's oscillations.

Oskar Torok's trumpet sound takes up the baton drawing deep from the well of players who once were young lions such as the more mainstream Piotr Wojtasik-type approach and yet retains the rich sonority of that sound while stripping it of nostalgia and twee paraphrase.

Marek Pospieszalski on tenor I suppose is the beating heart of what is a wonderful album and he operates in the mind's eye reminiscent of Tomasz Szukalski or in Komeda terms but probably less so given his different tone the way Bernt Rosengren's sound informed Knife in the Water but again he is not stuck in the past and sits more alongside the sound of Maciej Obara who was superb last year on Three Crowns.

'Roman II' takes the album more free form and in case we all forget the Jazz Darings in Poland (contemporaneous with what Joe Harriott in the UK was doing) were some of the first to respond to Ornette Coleman's revolution in sound as Stańko who was in that band with Adam Makowicz reminded me on many occasions. Stańko loved Ornette's sound and changed the face of Polish jazz throughout his career building on the freedom and the abstraction and shaping of it via the lens of his own aesthetic. Oba Janicki brings a quirky theatricality on drums to 'Roman II' and he can dazzle uptempo or just loll about. Recorded at the Polish Radio Studio in Warsaw just under a year ago, the words of Adam Mickiewicz spring to mind because they also conjure Komeda somehow: ''Whoever comes to me, will be free and equal, because I am freedom.''

marlbank albums of the year will be published on Thursday 31 December round midnight