Recording of the Week,
Ambrose Akinmusire - Owl Song
Of all the new stateside music releases, none catch the attention of contemporary listeners more quickly than those of Ambrose Akinmusire. The prestigious trumpeter, who was quick to rise to critical acclaim, rapidly entered into the wider consciousness of the jazz audience when he signed to the Blue Note label in 2010. His music is notable for its expressionistic style, often contained within intimate layers of nebulous accompaniment.
For the premier in a series of three recordings lined up for release on the Nonesuch label over the next year, he calls on two of the most innovative and genre-spanning jazz performers at work today: the revolutionary guitarist and composer Bill Frisell, and the acclaimed drummer and member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra led by Wynton Marsalis, Herlin Riley. Owl Song marks his first studio collaboration with either musician.
In terms of its audible landscape, the album is sparse and expansive; it prefers to explore the peripheral scenes, highlighting the spaces between the margins as opposed to commanding the centre of attention — that already well-known territory. In fact, the enrichingly humble performances each carry between them a state of poised reflection. Perhaps this quality owes to the record's strigine title, of which, Akinmusire states: “I have special affinity for the owls. Their personality is so distinctive... always observing." The overall approach of the ensemble is soft, cautious and questioning.
For his latest project, Akinmusire has expressed that each of its three albums will spotlight a distinct element of his musical world, involving different instrumentation and production approaches. As a player who eschews predictable statements or easy answers, it's simply a marvel to bask in his soulful and open-ended form of introspection; a form of gentle self-interrogation. But, as the year draws to its inevitable close, who knows what further revelations may lie in store. For one, I can certainly envisage Owl Song and its successors making their indellible mark on our hearts and minds in 2024.
Available Formats: CD, MP3, FLAC, Hi-Res FLAC