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Big Band Compositions From Jazz Pianist Ivo Neame!
Powerful Polyrhythmic Music On Vinyl LP!
Ivo Neame's twisting grooves and harmonic ingenuity have helped establish his distinct voice in international contemporary jazz. The celebrated Phronesis pianist returns to Whirlwind for Glimpses of Truth, a powerful artistic statement marking the first time Neame's big band compositions have been committed to disc. Neame's most assured body of work to date will undoubtedly be remembered as one of this period's most impressive artistic achievements.
"Having lots of people play this intricate polyrhythmic music can be really emotionally powerful," says Neame. Taking inspiration from Phronesis' large ensemble projects, the compositions also played a didactic role, as a way of introducing newcomers to complex rhythmic structures. The pandemic flipped that idea on its head: faced with dwindling opportunities to hear these compositions live, Neame thought, "I'm just going to plough on regardless and record it all." Composed, multi-tracked (Neame plays all the tutti sax lines), videoed, mixed and mastered remotely over the pandemic period, Glimpses of Truth embraces the digital on a global scale, as Gilad Hekselman, Jim Hart and Ingrid Jensen appear alongside a stellar selection of UK musicians.
Neame's creations grapple meaningfully with wider social issues. "We're always struggling with the real truth of anything," he says, explaining the album's title. "People talk about how we're in a post-truth world - this album is my interpretation of that." The release emerges into a postmodern landscape abounding with conspiracy theorists who fully embrace their own truths. "But a lot of the time, it's very murky - that's why I call it 'glimpses.' These days, it's 'this is my truth, that's your truth,' it's all very vague because the world is so chaotic." Glimpses of Truth offers stark clarity as a healing balm, working methodically through rhythmic complexity towards a negotiated artistic truth.
Neame stumbled across an article which claimed that 12 million Americans believe interstellar lizards run the United States. "I wanted to write a tune that would encourage people to wake up and question their beliefs," he says. "Rise of the Lizard People" is what followed, immediately dropping you into Neame's world of pulsing rhythms and shifting feels. "Strega" follows, the distinctive double-drum setup of Maddren and Scott accompanying Jensen's pensive trumpet touches. A mandolin-like left-hand tremolo gradually envelops "Broken Brains"; George Crowley features as the track veers towards introspection. The widespread mental health issues the title references are "not something to be taken lightly," says Neame. "We all have to check ourselves."
"Phasing Song" takes inspiration from Steve Reich and John Adams; a saxophone canon multitracked by Neame forms its compositional crux. "Persevere" is similarly layered, but the freest track on the album proves "you don't need to be in the same room at the same time to achieve something spontaneous and interactive." "I'm not precious about any music, it's all up for grabs," says Neame; "Ghostly Figure" is proof of that, heading in a gently unsettling electric direction with bouncing synths and eerie trombone murmurings. The album finds Neame well equipped on his continued search for hard-fought truths.
Features
- Vinyl LP
Musicians
Nathaniel Facey | alto saxophone |
---|---|
Ingrid Jensen | trumpet |
Gilad Hekselman | guitar |
Noel Langley | trumpet |
Jason Yarde | baritone saxophone |
Trevor Mires | trombone |
Gareth Lockrane | flutes |
Tom Farmer | double bass |
James Maddren & Jon Scott | drums |
Ivo Neame | piano |
Jim Hart | vibraphone |
George Crowley | tenor saxophone |
Selections
- The Rise of the Lizard People
- Strega
- Broken Brains
- Phasing Song
- Persevere Part 1
- Persevere Part 2
- Ghostly Figure