Posts

asdcjknldmsj sanckd

 In the event that I was 33% of a piano triplet (which fortunately for the strength of British music I am not), I don't have the foggiest idea how I'd feel about this collection. Amazement, more likely than not, yet that may spill into despair that a triplet could increase present expectations so high with its showcases of complex gathering thinking. Vijay Iyer, the New York-based piano player, bandleader and writer, is joined by two other appreciated artist/arrangers: the drummer Tyshawn Sorey and bassist Linda May Han Oh. On their presentation recording they sound like a veteran threesome whose capacity to arrange tricksy meters and suddenly shift center is utilized to serve the music instead of astonish the audience. รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนัง รีวิวหนั

How its WOrk nkcsndbn l

Eight of the tunes are the pianist’s, some revisited from earlier groups. The approach is  more direct and accessible than the improvisatory tack Iyer took on records with Craig Taborn and Wadada Leo Smith. The non-originals are Geri Allen’s Drummer Song, whose tricky architecture sounds thoroughly natural here, and an inventive, rhythm-heavy take on Cole Porter’s Night and Day. The nine-minute title track does indeed start in uneasy minor-key mood with meditative, pensive piano. This gives way to a lyrical passage from Oh, subtly supported by her bandmates. The energy then builds in waves with Iyer letting fly propelled by increasingly stormy percussion until a calm of sorts descends. It’s a resolution, though not exactly a happy ending. But if the theme of the album is uncertainty then, ironically, that restlessness has inspired a hugely confident-sounding trio. A candidate for the best of 2021 lists? I should think so. lavagame lavagame lavagame lavagame lavagame lavagame la