Miguel Gorodi Nonet - Apophenia (2019)
Artist: Miguel Gorodi Nonet
Title: Apophenia
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Ubuntu Music
Genre: Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:52:45
Total Size: 123 mb | 300 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Apophenia
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Ubuntu Music
Genre: Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:52:45
Total Size: 123 mb | 300 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. La Nausée
02. Time Sigmund
03. Search
04. Amygdala Intro
05. Amygdala
06. Soma
07. Fifths
08. Two Trees
09. Not Nicest Memo
Personnel:
Miguel Gorodi - trumpet, flugelhorn
Gareth Lockrane - flutes
Michael Chillingworth - alto saxophone, clarinet
George Crowley - tenor saxophone, bass clarinet
Kieran McLeod - trombone
Ray Hearne - tuba
Ralph Wyld - vibraphone
Conor Chaplin - double bass
Dave Hamblett - drums
[quote]As a youngster, Miguel Gorodi led something of a nomadic existence. He was born in Spain in 1990 but was then raised in Saudi Arabia and Thailand before moving to England in 2006. In his mid-teens he won a scholarship to study music at Wells Cathedral School and two years later received a place at London's Guildhall School of Music and Drama to study trumpet. He graduated from there in 2012 with a first class honours degree but stayed on for a further two years having been awarded a fellowship in the Jazz department. Initially recruited by vocalist Ian Shaw to play on his album The Abbey Road Sessions (Splash Point Records, 2011), Gorodi has been a sideman and soloist at sessions throughout Europe including, Scandinavia and Russia. Gorodi is now an in-demand trumpeter and a member of the Barry Green Sextet, SEED Ensemble and the London City Big Band. He also plays regularly with the prestigious London Jazz Orchestra.
Apophenia (erroneously making connections or meaning with unrelated things) is Gorodi's debut album and his nonet features some of the U.K.'s brightest rising stars. The pervasive serialism to the opening of "La Nausée" is accompanied by disconcerting oscillation in intensity and pitch a nod to Sartre's "Nausea" but settles down with Gorodi taking the first effusive solo. Gorodi's juxtaposition of tuba and vibes as heard on "Time Sigmund" is redolent of arrangements by George Russell or Mike Gibbs. Conor Chaplin makes his presence known here with a resonant double bass solo as does Gareth Lockrane on lithe flute. On "Search" Ralph Wylde's vibes begin to channel Gary Burton at his most contemplative. But this rumination is washed away by the angular "Amygdala" (an area of the brain responsible for emotions) over which Lockrane's flute presides. "Soma" benefits from a taut ensemble arrangement, whilst on "Fifths" Gorodi displays his magnificently fluid soloing technique. [quote]