Ches Smith and We All Break - Path of Seven Colors (2021)

  • 10 Jun, 15:57
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Artist:
Title: Path of Seven Colors
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Pyroclastic Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:08:38
Total Size: 158 mb | 358 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Ches Smith and We All Break - Woule Pou Mwen
02. Ches Smith and We All Break - Here's the Light
03. Ches Smith and We All Break - Leaves Arrive
04. Ches Smith and We All Break - Women of Iron
05. Ches Smith and We All Break - Lord of Healing
06. Ches Smith and We All Break - Raw Urbane
07. Ches Smith and We All Break - Path of Seven Colors
08. Ches Smith and We All Break - The Vulgar Cycle

Personnel:

Sirene Dantor Rene - vocals
Miguel Zenón - alto saxophone
Matt Mitchell - piano
Nick Dunston - bass
Daniel Brevil - tanbou and vocals
Fanfan Jean-Guy Rene - tanbou and vocals
Markus Schwartz - tanbou and vocals
Ches Smith - drums, percussion and vocals

Here’s the album that shows just why the nondescript term “drummer” doesn’t get near the chemistry of earworm hooks, sharp-end jazz innovation and global-musical openness of New York percussionist/composer Ches Smith. With saxophonist Tim Berne (a big compositional influence), John Zorn, violist Mat Maneri and many others, Smith has blossomed from skilful sideman to the collaborative original behind this exhilarating set – drawing on his devoted study of Haiti’s Vodou musical traditions with New York’s Haitian-American community, and in empathic hybrid lineups joining Haitian performers and jazz-rooted improvisers.

A 2015 quartet version of this venture is included in a brimming package, but 2020’s We All Break octet is the main attraction – a lineup including the evocative vibrato of vocalist Sirene Dantor Rene, three master hand drummers (including Smith’s Haitian teacher Daniel Brevil, whose originals form much of the repertoire), dynamic young double bass newcomer Nick Dunston, and scintillating jazz interventions from the fiery Miguel Zenón and Matt Mitchell on alto sax and piano respectively.

Sometimes the jazz players quietly shadow the songs, as Mitchell and Smith do around Sirene Dantor Rene’s gracefully tender unfolding of the opener, Woule Pou Mwen. Vocal exchanges between solo singers and chorus clamour over coolly elastic drum grooves on Here’s the Light, before switching to blazing Zenón sax breaks; Mitchell’s teeming free-piano improv uncannily mirrors the drummers’ wilful groove-bends all over the set, while sinister piano vamps drive angular, staccato horn melodies right out of the Tim Berne guidebook into anguished free-sax squeals on the hypnotic Women of Iron.

Smith wanted the resources of traditional vocalists, highly melodic drummers and melody-instrument jazz improvisers to become spontaneously inseparable on this long-honed adventure. We All Break have made a tour de force of it.