Max Jaffe - You Want That Too! (2025) Hi-Res

  • 26 Dec, 17:49
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Artist:
Title: You Want That Too!
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Colorfield Records
Genre: Experimental, Jazz, Electronic
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-48kHz
Total Time: 33:39
Total Size: 186 / 383 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Up Top Up (feat. Jeff Parker & Spencer Zahn) (3:13)
2. Pedro Point (feat. Meg Duffy & Shelley Burgon) (3:33)
3. S-NARE (3:11)
4. Gulf Of Mexico (feat. Gavin Gamboa, Daniel Rotem & Logan Kane) (3:53)
5. Wooden Wire Tap (feat. Meg Duffy & Spencer Zahn) (3:27)
6. Looking At The Inside of Your Eyelids (feat. Gavin Gamboa, Daniel Rotem & Logan Kane) (2:59)
7. Putney Waltz (3:28)
8. Ancestral Creeks (feat. Meg Duffy & Spencer Zahn) (3:40)
9. In Green (feat. Logan Kane, Jeff Parker & Daniel Rotem) (3:10)
10. Zen and Pteent (3:14)

Just a minute and 40 seconds into You Want That Too!, Max Jaffe and his cast of collaborators pull off the first of many head fakes. Opener “Up Top Up,” builds slowly and softly, with plinking piano, pulsing guitar, and bleepy synth organizing themselves like the multicolored tiers of a bismuth crystal. For a full minute, the quiet concatenation gurgles along, accumulating extra notes and flourishes, suggesting an eventual kosmische surge. But instead, each instrument disappears and the tempo drops to half-time, leaving only an uneasy chord structure and a lethargic drum pattern. Suddenly, Jeff Parker plucks a sighing six-note guitar run, dropping his shoulders into a solo section that carries the tune to its swooning conclusion. It’s only three minutes long, but at no point could you guess what might happen from measure to measure.

You Want That Too!, Jaffe’s latest release, is filled with these gleefully destabilizing moments. It’s the first record the percussionist has made from start to finish under his own name since decamping to Los Angeles from New York, where he spent nearly 15 years pinballing around the city’s experimental, noise, and jazz scenes. He has a vigorous yet graceful approach to the drums, a style that Dave Harrington, who plays in a trio with Jaffe and saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi, has described as “painterly” and “gestural.” His work with Amirtha Kidambi’s liberatory jazz group, Elder Ones, was commanding and direct, tethering the group’s freer impulses to the ground while occasionally erupting into quick, controlled explosions. In JOBS, his minimalist pop group with Rob Lundberg, Jessica Pavone, and Dave Scanlon, Jaffe’s rhythms are angular and sharp, carving clean spaces for the other instruments to crowd into. His solo music is a much looser affair, a potpourri of ideas that seem concurrently unintuitive and completely natural. It’s easy to imagine Jaffe seated at his drum kit or perched above a keyboard, smiling mischievously, keen to take a left turn he knows his ensemble will eagerly follow.

Jaffe was an early adopter of Sensory Percussion, a tool that maps sample triggers to drum surfaces, turning a single struck accent into a swarm of noise. On his last record, Reduction of Man, Jaffe inverted his approach, triggering events for his group to respond to rather than augmenting his own playing. That technique resulted in otherworldly sound collages that expand and contract like a creaky door in humid weather. You Want That Too! feels like a spiritual continuation of that method, keeping its predecessor’s methods of rubberbanding space intact, but anchoring the pieces with distinct melodic phrases rather than atonal blasts. Here, Jaffe softens the borders between his dual interests in electronic music and jazz, crafting compositions that are constantly molting and emerging anew.

“Looking at the Inside of Your Eyelids” is the most tuneful amalgamation of these ideas, a swaying, celestial post-bop number with saxophones swathed in yawning sine-wave bass like stars in the Medusa Nebula. Though it’s the most straight-ahead song on the album, it still manages to traverse three distinct movements within its crisp runtime. Other cuts construct a dense digital lattice before upending their trajectory with more organic elements.