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The 10 best jazz albums of 2022 (by The Guardian)

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    Posted: 30 Dec 2022 at 12:00pm
 

10. Kokoroko – Could We Be More

Hot live bands don’t always make hot records, but south London eight-piece Kokoroko nailed that transition with Could We Be More – a canny 15-track tapestry of the hip jazz references, updated Afrobeat and highlife vivacity, and seductive vocal hooks with which they charmed audiences from jazzers to Fela Kuti fans. Read the full review

9. Esbjörn Svensson – HOME.S.

Between the mid-1990s and his tragic accidental death in 2008, the Swedish pianist/composer Esbjörn Svensson gave classy piano-trio jazz an enthralling stadium-rock drama and drive. These delicate unaccompanied piano pieces, unreleased until now, show a contrastingly private Svensson – but with just the same vivid imagination and subtlety of touch.

Vivid imagination … Esbjörn Svensson
Vivid imagination … Esbjörn Svensson. Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian

8. Sun Ra Arkestra – Living Sky

A rare studio album from the still enthusiastically touring Sun Ra Arkestra, with the now 98-year-old leader and saxophonist Marshall Allen applying his late mentor Ra’s eclectic composing and intuitive free-harmonising methods to a fragmented 21st century. Allen’s own coolly sashaying Marshall’s Groove is a standout. 




Edited by snobb - 30 Dec 2022 at 12:06pm
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7. Oded Tzur – Isabela

Tel Aviv-born improviser and composer Oded Tzur’s unique tenor-sax whisper doesn’t come from mimicking saxophonists, but the ghostly sound of the bamboo bansuri flute and studying India’s raga forms. Word is spreading about his international quartet including New York drummer Johnathan Blake – this quietly distinctive set can only speed that up.

6. The Joe Harriott Quintet – Swings High

Jamaican alto saxophonist Joe Harriott was one of UK jazz’s brightest stars between the 1950s and 70s, a firebrand of a performer at home in free-improv and the bebop of Charlie Parker. He’s enthralling in the latter style on this sensitively remastered release of a classic live set.

Joe Harriott performing live
Joe Harriott performing live. Photograph: David Redfern/Redferns

5. Avishai Cohen – Naked Truth

That Israeli-born trumpeter/composer Avishai Cohen is a devoted Miles Davis admirer is evident in almost every sound he makes, but so is the independence of his imagination. Naked Truth is barely 40 minutes long, but it’s an exquisite piece of ensemble spontaneity, made with Cohen’s uncannily bonded regular quartet. Read the full review

4. Makaya McCraven – In These Times

A landmark multi-genre fusion project crafted by Chicago drummer-producer Makaya McCraven across seven years, In These Times is an amalgam of African American influences, and much more – segueing jazz, hip-hop, east European folk, classical strings and spoken word, in startling mixes of studio and live sounds. Read the full review

3. Cecil Taylor – The Complete, Legendary, Live Return Concert

This recently unearthed 1973 New York live recording by Cecil Taylor and his quartet reveals a unique genius reaching his fearless prime, shared with like-minded legends of the cliffhanging art of flat-out free-jazz in saxophonist Jimmy Lyons, bassist Sirone and drummer Andrew Cyrille. Surging energy balanced with meticulous detail.

The late Cecil Taylor playing at Ronnie Scott’s in 1975


Edited by snobb - 30 Dec 2022 at 12:07pm
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2. Mary Halvorson – Amaryllis/Belladonna

Jimi Hendrix was American guitarist/composer Mary Halvorson’s inspiration as a child. She has reinvented guitar improvisation in comparably radical ways, but also blossomed into a major contemporary composer. Avant-funk and warped swing, graceful classical-string sounds, headlong boppish grooves and more collide on these fearless but warmly communicative albums. Read the full review

1. Charles Lloyd – Trios: Sacred Thread

The final album in the octogenarian master Charles Lloyd’s three-part series celebrates trio improvisation from fascinatingly different angles. Sacred Thread takes the most global stance, in these intriguing conversations between Lloyd’s vaporously lyrical tenor sax, flute, and oboe-like tárogató, Zakir Hussain’s whirlwind percussion and Julian Lage’s rich-textured guitar.

from www.theguardian.com

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