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MARILYN MAZUR - Celestial Circle (2011)

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Celestial Circle might appear to be a conventional, piano trio-based vocal record on the surface, but it's an impression quickly dismissed with a closer look at its participants. Marilyn Mazur knows her way around a drum kit in no uncertain terms, but it's her more integrated approach, with an oft-times massive array of percussion—gongs, wood blocks, pots and other things that can be struck with hands, sticks and brushes—that has allowed the American-born/Denmark-raised and resident percussionist to evolve a more pan-cultural approach to rhythm, color and groove. Not that Mazur can't swing in a conventional fashion; she just chooses not to—or, rather, she swings in her own peculiar way.

Celestial Circle leans further away from orthodoxy with the return of two artists who've been conspicuously absent from the ECM label in recent years. Last heard on pianist Bobo Stenson's Cantando (2009), it doesn't take long to realize just how much Swedish bassist Anders Jormin's resonant tone and singing lines have been missed. Jormin's ability to lock with Mazur into a spare but dancing groove, during pianist John Taylor's solo on "Winterspell," juxtaposes with his soaring arco and motivic harmonics earlier in this dark-hued piece—one of a handful of Mazur compositions interspersed, on Celestial Circle, with solo, duo and trio improvisations.

Continuing work with another ex-ECMer (trumpeter Kenny Wheeler) and a member of drummer Peter Erskine's seminal ECM trio throughout the 1990s, Taylor makes his first label appearance since violinist Mark Feldman's What Exit (2006), and his ability to combine trenchant lyricism and soft but angular voicings remains inescapably commanding, but in the most understated of ways. There's little overt virtuosity here, though it's never in question. Taylor contributes one composition, the opening "Your Eyes," and his expressive touch and contrapuntal interplay with Jormin and singer Josefine Cronholm are quickly established, affirming a chemistry built, despite this being the quartet's first recording, since its inception in 2008.

Mazur records relatively infrequently for the label, this being but her third as a leader following the all-improv solo/duo recording, Elixir (2008), with label staple/saxophonist Jan Garbarek, with whom the percussionist has also toured and recorded for many years. As much as her writing gives Celestial Circle its context, it's the nine improvised miniatures—most under three minutes—that give the album its shape. Cronholm may wear the influence of Norma Winstone on her sleeve in the composed material, but in the improvs, she asserts her own voice, as rhythmical as it is melodic.

Mazur's clearly a democratic leader, but astute choices always bring her voice to the proceedings, whether it's the cymbals at the start of "Color Sprinkle," or the clay pot that gives "Temple Chorus" its pulse, as she joins Conholm in voice, as she also does on the more joyful, tuned percussion-driven "Among the Trees."

It may not follow piano trio conventions, but of Mazur's own recordings for ECM, including 1997's FutureSongs, Celestial Circle stands as her most readily accessible, even as it explores roads less traveled, with a group already possessed of a distinctive and singular collective voice.  -  John Kelman / allaboutjazz.com


La percusionista neoyorkina de nacimiento y formada en Dinamarca Marilyn Mazur formó parte de los proyectos de Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter y Gil Evans en la década de 1980, pero también pasó 14 años en el grupo del noruego Jan Garbarek. Una trayectoria, donde las improvisaciones musicales son pieza fundamental, que le ha merecido diversos reconocimientos. Para este magnífico proyecto, con momentos de etérea pero deslumbrante creatividad cuenta con la vocalista sueca Josefine Cronholm.  -  lossonidosdelplanetaazul.com


Tracks

01. Your Eyes (John Taylor/Josefine Cronholm)

02. Winterspell (Marilyn Mazur)

03. Kildevaeld (Marilyn Mazur)

04. Gentle Quest (Jordan/Taylor/Mazur)

05. Secret Crystals (Taylor/Mazur)

06. Temple Chorus (Marilyn Mazur)

07. Antilope Arabesque (Marilyn Mazur)

08. Chosen Darkness (Jormin/Cronholm/Mazur)

09. Among The Trees (Marilyn Mazur)

10. Color Sprinkle (Jormin/Taylor/Mazur)

11. Tour Song (Marilyn Mazur)

12. Drumrite (Marilyn Mazur)

13. Oceanique (Jormin/Mazur)

14. Transcending (Marilyn Mazur)


ANDERS JORMIN  double bass

MARILYN MAZUR  drums, percussion, voice

JOHN TAYLOR  piano

JOSEFINE CRONHOLM  voice


Recorded December 2010 at Rainbow Studio, Oslo

ECM Records – ECM 2228



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