Tigran
Hamasyan is one of those young music geniuses, and rubs our nose in it once
more with his last album Shadow Theater. His style is a smart mix of Armenian
folk tradition, experimental music and jazz of course, giving us something
genuinely original and well worth listening to.
Hamasyan
has got many prizes in the world of jazz music, like for instance the first
seat at the ”Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz”, under the direction of
influential jazz figure Herbie Hancock; he has also been noticed by Avishai
Cohen Trio, Chick Corea and Brad Mehldau, to give a few names.
This album
is a quality modern jazz work, starting effectively with ‘The Poet’, a track
introducing perfectly the versatility of the album. The drums’ irregular
accompaniment, its variation, the superposition of voices and the
Middle-Eastern influences all contribute to an impression of blurred imaginary
landscape, both unsettling and attractive. The second and fifth tracks,
‘Erishta’ and ‘The Year Is Gone’, follow the same vibe.
Other
pieces are very serene and sobre, such as ‘The Lament’, number three, ‘Pagan
Lullaby’, number eight, or ‘Holy’, number eleven, which give dreamy and ‘Ave
Maria’-like atmospheres, the cello being more present on these ones. The tenth
– ‘Alternative Universe’ – is notable for the piano part: here Hamasyan is put
on the foreground with a long ad-lib and gives us an insight of his great
talent.
From this
category, one of the key tracks of the album is by far the sixth one:
‘Seafarer’. It has a simple arrangement and melody, with a background of bass
lines from the strings alternating with a wavy pattern by the tenor saxophone
and piano, making us easily feel like a sailor in the middle of a restless sea
thinking of home. This piece sounds very noble and solemn; it just shows how
all the great things in life are simple.
But for the
most fiery of you, there are also a few devilish tracks with jerky rhythms such
as ‘The Drip’, number four, and ‘The Collapse’, number nine; interesting dark
pieces, with oriental touches here and there as well.
The album
leaves us with another great piece, ‘Road Song’, again with original rhythms
and sometimes almost Japanese tones, on a background of restless wavy piano. A
very positive energy emerges from this one track; something fresh, like a
re-start in one’s life. It then ends quietly, leaving us with a feeling of
curiosity for new things…this is what this album does to you.
This article appeared on AAAmusic.co.uk.
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