BBC Music Magazine

Jazz

November round-up

longside direct responses such as Mehldau’s, it’s easy to imagine other musicians finding time and cause to consider subjects to which they personally relate during this time of constraint. It’ll be largely coincidental, of course, as many such projects will have been gestating before the current emergency began, but this doesn’t detract from, who is a remarkable composer and bandleader and also an activist in the fields of data control and intellectual property. She directs her attention to this in , a formidable double album that deploys the forces of her big band to evoke the artificial world of technology and its exploitative uses, and the contrast it presents with the ebb and flow of nature and the real world. This powerful, uncompromising music is very much the sound of protest and a plea for humanisation, reflected in her sophisticated arrangements which are variously disturbing, strident, unsettling, puckish, uplifting and intoxicating. ( ) ★★★★★

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Parting Notes
‘When you experience personal loss,’ reflects composer Michael John Trotta (above), ‘within a couple of weeks everybody else’s lives have gone back to being the same. However, there’s something that you yourself can never quite put back together. I t
BBC Music Magazine9 min read
Debonair Bach With Gallic Charm
The Complete Cello Suites Henri Demarquette (cello) Evidence EVCD115 131:00 mins (2 discs) Best-known for his performances of contemporary music, French cellist Henri Demarquette has also spent a lifetime with Bach, having played the Cello Suites sin
BBC Music Magazine9 min read
Evocative Debussy And Spellbinding Stravinsky
Stravinsky: Petrushka (1947 version); Debussy: Jeux; Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune Orchestre de Paris/Klaus Mäkelä Decca 4870146 64 mins Few ballet scores manage to encapsulate such a varied and arresting range of emotions as Petrushka. But the s

Related