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At 79, Pulitzer Prize winner and NEA Jazz Master Henry Threadgill is one of the last men standing among the founding fathers of the jazz avant-garde. Because his output of recordings is not voluminous, every new Threadgill release is an event. The Other One is more of an event than most because of its ambition (it is an album-length suite) and its scale: It introduces a new 12-piece ensemble.

Threadgill is one of the true originals in American art. His music is its own universe, with proprietary organizational principles and unique aesthetic assumptions. Over the years, he has assembled a coterie of undaunted artists who have learned to play his music. Several are in the new band: tuba player Jose Davila, cellist Christopher Hoffman, drummer Craig Weinrib, pianist David Virelles. He has also built an adventurous audience and taught them how to listen to Henry Threadgill.

His new suite, titled Of Valence, is a multimedia work. When it debuted with two performances at the Roulette Intermedium in Brooklyn in May 2022, it included video, projected paintings and photographs, a prerecorded choir and prose recitations. This CD is a recording of the second performance with the multimedia elements edited out, leaving only the music. The audience’s applause is also edited out (until the end). Yet the recording feels alive. You feel the air around you, in a 240-seat space. All 12 instruments are vivid and clear.

Threadgill came on the scene in the 1970s as a saxophone revolutionary, but he does not play on The Other One. He conducts his cacophonous, arcane, astonishing orchestra. The suite is a rare example of Threadgill’s writing for large ensemble and for strings. There is a string section at the heart of this band (violin/viola/two cellos) and also three saxophones (two altos/one tenor), two bassoons, a piano, drums, and a tuba. With this array of instruments, Threadgill has at his disposal a huge diversity of colors and textures.

EDITOR’S PICK

RECORDING OF THE MONTH

HENRY THREADGILL ENSEMBLE

The Other One

12-piece ensemble; Threadgill, conductor Pi PI97 (CD, available as download). 2023. Liberty Ellman, prod.; Stephen Cooper, Eric Shekerjian, engs.

PERFORMANCE

SONICS

The first movement begins innocently enough, with David Virelles’s isolated, chiming piano. It sounds enigmatic but, unlike most of the music to come, occupies familiar tonal centers. Five minutes in, the rapt atmosphere and the tonality are both shattered when other members of the ensemble dart into the mix. Suddenly there is a great deal going on: competing snatches of melody; contrapuntal collisions; background drones; piercing sonorities from the strings, sometimes sweet, more often scraping and astringent. Threadgill presides over a maelstrom of sonic phenomena. He almost never aggregates his 12 players into a single massed is not about solos as such, yet individual improvisers seize brilliant moments: Virelles (who always leaves you wanting more of his evocative piano); Sara Caswell (perhaps now the premier violinist in jazz); the three saxophonists. (Peyton Pleninger, Alfredo Colón, and Noah Becker are young and not yet well known, but in fulfilling their roles here, they spill their guts.)

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