Former music journalist and multi-instrumentalist Jay founded
the crossover label Hemetic in 1995 and on this latest recording
he is joined by trumpeter Byron Wallen (with whom he collaborated
on the 1998 album Acoustic Masks), soprano saxophonist and bass
clarinetist Nicola Alesini and, on one track only, the erstwhile
Wire drummer Robert Grey on djembe. Apart from the more overt
influences of jazz and ambient music, Cardamom & Coriander
also fruitfully intersects with the austerity of folk music as
well as with a kind of home-grown minimalism. Ever present layers
of exotic percussion provide a circular, non-developmental background
over which the more dramatic solo lines are superimposed, notably
Wallen's utterly transfixing kudu horn solo on 'Calling Agwé'
which seems to invoke some long-forgotten ancient rite. Equally
entrancing is Alesini's keening soprano sax on the bleak, primordial
'Badunjari' which calls out into the firmament over the hypnotic
polyphony of Jay's striking backdrop, or the probing bass clarinet
melody that winds its way through the enigmatic soundscape of
'Water drums', rotating around sweeping synth pads, gurgling water
sounds, irregular flashes of electric guitar and the rhythmical
pattern-making of a solitary drum.
Jazzwise:
May 2001 |