Monday, September 22, 2025


Music Week

September archive (in progress).

Music: Current count 44894 [44857] rated (+37), 17 [21] unrated (-4).

I got a late start on this, well into Monday evening, so this will have to be perfunctory. One week's worth of records. I'm more or less current in a diminishing promo queue, although there are a couple of promising items I still haven't gotten to. Beyond that, I've been struggling to figure out what to play next, and that's led to a pretty scattered set of albums. Complicating things is that I was responsible for a disturbing number of mistakes in my bookkeeping. Only one (of six) A- records had its cover scanned, and a couple hadn't been accounted for at all. I doubt that I've caught them all, so there may well be records in the monthly archive that never made it into Music Week.

I don't know why I've been so scatterbrained this week, but a lot of things are happening very fast now, and I'm not coping well. I did manage to get my recycling kiosk built today. It will stand next to the front door, and collect items to give away, go into recycling, or the trash. Lots of room for CDs and books, since that's most of what we have. Next step will be to set up an accounting system to track what we're getting rid of. I can see the argument that there's no need, but I want to keep some sort of audit trail, at least of things no longer needed but still useful as memories.

I've started work on my next Substack post. It's going to be further thoughts on the latest Loose Tabs, but will be space-limited, so will focus on only a few key points. That piece is nearly done, so shouldn't take more than another day or two. Beyond that, I have a few more ideas. Some will be closer to the "everyday life" theme. I'm thinking about writing one on the advantages of building your own computers, and how one goes about doing that.


New records reviewed this week:

Adult Mom: Natural Causes (2025, Epitaph): Singer-songwriter Stevie Knapp, fourth album since 2015, may be considered a band now. Songs include one about cancer. B+(**) [sp]

Apathy: Mom & Dad (2025, Dirty Version/Coalmine): Underground rapper Chad Bromley, from Connecticut, 20 albums since 2004, Nancy & Ronald Reagan on the cover, looking sunny and care free, which is not how he remembers their era. "Grew up in the '80s with a welfare budget." Old style turntablism, dazzling wordplay, political smarts, bearing the full weight of history. A- [sp]

Lucian Ban/John Surman/Mat Maneri: Cantica Profana (2022-23 [2025], Sunnyside): Pianist from Romania, moved to New York 1999, has frequently looked back to his native music, as in his 2011 Transylvanian Concert with Maneri (viola) and his 2020 recording of Transylvanian Folk Songs with Maneri and Surman (baritone/soprano sax, bass clarinet). The latter was dubbed The Bela Bartók Field Recordings, although the recordings were new, based on his research. Subsequent tours generated two more live albums, this and The Athenaeum Concert (below). This one was taken from three earlier concerts. Surman is an inspired addition here. A- [sp]

Lucian Ban/John Surman/Mat Maneri: The Athenaeum Concert (2024 [2025], Sunnyside): Notes quote Bartók: "A future generation might conceivably discover and embody in their art music properties of the peasant music which have altogether escaped us." B+(***) [sp]

Jon Batiste: Big Money (2025, Verve/Interscope): Pianist, singer-songwriter, bandleader, has done some acting, is basically a big deal, born into "a New Orleans musical dynasty," cut his first album at 17, organized his band Stay Human before it became Stephen Colbert's Tonight Show house band (2015-22). I'm surprised at how little detail info is available on this -- big name, major label, but nearly a month after release, AOTY has 0 critic reviews, a 65/57 user score. Two featured guests: Andra Day and Randy Newman, but several other songs (e.g., "Maybe") channel Newman. Title song is big bunk, and cover shows Batiste playing guitar. Half of this is really good, in as many different ways. The other half tails off, but again through divergence. Few albums are so scattered, but few artists have so many options, and the authority to pursue them. A- [sp]

Big Thief: Double Infinity (2025, 4AD): Not my idea of a folk-rock band, just a very talented singer-songwriter (Adrianne Lenker) with enough of a band to deserve group billing (minus their bassist this time, but additional musicians make up for that. First play strikes me as near-perfect. I don't know how much more time I'll put in, but quite possibly one of the year's best. A- [sp]

Johnathan Blake: My Life Matters (2025, Blue Note): Drummer, from Philadelphia, several albums as leader since 2012, many side credits. With Dayna Stephens (sax), Jalen Baker (vibes), Fabian Almazan (piano), Dezron Douglas (bass), "plus special guests including Bilal and DJ Jahi Sundance," playing "a suite of songs that serves as a dual treatise on the importance of family values and the social imperative to stand up in the face of injustice." Does that. B+(**) [sp]

David Byrne & Ghost Train Orchestra: Who Is the Sky? (2025, Matador): Talking Heads majordomo, their 2-4-6 albums topped my annual lists, but his solo career has been very erratic, with interesting side projects early, a fine 1994 eponymous album, and more misses than not. He's slowed down considerably over the years, this coming 7 years after American Utopia, which itself was 6 years after Love This Giant. He seems at least to have recovered much of his chunky rhythm here, and Brian Carpenter's band helps (although they don't much sound like themselves), as he seems to aim at some bigger stage. B+(**) [sp]

Ethel Cain: Willoughby Tucker, I'll Always Love You (2025, Daughters of Cain): Singer-songwriter, aka Hayden Anhedönia, shades of darkwave or gothic or whatever, identities and aesthetics unfathomable (by me at least), but somewhere way back was an evident overdose of Baptist religion. Second studio album, ignoring whatever this year's Perverts was (a drone exercise, but it still got 77/27 at AOTY, with this one currently at 83/28). Seems thoughtfully composed at first, slips into some not-bad ambient drone, then tries to square the circle. B+(*) [sp]

Cardi B: Am I the Drama? (2025, Atlantic): New York rapper Belcalis Almánzar, got a lot of interest with her mixtapes and singles in 2016-17, followed that with a triumphant studio album in 2018, second album here, makes up for lost time by running 23 songs, 70:49, including old singles back to 2020's "WAP." B+(**) [sp]

Loyle Carner: Hopefully! (2025, EMI/Universal): British rapper-singer, fourth album, pretty successful over there, not so much here. B+(**) [sp]

Double Virgo: Shakedown (2025, Year0001): British duo/group, principally Jezmi Tarik Fehmi and Sam Fenton, first album after singles going back to 2020, so seems to be a parallel project to Bar Italia, where they defer to singer Nina Cristante. Hints of Pavement and Wire, not that I feel like pursuing them. B+(***) [sp]

Kathleen Edwards: Billionaire (2025, Dualtone): Canadian singer-songwriter, sixth album since 2002. Jason Isbell co-produced, and provided the backing band. B+(**) [sp]

Anat Fort: The Dreamworld of Paul Motian (2024 [2025], Sunnyside): Pianist from Israel, moved to New York in 1996, gained some attention with her ECM debut in 2007. Motian's started out as Bill Evans' drummer, went on to play with dozens of other famous pianists, rather oddly as he always seemed to be following his own drift, nudging the pianist to sharpen the contrast. His own groups almost never included piano, often guitar (especially Bill Frisell). Fort picked out 11 of his songs, with Steve Cardenas (guitar), Gary Wang (bass), and Matt Wilson (drums). B+(***) [sp]

Luigi Grasso: La Dimora Dell'atrove (2024 [2025], LP345): Italian saxophonist (soprano, alto, baritone, bass clarinet), albums since 1999, supported here by NDR Bigband, which he is a regular in. Bills this as "two themes and variations." B+(*) [cd] [09-26]

Michael Hurley: Broken Homes and Gardens (2025, No Quartet): Folk singer-songwriter (1941-2025), recorded an album for Folkways in 1964, a couple more 1971-72, then appeared as the lead artist on the 1976 album Have Moicy! Recorded steadily after that, but less notably, finishing this a month before he died on the road. B+(***) [sp]

Josiah the Gift & Machacha: The Happening (2025, BarsOverBs): New Jersey rapper, member of Umbrella Collective, several albums since 2020, here with producer Mattćus Overgaard Jensen. B+(**) [sp]

Kirk Knuffke/Stomu Takeishi/Bill Goodwin: Window (2025, Royal Potato Family): Cornet player, many albums since 2009, superb both in free and mainstream contexts, trio here with bass and drums. Also sings a couple songs here (not a plus, but not a minus either). B+(***) [sp]

Lizzo: My Face Hurts From Smiling (2025, Nice Life/Atlantic): Rapper Melissa Jefferson, four albums since 2013, Cuz I Love You (2019) a big hit, has a fifth one planned for later this year, calls this poorly-received interim effort a mixtape (AOTY: 50/3). Distinction seems to be hard, fast, rude, and repetitive. B+(*) [sp]

The Oxys: Casting Pearls Before Swine (2025, Cleopatra): Punkish band from Austin, third album since 2020, some past credits for various members, including two from Sylvain Sylvain and the Sylvains. Ten songs (28:14). B+(**) [sp]

Vinnie Paz: God Sent Vengeance (2025, Iron Tusk Music): Underground rapper from Philadelphia, Vincenzo Luvineri, started in 2006 with Jedi Mind Tricks, with 17 albums, most with metal-sounding titles, like Fires of the Judas Blood, The Priest of Bloodshed, The Pain Collector, Savor the Kill, Burn Everything That Bears Your Name, Lower the Blade, Tortured in the Name of God's Unconditional Love. I'm not into the pain, let alone the violence, that fills these tales, but I noted lines like "my life is darker than Charlie Parker" and "beware the wrath of a patient man," and the gloomy music lays bare the harsh reality. No reason we need to live in dystopia, but there's something to be said for not flinching when you do. A- [sp]

Carmen Staaf: Sounding Line (2024 [2025], Sunnyside): Pianist, from Seattle, based in New York, debut 2004 but mostly side credits (most often with Allison Miller or Jenny Scheinman). Explores Monk and Mary Lou Williams here, with various accompanists: Ambrose Akinmusire (trumpet duo) to open and close, Darren Johnston (trumpet plus others) for two tracks in the middle, Ben Goldberg (clarinets, three tracks, two with Johnston), one Monk tune just adds bongos (John Santos). B+(***) [sp]

Peter Stampfel, Friends & Daughters: Song Shards: Soul Jingles, Stoic Jingles, Vintage Jingles, Prayers and Rounds (2025, Jalopy): 46 songs of sorts, as noted in the subtitle, in less than 43 minutes, done up in his own inimitable style by one of our leading semi-pop folklorists, although for once I find the style grating, possibly because the humor is all but unfathomable. I briefly glanced at the notes when I first heard of this, and they seem likely to be interesting, but since I've played it I've lost all interest. B- [sp]

Craig Taborn/Nels Cline/Marcus Gilmore: Trio of Bloom (2024 [2025], Pyroclastic): Keyboards (mostly electric), guitars (too, including lap steel), drums. Billed as a self-titled debut, but the names are big enough they couldn't keep them off the cover. Long (70:18). A- [cd] [09-26]

Natsuki Tamura/Satoko Fujii: Ki (2025, Libra): Japanese trumpet and piano duo, their 10th, a relatively quiet affair that breaks up a bit toward the end. B+(**) [cd]

Tyler, the Creator: Don't Tap the Glass (2025, Columbia): Los Angeles rapper Tyler Okonma, started in Odd Future, solid gold since 2011, cashes in with a short one (10 tracks, 28:50), after 2024's 52:54 Chromakopia. B+(*) [sp]

Us3: Soundtrack (2025, Us3): British group, bill themselves as jazz-rap, debut 1993, I filed them under rap at the time, and haven't heard anything since until this, which I found a DownBeat review for. No rap here, as the title implies. B [sp]

Milan Verbist Trio: Time Change (2025, Origin): Belgian pianist, first album, trio with Toon Rumen (bass) and Jens Meijer (drums), mostly originals (covers from Ornette, Stanko, Bach, and Peacock). Has some impressive moments, but who doesn't? B+(*) [cd]

Wild Iris Brass Band: Way Up (2025, Ear Up): New Orleans band founded by Jeff Coffin (tenor sax) and Ray Mason (trombone), with trumpet (Emmanuel Echem), alto sax (Jovan Quallo), sousaphone (Neil Konouchi), drums (Justin Amaral), and tambourine (Ryoko Suziki). Coffin, who does a lot of side work in Nashville, has albums back to 1999 and close to 200 side credits back to 1989. B+(*) [sp]

Saul Williams: Saul Williams Meets Carlos Nińo & Friends at TreePeople (2024 [2025], International Anthem): Spoken word artist, started doing open mic, won a poetry slam title in 1996, which led to roles in a documentary (SlamNation) and a feature film (Slam), and from 2000 on to albums, including one with saxophonist David Murray. Nińo is a percussionist, who has regularly recorded with "& Friends" (since 2009). Music didn't quite grab me, but the insights/good messages of the farewell message did, like "we are all bearing witness to the horrendous acts of our government" and "we have a special responsibility because we're in the belly of the beast." B+(**) [sp]

Simón Willson: Feel Love (2024 [2025], Endectomorph Music): Bassist-composer, from Chile, based in New York, third album, quartet with Neta Raanan (tenor sax), Evan Main (piano), and Kayvon Gordon (drums). Interesting postbop, saxophonist continues to impress. B+(**) [cd]

Gaia Wilmer & Ra Kalam Bob Moses: Dancing With Elephants (2023 [2025], Sunnyside): Brazilian alto/baritone saxophonist, studied in Boston (where she met the percussionist), has worked in New York and Sao Paulo, producing several albums since 2017, mostly large groups (sextet and up). Her she takes Moses' solo tracks and builds on them, with various combinations of five more saxophonists, piano, guitar, and/or voice (Song Yi Jeon). Mixed results here, and Moses gets overwhelmed, but George Garzone remains unmistakable. B+(*) [sp]

Yoko Yates: Eternal Moments (2024 [2025], Banka): Pianist, originally from Japan, studied at Berklee and in Cambridge (UK), second album, original pieces, quintet with Jamie Baum (flute), Sam Sadigursky (clarinet/bass clarinet/alto sax), bass, and drums. B [cd]

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

Charlie Rouse: Cinnamon Flower: The Expanded Edition (1977 [2025], Resonance): Tenor saxophonist (1924-88), played in big bands early, ranging from Bull Moose Jackson to Dizzy Gillespie (and including brief stops with Basie and Ellington), but best known for his work with Thelonious Monk (1959-70, the band continuing after Monk died as Sphere). His own work is rather mixed, including Brazilian themes: Bossa Nova Bachanal (1962) and this in 1977, expanded here past 80 minutes. B+(*) [cd]

Old music:

Chris Cacavas: Chris Cacavas and Junk Yard Love (1989, Heyday): Singer-songwriter from Tucson, played keyboards and lap steel for a 1980s band of some note, Green on Red (Dan Stuart was the leader; Steve Wynn and Chuck Prophet also played at various points), started his solo career here, which appears to be up to 18 albums now, but still lacks a Wikipedia page. I looked into him after noticing a single (***) Christgau review for a 1992 album, identified as this but more likely Good Times. Solidly within their genre. B+(*) [yt]

Chris Cacavas & Junkyard Love: Good Times (1992, Heyday): Second album, the group name firmed up, easy to see from the cover how Christgau might have confused the title. One extraordinary song. I couldn't find the lyrics online, so tried to transcribe them: "I'm a saint/ I can do no wrong/ if you see me walking down the street/ just throw flowers at my feet/ and if you got something to say /well you best get on your knees and pray/ because I'm a saint/ I can't believe this crazy life I'm living/ where I can do what I want and all is forgiven/ can you see the trouble I'm in/ I'm evil but just can't sin/ if you don't believe a word I say well alright/ I'll ride on your dash one day/ because I'm a saint." Another verse, then ends with a chorus answering "he can do no wrong" to each assertion of "I'm a saint." Several more good ones. Could be a SFFR (subject for future research). B+(***) [yt]

Mary Halvorson/Kirk Knuffke/Matt Wilson: Sifter (2011 [2012], Relative Pitch): Guitar/cornet/drums trio, presented this as a group eponymous album but the names, all fairly well known by then, were prominent on the front cover, and this turned out to be a one-shot grouping. B+(***) [sp]


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Todd Herbert: Captain Hubs (TH Productions) [10-01]
  • Andy Nevada: El Rumbón (The Party) (Zoho) [08-08]
  • Premik Russell Tubbs & Margee Minier-Tubbs: The Bells (Margetoile) [10-15]

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