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Monthly Archives: January 2017

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New Tumble Album – Music for Trio

January 30, 2017 by Robert Heirendt
Uncategorized

I have always loved jazz, especially the more experimental and progressive edgy stuff. I have never considered myself a jazz musician however, yet mbira music is full of improvisation. Playing in Tumble has given me the opportunity to bridge the worlds between traditional African trance music and modern improvisational jazz.

My band Tumble formed in the Summer of 2014. At the time we were a trio – mbira – guitar – reeds. From the very start, I realized that the interplay in our playing and the collective timbre created by our instruments was very special. As a band, we have consistently embraced a very delicate balance between structure and improvisation that is exciting to me.

We began recording our album in the Spring of 2015, before bassist Bill Douglass joined the group. In our trio format, with no bass player, there was a certain open ended quality to the sound. At times, I could play in the lower register of my mbira and become the “bass player”. At other times, guitarist Sean Kerrigan would fill that role by digging into the lower register with his already thick and deep guitar tone. Reed player Randy McKean would do the same thing, especially when playing bass clarinet or tenor. At other times, we would all play in the higher register, creating a more “bottomless” or ungrounded feeling and sound. These shifts were never planned, but could happen spontaneously as a part of the group improvisation. 

Music for Trio is unlike any album I have ever worked on. My approach to album making and recording has always been to meticulously layer parts through overdubbing over a period of time. In this sense, my artistic process in recording was more like weaving.  With Tumble, we set ourselves up in the studio facing one another in a triangle, and played live with the “tape” always rolling. With an improvisational band like Tumble, the challenge in recording is to create a space where the spontaneous musical conversation can flow freely. During the recording of this album, we were able to get deep into our collective improvisation vibe where some real musical communication happened!  I am quite pleased with how it turned out. Much thanks is due to engineer Bruce Wheelock for creating such a warm, homey and comfortable environment at his wonderful studio Flying Whale Recording. 

Music for Trio is released on 1/31/17. You can get it at Clocktower Records in Grass Valley and at Tumble’s Bandcamp page.

My Favorite Albums of 2016

January 1, 2017 by Robert Heirendt
Uncategorized

2016 was not a kind year to our world community of important musicians. We lost way too many musical legends last year! Yet, despite all these losses, 2016 was a wonderful year for new music. There were so many wonderful records which inspired me greatly. When I was working on my first draft of albums I loved in 2016, I had well over 30 on my list! So… I have narrowed these down to 10. These are not scaled, but rather in alphabetical order. Instead of giving “music critic” type of descriptions of each album, I have decided to write a Haiku review/impression of each album.

Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop 

“Love Letter for Fire”

Harmonies in groove

“Don’t even know me that well”

Fractures of the heart

David Bowie

“Blackstar”

A swansong supreme

“At the center of it all”

Starman waves goodbye

Leonard Chiyanike

“Kamusha 2016”

Mbira master

Extended hypnotic spin

Get down in the depths

The video below is not taken from the album but shows Leonard and his brother playing mbira together

Leonard Cohen

“You Want It Darker”

Leonard spins song craft

“Lift the veil and see your face”

Fades into the light

Christian Fennesz & Jim O’Rourke

“It’s Hard for Me to Say I’m Sorry”

Brooding soundscapes

Sonic layers on layers

Soothes and scrapes longing

Lisa Hannigan

“At Swim”

Deep subtle textures

“Hide the rich and spare the young”

Melodies on ice

Invisible Guy

“Knuckle Sandwich”

Angular movement

Clarinet-piano-drums

Shifty interplay

Live footage of Invisible Guy – not from album

Allison Miller’s Boom Tic Boom

“Otis Was a Polar Bear”

Now who was Otis?

Polar bear Mingus glacier

counter point in punch

Radiohead

“A Moon Shaped Pool”

Haunting majestic

“The white room by the window”

Caressed in deep strings

Kjartan Sveinsson

“Der Klang  der Offenbarung des”

Ex Sigur Ros man

“Sonics of Divinity”

Rising orchestral

Please feel free to post/share some of the music that moved you the most in the past year..

Blessings for 2017!!

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