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Michael Formanek, Ensemble Kolossus - The Distance (2016) [Official Digital Download]

Posted By: HDV
Michael Formanek, Ensemble Kolossus - The Distance (2016) [Official Digital Download]

Michael Formanek, Ensemble Kolossus - The Distance (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Time - 71:19 minutes | 748 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital booklet

The Distance represents a grand creative leap for bassist-composer Michael Formanek, following two widely lauded ECM releases featuring his quartet with Tim Berne, Craig Taborn and Gerald Cleaver. The new album showcases his texturally rich compositions for the dynamic 18-piece big band he has playfully dubbed Ensemble Kolossus. The project saw some of the most distinctive musicians on the New York scene bonding to realize Formaneks epic design, as he re-imagined what a big-band can be. Channeling sounds from the classic to the modern, he also composed for individual soloists in the Ellingtonian tradition.

Jazz composers writing for large ensembles have often avoided the label "big band," going back to the Jazz Composer's Orchestra in the '60s, not to mention Sun Ra's Arkestra and the many Swing Era bands that called themselves orchestras. It's an understandable choice, given the unavoidable—and potentially limiting—stylistic associations that come with the big band name. Bassist/composer Michael Formanek playfully calls this 18-piece group Ensemble Kolossus: it represents a bold creative leap forward from his previous quartet recordings Small Places (ECM, 2012) and The Rub and Spare Change (ECM, 2010).

Formanek is no stranger to composing for large ensembles, having composed The Open Book for symphony orchestra with jazz soloists, which was premiered in 2007 at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore, where he teaches jazz bass and jazz history, as well as directing the Peabody Jazz Orchestra. The centerpiece of this album—the nine-part "Exoskeleton"—runs for over an hour: an extended composition for an extended ensemble. Formanek says that he has never been interested in the traditional style of big-band writing, "because it's just been done so well so many times before." But opening track "The Distance" is a lyrical tone poem in traditional style, highlighting Brian Settles' solo tenor saxophone.

Part I of "Exoskeleton" is full of thick, modernist dissonance. Part II gets back to tradition, in the form of a slow drag, featuring soloists Chris Speed (tenor saxophone) and Kirk Knuffke (cornet). Then it's on to sparse, atmospheric territory in Part III, featuring soloist Ben Gerstein (trombone). Back to swing on Part IV, with solos from Ralph Alessi (trumpet) and Alan Ferber (trombone). Guitarist Mary Halvorson had been using some electronic effects during her comping, but her solo on Part V really shows them off, with its tremolo and whammy pedal pitch-bending.

Parts VI -VIII drive to the conclusion through the use of ostinato patterns. There are several soloists playing simultaneously on VI, while VII gives rhythm section members Patricia Franceschy (marimba), Tomas Fujiwara (drums) and Kris Davis (piano) a chance to shine. Formanek's sense of humor shows again in the subtitles: "Shucking While Jiving" and "A Reptile Dysfunction." Part VIII is labeled as a collective improvisation by the full ensemble, but it nonetheless builds to a return of Part VI's ostinato.

It's a big, colorful piece, full of stylistic variety. Dense ensemble sounds are balanced with sparser textures. Formanek has a collection of very distinctive players to draw on—including many of New York's busiest players—and since almost everyone gets at least one solo, their individual voices almost guarantee a certain kaleidoscopic character. Formanek chose to concentrate on playing bass as part of the rhythm section, so fellow bassist Mark Helias made an invaluable contribution as conductor. The Distance is a remarkable achievement, which Formanek's smaller ensembles have only hinted at.

Tracklist:

01 - The Distance
02 - Exoskeleton Prelude
03 - Exoskeleton Parts I-III (Impenetrable / Beneath The Shell / @heart)
04 - Exoskeleton Parts IV-V (Echoes / Without Regrets)
05 - Exoskeleton Parts VI-VII (Shucking While Jiving / A Reptile Dysfunction)
06 - Exoskeleton Part VIII (Metamorphic)

Produced by Manfred Eicher. Engineered by Jon Rosenberg.
Recorded in December 2014 at Systems Two, Brooklyn, New York.
Mixed by David Torn. Mastered by Christoph Sticke at MSM-Studios, München.

Musicians:
Michael Formanek - double bass
Loren Stillman - alto saxophone
Oscar Noriega - alto sax, clarinet, bass clarinet
Chris Speed - tenor sax, clarinet
Brian Settles - tenor sax, flute
Tim Berne - baritone sax
Dave Ballou - trumpet
Ralph Alessi - trumpet
Shane Endsley - trumpet
Kirk Knuffke - cornet
Alan Ferber - trombone
Jacob Garchik - trombone
Ben Gerstein - trombone
Jeff Nelson - bass trombone, contrabass trombone
Patricia Franceschy - marimba
Mary Halvorson - guitar
Kris Davis - piano
Tomas Fujiwara - drums
Mark Helias - Conductor.

Analyzed: Michael Formanek, Ensemble Kolossus / The Distance
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR10 -2.10 dB -15.92 dB 6:00 01-The Distance
DR9 -1.08 dB -14.77 dB 9:04 02-Exoskeleton Prelude
DR9 -2.44 dB -15.69 dB 21:35 03-Exoskeleton Parts I-III (Impenetrable / Beneath The Shell / @heart)
DR9 -1.03 dB -12.98 dB 15:42 04-Exoskeleton Parts IV-V (Echoes / Without Regrets)
DR8 -1.05 dB -12.04 dB 11:29 05-Exoskeleton Parts VI-VII (Shucking While Jiving / A Reptile Dysfunction)
DR7 -1.95 dB -11.63 dB 7:28 06-Exoskeleton Part VIII (Metamorphic)
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 6
Official DR value: DR9

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 1467 kbps
Codec: FLAC
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