Advertisement
Advertisement

Avishai Cohen: Big Vicious

In brief:
"Cohen’s fourth album for ECM was produced by Manfred Eicher, but it seems as if Tel Aviv producer Yuvi 'Rejoicer' Havkin may have a played a bigger role in shaping it"

Israeli trumpeter Avishai Cohen (not the Israeli bassist of the same name) returns with a more energetic outing after his icy duo album on ECM last year. This time he heads a fusion band that wanders between jazz, rock and electronics on short tracks that mostly clock in at under four minutes.

After a couple of decades in the US, including gigs with the Mingus Big Band and Dynasty, Cohen moved back to Israel in 2014 and formed this group, Big Vicious. He is backed by two drummers and two electric guitarists, one of whom also plays bass.

Advertisement

The band members composed half of the pieces on the album together, with the rest by Cohen besides two covers: Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata and Massive Attack’s Teardrop – the latter an interesting choice as the Bristol band have long championed the cultural boycott of Israel.

The Big Vicious version is faithful to the often-covered original, at least until Cohen’s trumpet takes off into the stratosphere. There are shades of another British trip-hop-oriented band, Cinematic Orchestra, on the loungey The Cow & The Calf, with its whimsical whistled refrain. Like most of the album, this is pleasant but hardly adventurous stuff.

Cohen’s trumpet sound moves from a warm burnished tone on the opening Honey Fountain to a piercing, triumphant flight on the second track, Hidden Chamber. It’s one of the strongest pieces, though it ends oddly with a cut-up sample of Ghandi speaking.

That’s followed by the album’s weakest link, King Kutner, where Cohen keeps a low profile and gives free range to rock guitarist Uzi Ramirez and his whammy bar. The bombastic result brings back memories of school rock bands – and indeed it turns out the gunslinger was a schoolmate of Cohen’s. At other times Ramirez is more subtle, echoing Bill Frisell on the watery Teno Neno and the heartfelt ballad The Things You Tell Me.

Cohen’s fourth album for ECM was produced by Manfred Eicher, but it seems as if Tel Aviv producer Yuvi “Rejoicer” Havkin may have a played a bigger role in shaping it. He co-wrote three of the songs, including one of the most exciting, Fractals, which is explosive dark ambient soaked in delay over a South Asian undercurrent. The album closes with Intent, another ambient landscape underpinning some of Cohen’s most affecting playing.

Discography
Honey Fountain; Hidden Chamber; King Kutner; Moonlight Sonata; Fractals; Teardrop; The Things You Tell Me; This Time It’s Different; Teno Neno; The Cow & The Calf; Intent (50.32)
Cohen (t, effects, synth); Uzi Ramirez (g); Yonatan Albalak (g, b); Aviv Cohen (d); Ziv Ravitz (d, live sampling). Carpentras, France, August 2019.
ECM 083 6025

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Jack McDuff and Bill Jennings: Four Classic Albums

This collection features two albums by guitarist Bill Jennings as leader (Enough Said! and Glide On), which I reviewed as recently as 25 April...
Advertisement

Alt. takes 01/19

It’s me, speaking from another dimension . . . I was talking to a colleague a week or so back, about the great change that...
Advertisement

Callum Au: jazz for pleasure

Callum Au's new recording with singer Claire Martin, Songs And Stories, was recently released on the Danish label Stunt. It's an impressive large ensemble...
Advertisement

Pianos, Toys, Music And Noise – Conversations With Steve Beresford

Steve Beresford has throughout his adult life cheerfully ignored the boundaries marked and the walls erected around musical types, but irking purists, always a...
Advertisement

Buster Williams: Bass To Infinity

As deep as Buster Williams’ opening quote in this insightful film on his life is the seductive sound of his bass growling under his...

Bolden

Advertisement

JJ 11/93: Bill Connors – Of Mist And Melting

Thirty years ago Michael Tucker, re-encountering Connors' 1977 album, maintained that contrary to some critical opinion plenty happens
"Cohen’s fourth album for ECM was produced by Manfred Eicher, but it seems as if Tel Aviv producer Yuvi 'Rejoicer' Havkin may have a played a bigger role in shaping it"Avishai Cohen: Big Vicious