Advertisement
Advertisement

Roberto Magris: Suite!

In brief:
He’s absolutely fluent in the blues-based American tradition, but his playing and his structural ideas bespeak a European sensibility. The two are never in contention but seem to co-exist warmly and always creatively.

Magris continues on his warmly imperious way. There are few more exciting and satisfying composers around at the moment and it’s a measure of his gifts in that direction that he also chooses fascinating material to cover. This two CD set kicks off with a reading of In The Wake of Poseidon, which King Crimson fans will immediately recognise as one of Robert Fripp’s classics.

He closes the date with John Lennon’s Imagine, less promising material for a jazz group, one might have thought, but carried off with grace and imagination. He also covers the Santana-associated One With The Sun, with a few standards, including variations on Summertime, Too Young To Go Steady, and Never Let Me Go.

Advertisement

But it’s Magris’s own writing and arranging that really carries the day. His is a mid-Atlantic sensibility. He’s absolutely fluent in the blues-based American tradition, but his playing and his structural ideas bespeak a European sensibility. The two are never in contention but seem to co-exist warmly and always creatively.

The band he has assembled for this one are not always the most individual and certainly not idiosyncratic, but they play the music, rather than asserting themselves and that’s what these charts call for.

A Message For A World To Come and The Island Of Nowhere are striking examples of what Magris is about. There’s a stout humanism to his imagination. He’s too chastened to be a utopian, but it’s hard to come away from this fine record anything but uplifted.

Buy Roberto Magris: Suite! at https://jmoodrecords.bigcartel.com/product/194171616150

Discography
CD1: In The Wake Of Poseidon; Sunset Breeze; A Message For A World To Come; Too Young To Go Steady; Suite!; Circles Of Existence (48.50)
CD2: (End Of A) Summertime; Perfect Peace; (You’re My Everything) Yes, I Am!; Love Creation; One With The Sun; Never Let Me Go; Chicago Nights; The Island Of Nowhere; Imagine; Audio Notebook (52.20)

Eric Jacobson (t); Mark Colby (ts); Magris (p, elp); Eric Hochberg (b); Greg Artry (d); P.J. Aubree Collins (v).
J Mood 018

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Ahmad Jamal: Four Classic Albums

Double-CD set collects four Jamal LPs including At The Pershing, which sold 47,000 at a time when 15,000 was big news for a jazz album
Advertisement

Still Clinging To The Wreckage 07/21

He was called “the indestructible Wild Bill”, and when he died at his home in Santa Barbara on 14 November 1989, the Eddie Condon...
Advertisement

The peace of Pipedream

Keith Tippett's recent passing sent me scurrying back to the percentage of his discography that I have on record; the exercise disclosed facets of...
Advertisement

Sight Readings: Photographers And American Jazz, 1900-1960

Alan Ainsworth is a photographer with specialist interests in jazz performance and contemporary architecture. His book, published in February 2022, surveys a range of...
Advertisement

John McLaughlin/Paco De Lucia/Larry Coryell: Meeting Of The Spirits

A guitar summit, held in the Royal Albert Hall in 1979, Meeting Of The Spirits brings together three musicians with a collective background in...
Advertisement

JJ 10/79: Dick Morrissey & Jim Mullen – Cape Wrath

It takes a good deal of invention, strength and sheer willpower to overcome the limitations of rockjazz - the monotonous, often unswinging rhythm section...
He’s absolutely fluent in the blues-based American tradition, but his playing and his structural ideas bespeak a European sensibility. The two are never in contention but seem to co-exist warmly and always creatively.Roberto Magris: Suite!