Jamie Branch

Album Reviews: Anteloper’s Pink Dolphins, I Am’s Beyond and Bennie Maupin and Adam Nussbaum’s Symphonic Tone Poem for Brother Yusef

Three sets of improvisational duos go out… way out, on new albums.  Jaime Branch has injected vital punk energy into the improvised music scene during the past several years.  The trumpeter puts her healthy irreverence to good use in Anteloper, a collaboration with percussionist Jason Nazary.  Thanks to the deft production of Jeff Parker, the wavy Pink Dolphins might even appeal to fans of Animal Collective.

Reading Tony Whyton’s Beyond a Love Supreme: John Coltrane and the Legacy of an Album last week put me in the proper headspace for I Am’s Beyond.  Saxophonist Isaiah Collier and drummer Michael Shekwoaga Ode channel the polarizing 1967 album Interstellar Space with uncompromising ferocity.

Skronky but slightly less confrontational, Symphonic Tone Poem for Brother Yusef features the veteran innovators Bennie Maupin and Adam Nussbaum.  Mixing electronics with organic sounds, the saxophonist and percussionist pay tribute to the late Yusef Lateef.  Pink Dolphins and Beyond are very good, but the old guys show the kids how it’s done in their exceptional ancient-to-the-future collaboration.