MURIEL GROSSMANN — UNION
LINER NOTES from the original album cover:
Muriel Grossmann’s music had an immediate impact on me from the moment I first heard it. It was music with dedication, speaking from the heart. I felt it speaks of past and present, with joy and happiness. Ten seconds into listening and I was hooked. I was all over the web trying to find a vinyl copy, but strangely enough there wasn’t any available. Without a second thought we decided to get in touch with Muriel and ask how that is possible. And behold, before long, we were listening to the premix of ”Golden Rule”. I remember being inside of that record for the first time and having this feeling you get when you don’t really want to leave a place anymore. This was music performed with a great artistic concentration, integrity and energy. I felt a genuine love listening to the first side.
After the record ”Golden Rule” received good reviews, got accolades from record collectors around the world, was voted best record of 2018 by UK VIBE and was nominated for the Jazz Album Of The Year for the Gilles Peterson Worldwide Awards, Muriel Grossmann and the band were back to their usual routine, performing, touring and recording the follow up to ”Golden Rule”, a formidable record entitled ”Reverence”. While the record was still in the making, I called Muriel and told her that it would be great to finally meet in person. Muriel suggested we meet on her forthcoming tour of the Balearic Islands in early autumn of 2019. I proposed immediately to make a short road movie about that tour and that the band should record live if possible. The task of capturing a live performance at the concert proved to be impossible, but she managed to book a two-day recording session in Mallorca studio Caja Del Ruido with an actual Hammond B3. I remember we arrived one day prior to the gig in Mallorca to make a recording session the same day. Gina Schwarz — the bass player — could not make it so early though, and it took Llorenç Barceló by surprise. While warming up his fingers on the Hammond he realized that Gina was not going to participate in the recording session and he had to step into her territory. But after all, Muriel just wanted to capture the live set and she did it exceptionally and with grace.
The set opens in a cool tempo when the band enters into a deep meditation, playing ”HAPPINESS” with Muriel picking up the tenor saxophone in a composition from her 2016 album ”Natural Time”, a compositional embodiment and a reminder of why she caught the wide interest and imagination of dedicated listeners. When Llorenç picks up the groove on the Hammond bass pedals, you can instantly feel the tension growing and from that moment on, I realized it’s going to be one hell of a ride. Radomir Milojkovic takes the first solo, playing intricate bebop lines coupled with extraordinary excursions into blues. He pays a passionate and heartful homage to his guitar heroes — Wes Montgomery, Pat Martino, Grant Green and George Benson. After the guitar solo Muriel brings the band back into a meditation, playing an airy and atmospheric solo, taking the road less traveled. The way the band accompanies Grossmann is state of the art in delivering the true sense of the musical expression ”to accompany a soloist”. The third soloist, Llorenç Barceló, displays his deep knowledge and dedication for the Hammond as an instrument and for the masters that played it. Barceló’s attention to details, refined language and musicianship shines through this well executed solo, bringing to mind such icons of the instrument as Lonnie Liston Smith, Don Patterson, Larry Young, Sonny Phillips and Richard Groove Holmes. Llorenç Barceló’s unique way of playing and thinking was confirmed in a conversation that I held with him where he explained to me how he built up his first Hammond organ from scratch, buying piece by piece online. All this heavy-duty playing is guided by a steady ”hand that rocks the cradle” embodied in the masterful, hard swinging and grooving man behind the drum set, Uros Stamenkovic, the rhythm man who digs deep into a groove, embracing the performance as a whole.
On the second tune ”TRANEING IN” all guns are blazing. The composition from her celebrated record ”Golden Rule” is played here in a slightly faster tempo, a soprano saxophone workout dedicated to none other than John Coltrane. Grossmann takes charge, displaying her perfect melodic sense and storytelling skill while leading the ensemble into an energetic trance. The band responds with elastic multidirectional grooves, psychedelic soundscapes and superimposed harmonies, which proves to be a powerful ending for Side A.
Side B opens up with one of my all-time favourites ”SUNDOWN”, a composition from the 2019 record ”Reverence”, which was at that time only being road tested, since this session took place while the recording of ”Reverence” was still in full flow. I remember meditating during the recording of this song and drifting into a state of semi-consciousness between the two takes, because I felt so relaxed, the music detaching me from reality. In the beginning Barceló gives a hint of an already familiar bass line on the upper keys, before he abandons it at the same time as Radomir Milojkovic pulls out the slide, confirming that it wasn’t a one-off when he played his stellar slide solo on the composition ”Wien” from their last 2020 record ”Quiet Earth”. While the slide guitar in ”Wien” was played more in a Muddy Waters tradition, here in ”SUNDOWN” it serves as a cinematic backdrop and counterpoint to Muriel’s gorgeous, gentle and soothing tenor playing. Altogether it creates an empowering experience, which really allows you to step into a place and a time reflecting your inner being and inner direction feeling substantially connected to nature and the universe.
Then you wake from a dream when the band pumps up the tempo once again on the vibrant composition called ”AFRICAN DANCE”, which was first recorded for the aforementioned album ”Natural Time”. Stamenkovic gets into the burning hard, driving up-tempo Afro-Cuban rhythm, while Grossmann delivers motifs and short burst phrases, this time on the alto saxophone. Milojkovic and Barceló are locked into an infectious riff that makes you want to put on your dancing shoes and start jumping, pumping and shouting. It is an intense performance encompassing the trademark sound of this band, which gets under your skin after just a few bars.
The album closes with another tune from the record ”Reverence” that was also a part of a live set at that time, an impeccable piece of music called ”UNION”. Uros Stamenkovic plays a great Milesian groove and the whole band gets into the trance, while Grossmann delivers the melody in shaman-like fashion. It is free from fears and totally disconnected from belief systems and in its culmination you can feel the divine spiritual connectedness of this group as they deliver an exercise in sound that embodies a UNION.
In the context of this record and the previous ones, we can clearly talk about Muriel Grossmann’s music as a style of music that is distinctive and recognizable from the very first note. If there is any remotely positive side to the situation that the whole world has found itself in, it is that this record is able to see the light of day, which otherwise would have been unlikely, since Muriel already had her follow up to ”Reverence” composed and ready for recording. As it turned out, both records ”Quiet Earth” and ”Union” got their opportunity to be heard rather than being shelved deep in the recording vaults.
As Muriel told me on the road:
“True kindness and compassion are arising from the understanding that all things are interacting interdependently, are connected but constantly changing, somehow impermanent. And it is through this kindness and compassion that we are united.”
Liner Notes by Dmitri Kalinin
REVIEW in UK VIBE by Mike Gates
It’s all too easy sometimes to get stuck in the past. I do it myself, often. And with album releases this year such as Coltrane’s Love Supreme Live in Seattle, and reissues like Mankunku Quartet’s Yakhal Inkomo, just to name a couple of examples, we can see why. If, however, we turn our attention to the present day, it is incredibly heartening to know that the spirit of Coltrane lives on. Two artists, in particular, embody the true meaning of the master’s music in their own very special way; saxophonists Nat Birchall and Muriel Grossmann.
Over the last few years, Birchall and Grossmann have both managed to successfully shine a beautiful light on Coltrane’s legacy, whilst composing and performing new original music that is undoubtedly their own, breathing new life into the style of music that Coltrane, and others, began some fifty-plus years ago.
Having listened to, and thoroughly enjoyed, Muriel Grossmann’s last few albums, it’s particularly pleasing to hear a slight change of direction on her latest release, “Union”. OK, so maybe the words ‘slight change of direction’ are a little too strong, but I do detect a gentle shift in emphasis on this recording. It is perhaps more down to the band line-up and choice of instrumentation more than anything else, but there seems to me to be a richer, fuller, more uncompromising vibe to this session that I really like. It’s an incredibly powerful sound that if anything, harks back to some of Elvin Jones’ classic 70’s Jazz Machine albums like “Remembrance”, rather than the aforementioned inspirations from the ’60s.
“Union” kicks off with the very impressive “Happiness”, a tune originally recorded on Grossmann’s 2016 release “Natural Time”. Radomir Milojkovic’s focussed guitar and Uros Stamenkovic’s punchy drums get straight into the groove. Grossmann’s cosmic melody lines work particularly well with the mellow, bass-driven chordal improvisations of Lorenc Barcelo’s Hammond organ. The band are so together, journeying on and outward as the tune progresses in its own compelling magnificence. “Traneing In” is a wild romp through more unchartered territory, Grossmann’s soprano sax soaring above an almost Alt/Country music guitar riff. Guitar and Hammond solos feature strongly, cutting in against the ever-present full-steam-ahead drums. A backdrop of percussive textures and spiritual sounds greet the listener on the meditative “Sundown”. Originally recorded for the 2019 album “Reverence”, an empowering experience flows through the music, subtle slide guitar adding to the atmosphere of this wonderful tune. “African Dance” revels in its celebratory vibe, its upbeat Afro-Cuban rhythms punctuated perfectly by Grossmann’s gorgeously effervescent and soulful tenor sax playing. The title track “Union” is trance-like in nature, and Grossmann’s stunning, uplifting sax playing takes this piece into a different stratosphere altogether. The spiritual connectedness of the whole band plays a major part in making this tune so compelling and rewarding.
And so, once more, Muriel Grossmann has delivered a wonderful album for our ears, hearts, and minds, to sit back and enjoy. As with many things in life, this music allows us to look back, whilst staying in the moment of the here-and-now. And it is such a beautiful moment. You can’t help but go with the flow. Open up to it and enjoy it. Mike Gates, UK VIBE
Completely stunning music from the marvelous Muriel Grossmann – a saxophonist who’s become one of our favorite jazz talents over the course of the past decade – thanks to deeply spiritual work like this! The album’s got a Hammond organ, something you’re not as always likely to see in a session like this – played by Llorenc Barcelo with these open lines that are filled with mystical currents and colors, and which provide a perfect accompaniment to Grossman’s well-crafted solos on tenor and soprano sax! Guitarist Radomir Milojkovic grounds the sound with some slightly straighter lines, but still with a rhythmic pulse to match the modal vibes of the tunes – a quality that’s driven forward deeply by the drums of Uros Stamenkovic. If you’ve not heard the music of Muriel Grossman before, you’re in for a treat – and if you have, your collection of really special albums just got one record bigger! DUSTY GROOVE, CHICAGO
⇐ back to shop page