Album Notes Golden Rule

ALBUM NOTES

                      ‘Music is not mate­ri­al, Music is Spi­ri­tu­al’. With this one line from what may be his ear­liest poem[1], Sun Ra sets befo­re our minds what our ears and heart know to be true: music is a power, a for­ce, and a mys­te­ry that can chan­ge our way of being, our way of knowing. Music is spi­ri­tu­al. And while the roots of jazz grew from spi­ri­tu­al tra­di­ti­ons, it was the music of Sun Ra from the 1950s and espe­cial­ly John Coltrane’s record­ings from the mid-1960s that defi­ned spi­ri­tu­al jazz as we know it today. Modal, impro­vi­sa­tio­nal, medi­ta­ti­ve, testi­fy­ing, dro­ning, poly­rhyth­mic and bla­zing, spi­ri­tu­al jazz opens the mind to com­ple­xi­ty that is simp­le and sim­pli­ci­ty that is complex.

                Spi­ri­tu­al jazz has a long line of mas­ter prac­ti­tio­ners, from Coltrane’s con­tem­pora­ries inclu­ding Albert Ayler, Ornet­te Cole­man, Cecil Tay­lor, Yusef Lateef and Pha­ro­ah San­ders, to con­tem­pora­ry artists like Nat Bir­chall and Shabaka Hut­chings. Muri­el Grossman’s immer­si­on in the powers and tra­di­ti­ons of this par­ti­cu­lar cur­rent of jazz has been deve­lo­ping through her last several albums and here in ‘Gol­den Rule’ she and her band draw deep on the musi­cal prac­ti­ces that evo­ke the transcendent.

                        Muri­el Gross­man was born in Paris to Aus­tri­an par­ents and grew up in Vien­na whe­re she star­ted clas­si­cal stu­dies on flu­te at age 5. When she swit­ched to saxo­pho­ne and jazz at age 21, she says she lear­ned most­ly from lis­tening to records. She also credits Ger­man jazz pia­nist Joa­chim Kühn, with whom she later stu­di­ed, as having a gre­at impact on her musi­cal direc­tions. Her sources of inspi­ra­ti­on are wide and inclu­de a ran­ge of jazz giants from saxo­pho­nists such as Eddie Lock­jaw Davis to gui­ta­rists like Grant Green. Howe­ver, the sym­bio­sis of sounds that she crea­tes on this album – with Ser­bi­an gui­ta­rist Rado­mir Milo­j­ko­vic, Aus­tri­an bas­sist Gina Schwarz, and Ser­bi­an drum­mer and per­cus­sio­nist Uros Sta­men­ko­vic – remains most clo­se­ly ali­gned with the works of Coltrane.

                     The spi­rit in sound which this group crea­tes will be rea­li­sed in dif­fe­rent ways for each lis­tener. Per­so­nal­ly, I’m hoo­ked from the micro­to­na­li­ties which open the first track and whis­per of the insights and illu­mi­na­ti­ons to come; wit­hin a few seconds the gui­tar, bass and drums have con­ju­red a shim­me­ring land­s­cape across which the sopra­no saxo­pho­ne sets off, as if on a quest, or a jour­ney of dis­co­very. On every track, Milojkovic’s poin­til­listic gui­tar work is spell­bin­ding. The­re is also a kind of ‘hid­den mys­tic’, as Gross­man descri­bes it, to each num­ber, the result of judi­cious, almost sub­li­mi­nal, dro­ne instru­men­ta­ti­on that rewards repeated lis­tening. The­re are deep pools of peace and reflec­tion as in the slow and medi­ta­ti­ve ‘Direc­tion’, with Gross­man on tenor and a pro­bing bass solo by Schwarz. And always, abo­ve, below, around, the­re is the spi­rit of Coltrane.

                         The album tit­le ‘Gol­den Rule’ signals a com­mit­ment to reci­pro­ci­ty and respect: ‘do unto others as you would have them do unto you’. This basic pre­mi­se of social har­mo­ny and human digni­ty is com­mon to both reli­gious tra­di­ti­ons and huma­nist princi­ples, and it is this belief in our abi­li­ty to crea­te coope­ra­tively and to live in peace that under­lies the beau­ti­ful sounds of this album.
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[1] ‘The Neglec­ted Pla­ne of Wis­dom’ first appeared in a Saturn Records pro­spec­tus in 1965 or 66, but pos­si­b­ly dates from 1955, accord­ing to James L. Wolf and Hart­mut Geer­ken in their edi­ted book of Sun Ra’s poe­try and pro­se, ‘The Immea­sura­ble Equa­ti­on’ (Wai­ta­while, 2005), p. 250.
 Micha­el Jack­lin (@jazzozmentis)


REVIEWS

JAZZQUAD, Bela­rus Sep/2018 by Leo­nid Aus­kern visit the page here

                        Muri­el Gross­mann — GOLDEN RULE The fourth acquain­tance with the music of Aus­tri­an saxo­pho­nist and com­po­ser Muri­el Gross­mann, who is living in Spain. Without detrac­ting from the merits of Muriel’s works that I heard and wro­te about ear­lier (EARTH TONES (2015), NATURAL TIME (2016), MOMENTUM (2017), I con­si­der her new pro­ject Gol­den Rule to be the crea­ti­ve pin­na­cle of this talen­ted jazz lady and her stron­gest work up to this date.

                  Also Gol­den Rule was recor­ded like the last three albums by Muriel’s Aus­tro-Ser­bi­an quar­tet with gui­ta­rist Rado­mir Milo­j­ko­vic, bas­sist Gina Schwarz and drum­mer Uros Sta­men­ko­vic. The album is publis­hed in two ver­si­ons – 2x12’ LP and CD, which is due to appe­ar by the end of the year with a slight­ly redu­ced com­po­si­ti­on Tran­eing In (without a four-minu­te intro). The Cd dif­fers also in the design of the cover. In our review, the cover of the vinyl album is repro­du­ced. The album is very solid in terms of dura­ti­on: more than eigh­ty minu­tes of sound, only seven tracks all tog­e­ther. The lon­gest, Tran­eing In (almost nine­teen minu­tes of sound), took the who­le side of one of the vinyl records. But the point, of cour­se, is not the length, but the qua­li­ty of the music.

                     I have never heard Muri­el Gross­mann have so much expres­si­on and inspi­ra­ti­on in her play­ing on both her instru­ments, on the sopra­no saxo­pho­ne (as in the star­ting pie­ce of Gol­den Rule), and on the tenor saxo­pho­ne (as in the next Core). Muriel’s long, unusual­ly emo­tio­nal impro­vi­sa­ti­ons are fol­lo­wed by Milo­j­ko­vic’s ans­we­ring and ela­bo­ra­ting gui­tar solo, then to give way to a new, equal­ly expres­si­ve and tech­ni­cal­ly diver­se saxo­pho­ne solo. Muri­el plays in this album as if it is the last time in her life! All this action takes place against the back­ground of fle­xi­ble poly­rhyth­mic con­struc­tions crea­ted by the rhythm group (in my opi­ni­on, this album beca­me the most striking per­for­mance for Sta­men­ko­vic). When in the pie­ce Pro­mi­se or in the final, medi­ta­ti­ve com­po­si­ti­on Light, the tem­po beco­mes some­what more mode­ra­te, this does not affect the qua­li­ty of the per­for­mance. In Direc­tion, Grossmann’s saxo­pho­ne impro­vi­sa­ti­ons are well recei­ved in an excel­lent dou­ble bass solo by Gina Schwarz. And from the point of view of gui­tar work, the top of Milo­j­ko­vic, for my tas­te, is in the com­po­si­ti­on Tra­ne.

                          It is worth remem­be­ring, that Muri­el con­si­ders as one of her main tea­chers, the famous Ger­man free jazz pia­nist Joa­chim Kühn. Perhaps the extra­or­di­na­ry free­dom of expres­si­on reigning in GOLDEN RULE is, to a cer­tain extent, due to its influ­ence. Well, and, final­ly, the main source of inspi­ra­ti­on, the eter­nal light of many Jazz genera­ti­ons alrea­dy — John Col­tra­ne. It is not by chan­ce that one of the pie­ces of Gross­mann in this album is named after him, and the name of the other is the neo­lo­gism of Tran­eing In (liter­al­ly: “Inha­ling”). Tra­ne, espe­cial­ly the late Tra­ne, regar­ded music as a kind of sac­red, spi­ri­tu­al act. Fol­lowing him, Muri­el Gross­man aspi­res to the same spi­ri­tua­li­ty in her music, and — damn it! — She’s gre­at at it!

                                 The liner notes aut­hor Micha­el Jack­lin exp­lains the tit­le of the “Gol­den Rule” album by the famous bibli­cal (and world­ly) maxim: “Tre­at others as you would like them to tre­at you”. It’s hard to argue with that. But with refe­rence to the work of Muri­el Gross­mann, a dif­fe­rent inter­pre­ta­ti­on can be made here: “Go your own way. per­fect yourself, set yourself more and more hig­her tasks.” The new album of Gross­mann, in my opi­ni­on, is a mas­ter­pie­ce reflec­ting exact­ly such an approach. Leo­nid Auskern

DOWNBEAT, USA, Dec 2018, p. 64 by Andrew Jones 

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                  The phra­se “spi­ri­tu­al jazz” packs a pro­mi­se and a thre­at. It plays into a mytho­lo­gy about the exis­tence of a jazz that total­ly trans­cends com­mer­cial and mate­ri­al con­cerns. It also threa­tens the pre­pon­der­an­ce of someo­ne exp­lai­ning how they’re spi­ri­tu­al, but not reli­gious. On her new album, saxo­pho­nist Muri­el Gross­mann avoids both the­se traps. Gol­den Rule con­veys medi­ta­ti­ve tran­qui­li­ty and ecsta­tic joy without ever sound­ing over­ly pious. Most of the time, it’s also a lot of fun.

                  A cho­rus of instru­ments dro­ne behind a num­ber of tracks on GOLDEN RULE, but Grossmann’s per­for­mance real­ly is what makes it excep­tio­nal. Crisp drum and bass lines start off the stel­lar “Direc­tion” as a gui­tar comps hyp­no­ti­cal­ly and Gross­mann show­ca­ses her abi­li­ty to get the best of a tune melo­di­cal­ly. She plays a solo so lyri­cal every bar feels like a dis­cre­te com­po­si­ti­on. Bas­sist Gina Schwarz fol­lows with simi­lar­ly inven­ti­ve solo, the swir­ling dro­ne below len­ding depth and color.

               Gol­den Rule proud­ly wears John Coltrane’s influ­ence, and “Tran­eing In” demons­tra­tes Grossmann’s pro­wess on the sopra­no saxo­pho­ne. Schwarz under­pins the song with the spell­bin­ding bass line that chan­ges its pat­tern to gre­at effect when gui­ta­rist Rado­mir Milo­j­ko­vic takes a knot­ty, soul­ful solo. The tight­ness this group has built in its four years of play­ing shar­pens its brisk take on the composition.

                      The prac­ti­ce of medi­ta­ti­on deeply shar­pens Gol­den Rule. The dro­nes under­ly­ing its tracks heigh­ten the ten­si­on on cer­tain offe­rings, but feel mono­to­nous after a while. For­tu­n­a­te­ly, the dyna­mism of its soloists and the quartet’s tele­ki­ne­tic per­for­mance deli­vers the album’s aim: pro­vi­ding a lis­tening expe­ri­ence akin to trans­cen­dence. Andrew Jones

 

UKVIBE, UK, 26th Nov 2018 by Mike Gates visit the page here

              The ques­ti­on: What would you say defi­nes “spi­ri­tu­al jazz”? A power­ful expe­ri­ence? An evo­ca­ti­ve jour­ney? Music that trans­cends all time and place? Music that tou­ches your heart and streng­t­hens your soul? A sound that is at once explo­ra­ti­ve and free, whilst also giving a satisfy­ing sen­se of belon­ging? An incom­pre­hen­si­ble cos­mic ener­gy that hel­ps you feel groun­ded wit­hin an ever-chan­ging uni­ver­se? The ans­wer: Yes. All of this and more. Abo­ve all it is a con­nec­tion, with yourself, man­kind, and the world around you, a kind of medi­ta­ti­ve awa­ke­n­ing, as if to say “Ahh yes, this is it”. You can feel it. Your sen­ses rea­wa­ken and your mind is quiet­ly focus­sed. You let it all in, and breathe.

                  Few albums tru­ly cap­tu­re this spi­rit in such a con­sist­ent­ly start­ling and beau­ti­ful way. This one most defi­ni­te­ly does. Muri­el Grossmann’s “Gol­den Rule” embraces the ground­brea­king, explo­ra­to­ry jazz of Sun Ra and John Col­tra­ne, gives a very respect­ful nod to fel­low con­tem­pora­ries Nat Bir­chall and Shabaka Hut­chings, and immer­ses its­elf in a swirl of trans­cen­den­tal expres­si­on. Timeless and inno­va­ti­ve, this is one migh­ty state­ment of a recording.

                     Born in Paris to Aus­tri­an par­ents, saxo­pho­nist and com­po­ser Muri­el Gross­mann grew up in Vien­na, star­ting clas­si­cal stu­dies at the age of 5. When she swit­ched to saxo­pho­ne, dis­co­vering jazz at the age of 21, her musi­cal direc­tion chan­ged. Alt­hough lear­ning most­ly from lis­tening to records, Gross­mann also credits Ger­man jazz pia­nist Joa­chim Kühn, with whom she later stu­di­ed, as having a gre­at impact on her musi­cal­ly. Her sources of inspi­ra­ti­on are wide, inclu­ding a ran­ge of jazz giants from saxo­pho­nists such as Eddie “Lock­jaw” Davis, to gui­ta­rists like Grant Green. It is howe­ver, the sym­bio­sis of sounds crea­ted on this album, with Ser­bi­an gui­ta­rist Rado­mir Milo­j­ko­vic, Aus­tri­an bas­sist Gina Schwarz, and Ser­bi­an drum­mer and per­cus­sio­nist Uros Sta­men­ko­vic, that clo­se­ly link the music back to the works of Coltrane.

                   There’s an intri­guing sonic palet­te to Grossmann’s music. As the album begins, ope­ning with the tit­le track, I was immedia­te­ly drawn to the almost whis­pe­red sounds that move and shim­mer, acting as a back­drop to the tune its­elf. Perhaps my musi­cal adven­tures in life have been less adven­tur­ous than I thought, but this is some­thing qui­te uni­que in the way that the sounds are sen­si­tively and intel­li­gent­ly laye­red. It’s a litt­le like ASMR (Auto­no­mous Sen­so­ry Meri­di­an Respon­se), only in a good way! (I’m not a fan). And it’s a stro­ke of musi­cal geni­us, allowing the musi­ci­ans to explo­re and impro­vi­se on top of the core of the tune, and the sonic land­s­cape that lives and brea­thes behind that.

                     The initi­al bass-line on “Gol­den Rule” to my mind quiet­ly echoes the spo­ken words “A Love Supre­me”, as Grossmann’s sax sets off on a new and evol­ving jour­ney. “Core” con­ti­nues in a simi­lar vein, with perhaps more of a knowing glance to fel­low con­tem­pora­ry Nat Bir­chall. A fea­ture of the who­le record­ing is the depth of sound, lar­ge­ly crea­ted by the drums and per­cus­sion, hid­den secrets are gra­du­al­ly reve­a­led and the more I lis­ten, with luscious bass dri­ven groo­ves fuel­ling the fire as a beau­ti­ful sax shaped Phoe­nix rises from the fla­mes, the more I can hear the traces of histo­ry pro­pel­ling the music for­ward into new, unknown territories.

                     “Pro­mi­se” is a tune I can lose mys­elf in time and time again. It somehow speaks to me. This is the beau­ty of Grossmann’s com­po­si­ti­ons, but more over, the sen­se of con­nec­ted­ness I feel with the musi­ci­ans them­sel­ves. It’s as if I’m sharing their jour­ney whilst dis­co­vering my own. The slower, con­tem­pla­ti­ve “Direc­tion” is one of tho­se tunes you just don’t want to end. It’s a medi­ta­ti­on, expres­si­ve and inclu­si­ve, sear­ching and expe­ri­en­cing, reaching and grasping, rela­xing and finding.

                  “Tran­eing In” is the lon­gest pie­ce on the album. It opens with vibes, per­cus­sion and expe­ri­men­tal sounds, remin­ding me of Keith Jarrett’s “Spi­rits”. Milojkovic’s gui­tar takes cent­re-place, lea­ding the other instru­ments on an adven­ture into their own con­scious­ness. And then it all comes tog­e­ther in a spar­k­ling burst of light as the band-leader’s sopra­no sings out with an efferve­scent bridge of light. This is exci­ting and rich­ly rewar­ding music.

                          “Tra­ne” is almost tran­ce-like, using mul­ti-laye­red saxes to crea­te a won­der­ful palet­te of sound. The tex­tu­ral ope­ning gives way to an infec­tious groo­ve, with bass, drums and gui­tar all com­bi­ning per­fect­ly to allow the tenor sax to soar with unbrid­led aban­don. The clo­sing track “Light” is like a homage to what has come befo­re, warm­ly cele­bra­ting its musi­cal ances­tors in an uplif­ting and respect­ful way, step­ping through doors ope­ned by pre­de­ces­sors and wal­king bold­ly into the light.

                     For tho­se of you who enjoy your spi­ri­tu­al jazz, this album is an abso­lu­te must-have. Muri­el Grossmann’s Quar­tet evo­ke the true beau­ty, sin­ce­ri­ty and joy of Col­tra­ne, whilst suc­cess­ful­ly musi­cal­ly sin­ging out in their own voice, crea­ting new ide­as with a refres­hing ver­ve and skill. “Gol­den Rule” is qui­te sim­ply an incredi­ble album, inven­ti­ve, full of cha­rac­ter, and to my ears, a musi­cal joy to behold. Mike Gates