Showing posts with label Hiromi Uehara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hiromi Uehara. Show all posts

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Hiromi Uehara - Silver Lining Suite

Styles: Piano
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:16
Size: 152,1 MB
Art: Front

( 9:57) 1. Silver Lining Suite: Isolation
( 7:11) 2. Silver Lining Suite: The Unknown
( 9:09) 3. Silver Lining Suite: Drifters
( 7:27) 4. Silver Lining Suite: Fortitude
( 7:57) 5. Uncertainty
( 5:29) 6. Someday
( 5:00) 7. Jumpstart
(10:01) 8. 11:49 PM
( 4:00) 9. Ribera del Duero

Never one to take a safe, familiar route, pianist Hiromi (Uehara) has composed a classical quintet for her superb new album performed by, well, a classical quintet. That’s to say that her keys merge with a standard string quartet (violinists Tatsuo Nishie and Sohei Birmann, violist Meguna Naka, cellist Wataru Mukai) to play a highly melodic four-part suite with complex arrangements, as well as five additional tracks. The “classical” in question is European classical, albeit with large jazz components.

First and foremost, all but one of the album’s nine tracks are intensely percussive and staccato. (The other, “Uncertainty,” is a mellifluous solo recital.) The effect tends to be less of Schumann and Brahms than, say, Penguin Café Orchestra or the theme from Downton Abbey. That said, there are delightful chamber-music moments in play: A third of the way through “The Unknown,” the suite’s second movement, Hiromi plays a series of flowing ascending chords, then allows pizzicato violins to scamper back down the scale as she doodles around them with single-note lines. On “11:49,” the strings come together to mark off a syncopation that ticks like the second hand on a stopwatch, then suddenly stops to let Hiromi imitate a decisive, if discordant, chime.

Each tune (again excepting “Uncertainty”) also leaves plenty of room for jazz-informed improvisations. Though the strings were ostensibly chosen for their facility with jazz language, in practice they merely accompany Hiromi’s jazz language, which is formidable. She plays giddy games with rhythm on “Isolation,” the suite’s opener; offers a thoughtfully energized counterstatement to the melancholia of the theme to “Drifters” (the third movement); and turns the wistfulness in the title of “Someday” into foot-stamping impatience.

Recorded while quarantining in Tokyo, Silver Lining Suite came about due to unique circumstances that make its music unlikely to enter Hiromi’s regular performing repertoire. It should, however, enter your listening one.
https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/hiromi-silver-lining-suite-concord-jazz/

Personnel: Hiromi Uehara – piano; Wataru Mukai – cello; Meguna Naka – viola; Tatsuo Nishie – violin; Sohei Birmann – violin

Silver Lining Suite

Monday, June 26, 2017

Hiromi - Brain

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:31
Size: 143,3 MB
Art: Front

( 6:53)  1. Kung-Fu World Champion
( 7:11)  2. If...
( 5:43)  3. Wind Song
( 9:05)  4. Brain
( 7:08)  5. Desert on the Moon
( 4:38)  6. Green Tea Farm
(10:02)  7. Keytalk
(10:47)  8. Legend of the Purple Valley

Japanese pianist and composer Hiromi Uehara dazzled the jazz world with her 2003 debut, Another Mind. Its mash of keyboard pyrotechnics and range of compositional styles was multiplied exponentially by her irrepressible energy. On that set she used variously sized ensembles to articulate her compositions. On Brain, Hiromi strips it back to a trio and offers a more intimate look at her wide musical universe, utilizing drummer Martin Valihora, bassist Tony Grey (both fellow Berklee College of Music alums), and alternately bassist Anthony Jackson. The album opens with the wacky "Kung-Fu World Champion" with its mélange of sequenced keyboards. It's a fusion tune to be sure, but it's so kooky and funky that it transcends the label despite its reliance on staggering time signatures and stop-on-air turnarounds and changes. It's a careening tour de force where electronic keyboards and pianos are layered over a scattershot rhythm that pulls and pushes the deep pocket funk and strafes it with a post-bop sensibility. Grey's bassing here is so choice, so utterly fluid and physical. But it's back to jazz on "If..." with Jackson taking the bass chair. It's a strolling soul-jazz figure, bubbling over a series of chromatically arranged ostinati. Its beauty is crystalline despite all the activity. "Wind Song" is a mid-tempo ballad with beautiful ringing lines in the middle register. 

Its repetitive figure shifts and shapes an alternate melodic line in the solo.The knottiness of the title track offers a close, scrutinizing view of Hiromi's mad muse; using her piano to articulate a figure she creates a warped and angular counterpoint with electronic keyboards keeping the rhythm section striating in between, with precise interstitial motifs before the entire cut gives way to a blessed out of minor key prelude on the piano and her rhythm section dancing around the changes in hushed tones. The centerpiece of the set is a stunningly beautiful tune called "Green Tea Farm." A solo piece, it is pastoral. In sum, Hiromi has built upon her previous effort by stripping down her band and showcasing the less physical but no less ambitious side of her improvisational and compositional flair. Her sound might still be confounding to the purists, but who cares? Hiromi is a jazz pianist for the new century, one whose "yes" to the wealth of musical styles that are available to her is only eclipsed by her ability to work them into a unique whole that bears her signature. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/brain-mw0000220366

Personnel: Hiromi Uehara (piano); Anthony Jackson, Tony Grey (bass); Martin Valihora (drums).

Brain

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Chick Corea & Hiromi Uehara - Duet (CD1) And (CD2)

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 114:27
Size: 262,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:15)  1. Very Early
( 7:38)  2. How Insensitive
( 9:02)  3. Deja Vu
( 6:47)  4. Fool On The Hill
( 7:51)  5. Humpty Dumpty
( 8:45)  6. Bolivar Blues
( 7:46)  7. Windows
(14:59)  8. Old Castle
( 8:51)  9. Summertime
( 8:13) 10. Place To Be
(13:02) 11. Do Mo (Children's Song #12)
(12:11) 12. Concierto De Aranjuez (Spain)

At least one of the participants here, pianist Chick Corea, is an old hand at great duets. He has performed and recorded with Herbie Hancock, Ralph Towner, and Gary Burton. Here, his partner is the Japanese pianist Hiromi, and the sparks quietly fly and flare throughout. Corea has long been one of jazz’s most lyrical pianists, and his influence is obvious on the younger Hiromi. Her style, however, is a bit punchier, and more rhythmic--this makes for fine contrast between the two. On this double-disc live opus, the pair offset each other beautifully, engaging in give-and-take on originals (by each) and choice covers (the Beatles’ “Fool On The Hill”).  http://www.allmusic.com/album/duet-mw0000805866