Hamid Drake | Nicole Mitchell | Harrison Bankhead | Michel Edelin | Indigo Trio | The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest | RogueArt Jazz

rogueart jazz

Nicole Mitchell: flute, alto flute, piccolo | Harrison Bankhead: double bass, piano | Hamid Drake: drums, frame drum | Michel Edelin: flute, alto flute

Recorded on January 29th and 30th 2011 by Didier Houbre at Downtown Studio, Strasbourg, France. Mixing and mastering: Jean-Pierre Bouquet, L’Autre Studio, Vaires-sur Marne, France. Liner notes: Howard Mandel. Photographs: «ROGUEART». Cover design: Max Schoendorff. Cover realisation: David Bourguignon, URDLA. Producer: Michel Dorbon

This recording was made possible thanks to the help of Pôle Sud, Strasbourg, France, where Indigo Trio and Michel Edelin played the night before the recording. RogueArt warmly thanks Philippe Ochem, Brigitte Ochem, Alain Py, Joëlle Smadja and the all Pôle Sud Team.

Tracklist: 1. Top Secret (9:23) 2. Inside the Earth (5:07) 3. Dérives (5:07) 4. Wind Current (9:05) 5. Call Back (6:46) 6. The Ethiopian Princess Meets the Tantric Priest (7:42) 7. Ambre Sunset (6:32) 8. Return of the Sun (6:13)

Hamid Drake | Nicole Mitchell | Harrison Bankhead | Michel Edelin | Indigo Trio | The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest | rogueart jazz

Nicole Mitchell and Michel Edelin

are two of the most creative flutists in music of any sort today, brilliant improvisers with highly developed sensitivities to sound. Yet their personal approaches to playing one of the oldest instruments in the world represent two far ends of an esthetic spectrum… … So The Ethiopian Princess Meets the Tantric Priest demonstrates what happens when opposite poles touch. Like a marvel of physics, the reverberations generate something new: in this case, previously unimagined dimensions of pure song. The sonic spheres the Princess and the Priest conjure – with wonderful support from bassist/pianist Harrison Bankhead and drummer Hamid Drake – are akin to what’s born by a spirit of the air in congress with a guardian of the earth… — Howard Mandel, excerpts from the liner notes

Hamid Drake | Nicole Mitchell | Harrison Bankhead | Michel Edelin | Indigo Trio | The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest | rogueart jazz

Key musicians from the Chicago scene

Nicole Mitchell, Harrison Bankhead and Hamid Drake, created the Indigo Trio about six years ago. Since then, they’ve been exploring a musical field that faces the avant-garde of the improvisation. Indigo Trio has produced some noticeable records, including Live In Montreal (Greenleaf, 2007), Anaya (RogueArt, 2008). For The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest, Indigo Trio invites French flautist Michel Édelin to share in the music.

The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest includes eight tracks, with four Mitchell compositions, two from Édelin and one from Bankhead, along with the collective improv of the title track. Mitchell and Édelin play all kind of flutes: concert flute, alto, bass, piccolo and wooden flute, Bankhead swaps bass for piano on “Return Of The Sun,” and Drake plays both his kit and frame drum.

Indigo Trio’s musical approach is full of singularities. First, the quartet sounds peculiar: the slender high-pitched metallic flutes contrast with the low woody bass and the deep animal drums. The music relies also on shades, the flutes drawing sinuous lines while the rhythm section creates a groove-centric background (“Wind Current”). The group plays free (“Top Secret”), close to contemporary music (“Inside the Earth”), with an African touch (“The Ethiopian Princess Meets the Tantric Priest”) and almost mainstream (“Ambre Sunset”). Whatever the direction, the music always remains linked with melody and pulse.

Subtle and sensuous, Drake’s drumming swings constantly and shows a wide range of tints: minimalist (“Top Secret”), thick (“Dérives”), tense (“Wind Current,” “Return of the Sun”), and even near-bop (“Ambre Sunset”). Bankhead abounds in ideas, going from a fast walking bass (“Top Secret,” “Wind Current,” “Ambre Sunset”) to hypnotic loops (“Call Back”) and compelling patterns (“Wind Current”). Bankhead also bows curves (“Dérives,” “The Ethiopian Princess Meets the Tantric Priest”) and shrill passages (“Top Secret”).

As far as the Ethiopian Princess and the Tantric Priest are concerned, they light the fireworks with tactful dialogues (“Top Secret”), almost Debussy-like questions and answers ( “Dérives”), stylish counterpoints (“Return of the Sun”), spinning duets (“Call Back”), impetuous reshufflings (“Ambre Sunset”), majestic moments (“The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest”) and funny pieces reminiscent of Rahsaan Roland Kirk (“Call Back,” “Ambre Sunset”). The musical connivance between Mitchell and Édelin finds its roots in the kind of free music without borders that both artists have been developing for years, in the steps of the AACM, John Coltrane, and Don Cherry.

The Ethiopian Princess Meets The Tantric Priest is not a musical meeting between Ethiopia and India—and is even less a cocktail of African rhythms and Indian raga, nor a mixture of jazz and world music. Instead, Lucy and Shiva meet together to play their own music, genuine and powerful.— Bob Hatteau

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