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Saturday, December 31, 2022

Jazz Selections for 2022

 

My selections for the year’s best jazz releases appear below. I discovered some of these releases while I was sick with Covid and only able to sit in front of the television. I called up YouTube and added Gondwana Records in the search bar and then while bundled up in blankets, I started listening to Jasmine Myra and Chip Wickham.

There were a few other releases that I discovered during the year, but I haven’t listened to them often enough to make a definitive decision as of yet. Sometimes I return to records released in previous years, such as Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd’s Jazz Samba, which was released in 1962 and which I prefer over the album Getz/Gilberto. I also stumble onto more recent releases that I had missed when they were initially released, such as Hania Rani's Esja.

My selections below appear in no particular order. Three of them can be found at Bandcamp

Jasmine Myra, Horizons 

This debut album contains Jasmine Myra's own compositions and a band of talented musicians from the north of England. One memorable track is titled "Words Left Unspoken," which was written for Myra's grandmother who died during the pandemic. Many of the titles emphasize distance and create an overall melancholic feel to the music. Even so, this album places emphasis on melody. One critic when reviewing this album called for more dissonance, which wouldn't have fit at all. I look forward to hearing more of Jasmine Myra's music.


Chip Wickham, Astral Traveling

Released as a kind of preview to Wickham's Cloud 10, this album of three tracks, containing  22 minutes of music, is meant to be savored during the quiet times of day. The title track emphasizes the harp and Wickham's tenor saxophone. Wickham's flute is more prominent on "Sais (Egypt)." If I were one to astral project, I would want to return to my body to hear this music. 



Matthew Halsall, Changing Earth 


One memorable track from this EP is the one named "Upper Space." The return of the melody towards the close of this track makes me want to hit the repeat button and to listen to the entire album again and again. 




Tord Gustavsen Trio, Opening 

The addition of Steiner Raknes on bass has allowed Tord Gustavsen to experiment with different sounds. This album has been one that has been playing in my alarm clock for several months now. I love waking up to it.



Tuesday, December 06, 2022

Background Behind Chapbook

 

The author copies of my chapbook Listening for Low Tide arrived yesterday. I am very pleased to see twenty-five of my poems brought together in this chapbook. 

These poems were written over a period of about thirty-four years. The earliest one, “Sitting Alone, Listening,” dates from 1987 or 1988. That poem was a breakthrough poem for me because it contained my natural writing voice. Both my wife and my friend Derick Burleson have said a lot of good things about this poem; that's partly why it's included.

What connects these poems is an emphasis on listening. I am acutely aware of sound, and that awareness makes itself known in these poems.

I probably have spent hundreds of dollars entering chapbook contests. Over a period of years, I took out poems, added other ones, rearranged the poems, and changed the title several times, only to have editors say things like your poems emphasize a single theme, or your poems are too prosy and too subtle.

After seeing my wife format the winning chapbook and the finalist for our first chapbook contest, and after seeing how well they looked, I decided to let her set up my chapbook. She had been encouraging me to publish with our press, Choeofpleirn Press. We started with a trial chapbook a few months ago. That chapbook then went through another revision, and I solicited blurbs before we published Listening for Low Tide. Although we could have used a picture from Canva, I decided to use one of my own pictures. The cover picture may seem out of place with the idea of a low tide, but the picture matches what appears in the title poem.

Thirteen of the twenty-five poems are appearing for the first time in this chapbook. One downside to including poems not having been published first in literary journals is that I now have fewer poems to send out, but that problem provides more incentive to write new poems and to revise some of the other poems that I have written.

A paper copy of my chapbook is available at Amazon. An ebook for less money is available directly through our press, Choeofpleirn Press.

With the exception of a revised "Kneeling in Prayer," the poems of mine included within this blog are not part of this chapbook. Some of the poems can be found at the following links: Apple Valley Review and Dragon Poet Review and Poetica Review. Those poems published at Dragon Poet Review have undergone a few revisions. "Stenciling Another Kill" in Poetica Review has been revised as well. Apple Valley Review nominated "Those Nights" for the Pushcart.