"Talking about music is like dancing about architecture." - Thelonious Monk

Sep 5, 2010

ANAT FORT TRIO - And If


My 5 year old son recently made up a good game. We put on some music, launch the iTunes visualizer (must be the Classic not the new one which is dull) and then say things the patterns suggest or make us feel like. He comes up with sentences like ‘I feel like an astronaut playing with shooting stars’, or ‘I’m swimming in a dinosaur’s stomach’. The other day I put on And if by the Anat Fort trio, launched the visualizer and almost immediately he said; ‘It feels like I’m exploring inside a clock’. And in some ways he’s spot on. These ten pieces of exquisitely rendered music are all explorations in time and space played with the tenderness and touch of someone blessed by angels.

Israeli Anat Fort who shares her time between her homeland and NYC is a relative newcomer on the trio scene but is someone I suspect will be a leading light in it for years to come. This new release, only her second ECM album has all the hallmarks of the classic label; beautifully recorded, amazing piano, hi-fi separation between drums, Roland Schneider, and bass, Gary Wang, and a sonorific, ethereal mix that you can lose yourself in after just a few bars. This really is beautiful music for all ages. As Butch said to Sundance, ‘Who are these guys?’. My backlog of reviews is growing and growing as new talents like Anat keep arriving and redrawing the boundaries of trio music.

With touches of Jarrett’s gospel inflections and Crispell’s space and compositional economy, Fort is nonetheless a new original voice that we must savour and delight in. Her association with Paul Motian, another lifelong explorer and master of time, on her previous recording is celebrated in two eponymous pieces top and tailing the set which float on a beautiful slow tempo of time remembered, memories past and love. As the final cymbal sizzle fades we get 12 more seconds of silence to give us time to re-enter the world – we need it. The rolling Clouds’ Moving and tender Minnesota see the trio exploring Americana flavours with an ease of expression and lightness of touch I seldom hear so sensitively played. The canon-like En If embodies a deep focused train of thought and the near 10 minute Something ‘Bout Camels is the collection’s masterpiece full of eastern nuance, finessed harmonic structure and rhythmic interplay of the highest order. Lanesboro is full of longing and paints a more classical picture to accompany the soulful Minnesota, a place I’ve never heard celebrated in Jazz but which obviously plays a significant part in Fort's affections. And just in case you were wondering, Nu shows that she can get down in the grit and grime of the funk with the best of them.

This is deeply romantic, evocative art. I end listening to the 50 minute set wanting to weep for all the beauty in the world or for all its dilemmas or both. I still don’t know which but I do know that this is music that will help you understand your own soul.