Source:
https://scmp.com/culture/music/article/2122406/nine-best-jazz-albums-released-2017-new-jazz-more-ethnic-beats
Culture/ Music

The nine best jazz albums released in 2017, from ‘new jazz’ to more ethnic beats

Among the rich pickings are Vijay Iyer and his funky sextet, superstar bassist Linda May Han Oh, an impressive debut from drummer Kate Gentile, some soul grooves from Nate Smith and a mature solo effort by Craig Taborn

The best jazz albums of 2017 come from new and old faces alike.

Jazz fans have been treated to a range of gems during 2017, from the “new jazz” of Matt Mitchell to the ethnic-influenced sounds from the likes of Vijay Iyer. Here are the albums all jazz fans shouldn’t have missed this year.

Rez Abbasi

Unfiltered Universe

Whirlwind

There was some great jazz this year that drew on musical cultures beyond the United States. Unfiltered Universe seamlessly blends Carnatic music from India with jazz – and having Vijay Iyer, Rudresh Mahanthappa and Dan Weiss in the band is huge. This is the third in a series of recordings, and it is brilliant and exhilarating.
Rez Abbasi’s Unfiltered.
Rez Abbasi’s Unfiltered.

Linda May Han Oh

Walk Against Wind

Biofilia

Bassist May Han Oh is a young superstar – she is playing with Pat Metheny and Dave Douglas, yet the best music she’s making is her own. The quintet assembled for her fourth date is similarly young and thrilling, with Ben Wendel on saxophone, Matthew Stevens (recently with another astonishing bassist, Esperanza Spalding), Justin Brown on drums and Fabian Almazan on piano. The composing featured here is mature and wide-ranging, and it leaves gaping spaces that make the music airy but wise.
Linda May Han Oh’s Walk Against Wind cover.
Linda May Han Oh’s Walk Against Wind cover.

Steve Coleman’s Natal Eclipse

Morphogenesis

Pi

Coleman is making some of the best music of his striking career lately, and this recital is fascinating: based on the motions of boxing yet recorded without a drummer. Despite this absence, the music grooves, swings, pulses and jumps at every turn. Coleman’s collaborators remain impressive: Jonathan Finlayson on trumpet, Matt Mitchell on piano, Jen Shyu on vocals and many more.

Steve Coleman’s Morphogenesis .
Steve Coleman’s Morphogenesis .

Craig Taborn

Daylight Ghosts

ECM

Craig Taborn seems to be everyone’s favourite collaborator these days. His duets with pianist Kris Davis are free wonders, and his collaboration with Miles Okazaki is telepathic. His own music has been wonderful before, but Daylight Ghosts is the most mature of his own recordings.

Craig Taborn’s Daylight Ghosts.
Craig Taborn’s Daylight Ghosts.

Kate Gentile

Mannequins

Skirl

The surprise of 2017 is this debut recording from drummer Kate Gentile. Gentile has been in New York for a while, and she seems to have a particularly fertile musical relationship with pianist Matt Mitchell (including playing on his 2017 masterpiece). But her own composing and band leading make her debut shine.

Kate Gentile’s Mannequins.
Kate Gentile’s Mannequins.

 

Ryan Keberle and Catharsis

Find the Common, Shine a Light

Greenleaf

Keberle is another trombonist/composer whose music is among the most accessible and warm-hearted of the year. Catharsis started as a chordless quartet (two brass plus rhythm), but then added the sinuous and limber voice of Chilean guitarist Camila Meza, turning it into a quintet capable of re-imagining standards, playing tricky modern jazz, or delving into music from South America. Find the Common is a protest album that does all this and more.
Ryan Keberle and Catharsis’ album.
Ryan Keberle and Catharsis’ album.

Nate Smith

Kinfolk, Postcards from Everywhere

Ropeadope

Smith has played the drums with Betty Carter, Dave Holland, Regina Carter, Chris Potter and many more. Kinfolk is a “jazz” record, however, that probably wouldn’t have been possible until recently – a collection that has plenty of authentic, harmonically complex improvising, but also uses soul grooves and vocals to forge a connection back to pop music.

Nate Smith’s Kinfolk.
Nate Smith’s Kinfolk.