I was intrigued to learn that the latest record by cornet player Josh Berman will be a trio with bassist Jason Roebke and Frank Rosaly. His last album was an aggressive avant garde reassessment of the already pugnacious music of the likes of Eddie Condon. This was one of the nest albums over the last few years.
Berman is one of those players who is capable of producing genuinely uncompromising music and maybe one of the most outside approaches on his instrument within jazz, borrowing heavily on extended techniques more usually associated with Improv. The fact that he lists the likes of Bill Dixon, Dave Douglas, Bix and Ruby Braff as influences makes his music intriguing. However, I was wondering why there were just so few trumpet or cornet trios. I think there is a tradition of tenor trios starting from Sonny Rollins and this is no surprise due to the way that the tenor and bass combine so well, with one instrument seeming to absorb the other. I like the idea of hearing a trumpet exposed like this but can only think of Avashi Cohen being the only other example I am aware of. Pitching a trumpet in an exposed scenario like this is perhaps the ultimate risk.
Berman is one of those players who is capable of producing genuinely uncompromising music and maybe one of the most outside approaches on his instrument within jazz, borrowing heavily on extended techniques more usually associated with Improv. The fact that he lists the likes of Bill Dixon, Dave Douglas, Bix and Ruby Braff as influences makes his music intriguing. However, I was wondering why there were just so few trumpet or cornet trios. I think there is a tradition of tenor trios starting from Sonny Rollins and this is no surprise due to the way that the tenor and bass combine so well, with one instrument seeming to absorb the other. I like the idea of hearing a trumpet exposed like this but can only think of Avashi Cohen being the only other example I am aware of. Pitching a trumpet in an exposed scenario like this is perhaps the ultimate risk.
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