Nicole Mitchell | Joëlle Léandre | Dylan van der Schyff | Before After | rogueart jazz
Category: music label and artists| July 28th, 2012Nicole Mitchell | Joëlle Léandre | Dylan van der Schyff
BEFORE AFTER
Joëlle Léandre: double bass | Nicole Mitchell: flute, alto flute, piccolo | Dylan van der Schyff: drums, percussions
Recorded live on July 3rd 2009 by Simon Garber at Roundhouse Community Center, Vancouver (Canada). Mixing and Mastering: Jean-Marc Foussat. Liner Notes: Alexandre Pierrepont. Photographs: X, Bob fila, Dexter van der Schyff. Cover Design: Max Schoendorff. Cover Realisation: David Bourguignon, URDLA. Producer: Michel Dorbon
This performance took place as part of the 2009 Vancouver International Jazz Festival. RogueArt warmly thanks Ken Pickering, Raibow Robert and the Coastal Jazz & Blues Society
Tracklist: 1. Before before (17:26) 2. After Before (8:48) 3. Before After (9:15) 4. After After (7:39)
Download listen to Mitchell, Leandre, Van der Schyff | After Before (excerpt)
Download listen to Mitchell, Leandre, Van der Schyff | After After (excerpt)
17 EURO incl. shipment cost world-wide
Never one voice above the others
all voices fan-shaped in the presence of oneself and the other. To all that, one verb in all tenses – before, during, after – and for a thousand and one actions: to play, to make what has just been said, written, or dreamed play, always in a spirit of rapture. To make things play to bring out the beauty of things into a state of existence. — Excerpt from the liner notes, written by Alexandre Pierrepont
In September 2011
French double bassist Joëlle Léandre will celebrate her 60th birthday. To mark the occasion, Leo has already released a fine double-disc featuring Léandre in a tentet and a trio. Now, Before After deserves to take pride of place alongside it. Recorded live at Roundhouse Community Center, as part of the 2009 Vancouver International Jazz Festival, Before After finds Léandre in a trio with Vancouver resident, drummer and percussionist Dylan van der Schyff plus Chicagoan Nicole Mitchell on flute, alto flute and piccolo.
Mitchell is a virtuoso flautist who regularly tops the Rising Star Flute section in the Downbeat Critics’ Poll, 2011 being the latest occasion. She is a fluent soloist able to improvise flowing melodic lines while maintaining a warm, full-bodied tone. Even in the upper register, she never produces the kind of shrillness that turns some listeners away from jazz flute; on the contrary, she seems likely to make converts to it. She has a particularly impressive solo feature at the start of “After Before.” (With impeccable logic, the album’s four tracks are entitled “Before Before,” “After Before,” “Before After” and “After After.”)

Dylan van der Schyff
With such a soloist, it would have been easy for this trio to become flute plus rhythm section — but it is not in the nature of Léandre or van der Schyff to just play that role, adept as they can be at it. Instead, the trio frequently becomes an equal three-way conversation dominated by none of them, best demonstrated on the title track. Léandre is in a characteristically playful mood, investing the music with a happy-go-lucky lightness. As so often, she underpins the trio, subtly shaping and steering its music with her contributions. In typical fashion, these include her use of voice as well as double bass. Later on in the extended opening track, as it’s in danger of flagging, Léandre injects wordless vocals into a duet with the flute, soon joined by van der Schyff. It provides just the shot in the arm the piece requires and sees it through to a thoroughly satisfying conclusion.
Time and again, Léandre demonstrates that she is adept in the art of the duo, either with Mitchell or van der Schyff… or even between her own bass and voice. On “After Before,” we are treated to a call-and-response section between bass and flute that bursts with playfulness and invention. The bassist does not steal the show — that would be out of character. Instead, the album ends up as a delightful case study in successful trio improvisation. – By John Eyles
Flutist Nicole Mitchell’s strong attachment to the Vancouver creative scene
has borne unpredictable fruit. She has been an artist in residence at the city’s International Jazz Festival from 2006-2010, but it was only when bassist Joëlle Léandre was likewise featured, in 2009, that the two combined, along with Vancouver native Dylan van der Schyff behind the drums, for the performance documented here as Before After.
Over four collective inventions in a 43-minute program, the three participants reach an understanding predicated upon exploration of texture, an egalitarian outlook and the unforced melding of advanced techniques. Léandre is the mistress of such irregular meetings, bringing her formidable classical technique to bear in kaleidoscopic outpouring, sometimes abrasive but not afraid to be tuneful. As always, her voice is an important part of her armory and in that she finds common ground with Mitchell whose wonderful vocalized flute lines continually dance on either side of the divide separating instrument and larynx, spiced with unexpected low growls and flutters. She sounds like no-one else, having extended the legacy of pioneering flutist James Newton, thanks to the opportunities afforded by her higher pitched voice to blend ambiguously with her instrumental sound. Van der Schyff takes a back seat in such esteemed company, but he nonetheless acquits himself well, with his everything-but-the-kitchen-sink clatter providing a subtly evolving backdrop.
Assured self-expression and unfettered interplay form the dominant suit. The opening “Before Before” proposes a propulsive give and take, affirming that flute and arco bass make an alluring combination, particularly noteworthy in the final interweaving of bowed harmonics and blown upper partials. Mitchell is prominent at the start of “After Before,” her breathy alto flute intro demonstrating the full extent of her prowess before the Frenchwoman’s energetic sawing precipitates a game of chase. Once the drummer adds momentum, Mitchell switches to piccolo, producing extreme contrasts of pitch with Léandre’s rich bass register.
Van der Schyff introduces “Before After” through an engaging examination of dynamics, pitching sharp crashes against faint taps and modulated percussion, presaging a duet with the bassist’s darkly melodic abstractions, while the concluding “After After” revisits some of the territory from the opener after an initial duet for timbrally adventurous percussion and Mitchell’s patented flute/voice amalgam. Although Léandre can tend to dominate in some settings, if anything there is a slight tentativeness to this set which occasionally cries out for someone to take proceedings by the scruff of the neck to inspire fireworks inherent in the lineup. But no matter, there should be enough sparks to satisfy followers of either woman. – John Sharpe
Download listen to Mitchell, Leandre, Van der Schyff | After Before (excerpt)
Download listen to Mitchell, Leandre, Van der Schyff | After After (excerpt)
17 EURO incl. shipment cost world-wide
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