The Guardian (USA)

Brandee Younger and Dezron Douglas: Force Majeure review – perfect marriage of harp and bass

- John Lewis

Brandee Younger is a classicall­y trained harp player who you may have heard guesting with the likes of Lauryn Hill, Common, Drake and the Roots. Under her own auspices, she has been developing a jazz vocabulary for the harp, building on the achievemen­ts of Adele Girard, Dorothy Ashby, Alice Coltrane and Zeena Parkins. As well as being an instrument dominated by women (Younger’s latterday peers include Laura Perrudin, Alina Bzhezhinsk­a, Destiny Muhammad, Rachael Gladwin and Carol Robbins) the harp is notoriousl­y difficult for non-harpists to write for, and its music has developed largely through the experiment­ation of its practition­ers, who are able to exploit its unique melodic characteri­stics and variable decay times.

Younger has recorded several albums fronting her own quartet but it is in spartan settings that you really appreciate her technique and harmonic intelligen­ce. Force Majeure was recorded in the New York home she shares with her husband, the bassist and producer Dezron Douglas, and follows on from duets that the couple livestream­ed each Friday morning under lockdown. The harp and the double bass make great sonic partners: they reinforce each other through shared resonance, and Douglas’s serpentine, busy bass lines often sound like extensions of Younger’s harp.

For all the slapdash presentati­on and between-song banter, this is a delightful piece of chamber music.

Modal jazz classics by Pharoah Sanders and the Coltranes rub shoulders with heavenly, harmonical­ly rich readings of soul standards such as You Make Me Feel Brand New by the Stylistics and Clifton Davis’s Never Can Say Goodbye, with Younger lurching from modal flourishes to the more chromatic, bop-influenced improvisat­ions of Dorothy Ashby. On Kate Bush’s This Woman’s Work, Younger’s tumbling phrases sound like an African kora; on originals such as Toilet Paper Romance, she shimmers like an entire string section.

Force Majeure is released on 4 December on Internatio­nal Anthem records.

Also out this month

Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii (Birmingham Record Company/NMC) is an album of compositio­ns by Joe Cutler, the centrepiec­e of which is a three-part saxophone concerto featuring Trish Clowes. Part one is a piece of quizzical, fin-desiècle romanticis­m; part two a cartoonish riot; part three a nightmaris­h slab of dystopian science-fiction, where Clowes’s tenor sax seems to serve as the sole representa­tive of humanity.

In a Word is part of a series of “intergener­ational” collaborat­ions on the FRKWYS label, here featuring 78-year-old American post-minimalist composer Daniel Lentz and 39-yearold Canadian artist Ian William Craig. The standout moments see Craig’s androgynou­s, ghostly voice flutter over Lentz’s slowly mutating, Harold Buddlike piano phrases, all the time being artfully distressed by tape manipulati­on.

Bristol-based film composer Alexandra Hamilton-Ayresrelea­ses 2 Years Stranger (Manners McDade) an album written during an extended period of grieving. It’s based around funereal phrases played on a clunky upright piano, which are slowly orchestrat­ed using burbling synths, washes of white noise and spartan, icy string orchestrat­ions, all to devastatin­g emotional effect.

 ??  ?? Great sonic partners ... bassist Dezron Douglas and harp player Brandee Younger. Photograph: Deneka Peniston
Great sonic partners ... bassist Dezron Douglas and harp player Brandee Younger. Photograph: Deneka Peniston
 ??  ?? Brandee Younger and Dezron Douglas: Force Majeure album cover
Brandee Younger and Dezron Douglas: Force Majeure album cover

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