The Guardian (USA)

Sam Gendel and Fabiano do Nascimento: The Room review – a tender, complex modern classic

- Ammar Kalia

Few saxophonis­ts are capable of conjuring as many mutant sounds from their instrument as Sam Gendel. Since his 2017 debut, the LA-based instrument­alist has veered from downtempo melodics on 2018’s breakthrou­gh Music for Saxofone and Bass Guitar to woozy, electronic­ally processed versions of jazz standards on 2020’s Satin Doll and deconstruc­ted R&B classics on 2023’s Cookup. Usually producing at least two albums a year, Gendel’s restless creativity challenges what breath can do through woodwind and Midi synthesis.

Taken in this context, Gendel’s latest project is a departure. Featuring only soprano saxophone and Brazilian collaborat­or Fabiano do Nascimento’s seven-string guitar, The Room is Gendel’s most straightfo­rwardly acoustic album, and one of his most affecting.

Coaxing a breathy, whisper-soft sound out of his soprano, Gendel perfectly complement­s Nascimento’s muscular finger-picking harmonics across the album’s 10 tracks. Opener Foi Boto develops a tripping, bossa-influenced guitar groove while Gendel channels his flute-like sound from the saxophone, establishi­ng liquid phrases over the strings. Following numbers Capricho and album highlight Astral Flowers pick up the pace and allow Gendel to soar powerfully within his gentle tone, producing long keening lines over Nascimento’s percussive playing.

Despite its tenderness, The Room isn’t a background listen. Tracks such as Kewere and Poeira are technicall­y complex, with Nascimento playing busy cyclical rhythms while the warmth and breathy punctuatio­n of Gendel’s tone creates an emotive counterpoi­nt, proving that quietude can often produce the greatest impact.

Rather than deliver a pastiche of classic Latin jazz like Stan Getz and João Gilberto’s 1964 sax and guitar album Getz/Gilberto, Gendel and Nascimento’s minimalism establishe­s The Room as an intimate record of its own. Compact yet spacious-feeling, The Room is a celebratio­n of acoustics; a modern classic from two musicians in full command of their instrument­s.

Also out this month

Uganda’s Hakuna Kulala label presents another release from the forefront of the country’s lively electronic music scene. MC Ratigan Era’s Era is a fiery blend of dancehall bass and sparkling synths, putting a gritty twist on the Jamaican genre and anchoring it in Era’s baritone flow. Pan-African supergroup Les Amazones d’Afriqueret­urn with their third album, Musow Danse (Real World). Setting shuddering 808 basslines and snapping electronic drums against their powerful voices, the group produce their most riotously confrontat­ional record yet. Syncopated Latin rhythms and warped electronic­s combine on the debut album from singer and bassist Ëda Diaz, Suave Bruta (Airfono). Diaz’s wistful jazz vocal creates a refreshing contrast with her often raw-edged production style, producing highlights like the frenetic Tiemblas.

 ?? Room. Composite: Katie Walsh ?? No background listen … Sam Gendel (left) and Fabiano do Nascimento combine on The
Room. Composite: Katie Walsh No background listen … Sam Gendel (left) and Fabiano do Nascimento combine on The
 ?? ?? The artwork for The Room
The artwork for The Room

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