Josh Berman



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Josh Berman is an internationally recognized cornetist and composer. He has led the acclaimed Old Idea, Josh Berman and his Gang, and his own trio. In addition to being an indispensable contributor to Chicago’s jazz and improvised music scene, Berman has been a concert presenter with fellow Chicagoan Mike Reed, producing hundreds of shows over the past 20 years. Berman’s work has been critically acclaimed in the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, JazzTimes, and DownBeat, among others. His recordings can be found on the Chicago’s legendary Delmark Records and more recently on Austin’s Astral Spirits Records


Jason Adasiewicz's Rolldown
Varmint


Jason Adasiewicz –  vibraphone
Josh Berman – cornet
Aram Shelton – reeds
Jason Roebke – bass
Frank Rosaly – drums


Varmint is the sophomore follow up to Rolldown (482 Music, 2008), the self-titled debut of vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz’s quintet. Inspired by the avant-garde innovations of such late 1960s Blue Note recording artists as Eric Dolphy, Andrew Hill, Bobby Hutcherson, Jackie McLean, and Grachan Moncur III, Adasiewicz continues to explore the tenuous divide between inside and outside forms, while gradually developing his own sound.

From supple kaleidoscopic shadings to ringing, metallic cascades, Adasiewicz’s dynamic versatility as an improviser has made him a ubiquitous presence in the prolific Chicago jazz scene. His current side-man duties include work with Josh Berman’s Old Idea, James Falzone‘s Klang, The Lucky 7’s, Rob Mazurek‘s Quintet and Exploding Star Orchestra, and Mike Reed‘s Loose Assembly, among others.

Joined by a tight and responsive unit, his five year old ensemble features a formidable line-up. Cornetist Josh Berman and alto saxophonist Aram Shelton convey labyrinthine themes with a mixture of playful lyricism and pithy fervor as bassist Jason Roebke and drummer Frank Rosaly effortlessly navigate fractured rhythms and vacillating tempos.

Though an exploratory late 1960s Blue Note vibe continues to permeate Adasiewicz’s writing, his own originals have become more salient and distinctive. Eschewing a previous dependence on modal structures and rubato rhythms, most of these new compositions utilize unorthodox chord progressions, contrapuntal head melodies, angular intervals, odd meters, and irregular bar lengths for their structural foundation.

Only the knotty abstraction “Hide” and the moody tone poem “Punchbug” continue to embrace modal forms. Breaking from the Post-War vibe, Berman’s coruscating brass smears on the former and Shelton’s gnarled clarinet cadences on the later are distinctly modern in approach.

The title track, featuring a thorny but swinging theme, is indicative of Adasiewicz’s newfound approach. Punctuated by blistering double time interludes from the rhythm section, the tune’s vacillating meter inspires stirring solos from Berman, Adasiewicz and Shelton, who play to and against the shifting undercurrent. “Green Grass,” similarly alternates a diaphanous melody with hypnotic ostinatos, fueling jagged statements from Shelton and the leader.

An air of ethereal introspection permeates the genteel ballad “I Hope She Is Awake,” while “Dagger” evinces a moody noir atmosphere with a languid series of cubist chord progressions, allowing Roebke a rare, unaccompanied turn in the spotlight. The set culminates with a faithful rendition of Andrew Hill’s “The Griots,” bringing the session conceptually full circle.

An impressive follow-up to a solid debut, Varmint finds Adasiewicz growing as a composer and improviser, shedding his influences while discovering his voice.

-Troy Collins, All About Jazz, 2009