Ann Reynolds/Clave Gringa
Joy
Self-Released
Even the most die-hard of straight-ahead jazz enthusiasts can’t deny the music’s deep historical relationship with the music of Latin America and its diasporas. On her latest release, Joy, Seattle-based pianist and composer Ann Reynolds reverses the formula, tried-and-true since the Blue Note era, of the Latin-jazz b-side, with a collection of Cuban-inspired compositions.
An attentive and heartfelt musician, Reynolds found a muse in the culture of Cuba in 2000. Her efforts learning the islands’ complex mix of styles and traditions brought about Para Cuba con Amor (2014). Her sophomore effort returns to the complex, sometimes erratic, but always animated divisions of emotions in Cuban music through recordings with Cuban musicians and teachers, as well as her Northwest-based ensemble Clave Gringa.
Reynolds never loses sight of the music’s collaborative essence, a fact which Joy benefits greatly from. On the languid, bitterly sweet “I Never Meant to Love You,” Seattle’s ubiquitous Kelsey Mines (bass) gives a singingly melodic solo, contrasted by Steve Smith’s (percussion) widespread rhythmic work. Similarly, Daniel Barry (trumpet) adds a word in on “Searching” with his elegant flugelhorn solo.
Conga master Lalo Bello and Honduran percussionist Ricardo Güity add to the 6/8 rhythms of the West-African inspired “Searching” and to the bristling swing of a heart-on-the sleeve tribute to bop, “Dizzy Monk.” Vocalist Kate Voss even throws her hat in the ring on “Lada Mambo.”
With her Cuban band, Reynolds spotlights the vibrant emotional and rhythmic world of the Cuban community. Its musicians, including leaders in the scene such as trumpeter Julito Padrón, pianist Roberto Carcassés, as well as younger artists such as percussionist Maria de la Paz Fernández, and flutist Josué Borges, play with abandon on Joy. Not only have these artists expanded Reynold’s view on the world, but with their inclusion, listeners of Joy can find them expanding their own, too.
–Ian Gwin