Mitch Kessler
Erratica
(Sunjump Records, 2008)

โ€œWait for it.โ€ That suspenseful phrase heard in countless cinematic moments seems to have been echoed by alto and tenor saxophonist Mitch Kessler for some time. Recorded in 2008 at NRS Studio in Catskill, the Albany residentโ€™s long overdue debut release, Erratica, is comprised of eight originals that tumble out of the post-bop bag and feature Hudson Valley jazz stalwarts pianist John Esposito, bassist Ira Coleman, and drummer Peter Oโ€™Brien. Erratica is technically adventurous (โ€œThe Sixth Marx Brotherโ€) as well as arrestingly cerebral (โ€œBrain Freezeโ€). But it also has its strikingly tender parts, like the ballad โ€œBibi Andersson,โ€ with Kesslerโ€™s wilting, wavering tones draped by the glistening runs of notes from Esposito, who produced Erratica for his Sunjump label. This group, though, seems to groove at a high-thermometer reading. After Espositoโ€™s opening solo, โ€œGoblins in Loveโ€ becomes aglow in white heat, tempered by the loping, melodic lines of Kessler. โ€œPanicโ€ is an arm-wrestling match between Oโ€™Brien and Kessler. Oโ€™Brien brings about as much smack and crackle as Kessler can propel, in short, jabbing statements. In โ€œDeconstructing Post Modernist Dilletantism,โ€ the ensemble jumps through narrow portals with an abandonment of fear. Itโ€™s Espositoโ€™s proximity to Thelonious Monk and Kesslerโ€™s to saxophonist Charlie Rouse that harkens back to Monkโ€™s tenure at the Five Spot in New York in the late โ€™50s. Like Monk, Esposito holds you suspended in the air during his solo, wondering when heโ€™s gonna drop you dizzily to the ground. Erratica points straight ahead to another release by Kessler in the future. www.sunjumprecords.com

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