Michael Bisio
Travel Music
(2011, Independent)

Travel Music, bassist, composer, and educator Michael Bisioโ€™s first solo release, shouldnโ€™t get lost in the cartful of recordings heโ€™s appeared on thus far this year: pianist Matthew Shippโ€™s brilliant Art of the Improviser, saxophonist Louie Belogenisโ€™s Tiresias, pianist Bob Gluckโ€™s Returning, and a few others (and the yearโ€™s not over). Recorded at Karl Bergerโ€™s Sertso Studio in Woodstock, six of the eight compositions were written by part-time Upstater Biso and reflect a relaxed tempo of playing, as well as of his temperament. Theyโ€™re not as much compositions as they are narratives. In an almost 30-year career, a journeymanโ€™s reflections on the music he continues to produce.

Bisio says he was ready to make Travel Music last year even as he immersed himself in the projects of others. โ€œLivinโ€™ Large,โ€ he says, was written โ€œin real timeโ€ during a CIMP Records session with a quartet. He performs with wiry energy that smoothly dissipates into the melody at the end. The solemn title tune holds a respect for the journey, โ€œmore so than the destination,โ€ as demonstrated in Bisioโ€™s patient delivery of each phrase. Whether bowed or plucked, there seems to be no end to the lyricism in his playing. His version of John Coltraneโ€™s โ€œAlabamaโ€ is more evidence of this, as is his sensitive interpretation of Charlie Hadenโ€™s โ€œHuman Being.โ€ Michael Bisioโ€™s Travel Music adds to his reputation as one of the most distinctive bassists in creative music. www.michaelbisio.com.

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