
Michael Bisio Travel Music
(2011, Independent)
Travel Music, bassist, composer, and educator Michael Bisioโs first solo release, shouldnโt get lost in the cartful of recordings heโs appeared on thus far this year: pianist Matthew Shippโs brilliant Art of the Improviser, saxophonist Louie Belogenisโs Tiresias, pianist Bob Gluckโs Returning, and a few others (and the yearโs not over). Recorded at Karl Bergerโs 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. Theyโre not as much compositions as they are narratives. In an almost 30-year career, a journeymanโs 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. โLivinโ Large,โ he says, was written โin 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, โmore so than the destination,โ as demonstrated in Bisioโs 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 Coltraneโs โAlabamaโ is more evidence of this, as is his sensitive interpretation of Charlie Hadenโs โHuman Being.โ Michael Bisioโs Travel Music adds to his reputation as one of the most distinctive bassists in creative music. www.michaelbisio.com.
This article appears in October 2011.








