John Fordham 

Steve Coleman Council of Balance: Synovial Joints review – ambitious but cordial maths-themed jazz

Steve Coleman’s long-held preoccupation with expressing mathematical patterns in music informs this entrancing album
  
  


American saxophonist and composer Steve Coleman’s Functional Arrhythmias album had an untypical mellowness for this uncompromising artist, and this one takes that musical cordiality even further. Coleman’s decades-long mission has been to integrate mathematical regularities found in nature, astronomy and philosophy into improv music, and this expansion of his Five Elements band to a 21-piece – adding jazz, Latin and contemporary-classical musicians – is his most ambitious yet open-handed tilt at it. Lean, pithy themes still snap and swerve in Coleman’s signature manner, but the blend of elegant cello undertows and cool alto-sax melody on Acupuncture Openings, the warm trombone and string sounds on Celtic Cells, and the title suite’s tuba hooks and Afro-Cuban percussion are unexpectedly and consistently entrancing. Sometimes it sounds like an early New Orleans jazz band playing a film noir soundtrack with dashes of free-improv and salsa; in any case, Coleman’s rigour as a composer and improviser governs all of it.

 

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