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Vijay Iyer|Uneasy

Uneasy by Vijay Iyer, Tyshawn Sorey, Linda May Han Oh

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Although it stems from a work that Iyer originally crafted back in 2011, one could hardly imagine a better title for a 2021 album release than Uneasy. As the world wobbles onto its post-pandemic footing and the United States begins to take stock of the social and political toll from years of continued divisiveness, any optimism or forward motion one may feel is almost always tempered by the reality of that which came before. That anger and frustration with the past and the resultant realism about the future is at the core of the pianist's first trio album for ECM since 2015's Break Stuff. Like that outing, Uneasy relies on tight, confident interplay between three highly skilled and unique musicians, but this lineup is all new, featuring double-bassist Linda May Han Oh and drummer Tyshawn Sorey.

Iyer's skills as a player, composer, and collaborator have since grown considerably and Uneasy is an excellent showcase for all of them. "Children of Flint" and "Combat Breathing" are stunning compositions, focusing on the human costs of political negligence and malfeasance, forces that have unmistakably driven the uneasiness behind the album's title. "Children of Flint" is the more rigorous of the two, opening the album in a dramatically unfolding manner, but "Combat Breathing" definitely holds its own, finding a sturdy groove that's fueled by fire—not funk—and culminating in a cluster of sonics that evaporates into the ether like so much tear gas. The interplay between the three players is remarkable throughout, most notably on the dramatic "Entrustment," which relies on telepathic communication between the rhythm section and Iyer's piano; likewise, "Retrofit"—a piece written for sextet and appropriately complex—gets handled deftly by these three, giving each plenty of opportunity to shine. Of course, it's Iyer's piano work that holds down the entire affair, and as he wends through the dense, melodic "Touba," he manages to evoke Coltrane's spiritual-era changes, but with a more pensive vibe, while on the solo piece "Augury," his playing is both insistent and introspective. On Uneasy, Iyer continues his unique balancing act of presenting complex and demanding compositional ideas in a framework that's welcoming and accessible, with players who see eye-to-eye and can help execute that vision in a way that's imaginative and invigorating. © Jason Ferguson/Qobuz

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Uneasy

Vijay Iyer

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1
Children Of Flint
00:06:26

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

2
Combat Breathing
00:07:50

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

3
Night And Day
00:09:33

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer - Cole Porter, ComposerLyricist

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

4
Touba
00:07:17

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer - Mike Ladd, Composer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

5
Drummer’s Song
00:06:47

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer - Geri Allen, Composer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

6
Augury
00:03:29

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

7
Configurations
00:09:27

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

8
Uneasy
00:09:11

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

9
Retrofit
00:06:40

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

10
Entrustment
00:05:06

Vijay Iyer, MainArtist, Piano, Composer - Linda May Han Oh, MainArtist, DoubleBass - Tyshawn Sorey, MainArtist, DrumKit - Manfred Eicher, Producer - Ryan Streber, RecordingEngineer, MixingEngineer - Christoph Stickel, MasteringEngineer

℗ 2021 ECM Records GmbH, under exclusive license to Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

Review: Vijay Iyer, Tyshawn Sorey, Linda May Han Oh - Uneasy

Although it stems from a work that Iyer originally crafted back in 2011, one could hardly imagine a better title for a 2021 album release than Uneasy. As the world wobbles onto its post-pandemic footing and the United States begins to take stock of the social and political toll from years of continued divisiveness, any optimism or forward motion one may feel is almost always tempered by the reality of that which came before. That anger and frustration with the past and the resultant realism about the future is at the core of the pianist's first trio album for ECM since 2015's Break Stuff. Like that outing, Uneasy relies on tight, confident interplay between three highly skilled and unique musicians, but this lineup is all new, featuring double-bassist Linda May Han Oh and drummer Tyshawn Sorey.

Iyer's skills as a player, composer, and collaborator have since grown considerably and Uneasy is an excellent showcase for all of them. "Children of Flint" and "Combat Breathing" are stunning compositions, focusing on the human costs of political negligence and malfeasance, forces that have unmistakably driven the uneasiness behind the album's title. "Children of Flint" is the more rigorous of the two, opening the album in a dramatically unfolding manner, but "Combat Breathing" definitely holds its own, finding a sturdy groove that's fueled by fire—not funk—and culminating in a cluster of sonics that evaporates into the ether like so much tear gas. The interplay between the three players is remarkable throughout, most notably on the dramatic "Entrustment," which relies on telepathic communication between the rhythm section and Iyer's piano; likewise, "Retrofit"—a piece written for sextet and appropriately complex—gets handled deftly by these three, giving each plenty of opportunity to shine. Of course, it's Iyer's piano work that holds down the entire affair, and as he wends through the dense, melodic "Touba," he manages to evoke Coltrane's spiritual-era changes, but with a more pensive vibe, while on the solo piece "Augury," his playing is both insistent and introspective. On Uneasy, Iyer continues his unique balancing act of presenting complex and demanding compositional ideas in a framework that's welcoming and accessible, with players who see eye-to-eye and can help execute that vision in a way that's imaginative and invigorating. © Jason Ferguson/Qobuz

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