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Myriad3 Moons Press Myriad3 // MOONS (2016 Alma Records) Press: Braithwaite & Katz; Jane Harbury Publicity The Moons of Myriad3 JazzTimes Magazine (Online) May 28th, 2019 By Travis Rogers [ http://jazztimes.com/community/articles/172050-the-moons-of-myriad3 ] Myriad3 has been working together for over five years and the musical relationship has deepened to the point where their current album Moons (ALMA Record ACD52062) became an inevitability. It is a phenomenally creative and interactive conversation between artists who know and respect (and expect from) each other so well. Moons is their third album and the complete team of Chris Donnelly (piano), Dan Fortin (bass) and Ernesto Cervini (drums) along with Peter Cardinali (producer) and John “Beetle” Bailey (engineer). For some musicians, that level of comfort could lead to creative catastrophe, for Myriad3, it is a recipe for creative conversation. Bassist Dan Fortin spoke of the first two albums—2012’s Tell and 2014’s The Where—saying, “the material here is pretty different, and I’d say more thoroughly composed that The Where. I believed we have evolved with each album.” Pianist Chris Donnelly added, “Tell is rather a live off the floor record, with The Where being more of a transition to where we are now with Moons.” The pieces on Moons are agonizingly brief, the longest tracks (two of them) being only 5:33. It makes for intense performance and listening. Themes are often introduced then developed quickly while other pieces have a slower development but are gone too soon. The album begins with Donelly’s Skeleton Key. It is very emotional, even with its rather strident pacing. Donnelly’s piano is matched is mirrored by Fortin’s bass. Cervini maintains a determined half-shuffle while the piano right-hand carries the theme upward. Listen to the bass line in the final two minutes with the drums in locked rhythms. This is the next evolutionary step for Myriad3 and for Jazz. Noyammas is a cool bass dialogue with piano and bass, written by Ernesto Cervini. Cervini is the most aggressive while the piano and bass are more exploratory. The piano begins to develop in different directions from the bass with the result that a triadic conversation takes place. One thing that Noyammas allows is the focused hearing on each instrument. They are collectively marvelous but individually just as exciting. Unnamed Cells is by Chris Donnelly. The piano’s doubled chords are complemented by the two-note motif from the bass as Cervini knocks down the beat. This is a fascinating piece. Donnelly creates a brief eight-note motif with each note played in quads while the bass locks in at 8x. Then the theme notes are played in 16x by the piano. It is a musical mapping of the division of cells, notes (like cells) multiplying exponentially. Intuitive? Sure, but this is the stuff of the intellect, as well. And I like it. Dan Fortin wrote Stoner. It is slowly, almost contemplatively, paced. The intricate changes follow the lines that pass for logic in this state of thinking. Mellow and open, the approach allows great space for thoughtfulness and (con’t) (JazzTimes 2/2) imagination. The piano’s right-hand arpeggio serves as a platform from which the bass and drums jump off. The music settles and comes to rest. Fortin gets two-in-a-row as the composer of the following piece, Peak Fall. It has to be said again that this trio has developed a rapt rapport with each other and Cardinali and Bailey (this should be called a quintet) know exactly what to do with what the trio lays down. The bass lines are smart and spot-on with Cervini in great support with the brushes. Donnelly provides the gentler piano melodies. It is not “smooth” (mostly because that makes you think of Kenny G) but it is meditative and emotional. Counter of the Cumulus is the only piece not written by the trio. Rather, it is written by electronic master Disasterpeace. It is forward and adventurous with a strong link to music history. Well-written and performed with precision, it is a work that shows a commitment to the advancement and development of Jazz for the future. The trio opens in unison, with bass and drums strident with the piano. The piano immediately erupts into a furious arpeggio from the left while laying down a beautiful melody on the right. This is fantastic stuff. Bass and drums and left-hand piano just hammer the rhythm while the piano turns the melody into a Baroque two-part invention. The pounding passes into something lyrical and thoughtful—like the sweet smell of rain after the thunderstorm. That sweetness continues into Cervini’s Ameliasburg. It is a fine melody brought to life by piano and bass as the brushes and cymbal washes paint a picture of rainy streets. It is like an interlude in a movie drama. Beautiful. Sketch 8 is by Chris Donnelly. The bass and drums are in full-force as the piano lays down a three-note idea that lightens the sounds. The drum then adopts a military beat and the bass and piano move into something more Jazzy. Even with the three-note motif continuing, the melodic line follows a cool idea and the bass follows. Ernesto Cervini wrote the title track, Moons. It is one of the two longest pieces on the album and thank the moon for it. Not precisely haunting, it is more of a space-age nocturne with reflective imagery and thoughts of the future. There are passages of sheer loveliness as the piano moves alone trough the void. After the midway point, the bass moves alongside with a delicate propulsion as the brushes are added ever-so-lightly. This was a slowly developing piece as the drums are fully heard with only one minute left in the track. The bass (with the cool effects) also reaches its zenith with not much time left and the piano closes the song as it began. Brother Dom is also by Cervini. It is based on odd beats and Jazzy breaks and the melody emerges with smart rhythms. Eventually, the piano is just as percussive as the bass and drums and the melody is swallowed up in rhythm. A nice groove is woven in and out of the piece. Nicely constructed. Exhausted Clock by Dan Fortin closes the album. The clock’s ticking is heard breaking down and turning into brush work by Cervini before Donnelly brings the melody alive, Fortin close at hand. The melody is a charming line and the bass lines are beautiful. It is like life slowing to stillness. Myriad3 has achieved something truly remarkable with Moons. The intuitive understanding between the trio and the loose structure of many of the pieces allow them to present, develop and conclude delightful musical ideas in their own pace. Pointed to the future, Myriad3 believes in the present life of Jazz and strengthens it for the move to come. ~Travis Rogers, Jr. is The Jazz Owl Myriad3: Moons All About Jazz By Dan McClenaghan May 16th, 2016 [ http://www.allaboutjazz.com/moons-myriad3-alma-records-review-by-dan- mcclenaghan.php ] [4 Star Review] Someone's always trying to take a tried and true format out on a new tangent. Consider the piano trio: Bill Evans introduced deep, classically-influenced harmonics and a democracy of instrumental input in the late fifties and early sixties. The Esbjorn Svennson Trio (e.s.t.) brought in classical, rock, pop and techno elements; The Bad Plus plays with avant-garde jazz and pop/rock influences, and they can be loud. Even the tried and true changes. It's all good; and some of it is great. Myriad3, a forward-leaning piano trio out of Toronto, Canada, has released their fourth CD, Moons, taking the piano trio format on a modernistic tangent of their own. It's three stellar musicians—all of them superior tune smith's—who take on the form with an equilibrium of input, an energetic verve and intelligence, some catchy grooves and strong compositions, straight through. "Counter of the Cumulus," the only non-original of the set, opens with a majestic bombast before shifting into a Nik Bartsch-like groove. "Skeleton Key," from the pen of the group's pianist, Chris Donnelly, plays out as a rock dirge. Ernesto Cervini's drums shift from a muscular grandiosity to a whispered shuffle; Dan Fortin plays a yearning heartbeat to the pianist's delicate wind chimes, until the groove reasserts itself. A marvelously engaging, mood-shifting tune for the opening for an album. Cervini's "Noyammas" has a dark, furtive quality, a beautiful avant-garde piece that evolves and changes shapes as it rides time's flow. Bassist Fortin's "Exhausted Clock" wraps the set up with a graceful, subdued ballad. Gorgeous and wistful, a small masterpiece of subtle three-way interplay. Myriad3 Sets Controls for the Heart of the 'Moons' on New Alma Records Release [REVIEW] By Mike Greenblatt May 15th, 2016 [ http://www.classicalite.com/articles/40525/20160515/myriad3-sets-controls-heart- moons-new-alma-records-release-review.htm ] Get ready to take off as Canada's prog-jazz trio Myriad3, for its third CD, sets its sights on the heart of the Moons (Alma Records). If 2012's Tell and 2014's The Where were any indications, Moons is where they want to be: packed with surprise, voluptuous weirdness, classical gas and an eccentric eclectic no-holds-barred vision of instrumental music run amok. Born in 2011, Myriad3 is piano/synthesizer wizard Chris Donnelly, upright bassist/ fretless synth master Dan Fortin and drummer Ernesto Cervini who doubles on glockenspiel.
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