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    Yes,   it is a 2024 release, and had I given it proper spins at the proper
    time,   it would have likely ended up on a best-of list of mine. That’s my
    trope   though, isn’t it … where was I when this was happening?
    Luckily, in this case, it still is happening and it happens to be great. LA based   Vinny
    Golia, master of all things woodwind and renowned music educator, has
    created a top-notch album rife with  compositional   elements and
    scintillating improvisation. 
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    The   group is a choice selection of musicians – many of them also educators
    –   from the West Coast. Along with Golia is trumpeter Kris Tiner, pianist
    Cathlene Pineda, bassist Miller Wrenn, and drummer Clint Dodson. A quick
    look through their bios reveals some common constellations and
    connections, but it seems like Almasty is a first for the group –
    which is certainly not ascertainable from the music – and which was   followed
    up by a second recording, Can You Outrun Them?, released at the very end of last year.
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Almasty begins   with ‘A Little Game’, kicking off with a knotty
    harmonic clash between   Tiner and Golia, their interaction exuding a hint of Coleman and Cherry, which then quickly
    unfolds revealing a  cornucopia of textures, tones and melodies. The song is
    a game of chase with ideas darting about, drums and bass providing a
    strong   foundation, and piano smartly filling the space with supportive
    rhythmic   comping and vibrant chords. The next track
    ‘Requiem; a   visit to the fairy room, for WS’ demonstrates the diversity of
    the   music. The ballad-like tune begins with  a slightly wavering doubling
    of   sax and trumpet, under which Pineda sly interjects chords, along with
the rustle of percussion. The tune then opens up with the bass adding additional
    motion, and Golia begins playing a yearning melody.
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    Pineda   is in the fore on ‘Crocodylomphs & Theropods’, at first. Her
    syncopated comping and melodic snippets make for an accessibly abstract
    approach that seems at once classically jazzy and sneakily subversive.
    Tiner follows up with a solo of similar appeal. The last track that I’ll
    mention is ‘That Was For Albert! #43 (it’s not who you think…)’   Assuming
    that everyone thinks just like me, the Albert would be Ayler,   but who
    really knows. What can be definitively stated is that it is one   of the
    more exuberantly free flowing tracks of the recording. Wrenn’s   bowed bass
    adds tense reverberations and Dodson’s drumming provides a   turbulent
    underlayer for the musical effervescence on top.
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What   an album! Rich and colorful, gorgeously played inside and outside. We
    haven’t touched on the term ‘Almasty’ yet. Apparently it is a cryptid, a
    creature that may or may not exist like a Bigfoot – this one being a   wild
    man in the mountains of central Asia. I cannot say that it actually   means
    anything in relation to the music, but it could be a good piece   of trivia
    for you to use the next time you’re searching for small   talk before
    a show.


                                    