On his third date as a leader for
ECM, Norwegian guitarist
Jacob Young debuts an entirely new international quintet. His sidemen are saxophonist
Trygve Seim, and pianist
Marcin Wasilewski's trio featuring bassist
Slamowir Kurkiewicz and drummer
Michael Miskiewicz.
Forever Young is more "song" oriented than either of his preceding albums. It's warm, spacious, rhythmically fluid, and deeply lyrical as evidenced by "Bounce," which moves along like a latter-era
Roxy Music tune. But that melodicism isn't all pop-inflected. Opener "I Lost My Heart to You," introduced by the pianist, opens tentatively and tenderly and unfolds like a Brazilian folk song.
Seim's articulation of the melody reveals its emotional resonance.
Young plays a nylon-string guitar. His solo is free of angles; it offers tasteful arpeggios, accenting the changes as he plays into them. "Therese's Gate" is also touched by Brazil, but more by bossa, though its rhythmic signature is more elliptical. The interplay between
Wasilewski,
Young, and
Seim is elegant, and full of ideas. "Sophia's Dance" features a wrangling acoustic guitar solo and
Miskiewicz's rolling tom snare that evoke a tabla. The fat, electric guitar chords in "1970" recall early
Wes Montgomery, but
Young and
Wasilewski unpack it into something more modern, sleek, and global with hints of Indian and Latin jazz. "Beauty" has an open country feel, with shimmering, strummed acoustic chords which frame
Wasilewski's middle-register arpeggios in a breezy melody.
Seim's insistent solo moves it toward the margins as
Kurkiewicz's surging bassline urges him on. "Time Changes" is literal -- at least rhythmically -- it also swings through the head and bridge -- even when it engages a classic rock chord progression as one of its themes.
Young's playing throughout offers great technical facility, but he is a democratic bandleader, never showy.
Forever Young stands out in his catalog because it reveals an almost immeasurable growth in his compositional skills since 2007. These tunes inspire this fine band; they play as if they'd been playing them for ages. ~ Thom Jurek