1 minute read
Adan Hagley: Insomnia
A review of the debut album of a young lion in jazz in Trinidad
VSNaipaul implied that “we are a country of mimic men,” [Trinidad and Tobago] but our geographic location in the world, our social history makes the pull of myriad sonic and rhythmic influences inevitable. Adan Hagley on his debut album project, Insomnia, has made those connections from his wide listening palette. He cites Michel Camillo and Snarky Puppy, but one hears Ray Holman’s melodic template, Élan Parlē’s early harmonic experiments and the late Raf Robertson’s bold fusion ideas as sonic references that have all contributed to an impressive recording career launch in this music space. The local is not eschewed for the foreign as a model for jazz fusion access and success, and this is a good thing in our context as a region adding to the burgeoning jazz canon.
Advertisement
Adan Hagley returned to Trinidad in 2013 with an undergraduate degree from the important Berklee College of Music, and it shows in his use of an elevated music language and vocabulary that is necessary for serious jazz conversations among soloists and the harmonic ideas that generate that musical interplay.
Hagley on keyboards along with his tight rhythm section of Dareem Chandler on drums, Rodney Alexander on bass, Miguel Charles on guitar and Sheena Richardson on percussion, create a space for effective soloing mainly by Daniel Ryan on saxophones and Mikhail Salcedo on tenor pan, but the give and take, the call and response of the members of this band make for an album experience that does not disappoint, even for ears that have heard the evolution of kaisojazz towards wider Caribbean rhythms and pulses over the years.
The music on Insomnia, mainly originals, is more than calypso jazz in the 21st century, it is an amalgam of the wider Latin jazz influences and a funk aesthetic that is modern and accessible. The opening track, “Snarkyish” follows the pattern of the big band funk jazz arrangement of its namesake, Grammy winners Snarky Puppy. Ryan’s blistering tenor sax solo clears the way for Salcedo’s and later Hagley’s accelerating solos.
The Latin jazz-themed title track has Chandler and Ryan layering their instruments that reminds one of Steely Dan’s “Aja” — with Steve Gadd and Wayne Shorter in similar respective roles — in its effective crescendo towards the sublime without the chaos of mingling timbres. “Shadow Dance” is very reminiscent of the calypso jazz that was the basis for a local renaissance of the genre a couple decades ago with its impulse to make one dance and its sonic heartbeat reflective of a soca rhythm. A hint of Andy Narell’s melodic ideas with pan can also be heard here.
...conintued on page 37