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| Martin Wind: STARS: Newvelle Records |
The bassist Martin Wind has long been on my radar as one of
the more inventive and melodic bass players around. I’ve seen him perform live
with multi-reedist master Scott Robinson several years back and reviewed
several of his past albums that have shown the breadth and depth of this man’s
musicality. Wind’s latest release Stars is on Newvelle Records, a
label that is celebrating its tenth-year anniversary this year. The album is a
joyful and sonorous studio album that became available on January 30, 2026, and
features Wind’s upright bass paired with a star-studded band that includes the
master pianist Kenny Barron, the mellifluous clarinet of Anat Cohen and the
creative drum work of Matt Wilson.
| Matt Wilson, Anat Cohen, Martin Wind and Kenny Barron (photo credit unknown) |
The fifty-eight-year-old Wind was born in Flensburg, Germany. He studied orchestral bass at the Music Conservatory at Cologne and received a Master’s in Jazz Performance and Composition at the Music Conservatory in Cologne. Wind moved to New York in 1995, won third in the Thelonious Monk Bass Competition in Washington, D.C. and continued studies with Mike Richmond, Jim McNeely, Kenny Werner and Mike Holober to name a few. The bassist has been a member of the faculty at New York University since 1997 and has been a faculty member of the National Youth Jazz Orchestra in Germany. He continues with on- going musical relationships with European artists like Belgian guitar ace Philip Catherine, Dutch trumpeter Ack van Rooyen and German guitarist Ulf Meyer. With over fifteen albums that he has released as both a leader and co-leader, it is always worth following the progression of this man’s prolific work.
Stars opens up with the sauntering “Passing
Through,” in some ways the perfect composition that sets the tone and purpose
that Wind has in mind when recording this album. The album is reflective,
evokes memories from the bassist’s experiences as a musician, and has a
quiet sense of elegant melodicism. “Passing Through” is a
composition from the bassist/composer Aaron Bell. Wind once took lessons from
Bell when he came to New York and the one-time Ellington bassist became both a
mentor and a friend. The music is deceptively simple, clear and narrative
without being obvious. This newly assembled group reveals just how at ease they work together, allowing the music
to gently unfold and wrap you with a blanket of joy. Cohen’s clarinet is warm,
woody and provocative. Barron’s piano can at times evoke a down and dirty bluesy sense, but the man also has an
undeniably elegant feel and a deep well of creativity to draw upon. Wilson’s drum kit is always joyful, like a toy box radiating bliss, and Wind’s warm pizzicato bass lines guide the leisurely shuffle expertly. Clearly this is Wind’s beautiful homage to his
mentor and a tip of his hat to the Ellingtonian era. Not to mention, this is a hell of a composition that is strangely seldom heard,
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| Duke Ellington and Aaron Bell (photo credit unknown) |
“Life” is presumably a ballad composed by the leader Wind. It features some beautiful three-way improvisational lines by Cohen, Barron and Wind that weave themselves like sinewy silk threads into a melodic tapestry.
The album continues with “Black Butterfly,” a Duke Ellington
composition that is played in a jazz-chamber ballad form. It features the vocal-like
sound of Cohen’s resonating clarinet, and the heartbeat-like bass solo by Wind
that glows with warmth and elegance. Barron’s accompaniment is superb, as
Wilson keeps the pace with subtle ingenuity. The music is reminiscent of a simpler,
relaxed, more elegant time.
“Moody” is a gentle, contemplative Wind composition. Lead by
Cohen’s expressive clarinet's tubular sound and some dynamic counterpoint
bass work by Wind, the music is ethereal. Hanging in the air like a reflective
mood, not melancholic but deep in thought and reverend.
Wind gives a nod to the importance of
bebop to the canon of music. Here he chooses Bud Powell’s iconic “Wail,” which
was first heard on his album The Amazing Bud Powell from 1951. Powell
had the lead horns of the powerful tenor of Sonny Rollins and Fats Navarro’s
incendiary trumpet to trade ideas on this quick paced gem. Here Martin and
Cohen lay out the challenging, circuitous lines of the melody concurrently with impeccable skill, but at a decidedly more relaxed attack. Wind shows that no matter how complex
the music may be, it can be effectively entertaining and interesting at any
pace if the core of the music’s message is retained by the artists presenting
it. Wind and mates let the music flow
with satin smoothness and facility, and the results are rewarding. Kenny
Barron’s piano work here is a master class of modern interpretation. Barron is a true descendant
that preserves some of the history of jazz music in every note he plays.
Wind opens “The Feel of the Jazz,” another Ellington
composition (also credited are Bobby Troup and Geore T. Simon), with an extended,
plucky bass entre that hums with joy and creativity. The original release of
this song was on Duke Ellington and John Coltrane from 1963 and included
the rhythm section of Wind’s mentor Aaron Bell on bass and drummer Sam Woodward.
When Cohen’s clarinet enters this one, there is a sense of history meeting
modernity. Barron’s piano interacts with Cohen’s clarinet as the song progresses
and the two pros meld notes so easily at times with ease and familiarity that makes
it look effortless.
“Pra Diza e a Deus” is a beautiful ballad composed by the
Brazilian composers Edú Lobo and Torquato Neto. It was made popular by
Sergio Mendez and Brasil ’66 from their album Look Around from 1967. The English title of this song is “To Say
Goodbye” and anyone who has heard this version can’t forget the sad voice of
Sergio Mendes and beguiling sound of singer Lannie Hal or the vocalist Flora Purim’s moving version.
For the bassist, this is another homage that recognizes just how much Brazilian
music has influenced Wind and added to the jazz canon. Barron’s delicate solo
opens this song, before Wind’s aching arco bowing of the bass gorgeously spells
out the melody. Wilson drum work opens the rhythm with exquisite restraint, as
Barron’s piano expands on the melody. When Cohen’s clarinet enters the mix it’s
like her sound takes on the yearning, voice-like element that one remembers
from the original. Despite being wordless, these guys transmit the pathos of the
sentiment of saying goodbye to a lover.
The album continues with “Standing at the Window Waving Goodbye,”
another Wind composition, that deals with poignant moments of dealing with saying
goodbye to someone who is important to you. This reflective, unresolved piece is
another example of the music that speaks the most to this bassist as a composer.
Cohen’s clarinet seems to float above the music, as Barron’s piano is perfectly
supportive. Barron’s solo work always elevates the possibilities of harmonic inventiveness
and Wind and Wilson maintain the breezy rhythm.
Mitchell Parish’s “Stars Fell on Alabama” is a ballad played
at a slow gait that has an easy swing to it, and has an obvious tie-back to the
album’s theme, Stars. Cohen’s burnished clarinet resonates with sustained warmth,
and she navigates the melody with reverence and unadorned emotion. This song
brings you back to a time when the pace was more forgiving and a twilight concert
offered at a local gazebo could allow you to just sit back and get lost in the
music.
My digital release had two bonus songs, the first is a Bill
Mays composition “Blues with Two Naturals.” Mays is a pianist/composer that is part
of the Martin Wind Quartet. Mays is known for his harmonic humor and on this
one he naturalizes the two notes in the key signature, counter to a standard blues
form that uses flattened notes. Kenny
Barron, Wind and Wilson make this one all their own.
“Marc’s Moment” is another digital release bonus track that
Wind composed and didn’t include on the album. This closer is a joyous, free flowing
song that has a medium swing feel to it. Cohen’s clarinet just hovers like a feather,
twirling up and gliding down along the thermals as the rhythm section is led by
Wind’s booming bass, Barron’s pianistic accompaniment and Wilson’s gossamer drum
work.
Martin Wind’s Stars offers the listener some joyful, easy listening music played by a remarkably cohesive band, whose artistry should not
be missed.


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