Brad Mehldau fans should be used to his shapeshifting ways by now. Rightfully acclaimed for his jazz trio recordings, it is the balance of his catalog that delivers a rounded portrait of the musician, from
Largo and
The Highway Rider to
Mehliana: Taming the Dragon, and more. But
Finding Gabriel marks his most idiosyncratically expansive release yet. Its thematically linked compositions were inspired by a close reading of Old Testament sources -- Daniel, Hosea, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Job -- while considering our current sociopolitical era. He also experimented with the Oberheim OB-6 analog synth while composing, an instrument whose possibilities were new to him. It's used alongside acoustic and electric pianos, organ, xylophone, mores synths, and voice. His celebrated cast of guests includes trumpeter
Ambrose Akinmusire, violinist
Sara Caswell, saxophonist
Joel Frahm, drummer
Mark Guiliana, vocalists
Becca Stevens,
Kurt Elling, and
Gabriel Kahane, and small string and horns sections. In addition to ensemble pieces, three tunes are performed by
Mehldau as a one-man band.
A repetitive melody on grand piano and analog synth introduces overture "The Garden," with
Giuliana's kick drum offering an urgent pulse underneath. Next,
Mehldau's,
Stevens', and
Kahane's voices sing wordlessly, like instruments, before
Giuliana executes furious breakbeats and cymbal crashes.
Akinmusire's smeared post-bop trumpet bleats are (like Gabriel's horn at the end of time) countered by contrapuntal reeds and winds. "Striving After Wind" is a fusion tune akin to something by
Flying Lotus, with sweeping synths, electric pianos, and synthetic drums ballasted by entwined wordless vocals. On the solo "O Ephraim," synths, pianos, and
Mehldau's (lovely) wordless singing juxtapose prog rock and jazz. Chiming keyboards introduce "St. Mark Is Howling in the City of Night" with
Caswell's violin, funky breaks, and other strings ushering in a rockist frame that morphs into a minimalist piano theme accented by beats and classical strings. "The Prophet Is a Fool" is introduced by the crowd chanting "Build that wall!" in a jarring freeze frame of this historical moment; it's followed by a dialogue that underscores just who the subject is.
Frahm delivers a fire-breathing tenor solo, followed by
Akinmusire's as junglist rhythms underscore the tune's urgency. "Make It All Go Away" is a pillowy, near-pop melody with
Stevens and
Elling hovering alongside keys and drums. "Deep Water" is darker, a piece of neo-classical prog with violin and string trio and
Mehldau's elliptical piano.
Elling takes a killer sonically treated scat vocal on "Proverb of Ashes," with its backing track wedding EDM futurism to post-punk.
Mehldau closes the set solo with the title track, a spoken prayer surrounded by angelic voices, shimmering pianism, mellotrons, synths, and percussion instruments concluding with a quote from the prophet Daniel. It will take several listens to appreciate all that takes place on
Finding Gabriel, but that's as it should be.
Mehldau is scratching an itch; whatever bothers him is provoking action that leads to a strange, ethereal space where the questions and answers of both history and mystery are not only provocative, but interchangeable. ~ Thom Jurek