The debut by Grammy Award winning acoustic upright bassist and vocalist Esperanza Spalding, a native of
Portland, OR, is an exercise in joy and freedom. Well rendered for such a very young musician, it's quite notable,
considering the certainty of her concept and clarity of her vision. While steeped in contemporary jazz, there are Latin
flavors, unabashed free moments, and some implied and direct swing. Further, it is an expression of her well-being,
optimism, and future hope for her life in this music. Also in her peer group, pianist Aruan Ortiz and drummer Francisco
Mela add a hundredfold to this music and establish themselves as leaders-to-be, and are quite capable partners for
Spalding's wonderful sounds.
The first piece, a take of the Jimmy Rowles evergreen The Peacocks, lets you know something special is going on.
Spalding's bass leads out with the probing piano of Ortiz as wordless vocals and a modal jam all precede the melody,
followed by a free section. The imagination quotient of this interpretation is off the charts. Mompouana is a most
impressive circular tune surrounding the sweetness and light of Spalding's voice in a 9/8 time signature, choppy piano
motifs, upper to midrange drama, and thoughtful, intricate secondary lines. In their ultimate playful state, Perazun and
Perazela show Spalding's ability to scat, with Ortiz on the former and furiously alongside Mela on the latter track. The
other covers are a darker-than-the-original rendition of Chick Corea's neo-bopper Humpty Dumpty and the personable,
lighthearted Loro, written by Egberto Gismonti. Two Bad, with a feeling reminiscent of the standard Alone Together, is a
brittle, quirky, and unpredictable tune that is the only instrumental of the lot. Spalding sings no lyric content
whatsoever; her style is all natural, , and precious. Whether she is coerced to sing songs in the future is to be
determined. Junjo is an auspicious beginning that should catch the ears of any lover of great music.
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Junjo boasts an unusual format: A young American woman playing bass and singing wordless vocals with the
accompaniment of a Cuban pianist and drummer. But 22-year-old Esperanza Spalding, an Oregon native who teaches at
Boston's Berklee College of Music, is so confident in her multiple roles (she also produced the album, released on a
Spanish label) and the music goes down so easily, all awareness of her band's makeup quickly fades. With their
lighter-than-air quality, the tunes sometimes recall early Return to Forever (an association underlined by the inclusion
of a Chick Corea composition) and her playing boasts the warm, richly amplified quality favored by many young bassists.
But with pianist Aruan Ortiz stretching and shaping the melodies, Junjo is winningly personal. In addition to several
originals by Spalding, alone or in collaboration with Ortiz or her drummer, Francisco Mela, it includes a smart and
playful reworking of Jimmy Rowles' classic, "The Peacocks." --Lloyd Sachs
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