Reimagining
Jazz pianist and composer Vijay Iyer is one of those musicians who folds whole worlds of contemporary music into his work — hiphop, opera, Indian music, modernist classical, and other styles have all found their way into his varied output. On his excellent 2005 release, *Reimagining*, you can hear traces of alto saxophonist/composer Steve Coleman’s group, the Five Elements, an innovative outfit that Iyer has played with. In a way, the album is like an Eastern-tinged cousin of Coleman’s funk-informed jazz, and Iyer’s improvisations are intricate and gripping. It’s a joy — and a bit of a challenge — to follow every inspired zigzag. Stephan Crump on bass and Marcus Gilmore on drums in the rhythm section are fully in tune with Iyer’s sensibility, and it’s hard to imagine a better interpreter of the pianist’s work than alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa. The music also recalls 1970s prog rock stripped of nonsense, but more than anything, Iyer and his group are creating a truly *new* kind of jazz. Listen to a cut like “Inertia,” where a throbbing rhythm section accompanies Iyer’s eerie outlines, and it’s clear that *Reimagining* is ultimately beyond stylistic labels.
A decade into his recording career, pianist/composer/bandleader Vijay Iyer is still a startlingly original voice in jazz.