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$12.09The Story
| Release Date | 14/03/2025 |
| Format | LP Black |
| Label | International Anthem |
| Catalogue Number | IARC95LP |
Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes' is the debut album from Gregory Uhlmann (SML, Anna Butterss, Duffy x Uhlmann, Perfume Genius), Josh Johnson (SML, Jeff Parker ETA IVtet & New Breed, Meshell Ndegeocello, Anna Butterss, Leon Bridges), and Sam Wilkes (Sam Gendel, Louis Cole, Chaka Khan). The three improviser/arranger/producersâ impressive individual credits encompass such a wide stylistic pendulum swing that a collection of group music from the trio could mine any number of musical territories with masterful results. In these 11 instrumental songs, the trio explores a spacious lyrical curiosity that could be described as a jazz-informed take on progressive electro-acoustic chamber music.
Conceived during two live shows at ETA and a session at Uhlmannâs house in Los Angeles, the album maintains a focus on beauty, melody, and movement as the pieces unfold, with the trio pushing their instruments and highly-dialed effects to sculpt otherworldly sounds with the collective sensibility of a rhythm section. The ethos of these instant compositions is arrangement-minded improvisation that showcases the mournful beauty of Uhlmannâs fingerpicked electric guitar, the hybrid rhythm-lead of Wilkesâ bass chording, and the textural harmonic worldbuilding of Johnsonâs effect-laden alto saxophone.
The trioâs explorations are rooted in more than just musicality, though. The arc of the groupâs story is one of friendship and mutual admiration. Uhlmann and Johnson have known each other since their formative days as teenagers studying jazz. Shortly after first meeting in an educational setting, they would connect for nascent musical probing via low-stakes get-togethers back home in Chicago. They didnât even know at the time that they had both taken lessons from a mutual guiding light â legendary guitarist/composer Jeff Parker.
After high school, they headed in separate directions â Johnson to Jacobs School of Music in Bloomington, Indiana; Uhlmann to Cal Arts in Santa Clarita, California â but reconnected quickly upon migrating to LA, where shared opportunities for studio work as well as revolving-cast free improvisation at small clubs around the city naturally cemented their loose partnership. Uhlmann was both playing and programming, creating platforms for collaboration at the Bootleg Theater, while Johnsonâs transition from student-of to collaborator-with Jeff Parker was well underway via their weekly gig at Highland Parkâs ETA. In the immediate periphery of all of this was bassist Sam Wilkes, a serial collaborator well known in the LA creative music sceneâs cross-pollination trenches.
âI was playing with some musicians who went to Cal Arts,â says Wilkes. âI started going up there regularly, and Greg had this great band called Fell Runner. A group I was in split a bill with them at the old Bootleg Theater and it really solidified my appreciation and deep respect for the band and for Gregâs playing. They were doing things that were completely unique. Weâve been friends ever since.â
Wilkes and Johnsonâs first collaboration came after years of knowing one another in LA, but the musical connection and respect was similarly instantaneous. âIt was a session for Louis Cole Big Band,â recalls Wilkes. âEveryone went around on this one tune and took 4 bars, and Josh took this really, really unique 4-bar solo that really stood out. After the session, Louis looked at me and said âJosh Johnson!â and I was like âI know!â
In 2021, even before Uhlmann and Johnson began working on what would become SML, Wilkes and Uhlmann played together on an album by Miya Folick, which left them feeling like there was more music to be made together. Uhlmann suggested booking a live date as a trio with Johnson at ETA. With engineer Bryce Gonzales at the controls, the group worked through a short list of prepared material, augmented with passages of improvisation. âWe all agreed that it was important to have a nice melodic repertoire to use as a starting point to freely improvise,â says Wilkes. âLanding zones, essentially, while weâre out in the field.â
Those landing zones include a stunning cover of âThe Fool On The Hill,â perhaps the eeriest McCartney ballad in The Beatlesâ songbook. Johnsonâs tender rendering of the classic vocal melody unites the raindrop-leslie-plonk of Uhlmannâs electric guitar and the quietly grooving drone thump of Wilkesâ bass so comfortably that any move could feel natural by the time the trio opens it up for improvisation at the two-minute mark. What follows is a sublime take on the purring consonance only occasionally found in the best moments of the ECM or Windham Hill catalogs. Even more incredible is the fact that this particular recording of the tune documents the first piece of music this trio played together, from the opening moments of their first performance at ETA.
That instantaneous cualidad simpĂĄtico is what makes this trio special. What weâre hearing is a friendship between high-level improvisers translated into musical moments and executed with such curious precision that the lines between supposed opposites â composition and improvisation, jazz and chamber music, ennui and contentment â are delightfully blurred.
âFricaâ is, perhaps, the track on which that blur is most evident. The tune incorporates the staccato stutters and repetitions heard throughout the album, but doubles down with a subtly disorienting post-production chop by Johnson, which accentuates the trioâs live trance by introducing a floating phrase cut-and-mix. The fact that these concepts are employed intuitively, pre-edit, throughout Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes is precisely what makes the post-production shine. It can be difficult to discern what is a slip of the sampler and what is live, turn-on-a-dime action, and itâs exactly that mystery which draws us in.
âMarvis," the album opener, makes that clear from the jump. This fresh spin on a tune from Johnsonâs solo album 'Unusual Object' checks many of the same boxes as âFricaâ on the production level, but itâs all in service of a truly demented low-key groove. The trio is in lock step here, but itâs unclear how many legs are doing the stepping and just whose legs are taking which steps.
Conversely, the Uhlmann composition âArpyâ is a slow-paced, descending four chord meditation teeming with the life provided by the guitaristâs causally precise reverberated triplet repetitions and held down by Wilkesâ sturdy bass chording, which occasionally wanders into flamboyant high register flourishes. Johnsonâs soft alto treatment morphs in tonality throughout, eventually settling into something more aurally reminiscent of an Ondes Martenot or some gently twisted echo of Clara Rockmore.
All told, 'Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes' is a beautiful snapshot of three endlessly interesting players at the top of their game, rendered in such a skilled manner that its inherent mastery flows effortlessly, making passive atmospheric immersion as pleasant and stimulating as deep focused listening.Â
Tracklist
1. MarvisÂ
2. FumaroleÂ
3. ArpyÂ
4. FricaÂ
5. Hoe DownÂ
6. JicamaÂ
7. UnsureÂ
8. FieldsÂ
9. ShwaÂ
10. RewindedÂ
11. The Fool on the HillÂ
Description
| Release Date | 14/03/2025 |
| Format | LP Black |
| Label | International Anthem |
| Catalogue Number | IARC95LP |
Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes' is the debut album from Gregory Uhlmann (SML, Anna Butterss, Duffy x Uhlmann, Perfume Genius), Josh Johnson (SML, Jeff Parker ETA IVtet & New Breed, Meshell Ndegeocello, Anna Butterss, Leon Bridges), and Sam Wilkes (Sam Gendel, Louis Cole, Chaka Khan). The three improviser/arranger/producersâ impressive individual credits encompass such a wide stylistic pendulum swing that a collection of group music from the trio could mine any number of musical territories with masterful results. In these 11 instrumental songs, the trio explores a spacious lyrical curiosity that could be described as a jazz-informed take on progressive electro-acoustic chamber music.
Conceived during two live shows at ETA and a session at Uhlmannâs house in Los Angeles, the album maintains a focus on beauty, melody, and movement as the pieces unfold, with the trio pushing their instruments and highly-dialed effects to sculpt otherworldly sounds with the collective sensibility of a rhythm section. The ethos of these instant compositions is arrangement-minded improvisation that showcases the mournful beauty of Uhlmannâs fingerpicked electric guitar, the hybrid rhythm-lead of Wilkesâ bass chording, and the textural harmonic worldbuilding of Johnsonâs effect-laden alto saxophone.
The trioâs explorations are rooted in more than just musicality, though. The arc of the groupâs story is one of friendship and mutual admiration. Uhlmann and Johnson have known each other since their formative days as teenagers studying jazz. Shortly after first meeting in an educational setting, they would connect for nascent musical probing via low-stakes get-togethers back home in Chicago. They didnât even know at the time that they had both taken lessons from a mutual guiding light â legendary guitarist/composer Jeff Parker.
After high school, they headed in separate directions â Johnson to Jacobs School of Music in Bloomington, Indiana; Uhlmann to Cal Arts in Santa Clarita, California â but reconnected quickly upon migrating to LA, where shared opportunities for studio work as well as revolving-cast free improvisation at small clubs around the city naturally cemented their loose partnership. Uhlmann was both playing and programming, creating platforms for collaboration at the Bootleg Theater, while Johnsonâs transition from student-of to collaborator-with Jeff Parker was well underway via their weekly gig at Highland Parkâs ETA. In the immediate periphery of all of this was bassist Sam Wilkes, a serial collaborator well known in the LA creative music sceneâs cross-pollination trenches.
âI was playing with some musicians who went to Cal Arts,â says Wilkes. âI started going up there regularly, and Greg had this great band called Fell Runner. A group I was in split a bill with them at the old Bootleg Theater and it really solidified my appreciation and deep respect for the band and for Gregâs playing. They were doing things that were completely unique. Weâve been friends ever since.â
Wilkes and Johnsonâs first collaboration came after years of knowing one another in LA, but the musical connection and respect was similarly instantaneous. âIt was a session for Louis Cole Big Band,â recalls Wilkes. âEveryone went around on this one tune and took 4 bars, and Josh took this really, really unique 4-bar solo that really stood out. After the session, Louis looked at me and said âJosh Johnson!â and I was like âI know!â
In 2021, even before Uhlmann and Johnson began working on what would become SML, Wilkes and Uhlmann played together on an album by Miya Folick, which left them feeling like there was more music to be made together. Uhlmann suggested booking a live date as a trio with Johnson at ETA. With engineer Bryce Gonzales at the controls, the group worked through a short list of prepared material, augmented with passages of improvisation. âWe all agreed that it was important to have a nice melodic repertoire to use as a starting point to freely improvise,â says Wilkes. âLanding zones, essentially, while weâre out in the field.â
Those landing zones include a stunning cover of âThe Fool On The Hill,â perhaps the eeriest McCartney ballad in The Beatlesâ songbook. Johnsonâs tender rendering of the classic vocal melody unites the raindrop-leslie-plonk of Uhlmannâs electric guitar and the quietly grooving drone thump of Wilkesâ bass so comfortably that any move could feel natural by the time the trio opens it up for improvisation at the two-minute mark. What follows is a sublime take on the purring consonance only occasionally found in the best moments of the ECM or Windham Hill catalogs. Even more incredible is the fact that this particular recording of the tune documents the first piece of music this trio played together, from the opening moments of their first performance at ETA.
That instantaneous cualidad simpĂĄtico is what makes this trio special. What weâre hearing is a friendship between high-level improvisers translated into musical moments and executed with such curious precision that the lines between supposed opposites â composition and improvisation, jazz and chamber music, ennui and contentment â are delightfully blurred.
âFricaâ is, perhaps, the track on which that blur is most evident. The tune incorporates the staccato stutters and repetitions heard throughout the album, but doubles down with a subtly disorienting post-production chop by Johnson, which accentuates the trioâs live trance by introducing a floating phrase cut-and-mix. The fact that these concepts are employed intuitively, pre-edit, throughout Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes is precisely what makes the post-production shine. It can be difficult to discern what is a slip of the sampler and what is live, turn-on-a-dime action, and itâs exactly that mystery which draws us in.
âMarvis," the album opener, makes that clear from the jump. This fresh spin on a tune from Johnsonâs solo album 'Unusual Object' checks many of the same boxes as âFricaâ on the production level, but itâs all in service of a truly demented low-key groove. The trio is in lock step here, but itâs unclear how many legs are doing the stepping and just whose legs are taking which steps.
Conversely, the Uhlmann composition âArpyâ is a slow-paced, descending four chord meditation teeming with the life provided by the guitaristâs causally precise reverberated triplet repetitions and held down by Wilkesâ sturdy bass chording, which occasionally wanders into flamboyant high register flourishes. Johnsonâs soft alto treatment morphs in tonality throughout, eventually settling into something more aurally reminiscent of an Ondes Martenot or some gently twisted echo of Clara Rockmore.
All told, 'Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes' is a beautiful snapshot of three endlessly interesting players at the top of their game, rendered in such a skilled manner that its inherent mastery flows effortlessly, making passive atmospheric immersion as pleasant and stimulating as deep focused listening.Â
Tracklist
1. MarvisÂ
2. FumaroleÂ
3. ArpyÂ
4. FricaÂ
5. Hoe DownÂ
6. JicamaÂ
7. UnsureÂ
8. FieldsÂ
9. ShwaÂ
10. RewindedÂ
11. The Fool on the HillÂ













