http://www.downbeat.com/digitaledition/2014/DB1411/single_page_view/60.html
DOWNBEAT, NOVEMBER 2014
3½
The name of New York-based composer and woodwind player Anna Webber’s second CD declares an intention, not an outcome. There’s too much happening in the music to call it simple, even when she strips things back to barely there breaths and plucked piano strings. Listen closely and you’ll hear complexity in the individual sounds; hang on a spell and the music will turn a corner.
Simplification, it seems, is more of a process than a result. Webber has cut back on the number of players involved, from six accompanists on her previous CD, Percussive Mechanics, to two on this one. And this music does feel stripped of excess; as active as percussionist John Hollenbeck gets, as concentrated as Matt Mitchell’s piano figures are and as changeable as Webber’s attack may be, each gesture articulates a structural essential.
There’s a lot to admire about this record, and it expresses one command with unarguable clarity—to pay attention to Webber, both in the moment and in the future. However, there is also something rather inward-looking about it, as though the players are so busy sorting out how to get things right that they have left the task of figuring out how to connect to the audience.
—Bill Meyer