Turas (Self-released)
Fergus McCreadie Trio
Released December 6, 2018
2019 Parliamentary Jazz Awards Album of the Year
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mweFBJAV7s9pOlATf2vYJK-GPashJt6sc
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/7BEuRlsIMOfVLF3C1gbXL2?si=byYwySw2Q4GZVXGHiSVcCw
About:
Released in Spring 2018, the trio’s debut album, Turas, has been praised for “reflecting his engagement with the Scottish landscape and musical traditions while also showing a firm grasp of the jazz piano tradition” (Jazz in Europe). Turas won Album of the Year at the Parliamentary Jazz Awards 2019 and Best Album at the Scottish Jazz Awards 2019, following on from McCreadie’s Best Instrumentalist title at the 2018 awards.
The album was also shortlisted for the cross-genre Scottish Album of the Year Award 2019, reaching the final ten from 290-plus candidates, a rare feat for a jazz album.
McCreadie’s music is an innovative blend of jazz and Scottish traditional music. Turas (Scottish Gaelic for ‘Journey’) featured eight original compositions designed to take the listener on an auditory journey of Scotland. Depicting scenes from the Western Isles to the East Neuk of Fife, the music evoked the landscapes from which it took its inspiration. McCreadie, who also works with drummer Graham Costello’s widely acclaimed STRATA, among other groups, performs with bassist, David Bowden, the winner of the Young Scottish Jazz Musician of the Year title in 2017 and leader of the acclaimed, world music influenced band Mezcla, and drummer Stephen Henderson, a Jazzwise magazine One to Watch in 2018.
Track Listing:
1. The Culearn Mill 08:59
2. Ardbeg 09:35
3. The Back Burn 05:07
4. The Teacher 05:45
5. Hillfoot Glen 08:47
6. Mull 06:23
7. The Set 10:02
8. The Old Harbour 08:36
Personnel:
Fergus McCreadie: piano
David Bowden: bass
Stephen Henderson: drums
Recorded, Mixed and Mastered by James McMillan at QuietMoney Studios Artwork: StudioLR
Review:
Hard to believe
that this is a debut album from a young musician just starting out on his
recording career. There is an assurance and confidence that belies his tender
years that I’ve not heard for a long time.
Precocious talent may abound in many circles, but it is rare that they elicit
such a warm and positive feeling. That one is in safe hands as you listen to
this outstanding album is immediately beyond doubt, as McCreadie leads you
through a set of original compositions that are impeccably played, memorable
and thought provoking by turns.
Turas is the Scottish Gaelic word for journey, and that is exactly what
the album is. A journey not just through McCreadie’s musical journey, and the
road travelled in conceiving these compositions, but that of his native
Scotland and traditional Scottish music.
From the outset the juxtaposition of jazz and Scottish folk music is heard
through the music of the trio, with the compositions strongly evocative of
places in Scotland that have been visited by the pianist. ‘Ardberg’ with
it’s gentle and subtle opening theme statement is a fitting tribute to the
distillery of the famed whiskey to the sedate and reflective ‘Mull’ which
is reworked as an out of tempo ballad that seems to follow its own compelling
path.
Continuing the Scottish theme is ‘The Set’ which is paradoxically the most
traditional yet the most original piece on the album. Moving between a
jig and a reel, the composition is deeply infectious, yet still swings in a way
that is familar to the jazz trio, an outstanding piece of writing and totally
absorbing. This is immediately followed by ‘The Old Harbour’ which
McCreadie describes as having a basic harmony “where I just took triad
shapes and moved them through the diatonic scale.” The mood of the
composition is gentle and reflective, maintaining a disciplined focus on the
original aim of the tune, negotiating several key changes along the
way. The Scottish reel is again evident in the ‘The Back Burn’ where the
trio are not afraid to tear things up a little with a driving and authoritative
performance.
The young pianist comes up with more intelligent writing on the wonderful
‘Hillfoot Glen’ which it’s rolling opening piano statement and the way in which
it evolves into a more settled time feeling with McCreadie and cohorts digging
deep for the piano solo. There is also some wonderful accompaniment from bass
and drums that retain the interest and feel of the overall concept of the
composition.
Citing the influence of Jan Garbarek and Arild Andersen, and
other Norwegian musician’s use of their traditional music in their
compositions, McCreadie has felt a desire to incorporate his own native Folk
music within the jazz idiom he loves so much, and in doing so has made a highly
personal and hugely enjoyable debut. I can say with confidence that I have not
heard such an impressive trio record from a Scottish (or UK) pianist since
Brian Kellock’s ‘Live At Henry’s’ set.
Nick Lea (Jazz Views)