Pianist
Satoko Fujii leads a beautiful date featuring solo pieces, duets with soprano saxophonist
Sachi Hayasaka, and trio numbers with eminent bassist
Mark Dresser and ingenious percussionist
Jim Black.
Kitsune-Bi sounds great the first time through, and becomes more wildly impressive with each listen, revealing multi-layered depths. The pieces are all originals (except
Jimmy Giuffre's "Moonlight"). The album opens with "Hizumi," a trio tune that begins with the musicians feeling each other out. They gel within the first minute, and
Dresser soon starts performing double duty, moving around rhythmically with
Black while simultaneously interacting with
Fujii. The clincher is
Dresser's ability to mimic all the sounds of the piano theme; it's mind-boggling that he can create these sounds with a bass. "Sound of Stone" is a solo piano piece that
Fujii opens by musically chalking out the boundaries. A dark chord signals the end of the sketching, and she proceeds to fill the piece with dramatic runs and stalls, momentous build-up and thinning-out contrasts, and clusters that move up the scale followed by single notes that tinkle back down. This excellent melodic piece showcases her ability without turning into a show of empty virtuosity. "Zauzy" is a duet between piano and soprano saxophone;
Fujii and
Hayasaka play foil to each other, giving the impression of notes flying from a large, spinning music wheel. About 18 minutes into the trio piece "Past of Life," the group recalls the groove and interaction of
Tim Berne's Bloodcount. Altogether,
Kitsune-Bi is a stunning album filled with amazing interplay and stellar compositions. The astonishing skill and distinctive style on display here is somewhat surprising, considering that this is only
Satoko Fujii's second U.S. release.
Kitsune-Bi is an achievement of constantly flowing brilliance and creativity.
–
Joslyn Layne, Rovi