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SYLVIE COURVOISIER piano
WADADA LEO SMITH trumpet
Trumpeter-composer Wadada Leo Smith and pianist-composer Sylvie Courvoisier have collaborated for years, with Courvoisier performing and recording in multiple Smith-led groups and his clarion horn featuring on Courvoisier’s electric, atmospheric 2023 sextet album Chimaera. The pair have also teamed for some striking duet concerts, and they will continue their dual explorations with a tour of Europe over October 19-30, 2025. This will come fresh off the release of Angel Falls, their very first duo album together, to be released by Intakt on October 3rd. For the iconic, ever-prolific Smith — who turns 84 in 2025 — this is slated to be his final European tour, as he eschews the road after seven decades to conserve his visionary energies for writing and recording. For such feats as the epic album Ten Freedom Summers, Smith has been hailed by The New York Review of Books as one of the nation’s “most powerful storytellers, an heir to American chroniclers like Charles Ives and Ornette Coleman.” The Swiss-born, Brooklyn-based Courvoisier — whom The New York Times called “a pianist of equal parts audacity and poise” — has gone from strength to strength in recent years as she has reinterpreted Stravinsky, toured widely with her acclaimed jazz trio and as a solo pianist, and collaborated closely with such peers as guitar-star Mary Halvorson. Angel Falls and its attendant concerts promise to be a joint milestone for Courvoisier and Smith, their chemistry sparking a rare poetic fire. — Bradley Bambarger
Album
ANGEL FALLS 
Released October 2025
Intakt Records.
The cover artwork was created by artist Sophie Bouvier Auslaender, who designed 200 unique LP covers, hand-printed artworks exclusively for this project. Each edition is numbered and signed, and will be available at the concerts.
REVIEWS
Music that defies all stereotypes – free, spiritual, sonically overwhelming. "Angel Falls" is not an album in the classic sense, but rather a meeting of two extraordinary personalities: the Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier, one of the most important voices in contemporary European jazz, and the legendary American trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith, a key figure in avant-garde jazz.
Together, the two create a sound space that is both meditative and eruptive. The improvisations arise from an almost telepathic understanding of one another – every note, every pause, every breath seems to be part of a larger, unwritten score. Between melodic beauty and free-flowing cascades, a deep, almost ritualistic energy unfolds.
"Angel Falls" is a work of rare intensity—spiritual, uncompromising, full of inner logic and emotional clarity. A meeting of two masters who not only communicate with their music, but also philosophize. Absolutely worth listening to.
— Jacek Brun, Jazz-Fun Oct
This is the first recording from pianist Courvoisier and trumpeter Smith. Ten years ago they performed together at a concert. I’m glad they finally recorded an album together. This is an improvised exploration of simplicity that showcases both musicians at their best.
Smith has long been one of the most adventurous musicians to take up the trumpet. Courvoisier has long been one of the most sublime. Together they make unforgettable music…..
Angel Falls is truly a beautiful album.
— Craig Byrd, Cultural Attaché
The history of humankind resounds with the sound of piano/trumpet duets. But not like this one. Not like Angel Falls. Because the true beauty of Angel Falls is that grandmaster Wadada Leo Smith, aided and abetted by the fervent curiosity of Brooklyn- based/Switzerland native pianist Sylvie Courvoisier, enlists the listener as an active creator in truly beatific, beautiful music. 
That is a magic thing that does not happen often. All too often, the audience is reduced to listening and observing. Left only to marvel, judge, compare. But magic can be many things. And when it comes to duets as inspired as Angel Falls, the magic does what magic is meant to do: calm the savage beast and inspire greater dreams.
The two are coaxing. Without words. As Smith stutters and sputters, "Vireo Belli" becomes a ruminative scripture playing against Courvoisier's penetrating presence. The pianist—whose recent foray with guitarist Mary Halvorson, Bone Bells, (Pyroclastic, 2025) holds a sure lock on this year's best-of-lists—stuns and seduces in harmony, co-creating the singular "A Line Through Time" and the spiky "Sonic Utterance."
Familiar with each other's artistry through their work with John Zorn, Marcus Gilmore, and Nate Wooley Angel Falls is a through-composed passion play from the opening adagio, the limpid "Olo'Upnea and lightning" to the closing epiphany "Kairos."Propelled by Courvoisier's cunning, metabolic approach—equal parts high Euro-chamber and downtown avant- garde—and Smith's stately, mortal wisdom, "Whispering Images" becomes enshrined in time. "Naomi Peak" creates a warm, anticipatory air of prologue. "Angels Falls:" A mystery unraveled.
But pay no attention to titles. Not so much for the reason that they might mislead, but that they hold any pertinence at all. Angel Falls, recorded in two hours (perhaps, while the rest of us were napping) at Oktaven Audio in Mount Vernon, NY, by Ryan Streber, is a whole music that takes you by surprise. It is a far less abrasive language of debate. Like magic, like Angel Falls, neither happens often.
— Mike Jurkovic, All About Jazz
Wadada Leo Smith enjoys recording as a duo with pianists. I have appreciated his creative merging with a variety of artists including Amina Claudine Myers, Angelica Sanchez, John Tilbury and Vijay Iyer. Perhaps, it was inevitable that he would suggest a recording with Sylvie Courvoisier. When they discussed it, Courvoisier suggested they avoid music charts. As a result of that request, the eight tracks on this album “Angel Falls” were recorded freely and uninhibited.
The two artists compliment each other, in a restless, spontaneous kind-of-way. Both are free spirits and master musicians. The original songs they sing together offer us continuous calibration and improvisation. They become a conversation between trumpet and piano right from the opening tune, “Old ‘Upnea and Lightning.” The trumpet takes the lead. Courvoisier’s piano chords fall into place, like rain to a thirsty earth. They both feed and compliment the production.
“The title reflects the world’s highest continuous waterfall in Venezuela,” Courvoisier explains. “I like the image of an angel falling down,” she refers to their album title.
The pianist and trumpeter first played together in 2017 at a concert organized by John Zorn. After that initial meeting, the two musicians exchanged phone numbers and have played together a hand full of times since that initial meeting.
The two bring artistry that draws from years of performance and decades of composing. Each has mastered the Avant-garde. They let freedom ring, allowing themselves to seek out their hidden most emotional introspection and creativity. Without charts, their music offers a new dimension of freedom and exploration. They listen to each other intently. The musical conversation is often tentative, sometimes explosive, but always unpredictable. Amazingly, they started recording this project at noon and by 5pm it was mixed, mastered and finished.
“We just played right through exactly the order of the CD, and exactly the amount of music on the CD, with no edits. We probably did that in two hours,” Sylvie stated proudly.
Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and American trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith—two genuinely inventive improvisers and composers—have collaborated before (notably on Courvoisier’s sextet album Chimaera), but Angel Falls marks their first duo recording. Smith, long devoted to this intimate format, brings his singular lyricism, while Courvoisier thrives on spontaneity and discovery. The album, titled after Venezuela’s towering waterfall, was recorded in the precise order presented, with no edits.
“Olo’ Upnea and Lightning” opens with Courvoisier’s wide-interval explorations on prepared piano, interwoven with luminous tonal chords. Smith responds with prayer-like intensity, his trumpet voice feverish yet finely crafted. Shifts from darkness to light define the piece, with both musicians embracing unrestrained expression. “Naomi Peak” follows in a whirlwind of centrifugal force—staccato trumpet bursts meet dizzying piano flutters, interrupted briefly by fragility before bluesy inflections ground the conclusion.
“Whispering Images” floats in a spectral haze of altered piano strings, drones, and muted trumpet, suspended between galaxies and propelled by near-waltzing cadences. By contrast, “Vireo Bellii”—named for a songbird—is playful and brisk, its sparse piano motifs forming oddly constellated patterns against Smith’s oscillation between penetrating cries and mournful restraint.
The title cut, “Angel Falls”, is another example of the duo’s constant communication and sophisticated interaction. Intense and dramatic, the piece probes darker tonalities with a suspenseful cinematic weight. Despite feeling intrinsically cerebral, its abstractions resist predictability.
Angel Falls confirms Courvoisier and Smith’s magnetic rapport. It may feel bulky at times, but their fearless interplay, rooted in both lyricism and texture, cements their place among the most compelling improvisers of our time.
— Filipe Freitas, JazzTrail
Longue de plusieurs années au sein de la scène new-yorkaise, la collaboration entre Sylvie Courvoisier et Wadada Leo Smith s’est concrétisée dernièrement autour de deux disques. Smith intervient au sein du quartet qui interprète Chimerae paru en 2023 et qui constitue d’ores et déjà à coup sûr un des sommets de l’œuvre toujours en cours de la pianiste suisse, tandis que le duo qu’ils constituent aujourd’hui pour Intakt montre une fois de plus les affinités qui les relient.
Le trompettiste a toujours su trouver l’épanouissement de son jeu en présence d’un clavier, comme en témoigne une collaboration avec Angelica Sanchez en 2013 ou plus récemment le très méditatif Central Park’s Mosaics of Reservoir, Lake, Paths and Gardens aux côtés d’Amina Claudine Myers. Avec de nombreuses nuances toutefois, les deux interprètes s’élancent cette fois dans un répertoire sans filet qui se nourrit des apports de l’autre.
Avec comme aire commune une place importante accordée au silence considéré comme un allié, les deux musiciens laissent se construire un lent dialogue qui prend le temps de laisser advenir puis se formuler les idées. Chaque geste, commun ou partagé est ainsi particulièrement abouti et la coordination entre les deux atteint un degré d’entente tel qu’on ne semble plus écouter de la musique mais plutôt assister à une chorégraphie.
Les articulations acrobatiques de Courvoisier, de même que sa capacité à utiliser l’intégralité des potentialités de son clavier dans la profondeur des basses comme dans l’espièglerie de quelques trilles aigus, tournent autour, parfois avec griserie, de la trompette puissante et immuable de Smith qui viendra soudainement se déchirer dans un cri bouleversant. Loin des compositions trop cadrées qui corsèteraient l’expressivité en la canalisant, le champ des possibles est ici totalement ouvert et dans un jeu souple et mobile les deux musiciens cherchent la bonne distance à l’autre, faisant de leur rapprochement ou de leur éloignement les conditions d’une tension en permanence régénérée et d’une intériorité qui s’épanouit dans la communion de deux individualités.
— Nicolas Dourlhès, Citizen Jazz
Swiss pianist and composer Sylvie Courvoisier has been a defining figure on the contemporary jazz scene for 20 years and is at the epicentre of the New York music scene.
Having just been awarded the prestigious Swiss Grand Prize for Music 2025, she now presents her duo album with the legendary Wadada Leo Smith.
This follows the recent acclaimed release of her solo album To Be Other-Wise and the atmospherically multi-layered sextet album Chimaera.
An exceptional musician, Smith is always at the pulse of the times, celebrating musical diversity and creativity and speaks out against any labelling of his work. He has helped shape the development of music in various contexts over the last 50 years.
Angel Falls (due out October 3rd, 2025) exudes the magic of musical freedom, possesses an astonishing immediacy, and has a captivating sense of dazzling sound architecture. “They both sound great. They complement each other without resorting to obvious moves. There is no ‘comping’, no showmanship, just a constant feeling of continuous calibration, quirky elements that are somehow perfectly balanced. How do they do it?” writes John Sharpe in the liner notes
In music as in life, Courvoisier crosses borders with a creative spirit and a free mind; her music-making is as playful as it is intense, as steeped in tradition as it is questing and intrepid, and thus this wholly impassioned new recording opens on the organically beholden, and sumptuously confluent Olo’Upnea and lightning and then we get the playfully strident Naomi Peak, a languishing beauty that veins through Whispering Images, and the sober toned A Line Through Time And with American trumpeter and composer Smith bringing his esteemed creativity to the fore in stunning style, up next is the flirtatiously perfect Vireo Bellii which is itself followed perfectly by the demurely elegant title track Angel Falls, the set rounding out on the sharply cornered at times, yet mellow and wafting at others Sonic Utterance, closing on the formidably structured decadence of Kairos.
— Anne Carlini, Ghost Canyon
The piano enters stealthily, its ethereal elements exposed. A tentative trumpet follows, the flutter of the player’s tongue creating a sound not quite foreign to human ears and certainly not familiar. As if a veil of purple fog was playing with dewy blades of grass in a forest meadow, the piano continues suggesting an awakening as the trumpet moves toward a clarity found when that first ray of sunshine breaks through. The recording is called Angel Falls. Angel Falls is the Anglo name for the world’s tallest waterfall at 979 meters, and a plunge of 807 meters. It drops over the edge of the Auyán-tepui mountain in the Canaima National Park and is located in the Gran Sabana region of Bolívar State in Venezuela. The pianist on the recording being revealed here, Sylvie Courvoisier, remarks on another possible reference: “And I also like the image of an angel falling down.” Contemplate the concept. Does a falling angel make a sound; we know waterfalls do. When does a falling angel become a fallen angel?
There’s a chill of a certain kind I feel whenever the sound of Wadada Leo Smith’s trumpet first issues from whatever device I am listening to. It’s something akin to the shiver of anticipation before entering a place I’ve never been armed only with a general understanding that it will be unlike any other previous excursion, even if the surroundings seem intimately familiar. Smith’s latest work with pianist Sylvie Courvoisier continues this tradition; uniquely original yet satisfyingly familiar. This doesn’t mean in any way that listening to this new disc, titled Angel Falls, is predictable or comfortable, somnolent or static. It is none of those; instead it renews the concept of music while reconstituting the concept of jazz. Once again, Smith takes the elements of jazz and transcends them, creating a music that is not only of this earth. In Courvoisier, he has once again found an ideal counterpart–one whose playing ensures the music created will be considerably more than the sum of its parts. Exponentially more. Courvoisier’s piano playing assumes the piano’s traditional role of providing rhythm to the soaring and floating tones created by Smith’s trumpet while also creating melodies and harmonies of its own.
Smith and Courvoisier first played together in a 2017 concert organized by composer and sax player John Zorn, an avant-gardist in his own right. The musical attraction was instant and within a few months the two recorded a live performance with drummer Marcus Gilmore. Other collaborations followed. The booklet accompanying the disc notes Smith’s love of the piano and trumpet duet. That love and the two artists’ comfort with the format defines the work. Muted or open, Smith’s trumpet whispers, talks and ultimately sings; Courvoisier’s fingers remark, respond and encourage the musical conversation we are privileged to listen in on. There’s a sonic intuition present between the piano’s ivories, the horn’s valves and the souls that guide them that turn their musical manifestations into a celestial celebration the musicians seem happy to share. The sum is certainly greater than its parts—parts which have proven they can also stand alone without fear or hesitation.
Kenny Dorham is also a trumpet player. He left us over fifty years ago. Thanks to the master producer at Resonance Records Zev Feldman, a previously unrecorded performance of Dorham’s was released last summer. Titled Blue Bossa in the Bronx: Live From the Blue Morocco, the recording is from a 1967 performance and features Dorham on trumpet, Sonny Red on alto sax, Cedar Walton on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Denis Charles on drums. The title of the album cones from Dorham’s 1963 composition called “Blue Bossa,” which neatly blends bebop and bossa nova styles. The recording opens with a twelve minute take on this tune; by the time the subsequent tune begins—written by Charlie Parker—the listener is inside the Blue Morocco, smoky room, glasses of beer and some of the coolest jazz musicians in the five boroughs that evening.
Dorham was a sideman before he began recording with his own ensembles. He played with Billy Eckstine, Charlie Parker, Art Blakey and Horace Silver’s Jazz Messengers and Hal Roach. There were probably others I am forgetting here. Those in the know—fellow jazz musicians, jazz critics and radio deejays—called Dorham a musician’s musician, an acknowledgment that is both a high compliment and an occasional curse, especially when bills need to be paid. It seems reasonable to assume that Dorham’s years of playing in ensembles led by others provided him with a certain understanding about accompaniment, the spotlight and lack thereof, and the meaning of professionalism, not to mention the nature of ego. If one considers those possible lessons when listening to the performance being written about here, they might hear a confidence of a player capable of playing what he hears while anticipating what comes next. There’s also a gentle humility that resonates within each tune and every solo. The piano steps forward and Dorham moves into the shadows; the same can be said about the saxophone’s presence and the always important bottom—the drums and bass.
2024 was the hundredth anniversary of Kenny Dorham’s birth. Resonance Records assembled and released Blue Bossa in the Bronx to mark that event. Listening to the final measures of “The Theme,” the last tune on the disc as I write this makes me happy enough to blow out all one hundred candles on Dorham’s centennial birthday cake.
— Ron Jacobs, CounterPunch
