
Text by Nick Storring:
Bassist and composer Dan Fortin's varied musical output is a vivid illustration of the extent to which restlessness can drive creativity. The Hamilton, Ontario resident maintains an omnivorous musical diet in a vast assortment of projects across numerous styles. Fortin released his debut BRINKS in 2015 with Fresh Sound/New Talent Records. The critically acclaimed record features long time collaborators David French, Michael Davidson, and Fabio Ragnelli, and includes ten of his songs, all of which inhabit variations on the jazz idiom. In 2020, he released The Latest Tech, a less-classifable collection of double bass solos that betray a fascination with structure, space, and rhythm. The album came out as a digital release and sheet music with Elastic Recordings, the suitably eclectic imprint that he runs with the aforementioned Davidson, which is also home to the present release.
Fortin is also known as a member of the increasingly experimental pop outfit Bernice (Telephone Explosion Records), Toronto supergroup Queer Songbook Orchestra, and violinist Aline Homzy's colourful Aline's étoile magique. He also co-leads the JUNO- nominated MYRIAD3, along with pianist Chris Donnelly and drummer Ernesto Cervini.
Anyone tempted to chalk Fortin's various guises up to mere 'gigging' need not look any further than Fortin's forthcoming LP Cannon to witness his curious artistry at work. The record illuminates his eccentric pluralism through a series of ten unclassifiable, pop-song-length compositions that enlist an assortment of different guests including Karen Ng (collaborator to the likes of Weather Station, Lido Pimienta, and -----_ ), Philippe Melanson (Sam Gendel, Bernice, Eric Chenaux Trio), Tom Gill (Bernice, Fievel Is Glauque, Joseph Shabason, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Chaka Khan), Canadian jazz and contemporary music mainstay David Occhipinti, and others.
Much of the album is pared-down in feel and even when Fortin or his collaborators provide additional layers, the perceived scope remains contained, a choice that ensures his delightfully odd sensibilities remain in the foreground. This sparsity can be traced back to the original vision that Fortin had for the record. Initially it was conceived as a follow-up to The Latest Tech, and was also intended as a solo double-bass record. However, when Fortin ended up in Calgary for a spell during the early days of the pandemic with just a bass guitar, the original image he had of the album began shifting toward a dreamlike patchwork of sounds and ideas.
"Minty" was the piece that first unlocked this desire to work collaboratively. After recording his part on electric bass, Fortin's immediate thought was to contact the brilliant and ubiquitous Toronto saxophonist Karen Ng to play on the track. Ng's reply exemplifes the surreal quality that permeates the album. The solo she unfurls begins almost conventionally around the track's 30 second mark, gradually growing more fractured and impassioned. By the one and a half minute mark, she has exited the track entirely, leaving Fortin's bare, elusive bass to close out the remaining duration.
His invitation to longtime collaborator, vibraphone virtuoso Michael Davidson, yielded something very different than he had first
imagined. Rather than the deft mallet work for which he is known, Davidson contributed a knot of abstract synth textures. And in keeping with the emergent exploratory spirit of the project, Fortin embraced the surprise, elaborating on it with his own electronics.
"Act II," featuring his Bernice bandmate Philippe Melanson, deviates even further from the initial formula. It started life as a sequel to "Act I" from The Latest Tech—audibly so—but distills its acoustic predecessor's nimble bounds across the bass' full range to a curious and skeletal bounce. Scattered throughout this lean bassline is a wild assortment of sonic disruptions—bursts of noise, truncated ambience, jittery arpeggiations, and the cubist samples that Melanson hurls from behind his electronic drum kit.
Continued at https://www.danfortinthewebsite.com/cannon
Credits
Dan Fortin
CANNON
Uh Hundred
Dan Fortin: electric bass, synths
David Occhipinti: guitarAct II
Dan Fortin: electric basses, synths, field recording
Philippe Melanson: e-drumsMinty
Dan Fortin: electric bass
Karen Ng: alto saxophoneAllium Tower
Dan Fortin: electric bass, synths
Michael Davidson: synthsAplomb
Dan Fortin: electric bass
Chris Donnelly: pianoPalms
Dan Fortin: electric bass, double bass, synths, field recordings
Yunjin Claire Lee: synths
Fabio Ragnelli: drumsEastern Side of The Ural Mountains
Dan Fortin: double bass, synths
Jos. Fortin: synths and programmingCuesta
Dan Fortin: electric bass, electric baritone guitarQuestion Song
Dan Fortin: electric bass, electric baritone guitar, synths
Madeleine Ertel: trumpetSparkwood
Dan Fortin: electric bass, field recordings
Thom Gill: guitar, piano, whistling
All music composed by Dan Fortin except for Uh Hundred (Dan Fortin/David Occhipinti) and Eastern Side of the Ural Mountains (Jos. Fortin.)
(SOCAN.)
Recorded in Calgary, Vancouver, Hamilton, Parry Sound, Peterborough, and Toronto between January 2021 and April 2023
Additional recording by Joseph Shabason @ Studio Aytche, Toronto, April 4th 2023
Mixed by Joseph Shabason @ Studio Aytche, Toronto
Mastered by Stephan Mathieu @ Schwebung Mastering, Bonn DE
Art and design by Andrew Zukerman
Produced by Dan Fortin
