Sam Ospovat’s Blight Music Channels NYC’s Raw Energy Through a Transatlantic Avant-Garde Lens

Blight Music, the third album by drummer and composer Sam Ospovat as a bandleader, is an uncompromising statement that bridges the ecstatic freedom of avant-garde improvisation with the rhythmic vitality and melodic tension of the 1970s loft jazz scene. The album doesn’t just nod to history—it vibrates with it, reimagining past energies for a chaotic present.

Recorded in a burned-out, graffiti-covered waterfront warehouse in Brooklyn’s Bush Terminal, Blight Music captures more than just music. It captures atmosphere. Concrete pillars, soaring 20-foot ceilings, and the industrial remnants of New York’s past created a reverberant environment where the city’s monumental history, volatile present, and uncertain future all seemed to collide. That tension lives in every note—raw, alive, unfiltered.

The music itself is a high-wire act. It veers between exuberant melodic lines and unrelenting intensity, often suspending time through intricate polyrhythmic layers. Each composition is executed with fiery conviction by a transatlantic supergroup of improvisers—musicians known for their adventurous spirits and distinct voices.

The core ensemble includes:

  • Matt Mitchell (piano), who also contributes the album’s liner notes,

  • Tim Dahl (fretless electric bass),

  • Finnish ECM legend Raoul Björkenheim (electric guitar),

  • Olli Hirvonen (electric guitar),

  • Matt Nelson (tenor saxophone),

  • Nick Lyons (alto saxophone),

  • and Sam Ospovat on drums and compositions.

Together, they form a unit that Ospovat has cultivated over several years, with performances across New York and Europe. The group took on a more permanent shape after Ospovat’s nearly full-time move to Helsinki in 2022, evolving into a rare ensemble that defies national and stylistic borders.

Sam Ospovat Expressive Olympics