Continuing the fruitful creative partnership that began with 2016's Upward Spiral, vocalist 
Kurt Elling once again pairs with saxophonist 
Branford Marsalis for the lyrical, ruminative 2018 effort 
The Questions. Joining them are pianist 
Joey Calderazzo, drummer 
Jeff "Tain" Watts, guitarist 
John McLean, pianist Stu Mindeman, bassist 
Clark Sommers, and trumpeter 
Marquis Hill. As the title implies, the album finds 
Elling in deeply contemplative mood, delving into songs rife with existential themes of human suffering, and the hope for a better world. While that may sound like a serious-minded slog, it never gets bogged down. Rather, this is a well-curated set of songs, done in 
Elling's usual sophisticated, literate, and uplifting style. Instead of playing standards here (though the album ends on an inspired reading of 
Hoagy Carmichael and 
Johnny Mercer's "Skylark"), 
Elling and 
Marsalis (who also produced) move toward songs that are further afield of the jazz tradition. There is a poetic quality to many of the song choices that reflect 
Elling's longstanding love of spoken word, beginning with his soulful opening rendition of 
Bob Dylan's "A Hard Rain's-a-Gonna Fall." Moving from a spare, soulful a cappella intro to a wave-like full-band arrangement, the song works to set the album's overall tone of thoughtful, existential questioning. Similarly engaging are his takes on 
Paul Simon's "American Song" and his subdued, gospel-inflected version of 
Peter Gabriel's "Washing of the Water." As with many of his past albums, he also adds his own literary spin to several pieces, including taking Carla Bley's sweetly attenuated piece "Lawns" and combining it with his own lyrics, and a poem by writer Sara Teasdale, turning it into "Endless Lawns." Similarly, he adds lyrics to 
Jaco Pastorius' instrumental "Three Views of a Secret," drawing inspiration from the work of 13th Century poet Rumi and transforming the song into his own "A Secret in Three Views." Musically, while the core of 
The Questions sounds like an acoustic jazz album, the overall sound is much more of a hybrid, weaving in elements of contemporary folk, classical, Latin, and even new age. That said, there are certainly stellar bits of improvisation, including a warm, harmonic flügelhorn solo from 
Hill on "Lonely Town," and a spiraling soprano sax section from 
Marsalis on "I Have Dreamed." Ultimately, all of this works to frame 
Elling's textured, highly resonant vocals and heartfelt message. As he sings on "Skylark," "Haven't you heard the music in the night? Beautiful music." ~ Matt Collar