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Jazz Recordings and Events of 2003 By Jeff Cebulski Click here for Dapp Theory CD Review
Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon sharpened his musical teeth under the tutelage of Wynton Marsalis and has developed a staunch fan base with a number of albums as a leader, four for nagel heyer. This latest one is a dip into traditional, New Orleans-style material, featuring Gordon’s soulful and bluesy voice on several cuts, either as a post-Armstrong graveller or as a gospel-tinged scatman. The blues is the main focus, and his long time musical mates Victor Goines (sax), Farid Barron (piano), Rodney Whitaker (bass), and the funky Herlin Riley (drums) are up to the task. Next to Robin Eubanks and Steve Turre, Gordon has done much to keep the trombone in the mix of modern jazz. Cliffhanger is actually made from a session back in 1999, but it’s hard to believe the company hung onto this so long. Sandke is one of many competent trumpet players familiar to longtime jazz afficienados who listen to this label and Concord Records. His clarity and taste never fail to please, and he always chooses his support group wisely. The “discovery” for this reviewer on this CD is tenor saxman Harry Allen, whose rich toned offerings swing like crazy, kind of like a latter day Harold Land. Gordon joins in on one cut, Mulgrew Miller plays his normal wonderful piano, and the ubiquitous WashingtonsPeter and Kennyprovide a formidable rhythm section. Even though the majority of this CD handles classic songs, these guys find new ways to express them. As for old farts, it seems the
European labels have an agenda to keep them alive, resulting in many
efforts that lack the pizzazz of youth. However, the drumless trio of
trumpeter Claudio Roditi, pianist Klaus Ignatzek, and bassist Jean-Louis
Rassinfosse presents thoughtfully refreshing music on an album that visits
only one classica jazz one at that, On Green Dolphin
Streetand presents five Ignatzek compositions. Roditi is fairly
well known among veteran American music buffs, but Ignatzek has firmly
held the flame of jazz in Western Europe for half of the 20th century.
With the exception of one piece where Roditi is obligated, I guess, to
sing (and not exceptionallyleave that to Gilberto), these pieces
sound like comfortable music played at a high-class clubrewarding
close listening but also serving as cerebral background
sound. Chicago’s Kurt Elling has fed on and extended the traditions of Frank Sinatra, Billy Eckstine, Jon Hendricks, and Mark Murphy for over a decade and has released several varied albums for Blue Note. His latest displays him at his best, practicing vocalise, the art of putting words and scats into instrumental classics. On Man, Elling sings along with the music of Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays, Joe Zawinul, John Coltrane (a powerful and universal ‘prayer’ to the tune of Part 2 of A Love Supreme), and even The Association (“Never My Love”). Elling clearly has a romantic side, but isn’t afraid to swing and take chances with arcane poetry. This guy should be a star. One guy who will probably be a star in the near future is young Peter Cincotti, whose debut on Concord was touted by no less than CBS television as a return to Young Sinatra. Indeed, Cincotti sounds more naturally like Frank than his predecessor, Harry Connick, Jr., under whose wing Cincotti learned to sound like Frank. Unlike Connick, though, Cincotti seems to relish a small club ambiance and the intimacy of lyrics. He’s not afraid to play around with arrangements and pace; on this CD, he creates a fully masculine reading of “Miss Brown” and meshes “Fool On the Hill” with “Nature Boy” in a way that makes it seem like the most natural thing. Only 19 when he recorded this album (produced by Phil Ramone), Cincotti shows his already matured piano chops on all the songslike Connick, but with more nuances that place his work within the scope of jazz while still lending support to his singing. Lizz Wright was introduced to
me by one of this rag’s editors, who thoughtfully sent me a CD-R of a
radio broadcast of her singing at the New Orleans Jazz Festival last year.
While no studio CD can really capture the thrill of live performance,
Salt at least provides an accurate transcription of the breadth of
this singer’s range and material. Like Wilson, Wright can hit low notes
with appropriate timbre; like Anita Baker, Wright can weave notes around
and through even the most mundane and pedestrian lyrics to create a
personal statement. Wright’s gospel influences are clearly evident in
style and word, occasionally crossing over into romance but without
cloying nuances. After hearing her version of Mongo Santamaria’s “Afro
Blue” (sung like Coltrane played it), I figured I was hearing the real
deal. One of those is electrified trumpeter Erik Truffaz, whose third Blue Note CD finally expands on the Fusion Miles motif of his first two albums. Giant Turtle again features his young vibrant quartet, but its past occasional ethereal dissonance is refocused on establishing prog rock connections. Fender Rhodes wiz Patrick Muller is especially versatile as the music’s energy climbs and falls among genre, creating a unique synergy that has not been heard since…well…Miles. Bassist Marcello Giuliani uses all of his 70’s approaches to electrified rhythm, while drummer Marc Erbetta would have easily commandeered a spot in a Weather Report session. Still, the music sounds fresh and vibrant because it takes itself seriously instead of considering itself a one-off hybrid. Dapp Theory, the brainchild of
Canadian keyboardist Andy Milne, is a band that tries to take advantage of
modern beat and language while keeping one foot in the fusion world. For
the most part on Y’all, it works, especially when Milne experiments with
an improbable two-man tag team of Bruce Cockburn and the DJ Kokayi.
Cockburn and Kokayi are joined together on two songs (both Cockburn
compositions), and the DJ fills in on three others, evincing the most
sincere attempt of jointing jazz and hip hop that I’ve been able to find.
On other tunes, though, the music sometimes falls flat, as though, without
any lingual connection, the band fades into fusion Limbo. Harmonicat
Gregoire Maret’s relatively thin playing bodes better on ballads (like the
lovely version of “Con Alma”) than on the hipper material, where his notes
work like Ritalin to the music’s spastic tendencies.
In Damaged, we get nine improvised pieces played live in France by enigmatic electric bassist Steve Swallow, the rising young saxophonist Chris Potter, and the powerful percussionist Adam Nussbaum. The amazing thing to these ears is that Potter, who finished a tour with the Dave Holland Quintet (and was recorded for Extended Play) a month before these recordings, sounds no worse for the wear, meeting the stylistic challenges presented by Swallow head on with panache. Swallow, known for his forays into cerebral jazz with Paul and Carla Bley while receiving kudos for his dexterous bass playing, presents his players with rich, energetic formats and slower, pensive moods. Nussbaum is equal to the task, answering Potter’s runs and pushing the group toward tolerable chaos. Extended Play, the first live recording released by what is arguably the world’s top jazz ensemble, will be many people’s last chance to hear the volcanic Billy Kilson on the drums in a Holland-led group. Recorded in November, 2001, Holland, the highly-acclaimed bassist, leads his band through “extended” versions of already long compositions that show Holland’s connection to his late mentor Miles Davis: the settings present the musicians with just enough melody and tone to improvise one layer at a time until they meet in a rising crescendo, with a grinning Holland behind them nodding in pure joy. Potter’s playing sometimes becomes a bit static in approach, but when the music opens up to soloing, both he and trombonist Robin Eubanks are able to take advantage and blow notes like there’s no tomorrow. In the meantime, no bassist commands the attention Holland does, either when he introduces a song or when he takes off on his own solo. Holland also commands
attention when he plays for someone else, and Roy Haynes’ latest album,
Love Letters, is no different, even when the bop master Haynes is the
drummer. Perhaps no other percussionist (since Billy Higgins died)
receives as much homage as this ageless wonder does. On Letters, given the
rather traditional list of songs presented, Haynes demonstrates wise
restraint and lets his guests find ways to uplift what could have been
mere redundant material. Joshua Redman’s blistering solo awakens the
normally languid “My Shining Hour”; John Scofield’s tasty picking enhances
the title cut and a trio version of “Afro Blue”; and Kenny Barron’s
chromatic piano is featured on “How Deep Is the Ocean.” While the young
bass genius Christian McBride demonstrates his own versatility on four
songs, Holland is clearly a shining star as he melds Scofield and Haynes
into a refreshing unit on four others, with rising pianist David Kikoski
helping out on two of them. Even with this talent on display, this CD
possesses surprisingly engaging music from seemingly ancient
settings. His fourth album as a leader for Milestone finds him with his mentor, pianist Harold Mabern, the great bass godfather Ron Carter, and Alexander’s mate from One For All, drummer Joe Farnsworth. This straight-up collection is an improvement on his previous CD, Summit Meeting, in that he explores a greater range of music with more clarity and energy. The title cut has vestiges of Paul Desmond’s smooth dexterity but with the richer tone and rhythm of Michael Brecker. “Cold Smoke” presents Alexander within a blues motif ala Coltrane (a major influence), and “Nemesis” proves that, for raw power and drive, no one can really compete. And listen to Carter on “Island”; every note is perfect. One For All, the ensemble that Alexander, his trumpet partner Jim Rotondi and pianist David Hazeltine assemble for periodic recording and tours, released its fourth album for Criss Cross this past year, and, like its predecessors, it travels freely within the post bop world, revisiting jazz standards and exploring new compositions. Rotondi is one of the finest trumpet players around; think Art Farmer with the shine of Booker Little. Hazeltine has been a favored
studio musician for over a decade and has gained increased critical
acclaim for his trios and quartets. Trombonist Steve Davis always brings
interesting compositions built upon blues idioms. Live, these guys really
smoke and a lot of that energy is also transferred to their studio work.
In Alexander’s case, it is intriguing to compare the sextet’s versions of
“Nemesis” and “Cold Smoke” to those on Nightlife. Like Monk, redundant
perhaps, but never boring. Why A&M did not release the music on Bossas and Ballads after it was recorded in 1989 is a major mystery (instead, it released the more tepid Apasionado). Getz, for all his health difficulties stemming from decades of drug use, hardly sounded better. He caresses every song as a close friend, while his erstwhile musical collaborator, pianist Kenny Barron, provided five compositions and solid support. As the album’s title suggests, the material is divided between Latin-rhythmed pieces and thoughtful ballads. Every cut has something memorable; Getz made truly smooth jazz before that monacker was given to relatively homogenized radio music. On Lift Every Voice,
Charles Lloyd hearkened back to old times by reconnecting with drummer
Billy Hart and inviting pianist Geri Allen to sit in (in place of the
deceased Michel Petrucciani) on a double-CD collection of songs that
reflected a somber but hopeful tone following the tragic events in New
York City. Included were guitarist John Abercrombie (who appeared on
Lloyd’s two previous CD’s for ECM) and bassists Marc Johnson and Larry
Grenadier. Abercrombie’s echoing fills and washes provide a mystical-like
riffing to Lloyd’s chordal perusing. What we hear on this album is not so
much different from Lloyd’s past recordings but is predominated by
Americanized spiritual motifs rather than the Eastern themes that emanate
from Lloyd’s Buddhistic influences. The run of pieces on the second disc,
which includes the three spirituals “Go Down Moses,” “Wayfaring Stranger,”
and “Deep River,” is one of the most moving moments in latter day jazz.
This is true artistic courage, a player presenting a homage to his roots
in a time when politically-popular sophistication rules the
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