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Reviews that mention Burton Greene

Burton Greene

Live 1965
Porter Records PRCD 4040

Marion Brown

Why Not?

ESP 1040

Alto saxophonist Marion Brown never achieved the same fame or notoriety as some of his New Thing’s contemporaries, because, as these CDs prove he was a man out of time. While Albert Ayler was destroying jazz’s most vaulted conventions with his fervid glossolalia, and Archie Shepp was attacking bourgeois conventions verbally and with his over-the-top playing, Brown, their contemporary, was gently extending the Bop tradition in a more-or-less standard format.

This doesn’t mean that the organized improvising on Why Not, a reissued classic from 1966, or on Live 1965, a newly discovered session by pianist Burton Greene’s quartet is any way lacking. It’s just that with the benefits of hindsight, we can hear that players such as Brown – and drummer Rahied Ali, who is also present on both discs – were Free Jazz Mensheviks compared to the out-and-out Free Jazz Bolshevism which avatars such as Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, John Coltrane, Ayler – and sometimes Shepp – promised and delivered.

It’s interesting to note who else is involved on these dates. Playing a program of his own compositions based on different thematic ideas, Greene, who explores the inside as well as the outside of the piano, is the most radical stylist on Live. Bassist Reggie Johnson was a steady journeyman, who also worked with Shepp and trumpeter Bill Dixon. As for Why Not, besides Ali, who had R&B and Bop roots, the other players are Norris “Sirone” Jones, a half-decade away from his breakthrough as part of The Revolutionary Ensemble, and who retreated increasingly towards the mainstream before his recent death; and pianist Stanley Cowell, a Free Jazzer only by affiliation who from the 1980s onwards was ensconced in mainstream piano formations.

Greene’s singular inventiveness is made that much clearer from the first track of his disc, where his soloing bounds from Red Garland-like blues to Bach-like inventions that would have fit perfectly in John Coltrane’s initial version of “My Favorite Things”. Nevertheless, the almost 28 minute “Like It Is” – how’s that for a mid-1960s title? – shows that the pianist’s forward-thinking strategies were already in place. When Johnson begins to worry his strings with beneath-the-bridge friction, Greene joins in with clanks and stops from the piano-harp. Then, as Ali intensifies his attack with press rolls, cymbal shakes and bass-drum bumps, the keyboardist responds by alternating between kinetic runs and string-stopping. Earlier his discordant note clusters made common cause with Brown’s ancillary note extensions and pressurized trills. Later Greene’s hunt-and-peck pianism turns to outlining designated notes, with Brown contributing a coda of disaffiliated tongue splatters.

Lower-pitched, aleatory expositions make up Brown’s narrative on “Cluster Quartet II”, based on compressed motoric clusters. Nonetheless the broken octave exposition depends on Johnson’s thick strumming, Greene’s stomps and tremolo respites and time-suspending thumps and ruffs from Ali to fully satisfy the compositional ideas.

Would that a similar try-anything ethos was present the next year. Why Not’s four performances, while better recorded, seem desultory in comparison to the work on the other CD. Only the title tune generates real heat, and that might be merely because it taken at a faster clip than the others. It encompasses a stop-start staccato interface and tremolo key scattering from Cowell and Ali’s double-timed flams and pops which reintroduce some excitement after unadventurous walking from Sirone. Brown’s final solo variant involves recapping the head, then using a frequent stylistic tick of the time, repeating it again as the coda.

On the rest of the CD, tempos range from balladic to frenetic –sometimes on the same track – with the pitter-patter bass lines, piano chording and clattering cymbals referencing (Free) Bop rather than Energy Music. Brown confirms his traditionalism throughout by quoting as frequently and incongruously as Dexter Gordon; “My Mom Gave Me a Nickel” at one point, “Three Blind Mice” at another.

“Homecoming” – perhaps a symbolic title – epitomizes this approach. Beginning as a melancholy intermezzo, with the theme stretched by Brown, it swiftly explodes into cacophony complete with military press rolls from Ali; surprising honky-tonk-like syncopation from Cowell; and, when he isn’t quoting other tunes, squeaky country brass- band references from Brown. Speeding up the pace from adagio, the four unite for a presto finale.

Why Not is valuable because it restores to general circulation one of the seminal sessions in Brown’s limited discography. Live 1965 is more impressive. It demonstrates – as does John Coltrane’s Ascension and Shepp’s Fire Music – that Brown’s best work may have resulted when someone else led the recording date.

-- Ken Waxman

Track Listing: Why: 1. La Sorella 2. Fortunato 3. Why Not? 4. Homecoming

Personnel: Why: Marion Brown (alto saxophone); Stanley Cowell (piano); Norris “Sirone” Jones (bass) and Rashied Ali (drums)

Track Listing: Live: 1. Three Theme II 2. Cluster Quartet II 3. Like It Is

Personnel: Live: Marion Brown (alto saxophone); Burton Greene (piano); Reggie Johnson (bass) and Rashied Ali (drums)

June 16, 2010

BURTON GREENE

Live at Grasland
Drimala DR-04-347-01

Forever associated with ESP-Disk, the 1960s New Thing and the Jazz Composers Guild, pianist Burton Greene’s prowess as an expressive composer and pianist have been given short shift by many jazzers. Hopefully this solo CD’s varied and exciting program will go some way towards redressing this situation.

Greene, who has spent most of his time since 1969 living in Europe also teaches Jewish and Balkan Jazz at Amsterdam’s Muziekschool. Here an exposure to his Eastern European roots through Klezmer and associations with sardonic Dutch musical chameleons such as drummer Han Bennink and reediest William Breaker has added an unexpected, swinging melodiousness to the fire-breathing recklessness he exhibited in earlier associations with Free Jazzers like drummer Sunny Murray.

Sylosophy (Digitalville)”, for instance, features jumping polytonalism as he sluices al over the keys. Moving uneven patterns back and forth, his hands produce simultaneous, opposing lines -- chamber music fantasia in one and rent party honky tonk in the other. With some near-ragtime, accelerated chording and vibrating tremolos, he glides up and down the scale until a walking bass line produces deep tones that are expanded and speed up to player piano movements. Coda is more characteristic slurred fingering and exhibitionistic crescendos. Meanwhile, despite its hippie era title, “A Cozy Winter Veggy Soup” is an uptempo jazz waltz, build on effortless fortissimo swing. Featuring treble glissandos and a jaunty bass countermelody, it ends with harmonic concordance from each hand.

Or take the frisky “Gnat Dance”. Built around portamento slurred fingering and individual key bounces, a boogie-woogie section soon becomes double and triple syncopated. Ranging over the keys, ruffling them at appropriate moments, Greene springs back to complete a phrase with an errant note, using body English that owes as much to Chico Marx as Thelonious Monk. At the end, double-timed bottom runs give way to dissonant chords and cascading note clusters.

A composer, not a phrase expander, Greene constructs his tunes in definite sections, a technique most obvious on his almost 16½-minute “South Florida Odyssey Suite” in two parts -- “12,733 Shopping Malls” and “Florida Summer Odyssey”. There are times on the former when, as elsewhere, he seems to be playing a polyrhythmic version of a Broadway show tune. That’s in the later half of the piece, where it proceeds suggestions of a 19th century waltz and a false ending with the “Shave and a Haircut, Two Bits” beat. Final cadences include tremolos and glissandos, which relate to earlier, quick-fingered child-like melodies that mock consumerism.

Expanding the motif, “Odyssey” uses a tango-like rhythm and a jerky circus melody to dramatically reprise the polyrhythmic theme, then pedal pressure to outline a new splayed-fingered romantic fantasia. As these moderato tones calm the previously frantic rhythms, the tune hymns the unexposed, pacific beauty that still exists in some parts of Florida.

Stately too is Greene’s solo piano version of long-time associate clarinetist Perry Robinson’s “Angels”. Light fingered, Greene creates a gentle curlicue motion that bounces, jumps and decorates the patterns with different pitch and tempo configurations. Following a bluesy mid section, the pianist downshifts to glissandos and two handed pumps, ending with sharp spinning ratchet cracks and finger cymbal peals.

Like Robinson and trombonist Roswell Rudd, Greene, 67, is another of the still vibrant first generation avant players whose contributions are too often minimized. A fine effort like this one, available at www.drimala.com should give him more prominence.

-- Ken Waxman

Track Listing: 1. Calistrophy 2. In the Footsteps of the Bratslav 3. Sylosophy (Digitalville) /South Florida Odyssey Suite: 4. 12,733 Shopping Malls 5. Florida Summer Odyssey 6. A Cozy Winter Veggy Soup 7. Gnat Dance 8. Angels

Personnel: Burton Greene (piano)

July 19, 2004