Freexielanders
April 11, 2017Looking Back, Playing Forward
Rudi Records RRJ1032
Dave Burrell and Bob Stewart
The Crave
No Business Records NBLP 100
Joe McPhee/André Jaumep
Nuclear Family
Corbett vs Dempsey CvD CD031
Simon Nabatov
Monk’n’More
Leo Records CD LR 780
Something In The Air: Twisting Classic Jazz and Jazz Classics
By Ken Waxman
Classic Jazz, sometimes called Dixieland or Trad Jazz van be a path into the music. However since the 100th birthday of recorded jazz passed last month, those who stick to recreating jazz standards of earlier eras are in the position of Early Music devotes who refuse to consider anything not played on period instruments. Ironically enough some well-known Free players started out as Dixielanders, including saxophonist Steve Lacy and Toronto artist/pianist Michael Snow, but they soon switched to more challenging fare. Recently a new curiosity has emerged though. As a post-modern paradox some advanced improvisers are mixing old timey classics with free form sounds with unique results.
Take for instance the Italian octet The Freexielanders. On Looking Back, Playing Forward (Rudi Records RRJ1032) the band brings the same rollicking, texture-stretching freedom to contemporary original as they do to two-beat tunes that were even considered warhorses in the early 1950s. Yet starting with the first track which blends the hoary “St. Louis Blues” with “Gotta Get to St. Joe”, the foot tapping performance is done with such finesse that it’s obvious that Alberto Popolla’s sparkling clarinet blowing and Giancarlo Schiaffini’s gutbucket trombone slurs would impress during this pseudo-march exposition whether played in 1917 or 2017. This same sort of transubstantiation is applied to standards like “Yardbird Shuffle”, borne on trumpeter Aurelio Tontini’s Gabriel-like high chortles and slap bass from Gianfranco Tedeschi; or “Black Maria” that evolves into a hearty swing-shuffle dance, following a jagged split tone intro from the five horns plus vibraphone-clanking extensions from Francesco Lo Cascio that could have been part of a 1965 Free Jazz date. Like actors who are as convincing in a Shakespearean production as in an action flick, the eight perform reverse alchemy on modern tunes. “Sabor de habanera”, a Schiaffini composition, moves from tango to tea dance to something more within the contrapuntal challenge between the trombonist and clarinetist and ends with a Count Basie-like repeated riff. Meanwhile “Voice del Deserto” treated as a cousin to Hoagy Carmichael’s “Hong Kong Blues” features both free-form reed wiggles from Popolla and sizzling Gene Krupa-styled pumps from drummer Nicola Raffone. Relentless polyphony that characterize the recasting of Jelly Roll Morton’s “Cannonball Blues” relates both to notated orchestrations with a Native Indian-like lilt that pulls it one way plus slap bass and so-called Jungle effects trumpeting pulling it in another. More distinctively Tontini’s sputtering tongue stops and Schiaffini’s well modulated slides not only made a perfect toping for the stacked reed trio vamps on Come Sunday but by leaving space for altissimo clarinet puffs. The piece is deconstructed to the extent that the performances – like most of the CD – become timeless.
Timeless too is a 1979 Paris duo between American cornetist/saxophonist Joe McPhee and French saxophonist/clarinetist André Jaume on Nuclear Family (Corbett vs Dempsey CvD CD031). At a time when so-called Young Lions claimed ownership of all of jazz’s pre-1960s vocabulary and ignoring modern currents, these players presented their own originals alongside classics from the Ellington band, Monk, Coleman and Charles Mingus. With a layer-cake-like recipe of dense and voltaic alto saxophone licks atop guttural bass clarinet slurps, the narrative of Duke Ellington’s “Come Sunday” is more emotional yet grounded than The Freexielanders’ version. This combination of jump-though-hoops modernism coupled with heart-on-sleeve sentiments conveyed by Jaume’s tenor saxophone is augured on the preceding Chelsea Bridge and echoed on Nuclear, the free improvisation that follows. With variable snorts and slurps nearly electric in output, the half-atonal, half-accessible theme is transformed when the pocket cornet’s sprightly grace notes add a whiff of “Come Sunday” to the exposition, completed by staccato growls and slurred snarls from reeds and brass. This tightrope balancing act between affiliation and avant-garde is expressed throughout, whether the two play off one another’s advances with punchy note nips during “Pithecanthropus Erectus” or make jittery “Blue Mon”k even more antsy in execution, as Jaume’s outer-space-like bass clarinet rumbling and McPhee’s tongue slaps and bites beak down the theme into atoms and then reconstructing it. Echoes of early jazz even work their way into “Rue St. Jaume”. Here New Orleans-style tongued exaggerations from both saxophonists swirl around the theme like a handkerchief waving at a parade, with high-pitched split tones overlapping with the equivalent of a reverent coda at a jazz funeral
Pianist Jelly Roll Moton’s jazz funeral took place in 1939, but pianist Dave Burrell and tuba player Bob Stewart pinpoint the adaptability of Moron’s arrangements to contemporary setting on The Crave (No Business Records NBLP 100), by splitting the program between three Morton compositions and three by Burrell. A commanding stylist, Burrell’s performances bring an Ellington-like refinement to this bare-bones format, opened up on tracks such as his own “Pua Mae Ole”. But at the same time, like a couturier who insists on classic detailing on a leading-edge garment he’s crafting, the pianist doesn’t mute echoes of the past, such as primitive blues on Morton’s “New Orleans Blues” and ragtime reflections on Morton’s “The Crave”. On the second tune Stewart defines the function of a so-called brass bass, huffing a grounding ostinato alongside the pianist’s jaunty interpretation that also twist tango intimations into Hot Jazz with intelligent pauses and contemporary chord augmentations not upsetting the piece’s terpsichorean orientation. In contrast, the tubaist’s dramatic growling coupled with the pianist’s meditative pace ups the intense story telling that is Burrell’s I Am His Brother. Instructively enough Burrell’s savvy conversion of two other Morton tunes point out the lineage between 1920s ivory ticklers and Monk. These Monkish allusions are especially noticeable on the harder-edged “Spanish Swat”, where Burrell’s keyboard creeping leads to opaque, moderato and angled patterning. His narrative which slides from high-pitched glissandi to segmented bass chords, are held up like top man on a human pyramid by Stewart’s puffing continuum. “New Orleans Blues” is taken at a more leisurely pace than the original, with contemporary note variations pock-marking the stone face of Morton’s original. These improvisations not only stretch the theme with the looseness of a cat chasing a string, but allow the tuba player’s contemporary oom pah pahs to march in rhythmic lockstep with Burrell’s deeply felt and relaxed tune elaborations.
With many Monk compositions now nearly 70 years old, they’re as much Classic Jazz as Morton tunes. On Monk ’n’ More (Leo Records CD LR 780), Russian-American pianist Simon Nabatov tries for a similar alchemical updating of five Monk lines by interspacing them among five originals that probe keyboard extensions using live electronics., Nabatov no more takes the Monk canon as immutable, than a Talmudist would take the Torah’s words as unavailable for interpretation. Like that scholar’s theories, Nabatov’s explorations provide alternative readings of the pieces. Nabatov’s take on “Skippy” for instance is more herky-jerky than the original; while “Oska T” is taken thicker and faster. Using pedal shading he adds echoes of the Russian romantic tradition, while paradoxically emphasizing the tune’s swinging pulse that in turn links it to the blues and stride Morton and Ellington were perfecting in the 1920s and 1930s. Re-harmonized, “Pannonica” becomes more expansive, with the triplet timed note coloration adding unexpected tenderness to its habitual angularity. Although most of the electronic experiments are concerned with laboratory condition-like probes into pitch and timbral extensions, the additional clanging results confirm Monk’s unique orientation. The discontinuous interface on “Electronic Extension 4” for example with its blurry pulses reflecting back onto the initial stop-and-start theme posits how Monk could have utilized computer programming. This is confirmed on “Sunrise Twice Redux” the CD’s almost 14½-minute centrepiece. <
–for The Whole Note