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AHMED ABDULLAHS
EBONIC TONES
Taras Song
TUM
CD009
KAHIL ELZABAR'S RITUAL TRIO/BILLY BANG
Live At The River East Art Center
Delmark
DE-566
Recorded in different cities seven months apart, these CDs are connected
by the presence of violinist Billy Bang and a profound respect for all
variations of Black improvised music.
In addition to two originals by Brooklyn-based trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah,
Taras Song is a compendium of hip heads from Thelonious Monk, Ornette
Coleman, Sun Ra and others. In many ways a showcase for the percussion
implements of Chicagos Kahil ElZabar, Live At The River East
Art Center, takes its inspiration from the drummers twin influences,
Pan-Africanism and the citys Association for the Advancement of
Creative Musicians (AACM).
Neither CD lacks animation, and its a tribute to the Ebonic Tones
that the nine songs the band plays in a studio dont sound any less
live than the five recorded by the Ritual Trio in concert.
If theres any overriding complaint about either session its
that both groups adhere a little too closely to the timeworn head-solo-solo-head
formula. But what they lack in original arrangements, they more than make
up with polyrhythmic fire.
Although Bang is odd man out in two more-or-less established bands, he
has such a long history with most of the other players as to fit tongue-in-groove
when the music starts. He and Adullah were both in the Sun Ra Arkestra
for a time and first recorded together more than 20 years ago. Drummer
Andrei Strobert, who is also a producer and recording engineer, recorded
Sun Ra, among many other musicians; and even bassist Alex Blake, best-known
for his 30-year association with pianist Randy Weston, played with Ra
at one point. Detroit-born baritone saxophonist Alex Harding is younger
than the others, but besides his other gigs is a member of the post-Ra
Arkestra under Marshal Allens direction.
Bangs association with the Ritual Trio goes back to another live
recording date with the band in 1994, since then he has often played in
duo and other situations with leader ElZabar. One of Chicagos
master improvisers, tenor saxophonist Ari Brown can hold his own with
anyone from AACMers, pianist Muhal Richard Abrams to reedist Anthony Braxton,
and excitingly often combines tones with Bangs lines here. Bassist
Yosef Ben Israel, who usually powers Ernest Dawkins New Horizons
band, has replaced the late Malachi Favors in this group. Favors is saluted
in two of the compositions here.
Favors
main group, The Art Ensemble of Chicago (AEC) was one of the first to
reflect the AACM ethos and the primacy of jazz that wasnt made in
New York. Instructively, Abdullah who states that I have never believed
in any one city being the origin of this music pays tribute to a
clutch of modern thinkers from elsewhere on TARAS SONG.
Not only does the band honor Fort Worth, Tex.-born Coleman, Memphis-born
Frank Lowe another long-time Bang associate and Ra whose
roots were variously Birmingham, Ala., Chicago and Saturn, but it also
doesnt neglect less acknowledged traditions. Iko Iko,
the traditional New Orleans chant, featuring Abdullah on trumpet and vocals,
continuo honks from Harding and Bang sounding as if hes playing
a Caribbean mandolin, is a rousing postlude. More pointedly the program
begins with a respectful reading of Pensacola, Fla.-born Gigi Gyrces
Sans Souci. Underappreciated in the 1950s, Ebonic Tones
arrangement shows off the swinging sophistication of this bop-tinged original.
Other tunes confirm this link between the primeval and the progressive.
Lowes Nothing but Love, for instance, is suspended between
Second Line march and dance-like calypso with a back beat. Blake appears
to be playing an electric bass, Strobert contributes binary bounces and
Hardings solo includes cunning, understated flutter-tonguing and
snorts. Blue Monk gets an almost Dixieland arrangement with
the fiddler double stopping and the horn men crating tremolo obbligatos.
Even a nearly 13-minute version of Colemans Lonely Woman
is launched with Latinesque, matching band beats and call-and-response
patterns between trumpet and violin. Given enough space, Harding growls
and keens, thrusting out repeated altissimo runs if he was jazz-R&B
bari man Leo Parker; while the trumpeter brassily breaks the melody into
partials and squeezed counter tones and Bang plays either country hoedown
vibrations portamento or double- and triple-stopping sweeps and swoops.
Abdullahs The Cave takes all these influences one step
further. Programmatic, throughout its almost 14½ minutes,
the theme redeploys from languendo to agitato and back again, with some
of the voicing reminiscent of the low-flame tone poems saxophonist Gyrce
used to write for himself and trumpeter Art Farmer. Earthier than Gyrce,
the baritonist creates a guttural , raspy tremolo solo without
neglecting the basso timbre of the beast while the trumpeters
double-tongued, chromatic flourishes take nothing from Farmer. Then theres
Bangs slithering, triple-stopping movement. By the finale, its
obvious this cave encompasses Sun Ra-like polyharmony, as well as spikier,
serpentine solo lines.
Bangs bravura and virtuosity is confirmed on the fewer, longer selections
of the other CD. With ElZabar exercising himself on congas, kalimba
and ankle tambourine however, the roots on display take in African counter-rhythms
as well as polyphonic complications. Several of the compositions gain
their shape from ElZabars thumb piano, with off-kilter torque
from Bang and slurry tremolo lines from Brown.
Since both the introductory Big M and the final Oof
are written for and dedicated to Favors, the trios new bass man,
Israel may have felt a draft. But he maintains an unruffled composure
throughout and unhurriedly exposes hidden parts of the bull fiddle below
the bridge and elsewhere when he takes his solo on the last number.
Like Abdullah, ElZabar sings enthusiastically if not always melodiously,
though his raison detre is rhythm not the poetics of Ra which the
trumpeter quotes. Sometimes, the percussionists vocalizing is a
tinge unsettling as when his grunts and whines accompany the saxophonists
Tranesque exploration of the theme on the percussionist-penned Return
of the Lost Tribe.
Here and on his own Where Do You Want To Go? Browns
half-Swing Era smoothness and half-South Side AACM atonality harmonizes
and amplifies Bangs brazen sawing. The second tune is notable not
only for Browns integration of licks from Afro Blue
into his solo, but also for a dynamic display of concussive polyrhythmic
strength from the ElZabar on congas.
More a foot-tapper than a dirge, Oof knits together many of
the themes which characterized Favors life with the AACM and AEC.
Besides Israels abrasive runs, theres more kalimba layering,
and times when the violinist shrills double- and triple-stops with the
saxophonist playing sensitive accompaniment then they reverse roles.
On his own, Brown buzzes double tones like an old-time blues singer, only
gradually making the sounds broader and deeper. Hes joined by ElZabar
incessantly repeating big Favors and other phrases with different
inflections and volumes, as if he was a gospel preacher, feeling the spirit
in the midst of a sermon.
Both captivating CDs offer views of advanced/traditional Black improvised
music, with Taras Song having a bit of an edge because its arrangements
allow a multiplicity of voices to be heard more clearly.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: Tara: 1. Sans Souci 2. Lonely Woman 3. Tara's Song 4. Nothing
but Love 5. Tapestry 6. Blue Monk 7. Fate in a Pleasant Mood 8. The Cave
9. Iko Iko
Personnel: Tara: Ahmed Abdullah (trumpet and vocals); Alex Harding (baritone
saxophone); Billy Bang (violin); Alex Blake (bass); Andrei Strobert (drums)
Track Listing:
Live: 1. Big M 2. Return of the Lost Tribe 3. Where Do You Want To Go?
4. Be Exciting (Kahil Testifies) 5. Oof
Personnel: Live: Ari Brown (tenor saxophone); Billy Bang (violin); Yosef
Ben Israel (bass); Kahil ElZabar (drums, percussion and kalimba)
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