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A.D.D. TRIO
Sic Bisquitus Disintegrat
Enja
ENJ-9361
No innocents abroad, the members of the A.D.D. Trio are three experienced
English-speaking musicians who choose to live in Continental Europe.
Bakers rather than cooks, the three have blended spoonfuls of improv,
jazz, classical and new music with some pinches of funk and rock onto
this cookie sheet of original sounds. When that cookie crumbles -- bisquitus
disintegrat -- what results is a torte, honeyed enough for the occasional
sweet-fancier, but with enough tang and personality to impress the sophisticated
nibbler.
American-born flute virtuoso Robert Dick, who relocated to Switzerland
in the early 1990s, has brought his five standard, and a few self-created,
flutes to discs with such improvisers as bassist Mark Dresser and reedist
Marty Ehrlich. He's also been the recipient of grants to create and perform
his own classical compositions. Irish-born guitarist Christy Doran, who
lives in Lucerne, began playing in a duo with Dick when the later arrived
in Switzerland. Doran was once part of storied Swiss combo OM, which included
drummer Fredy Studer and saxophonist Urs Leimgruber. Since then he has
written music for ballet, theatre and film.
When
the two joined forces in 1993 with British-born, Paris-based drummer Steve
Argüelles A.D.D. was formed. A founder of the gigantic Loose Tubes
band, Argüelles played extensively with expatriate South African
saxophonist Dudu Pukwana in London and was part of the Paris-based improv
combo the Recyclers.
Recorded for Swiss radio in 1998, this disc finds each of the bakers throwing
his ingredients into the batter, sometimes in quite unexpected ways. The
lightly rocking "Whammy Bar," for instance, ostensibly a Doran
feature, gets its forceful bass line from Dick's pumping contra bass flute.
On
the other hand, the low-pitched F bass flute makes its appearance on the
title track. This vertical blown woodwind's tones are sometimes blended
with Dick's internal flute vocalizing for the reoccurring theme. With
Doran adding the odd electronic aside, Argüelles has the most freedom
here, but disappointedly sticks pretty close to regular drum patterns
Then there's "Endless None" a funk-drenched head banger, which
shows how flute tones can actually combine with stroked guitar and recurrent
percussion rhythms without sounding effete or out of place. No one is
going to mistake Dick for PeeWee Ellis, but he shows that R&B means
as much to him as Ravel & Beethoven.
Dick's own invention, the glissando headjoint makes its appearance on
a couple of tracks. Designed to give him the freedom to quickly slide
from one note to the other with an electric guitarist's facility, it most
prominently shapes "Headjoint." Fascinatingly enough on this
composition named for that late 20th century innovation though, it sounds
exactly like the primitive quills Henry "Ragtime Texas" Thomas
played on his 1928 recording of "Bull Doze Blues." Even the
strummed guitar portions here appear to be as archaic on this tune as
they sound on that blues recording from the 1920s.
Most of the time though, with the woodwind player bringing out his armory
of specially designed flutes and using them as a human-powered synthesizers,
things are a bit more modern. These nine shortish selections also prove
that there's very little the three can't play.
Although in retrospect this confectionery may lack the flambéed
ingredients that would raise it to cordon bleu from mere gastronomic status,
it's still an enjoyable, easily digested session. It will appeal to anyone
who appreciates the sound of any of the instruments, especially what issues
from the utensil of master baker Robert Dick.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Hopscotch; 2. Sic Bisquitus Disintegrat (That's the Way the
Cookie Crumbles); 3. Endless; 4. Photosynthesis; 5.Crinkum-Crankum; 6.
Der Grüne Heinrich; 7. Headjoint; 8. Whammy Bar; 9. Three Characters
Personnel:
Robert Dick, flute, alto flute, C bass flute, F bass flute, contrabass
flute, glissando headjoint; Christy Doran, guitars; Steve Argüelles,
drums
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