
Bik Bent Braam
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ALL EARS
Foaming Wife Hum/Line
CDBBB
3 & 4
Two
bands for the price of one could be the come on for this two-CD set by
All Ears, an international, but Amsterdam-based sextet of top-ranked players.
For while the personnel on each disc is identical, the music takes on
a completely different character whether the group's playing the seven
freebop compositions of its tenor saxophonist Frans Vermeerssen on Line
or the more detailed 12 tracks that make up pianist Michiel Braam's Foaming
Wife Hum.
While
both sets of tunes shows off the musicians' outstanding ability to change
mood, textures and tones with the roll of an euro, Braam's more accomplished
individuality, coupled with resonance borrowings from across jazz history
ends up being more satisfying than Vermeerssen's almost undiluted modernism.
Not that either composer is less than professional, it's just that the
pianist, whose other bands range from a trio to the 13-piece Bik Bent
Braam (BBB), is a musical theorist in the unparalleled heritage that includes
jokesters like Misha Mengleberg and Willem Breuker. He gives equal weight
to experimentation and entertainment.
The sextet is unquestionably able to play anything the two composers put
in front of them. German reedist Frank Gratkowski has matched wits with
everyone from German pianist Georg Gaewe to American drummer Gerry Hemingway.
American drummer Michael Vatcher is a linchpin of the Available Jelly
band, while trumpeter Herb Robertson, another Yank, has been on call for
gigs as varied as American altoist Tim Berne's combos to Italian percussionist
Tiziano Tononi's massive big band projects. Braam has led his own bands
since 1989. Vermeerssen, who first played with Braam that year and who
is a part of BBB, has his own combo and a coop quartet with trombonist
Wolter Wierbos. Third Dutchman -- along with the tenor saxophonist and
pianist-- bassist Wilbert de Joode, can find his place as easily in clarinetist
Ab Baars's jazz classicism as violist Ig Henneman's mixture of so-called
classical and improv influences.
De
Joode, along with others, also gets more chance to showcase his different
persona on Braam's tunes than Vermeerssen,'s more prosaic pieces. Usually
on both parts of the set, his time is as firm and solid as a mantle clock,
modernistically unflashy like Paul Chambers or Charlie Haden, but with
more arco command. "Herbicidally," for instance, allows him
to reveal his inner Pops Foster, slapping away on a tune that recalls
vaudeville pit bands. Robertson contributes some open horn bravado and
wah-wahs à la Red Allen, Braam chords from his right hand like
Fletcher Henderson and the saxes vamp as if they were Coleman Hawkins
and Buster Bailey in one of Henderson's bands from the 1920s. Vatcher's
trap work is so authentic that you almost expect him to emulate Gene Krupa
and break out the splash cymbals and choke cymbal for novelty effects.
More
closely related to the Dutch sense of the absurd, De Joode begins his
arco solo on "Willy-Nilly" with what sounds like the intro from
the Beatles "Day Tripper." At first the buzzing and squealing
horns riff, trill and slur every which way as if building up to play "Ascension"
then coalesce into another Swing pastiche, surmounted by felt-hatted trumpet
mutes. As the brassman toys with the theme in different pitches and registers,
the pianist plows along as well, sounding notes that apportion themselves
as semi-ragtime, semi-stride and semi-bop.
Braam
offers more tricks from his fingers as the suite runs its course. On the
minute "Burry" he lightly exercises his right hand like Teddy
Wilson, complemented by de Joode's bowing, while on "All" the
inflections are those of James P. Johnson, if the stride and Charleston
composer would have explored different off-kilter octaves and arpeggios
with a prepared soundboard.
Then
there's the squeaky sound on "Bony," alive with the pumping
and bouncing syncopation some identify with improv from the Netherlands.
Among rock-style paradiddles from the drummer are buzzsaw tenor sax slurs
and a freight train's timekeeping power from the bassist, Braam batters
the keyboard with a touch more reminiscent of Hillbilly boogie king Roy
Hale than Cecil Taylor.
Other
features of the suite include some slinky film noir alto obbligatos from
Gratkowski; horns riffing in unison in the form of a canon; a native Indian
motif transmogrified in Braam's contrasting low-frequency chord -- perhaps
transferred via de Joode's unvarying syncopation from Baars who often
does this sort of thing -- and the final piece where the muted trumpet
sounds as if it's playing an adagio version of "East St. Louis Toodle-oo"
mixed with a funeral march.
For
his part, Vermeerssen loosens up enough to participate. On "Tenorman"
-- perhaps named for drummer Lawrence Marable's West Coast LP that featured
James Clay -- the saxophonist varies his Getzian timbres and trills with
tongue slap, double tonguing, slurs and minor spetrofluctuation. The Wellian
-- or is it Breukersque? -- arrangement includes brassy Dixieland plunger
tones from Robertson and Braam jumping from honky-tonk echoes on the keyboard
to investigation of the internal soundboard.
Braam's
writing may sometimes verge on pastiche, but with Vermeerssen's Line,
the influences are much closer to the surface. Many of the pieces reflect
what would have happened if the 1960s Jazz Messengers had concentrated
on Ornette Coleman heads. Or if the West Coast's cool jazzers had the
guts to bring more abstract flourishes to mainstream standards.
"Day
See," the longest composition, even sounds as if it begins with the
intro from "A Night In Tunisia," heavy on the bass playing and
shifting polyrhythms. Robertson shows that if need be he can replicate
a modified version of the Freddie Hubbard/Lee Morgan role, complete with
chromatically ascending grace notes, Vatcher contributes a gentle shuffle
and Gratkowski some New Thing style squealing.
It's
likely also the alto man who leads the round robin of tongue slaps, key
pops, trills, false fingering and what could be balloons bursting that
characterize the reed work on "18 Rabbit." This is coupled with
woody tugs from de Joode's strings, plus growls and mouthpiece kisses
from Robertson. It's definitely Gratkowski who contributes the gentle,
coloratura clarinet line and wavering glissando that sound harmonica-like
on "As In." Slow-moving and lullaby-like, Braam's key shifting
and pedal action give the reedist a harmonic cushion as Vatcher adds an
irregular drum beat.
All
and all, "Petersburg," the last piece, seems to work the best,
perhaps because the unison sounds relate to Vermeerssen's experience with
brass fanfare band. In this comfort zone, the tenor man has a proper setting
for his hard-bop-leaning tone, as de Joode slaps the bass and Robertson
spews out a speedy set of triplets. Sliding along the keys in a modified,
rollicking Swing style, Braam sets up Vatcher's rapid flams and ruffs
and Gratkowski slurring out exaggerated tones without losing the theme.
Yet
when all the musicians pump out timbres every which way for an avant-garde
ending, it sounds more like a symphony orchestra tuning up than any attempt
to construct pinpointed and controlled group tumult as John Coltrane did
with Ascension.
Two
bands for the price of one, all right. But most will be able to figure
out which leader contributes the more interesting charts.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: Hum: 1.Tenorman; 2. Offers; 3. All; 4. Burry; 5. Yammerheads;
6. Willy-Nilly; 7. Improved; 8. Bony; 9. Ears; 10. Herbicidally; 11. Up
To; 12. Drumming
Line:
1. Cherry Pop; 2. Line; 3. Day See; 4. Break; 5. 18 Rabbit; 6. As In;
7. Petersburg
Personnel:
Herb Robertson, trumpet; Frank Gratkowski, alto saxophone, clarinet; Frans
Vermeerssen, tenor saxophone; Michiel Braam, piano; Wilbert de Joode,
bass; Michael Vatcher, drums
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