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EDDIE PRÉVOST
Material consequences
Matchless
MRCD48
Most rational listeners -- excepting out-and-out percussion fanatics --
approach a solo percussion disc with the same ear wrenching dread most
of us reserve for the dentist's drill. In fact many might prefer some
very noisy oral surgery session to spending an hour with the over-inflated
bombast that resonates from the kit of most rock, all fusion and many
jazz drummers.
An
Eddie Prévost session is different. One of the founders of British
group AMM, he has spent more than 35 years perfecting an approach to non-associative
music that is as musically mysterious as it is subtle. You don't listen
to a Prévost -- or in fact AMM discs -- to say, "listen to
that guy bang that bass drum and sets of cymbals," but to puzzle
out what percussive impulse produces which sound. If anything the words
which best describe the four instrumentals that make up the almost 65
minutes of this session are focused composure.
As
he states it, Prévost is interested in a configuration of sounds,
and over the years, he has added bowed cymbals, so-called found objects,
gongs, chimes, bells, resonating boxes and an oversized, stringed contra-bass
drum to transform his kit beyond the standard one. This percussive array
isn't used for self-aggrandizement, but to creatively respond to a singular
musical context.
This
CD is especially noteworthy and consistently challenging, for Prévost,
who has written extensively about musical aesthetics and conducts many
improvisational workshops, is, above all, a group creator. Cogitating
and perpetuating a solo session is somewhat similar to imaging how a union
organizer would find a role for himself on an uninhabited island.
Still,
what strikes the careful listener right off is how much of what has always
seemed to be an AMM group sound is ingenuously produced by Prévost
alone. Take "Mostly Bowing" for instance. Not only can you hear
the organ chord-like striations produced as a bow lacerates a cymbal,
but also a rumbling overtone that most would have associated with the
attachments from AMM member Keith Rowe's laptop guitar. A concerto of
long, continuous notes bisected by repeated clicks and pulls plus animalistic
growls, it shows that the percussionist is able to forge tones that others
need G3 PowerBooks to create.
Here
and on "Dance music of an Imaginary People," the drummer is
adamant that no amplification is being used, even though he's able to
conjure up what could be guitar and bowed bass sounds with his percussion.
"Dance..." appears to feature Prévost simultaneously
producing string-like overtones with one hand, while using his palms and
sticks to create the percussive with the other.
Among
the other musical allusions offered here are that of a tabla being struck,
sleigh bells being shaken, the buzz of stroked cymbals and the sound of
a gong being repeatedly and ritualistically pounded. More clearly you
can hear tiny unselected cymbals rotating on top of the snare and toms,
plus the inflection echoing from the rims and sides of individual drums.
Traditionalists
can also be assured of Prévost's mastery of the standard kit on
the appropriately -- if sardonically -- named "Statutory Drum Solo."
Here, the man who in an early review was described as "the Art Blakey
of Brixton" (sic) shows that the advances of pure jazz masters like
Blakey and Max Roach haven't been lost on him. Someone who has never lost
an affinity for jazz -- especially out of the AMM orbit -- he knows his
way around a standard kit. Hear him taping the bass drum and hi hat, worrying
the sizzle cymbals and building up repeated patterns on snare and floor
toms. His press rolls come fast and furious, as do his lightening quick
cymbal sizzles. Also without increasing his volume, he's able to approximate
chugging freight train patterns. Bebop drums aren't being played here,
but this is certainly not academic New music either.
Sensitive
souls who cover their ears when faced with the prospect of an extended
drum solo would be well advised to listen to this disc. So should dyed
in wool (metal?) drum fanatics. They both may learn how one can exhibit
percussion proficiency without tumult.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Stridorings; 2. Dance music of an Imaginary People; 3. Mostly
Bowing; 4. Statutory Drum Solo
Personnel:
Eddie Prévost, percussion
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