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FRED ANDERSON
On The Run
Delmark
DE-534
FRED ANDERSON
Dark Day
Atavistic Unheard Music
UMS/ALP 218 CD
Good things come to those who wait is an expression that was never has
more currency than when it's applied to the career of brawny Chicago tenor
sax stylist Fred Anderson. Anderson, was practically unknown and definitely
under-documented for almost three decades after his recording debut on
Joseph Jarman's Song For in 1966.
Today that's all changed. He practically doesn't have the time to play
at and manage his bar, The Velvet Lounge, in Chicago's near South Side,
so busy is he travelling in North America and Europe and working with
his own bands and other members of the improv community. He even has a
personal manager.
Because of this, CDs of newer and archive material are continuously being
released. On the Run, for instance, was recorded in March 2000 at the
Velvet Lounge. Dark Day, which dates from 1979, couples a quartet session
done in Chicago with a never-before-released souvenir of the same band's
appearance at a festival in Verona Italy.
One glance at the personnel gives an idea of Anderson's appeal and persistence.
Drummer Hamid Drake is on both sessions, recorded 21 years apart, while
quartet trumpeter Billy Brimfield regularly plays with Anderson to this
day. On the Run's bass duties are handled by Tatsu Aoki, a long time Anderson
associate, who often leads his own Asian-American projects in Chicago,
while the unknown Steve Palmore was on hand in 1979.
As a literal record of what a typical set at Velvet Lounge sounds like,
the new CD is instructive. But, like many performances put together without
recording in mind, a certain sameness creeps in after a while. It's not
that the playing isn't good. Exciting playing is given an added impetus
by immediacy and location. On disc, though, certain planning should be
done with art that's going to be consulted again and again -- especially
when only a trio is involved.
The disc starts out promisingly enough with a breath-taking 41/2-minute
unaccompanied tenor solo from Anderson, with his hard, harsh tone reverberating
throughout the room. It certainly proves that at 71, Anderson has lost
none of his stamina or inventiveness.
However when Aoki and Drake get a chance to individually take solos on
the final two tracks, each wisely limits himself, allowing the other two
to spell them before they go too far. Aoki's archer's pull on the strings
works because Anderson places a short, jaunty melody in its vicinity,
begins trading fours with Drake and interests the bassist in creating
percussion sounds on the side of his instrument, punctuating that with
the odd string pluck. Later the saxophonist's Sonny Rollins-like Caribbean-Latin
phrases and some bass runs leaven Drake's work out on the final track
before the drummer becomes overbearing. Seemingly the saxophonist still
has more energy than his younger compatriots.
As a matter of fact, it appears that this session works best when the
other two get out of the way and give Anderson all the room he needs.
Even on the slower numbers he builds his solos out of knife-sharp single
notes embellished with the occasional protracted tone swoop, sometimes
digging down to baritone range. To keep up, Drake will often splash his
cymbals, begin tapping on cowbells, or introduce Art Blakey-style press
rolls. Aoki, on the other hand, will move the beat up and down, sometimes
appearing to entangle himself at the very top of the bass neck. When that
happens, the saxophonist has to call one or both back to the theme with
something that resembles a higher-pitched clarion. Fewer solos and more
group music would have improved then situation.
It's a different story on the 1979 discs, centred around the two-part
harmonies which Anderson and Brimfield even then had been working on for
years. The difference is that on tunes like "Saxoon" Anderson
plays the same as he does today -- and probably did in the 1960s -- while
the trumpeter works in a quicksilver, freebop, almost hard bop style.
The same thing happens on the title tune with the saxophonist honking
and double-timing, backed by thunderous bass chords, while Brimfield's
work seems more conservative.
Proceedings get a little harder and rougher on the Chicago version of
"Three On Two." Especially impressive is when the sax player
begins constructing variations upon variations on a tune he obviously
knows well and is instantaneously joined by the snare and cymbals of Drake.
Reminiscent of Jimmy Garrison, the previously and afterwards unknown Palmore
asserts himself with a bowed bass interlude that while a little screechy
in the upper register at least allows him to sound two strings simultaneously.
As he strums, plucks and bows Drake brings out his mallets for a firmer
attack.
Only 23 at the time, his own "The Prayer" -- now called "Bombay[Children
of Cambodia]" and still played today -- highlights the drummer's
future stature. He performs the leisurely composition on tablas, gradually
revving up the tempo as his notes are mirrored by the bassist playing
in cello range and sharp trumpet lines.
Brimfield was in particularly fine form four days later at the Verona
Jazz Festival, creating some of the most unfettered and edgy improvisations
of his career. Palmore and Drake sound fine as well, but much of Anderson's
work is sabotaged by the recording equipment. Somehow the mikes seems
to have been placed in such a way that the rhythm section is overloud
and the saxophonist consistently distant. It gets a little irritating
to try to hear him solo in the background as the bass and drums loudly
accompany him in foreground
On this version of "Three On Two," which counts in at about
twice the length of the Chicago one, he nearly disappears at the beginning
of the track, only to be succeeded by the trumpeter when he starts to
pick up speed. Brimfield is exceptional, though, playing with the familiar
melody the way Anderson did in Chicago and pumping out little ditties
in the course of his solo. Drake's subtle cymbal timbres frame the saxophonist,
unlike the rest of his drum kit, and when he can be heard more clearly
Anderson seems to be building his contribution out of single notes held
for inordinate lengths of time.
Balance is almost restored on "Dark Days" - - which is also,
in a shorter version, on disc one -- as the saxist and brassman create
some two-part harmony, playing parallel lines and almost the same notes
at complimentary tempos and pitches. On his own, perhaps conscious of
the strange mike placement, Anderson appears to be biting off little parts
of the head and playing rugged variations on them. Even Palmore gets into
the spirit, producing tough, guitar-like strums.
So there you have it, three live views of Fred Anderson's art, recorded
at different times and places with mike placement, crowd sounds, impressive
improv flights and mistakes preserved for all to hear.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing Run: 1.Ladies in Love; 2. On The Run; 3. Smooth Velvet;
4. Tatu's Groove; 5. Hamid's On Fire
Track Listing Dark: Disc 1: 1. Dark Day; 2. Saxoon; 3. Three on Two; 4.
The Prayer. D Disc 2: 1: The Bull; 2. Three on Two; 3. Dark Day
Personnel Run: Fred Anderson, tenor saxophone; Tatsu Aoki, bass; Hamid
Drake, drums
Personnel
Dark: Billy Brimfield, trumpet; Anderson; Steve Palmore, bass; Drake,
drums
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