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FARUQ Z.
BEY & THE NORTHWOODS IMPROVISERS
19 Moons
Entropy Stereo
ESR 011
Detroit
Jazz is usually associated with that time in the mid-1950s when enough
powerful musicians, including drummer Elvin Jones, pianist Tommy Flanagan
and trumpeter Donald Byrd, suddenly stormed out of that city to populate
nearly every major hard bop aggregation.
But the city's improvisational history runs deeper than that, dating from
the pioneering work of big bands like McKinney's Cotton Pickers and Jean
Goldkette's in the 1920s to contemporary stars like tenorman James Carter
and violinist Regina Carter.
Behind these national figures, though, was another group content to stay
home, expand the scene and nurture younger talent. Featured soloist on
this disc is one of those men, saxophonist/poet Faruq Z. Bey. Known in
the 1970s and 1980s as one of the guiding forces in the sci-fi jazz outfit
Griot Galaxy, with its echoes of the Arkestra and the Art Ensemble of
Chicago, his sidemen included bassist Jaribu Shahid and drummer Tani Tabbal,
best known for their work with Carter.
Now, after a protracted silence caused by a serious accident among other
problems, he's reemerged with this fine CD. Interestingly enough, while
most of the compositions here are his, his collaborators aren't Detroiters,
but members of a longtime improv trio from Central Michigan, The Northwoods
Improvisers.
Together for almost 20 years and having evolved from an alternate rock
band, the three pinpoint a significant international trend: the existence
of small pockets of improvisers in all sorts of unlikely places. At the
same time, after a few albums on their own and an appearance at the Montreux/Detroit
Festival, this concert CD is in no way cast as a meeting of a master with
his disciples. Everyone is on equal musical footing, and bassist Mike
Johnston even contributes one tune and wrote another with Bey. Throughout,
vibist Mike Gilmore emerges as the second featured soloist after Bey,
frequently fabricating a countermelody to his improvisations.
At the same time, the session is definitely cast in mould that recalls
the exploratory ethos of the 1970s typified by John Coltrane's later work
as well as Pharoah Sanders and Albert Ayler then revolutionary thrusts.
Alyer is honored with a Bey poem in the booklet and by Johnston's gospelish
composition of the same name. Given a certain lightness from Gilmore's
vibes, Bey uses multiphonics here, but his piece is far different -- and
in some ways more conventional -- then Ayler's. At times, in fact, it
sounds as if he's playing "For He's A Jolly Good Fellow" in
the midst of his reed-biting solo.
True to the nature of deeper Detroit jazz though, there's a connection
to the tradition as well on Bey's "After Death", whose strange
title may refer to his accident. Begun in the tenorist's best Archie Shepp-out-of-Ben
Webster breathy choruses, it soon develops a striding show tune lope,
helped not a little by the inventive drumming of Nick Ashton, who simultaneously
sounds as if he's playing a regular kit and the congas. Gilmore's four-mallet
work allows him to devise many more tones, suggesting what would have
happened had Tito Puente recorded with Trane.
Spiritually oriented dignity is the order of the day, however, especially
when the band is expanded by Len Bukowski's contra alto clarinet on three
tracks and Patrick Boyer's tambura on one. That piece, "Fountain"
links the uncommon, protracted buzzing produced by those two instruments
to straightforward bass and drum patterns underneath, as Bey embarks on
a time-suspending saxophone flight. Then, on the title tune, a vibes and
bowed bass intro gives way to reverberating, practically earth-shaking
continuo courtesy of Bukowski and Johnston. When the melody changes once
again to a slinky, pivoting outline, heavy on the walking bass, Bey adds
enough irregular vibrato and flutter tonguing in keep the tone elevated.
It's been more than 19 moons that Bey has been represented on disc. This
session is doubly valuable however. For not only does it showcase an important,
undercelebrated local improviser, but it's also the newest status report
on another unique group of musicians.
--
Ken Waxman
Track Listing:
1. Fountain*+ 2. After Death 3. Mamaka II 3. Ayler 5. Moors 6. 19 Moons*
Personnel: Faruq Z. Bey (alto and tenor saxophone); Len Bukowski (contra
alto clarinet)*; Mike Gilmore (vibes, bone guitar); Patrick Boyer (tambura)+;
Mike Johnston (bass); Nick Ashton (drums)
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