
Isospin Labs

Roaratorio
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FLUID MOTION
With Sam Rivers
Isospin Labs
42058
CAREI THOMAS FEEL FREE ENSEMBLE
Mining Our Bid'ness
Roaratorio
Roar 04
More dispatches from the American heartland again prove that original
improvised music is alive and well in such unlikely (for jazz snobs) places
as Minneapolis, Minn. (Carei Thomas' band) and the Tampa Bay-St. Petersburg
region of Florida (Fluid Motion with septuagenarian reedist Sam Rivers).
Both albums are praiseworthy and a strong indication that the neo-cons
haven't forced every musician to become a mainstream android, churning
out approved versions of accepted jazz standards. But, paradoxically,
the fact that the bands represented perform far away from the critical
mass of outside improvisers who cluster in New York, Chicago, the Bay
area and Boston means that the writing and playing here isn't as far out
as the musicians probably imagine they are.
In truth, the compositions of 64-year-old pianist Thomas, an underground
legend in the Twin Cities since 1972, and Fluid Motion's trombonist David
Manson, who encourages and presents new music in his twin cities, are modern
mainstream ones with experimental touches. Inventive and impressive, the
quasi-freebop you'll hear on both discs is standard currency in most major
jazz centres. That they seem avant garde in these cities shows how far
the tentacles of the neo-cons have reached into every jazz scene.
Interestingly enough, the other situation Mining and Fluid share in common
is that the featured lead voice is a well known saxophonist who isn't
the group's main composer. Thomas' Feel Free Ensemble showcases the soprano,
alto and tenor saxophone work of Minneapolis resident George Cartwright,
leader and chief composer of the jazz-rock band Curlew. Manson's Fluid
Motion sextet is built around the saxophone plus flute playing of recent
Florida resident Rivers, famous for a stint with Miles Davis in the 1960s,
who has recorded many outstanding discs over a 40 year period, and whose
Studio RivBea loft provided many of New York's experimenters a place to
play in the 1970s.
Manson's EMIT series of new and experimental music concerts has been trying
since 1995 to do the same for Central Florida as RivBea did for Manhattan,
and this disc is a logical outgrowth of that work. All and all though,
many of the pieces sound like what would have happened if the most advanced
members of The Jazz Messengers had had a gig at Slug's Saloon in the mid-1960s.
The language, for a start, is definitely hard bop -- the constant groove
of bassist Doug Mathews and drummer Anthony Cole, who usually complete
Rivers' trio, see to that. In fact, many of the finger snappers may have
reminded the saxophonist of his stint with Blue Note records in the 1960s.
Furthermore when the saxist's grating low-pitched multiphonics mix with
Manson's tone-varying trombone inflections, the effect is as if saxophonist
Archie Shepp's band from the 1960s with trombonists Roswell Rudd or Grachan
Moncur III was on board, especially on a quasi-stomp like "Poodle
Science."
Paradoxically the solos of trumpeter Jonathan Powell -- more than 50 years
Rivers' junior -- are the most straightahead throughout the disc. More
Freddie Hubbard than Don Cherry, the brassman may reflect that insidious
neo-con influence. Manson describes his tunes as ones that "groove,
stretch, break apart, and reassemble for another round. They fit together
like a Calder mobile when they succeed." That's true to an extent,
but with some arrangements seemingly built on classic traditional jazz
patterns -- high instrument's lines on top, lower ones on the bottom --
the proper comparison may be to a functional LEGO set. "Tangents,"
for instance, is a funky hand clapper built on bass ostinato, as is the
more restrained "Whispers," though the later features more unison
horn work and a shuffle rhythm from the drums. Most tunes have the quintet
members tossing phrases back and forth in approved freebop manner, with
Manson showing his inventiveness at times on mellow, muted horn, Rivers
adding some Orientalism on sweet soprano sax, Cole producing Latinesque
accents and Mathews double timing his syncopation.
"Crossdrift" is the only composition that starts with a classic
free jazz tenor saxophone solo. It's set off by rolling drum kit parts
that then showcases wheezing trills from Rivers after the theme has been
elaborated by the other horns. Manson then shows off his facility at double
tonguing and Powell finally unveils some plunger mute ornaments, though
in a pretty limited range.
In another part of the country, general utility man on Thomas' date is
Steve Sandberg, who plays trombone, tuba, baritone horn, bass funnelphone
(!) and piccolo funnelphone (!!). Whatever those last two instruments
are or what they add to the date is up in the air, but the CD is most
valuable for finally getting into general circulation Thomas' music.
Pittsburgh-born Thomas gigged in Chicago as an improvising vocalist with
Sun Ra's band in the early 1960s. In the middle of the decade, as a pianist,
he put together a group with saxophonist with Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre
that included drummer Jerome Cooper and trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith. More
recently, his associates in Minneapolis have included multi-instrumentalist
Douglas Ewart, another Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians
(AACM) member, plus the players on this disc.
Moving at a slower place than tunes on the other CD, the Feel Free Ensemble
is literally an ensemble, with Thomas' piano rarely front and centre.
One of the few examples of his playing is found on "Baby Baby, Home
Buddy," a tone poem where his sylvan chording meshes with arco bass
lines and very miscellaneous percussion wobbles. In the front line tenor
man Cartwright produces a breathy Ben Webster boudoir saxophone tone,
doubled by a throaty counter melody from Sandberg's trombone. Tuba and
alto saxophone advance the head on the next track, but Tim DuRoche's drumming
and Brock Thorson's bass lines are strictly in the hard bop mode.
"Invention #1: Way North of the Order," a modal vamp and the
longest track, moves very slowly with drummer Alden Ikeda contributing
a shuffle beat. Sandberg brings out his baritone horn, Cartwright intros
with tongue slaps, then mixes some braying atonality from his reed with
a tough, mulched valve sound from the trombonist. All the while Thorson
produces a steady accompanying pulse. The tenor saxophonist also loosens
up with some mild multiphonics on the second version of "Monsieur
Duprée (Carton XV)". Taken at a stately gait rather than the
light swing of version #1, which features another Twin City legend, tenor
saxophonist William R. Lang, this one relies on the dual ("aeriel"
and "terre") basses of Adam Linz and Thorson for its rhythmic
shape. Cartwright's squeaks and trills and Thomas' comping
seem to merely lengthen the tune toward lugubriousness. Maybe one version
would have sufficed.
Alternately, "Tippy/One Ahead," dedicated to all victims of
violence is one programmatic tune that really seems to work. Again moving
at near stasis pace, it slowly changes from being a tenor sax-directed
lament to one where the vocalized screams and cries from Cartwright seem
to reflect violence, as do the focused drum beats from Ikeda.
These twin heartland dispatches are worth investigating to familiar yourself
with under-heralded musicians. But don't listen expecting to hear anything
all that different from improvised music in bigger centres.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing With: 1. Fluid Motion; 2. Poodle Science; 3. Tephlon; 4.
Whispers; 5. Pengquan; 6. Crossdrift; 7. Following; 8. Tangents
Track Listing Mining: 1. Monsieur Duprée (Carton XV)*; 2. Magicmysticmaestromentor~;
3. Baby Baby, Home Buddy#; 4. The Awestruck Waters of Antiquity#; 5. Tippy/One
Ahead~; 6. Invention #1: Way North of the Order~; 7. Monsieur Duprée
(Carton XV)~+; 8. Accordance~+
Personnel With: Jonathan Powell, trumpet; David Manson, trombone; Sam
Rivers, soprano and tenor saxophones, flute; Doug Mathews, bass; Anthony
Cole, drums
Personnel Mining: Steve Sandberg, trombone, tuba, baritone horn, bass
funnelphone and piccolo funnelphone; George Cartwright, soprano, alto
and tenor saxophones or William R. Lang, tenor saxophone*; Carei Thomas,
piano; Brian Roessler*, Brock Thorson, (all other tracks) bass; Adam Linz,
ariel bass+; Eric Coursen* or Alden Ikeda~ or Tim DuRoche#, drums
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