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JOHN HOLLENBECK
LARGE ENSEMBLE
A Blessing
OmniTone
OTI 15209
Already praised as a first-class drummer, composer and combo leader, John
Hollenbeck now shows that he can handle the writing, arranging and guiding
of an 18-piece ensemble as fluently as his other talents.
Since for all reports his drumming is a clear-headed and multi-directional
as it is on A BLESSING, is it any wonder that his employers have ranged
from mainstreamers Bob Brookmeyer and Lee Konitz, more advanced players
like Brad Shepik and Jorrit Dijkstra plus New Music doyen Meredith Monk?
True to his influences, which include rock music and more conventional
so-called classical music sounds, Hollenbecks treatment of a large
ensembles energy and force is far different than standard big band
writing and instrumentation.
Although his brass section has as many trumpets and trombones as Stan
Kentons or Duke Elingtons bands, his five-piece reed section
includes one member doubling on baritone saxophone and bass clarinet,
another Chris Speed from the drummers Claudia Quintet (CQ)
playing only clarinet, one tripling on flute, soprano and alto
saxophones and two others tripling on tenor and soprano saxophones plus
English horn. The rhythm section has his CQ pal Matt Moran playing mallets
(sic) and Kermit Driscoll on what sounds like electric as well as acoustic
bass. Added to many of the tracks is the vocalizing, wordless or otherwise,
of another longtime Hollenbeck associate, Theo Bleckmann, whose distinctive
voice has been featured with Meredith Monks Vocal Ensemble since
1994, as well as in projects for Mark Dresser, Dave Douglas and other
jazzers.
A fantasia with words, the first and title track, features Bleckmanns
countertenor in parlando, reading the words to a blessing printed on the
Mass card at Hollenbecks grandmothers funeral. With resemblance
to a nocturne going even further to encompass the sensitive, low-frequency
piano work of Gary Versace and the reedy harmonies of the English horns.
At the same time as these instruments produce hushed dynamics, the bassist
and drummer provide understated bop-like bounces. Following a variation
where reeds tones resemble a mixed choir of human voices, the finale involves
a stop-time section with staccato horn lines floating on top of polyrhythmic
emphasis. Coda involves Bleckmanns impassioned singing mixed with
quivering instrumental textures.
In contrast, Abstinence is driven by an electric bass continuo
which contrasts with a main theme made up of half-speed piano arpeggios
and muted trombone glissandi. After one bone rams out plunger tones
on top of trilling and vibrating reed lines, a polyrhythmic variation
is introduced with a balanced drum beat and walking bass. As this variation
gradually supersedes the original theme of carefully harmonized voices,
tougher vamps from Hollenbeck and Driscoll build up to a climax of rock
band-like vamps and downward cascading textures from the piano. The ending
features Sun Ra Arkestra-like space ship launching and landing sound approximations.
Although Hazrat Inayat Khans words sung by Bleckmann on the final
The Music of Life are a little too utopian, low key and stamped
with vocal-recital purity, the quivering woodwind backing and single note
piano timbres give it some life, as does the singers postlude of
gargling throat textures.
Throughout the CD, the compositions at various times include wavering
rubato massed horn lines, sideslippoing English horn obbligatos, staccato
and forte brass explosions, Africanized percussion ruffs, bounces and
drags, and a cross section of harmonies and counter-themes.
Not your fathers big band, A BLESSING is also notable for its absence
of drum pyrotechniques. So good in his other roles here, Hollenbeck likely
figured he didnt have to show off his already acknowledged skills.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. A Blessing 2. Folkmoot 3. RAM 4. Weiji 5. Abstinence
6. April n Reggae 7. The Music of Life
Personnel: Tony Kadleck, Dave Ballou, Jon Owens, Laurie Frink (trumpets);
Rob Hudson, Kurtis Pivert, Jacob Garchik, Alan Ferber (trombones); Chris
Speed (clarinet); Ben Kono (flute, soprano and alto saxophones); Dan Willis
and Tom Christensen (tenor and soprano saxophones and English horns);
Alan Won (baritone saxophone and bass clarinet); Gary Versace (piano);
Matt Moran (mallets); Kermit Driscoll (bass and electric bass); John Hollenbeck
(drums); Theo Bleckmann (voice); J.C. Sanford (conductor)
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