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JIM KNODLE
& ANASI
Wending
9 Winds
NWCD0263
DAMON SHORT
Go Figure
9 Winds
NWCD0231
Brass and strings figure prominently in these two discs recorded by experimenting
musicians who fight the good fight for improv in cities like Chicago and
Seattle, which move in and out of the jazz spotlight.
Yet sometimes it takes more than good intentions, good ideas and good
technique to produce sessions that will resonate outside of a particular
social and geographical area. Perhaps that's why trumpeter Jim Knodle's
session ends up being disappointing while drummer Damon Short's lives
up to its promise
Both men are veterans. Knodle has spent years in the Pacific Northeast
music scene taking all sorts of gigs with all kinds of players. Part of
the loose community seeking out-of-the-norm sounds, he recently formed
Anansi, named after the canny spider character in African folklore, to
expand his personal view of lyrical improvisation. But his CD only rises
above typical when he's truest to himself.
For many years grizzled Chicagoan Short has been playing his own music,
both in the Windy City and for four years in New Orleans. This CD features
musicians who have worked with the drummer since about 1989. One, trumpeter
Paul Smoker, who now lives near Rochester, N.Y., has a national reputation
from his associations with Anthony Braxton and the Fonda-Stevens group.
A couple more deserve to be heard more widely.
Wending's high point occurs with its second and shortest track "No
Before Like More." A spare, low-key composition that Knodle says
"is about going to sleep in Iowa and hearing train whistles from
20 miles away" it captures perfectly the idea of a Prairie existence
and its miles of flatland. Built around a highly articulated, almost legit
sounding trumpet line, it includes straightahead quasi country music-like
harmonies from guitarist Paul Sawyer, some plunger color from trombonist
Michael Vlatkovich and well-thought out piano asides from Lynette Westendorf.
Putting aside the title track, which seems to merely meander, the centrepiece
of the disc at more than 25 minutes -- and perhaps the reason for its
recording -- is "M.D.D." Here the trumpeter, trombonist and
guitarist plus rhythm section -- piano sits this one out -- interpret
a composition of Knodle's designed to fit the word-rhyme of the poem "Miles
D." by Pamela Moore-Dionne, reprinted in the booklet. The limitation
is that the band is only able to play each theme once.
What results is an aural caricature of the sound of different Miles Davis
bands from the 1950s through the to 1970s. Rife with undemanding swing
at the start, Dan O'Brien puts a little torque into his steadfast Paul
Chambers emulation and Knodle's Harmon muted- Miles tone moves along well
enough, until what seems to be fusion era Davis arrives. Without warning
Sawyer starts firing out chicken-shack rhythm guitar licks as if he was
Steve Cropper, drummer Don Berman hits hard and steady like Cropper's
fellow MG Al Jackson, as the trombonist growls out pungent plunger trombone
stops that are fine Vlatkovich, but seem divorced from the rest of the
proceedings. When he, the trumpeter -- still muted -- and the guitarist
-- now in Joe Pass mode -- return to balladic style then go back to rock
rhythm, the entire concept seems to fall apart.
Maybe with the articulation of Moore-Dionne's lyrics this composition
would have worked better. Perhaps, as well, the track and CD will be welcomed
as a keepsake for those locals who have seen the trumpeter perform it
in person. Still Knodle writing as himself on "No Before Like More"
is much more impressive than the Miles emulator on "M.D.D."
Sticking to his own vision in future he could probably turn out a fine
CD.
If Wending's centrepiece is based on someone else's conception, then Go
Figure's "Gardens of Perception," which is also almost 25 minutes
long, was written by Short for the featured musicians on the session.
What they do with it showcases their skills. Paul Scea, now director of
Jazz Studies at West Virginia University in Morgantown, exhibits his tenor
tone alive with split tones and side slipping, easily working on his own
when necessary, sporting a slinky, shaded tone and honks that would make
Willis Jackson proud. Earlier he produces a fat sound by doubling his
bass clarinet line with the feisty baritone saxophone sound of Chuck Burdelik,
a former longtime member of Hal Russell's NRG Ensemble.
But the defining thematic sounds belong to the less-than-common instruments
here. Short, with who has recorded a duo CD with Scea, is featured on
one, and shows that he's much more than a beat man as he moves from his
kit to vibrate the vibes with a light-fingered attack approach that makes
it resonate like an electric piano. The other miscellaneous tones come
from the mellow smoothness of Chicagoan Ryan Schultz's bass trumpet, which
is pitched in trombone range and which sounds as if he can also use it
as a hunter's horn. One of the few practitioners of the swollen brass
outside of Cy Touff, who recorded with Woody Herman's Herd, Schultz's
versatility has allowed his instrument to mesh with players as different
as Chicago's avant-mainstream tenor saxophonist Ari Brown and New York's
classically-oriented French hornist Tom Varner.
Unfolding in a circular fashion, the malleable theme of "Gardens"
fluctuates up and down in pitch with Scea's flute and the trumpet at its
peak and drums and bari at its base. Expanding with brass fanfares, sliding
tones and massed cascading horn runs, the piece resolves itself, helped
not a little bit by the subtle and low-key backing from now Brooklyn-based
guitarist Jim Yanda and Chicago homeboy bassist Larry Kohut.
That's not all. When, despite its title, Short's frisky "Old School"
resembles tunes played by Ornette Coleman's 1960s' quartet, Scea's buzzing
flute vies for space with Smoker's bumble bee trumpet tone. With bass
mooring the timekeeping, Schultz is able to create a droning countermotif
that really sounds as if it's coming from a gender-bent half-trombone/half-tuba.
Short's expressed admiration for Gene Krupa shows through in his high-sticking,
cymbal and bass drum work. Plus the whole tune ends on an upbeat.
Yanda comers up with some Jim Hall-like slick backing licks on "Anesthesiology,"
which seems to be reaching out to "Show Me The Way To Go Home".
Enervated trumpet lines add to its smooth execution. Yet when Scea inserts
random tenor sax notes, the guitarist returns as good as he gets with
intermittent plucking.
Finally there's "Flag Day," an obtuse piece that appears to
be a Smoker feature. Slicing his way through jungle sounds from the other
horns, the trumpeter, inserts and withdraws his mute as quickly as he'd
manipulate a
video game, trilling and whistling on one hand, plunging deep into choked
valve territory elsewhere. As drum beats build up to a steadfast rat tat
tat, Burdelik on baritone and Scea on bass clarinet join in, as does Yanda
with an occasional banjo-like strum. At the end, before Smoker spits out
an extended plunger mute coda, the entire aggregation resembles an out-of-sorts
New Orleans marching band whose unsteady members hit a few too many watering
holes on the way to a jazz funeral.
Bewilderingly, all this material was recorded in 1997, but has had to
wait years for release. Perhaps the members of Short's national ensemble
play so well as a matter of course that they didn't realize how good this
session actually is. Well, at least it's out now and we can all enjoy
it.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing Wending: 1.Wending*; 2. No Before Like More*; 3. M.D.D.
- Four 4
Track Listing Go Figure: 1. Permutation*^; 2. Go Figure*; 3. Old School;
4. Anesthesiology*; 5. Flag Day; 6. Gardens of Perception*; 7. Anthem*^
Personnel Wending: Jim Knodle, trumpet; Michael Vlatkovich, trombone;
Paul Sawyer, guitar; Lynette Westendorf, piano*; Dan O'Brien, bass; Don
Berman, drums
Personnel Go Figure: Paul Smoker, trumpet; Ryan Schultz, bass trumpet;
Paul Scea, soprano and tenor* saxophone, flute, bass clarinet; Chuck Burdelik,
tenor^ and baritone saxophone; Jim Yanda, guitar; Larry Kohut, bass; Damon
Short, drums, vibes
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