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MARIO PAVONE
OCTET
Totem Blues
Knitting Factory Works
KFW 292
Maybe there's hope for some of the young lions after all.
Just
as long as they're placed in the context where their chops and ideas are
utilized as part of a larger concept, then they perform admirably. This
octet CD with band split down the middle -- half-callow musicians and
half veterans -- proves the point. Of course, it also helps to have a
visionary leader and composer at the helm. Which is where bassist Mario
Pavone comes into the picture. Best known for his collaborations with
exploratory reedists Thomas Chapin and Anthony Braxton he has record several
well-received CDs with largish group like this one, a few including some
of the same players featured here. Perhaps the bassist knows how to get
the best out of these young musicians because Pavone, who is now a grandfather,
was a 1960s/1970s young lion himself. After early experience with the
likes of trumpeter Bill Dixon and pianist Paul Bley, he helped found the
Creative Musicians' Improviser's Forum. It was a sort of Connecticut version
of Chicago's Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, which
included percussionist Pheeroan akLaff, drummer Gerry Hemingway and trumpeter
Wadada Leo Smith among others.
Two
of the young lions, pianist Peter Madsen and drummer Matt Wilson worked
with Pavone on Remembering Thomas his tribute to Chapin. Moreover, Wilson
has already proven himself one of the most versatile of younger percussionists,
putting in time with everyone from saxist Dewey Redman to the Jazz Composers
Collective. Madsen also has a list of credits as long as a Bosendorfer
keyboard ranging, from the expected -- the Mingus Big Band and Marty Ehrlich
a -- to the unusual -- Maceo Parker, Stan Getz and Don Cherry. If his
work with any of them was as exemplary as it is here, he's obviously headed
for a long, versatile career.
Saxophonists
Mike Dirubbo, who also specializes in Latin music and teaches professionally,
and Jimmy Greene both studied with Jackie McLean. The later also worked
in a reconstructed Horace Silver group and was a runner-up in a Thelonious
Monk Institute competition, which has the same resonance in a neo-con's
career as a studio mailroom job does for a wannabe Hollywood producer.
Still, on tunes like "Not Five Kimono" and "Poet O Central
Part" his exploratory tenor tone proves that his influences are wider
than most.
As
for the veterans, reedman George Sovak worked with ill-fated Chapin in
the 1980s, while trombonist Peter McEachern's employers range from minimalist
composer LaMonte Young to blues legend, Clarence "Gatemouth"
Brown, as well as Chapin and Pavone. Meanwhile trombonist Art Baron played
in Duke Ellington's band the last year Ellington himself led it, and has
experience that encompasses Broadway pit bands, the Olympia Brass Band,
sessions with Stevie Wonder and, surprisingly, the Lincoln Center Jazz
Orchestra.
Baron's
Ellington roots come most clearly to the fore on the title track, where
he and McEachern recall the plunger mute heyday of "Tricky Sam"
Nanton in Duke's Jungle Band. However the tune itself, with its Native
Indian motif is more closely allied to J.J. Johnson's "Mohawk"
than anything in the Ducal canon. Interestingly enough, here and on the
speedy "New Socks," it's McEachern's muted, but limber neo-bop
lines that sound more obviously Ellingtonian than what Baron produces.
Charles
Mingus, Pavone's other main influence, gets his due in "Not Five
Kimono" with its gospelish mixture of bones and saxes. Greene comes
across as a more discordant sounding Booker Ervin and Madsen references
Horace Parlan. Incidentally he suggests a double-timing soul-funkster
on "Otic" as well. The rest of the tunes, all written by the
bassist, except for Chapin's "Poet O Central Park" are more
fine examples of evolving contemporary freebop, foottappers with brains.
Pavone takes solos on most of the tunes, but considering the advances
in bass playing that have been made since he was a young lion, his work
can be heard as yeoman-like and able to get the job done, but not spectacular.
There's
a positive feature in this as well. For obviously the bassist didn't see
his role here as star soloist with massed supplicants framing his genius.
Instead he comes across like a wily bandleader of old, directing his young
lions and youthful veterans towards the promised land of good jazz.
With
so many CDs and bands appearing which highlight the neo-con equivalent
of the blind leading the blind -- the inexperienced leading the inexperienced
-- Totem Blues is doubly impressive. By giving his sidemen guidance and
a proper climate in which to blow, Pavone has come up with a noteworthy
octet that produces an impeccable setting for his compositions.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Not Five Kimono; 2. Sequence; 3. Totem; 4. Poet O Central
Park; 5. Bass Song; 6. Bella Avo Fero; 7. Otic; 8. New Socks; 9. Odette;
10. Cherry Bars
Personnel:
Art Baron, Peter McEachern, trombones; Jimmy Greene, tenor saxophone;
George Sovak, tenor saxophone, clarinet; Mike Dirubbo, alto and soprano
saxophone, clarinet; Peter Madsen, piano; Mario Pavone, bass; Matt Wilson,
drums
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