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NICK STEPHENS
SEPTET
Live at the Plough Stockwell
Loose Torque
LT007
FAST COLOUR
Antwerp 1988
Loose Torque
LT001
Two vibrant snapshots of London Jazz in the late 1980s, early 1990s, these
discs show that just before the Limey version of Young Lions appeared,
musicians of many different schools had developed a rapport with one another.
By this time jazz-rockers, Free Musicians and boppers had been coexisting
for a good many years, while the Brits had the added advantage of having
internalized the Kwela and Township Jive rhythms expatriate South Africans
players brought with them to the British jazz scene, after they fled Apartheid.
Probably the best-known of these expatriates was saxophonist Dudu Pukwana
(1938-1990), featured on ANTWERP 1988 and celebrated with Do Do
That Dudu That You Do on LIVE AT THE PLOUGH STOCKWELL. When the
bands on both sessions adapt African-influenced patterns, theyre
not doing it for novelty. Trumpeters John Corbett and Harry Beckett, trombonist
Annie Whitehead and saxophonist Evan Parker had been part of South African
pianist Chris McGregors Brotherhood of Breath with Pukwana, while
bassist Nick Stephens and drummer John Stevens had long-time working relationships
with the altoist.
Ironically with such heavy hitters as Parker, Pukwana and Stevens (1940-1994)
on board, the Antwerp CD appears to be a unique all-star date, with the
two CD-set merely the approximation of a typical two-set Saturday night
pub gig. Not exactly... The tightness of the septet, which played at Stockwells
The Plough every Saturday night, make this session the equal of the other,
since Fast Colour rarely worked with Parker and Pinise Saul, who was also
vocalist in Pukwanas Zila band.
While Whitehead, Corbett, who also played in the London Jazz Composers'
Orchestra, and saxophonist Chris Biscoe, a long-time associate of pianist
Mike Westbrook, are proven qualities, and drummer Mark Sanders, featured
on two tracks, would go on to record with the likes of Parker, one of
the outstanding soloists is the little-known Jerry Underwood.
Underwood, who died in 2002 at 45, worked with avant-folkies like John
Martyn, and in Jacqui McShees Pentangle as well as doing improv
gigs. His solos throughout are impressive, especially on One for
Ron/Cunning Mingus, dedicated to Ron Herman, who played alongside
Stephens and Stevens in the Spontaneous Music Ensemble and (obviously)
bassist Charles Mingus. Revealed is an unapologetic, feet-planted-on-the-floor
hard blower in Underwood, who spins guttural sounds, phrases and lines
to their logical conclusion without showboating. Hes sort of the
Brit equivalent of the late John Stubblefield, another powerful, but underappreciated
tenorist, who worked with Mingus and the Mingus Big Band.
While Sauls throat-twisting glossolalia, anti-Apartheid chanting,
whistling and screams are a vital part of the performance, the preponderance
of vocals frequently makes it seem as the band is backing the vocalist,
rather than the singer being one part of the ensemble.
Luckily theres enough instrumental prowess on display to more-or-less
make up for that. Whitehead confirms her skills with a few muted, flutter-tongued
excursions that manage to be both tailgate colorful and bebop slick. With
no sign of his Free Music persona in evidence, Parker is content to play
second fiddle
er, saxophone
to Pukwana. When he does solo,
Parkers jagged timbres are firmly in the Free Jazz realm. Meanwhile,
Stephens keeps up a steady beat, faithful to Township Jive as well as
Jazz conventions.
As for Stevens, his loose-wristed, foot-pumping outings, especially on
John Dyanis Gone, are undertaken with locomotive style
power, revealing the inner Buddy Rich that seems to have hidden inside
the innovative Free Jazzer. Becketts double-tongued, soaring obbligato
to the drum work is particularly apt, as he matches the percussionist
phrase for phrase, smear for smear, no matter the tempo.
One was never exactly sure how much of Pukwanas mature style came
with him from South Africa and how much grew organically from the confluence
with advanced Free Jazz stylists in the United Kingdom. Here his percussiveness
in false registers is on display as well as intense, raspy irregular vibrations
that at points mirror Eric Dolphys advances.
Recorded more than a year later, on the evidence of his compositions for
his own septet, Stephens also appears to have internalized the adapted
South African cross rhythms to his own end for LIVE AT THE PLOUGH STOCKWELL.
While several of the tunes have punning pseudo-African titles such as
No Me Degas Nada, the strength of the performance comes from
this Anglo-African admixture, with band voicing and sudden tempo changes.
Besides the brassy enthusiasm of individual horn soloists, some of most
pointed bonding material comes from British-based Peruvian guitarist Mano
Ventura. Mixing stinging jazz runs with Latin-styled rhythms, his string
expansions complement the soloists or the rhythm section, depending on
the circumstances. The only distraction almost understandable in
a 1990 context comes from his over-reliance on too bright George
Benson-like octave runs.
Throughout the eight tracks the septet delivers the type of closely arranged
bravura performance thats polyphonically sophisticated yet rhythmically
open. Who knows, with a few of the tunes replete with insistent stay-in-your-memory
hooks, the audience at the Plough may have been moved enough to execute
the odd dance step to the foot-tapping rhythm. Linking the performance
to horn-resplendent Yank funksters like Kool and the Gang or Earth, Wind
and Fire, the crowd may not have realized that some of the United Kingdoms
most accomplished jazzers were letting their hair down if they
had any with this gig. Consciously or not, through the musicians
unshowy use of extended techniques, the two-CD set also points out the
links between improv and so-called more popular forms such as funk and
kwela.
Anyone interested in a peek behind the scenes at what went on during a
top-quality British jazz pub gig in the late 1980s/early 1990s would be
wise to seek out LIVE AT THE PLOUGH STOCKWELL. Understanding that the
emphasis on ANTWERP 1988 is directed towards a variant of South African
jazz, not cerebral BritImprov for which Parker and Stevens are best known
could draw you to that disc as well.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: Fast: 1. Now Time 2. Way It Goes 3. John Dyanis Gone
4 Dont Throw It Away 5. Mbizo 6. Way It Goes/Now Time
Personnel: Fast: Harry Beckett (trumpet); Annie Whitehead (trombone and
voice); Dudu Pukwana (alto and soprano saxophones); Evan Parker (tenor
saxophone); Nick Stephens (bass); John Stevens (drums); Pinise Saul (voice)
Track Listing: Plough: CD1: 1. Just One Ornetto 2. Do Do That Dudu That
You Do 3. Fayzed 4. No Me Degas Nada CD2: 1. West 11# 2. One for Ron/Segue
3. Cunning Mingus# 4. In Off*
Personnel: Plough: John Corbett (trumpet); Annie Whitehead or Alf Waite#
(trombone); Chris Biscoe or Paul Mason* (alto saxophone); Jerry Underwood
(tenor saxophone); Manno Ventura (guitar); Nick Stephens (bass); Brian
Davison or Mark Sanders* (drums)
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