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POING
Giants of Jazz
The Legendary Royal Records
RR 90 210
THE CLAUDIA QUINTET
I, Claudia
Cuneiform Rune
187
Hand
another accolade to 30-something musicians -- they've finally liberated
the accordion.
Once the preserve of polka bands -- or worse -- Lawrence Welk's champagne
music, the reedy sound of the bellows and keys has made distinct inroads
into contemporary improv in the hands of stylists from both Europe and
North America. Two of the most accomplished -- Oslo's Frode Haltli and
New York's Ted Reichman -- help shape the sound of these two bands.
Although a further question uniting both these discs is how much of the
material is written and how much improvised, I CLAUDIA and GIANTS OF JAZZ,
are as different as their formations. On the later, Haltli is part of
the five-year-old Poing trio, which play the works of contemporary Norwegian
composers with improvised sections. Besides recording with the improv
No Spaghetti Edition ensemble in Oslo, the accordionist has performed
as a soloist with several orchestras in Europe and Asia. Both bassist
Håkon Thelin, who is part of the contemporary music Oslo Sinfonietta,
and reedist Rolf-Erik Nystrøm stand more often on the legit side
of the fence. Obviously then, the CD title is more tongue in cheek than
descriptive.
I CLAUDIA on the other hand is the second CD by the six-year-old Claudia
Quintet playing pieces by John Hollenbeck. The percussionist moves in
New music, jazz and improv circles and his music and sidefolk reflects
those parameters. He has gigged with the Village Vanguard Orchestra, trumpeter
Cuong Vu and composer Meredith Monk among many others. Reichman has played
with reedists Anthony Braxton and David Krakauer, while bassist Drew Gress
has worked with jazzers as mainstream as pianist Fred Hersch and as out
as altoist Tim Berne. Vibist Matt Moran's collaborators include bassist
Mark Dresser and violist Mat Manner, while reedman Chris Speed has worked
with Berne and pianist Uri Caine.
All of which means that even if a piece such as "Adowa" is supposed
to be programmatic enough to echo West African funeral sounds, the bouncy
drums, bass and vibe rhythms suggest a funkier Modern Jazz Quartet, while
Speed's clarinet spits out mid-range growling obbligatos. Meanwhile, the
countermelody from the accordion slides from Parisian music hall to Balkan
country dances in the space of a couple of minutes.
Similarly, "Arabic" may offer up a whirling dervish circumnavigation
from Moran's wooden marimba that moves into gamelan territory and irregularly
vibrated clarinet trills. But sounds from the accordion keys and the trap
set are strictly straightahead. Propelled on high frequency, growling
dynamics from Reichman's bellows the tune moves from adagio to andante
with single note contributions from vibe mallets and clarinet reeds.
Most other tunes are based on the shared harmonies available when mouth
reeds and manipulated reeds are voiced together, with the end products
individually encompassing bleak, reverberating (Morton) Feldmanesque space,
organ-like ecclesiastical suggestions that border on plain song and ringing
repeated note patterns. Along the way the unique timbres of the squeeze
box -- spurred by irregular beats from Hollenbeck's snare, toms and bass
drum, twist themselves into what could be wind whistling tumbleweed accents,
Old Country bouncy czardas or drones that could be produced electro-acoustically.
With the colors bouncing with reed glissandos and fourfold mallet reverberations,
even the nine-minute salute to Hollenbeck's comfy naptime "Couch"
includes an almost marital drumbeat along with the gliding cushions of
clarinet lines and accordion crescendos.
Over in Norway, Poing's compositional forays are weakened by being subdivided
into too many short sections. Eivind Buene's "Seven Types of Ambiguity",
for instance, ostensibly unrolls over six tracks, as does Knut Olaf Sunde's
"(<<But Brother Ass, there is a whole dimension lacking to
what you say. How is it possible for one to convey this in Oxford English?>>)".
[phew!]
The later comes across better, since among the stop-and-start variations,
Nystrøm offers a soprano sax solo at the top and a baritone sax
line at the end that provides different tonal qualities. Meanwhile, as
he moves from key pops and swirling, whistling trills, Haltli introduces
whirling and wavering multiphonics. Thelin's bass stays pretty much in
the background, however. At points, as well, the reedy squeezebox and
the literal reed sound so similar that it's often impossible to distinguish
one from the other. Luckily as the timbres echo back-and-forth the sax
slides from penny whistle territory to harsh lower-case lines as the accordion
stays mid-range, producing a keyboard related continuum.
Nystrøm's alto gets a workout on the former tune, with tongue slaps,
irregularly vibrated notes, alp-horn like resonation and whirled split
tones that reach falsetto and above. Meanwhile the accordion buffers the
reed clicks with systematic, pulsating keyboard pressure.
Elsewhere on the disc, the few times when Thelin promulgates a more powerful
bass line the reverberations make Poing resemble another unconventional
improv trio -- Australia's The Necks -- while the droning pulses of the
accordion can sometimes make the ear think it's hearing electro-acoustic
tones. A bonus video track is alternately bleak and spacey. The dissonant
sound is distanced from the visuals which alternate between primitive
performance, band standing around shots and updated, pseudo psychedelica
that resembles computer screen savers.
Most instructively, the Øyvind Torvund-penned title track is about
as far as a recreation of the styles of say, Louis Armstrong or Charlie
Parker -- to pick two "giants of jazz" at random -- as can be
imagined.
When Thelin's abrasive bowing, encompassing both legato and ponticello
techniques, is added to Haltli's bumpy vibrated overtones and Nystrøm's
braying, back of the throat growls the effect is what could be expected
if Pauline Oliveros and Albert Ayler were put in charge of the band at
Bedlam. Classic Jazz it ain't. But as the unstoppable lumps, thumps and
bumps are exposed in an orgy of fleet-fingered high- intensity keyboard
smears and squealed sax cadenzas, Poing proves that its Euro creations
are unidentifiable enough to bob up with a singular individuality in the
sea of modern improv.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: Giants: 1. Essential Extensions 2.-7. Seven Types of Ambiguity
8. Fisk i kjerka 9*. - 14#. (<<But Brother Ass, there is a whole
dimension lacking to what you say. How is it possible for one to convey
this in Oxford English?>>) 15. Giants of Jazz
Track Listing: I: 1. just like him 2. Opening 3. "arabic" 4.
The Cloud of Unknowing 5. Adowa (for gra) 6. "... can you get through
this life with a good heart?" 7. Misty Hymen 8. couch
Personnel:
Giants: Rolf-Erik Nystrøm (soprano*, alto and baritone# saxophones);
Frode Haltli (accordion); Håkon Thelin (bass)
Personnel: I: Chris Speed (tenor saxophone and clarinet); Ted Reichman
(accordion); Matt Moran (vibes); Drew Gress (bass); John Hollenbeck (drums)
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