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RICH HALLEY
Coyotes in the City
Louie
021
Untamed beauty typified by mountains, forests and plenty of rain are what
most people think about the Pacific Northwest. Yet, judging from this
and other sessions from the West Coast Canadian and American population
centres, there are as many wild musicians as wild animals in the area.
Consider
the three represented on this unadorned but effective CD, who recorded
the tracks in one take in a small studio near Portland, Ore. Leader, heavy-toned
saxophonist Rich Halley, who was educated as a field biologist and also
works as a computer programmer, wrote most of the compositions for open-air
concerts he was doing in a nearby nature park. Inventive percussionist
Dave Storrs is also a studio owner and recording engineer. He and Haley
have played together in the Portland area for about 30 years. Clyde Reed
is not only a steady bassist and one of the founders of Vancouver, B.C.'s
NOW Orchestra, but also an economics professor at a university in that
city.
Only three players means there are plenty of wide-open spaces available
to stretch out in on the six compositions. But despite that and the rustic
outdoor suggestions of the titles, this is not an environmental recording
with sounds designed to reflect Mother Nature. A lot of what's played
here simulates the freedoms worked out in smoky East Coast bars and European
cabarets, as much as natural settings.
In short, Halley, best-known as leader of the Lizard Brothers, and who
has performed in R&B and Latin bands as well as with the likes of
Julius Hemphill and Andrew Hill, is an inside-outside player who references
tenor titans like Sonny Rollins as much as the coastal mountains.
Most illustrative of the tracks is the title number, which features the
reedist on all of his horns. His pastoral wooden flute respires in the
middle section, echoed by bass string plunks and cowbell strokes. But
that soon give away to piercing, soprano saxophone lines, where he spews
out so many notes he threatens to get ahead of the melody. An inventive
yet lyrical bass pattern blends with the horn as the percussionist concentrates
on cowbells and cymbals. Finally the piece ends with spume of northwestern
air blown through the saxophone.
Halley's liquid soprano sound is given a workout on "Crows,"
backed by a cushion of drumstick rubs then palm strokes on the toms, plus
an unvarying bass pattern. When he turns to tenor saxophone, Halley changes
the rhythm, doubles the tempo and gets a righteous, raspy buzz in his
tone. Articulated single notes may characterize some of his playing, but
so do extended passages of glottal split tones.
Malleable in his soloing, the reedman's occasional renal squeaks can suggest
the most alienated of energy players, as does his tart tone. However,
he can also easily construct gutsy ballads like "Green Dusk"
or "Half Light" that appear attached both to standards and Ornette
Coleman's earliest LPs, which, after all, came from the West Coast. Seemingly
unflappable, Storrs and Reed putter along, no matter what surprises the
saxophonist throws their way.
In North America's earliest days, explorers spent a lot of time unsuccessfully
searching for a Northwest Passage to the spice route. However if jazz
fans are looking for some spicy playing and new musical routes, a passage
to the modern Northwest would seem to be more in order.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Green, Brown and Blue; 2. Green Dusk; 3. Crows; 4. Half
Light; 5. Coyotes in the City; 6. Rimrocks
Personnel: Rich Halley, tenor and soprano saxophones, wood flute, percussion;
Clyde Reed, bass; Dave Storrs, drums, percussion
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