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RENT ROMUS'
LORDS OF OUTLAND
Avatar In The Field: A Tribute to Albert Ayler
Edgetone Records
EDT 4001
RENT ROMUS'
PDK VOTEX PROJECT
A Tribute to Philip K. Dick
Edgetone Records
EDT 4003
RENT
ROMUS' LIFEBLOOD TRIO
Blood Motions
Jazzheads/Edgetone Records
JH 1136
With music
that rappels from the New Thing to skewed mainstream jazz to horror and
sci-fi pastiches to skronk and back again, Bay area saxophonist Rent Romus
is certainly carving a distinctive musical niche for himself. He's also
a one-man cottage industry, organizing tours in North America and overseas
for his many band projects, booking a couple of California music series,
participating in multi-media happenings, producing CDs, helping in the
marketing of another jazz label, and running his own Edgetone Records.
Frenzied activity appears to agree with the young reedman though. For
on the evidence of the music on these sessions, he's thriving rather than
spreading himself too thin, even with his patented B.I.A.C.S. (bull in
a china shop) approach to improvisation.
Each disc here exposes some part of Romus' game plan. AVATAR is his quartet's
take on the music of Albert Ayler; PKD VORTEX, with an almost completely
different quintet is a musical tribute to science fiction writer Phil
K. Dick; and BLOOD is a trio effort recorded with young Danish musicians.
Consider the first disc, made up of five Ayler so-called standards plus
band originals -- mostly by Romus -- in the same style. The result of
eight years of Ayler immersion, Romus et. al have tried to bring their
own perspective to the music, and don't even play "Ghosts",
the late hornman's greatest hit (sic).
Using a full fruity tone with a vibrato that's almost broader than Ayler's,
Romus blends his saxophones, sometimes played simultaneously, with Toyoji
Tomita's trombone. Moving from reverberating tailgate tones on Romus'
"Aces for Albert" tribute and other tunes to little bleeps of
sound that seem to come right from the high inside the instrument's bell
on "Vibrations" and elsewhere, the slide man serves as a perfect
foil for the saxophonist.
Although bassist Bill Noertker doesn't appear to step forward for more
than a bar or two anywhere on this set, his Latinesque "V/F Bright
and Noble" is a light swinging line hoisted upwards by Tomita's low
continuo and Romus' honking, smearing take-no-prisoners approach. It certainly
gains the approval of an audience made up of alt-music fans. Strongly
in the background throughout, Dave Mihaly makes the greatest impression
with his death march-like drumbeats on "Snow Ghost".
Still, Romus is chief Lord here. He brings out his piccolo when he's not
manipulating one sax or another through key pops or slap tonguing, or
spends time spinning out a child-like theme on the soprano. Elsewhere,
he'll verbally explain bit about his passion for Ayler to the audience,
and scream, rage and shout to keep the momentum building. Finally his
eviscerating alto tones and Mihaly's bell blasts help turn Ayler's "Our
Prayer" into a sing along Romus and Mihaly were joined by electric
cellist Doug Carroll, guitarist Joel Harrison, and most spectacularly,
Tom Nunn's electro-acoustic "inventions" for PKD recorded nearly
two years earlier.
Appropriate cadences for a project honoring the pioneering sci-fi author,
Nunn's spectral sounds provide the underpinning for much of what happens
here. It's especially noticeable on "March of the 80 foot Phils",
where it pulsates in the background while the foreground is occupied by
a screeching, tenor-range saxophone solo from Romus. Earlier, a quasi-military
percussion tattoo had been succeeded by mocking saxophone bellows harmonizing
with elastic percussion that sounds as if they're produced by striking
upturned plastic milk cartons.
If anything that milk-carton sound is the disc's leitmotif, though, whether
it's the result of Nunn's noisemakers or Mihaly's percussion isn't made
clear. The sound is certainly versatile enough, making its appearance
at one point twisting around a funky rock beat on "Nobody likes the
anti-septic lady", which is also notable for Carroll's barbed wire
electric cello lines and some fulminating drum beats. Another time on
"Return of the Wild Marian Fur" the unique tone adds to the
acoustical guitar-cello blend that's complementing Romus' gangly alto
solo.
Not that this CD lacks fervor. "Third Eye" features literal
human screams, echoing Twilight Zone-style guitar riffs -- which often
sound like an uneasy marriage between lo-fi grunge and arena rock -- plus
outer space organ tones which may have migrated over from Sun Ra's Arkestra.
Amplified cello notes joust with Romus' tart, tough vibrated split tones,
both boogying on top of highly amplified percussion. Elsewhere, tympani
echoes and thunderstorm crashes are never in short supply.
A variant of circus-like burlesque and parody appears in some of the tunes
here and on the Ayler project, but the creations are a lot more serious
on BLOOD. A trio set it's more-or-less a showcase for Romus, who comes
across as a sort of POMO Sonny Stitt. Alto saxophonist Stitt (1924 -1982)
was the classic loner, moving from city to city and record date to record
date, picking up a rhythm section wherever he landed and played variations
on standards, rhythm tunes and the blues. He still managed to create some
fine jazz free of artifice, though.
Obviously more focused than the older saxophonist, Romus here offers a
combination of standards -- in his case Charles Mingus' "Better Get
Hit In Your Soul" and Eric Dolphy's "Out To Lunch" -- and
some funky originals. As for the backing musicians, the CD, which is sort
of a souvenir of Romus' first overseas tour to Denmark, links him with
locals, bassist Jonas Westergaad and drummer Stefan Pasborg.
Actually the saxophonist is most impressive on "Better Git".
Using his best Hank- Crawford-out-of-John-Handy tone, he manages to play
both the solo and the backing figures from the original performance. "Lunch"
is treated unusually as well. Starting with a fusty, Dixieland sound he
doubles its concentration by playing alto and soprano at the same time,
at one point even getting involved in duetting with himself.
Surrounding all this are compositions that are pretty straightforward
with their parameters boudoir saxophone blues practiced by the likes of
Sam "The Man" Taylor and Jackie McLean-style neo-bop. You can't
charge the session with false advertising either. If something's called
"Break Tune", then it's literally that, the kind of blues-based
set closer you'd hear in most jazz clubs, complete with staggered saxophone
bomps, smash and grab drumming and steady Paul Chambers style bass.
However you don't get much feeling for the rhythm section on the eight
tunes, but it was probably planned that way. Since Romus was the American,
the oldest (!) and most experienced musician, the bassist and drummer
pretty much stay out of his way. What can be faulted, however, is the
minimal packaging. Unlike the other sessions, there's no listing of composer
credits, recording date, place of recording or even which instruments
are used.
Despite that, any one of these discs can serve as a proper introduction
to Romus music in different configurations. Despite the varying contexts,
he doesn't play that differently on any outing. Between his entrepreneurial
urges and his maturing solo abilities, you're sure to hearing much more
from him in the future.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing Avatar: 1. Avatar in the Field 2. Holy Spirit 3. Intro to Zion
Hill 4. Zion Hill 5. Aces for Albert 6. Vibrations 7. V/F Bright and Noble
8. Dancing Flowers 9. Snow Ghost 10. Our Prayer
Track Listing PDK: 1. Vortex PKD 2. Ape of God 3. Third Eye 4. Nobody
likes the anti-septic lady 5. March of the 80 foot Phils 6. Return of
the Wild Marian Fur 7. Quest for Reality Part 1 8. Quest for Reality Part
2
Track Listing Blood Motions: 1. U R the 1 2. Better Get Hit In Your Soul
3. Blood Motions 4. Out To Lunch 5. Danish Nights 6. Break Tune 7. Up
Side Down 8. Coffee
Personnel
Avatar: Toyoji Tomita (trombone); Rent Romus (soprano and alto saxophones,
piccolo, voice); Bill Noertker (bass, recorder); Dave Mihaly (drums, percussion,
odd things)
Personnel PDK: Rent Romus (soprano and alto saxophones, piccolo, voice);
Joel Harrison (guitar); Doug Carroll (electric cello); Dave Mihaly (drums,
percussion); Tom Nunn (electro acoustic inventions)
Personnel
Blood Motions: Rent Romus (soprano and alto saxophones); Jonas Westergaad
(bass); Stefan Pasborg (drums)
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