
Senators Records
|
STEVE LACY
10 of Dukes + 6 Originals
Senators Records
SEN-01
Approaching a mixed program of 10 familiar Duke Ellington compositions
and six originals would be a provocative venture for any musician. Doing
the whole thing on solo soprano saxophone should be even more daunting.
But 68 year-old Steve Lacy has been going against the grain for almost
half a century, so one more challenge doesn't faze him.
Initially attracted to the soprano after hearing Sidney Bechet playing
Ellington's "The Mooche," a variation of which is rhythmically
deconstructed on this fine disc, Lacy soon moved from Dixieland to the
avant garde in the company of pianist Cecil Taylor in the mid-1950s. Unclassifiable
since then, Lacy who recently returned to the United States after three
decades in France, has played in many countries of the world and with
the equivalent of several symphony orchestras worth of musicians. He has
been associated with musicians as different as jazzers Thelonious Monk
and trumpeter Don Cherry, classical composer/pianist Frederic Rzewski
and Euro improvisers, guitarist Derek Bailey and pianist Misha Mengelberg.
He organized repertory bands before they were fashionable, was allied
with the New Thing but never part of it, early on allied songs and spoken
work with improvised music, and has lead a series of impressive French-based
sextets and trios over the past 20 years. Lacy was also a pioneer in giving
solo concerts. This one, recorded at the Egg Farm concert space in Japan,
is the most recent example of his mature musical preeminence.
By necessity the ducal material, which dates in the main, from Ellington's
developing oeuvre of the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, retains the familiar
melodies, but is somewhat recomposed using extended techniques like polytones,
smears, kisses and extreme glissandi. "Koko," for instance is
all tongue slaps and guttural growls until Lacy begins limning the familiar
theme rubato in a higher register. "Azure" seems to expand in
the horn from a region just short of his large intestine, with a high-pitched
recapitulation of the melody in the middle. "Cottontail" and
"In A Mellow Tone," on the other hand are treated straightforwardly
enough with only a hint of torqued glissando, though intimations of other
Ellington tones are suggested by the later.
Meanwhile his moderato trilling version of "Portrait of Bert Williams"
seems to sum up the descriptive tune at almost the same length as the
original Barney Bigard's halting speech-like clarinet and the underlying
pathos of Tricky Sam Nanton's trombone did in the original.
The six originals are a different matter. Inspired by distinct personages
including singer Stevie Wonder, novelist Herman Melville and philosopher
Lazo-Tzu, the saxophonist reins in his variations here, relying in the
main on mid range, tasteful harmonies. "The Breath" for Tzu
does engender repetition and extended trills, while surpassingly, "Art,"
for Melville, suggests some lines that resemble French bal musette. Briefly
Lacy introduces the final track, reciting Ryokan's Zen epigrams that inspired
him. The performance, built on soaring bird-like cadences, slides up and
down the scale with differentiated tones to mark the shift from one section
to another. A vital addition to the expansive Lacy catalogue, this CD,
which can only be obtained through the Internet at www.senatorsrecords.com,
should be welcomed by fans of Lacy, the saxophone or just plain improvised
music lovers.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. In a Mellow Tone; 2. The Mooche; 3. Morning Glory; 4.
Prelude to a kiss; 5. Portrait of Bert Williams; 6. Azure; 7. Cottontail;
8. In a Sentimental Mood; 9. Koko; 10. To the Bitter; 11. Art; 12. Gospel;
13. On a Midnight Kick; 14. Wave Lover; 15. The Breath; 16. Traces*
Personnel: Steve Lacy, soprano saxophone, recitation*
|