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STEVE LACY/DANIEL
HUMAIR/ANTHONY COX
Work
Sketch
SKE 332028
Opposite
to the average person who supposedly becomes more conservative as he or
she ages, improvisers seem to go in a contrary direction. In earlier times
Duke Ellington and Coleman Hawkins -- to take two examples -- were still
experimenting with new methods in their sixties and seventies. Today,
Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, Derek Bailey and Steve Lacy, all of whom
are on either side of 70, are as probing in their playing as they ever
were.
Take
Work, American soprano saxophonist Lacy's newest session recorded in France
with 63-year-old Swiss drummer Daniel Humair and relative young'un --
American bassist Anthony Cox. With all musicians in perfect control of
their instruments, it's as satisfying a session as Lacy has made in his
almost 50 year recording career.
Secret
weapon is Humair, whose experience ranges from work with (pre-fusion)
Jean-Luc Ponty and Ur-bopper tenorist Johnny Griffin to Gallic experimenters
like saxophonist Michel Portal and bassist Henri Texier. Except for his
solos, the essence of this drummer's art lies not so much in what he does,
but what he doesn't do. A cymbal caresser and brushes-and-fingers man
par excellence, Humair's accompaniment is so abstruse that it often seems
as if the rhythm is being produced by osmosis. Cox, whose associates include
saxists like Marty Ehrlich and Joe Lovano, keeps his head down as well.
In fact, except for some arco noise making on one track, his contribution
may be a little too low-key.
Then
again, that opens up that much more space for Lacy, who recently relocated
to Boston -- and the New England Conservatory -- after nearly 40 years
as an expatriate. Among the 10 tunes are three by the saxophonist and
two by his old friends and mentors -- pianists Mal Waldron and Thelonious
Monk.
Monk's
"In Walked Bud," which the saxophonist likely played with the
piano master, or in his Monk repertory combo with trombonist Roswell Rudd
in the mid-1960s, is a fairly uncomplicated tune from that canon. He uses
his bristly, slipsliding vibrato to take the lead and reconfigure it in
distinct obbligatos.
Waldron,
one of whose final CDs was recorded barely four months before this one,
with Lacy guesting on a couple of tracks, collaborated with the saxist
on-and-off throughout his career. Made up of high-pitched split tones
and buzzing growls, it appears that Lacy's solo on Waldron's "Snake
Out" is even more astringent than usual. Could its abrasive tone
and Cox's solo, which manage to approximate bell-ringing tones, be heard
as being funereal? Lacy keens like an inconsolable mourner and Cox suggests
tolling church bells?
Elsewhere,
each of the saxman's distinctive compositions unrolls in such a way that
they sound newly unfamiliar. Floated on walking bass lines and simple
cymbal accents, "Tina's Tune" features someone -- Cox perhaps
-- doubling Lacy's gliding, tongue-twisting theme as the swinging piece
moves in a comfortable fashion. "Resurection,"[sic] on the other
hand, is a pulsating freebop number. Chirping split tones arise from the
saxophonist, Cox's stately walking bass evolves into well-elaborated arco
discord, and the drummer produces the perfect pulse to back up each of
its sections, whether it's the ping of cymbals or shuffle of brushes on
snares. Old enough to appreciate song construction, this "Resurection"
besides being misspelled doesn't seem to be honoring someone's life after
death as much as celebrating a straightahead melody like "The Pink
Panther Theme."
Further
to this, Lacy sounds uncharacteristically jazzy on French reedman Louis
Sclavis' "Maputo," as his sweet-sour tone and subtle slurs mix
it up with Cox's wailing bass and Humair's bop-inflected sizzle cymbal
strokes.
"Sorcelery,"
[sic] the drummer's one composition and the longest piece on the CD, is
also his showcase. Employing belfry-resonant, unselected cymbal tones,
single beats on his bass drum and floor tom, Humair sets up a main theme
that is commented on by Lacy in duck-like, double tongued polyrythms.
Using a phlegmatic tone, the saxman not only spits strangled notes all
over the music, but their overtones as well. In response the drummer counters
with cross sticking on his snare and toms.
An
exceptional demonstration of jazz as an old man's art, Work can be enjoyed
by any improv fan.
-- Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Bois d'arbe; 2. Snake Out; 3. Tina's Tune; 4. Oldenburg Bed;
5. Resurection; 6. Acrylic; 7. Maputo; 8. Sorcelery; 9. The Crust; 10.
In Walked Bud
Personnel:
Steve Lacy, soprano saxophone; Anthony Cox, bass; Daniel Humair, drums
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