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WILLIAM PARKER
Fractured Dimensions
FMP
CD 122
COLLECTIVE
4TET
Synopsis
Leo
LR 380
Change
one man and you change the music, is an old -- and pre-feminist -- Free
Music axiom. The converse is true as well, of course. Maintain a consistent
combo line up and the sounds become that much more profound, since each
player knows exactly what he can count on from the others.
Validating both sides of the equation are the quartets on these two CDs,
each coincidentally featuring bassist William Parker. FRACTURED DIMENSIONS,
whose title might reflect the recording circumstances, shows what happens
when three members of a regularly constituted band -- Other Dimensions
in Music (ODM) -- are forced by circumstance to play with someone else
at the last minute. More than 78 minutes of music resulted from Alan Silva's
piano and synthesizer tones being grafted onto the sounds perfected by
Parker, brassman Roy Campbell and multi-instrumentalist Daniel Carter
in a Berlin concert in 1998 when ODM's drummer was a no show.
More than four years later Parker joined with the other members of the
Collective 4tet to record its first CD after a five year hiatus. Luckily,
the creative concordance was still flowing among the bassman, fellow Americans
trombonist Jeff Hoyer and pianist Mark Hennen plus Swiss percussionist
Heinz Geisser. Geisser, who usually works in bands with fellow Swiss pianist
Guerino Mazzola, conceived of this co-op group in the early 1990s and
its personnel has remained constant since then. Besides Parker, whose
list of collaborators at this point probably outnumbers the membership
of the United Nations, the other players have certified downtown New York
credentials. Hoyer has played with Cecil Taylor and in Bill Dixon's Vision
Festival Orchestra that included Campbell. Hennen has played in large
aggregations led by drummer William Hooker and Silva, and in a combo featuring
Carter and another Parker associate reedist Sabir Mateen.
Because of this shared background, the Collective 4tet lives up to its
name, never coming across as if it was a William Parker quartet with three
sidemen. The bassist does add his distinctive rock-solid time keeping
to the mix, but SYNOPSIS is as much Geisser's or Hennen's or Hoyer's session
as it is Parker's.
Especially impressive in this context, Hoyer, like Gary Valente in most
of Carla Bley's bands, has a complete command of old time tailgate techniques,
screwed onto modernistic impulses. So, on something like the title track,
not only can he create protracted plunger tones, but he can also bend
and expand them in short chromatic bursts.
Constantly pushing the air forward with his valves, mouthpiece and bell
more than with slide positions, he offers fragments of rubato trills.
Meantime Hennen contributes low frequency, right-handed syncopation, Parker
buzzing, bowed bass notes, and Geisser the spatter and drip of near liquid
cymbal timbres. Overall, the sonic compression becomes so viscous that
at points it seems as if you'd be unable to cut it with a blade -- not
to mention a trombone slide, a cymbal edge or a double bass bow. As the
pianist showcases high and low-pitched contrasting tremolos, the piece
ends with a protracted trombone exhalation
Other tunes can be just as intense. "Jig", for instance, begins
with National steel guitar-like plucks from Parker, with purposely heavy-handed
tremolos and glisses from Hennen, who is intent on curlicue decorations,
flashing octave digressions and a cascading waterfall of notes. Eventually
the thunder of drum rolls and undulating 'bone slurs give way to two minutes
of complete silence, ultimately shattered by another 50 seconds of prolonged
trombone lines, sparking piano glisses, powerful bass plunks and multi-directional
percussion.
Although Hennen's vehement chording and contrasting dynamics and Geisser's
consistent clips, bangs and bops encourage chromatic blats and purrs,
the trombonist doesn't always have to appear musically as if he's a senile
old man -- constantly talking to himself. On "Left Turn", the
appropriately titled, most outside number here, his response to the pianist
and drummer is to bury notes in the bell like a small animal digging in
the ground, and blow raspberries of almost "treated" colored
noises. Geisser drags his drumstick the full length of a metallic resonating
cymbal and Hennen first sounds the bottom frame and escapement then drones
the string action on the piano's inside speaking length for their bits.
Conventional piano sounds do make their appearance on FRACTURED DIMENSIONS,
but Silva, who first made his reputation as a bassist with Cecil Taylor,
Sun Ra and Albert Ayler, usually emphasizes the orchestral colors of his
synthesizer. While restraint has never been a watchword in Free Jazz,
during the course of this continuous performance, the other musicians
play forcefully enough to mute his tendency to come across fortissimo,
spewing crescendos like E. Power Biggs playing a massive cathedral organ.
Most of the CD appears to be a prelude and postscript to "Acrosses
Rain", the almost 34-minute climatic track. Showcasing Carter on
flute, his unsegmented airy tones meet the pluck and scrape of Parker's
lacerated bass attack and Campbell's trumpeted grace notes. Somehow here,
Silva seems to be able to produce octave jumps and chordal asides along
with what sounds like metallic marimba beats and symphonic orchestral
textures.
Later, as Silva exposes some Taylor-like repeated syncopated phrases,
Campbell begins a melancholy Harmon-muted tone exposition, with burbling,
repeated shakes à la Miles Davis. Parker's swollen swatches of
double-stopping arco bass get more abrasive as the trumpeter trills higher
and higher notes, seemingly picking up some grit in his tone along the
way. Suddenly you realize that the almost Milesean trope has been mixed
with some Bubber Miley-style wah wahs with Carter adding slightly more
dissonant timbres from his trumpet as well. As Silva enters with a swelling
keyboard concord, Campbell pitches his output higher and Carter explores
his horn's limits, at times evidently wallowing in tonal flatness.
Arco, Parker begins mountain climbing with his G-string as his pickaxe,
hitting more elevated pitches as he ascends. Soon Campbell reasserts himself,
with portamento-smeared tones and higher-pitched extended grace notes,
more like Dizzy Gillespie than Davis. Eventually he's in stratospheric
Cat Anderson-territory, moving upwards in octaves as Carter outlines his
emotional articulation below.
A valuable figure in any band, that includes TEST and different projects
involving Parker and pianist Matthew Shipp, Carter's chameleon-like character
makes him MVP in many situations. Here he can match Campbell's brassy
trumpet flourishes with boppish, razor-sharp alto saxophone trills at
one point, then a few minutes later transform the same instrument into
a cauldron of cascading dynamics, squealing out hunks of pitchsliding
staccatissimo split tones. All this takes place on top of the vibrating
surface of Silva's sythn, as the keyboardist introduces polytones and
polyrhythms, intermittently pierced by Parker's bass tones.
Other times, as on "Eternal Flower", the saxman vibrates a bury
tone for maximum sensual effect, producing the sort of boudoir fireplace
warmth from his axe that you would expect from Gene Ammons or Hank Crawford.
Behind him, Silva creates an undercurrent of shifting tones. Later Carter
masticates the reed for maximum split-tone effects and Campbell barks
himself into piccolo trumpet range.
Then there's "Sonnet For Armstrong", which may or may not be
about Louis A. Carter, smearing out a long-lined tone from the chalumeau
register of the clarinet, may have impressed Armstrong, as may have the
repeated pattern Parker bows over and over again throughout. But Satchmo
may have had trouble warming up to Campbell, muted and high-pitched, going
his own way with chromatic double-tonguing and resonating grace notes.
And he probably wouldn't have known what to do when Silva turns on the
string part of his synthesizer to birth what appears to be the shriek
of a thousand tiny bats that have migrated from a horror flick soundtrack.
While you wonder whether the penultimate plunger-muted trumpet notes are
from Campbell or Carter, it's likely that the quiet, smudged grace notes
that combine with a dimineundo of low frequency descending piano chords
ending the piece -- and the CD -- are Campbell products.
Altering the band personnel or keeping it constant are the illustrated
strategies here. Each CD shows how well each of those concepts can operate
in practice.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: Fractured: 1. Figures standing in the door 2. Eternal flower
3. End Of famina 4. Vermeer 5. Acrosses rain 6. Sonnet for Armstrong
Track Listing: 1. Convergence 2. Going ahead 3. Synopsis 4. Left turn
5. Jig
Personnel:
Fractured: Roy Campbell (trumpet, flugelhorn); Daniel Carter (alto saxophone,
flute, clarinet and trumpet); Alan Silva (piano, synthesizer); William
Parker (bass)
Personnel:
Jeff Hoyer (trombone); Mark Hennen (piano); William Parker (bass); Heinz
Geisser (percussion)
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