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WILLIAM PARKER
& THE LITTLE HUEY CREATIVE MUSIC ORCHESTRA
Spontaneous
Splasc(h)
WS CDH 855
SATOKO
FUJII ORCHESTRA-EAST
Before the Dawn
NATSAT
MTCJ- 3010
Downtown, they say, is a state of mind. So is so-called downtown music,
as these two live big band sessions demonstrate. With polychromatic ideas
enlivening both groups, and with composers extending and distend the status
quo, the points of congruence between Spontaneous -- recorded in May 2002
at the epicentre of hip, Manhattan's CBGB's -- and Before the Dawn --
recorded 16 days later at a jazz festival in Hamamatsu, Japan -- are closer
than you'd imagine.
Each
CD features a clutch of top-rank soloists and section players, although
the first CD's two compositions are firmly in the instinctive tradition
of post-new thing large ensembles, while the Before the Dawn's five tunes
are more carefully arranged. That difference may reflect the orientation
of the leaders, though, rather than where each is domiciled.
Bassist
William Parker, the unofficial mayor of New York's Lower East Side, has
been in thick of the avant garde for 30 years, playing with groups of
every size and with everyone from Cecil Taylor to David S. Ware. Formally
educated with degrees from both Japanese universities and Boston's New
England Conservatory, pianist Satoko Fujii has evolved her own style drawing
on mentors like Paul Bley, traditional Japanese sounds and echoes of post-Rock.
She also lives part of the year in Tokyo and part in New York, where besides
leading smaller bands, she helms her Orchestra-West, with sidemen often
closely allied to the Parker circle.
Dawn
allows her to show off her hometown team as Orchestra-East, which is both
good and bad. Some of the players have a history in the island's somewhat
insular experimental music scene, and add unexpected textures to her composition.
Others toil at more conventional gigs, which on this disc sometimes leads
to the creation of vamps from the sections that are more reminiscent of
the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra than so-called outside large bands.
This
musical schizophrenia is most notable on the almost 20 minute "Joh-Ha-Cue."
Initially moody and atmospheric, it begins by featuring Kunihiro Izumi,
the alto saxist from Shibusa Shirazu (SS), a local avant-big band soloing
in a reedy Klezmer-lite style. But in his showcase, Pikaia leader trumpeter
Takao Watanabe moves between a whinnying muted lead line and a Maynard
Ferguson-like screech. Almost before you know it, SS's drummer Masahiro
Uemura is bearing down on the sounds like a rock-influenced Buddy Rich
and bassist Toshiki Nagata comes up with enough highly amplified thumb
pops to fit in on a Brothers Johnson West Coast R&B session. Here
and elsewhere, tenor saxophonist Hiroaki Katayama takes on the role Flip
Phillips and much later Sal Nistico had in successive Woody Herman Herds:
the reed sparkplug whose gruff growls and honks goose on the others.
Eventually
swing gives way to gentle suggestion of gagaku music in the tune's second
section, with SS's baritone man Ryuichi Yoshida, providing gentle, rural-
sounding flute playing that could almost come from a shakuhachi. Cowbell
thwacks and irregular patterns characterize the drummer's contributions,
until unison andante trombone lines give way to an open-horned, chromatic
trumpet solo by Natsuki Tamura, Fujii's husband and closest collaborator.
Working with only the bass and drums behind him, his outbursts alternate
with unison smears from brass and reed sections. As the other horns ascend
and descend the chord structure, the drummer rolls and ruffs. Tamura then
comes up with some unexpectedly gritty freylach tones, while the bassist's
unvarying rhythmic structure holds the tune together. Ending with all
15 musicians shouting out discordant timbres as loudly as they can, the
coda showcases Jungle-style plunger work from the trumpeter.
Earlier,
on "Pakonya," baritonist Yoshida slurs, snarls, shouts and triple
tongues out split tones, bouncing in and out of the altissimo range to
confirm his avant-garde credentials. Added as well are darting Cecil Taylor-like
arpeggios from the keyboard, one of the few times Fujii solos. Nevertheless,
the underlying theme is strictly AfroCuban, complete with the band members
noisily vocalizing, as well as a Randy Brecker-style high notes and brassy
solo that isn't ascribed to, but probably comes from trumpeter Yoshihito
Fukumoto, who plays in Orquestra de la Luz, Tokyo's (!) most acclaimed
salsa band.
On
other tracks there are effervescent and symphonic suggestions that meld
conventional horn parts with contributions from Fukumoto, free improv
veteran trombonist Tetsuya Higashi and tenor saxophonist Kenichi Matsumoto,
whose slow, gliding aural walk contains a sprinkling of split tones. With
wounded rhino squeals from the baritone sometimes vying with Arabic-sounding
high reed interludes, and a restless drummer whose boppish bomb-dropping
mixed with steady rock-like thump alternately pays homage to Kenny Clarke
and Rush's Neil Peart, other tracks seem to lack a cohesive vision.
Then
again would the unison vocal spirit chanting that mixes with riffing horns
on "Wakerasuke" have an additional resonance for an oriental,
rather than an occidental audience? Older pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi wrote
a similar section in a composition on her Shogun album years ago. With
the sound reminiscent of a crowd at a sumo wrestling match or amateur
talent time in Bedlam, it adds a confusing subtext to the piece. Otherwise
it's all daringly speedy bass runs, mewling trombone slurs, honking, dueling
tenor sax lines plus octave jumps and piano clipping from the leader.
More
catholic in conception than Fujii's CD, Spontaneous is a sound monument
to the bigger band currents that have been around since Ascension. Setting
the pace with judicious rhythm at the beginning, Parker is subsequently
heard as infrequently on his session as Fujii is on hers. Here he sets
up the pulse, helps create some light, Gil Evans-like rhythmic underpinning,
and then gets out of the way for the other 16 musicians.
Along
the way Gold Sparkle Band (GSB) member Charlie Waters sounds out some
shrill, split-tone swaggering clarinet tones and trumpeter Matt Lavalle
moves from shrill slurs, a more mellow middle register and chromatic runs,
with the double drum team hitchhiking along behind him. Lavalle ends his
solo double-tonguing with an allusion to the Woody Woodpecker theme. Squealing,
multiphonic alto work from Rob Brown, trombonist Dick Griffin's more expansive
brass vibrations, lockstep rhythmic patterns and double bass drum pedal
action and press rolls set up other standards. As another point of difference
between this group and Fujii's, tenor saxophonist Sabir Mateen may double
time and swoop over the massed sections playing behind him, but you wouldn't
confuse that work with what Joe Farell used to do with the Thad Jones-Mel
Lewis band. This is especially true when Mateen introduces snarling panting
dog tones.
Throughout,
there's enough room for the soloists as there would be in more traditional
big bands, yet riffing tutti passages, with the occasional high trumpet
trill poking through the other sounds, provide the connective tissue to
holds this together. By the end of the first track, the sections are moving
as one, with themes sounded at different times varying the beat, all of
which finally combine into a lumbering, shuddering end stop.
Dedicated
to bassist Charles Mingus, there are times on the second track that the
offbeat shuffle from the drummers -- who individually power the GBS or
David S. Ware's and Matthew Shipp projects -- plus the wiggling, blaring
brass are more reminiscent of Sun Ra's Arkestra or a studio funk band
than anything Mingus wrote. Still Alex Lodico, playing Jimmy Knepper to
Parker's Mingus, corkscrews out emphasized plunger tones with a bit of
grit at the end, while longtime Parker associate, trumpeter Lewis Barnes
glisses from bent notes to repetitions. As the band forges on polyrhyhmically,
with a tuba's pedal point ostinato added, trumpeter Roy Campbell, Parker's
associate in Other Dimensions in Music, makes his way up the scale in
half step grace notes backed by a steady walking pulse from the bassist.
All around him the brass peck out their parts as the reeds surge and smudge
the bar lines below them. As spontaneous hand clapping breaks out -- another
Mingusian touch -- Matten overblows himself into dog whistle territory.
Spurring the band forward as it undulates back-and-forth at the same time,
his reed-shattering, incendiary tones serve the same incendiary purpose
tenor saxophonist Booker Ervin's did with Mingus. With the reeds and brass
still detonating sounds every which way the piece fades away.
Whether
your preference is for downtown Tokyo or downtown Manhattan, if you're
a modern big band follower, you'll probably want both these discs.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: Spontaneous: 1. Spontaneous Flowers; 2. Spontaneous Mingus*
Track Listing: Dawn: 1. Pakonya; 2. Joh-Ha-Cue; 3. Wakerasuke; 4. Before
the Dawn; 5. Yattoko Mittoko
Personnel:
Spontaneous: Lewis Barnes, Roy Campbell, Matt Lavalle, trumpets; Dick
Griffin, Masahiko Kono, Alex Lodico, Steve Swell, trombones; Dave Hofstra,
tuba*;
Rob Brown, alto saxophone, flute; Ori Kaplan, alto saxophone; Charlie
Waters, alto saxophone, clarinet; Sabir Mateen, alto and tenor saxophones;
Darryl Foster, tenor and soprano saxophones; Dave Swelson, baritone saxophone;
William Parker, bass; Andrew Barker, Guillermo E. Brown, drums
Personnel:
Dawn: Natsuki Tamura, Yoshihito Fukumoto, Takao Watanabe, Tsuneo Takeda,
trumpets; Hiroshi Fukumura, Haguregumo Nagamatsu, Tetsuya Higashi, trombones;
Sachi Hayasaka, Kunihiro Izumi, alto saxophones; Hiroaki Katayama, Kenichi
Matsumoto, tenor saxophones; Ryuichi Yoshida, baritone saxophone, flute;
Satoko Fujii, piano; Toshiki Nagata, bass; Masahiro Uemura, drums
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