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WAYNE PEET
QUARTET
Live at Als Bar
Pfmentum
PFMCD027
Probably better-known for the exceptional engineering job he does on many
Nine Winds releases, Los Angles-based Wayne Peet is also a keyboardist
of note, gigging with different bands led by multi-reedist Vinny Golia
and trumpeters Jeff Kaisers large Ockodektet.
But LIVE AT ALS BAR is something else again three extended
jams featuring Peet on organ, present Wilco member Alex Cline on one guitar,
former Shadowfax founder G.E. Smith on the other, backed by the heavy-handed
drumming of studio pro Russell Bizzett, who has accompanied everyone from
trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and pop-folkster José Feliciano as well
as provided rhythms for TV fare like The Laverne & Shirley Show
and Northern Exposure.
Considering the set was recorded about seven years ago in April
1999 and contains no more than 43½-minutes of music, one
has to question its release now. Cline and Smith may have higher profiles
in 2006 and fusion fans may be interested in their earlier work, but despite
the guitar-organ-drums format, this isnt really a jazz date.
If anything the overwrought guitar flanges and fuzz-tones lines plus Bizzets
uncompromising percussiveness suggest the heyday of rocks so-called
super-sessions. Psychedelic bluesmen like guitarists Harvey Mandel, Carlos
Santana organist Barry Goldberg, and, of course, guitarist Mike Bloomfield
and organist Al Koopers famous SUPERSESSION created the most famous
examples of this rock-indulgence. But the improv content was pretty minimal.
Peet & Co. arent that musically complacent. But still, hearing
the repeated organ washes, jangling, metallic guitar licks and extended
fuzz tones, not to mention the unvarying rhythm that seems determined
to emphasis every beat, you feel as if youve climbed into a sonic
way-back machine, with the control set way before 1999 more like
1969. Also, when Peet isnt outputting jittery pulsations, his dual
keyboard skates awfully close to roller rink accompaniment, Cline and
Smith seem to emphasis every fuzoid lick from crunching fuzz-tone chords
to flanging to sitar-like tremolos. Additionally Bizzett never seems to
have met a surface he didnt want to jab or smash repeatedly.
If LIVE AT ALS BAR has any high point, its Inner Funkdom
unsurprisingly the shortest fewer than 11½ minutes
and final track. With his organ bass, Peet sets up a funky beat that snakes
throughout the piece. Yet any balance between the body and the cerebrum
eventually vanishes underneath repeated organ licks, overloaded amplifier
distortion from the dual guitars and endless drum breaks.
The crowd at Als Bar sounds as if its having a good time with
the bombastic effects here. While an audience exists for this sort of
rock-fusion effort, most people though, can find better sessions
that add a tincture of the cerebral to the bluster.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Five Swirls: a. Swirl b. Big Lumps c. Soft Foot d. Another
Room e. Points 2. Five Doors: a. Creepsville b. Mellow c. Surges d. Driving
Time e. Cross Stick Coda 3. Inner Funkdom
Personnel: Nels Cline (guitar); G.E. Stinson (guitar and mangled recordings);
Wayne Peet (organ and organ bass); Russell Bizzett (drums)
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