For
all of its commitment to a different aesthetic this could
be a trio that takes its cues from the Ornette Coleman
trio from some forty odd years ago with David Izenzon
on bass and drummer Charles Moffett. As is so often the
case, however, the comparison is as much hindrance as
it is help in assessing the music they produce.
The
bass-drums cartel of Hilliard Greene and David Pleasant
is coherent and propulsive enough in its own right to
prompt thoughts of a duo album. The fact that they lend
such force to alto saxophonist patrick brennan’s
flights makes for the kind of listening that’s both
stimulating and deeply satisfying, lending substance to
the idea that time spent in the company of this music
is time well spent.
“abundant’”
is both an apt title and a case in point. brennan’s
work here has something in common with Marion Brown in
the sense that his lines seem similarly pared down, stripped
of excess. Pleasant comes on either like a perpetual motion
machine or a kind of post-modern Elvin Jones, lending
the music a momentum it would otherwise have lacked.
The
rhythmic vitality of Greene and Pleasant is not, by any
means, merely compensatory for the lack of harmonic input,
however. Instead, this is music exhibiting a different
kind of intimacy, giving rise in places to the notion
that the listener is somehow eavesdropping. This is perhaps
most evident on the lengthy ‘the terrible 3s,”
where Greene’s solo bass is commented upon by brennan
and Pleasant in turn, as if the three musicians are, in
the best sense, in thrall to their collective musical
endeavor.
The
aptly titled “flash of the spirit” features
the trio of alto sax, harmonica and bass in sympathetic
fashion, making for music paradoxically both warm and
desolate; evocative, perhaps, of some blasted landscape
made non-alien only by the human presence. This is especially
evident when brennan momentarily drops out to let harmonica
and bass check each other out in some approximation of
the move to understanding.
Placed
half way through the program, “’The Hardships”
speaks of fundamental truths through Pleasant’s
rapping. On first listen it sounds anomalous, but repeated
listening reveals it to be something else entirely, namely
a kind of call-to-arms in the midst of music that speaks,
if not of higher consciousness, then at least of how the
interaction implicit in making music is and can be some
kind of social panacea.
-
Nic
Jones
TOP