In truth, I wasn’t too thrilled with patrick
brennan’s two previous efforts “the
drum is honor enough” and “rapt circle”.
Yet this one is different. Apart from brennan on
sax, Hillard Greene’s bass is the only constant
with the previous albums. David Pleasant plays drums
and harmonica on this CD. And the music is totally
different too.
The
more limited line-up has opened the music quite
a lot, and the three musicians weave some sensitive
and creative textures. You have the feeling that
anything could happen on this album, and it does.
The music is often tentative, timid even, creating
soft but intense interplay, with the exception of
“Hardships”, which is an uptempo high
enery great anger vocal rap/spoken word piece. But
indeed all the other pieces are free form open improvizations
around agreed themes and structures, played with
a musical delicacy and precise elegance that demonstrates
once again that free jazz can be so much more than
noisy blowing contests, and truth be told, even
more subtle, nuanced and emotionally authentic than
the large majority of more mainstream releases.
The
music itself is built around themes, that appear
and then disappear again, depending on the mood
of the musicians, like waves on a river. And that
is what the title means “river that flows
in two directions”, in the local native American
language, referring to the Hudson’s typical
tide currents. On “flash of the spirit”,
Pleasant switches to harmonica, which makes for
an unheard of combination, but it works, and it
works well. In “the terrible 3s” brennan’s
sax speaks in short bursts, words and phrases over
a very varied rhythmic creation by Pleasant and
Greene.
The
last piece, which I find the highlight of the album,
starts with a weeping duo of sax and bass, moving
into a lightly funky form, then almost organically
shifting to a higher gear free bop, and the fun
thing is that despite the ever increasing power
play of the rhythm section, brennan keeps his cool
and his soft angle, right until the very end, when
he does explode, only to come to a sudden halt for
a final blow, literally. Open and intense music
by three stellar musicians. There is much to enjoy
here. by Stef, Tuesday, August
21, 2007.
http://freejazz-stef.blogspot.com/
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