CIMP
is that very special Amercan label which forages for good
improvised Jazz wherever it can be found and damn the commercial
consequences. I'd like to think the more forward-thinking
of us shop this label like we used to do ECM. Bob Rusch is
again to be complimented for providing great musicians with
a place for them to advance their art, keep out of their way
while they're doing that and then releasing the results with
a minimum of editing.
That
said, I have to admit that the fourth Patrick Brennan's Sonic
Openings isn't entirely my bag. Artistic freedom is (among
many other things) the freedom to put out what music pleases
you at that time, hoping to communicate with a theoretical
audience somewhere, and to hell with what the critics think.
Thankfully and obviously! But this CD appears to be doing
something I don't follow too well.
Brennan
has a tart alto tone, he only wigs into the upper register
when he feels he has to, and there's a
welcome bluesiness to many of his angular melodies (especially
at many points in the mult-part Permeations Gumvindaboloo").
Sad
to say, he and Steve Swell do not appear to be interlocking
very well much of the time on these five pieces. When improvising
simultaneously, as after the head in "Drums not Bombs,"
Swell and Brennan sound like two men having an argument, interrupting
one another repeatedly. The idea of musical instruments relating
to one another as if conversing (not taking into consideration
just now that all music is a sort of 'conversation' anyway)
is well known and no spring chicken; Vivaldi did it in his
Concertos Grossos. But there are few sparks struck in these
passages that I can hear. That may not have been what they
had in mind, but still...
Solo
passages are better, such as one of Swell's in "Permeations":
with a loose color field to draw from, he takes on the studio
hum with his usual gusto, and raises the temperature dramatically.
Hill
Greene (known to me from Dave Douglas' SANCTUARY band, among
many other groupings) and Baker are breathtaking in their
interplay and their own solo space. At one point in "Permeations"
Baker shadows Brennan 16th-note-for-16th-note like Billy Cobham
did McCoy Tyner on Tyner's early '70s release on Milestone,
FLY WITH THE WIND. No mean feat!
Green
is concise and swinging in a 21st century fashion, as ever.
His manipulation of time, when the charts allow it, is a lot
of fun to hear (like the double-speed bowing later on in "Hot
Red", also heating things up).
Even
so, tempos often come off too 'largo' [why follow "Hot
Red", a slow blues a la Ornette Coleman, which often
appears not evocative enough of 'the feelin', with another
one ("Shadow Doing")? And then another ("Rough
Hue")? Though Swell's flutters over Brennan's held tones
in the former are worth a listen] or too offhand.
The
conversational' approach to this material simply strikes me
as needing more forward motion. But if you keep listening
you do hear manipulations of the very plastic beat, you do
hear Swell and Baker boiling that pot... in the end, I have
to conclude that THE DRUM IS HONOR ENOUGH is a reimagining
of blues forms in a freer format.
Late
in "Rough Hue" everything finally comes together,
though: the instruments coalesce and become a whole, streaming
one musical statement from four directions. Not bad!
The
head of "Rough Hue" has a loose 'Elton Dean's Ninesense'
kind of feel to it, the low-speed tempo notwithstanding. And
three minutes into "Drums," listen for the bouncy
section wherein Swell steps out, Green and Baker cushioning
his explorations in a jogging time. Very nice.
Brennan
is also to be complimented for a lengthy liner essay about
his musical theories and a few other thoughts as well ("Music
may be free, but musicians work very hard for it, and they
have to eat too." Yowza; that puts the 1960s hoo-hah
that surrounded the Isle of Wight festival and the recent
file-copying/CD-burning/screw-the-artist-but-don't-say-so-out-loud
controversies in very strong bas-relief. Well done!)
This
CD may be more your thing than it was mine: dynamically reflective,
exploring blues ideas in an often arresting fashion, easily
conversational in approach with some fireworks. Your call.
-
Kenneth Egbert
jazznow.com
Patrick
Brennan's Sonic Openings Under Pressure
The
Drum Is Honor Enough
- CIMP #305 USA -CD
Hilliard
Green - bass, Steve Swell - trombone, Patrick Brennan - alto
saxophone, Newman Taylor Baker - drums
Jazz
Now Interactive November 2004 Vol 14 No. 7 - Table of Contents
Copyright Jazz Now, November 2004 issue, all rights reserved.
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