

NOVEMBER 1996
CASTING A WIDE NET
![]() Phish: A success in the studio at last Photo: Danny Clinch |
Hear
a clip ("Taste" or "Train
Song") from Phish's Billy Breathes
in RealAudio 28.8
format.
Or, you may also download "Taste" and "Train" in .AU format. (For help,
see a note about the audio.)
![]() Photo: Steve Maruta |
The results are generally persuasive, especially when Rollins is free-associating at length over strong rhythmic support ("G-Man" and the title track) or looping riffs and outrageous quotations in heated unaccompanied cadenzas ("Autumn Nocturne," "Skylark"). What also emerges clearly is a point stressed in Chip Stern's excellent liner-note interview with Rollins--that the saxophonist has been absorbed in wedding jazz swing to Caribbean and other dance rhythms, rather than simply replaying his hard-bop triumphs of the 1950s and 1960s. Although the choice has its downside (a preference for electric bass), it has also produced such treats as the celebratory "Duke of Iron" and "Harlem Boys."
Rollins and his wife and manager, Lucille, have taken pains with the selections on Silver City, substituting choices late in production to include two tracks from this year's Sonny Rollins +3, his strongest album in a decade. The decision was well advised, because Rollins, at age sixty-six, has been performing with the strength of a newcomer and the imagination of jazz's reigning genius. --B.B.
Hear
a clip ("Silver City," "Autumn
Nocturne," or "Duke of Iron") from Sonny
Rollins's Silver City
in RealAudio 28.8
format. Or, you may also download "Silver City," "Autumn
Nocturne", and "Duke of Iron" in .AU format. (For help,
see a note about the audio.)
![]() Medeski, Martin & Wood Photo: Michael Macioce |
Medeski Martin & Wood are all about grooves. John Medeski favors early-generation electric keyboards like the clavinet and the Wurlitzer piano, which he locks into infectious patterns with Billy Martin's drums and Chris Wood's upright bass; then the music unravels. Shack-man (Gramavision), the fourth MM&W collection, brings a new level of concentration and momentum to the concept. Each track begins by stating a seductive basic rhythmic premise and then pulls on a single instrumental strand as drums, bass, or keyboards wander off on warped tangents. Simple on the surface, yet new facets emerge with repeated listening.
A more direct line to funky jazz styles is heard in the music of young San Franciscans such as the eight-string guitarist Charlie Hunter and the tenor saxophonist Dave Ellis. After working in Hunter's trio, Ellis formed his own band, which is heard on Raven (Monarch). The CD contains several modern jazz classics (by the likes of McCoy Tyner and Wayne Shorter) that receive a new, danceable spin. The jazz/pop standard "Always There" and a Beatles tune are also in the mix, which Ellis dominates with his enveloping sound and emphatic attack. Hunter and the fusion drum pioneer Mike Clark make guest appearances that add extra kick to Ellis's populist approach. --B.B.
Hear a clip ("Hi Lo" or
"Raven") from Dave Ellis's Raven
in RealAudio 28.8
format.
Or, you may also download "Hi Lo" or "Raven" in .AU format. (For help,
see a note about the audio.)
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Copyright © 1996 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved.