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Iyer trio's new 'Historicity' draws from eclectic sources

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  • Iyer trio's new 'Historicity' draws from eclectic sources

    Posted: Nov. 22, 2009
    Iyer trio's new 'Historicity' draws from eclectic sources

    BY MARK STRYKER
    FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC

    There's no single answer to the question of what's happening in jazz
    right now, but "Historicity" by the kinetic trio led by pianist Vijay
    Iyer represents one reasonable place to start (*** out of four stars,
    ACT).


    A lot of ideas that have been floating around jazz for the past decade
    find a compelling distillation here. Rhythmically the music deals in
    odd meters and dense textures anchored in souped-up funk, hip-hop and
    idioms from Africa, India and Latin America. Individual voices pursue
    aggressively independent paths. Prickly improvisations eschew standard
    forms without abandoning discipline or historical references. The
    repertoire makes a post-modern statement, too, in its heady range,
    from a vamp-based take on Bernstein's "Somewhere," to overlooked jazz
    compositions by mavericks Andrew Hill and Julius Hemphill, to pieces
    by Stevie Wonder and M.I.A.
    What is especially captivating is how Iyer, bassist Stephan Crump and
    drummer Marcus Gilmore phrase as one, even when tracking different
    rhythmic orbits around the pulse. On the title track, a puzzle-box
    composition by Iyer, the players suggest unstable atoms. Iyer's
    discursive rumbling ricochets off the drums and vice versa. Crump's
    bass sometimes hooks up with one or the other of his colleagues or
    sets its own course. The feedback loop continually refreshes itself.
    Hill's "Smoke Stack" is a standout, as Iyer's slippery lines and dark
    harmonies wink at the composer while also revealing Iyer's liquid
    fluidity and formidable technique; his virtuosity is matched by Crump
    and Gilmore. Weaknesses? Well, Iyer's music is more interesting
    rhythmically than it is harmonically and melodically, and his
    improvisations can stall in a kind of gray, generic wash. But the
    trio's tug of inevitability often pulls you back into the vortex.
    Bobby Hutcherson's "Wise One" takes its title from a lyrical John
    Coltrane composition, but it could also apply to the veteran
    vibraphonist himself, who paces his improvisations beautifully on this
    Coltrane tribute (***, Kind of Blue). The direct simplicity with which
    Hutcherson phrases the tender melody of "Dear Lord," adding just a few
    well-placed ornaments and hesitations and then improvising lovely
    counterpoint beneath guitarist Anthony Wilson, is a lesson in
    extracting maximum emotion with minimum fuss.
    The tone is reflective, with ballads like "Nancy," "All or Nothing at
    All" and McCoy Tyner's "Aisha" casting a longer shadow than extended
    modal incantations like "Spiritual." The quintet -- including pianist
    Joe Gilman, bassist Glenn Richman and the fiery, underrated West Coast
    drummer Eddie Marshall -- plays well, but I wish the self-effacing
    Hutcherson kept more of the solo space for himself. His focused
    improvisations merge gorgeous melody, sophisticated harmonic
    imagination, swing and a singing sound.
    Given the East Coast bias in jazz, the Chicago drummer Dana Hall would
    surely have a far greater reputation if he lived in New York. "Into
    the Light," a dynamic album showcasing the 40-year-old Hall's
    distinctive skills as a drummer, composer and bandleader (***,
    Origin), should raise some eyebrows. The language is contemporary
    post-bop, and Hall favors a tough-minded, interactive approach,
    explosively breaking up the time without mortgaging an ounce of swing
    or groove.
    Hall manages to create his own distinctive sound world within a
    familiar idiom. Most of his compositions have strong melodic or
    rhythmic hooks and harmonies meaty enough to promote inspired
    improvisation. Moreover, the chemistry of this particular quintet --
    with Terrell Stafford on trumpet, Tim Warfield Jr. on tenor and
    soprano sax, Bruce Barth on piano and electric piano and
    Detroit-reared Rodney Whitaker on bass -- strikes a creative spark
    that doesn't always happen in the studio.
    Then there's Hall's ear for texture, dynamics, color and
    storytelling. "Jabali," a fast burnout, takes off from a
    melodic-rhythmic call that nods at Herbie Hancock and leads to
    furious, freely conceived solos over a swinging pulse. Hall shadows
    each soloist, sparring and supporting, and when his own turn comes, he
    lets everything go.
    Detroit-born violist Kim Kashkashian has always been drawn to music of
    brooding emotions, atmospheric mystery and the yearning gestures of
    folk song.
    Her latest ECM recording "Neharót" is saturated with these sounds
    (****). Written for Kashkashian by the Israeli composer Betty Olivero,
    "Neharót Neharót" ("Rivers Rivers" in Hebrew) explores war, grief and
    mourning. The music -- scored for viola, percussion, accordion, tape
    and two string ensembles -- folds songs of the Middle East into a deep
    meditation that gathers remarkable force when, shortly after nine
    minutes, the solo viola is joined by a wail of taped female voices.
    Kashkashian's eloquence underscores the music's tragedy but also its
    cathartic prayer for humanity. The other works, by the Armenian
    composer and frequent Kashkashian collaborator Tigran Mansurian and
    the Israeli Eitan Steinberg, explore a similarly spiritual
    aesthetic. If you have any soul at all, this CD will reach it.

    Contact MARK STRYKER: 313-222-6459 or
    [email protected]://www.freep.com/apps/ pbcs.dll/article?AID=3D/20091122/ENT04/911220345/1 035/ENT/Iyer-trios-new-Historicity-draws-from-ecle ctic-sources&template=3Dfullarticle
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