I play a lot of avant garde on
my Live365 station. I worry that I don’t
play enough hard bop, which I love and want to encourage. I find special satisfaction in coherent bop
played by avant garde jazzmen. I come
back again and again to Anthony Braxton’s Six
Monk Compositions. Listening to it
is a little like finding out for sure that an abstract painter can draw a recognizable
human face. I also enjoy albums that have
a mix of challenging AG compositions along with more accessible standards.
Tenor Sax player Dewey Redman
was very good at that kind of mix. Redman, who
passed away in 2006, is best known for his work with Ornette Coleman.
Mr. Redman missed the ascension of his old friend Ornette
Coleman, moving to New York to join the band only in 1967. His performances
with Mr. Coleman over the next seven years, on albums like “New York Is Now!,”
“Love Call” and “Science Fiction,” on which his tenor saxophone meshes with Mr.
Coleman’s alto, are good ways to understand some of the great jazz of the
period, intuitively finding a third way between general conceptions of the jazz
tradition and the avant-garde.
Today I purchased a couple of Redman’s
recordings: Living on the Edge, and In London, both for under five bucks
from eMusic. These are wonderful
documents. Living cost me about three
dollars. This is how to move moving
music. Here is the lineup from the
former:
- · Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Dewey Redman
- · Bass – Cameron Brown
- · Drums – Eddie Moore
- · Piano – Geri Allen
I am playing ‘Pt. 1 Blues or
J.a.m.’, and ‘Boo Boodoop’. The former
is a straight ahead, juke joint blues.
The latter is all avant to the garde.
Geri Allen is wonderful and, if the Penguin Guide is to be believed, she
keeps Redman in the bounds of earthly logic.
I am playing ‘The Very Thought
of You’ from In London.
- · Arranged By, Tenor Saxophone – Dewey Redman
- · Bass – Cameron Brown
- · Drums – Matt Wilson
- · Piano – Rita Marcotulli
This is a compelling
standard. Finally, I am playing ‘Boody’
from the very adventurous album The Ear
of the Behearer. This is a bloody
good grasp of the heart of American music.
- · Bass, Flute [Wood] – Sirone
- · Cello – Jane Robertson
- · Drums, Saw, Timpani [Tympani], Gong – Eddie Moore
- · Percussion – Danny Johnson (10)
- · Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Bagpipes [Musette], Composed By – Dewey Redman
- · Trumpet, Bugle [Moroccan] – Ted Daniel
All three albums are great
items for your collection. The last is
going to give you quite a ride.
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