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Apex
Barnes and Noble
Apex
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Apex
Current price: $17.99
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This collaborative album between two alto saxophonists of different generations but similar character is a fascinating if somewhat overlong (77-plus minutes!) encounter that demonstrates the power of what's known as the "inside-outside" approach to jazz.
Mahanthappa
, the younger of the two men, is known for his fusions of post-bop saxophone with classical Indian music -- indeed, on his 2004 release
Mother Tongue
, he took it one step further, and performed compositions based on the tonalities of people speaking various Indian languages. If this sounds like a hyper-cerebral exercise, something almost
Braxtonian
in its capacity to alienate casual listeners, well then
Apex
is the ideal counter. A hard-swinging disc that pairs
with
Bunky Green
, a 1960s player whose best-received work emerged in the late '70s,
finds the two hornmen backed by a powerhouse all-star band including newly minted MacArthur fellow
Jason Moran
on piano, bassist
Francois Moutin
, and drummers
Damion Reid
and
Jack DeJohnette
switching off. Everyone gets spotlight time,
Green
play distinctively enough that each is identifiable despite the fact that they're both on alto, and the music maintains an adventurous but grooving hard bop feel. A concise 40- to 45-minute running time might have been more enticing to non-diehards, but while the 15-minute album closer may seem particularly intimidating, it's actually two pieces, the nine-minute
"The Journey"
and then a five-minute sax-drums duet to bring things to a gentle close. ~ Phil Freeman
Mahanthappa
, the younger of the two men, is known for his fusions of post-bop saxophone with classical Indian music -- indeed, on his 2004 release
Mother Tongue
, he took it one step further, and performed compositions based on the tonalities of people speaking various Indian languages. If this sounds like a hyper-cerebral exercise, something almost
Braxtonian
in its capacity to alienate casual listeners, well then
Apex
is the ideal counter. A hard-swinging disc that pairs
with
Bunky Green
, a 1960s player whose best-received work emerged in the late '70s,
finds the two hornmen backed by a powerhouse all-star band including newly minted MacArthur fellow
Jason Moran
on piano, bassist
Francois Moutin
, and drummers
Damion Reid
and
Jack DeJohnette
switching off. Everyone gets spotlight time,
Green
play distinctively enough that each is identifiable despite the fact that they're both on alto, and the music maintains an adventurous but grooving hard bop feel. A concise 40- to 45-minute running time might have been more enticing to non-diehards, but while the 15-minute album closer may seem particularly intimidating, it's actually two pieces, the nine-minute
"The Journey"
and then a five-minute sax-drums duet to bring things to a gentle close. ~ Phil Freeman