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Mother Tongue
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Mother Tongue
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Mother Tongue
Current price: $17.99
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If there's any complaint about the creative bond (symbiosis? telepathy?) between alto saxophonist
and pianist
, it's a mutual tendency towards the cerebral and conceptual. It's impossible to deny the freshness of the music but their focus can bring an aura of severity that at times makes you wish the two would just lighten up and have some fun playing.
,
's third disc as a leader, offers no indication of anything other than business as usual at first glance. The disc is part of a larger suite based on the different languages spoken by people from India, supported by grants from major arts-funding organizations. It's an intriguing idea, using the speech patterns drawn from interviews to fashion the music, but still a bit daunting -- severe side again, no?
Well, surprise, folks -- maybe it's that good old human dimension, but
takes off like a shot with
's alto flashing a lighter, brighter tone than his familiar tartness. There's something like an orthodox "
tune" structure here and
actually comps in a vaguely
-ish vein with a light touch. It's way more freewheeling blowing than we're accustomed to from these two, and
blows up another serious storm playing the kind of extended scale runs he rarely employs on the fractured-with-flow
The stabbing melody lines to
intricate and extended, is more
's norm, with
's bass prominent as counterpoint. The lighter, lyrical tone returns for the up-tempo
where the cadences of the speech rhythms are apparent.
is a journey with
's drums typically light beneath
trills and
's climbing scalar runs as he explores all the melodic strands he can find. The dynamics drop down for a brief
break-out while
and
support him with fractured near oom-pahs, before it heads for a lush, stately finale except for double-timing on out on the fade. Your basic head-solo-head composition, in other words.
Like
the fragmented
finds
filling in some holes in the melody line
is playing -- or maybe it's vice versa because the way these two fit their lines together, you never know what, where, when, or how they're going. And the way the extended, rippling lines tone down behind
's bass lead on
shows it's all four players, because there's little soloist/rhythm sections distinction and who is soloing and who is supporting is pretty much up in the air.
is a gorgeous long melody line with a yearning
flavor by
-- his tonal range has expanded greatly since
.
's solo there goes cascading down scales, while the slower
goes outside with rumbling left-hand clusters that
extends farther.
opens with the saxophonist blowing
, picking his spots before unfolding into a gentle
that progressively unwinds, speeds up, goes free, and winds back down to a soft landing while remaining organic all the way.
sounds like a major advance from the far-from-shabby
for
. As a player, there's a greatly expanded range to his playing and a much wider tonal palette. Technical stuff aside, the human speech element worked wonders, lightening up the music and making it more dynamic. Bet the musicians had some fun developing the ideas and playing around with the material, and that's always nice to hear, especially with these guys. ~ Don Snowden