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Barnes and Noble

This Brings Us To, Vol. I

Current price: $17.99
This Brings Us To, Vol. I
This Brings Us To, Vol. I

Barnes and Noble

This Brings Us To, Vol. I

Current price: $17.99

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Henry Threadgill
has, in the framework of abstract music, been a stalwart, spontaneous composer whose personal sound is near impossible to identify, or certainly codify. A listener who enjoys very challenged music would have difficulty in discerning what is made up or written out. The elusive nature of
Threadgill
's kind of progressive jazz has to confound even those most oriented to his quirky pieces. Where the quintet
Zooid
lands in this quirky quandary of pegging a signature sound is subject to guesswork, but it definitely has its own brand of concentrated cohesion. Between
's scattershot flute and alto sax, the sleek tuba or trombone work of
Jose Davila
, and
Liberty Ellman
's thorny electric guitar, sparks are always flying about in a collective discourse that is completely unpredictable. Electric bass guitarist
Stomu Takieshi
and drummer
Elliot Humberto Kavee
are practically secondary in this mix of give-and-take improvisation that needs little rhythmic support or urgency. What seems telepathic or in zig-zag patterns is bursting with colors to the point where those lines are blurred with the virtuosity of these players. Then again, most of the tracks do have a funky underpinning anchored by
Takieshi
and
Kavee
that lends a more contemporary, updated feel to the proceedings.
has always used contradictions as a foundation for his music, and that is something his fans should expect at this juncture. His flute playing is exceptional as featured on the first half of this session, traipsing along in cat-like fashion for the intriguing film noir-shaded
"White Wednesday Off the Wall,"
or the funkier, heavy water experiment
"To Undertake My Corners Open."
Ellman
Davila
take hefty respective solos on these tracks, alleviating
of any heavy leadership burden, but
"Chairmaster"
is more a collective jam, as
's chunky tuba gets the ball rolling for
's spatial guitar, the in-late flute, and a diffuse melody that cannot be pinned down. With the other three selections featuring
's atmospheric and wooden alto, you hear more gothic tones, still funky but intangible within
's color palette during
"After Some Time."
A driving free bop pattern anchors
"Sap"
at the outset, but bursts in all directions at once like fireworks, while
"Mirror Mirror the Verb"
staggers short phrases like bursts of dimmed light. A most unique combination of musicians that collectively sounds like no other modern jazz ensemble,
's
must be heard to be appreciated, especially live, as the studio does not do the band justice. This CD is identified as a first volume, and though clocking in at a brief total time of under 40 minutes, it must mean there's more in store. ~ Michael G. Nastos

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