Sam Rivers Quartet: Undulation - Archive series. Volume 5
Polityka prywatności
Zasady dostawy
Zasady reklamacji
Avant Jazz / Free Improvisation / Avant-Garde
premiera polska: 2021-10-12
kontynent: Ameryka Północna
kraj: USA
opakowanie: Jewelcaseowe etui
opis: New York City Jazz Record:
This month is the 10th anniversary of the passing of Sam Rivers (Sep. 25th, 1923 - Dec. 26th, 2011), the multi-instrumentalist (tenor and soprano saxophones, flute, piano) whose Studio RivBea in Manhattan’s NoHo district was the most famous venue in the Loft Jazz movement in the ‘70s. This concert recording from
Florence, Italy (May 17th, 1981) chronicles the “electric” band Rivers formed and toured with mostly outside the U.S. after the demise of Studio RivBea. Although influential in ‘60s avant garde jazz, especially on period Blue Note LPs, Rivers can more accurately be described as inside-outside, never a completely free player, often circling back to the forms of bebop: extended chord changes, elaborations of pop song melodies. So on this hour-plus performance, divided in CD production into nominal tracks, which are actually part of a continuous, multi-faceted continuum, Rivers veers from free blowing largely on the first two “tracks”, with his tenor, to a strong suggestion of tunes and chord changes, as on the third track: “Tenor saxophone section II”, his horn riding on funky toms (Steve Ellington), electric guitar (Jerry Byrd) and electric bass (Rael-Wesley Grant) rhythmic riffs. Ellington’s solo, mostly sticks on drumheads with some cymbal accents, follows the tenor sections, leading into three piano sections. Rivers, solo, waxes lyrical; joined by the band he is quick and pointillistic over skittering guitar. But a final piano section finds him soulful, more Ramsey Lewis than Cecil Taylor. Byrd’s solo, his tone and attack more straightahead jazz than rock or funk, leads to the final flute sections, the first over funk rhythms, flute high and bright. Rivers adds vocalizing and humming in a solo section, then returns after a solo from Grant to take it out over funky beats, interspersing his flute with some energetic scat-singing.
by George Kanzler
dusted magazine:
Jazz fusion isn’t an idiom commonly emphasized in investigations of Sam Rivers’ oeuvre. Free jazz commonly has that distinction instead, whether as the crux of studio or concert engagements where spontaneous improvisation often alternated with adherence to fluid thematic signposts. Closer than cursory examination reveals that Rivers welcomed electric instruments into his projects and did regular work in electric settings outside the jazz realm. Rivers even had a regular electric quartet for a time, although commercially sanctioned documentation was heretofore limited to a single Italian concert date from April 1981. Undulation doubles that regrettably modest quotient with the release of an archival tape from the following month with the same band. What it arguably lacks in comparative fidelity, it more than recoups in brio, intensity and revealingly extended interaction.
Rivers’ embrace electric guitar and bass accompaniment was a natural extension of his interests. Jerry Byrd and Rael-Wesley Grant were inspired discoveries on each instrument, combining solid R&B/funk backgrounds with a versatility honed from jazz gigs. Drummer Steve Ellington was a long-standing associate dating back to Rivers’ Boston years and a pair of recordings for the Blue Note label. The Florence concert follows the general organizational template that was Rivers’ custom, breaking into sections forwarded by instruments from his arsenal (tenor saxophone, piano and flute) and those of his sidemen. A section for soprano saxophone is suspiciously absent. When considered with the fade edit that separates Byrd’s guitar solo from Rivers’ final foray on piano, it’s likely that this section either didn’t make it to tape or was excised after the fact.
What is present is often glorious. Rivers really digs into the grooves drafted by his colleagues and brings a sustained level of energy and incisiveness that in turn inspires them. The music is sequenced and titled to make access to shifts in instrumentation instant if desired. Rivers starts on tenor, blowing florid fragments over the sort of rolling and reconfiguring rhythms that make the album’s title so apposite. Grant gets just the right amount of rubberized action from his strings and Byrd is a fleet-fingered beast in the deployment of stinging, arpeggiated runs. Twenty-one minutes later, the leader drops out leaving Ellington to a solo exposition. Guitar and bass solos frame most of the leader’s forays on flute with a final coda finishing the set. Funk figures would return to his compositional language at later points in his career including charts for the Rivbea Orchestra. It’s at once instructive and immersive hearing him play with and over them so enthusiastically here.
by Derek Taylor
jazzandblues.blogspot.com:
As Bill Shoemaker lays out in his fine liner essay that accompanies this album, the early eighties was a time of transition for the great multi-instrumentalist and composer Sam Rivers. The prior decade had been quite fruitful, as he had been the proprietor of one of the most well known jazz lofts of that burgeoning underground scene, as well as releasing high quality records on major and highly regarded independent record labels. But by the eighties things had changed drastically, property redevelopment in New York City priced artists and musicians out of the loft market, while the rising neo-conservative jazz movement pushed Rivers into the hands of much smaller record labels with inadequate distribution. In league with the brilliant late seventies / early eighties avant free funk of Arthur Blythe and James Blood Ulmer, this concert, recorded in Florence in May of 1981, shows Rivers adapting with the times, playing with Jerry Byrd on guitar and Rael-Wesley Grant on electric bass in addition to longtime musical associate Steve Ellington on drums. The great Sam Rivers Trio performances of the seventies presented the leader playing several instruments over a boiling bass and drums backdrop. Things have changed here, as the music is as often as not centered around unaccompanied solo portions, in the beginning where Rivers develops a lengthy and fascinating outré tenor saxophone improvisation, only to come back to the band and join the funky bass boosted framework that they have developed. Ellington gets space for a lengthy and well delivered drum solo, then Rivers builds from the piano, leading to a wonderful cascading full group section, with everybody at their best led by the free flowing notes of piano and guitar. Rivers grows more muscular, kneading the keys and pulling out strong chords, before pulling back to a jaunty theme. There's a section for guitar that's snarling with added vocal encouragement, basic bass and drum backing, encouraging Byrd to wail in a bluesy but slightly disconnected manner. Rivers moves to flute with subtle accompaniment from the band, he's brilliant and unique on this instrument, creating beautifully flowing sounds and moving into an unaccompanied section. Interspersed with vocalizations while scatting and humming into the instrument. The band returns at lightning speed pushing the tempo, leading to an open space bass solo, played in a nimble and impressive fashion. Rivers returns with the full band, still playing flute in a lightly funky setting, he scats the finale while announcing the musicians to the audience. This is a valuable recording, not only for the musicality on display, but for shedding some light on Sam Rivers' activates in the eighties. Recording and performing opportunities grew more scarce as the decade went on, leading to Rivers joining Dizzy Gillespie's band and moving to Orlando. But fear not, this set the stage for one of the greatest final acts in jazz history.
by Tim Niland
Point of Departure:
The fifth in NoBusiness’ series of Sam Rivers reissues, Undulation is yet another reminder of his prodigious skills as improviser across instruments, during a phase of his career in which long-form improvisation, taken to at times astounding levels of invention, was his primary modus operandi. Despite his omnipresence in the New York free jazz scene, from the mid-60s work on Blue Note into his central role in the Loft Jazz era, Rivers has never received as much attention as he might. This may be partly related to his increasing insistence, despite his distinctive voice as a composer, to pioneer long-form improvisation, which he referred to as “spontaneous creativity:” “Improvisation to make every performance different, to let your emotions and musical ideas direct the course of the music, to let the sound of the music set up its own impetus, to remember what’s has been stated so that repetition is intention, to be responsive to myriads of color, polyrhythms, rise and fall, ebb and flow, thematic variations.” As a true multi-instrumentalist – as well as the tenor and soprano saxophones, flute and piano which he deployed live, he also played trombone and viola – Rivers often signalled sectional transitions by switching between instruments, and within his playing on any of these was an immense flexibility. Steve Coleman designates Rivers’ approach part of “the snake school” – others of whom included Coleman Hawkins, Lucky Thompson, Benny Golson, and Lockjaw Davis – characterized by “directional shifts in lines and intervals,” and a “slippery,” “long and rangy” approach to phrasing connected to Rivers’ physical movements while playing the music, which Coleman likened to a “snake dance.” Likewise, latter-day collaborator Anthony Cole asserts: “It moves! It’s danceable if you want to dance. It’s listenable if you want to listen. If you want to close your eyes and slip off into a cosmos somewhere, it lets you do that.”
In 1975, as well as recording Sizzle with former Lifetime guitarist Ted Dunbar – for my money, his most underrated great record – Rivers had played with James Blood Ulmer in the lofts. But it wasn’t until the 1980s, following the ending of his group with Dave Holland and Thurman Barker, that he regularly included guitar in his groups. The band on Undulation – Rivers, guitarist Jerry Byrd, bassist Rael Wesley Grant, and drummer Steve Ellington – was previously documented on Crosscurrent (1982), and a later group with Lucky Thompson’s son, Darryl Thompson, replacing Byrd, and Steve McCraven replacing Ellington yielded Lazuli (1990). Guitar added something else to these groups, drawing more closely from dance musics. As Rivers remarked: “I’m trying to play exciting, advanced music with a nice, primitive beat – combine the intellect with the soul.” Sizzle came out the same year as Ornette Coleman’s Dancing in Your Head, the debut of his Prime Time band. Both are sextet records, Rivers’ with one guitarist and two drummers, Coleman’s with two guitarists, plus an electric bass to fatten out the ensemble sound. Coleman later claimed that the main reason for using electric instruments was to match the orchestral amplitude of Skies of America, and both Sizzle and Dancing can be seen as attempts to expand the volume and timbral possibilities of the conventional jazz small ensemble. While Coleman treats funk influences in terms of interlocking melodic fragments, Rivers emphasizes long, improvised streams, with rock and funk just two of many idioms from which the group might draw at any point: from double time to no time, backbeat to polyrhythm, in fluent and fluid disregard for genre.
Like Bern Nix in Prime Time, the hollow-bodied timbre of Dunbar’s guitar on Sizzle and Jerry Byrd’s guitar here comes from (free)bop rather than funk or rock, providing a suitably knotty interaction with Rivers’ fluid, changing lines. (Byrd had come up alongside George Benson in Pittsburgh during the early ‘60s). Drummer Steve Ellington, an early collaborator from Rivers’ Boston days, combines clattery responsiveness with occasional multi-dimensional backbeats (most notably on the third track); the round, elastic sound of Grant’s electric bass further nods to the funk dimension, though his actual lines are closer to turbo-charged jazz inflections, not so much walking bass as a constant sprint. As ever in Rivers’ music, each player gets an extensive solo feature: not only is this a fundamentally collaborative group music, but we get to hear every detail of its component parts. This is a music so packed that a blow-by-blow description would come across as little more than a pedantic reduction. Suffice to say that, as the disc opens, Rivers comes out in blazingly talkative mode, his rapid melodic extrapolations bejewelled with trills, honks, multiphonic wails, and juddering staccato blasts closely shadowed by Byrd’s crisp-toned guitar. For sheer exhilaration, there’s little to beat these kinds of driving “snake dances,” and the other musicians, intensively responsive, push the scampering, rough-and-tumble feel to new heights. Other highlights are the unaccompanied tenor feature – at once frantically searching yet assured and fixed in direction – the bluesy scramble of Byrd’s solo – and of the final piece, Rivers greeting Grant’s infectious bassline with an appreciate holler before launching into lithe flute lines and unexpected scat singing that crackles with serene energy, all while offering a closing rollcall of the members of the band. That records like Sizzle are still out of print suggests the pitfalls of major label releases – underpromoted and buried, then hard to re-release – in contrast to the fertile live archive mined by NoBusiness. We can, however, be glad that the Lithuanian label continues to do such sterling work: Undulation is ample evidence of Rivers’ power, present on virtually anything he touched, and an important documentation of a little-known chapter of his work.
by David Grundy
muzycy:
Sam Rivers - tenor saxophone, flute, piano
Jerry Byrd - guitar
Rael-Wesley Grant - electric bass guitar
Steve Ellington - drums
utwory:
1. Tenor saxophone section I 11:17
2. Tenor saxophone solo 4:26
3. Tenor saxophone section II 5:37
4. Drum solo 8:14
5. Piano solo 5:52
6. Piano section I 4:21
7. Piano section II 6:19
8. Guitar solo 5:25
9. Flute section I 4:53
10. Flute solo 4:08
11. Flute section II 2:07
12. Bass solo 5:21
13. Flute section III 4:55
wydano: 2021-10
nagrano: Recorded May 17, 1981, Florence, Italy
more info: www.nobusinessrecords.com
more info2: www.rivbea.com
Opis
- Wydawca
- NoBusiness Records
- Artysta
- Sam Rivers Quartet
- Zawiera
- CD