Thursday, June 23, 2011

Tatsu Aoki's Miyumi Project at MCA Jazz on the Veranda

Tatsu Aoki’s Miyumi Project
MCA Veranda
Tuesday, June 14, 2011

A vastidão (ah vahs-tchee-DOWN): Somehow the Portuguese word (with its wide-open syllables and three-beat length) that expresses the concept of vastness resonates more directly with the spirit of the most recent concert at the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Tuesday on the Veranda series than the clipped-sounding English word. A vastidão, the expanse of the sextet: two tenor saxophones, one baritone sax, upright bass, taiko drums, three-congas percussion. A vastidão, the 360 degree view from the veranda seats: the sextet, the 2/3 height mark of full, green trees, and the honeycomb windows and decks of lakefront apartments to the North; a manicured green lawn lined with enormous white stone flower pots, the blur of Lake Shore Drive, then the pure blue lake and the shimmering horizon to the East; the speckled grey minimalist walls of the museum to the West; and stone steps cascading down toward Chicago Avenue behind, to the East.

The group arrived ready to meet the June breeze with the force of brass floating serpentine over four-note bass ostinatos. Taking a cue from the modal jazz pioneered by Miles Davis on his masterwork Kind of Blue, the Miyumi Project privileges melody and the hypnotic rhythmic phrase over the rapidly moving chord changes of be-bop. However, there the comparisons end. The two tenors and one baritone sax do not play medieval church modal scales as do the horns on the Miles’ work, but rather blossom their inventions within the traditional Western 8-note scale – with polytonal embellishments and extended techniques, to be sure – and with much reference to the pentatonic “blues” scale. Additionally, Aoki’s ensemble features a conga player and a percussionist on the martial Japanese taoki drums, a touch not found among the modal jazz groups.

The musicians played two sets of several pieces each and the musical/emotional range that was covered covered, also: a vastidão. Tatsu Aoki’s Miyumi Project, may hearken to modal jazz in its emphasis on melody and repeating bass lines, but its direct spiritual and aesthetic forbear is certainly the 1960’s work of Yusef Lateef. Lateef is the first jazz composer and arranger to blend Eastern music and instruments with a blues/jazz aesthetic. The opening track, “The Plum Blossom,” to his seminal work, Eastern Sounds (1961), sets the radical and hypnotic tone for the record, as the Afghani stringed rubab plays a steady pulse twang and Lateef states the melody and improvises on the Chinese clay xun pipe. Since Lateef, the East and West have continued to form sometimes intriguing and sometimes dubious hybrids in jazz (John Zorn’s Masada and Don Cherry’s work in the 1970’s are standouts in the realm) and Aoki’s Miyumi project clearly falls into the “intriguing” category, to which I would also add the describers bold, mesmerizing and joyful.

The ensemble’s front line of horns, Edward Wilkerson and Jeffrey Chan on tenor and Mwata Bowden on baritone sax, clarinet and diggery-doo -- constitutes a type of Chicago Brass Dream Team. Bowden, the elder statesman of the group, gaunt in a white tunic, stood in between the two younger players and anchored the trio with forceful and passionate blues-based lines that expanded into sky-climbing poetics before finally returning to the tonic note like a hawk soaring back down to its nest. Bowden’s vocabulary is ever-expanding and it was striking to hear his flexible New Orleans march-tinged lines syncopate with the often strict, Japanese martial rhythms pounded on the taoki drums by Amy Homma: a new pleasure for the ear.

Wilkerson played impressionistically. His tenor phrases often sounded as questions, which were then repeated, interrogated, investigated, and placed again into sonic space to see what further questions they may provoke. His lines veered from jagged to round, as abstraction and speed braked into cooler melodic statements. He came meditatively upon long individual notes which he let the audience savor as they peaked and decayed. He blew what my scribbled notes call “phosphorescent meltdown” and at times, when his melodic lines ascended and descended as a trick waterfall which falls, hits the sandy bottom, and suddenly bounds back upwards, Wilkerson even recalled the rapid-fire minimalist lines of composer Phillip Glass.

The youngest of the front line horn players, Jeffrey Chan, evoked the sweet and the melancholy in his playing and in this sense echoed Duke Ellington’s poetic sense. The breathiness and slowdown which emerged towards the end of some of Chan’s expertly chosen note-paths brought out Tuvan-like overtones compelling to the ear. When Bowden played, Chan often teamed up with fellow tenor Wilkerson to blow quick five-note statements in unison that recalled the punch-punch lines of Fela Kuti’s Afrobeat ensembles. The Brass Dream Team listened so well to each other that such call-and-response dialogue elevated the pieces into unexpected realms of intensity.

Tatsu Aoki is the ensemble leader, not only as he is responsible for the compositions, but also because it is the three, four or five note repeating figures that he plays which form the backbone of the group’s explorations. Elegant in a black cape draped over black pants and shirt, Aoki adroitly stated the bluesy bass lines and two-stepped lightly on his feet around his instrument. With Aoki’s architecture sketched, the ancient taiko drum patterns played by Amy Homma could enter the picture. As mesmerizing as the strict martial figures Homma played, were her movements: she would form an inclined T with her torso and arms and then revolve the sticks into the drums with dramatic stretches and swings. The ways in which Homma’s strict-time, non-syncopated percussion crosshatched with the African-based syncopations of Coco Elysses’ congas formed a sonic knot for the listener to try to undo as the night progressed. This, in fact, is the great ambitious gesture of the Miyumi Project: the attempt to mesh the upright, martial beats of the aoki percussion with the jazz musicians’ swing. It worked in a way that maintained a delicious tension throughout the evening.

The pieces sound as the architecture-inspired paintings of Roberto Matta appear. Visible are the lines of the dwelling, in the form of Aoki’s bass parts, while the instrumentation of the rest of the group drapes and swirls around as splashed light greens and bright whites -- in a way that is both free and yet totally cohesive. To sit in the echo of such living and pulsing structures is to feel as if one has entered a work by Matta – some dream.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Beau Barry at Cafe Ballou

Beau Barry
Café Ballou
Sunday, June 12, 2011


A rail-thin man wearing wire rim glasses and with a mop of grey hair enters the café. “Are you one of the jazz guys?” the barista. “Yeah,” the musician, with a slight smile. He extracts a shiny blonde wood Epiphone hollow body from its case. He places a large take-out coffee cup on the floor in front of him, the letters TIPS spelled out in black marker across it. And then the guitarist waits.

Minutes later, a large and jovial man carrying a saxophone case enters through the sunny doorway. His eyes are wide and expressive and he smiles a broad gap-toothed grin. The tenor saxophone he takes out from the case has the hushed, romantic hue of brass unpolished. The duo opens with “April in Paris” and the tenor’s statement of the melody is full and breathy and with enough idiosyncrasy in the phrasing to cause the café patrons to pause at their laptops. The guitar accompaniment is rudimentary; it runs the chart workman-like, but keeps good time: a metronome of harmonic structures upon which the tenor can navigate.

Beau Barry, the tenorman, states each standard’s theme with intriguing lacunae and phrases run-past-the-measure-bars. His improvisations over the hollow body’s harmonics are by turns whispery, introspective and intimate or big and blustery. They seem a wonderful expression of the spectrum of the big man’s spirit. Regardless of where upon the arc the improvisation falls, the song’s story remains always present – stated though it may be within perilous, rapid ascents of notes or sweeping runs downward to the lower register.

And so it goes at Café Ballou on Western Avenue on a Sunday afternoon in the city the mystery writer Harry Keeler called “the London of the U.S.” A few dollars will find their way into the tip cup and Fats Waller’s racing and shimmering “Jitterbug Waltz,” from 1942, will have leapt once again to life – perhaps never played so well before.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Mike Reed's People, Places and Things/Green Mill/June 11, 2011

Mike Reed’s People, Places and Things
Green Mill, Chicago
Saturday, June 11, 2011

Last night's show at the Green Mill with Mike Reed's People, Places and Things -- a group dedicated to interpreting hard bop compositions by Chicagoans active in the late 50s and early 60s -- went places seldom heard. The saxophone symbiosis between Tim Haldeman's tenor and Greg Ward's alto was a dialogue of declaration, listening, comment, and embellishment. What's the Laurie Anderson line? "Excellent birds" -- an apt description of the conversation between the two saxophonists. That revisiting the Chicago hard bop compositions of the late 1950's could result in such bold blossoming in 2011 reminds us of how much is to be gained be relooking at the past.

Reed's delving into this 1954-1960 Hyde Park songbook reminds one the gestures of the characters in the fiction of Chilean writer, Roberto Bolaño. In his story "Last Evenings on Earth," a boy accompanies his father on a supposed bonding trip to Acapulco, but only finds refuge amidst their strange tourist meanderings in a book he carries which describes the lives of little known French Surrealist poets of the World War II era. In the novel The Savage Detectives, a pair of poets in the 1980s travels the labyrinth that is the Northern Mexico desert to find the elusive poet Cesárea Tinajero who was active in the 1920s Mexican avant-garde. For the characters of Bolaño, dialogue between artists across the decades lends sustenance to life. And what transpired at the Green Mill with Mike Reed's People Places and Things was a dialog between the Chicago of today and the Chicago of the late 1950s -- both eras hovering, vibrating within the city's unending grid of tracks and streets. Both eras speaking across time to each other.

Dan Hanrahan