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Elements Of Style, Exercises In Surprise

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The Vandermark 5

 
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Elements Of Style, Exercises In Surprise
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A recipient of the "Genius Grant" demonstrates why he got it.,

  • We Say...

    Working groups always have the edge over ad-hoc and short-term combos in the je ne sais quoi sweepstakes, as further evidenced by Chicago reedman-composer Ken Vandermark's principal outlet, a simpatico little band with big-band amplitude. Honed by frequent touring and a weekly house gig, the 5 seems to be of one, able mind, whether playing squeaky, Anthony Braxton-style minimalism ("Intagliamento"), or digging into funk more out of Zappa than JB ("Knock Yourself Out"), or a plaintive ballad ("Gyllene"), or an extended free-and-composed collage ("Six of One"). Vandermark was once the recipient of a McArthur "genius" grant, and maybe they were right: On this album, recorded with a rare paucity of reverb, his tunes show an equal appreciation of Ornette and Ellington, and though he can get as noisy and atonal as the next free-jazz genius, he has a gift for making experimentalism approachable.

  • They Say...

    The title of the Vandermark Five's Elements of Style...Exercises in Surprise refers to the tight juxtaposition of structural post-bop formalism and free jazz improvisation. The band -- Vandermark, reeds; Dave Rempis, saxophones; Kent Kessler, bass; Jeb Bishop, trombone; and Tim Daisy, drums -- offers wonderfully tight ensemble playing in every composition here. Vandermark's compositions have become knotty exercises in rhythmic interplay even in the front-line melodies. There is a gutbucket roots feel to some of the material here -- best exemplified by "Knock Yourself Out," where the horns express a soulful muscularity in the middle and lower registers as they boom out of the mix. On "Telefon," bop tempos are wound in a short head before breaking into wind-sprint saxophone and trombone solos. The wonderfully muted "Gyllene" is a warm, slow tonal piece that offers one of the most lyric and basic melodies Vandermark has ever written. It's rooted deeply in the blues, and strolls unhurriedly, as it allows the soloist to explore the skeletal frame thoroughly. There is one completely improvised way-out tune here, "Intagaliamento," and it feels out of place on this set. The album closes with "Six of One," a monster 20-plus minute composition that opens very slowly and ominously with single and duet instruments meandering. At five minutes the entire ensemble kicks in and the tune breaks wide open into an intricate exploration of post-bop, Afro-funk harmonics, and sprightly engagement and counterpoint, first between the three front-line players and then with the rhythm section. This is a solid date that offers a wide-angle view of Vandermark as this band's composer and arranger.

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