I've been listening to this album for a while now, finding it so immensely rich that I thought I would do it insufficient credit by already reviewing it. So I listened again, and again, and again.
Even if totally improvised, the music sounds very structured, with themes and angles of attack coming and going, shifting in layers and floating forward quite coherently, despite the incessant changes. It all sounds like the long intro to something that it still coming, but it's there already, right in front of your ears. It does not sound like jazz at all, influenced by some notions of 20th century classical music, yet at the same time is accessible and lyrical, and totally free.
The initiator and band leader is drummer Vijay Anderson, actually bringing together the two regular trios he plays in : Sheldon brown on saxes, Ben Goldberg on clarinet, Ava Mendoza and John Finkbeiner on guitars, and Smith Dobson V on vibes. Interestingly enough, both Anderson and Finkbeiner also are part of Lisa Mezzacappa's Bait & Switch.
The band's coherence is, as said, astonishing. They move forward like a shoal of fish, all together yet without a clear path, and remaining a single body, rather than an entanglement of clashing sounds. The line-up changes regularly, always in the same vein, a little raw and light-footed. And even if all the voices are there at one moment or the other, there is no real soloing to speak of, but rather a joint creation of a sonoric totality.
Complete on >> http://freejazz-stef.blogspot.com/2010/09/vijay-anderson-hardboiled-wonderland.html
Lynn Johnston Trio
Lynn Johnston-Bass Clarinet
Brett Felsher-Guitar
Vijay Anderson-Drums
July 1999
Carson, California
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Vijay Anderson - Hardboiled wonderland
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, September 07, 2010
Labels: Vijay Anderson
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