Showing posts with label Mark Helias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Helias. Show all posts

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Jane Ira Bloom - "Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson"

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“At an age when most creative people are settling into comfortable work patterns, soprano saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom continues finding ways for her artistry to evolve. These days, her music often aims to capture the      i spontaneous nature of creativity itself.”
- James Hale, Downbeat

"Jane Ira Bloom's music is a gift to the world from a consummate musician, composer and teacher."
- the editorial staff at JazzProfiles


Sometimes it seems to me that too much emphasis is placed on Jane Ira Bloom’s many academic distinctions, awards, and credentials, and not enough weight is given to her musicianship and the relative merits of her music.


Not that she isn’t deserving of kudos for her many scholarly accomplishments and, let’s face it, they help provide a financial base for her Jazz explorations, but I think too much attentiveness to this sort of thing ultimately detracts from the creative explorations contained in her music.


So while they are considerable, I am not going to include her trophy case of degrees, grants, poll rankings, et al that make up so much of the media releases that accompany her latest double CD - Jane Ira Bloom - Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson [Outline OTL 143] - but I am going to share my observations and opinions about the music on it as composed and improvised by Jane Ira on soprano sax, Dawn Clement on piano, Mark Helias on bass and Bobby Previte on drums. “Adding the Emily Dickinson narrative to the ensemble on Disc 2 is the acclaimed actor Deborah Rush.”


Just to be clear, Disc one is Jane’s quartet performing 14 tracks of music that Jane Ira composed based on excerpts of the poet Emily Dickinson’s collective works and envelope poems; Disc 2 contains the same 14 tracks, rearranged with spoken word added by Deborah Rush. The album closes with Jane’s solo interpretation of Rodgers and Hart’s It’s Easy to Remember.


The arrival of Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson made me harken back to my earliest days as a Jazz musician based in California when Poetry spoken over a Jazz accompaniment [sometimes it sounded as though it was the other way around] was all the rage in coffee houses in Los Angeles and San Francisco.


Jane’s latest Jazz & Poetry CD prompted me to pull out of my collection Jazz Canto Vol.1: An Anthology of Poetry and Jazz. Issued in 1961 at the height of the Jazz-Poetry experience on World Pacific Records [1409] the LP containes poems by Walt Whitman, Dylan Thomas, William Carlos Williams, Langston Hughes, Lawrence Lipton [who co-produced it with long time Pacific Jazz photographer William Claxton], Philip Whalen and Lawrence Ferlinghetti as interpreted by John Carradine, Hoagy Carmichael, Ben Wright, Roy Glenn and Bob Dorough performed with the music of Gerry Mulligan, Chico Hamilton, Fred Katz and Jack Montrose.


In his introduction to Jazz Canto Vol.1: An Anthology of Poetry and Jazz, Lawrence Lipton commented:


“Since the advent of Jazz West Coast, nothing has so excited the listening interest of the public, the press and jazz musicians alike as the emergence - again on the West Coast -- of Poetry and Jazz. This album presents various ways of approaching the problem of bringing verbal content back into jazz music and restoring poetry and music to their proper and historic integration as related arts.


To avoid the errors and confusions of such terms as "poetry and jazz" and "poetry with jazz," background music, accompaniment, etc., which have marked and, I think, marred, the more or less hit-or-miss club, concert and recorded "P & J" of the past, I have decided to call it Jazz Canto. Jazz, because it is in the modern American idiom. Canto, because it is poetry, a word derived out of the Latin cantus, singing, which in English came to mean verse. Jazz Canto derives from the American "talking blues" and is related to the German Sprechstimme, the Italian commedia deli arte all' improvise, and similar forms all the way back to the Greek goat-plays and primitive ritual word-chant with music. …”


Mr Lipton closes his annotation with this prediction: “I feel that with ]azz Canto Vol. 1 "Poetry and Jazz" comes of age, approaching something like an art form that will endure and grow and become a part of the standard repertoire of both poetry and jazz performance.”


Alas, unfortunately this was not to be the case. Although both Jazz and Poetry have endured, the have not done so together. As far as the aesthetic tastes - perhaps, too generous a phrase -  of today’s general public are concerned, it is a wonder that either have survived at all!


Both Jazz and Poetry are intellectual arts - it takes a good deal of brainpower to play the former and a significant amount of mental ability to create the latter.


Given the late bassist, composer and bandleader Charles Mingus’ admonition - “You gotta improvise on something” - and the psychological and emotional forces that create both Jazz and Poetry, it is surprising that a closer affinity hasn’t evolved between both of these arts.


I suppose the missing link is the awareness of one intellectual art to seek out the other.


And this is where Jane Ira’s brilliance - if you’ll pardon the play on words - blooms!  For as she explains: “I didn’t always understand her but I always felt Emily’s use of words mirrored the way a Jazz musician uses notes.”


The first CD allows the listener to experience the music on Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson on a standalone basis while the second CD allows for the music to be heard in conjunction with the spoken word of the excerpt that a particular theme [track] is based on as sensitively interpreted by Deborah Rush.


I experimented with the music by recombining it so that the musical version of the poetry excerpt was followed immediately by the spoken word version such that Jane Ira’s melody lingered in my mind while I heard Emily Dickinson’s poetry as read by Deborah. The separation and the sequencing were a revelation in terms of how well Jane Ira’s melodic interpretation of Emily Dickinson’s poetry works; not only does one compliment the other, but one also complements the other.


Poetry readings require a certain control and clarity, enunciated dynamics to underscore or stress particular elements in the poem, but above all, they require rhythmic space and pacing so that the impact of what the piece is about can be felt and not just understood or intellectualized.


Amazingly, Jane Ira’s music contains all these elements: control, clarity, dynamics, space and pacing to such a degree that one hears her melodies as what Mr. Lipton refers to in his introduction to Jazz Canto Vol.1: An Anthology of Poetry and Jazz “...  the Latin cantus, singing.”


To come at this conception another way, the canticle quality of Jane Ira’s compositions on Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson conjures up a phrase often associated with the late pianist Bill Evans - “How My Heart Sings.” In effect, what Jane Ira has accomplished is to transliterate Emily Dickinson’s poems into cantica or songs.


And speaking of Bill Evans, pianist Dawn Clements work, which was new to me on this recording, reflects a pianism marked by a touch that is simply exquisite and very reminiscent of Bill’s.


Bassist Mark Helias and drummer Bobby Previte reflect the “wedding bells” that legendary bassist Chuck Israels always wants to hear when he listens to a bassist and drummer playing together. It’s almost as though they were created as a rhythm section expressly for the purpose of working with Jane Ira and helping to interpret her music.


To extend the Bill Evans analogy a bit further, Bill’s earliest trios were one of the first forms of collaborative Jazz and the music as played by Jane Ira, Dawn, Mark, and Bobby on Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson is a true continuation and extension of this approach to Jazz.


The audio aura in which the music takes place is a tribute to recording engineer Jim Anderson and his team and associates. The sound is spellbindingly clear so much so that it wraps the music in an additional layer of intimacy. The sound quality is so “alive” that you get the impression that the music is being played in your living room [would that it were].


At some point, all the descriptive adjectives in the world become inadequate as a means of depicting music and poetry so at this point I’ll stop trying to do so and allow you to experience both for yourself in terms of what’s on offer in Jane Ira Bloom’s Wild Lines: Improvising Emily Dickinson.


The release date for the CD is September 8, 2017 and it will be available through Amazon.com and iTunes. Jim Eigo is handling the national press campaign and you can reach him at www.jazzpromoservices.com and Jane Ira at www.janeirabloom.com and at www.facebook.com|JaneIraBloom.




Saturday, April 30, 2016

Jane Ira Bloom - Early Americans

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Crystalline beauty - I never thought I would use this phrase in describing the sound that comes from a soprano sax - but that’s exactly what comes to mind when Jane Ira Bloom plays the instrument.

Jane has such a grand and glorious tone that she plays one note and your hear the whole instrument.

There’s so much profundity in just one note - she’s thoughtful and reflective and takes her time with phrases, letting a note trail off or naturally fade away while still holding it - that her sound evokes a sad or bittersweet beauty in her music.

Because Jane has such great control over her instrument she is able to render a plaintive, beautiful and emotive expression of a song’s melody; she just let’s the melody speak, clearly and distinctly.

The other element of Jane Ira Bloom’s approach to Jazz that has alway struck a responsive chord with me [pun intended] is her use of space which helps lend an atmospheric quality to her lines [improvisations].

The crystalline beauty of her tone, her judicious use of space that allows the music to breath is further enhanced on her forthcoming CD - Early Americans - by her choice of contexts, in this instance, her association with bassist Mark Helias and drummer Bobby Previte.

In some ways, a trio made up of a horn, a string and a percussion instrument strips the context down to a bare minimum and allows the musicians to listen to one another more closely while affording the listener a chance to hear each musician more clearly.

The results are magical.

Jane Ira, Mark and Bobby bring a virtuoso level of musicianship into an intimate trio setting and produce music that is warm, flowing and “conversational” - the epitome of the kind of dynamic interaction one would expect from a blending of such exceptionally talented musicians.

Jane Ira Bloom - Early Americans launches as an Outline [OTL 142] stereo CD on May 13, 2016. It is available for pre-order on Amazon as either an Mp3 download or a CD and you can locate more information about it and Jane’s other recordings by visiting her at www.janeirabloom.com.

You never know what American original soprano saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom is going to do next. After the success of her 2014 all-ballads release "Sixteen Sunsets" Bloom shifts into another gear showcasing the kinetic energy of her acclaimed trio playing with the musicians that she knows best on Early Americans (OTL142).

It's her first trio album, sixteenth as leader and sixth recording on the Outline label. Her sound is like no other on the straight horn and she lets it fly on every track. She's joined by long-time bandmates Mark Helias on bass & drummer Bobby Previte and with over fifty years of shared musical history together the album is sure to be a winner. Bloom's collaboration with Helias dates back to the mid 70's in New Haven CT and her unique chemistry with Previte has been ongoing since 2000.

She brought the group together in summer 2015 to Avatar Studio B in NYC to capture their breathtaking sound in both stereo and surround-sound with renowned audio engineer Jim Anderson. The album features twelve Bloom originals ranging from the rhythmic drive of "Song Patrol" and "Singing The Triangle" to the spare melancholy of "Mind Gray River." She closes the album with a signature solo rendition of the American songbook classic, Bernstein & Sondheim's "Somewhere." World-renowned portrait photographer Brigitte Lacombe contributes a stunning cover image of Bloom. "Playing in threes" has always held a special fascination for jazz artists - it offers the possibility that something can be slightly off balance and that's just what fires the imagination of players like Bloom, Helias, & Previte.

With Early Americans Jane Ira Bloom stands in the vanguard of her generation carving out new territory in the heart of the jazz tradition, Don't miss this trio of "fearless jazz explorers who share a commitment to beauty & adventure."

Soaring, poetic, quick silver, spontaneous and instantly identifiable are words used to describe the soprano sound of saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom. She's been steadfastly developing her singular voice on the straight horn for 35 years creating a body of music that marks her as an American original.

She's an eight-time winner of the Jazz Journalists Association Award for soprano sax, the Downbeat International Critics Poll, and the Charlie Parker Award for Jazz Innovation and has collaborated with such outstanding jazz artists as Charlie Haden, Ed Blackwell, Kenny Wheeler, Julian Priester, Mark Dresser, Jerry Granelli, Matt Wilson, Billy Hart and Fred Hersch. Her 2014 all-ballads release "Sixteen Sunsets" was nominated for a Grammy Award for surround-sound. In addition she's garnered numerous awards for her creativity including a Guggenheim Fellowship in music composition and the Mary Lou Williams Women In Jazz Award for lifetime service to jazz. JIB was the first musician commissioned by the NASA Art Program and was honored to have an asteroid named in her honor by the International Astronomical Union (asteroid 6083janeirabloom).

A strong visual thinker, Bloom's affinity for other art forms has both enriched her music and led to collaborations with other innovative artists such as actors Vanessa Redgrave & Joanne Woodward, painter Dan Namingha, cartoonist Jules Feiffer, director John Sayles and legendary dancer/ choreographer Carmen DeLavallade. Her long-standing interest in space exploration and neuroscience has lead to cutting edge recording projects inspired by outer and inner space. Performance venues include Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, Dizzy's Club Jazz @ Lincoln Center, St. John the Divine Cathedral and the Einstein Planetarium in Washington DC.

She has composed several works commissioned through the Chamber Music America/ Doris Duke New Jazz Works Program including Chasing Paint, a series of compositions inspired by painter Jackson Pollock, Mental Weather, a suite of neuroscience inspired pieces, and recently Wild Lines, a jazz reimagining of Emily Dickinson's poetry that premiered at UMASS/ Amherst in the poet's hometown.

The subject of numerous media profiles on network television, on radio, and in major national magazines, JIB has recorded and produced 16 album projects since 1977 for CBS, Arabesque, ENJA, Pure Audio and Artistshare Records, and founded her own record label (Outline Records). A professor at the New School for Jazz in New York City, she holds degrees from Yale University, the Yale School of Music and continues to find inspiration merging her music with the world of arts and ideas.”

I have re-posted my earlier review of Jane’s Sixteen Sunsets as the featured blog in the side bar and the following video will provide you with a sampling of the music on the forthcoming Early Americans disc. The tune is entitled Rhyme or Rhythm.