Liner notes

Here’s some liner notes I wrote a quarter century ago. I had two knees then, a lot more hair, a lot less me. That pool hall–actually a warehouse turned pool hall–I remember well, a great place. I kept the guitar player from getting his ass kicked one night by bikers after he smashed his axe in a Hendrix like rage and hurled it across the room. It soared high overhead and nailed a big overhead light which exploded in spark and flame. Cool. Two big dudes grabbed him and were about to lay an Altamont on him–he deserved it–but I jumped in and claimed I was his manager and if they laid a hand on him I’d sue. They backed off, but a couple beers and a cooling off later, the band discovered their van busted into and the guitars–and only the guitars–had been smashed to atoms. Everyone figured it was a fair trade.

I think I had to do that manager bit a couple times over the years, keeping people out of trouble. One time I was an A&R man for Sony, I think, and I went up and offered the guitar player of another band a contract. The security guard has just tasered him–they were making a complete mess of the stage, smoke and creamed corn all over the place, and the guard flipped out and tasered the dude when he said you taser me and I’ll kick your skinny ass. The guard tasered and the guitar player writhed on the stage while the band kept playing. That band never stopped. The guard could have shot him and the band would have kept on playing. When it looked like the guard–a little Barney Fife of a guy–was gonna taser the guitar player again I stepped in with the contract offer. The suit and tie helped. Guard looks at me and says you wanna sign THESE guys? But he did put the taser away.

I’ve yet to see a taser used on a jazz stage. Or creamed corn, for that matter. Maybe I’m just hanging out at the wrong clubs.

Anyway, here they are, the liner notes I wrote about the band in that first paragraph. I’ll leave the second band, with the smoke and the creamed corn and the taser, to your imagination for now. That giant pool hall, incidentally, burned to the ground a few years later with one of the bikers inside. A case of arson-murder apparently. I remember they called him Machine Gun.. Apparently he came back from Nam a little damaged. There’s probably one in every biker gang. As for the metal club (was it called the Metal House?) I doubt it’s around anymore either. I remember it was owned by one of the Village People. Don’t know which one. Maybe the sailor.

Wisconsin Death Trip

(Liner notes from the various artists compilation album Gimme The Keys, the band is Lexington (aka Lexington Devils), the tune “Wisconsin Death Trip”, 1987)

I can remember the first time I heard “Wisconsin Death Trip”.  The band was playing in a biker\bar in an industrial stretch of Anaheim—you know, all parking lots and dumpsters and broken glass.  The club was an immense pool hall, really, row after row of billiards tables surrounded by bikers and their women, punks trying to look like junkies and junkies like punks, old hippies with beads and bellies, barmaids with them perfect asses.  Typical rock’n’roll environment.  Lexington was playing to an indifferent crowd, the crowd being those who stuck around the stage long enough for them to do a song.  They had a bunch of loyal, even fanatical fans who squealed and yelled to everything they did, especially the tight little Replacements-like numbers:  verse, chorus, verse, lead, chorus, Thank you, “Singapore Sling”, “Mama Wants Her Baby Back”—good songs, don’t get me wrong, damn good songs.  But the band looked so weird.  I dunno.  Not so much the way they were dressed—Frank in that James Dean / Monterey Pop Jimi outfit and that trashed little Les Paul in his giant Mexican hands; Derek like Keith Moon might have looked like if he had played for Gene Vincent, with those giant sticks he launch off his ride, actually hitting and hurting people;  Eric, beautiful, serene, stoned, even if he weren’t, fingers snaking across the frets bloozin’, jazzin’, rockin’ it—and Lex, that crazed rasping voice belied by the almost pretty face El Greco’d in the shitty bar lighting, body twisting, rolling, writhing, staggering—drunk off his ass, pounding his head on the mike stand, laughing laughing laughing, the pretty pink scarf draped besodden round his neck billowing in the breeze blown by Derek’s giant floor fan.  Frank is in the middle of some bloozy rock shuffle (“Lord of the Highway”) and it is an audience favorite, they’re digging it at the pool tables, shaking their cues to the beat, when he starts strangling his guitar, I mean choking it, trying to kill it, you can hear its feedback screams over everything, and he doesn’t stop and it just screams and screams and Eric just digs it and nods to Derek who brings it down, way down, all closed high hat and rim shot, and Lex struggles to his feet, kicks one of the toms laying around across the stage, and just stares at Frank, watching, studying, waiting, catching a breath.  Frank’s playing with the guitar now, moving it around in front of the amp, making funny feedback noises.  Eric stops, Derek taps out a quiet blooz on his shut high hat, its jagged shattered edges sticking out in all directions.  It goes on like that for a while, seconds, minutes, this electric squeal and garbage can tapping.  The audience doesn’t get it, a few applaud, some hoot, a big drunk biker yells something unintelligible.  The band stands there.  The breeze from the fan blows Lex’s scarf.  It quivers a little, barely alive.  Frank pulls his fingers off the guitar’s neck.  The feedback expires.  The stick taps arhythmically, slowly, even more slowly.  The bar is hushed.  Billiard balls clack.  That biker mumbles.  A lady with beautiful legs is walking round by the bar, looking antsy.  People hit furtively from the joint being passed around.  What a weird way to end a set.

I remember the next few seconds in slow motion.  Frank bolts upright and turns on us, some freaked out “Foxy Lady” triplet riff distorted beyond belief explodes out of his amp and then the whole band follows, punctuated by Derek’s tom tom blasts and it’s a freakin’ Motorhead/Hendrix/Zeppelin hurricane, Lex is screaming and it goes on like that for a minute or two, the audience rockin” out or just staring frozen wondering what the fuck has just happened when it stops just–like–that except for Derek’s out of time descending roll skin-crackingly loud and it hangs there, just for a minute, then BOOMP BOOMP BOOMP BAM and what’s this?  Weird guitar, soaring, building on an incredible bass line that just goes on higher with an almost intolerable suspense, drums one two three four five six one two three four five six and Lex on the floor writhing and hurting, first almost in a whisper “Saw your face in the paper…” oblivious to us, to everything but the band, “You know you looked so fine” the vocal melody alien, fragile as a child’s noodling on the piano, or a fragment of a birdsong, recorded and slowed down a hundred times.  Frank is chording now, big guitar chunks smashed together, following the bass line, then leading it, then staggering away crazily into feedback then back into he melody again, Derek’s drums grow louder, Lex is walking across the stage, bumping into Frank, away from Eric, tripping on chords, kicking aside pieces of drums and empty cans, yelling into the microphone, yelling at someone in the song, , then screaming this curdling blues howl into the cacophony of drums, guitar and bass blasting this twisted “Dazed and Confused” riff till the remains lay scattered about the stage and the band asks for a beer for Lex.  “He looks thirsty.  Come on.”  The crowd stood silent for a moment, and then screamed.

Wisconsin Death Trip

(Liner notes from the various artists compilation album Gimme The Keys, the band is Lexington (aka Lexington Devils), the tune “Wisconsin Death Trip”, 1987)

I can remember the first time I heard “Wisconsin Death Trip”.  The band was playing in a biker\bar in an industrial stretch of Anaheim—you know, all parking lots and dumpsters and broken glass.  The club was an immense pool hall, really, row after row of billiards tables surrounded by bikers and their women, punks trying to look like junkies and junkies like punks, old hippies with beads and bellies, barmaids with them perfect asses.  Typical rock’n'roll environment.  Lexington was playing to an indifferent crowd, the crowd being those who stuck around the stage long enough for them to do a song.  They had a bunch of loyal, even fanatical fans who squealed and yelled to everything they did, especially the tight little Replacements-like numbers:  verse, chorus, verse, lead, chorus, Thank you, “Singapore Sling”, “Mama Wants Her Baby Back”—good songs, don’t get me wrong, damn good songs.  But the band looked so weird.  I dunno.  Not so much the way they were dressed—Frank in that James Dean / Monterey Pop Jimi outfit and that trashed little Les Paul in his giant Mexican hands; Derek like Keith Moon might have looked like if he had played for Gene Vincent, Continue reading

Benn Clatworthy: Three Wise Monkees

(liner notes, 2009)

Three Wise Monkeys is the latest of Benn Clatworthy’s dozen or so albums. The title track kicks the thing off with almost a Wayne Shorter feel. Clatworthy’s first solo is brilliant, bits and pieces of the melody, tentative and almost staccato at first, then taking off into something beautiful and fast that just ends and you almost want to go back and hear it again knowing there was so much going on there you didn’t pick up on….but Joe Bagg comes in on organ absolutely cooking, something groovy and fast that also ends so suddenly with the head you want to go back and rehear it.  But that damn head is too insistent, too propulsive and before you know it the tune is over and damn it was a good one. A great tune that you’ll be hearing on your jazz station. It’s a nice surprise to hear Clatworthy doing the relaxed pop number “By the Tme I Get to Phoenix”. It certainly fits the format, about as close to a sixties organ album this set comes, as Bagg certainly knows how to carry it along nicely. Sit back and dig it.

Neither Clatworthy or Bagg can resist the temptation to toss a few curves into the old  “You Stepped Out of a Dream”, the tenor is upper register, the organ tosses in bits of dissonance and Littleton is dancing all over his kit…..check out the funky break Clatworthy had tacked on. Bagg’s solo here is spare and so nice, just a run across the keys, a few repeated figures, swinging and thoroughly groovy.Littleton’s takes a brief turn too, mostly solid pops on the snare with just enough tom work to punch the whole thing up again, and then Bagg and Clatworthy come in for the head and a final funky break and it’s over.  Not the usual take.

Clatworthy’s “Blues For Gaza” is spooky, a fragment of “Shenandoah” almost,  spare and desert blown, repeated a couple times, each more evocative and sadder than the one before that fades out before three minutes is up.  It’ll hang with you.  There follows twenty seconds of bass pedal and drums and rhythm organ in 6/8 that’s just begging to be sampled but in comes Clatworthy with the melody to “What’s Goin’ On” and it all settles into place. He explores the thing, Bagg does the same, but neither ever wander that far from Marvin’s idea and it’s a great take, like something you’d find on some mid-seventies jazz LP that was never reissued, sweet and soulful and a tad stoned. “Just Another Addiction” is another original, Littleton all over again the background filling in spaces, Bagg comping perfectly, then doing a Monk-like solo, and Clatworthy pushing it everywhere else, Clatworthy finding things to do with a melody a lot of cats wouldn’t try. Check out the head when they return…Bagg’s rhythm is almost hypnotic. “I Cover the Waterfront” comes in just beautiful, echoes of Lester Young, just perfect.  The whole trio is so on here, you just wish you can hear this live right now, glass in hand, sunk into a barstool, transfixed. In the middle Clatworthy and Bagg skitter and bounced around the  familiar melody while Littleton’s brushes is so hushed it leaves a pulse really that carried the tune along effortlessly. And dig Bagg’s solo….he owns the thing. The fade is gorgeous.

“One For Pete” finishes the set the way it began, strong and straight ahead. You can really hear the Trane now, Clatworthy has the man in his bones. Bagg walks the baseline, and drops in touches of Larry Young, maybe, tight percussive comping.Littletonagain fills in the spaces just right with the snare, tom fills and especially the cymbals. That’s a great Bagg solo, he’s working it, and Clatworthy comes in again, always reaching up for the high notes, a couple snappy drum breaks, a couple classic Clatworthy swirls and a final brief Bagg solo, everyone drops back into the head off the snare and that’s a take, baby. Yet another solid Benn Clatworthy album. Can’t wait for the next one.

Chris Colangelo

Elaine’s Song is bassist Chris Colangelo’s first record as a leader in ten years. Seven of the nine tracks are his. If you frequent the jazz spots inLos Angeles, you’ve seen him, heard his strong, supple playing, always right down the middle. You’ll find him with a lot of challenging saxophonists and pianists; Colangelo has no problem at all keeping their melodic (and not so melodic) flights firmly grounded, no matter how far over the edge they go. Nothing seems to scare him. He’s fromPhiladelphia.

It kicks off up-tempo with “The Ubiquitous One”, bass and piano and drums and sax sort of dancing off each other, laying the melody out in pieces for us. The tempo shifts and Bob Sheppard lays out soulful tenor sax lines, then flutters around the melody. Pianist John Beasley comes in carefully, thoughtfully, and departs again after a few flourishes. Sheppard takes another turn. A good opening. “Like Kenny” is for Kenny Garrett, one of Colangelo’s favorite players. Alto player Zane Musa joins in on this one with rushes of notes, crazy runs up and down and up and down, until everyone comes together for the head arrangement. Then Musa on alto and Benn Clatworthy on tenor and Beasley at the  piano take a hard driving chorus each, then go round again for another, finally handing it off to drummer Steve Hass who adds hints of Elvin rolling across the toms. It ends in tight ensemble finish.

 On the title track Colangelo lays down a strong bassline for Beasley and Sheppard to dance around. Beasley’s solo here is so nice, almost a melody in each hand, descending in big chords till a hard-toned Sheppard comes in. Colangelo follows him up with that lively, expressive solo (and check out Beasley quietly in the background). Sheppard brings us back to the melody over Beasley’s big chomping comps. It fades sweetly. Colangelo’s wife Elaine must love this thing.

 Benn Clatworthy’s flute floats over “Green and Blue”, and Beasley’s got a soft touch here, tentative at first, right into Colangelo’s solo that you swear drops every note exactly where that note should be. It fades softly as the flute comes in again. Hass keeps the thing lively on cymbals and snare. You drift with this tune, not really knowing where it’ll drop you off. Has announces the end quietly in finger rolls on the snare. “Gryffindor’s Revenge” is a fast and straight ahead trio number. Things were cooking in the studio that day, Beasley’s on fire, and Colangelo and Hass are in that loose lockstep of a rhythm team completely in the pocket.  This one has airplay all over it.  Benn Clatworthy is back on tenor for “Watts Important”, dedicated to Jeff “Tain”Watts.  Hass drives the thing from behind the kit, but listen to Colangelo walking it right down the middle, perfect, old school. Beasley lets loose here, fingers flying, Clatworthy edges toward the outside when it’s his turn, and the four of them together absolutely cook when saxophone stops blowing and Beasley trills a descending, falling thing into nothing but bass notes and high hat—a really cool effect. Just like that they’re all back ending in Hass’s rolling solo. Freeway driving music, this one, late at night, wide open.

 Colangelo opens Steve Swallow’s gorgeous “Falling Grace” sparely, laying out the melody in the upper register of his ax, and in comes Beasley, strong, melodic. The drums slide in to make a beautiful trio number that seems to bring out the best in all three of them. That bass solo you swear is talking to you. Up next is “Straight Street”—not exactly a Coltrane standard and so rarely done by anyone it’s a kick to hear it here. Bob Sheppard takes it on the soprano and goes places with the melody, a lot of places, and Beasley follows with a nice jaunt of his own. For the final cut, “From Dark to Light”, Sheppard is back on tenor, leading the melody that reveals itself slowly over a hypnotic rhythm. The vibe is spiritual and the playing post-bop and the feel goes way back to the deep, deep roots of this stuff. You’ll find yourself swaying to it and the melody lingers in your head. It’s a perfect ending to this album.

DMQ liner notes

DMQ at the 322

Drummer Jeff Donavan and bassist Larry Muradian came together years ago, forming a quintet called the Nairobi Trio. They began a still-running Sunday residency at Busters inSouth Pasadena. Curtis Brengle settled in on piano. There was a great album (“Straight Ahead”…look for it). They changed their name to the Donavan-Muradian Quintet (DMQ). They gigged steadily aroundPasadena, and released the fine “Pacifico”, with saxophonist Chuck Manning and trumpeter Kye Palmer settling in. Time came to document DMQ’s sound asPasadenajazz fans had been hearing it, live. Café 322, a new nitespot in nearby Sierra Madre, proved ideal. It’s a great jazz room, with a good crowd and good pasta. You’re listening to the date.

Wayne Shorter’s “Black Nile” kicks it off straight ahead. Palmer’s trumpet sails pretty. Builds up. Swirls, circles, drops back in a cloud of flurried notes. Saxophonist Manning starts off gingerly, thinking, building his solo’s structure a few notes a time, laying groundwork, picking up tempo, notes coming faster, working out ideas, faster, more clustered, even faster, almost screaming but not quite, and drops back in. Pianist Brengle takes a turn, then all get back into the head, underlain by Donavan’s punchy fills, Muradian’s steady lines. Good, good stuff.

Benny Golson’s “Whisper Not” unfurls like cigarette smoke in an old black and white; Manning leading off with just a hint of fifties funk, hitting all the right notes in Golson’s melancholia. Brengle shines here, bloozing it with hints of Hines, maybe; big full chords and fleet-fingered trills. Palmer comes in with that gorgeous, burnished tone. When the band comes together again on the bridge they saunter, Donavan’s drumming square behind them.

Palmer and Manning trade off on the opening of “It’s You or No One”, then weave together, and Brengle solos briefly, then Palmer flies, a beautiful Brownie-toned flight into high notes. They all come in tight for the finish. They excel at this. All those Sundays at Busters pay off in the ensemble passages.

Shorter’s “Edda” features relaxed and spacious work by Brengle, and Palmer follows in the same mood, Donavan torqueing up pressure behind him. Manning gets Shorter’s feel–his tone grows harder, the solo edges outward, some fast crazy figures and hints of things new, then recedes back into the theme and drops into silence. There’s a sparse hornless moment before all join in for the finish.

 DMQ at the 322 vol. 2

”Softly as in a Morning Sunrise” opens with Palmer and Manning fluttering around one another. After a wonderful Palmer solo; Manning takes his turn aggressively. The rhythm section cooks, Brengle drops in touches of Tyner behind the changes, Donavan trading breaks with the others…. They give the room a breather with a beautiful “Stella by Starlight”; Muradian takes a rare solo on this one. Then right back into the straight ahead on the final cut, “Locomotion”. Muradian lets no one lag, Donavan’s on all cylinders, Brengle, Manning and especially Kye Palmer take fine leads. The audience is digging it in the fade. 

Locomotion is what it’s all about. Keep moving, keep swinging. Put this album on and just try and sit still. When DMQ get in the hard bop groove it’s like driving on a wide open Pasadena Freeway. This album sounds so good you pass right by your exit, by all the exits. You want to keep on driving. Straight ahead.

DMQ liner notes again

DMQ: Straight Ahead Vol. 2

DMQ cooks. Always have. From their debut Straight Ahead through a zillion gigs and onto their fourth and latest here, Straight Ahead, Volume 2.  Listen how drummer Jeff Donavan kicks this thing off Blakey style with a rattling volley of snare shots. It’s his tune, “Jeff’s Blues”, but he gets out of the way quickly, dropping down to a mean rhythmic pulse, letting tenor Chick Manning jump in, who starts easy, logically, then pushes his ideas outward, letting the melody skitter and bounce back and forth, even going off on a wild tangent before returning. Now it’s trumpeter Kye Palmer’s turn.  He too starts tentatively, explores the tune a bit, looking over the lay of the land, finally leaping up, way way up, coming down in one of Donovan’s tight solos. Back to the head they all come for some fine ensemble playing. Stirring stuff.

“Mario’s Mode” is all Miles mute and muffled rhythm and dedicated to the man behind the bar at the Café 322….Curtis Brengle’s piano comes to the fore here, with a long impressionist take, and bassist Muradian takes a rare solo too. The sheen on the ensemble passages, the groove locked down, Manning adding little hints of counterpoint…that is the mark of a outfit that has a steady gig somewhere, that’s played together for a long, long time. Nice to hear.

Manning does good on “Moment’s Notice”, even keeping his madder impulses in check. And man does Palmer sound nice…listen to his high runs there. Brengle takes it straight ahead on the keys. Manning’s final licks are so light and airy it Getz to you.

Then comes “Blue Minor”, a perfect vehicle for this band, as solidly grounded as they are in the sounds of fifties and sixties NYC jazz. But Palmer owns the thing with that beautiful solo.

“Skylark” is a surprise. It’s gorgeous, with a melody for Kye Palmer to run with, playing his horn like a star… There was a time when the ladies swooned for this stuff. That was so long ago. Now we can just dig it and wonder about them days. But 

“J.D.’s Groove” brings us forward a few decades, and Manning goes fractal bouncing off the groove, Palmer glides shining overhead and Brengle again lays down another liquid mercury run. Terrific vehicle for the soloists. Crowds love this stuff live. They wrap it up with a very nice “Night Has a Thousand Eyes’. Dig Donavan’s toms accenting beautifully under the tune. The dude likes to bop the things. Shang-a-lang.

This stuff screams airplay.  It really does. The Donavan Muradian Quntet rocks. Straight ahead.

 

Elliot Caine: Hippie Chicks on Acid

Liner notes for the Elliott Caine Sextet’s Hippie Chicks on Acid

Take 1

There was a time when every jazz musician had a backstory. Get some players good and relaxed on the right elements and the stories would flow. Boozy nights with big bands, long crazy tours, the circuit. Knives flashing, guns drawn, lines, spoons, balloons and reefer. The women. Being yelled at by Buddy Rich or fired from Disneylandor jam sessions with the King of Siam (really), gigs with Bird or Trane or Elvis. Elliott Caine has loads of those stories. About his start inIndianapolis (Freddie Hubbard’s hometown too, and J.J. Johnson, Wes Montgomery and Phil Ranelin hail from it as well), his first professional gigs were with soul bands back in the sixties. Barely out of school, with a big red Afro and the nickname Soul he did the chitlin circuit with Calvin Turner & The Soundmasters (their 45 is prized by rare groovers) and others. There were jam sessions, and heading downtown to watch Freddie Hubbard and others jam in the clubs. This was the Blue Note era, and an endless stream of extraordinary jazz was coming out ofNew York. Miles was totally happening, a jazz superstar. Trane was gone, a saint, a martyr. Caine latched onto Lee Morgan. “Cornbread” was on all the jukeboxes. He learned his solos inside out, knew every note. Jazz players do that, find a creative spirit they totally dig and learn and borrow. Caine’s playing is built on Lee Morgan in many ways. He can talk Lee Morgan all night long. Miles too, and all the modern trumpet players, from bop on up.

At some point Caine moved out west. There’s New Yorkand there’s L.A.The weather is nicer out here. Gigs can be tight, though. You play what you can. He spent years in the ranks of Latin bands like Los Tijuana Jets, Los Inolvidables, Super Banda Azucar. And many others. Several nights a week, six sets a night, grinding through cumbias, rancheras, and salsa, endless repetitive ensemble passages and lots of screaming high notes. Rough on the lip, but good for discipline. Inevitably the chops pick up. He scored with a great R&B gig with Jump With Joey for a few years, playing bigger gigs. A lot of Latin one offs and casuals. At some point he figured the hell with it, it’s time to start my own band. The first album, Orientation, released in 1998, had a mix of Latin jazz (that got some nice airplay) and straight ahead. His second, Le SuperKool (from did the same, but leaned a little more towards the jazz side. And the third, Blues From Mars, was a breakthough artistically, some bop, some beautiful ensemble balladry, and some flat out weird stuff (like the title cut) that boded well for his creative future. He plays cuts off all three of those releases here.  

Elliot Caine is one of those lucky guys who has managed to hold together the same core of players for years now. Of course not on every gig, since jazz musicians tend to go with the best money on any night (something that confuses a lot of rock fans who are used to seeing bands with fixed line ups)…but for jazz he’s got a pretty solid core players. He’s been playing with tenor saxophonist Carl Randall for ages. Randall has quite a backstory himself. A native Angeleno, where players like Dexter Gordon and Harold Land and Teddy Edwards set the tone, he had his mind blown by John Coltrane like everyone did. He’s spent decades with the Gerald Wilson Orchestra, played with scores of local cats, with jazz stars like Blue Mitchell and Donald Byrd, and did a very long stint with Freddie Hubbard. Drummer Kenny Elliott is a Chicago native and steeped in that town’s blues, soul and jazz scenes. If they played Chicago he probably played with them. Rare groovers will dig knowing he was a house drummer for both Brunswick and then, out in LA, for Fantasy Records. He did a long stint with Lou Rawl’s band. He’s a steady drummer, in the pocket always, but given the word he can launch into explosive solos. Bassist Bill Markus is a relative kid with his mere 25 years as a pro. An in demand player who’s worked with everybody, his list of credits is endless, including a lot of legendary names in southern California jazz (Horace Tapscott, Billy Higgins, Harold Land and Kenny Kirkland to name a few.) He’s a solid player, always where he should be, someone a band can build their improvisations around.

Then there’s the two guest players, both of whom are among the most exciting newer presences on the L.A.jazz scene today. Vibraphonist Nick Mancini came west from upstate New York just a few years ago and has been a whirl of creative energy since. He’s brought a whole new take on vibes playing to Los Angeles, full of melodic invention and percussion, you’ll hear it in every track he plays on here. His simplest figures resonate and hold your attention, his extended solos go wild with notes that are perfectly placed, and he can let a single mallet tap lightly on a bar just once and it’ll be exquisite. Mahesh Balasooriya has come up through the ranks of this town’s army of young pianists and proven himself to be a stellar rate improviser and accompanist. He has a feel for the blues and even gospel that rings so true you’d think he lived that life (instead of being raised in theL.A. suburbs). And listen to his solos here, each is a little marvel building on itself. His feel for melody, and what can be done with it, can at times be, well, mind blowing. Paired with Mancini it’s a sensation, with each offering the other so much to work with. Caine has himself a rich palette to work with. 

“Hippie Chicks on Acid” is a newer tune, recorded here for the first time. Carl Randall takes it first, in tentative steps, a little this way, a little that, hugging staying close to the lower register of his horn. Eventually patterns come to him, a way though this strange tune, and he explores a bit, seeing where it goes. Caine follows. He too starts tentatively, exploring, staying close to the low end of his trumpet too.  Suddenly with a burst of notes he sees the way and takes off. He’s tripping now, high note flashes, rippling bursts of notes, melodic trails in the dark. He fades on a downspin and backs out again. The rest of the band follows. Piano and vibes each take a turn in tentative exploration followed by bursts of seeing the light. The tune winds up a swirl of sax against trumpet melodies against vibe melodies going round and round. Just like, well, hippie chicks on acid. [It fizzles out here...]

Take 2

First time I ever saw Elliott Caine was forever ago, I can’t remember where, but I liked the sound of his horn, the sound of his music. He plays all over town, with pretty much the same core band—Carl Randall on tenor, Bill Markus on bass, Kenny Elliott on drums—that he has here, with various pianists sitting in. Mahesh Balasooriya’s the man you hear on this set. Even in a town awash in excellent pianists, Mahesh stands out. He’s got a real feel for the blues, you can hear that popping up all over this album. A real treat is Nick Mancini on the vibes, an unusual addition to Caine’s sound. Mancini’s sensitivity playing under the other players, and his own brilliant solo work, give this album a whole new dimension. Caine kicks off the thing with his edgy “Hippie Chicks on Acid”. Dig that odd groove, the off kilter feel. Carl Randall takes it first, in tentative steps, a little this way, a little that, hugging staying close to the lower register of his horn. Eventually patterns come to him, a way through this strange tune. Caine follows. He too starts tentatively, exploring, staying close to the low end of his trumpet too. Suddenly with a burst of notes he sees the way and takes off. He’s tripping now, high note flashes, rippling bursts of notes, melodic trails in the dark. He fades on a downspin and backs out again. Piano and vibes each take a turn in tentative exploration followed by bursts of seeing the light. The tune winds up a swirl of sax against trumpet melodies against vibe melodies going round and round. “Paying the Price” has an odd groove too, but could have come off some classic Blue Note session. Randall feels around this one, looking. Caine follows, then Balasooriya cuts to the straight ahead. Kenny Elliott explodes on the drums, pounding, rolling. “Elaina’s Dance” moves, jazz people could dance to this one if jazz people still danced. Caine cuts loose like Lee Morgan in the middle. I’ve heard “A Different Beauty” a zillion times, it’s from his first album Orientation way back when. His flugelhorn still sounds gorgeous here.  So does the piano. “Defiance” is one of those great live cuts, it can hang around in your head for days. Randall takes off on this one, and Caine lets loose some perfect hard bop trumpet, drums all over the place behind him. “No Way Out” begins with another of his strange stoney grooves, but it’s a splendid straight ahead number, really, with that Blue Note feel again. On the last track, “Little Rio”, Mancini lays out the melody, with Balasooriya is there too, then in come the horns for a minute and then it’s back to a beautiful vibe solo. The tune drifts like that, gently, from player to player, each interpreting the melody the way he hears it. Everyone comes in for the fade, and Markus gets in the last licks. “I hope you enjoyed the trip” Elliott says.  I did.

Benn Clatworthy: The Decider

The Decider is the latest in Benn Clatworthy’s remarkable string of releases. He’s playing tenor and some flute, Chris Colangelo’s on bass and Ryan Doyle is drumming. It opens with a Latin take on John Lewis’s “Afternoon inParis”, but as he loosens up on the solos we get hints of what’s to come, that maybe Clatworthy doesn’t quite hear a melody the way the rest of us do, and he certainly doesn’t feel constrained to follow any rules on what to do with one.  A shadowy “Pannonica” begins tentatively, melancholy, then as Clatworthy leaps from the familiar head into the thin air, the blues lighten and his playing, as if soaring, glides and sails downward, catching the head again on its downward trek. Colangelo strips it all down to the bone. Back in comes Benn, lighter but still melancholy, hung back by whatever’s eating him, an Englishman lost in American blues and clinging to Monk. Colangelo “Patterns” is laid out spare and geometric, a beautiful little bummer of a piece (and dig Doyle’s lighter than air solo). There’s a gorgeous downer take on “I Get a Kick Out of You”, and “Bossa Mia” (for his stepdaughter) swirls in a stiff breeze. On numbers like Monk’s “Off Minor” or Weil’s “This is New” or his own “The Decider” he just goes nuts, running circles around, over, under the melodies. But it’s on “Sister Sarah” (for his sister) we get the classic Clatworthy, stating a theme he repeats and lets hang…it seems to echo over the landscape until he begins to explore all the spaces around it, all the nooks and crannies and corners round which whole new spaces open. When he lays down his horn Colangelo comes in, his muscular bass line finding yet more areas to explore….then there’s a pause and the opening theme repeats, spare and lonely. You catch that in a local club, and you don’t forget it. Benn Clatworthy plays some of the most exciting, intense, beautiful, uncompromising, and personal jazz saxophone there is. Which is what this is all supposed to be about, isn’t it?

Cow Bop: Too Hip For the Room

Cow Bop Take 1

Too Hick For the Room my big city ass. Sounds just right by me.  This town, hell this world, needs a lot more Bob Wills. Western Swing is air you can breathe, smoky and boozy and dudes out in the parking lot fighting. Inside the honky tonk everyone’s grooving and swinging, hell there’d be dancing with the ladies if all them uppity jazz swells and slick hipsters would or could take a step or two. Man, can these cats play. Cow Bop ain’t no country radio band (not yet anyway), ain’t no jazz band either, but mama they sure swing, and yup that’s some pure Charlie Parker you’re hearing there in that mind blowing guitar solo. Bruce Forman that cat is, a barbed wiry, smirking smartass in a Stetson. The fiddler trading licks with him is Phil Salazar, and the hottie singing sweetly in the middle is Pinto Pam. Hands off, fellas, she sizzles. A dude I knew heard this album just once, jumped into his car and headed straight up the Grapevine where the mule deer and antelope play.Bakersfield is up that away, he said, next best thing toAmarillo. They got pickup trucks there, and cows and oil fields and chicken fried steak, and they got theSilverPalace and Merle and honky tonking Saturday nights. They got Cow Bop?  No, he said, but they should. Best western swing in the land.

Cow Bop Take 2

Never expected to see something like CowBop in a jazz club.  Saw ‘em take the stage in cowboy hats, pronghorns glued to the bass drum, singer in a long cowgirl dress. The regulars in the jazz joint stared over their cocktails, not getting any of this.  The music was lightning fast, kinda swingy but awfully down home too. And man could those cats play. Solos zipped back and forth from fiddle to guitar and back again. Damn if that smartass guitar player wasn’t quoting Charlie Bird Parker. And ol’ crooked horn Dizzy too. And a lot of Bob Wills. The pretty girl sang about Texas, and dancing, and drinking, and men doing ladies wrong. By set’s end I was hooked, line and sinker. Y’all got any records? They said they had a couple. We got a new one we’re working on too. Yeah? Any good? Goddamn right it’s good. It’s gonna make us stars. And they packed up their gear and tossed it in the back of an old red Chevy pick up and took off in a cloud of dust. Well, that new one is this one here, Too Hick For the Room. Hot damn. What they call great driving music. That long stretch of highway betweenTulsa andBakersfield went by in a flash. Cow Bop.    

CowBop Take 3

Never expected to see something like CowBop in a honky tonk. Not even one inTolucaLake. Place was filled with big city cowboys, who were just regular cowboys for the most part, and somehow done good in the city but needed a cold beer to cry in. Place was full of hipsters too. Funny watching them slide round one another like oil and water. We sat through a mess of Merle wannabes. Some not bad but the place was itching for a little more something. Past midnight this strange bunch takes the stage in old Stetsons and sparkly Nudie shirts and what looked like pronghorns glued to the bass drum. Some band…I wouldn’t buy a used car from that smart assed guitar player, the fiddle player had an attitude, the bassist and drummer looked a little off. I liked the singer, though, a pretty thing in a long dress, like she was right off the bus fromAmarillo. Everyone on the dance floor looked mighty skeptical. Then the band started playing. Hot damn. The realTexasswing. Bob Wills and be bop. Licks flying fast. The banter even faster. That singer sizzling hot, man, don’t touch. They whipped through their set and the crowd loved every country fried second of it, dancing and happy. And I can’t remember when I saw another band do that. This is the real shit. CowBop.

 CowBop Take 4

 A guy I know, a real good ol’ boy but with smarts, he’d been looking for something old, something new.  Something country that don’t piss him off all shiny and Nashville. Something that swings like a good Panhandle electrifried fiddle band. Something with smarts and guts and chops. With licks like them jazz boys had in the old days, fast crazy licks. Something funny. And all that plus a pretty singer. He’s been going bar to bar, club to club hoping to find something and finding nothing. But he’s stubborn like a mule, and keeps looking. He calls me one night from some run down honky tonk in the Valley. Says he found it.  Said they got a guitar, a fiddle, some drums with horns on ‘em and a bass fiddle. The prettiest little singer you ever saw. They play the western swing, they play a little bebop, they play some honest to god country. And they play their asses off. Git on down here. So I went and damn if he wasn’t telling the truth.  The band was soooo good. Then soon as they finished my buddy was out the door. Found him out in his roadster, yelling something about Bakersfieldor Tulsaor Luckenback. I couldn’t make it out. All I could hear was Too Hick For the Room blaring from his tinny speakers. I just shrugged. He shrugged back, then tossed me a Lone Star and was gone. CowBop.     

 CowBop Take 5

 Buddy Rich hated country music. Buddy Rich was an asshole. Kicking trumpet players off his bus in the middle of the desert for no apparent reason. Willie Nelson doesn’t hate jazz. And on Willie’s bus the whole band gets high all day, smoking the best reefer this side ofTulsa. Bob Wills was born inTulsa. Or should have been. He had a bus too. Lord knows what happened on Bob Wills’ bus. Charlie Parker made the Count Basie bus stop a minute so he could pick up a fresh killed chicken that had run smack into the grill of a Studebaker. That’s how you got named back then, just by picking up a bird. Now the thing about Cowbop is they play that Bob Wills thang and buckshot the instrumental passages with Charlie Parker licks. The guitar player tosses one at the fiddle player who fastballs it back. The bassist and drummer cook behind them.  There’s a pronghorn skull screwed into the bass drum. The singer’s a beauty, sizzling in that long gingham dress. No way you can’t love this band. And if Buddy Rich were on CowBop’s bus he’d know when to keep his mouth shut. Of course they don’t have a bus, so the point is moot. But they got this album, though. And man, what a cooker. Take a listen. CowBop.