George Braith - Musart (1967) {2013 Real Gone Music Edition}
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© 2013 Real Gone Music / Dusty Groove / Concord | RGM-0167
Jazz / Post Bop / Avant-Garde Jazz / Soul Jazz / Saxophone
Saxophonist and
composer George Braith released five recordings during the 1960s before
going silent for a couple of decades. He is well known as an innovator,
able to play two saxophones at once -- he was inspired after seeing
Roland Kirk in a Philly club -- though he used that technique only when a
tune warranted it. Braith's first four albums -- Laughing Soul, Soul
Stream, Two Souls in One, Extension (all cut for Blue Note except
Laughing Soul) -- wove hard bop and soul-jazz that was ubiquitous for
both labels at the time. His final offering for Prestige, 1967's Musart,
is a whole other thing.
For the first
time, Braith was allowed to follow his muse with a plethora of musicians
in various combinations, and employ a wide range of sounds and
textures, which were captured spectacularly by Rudy Van Gelder.
Musically, Musart seamlessly moves from Latin, exotica, and bossa to
gently dissonant outside jazz to hard-grooving soul-jazz. The opening
"Del's Theme" commences with an exotic, haunting, wordless female
backing chorus, a Latin rhythmic pulse set by hand drums and shakers,
and Ben Dixon's drum kit; Braith and pianist Jane Getz wind around them
modally before his alto digs into a meaty but fluid melody. On "Laura,"
Braith uses a strich (a straight alto horn sans bell) atop a chorus of
percussion and bass, playing a bluesy, straight-ahead melody through
African rhythms before Getz solos in bright colors and tones. The intro
to "Our Blessings," played to a tango rhythm by electric guitars, organ,
electric bass, and Getz's deft right-hand arpeggios, highlights
Braith's soulful yet angular strich. And speaking of soul, the brief
"Splashes of Love" melds Motown with Bacharach-esque pop in Braith's
breezy yet adventurous soprano saxophone improvisation. The crown jewel
in this set, however, is the title track. Over nine minutes long, it
begins with layers of percussion, a single bass note, and its first
overtone. An electric guitar enters, playing the outlines of a chord
progression without completing it, and Braith doubles on soprano and
alto to create the theme. A flamenco interlude follows on guitar and is
dramatized by Getz's piano before the worlds of Latin and African
musics, modal and free jazz, all entwine without ever losing focus;
moving farther afield and ending in wide-open space. It's a stunner.
It's followed by a warm, fluid reading of the standard ballad
"Embraceable You," played on fat-sounding, C-melody horn, and it's
closed by the funky Latin soul of "Evelyn Anita," with Braith on strich
and soprano leading congas, bongos, tambourines, and bass. Musart is his
masterpiece; it is one of the most diverse yet refined albums to come
out of the '60s, and has few peers even today. Its wholly original,
creative imagination and expert execution are equaled only by its
perfect balance between refinement and solid grooves. |
tracklist:
01 - Del's Tune
02 - Laura
03 - Our Blessings
04 - Splashes Of Love
05 - Musart
06 - Embraceable You
07 - Evelyn Anita
|
Ruskaval, it could have been a great ugrade for me, but alas ! part 1 is gone) (or did I miss smething somewhere ?)
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