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The bottom end is a big presence on Bruno Råberg's Ascensio, fitting for a bassist-led
quartet... a solid, emphatic heartbeat for the rest of the band to contend with.
Bassist Bruno Råberg, the Swedish-born Berklee educator, incorporated a foundation of
Scandinavian folk tunes in his previous Orbis outing, Presence ; as he does here. Shifting
meters, unusual time signatures, a muscular rhythmic pulse behind the front line horns, combined
with a drummer (Marcello Pelitteri) who divides the spaces with the snap and pop of emphatic
punctuations. Add to this the ineffable "Scandinavian tinge," and Ascensio has a
sound that
seems familiar and foreign at the same time.
Råberg's bass voice is insistent, an ever-looming presence for the horns--Phil Grenadier on
trumpet and Alan Chase on soprano and alto sax--to weave their sinuous lines around. The
piano-less quartet is more often associated with the free jazz arena, but Ascensio is a
Råberg-composed effort. His tunes are a bit off-kilter (to the American ear) but highly accessible,
with
flowing melodies and a structure that allows lots of room for front line soloing. Both horn men are
stellar in their team and individual efforts therein. Chase has a relaxed approach, full of cool logic;
and Grenadier can at times sound slightly anguished, a scratchy Miles Davis '58 Milestones
tone, stretching his lines then turning around and biting them off.
The title track opens with a gravelly bowed bass, with the horns supplying a jerky rhythm before
the roll into some clean unison blowing leading into two truly entrancing, back-to-back horn solos.
The highlight in a highlight-filled outing.
Visit Orbis Music on the web at
www.orbismusic.com
~ Dan McClenaghan
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Track Listing: Maya, African Daybreak, Through the Window of Compassion, Stilts, Ascensio, Estaron, Triptych,
Easter Song, Caffe's Nero, Angle of Repose.
Personnel: Phil Grenadier, trumpet; Allan Chase, Alto and soprano saxes; Bruno Raberg, bass; Marcello
Pellitteri, drums.
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