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Pleiadian Call successfully showcases the amazing versatility and the intellectual depth of
multi-instrumentalist Chris Greco and his trio. He alternates masterfully between soprano, alto, and
tenor saxes, flute and clarinet with true aplomb on this recording of mind-stimulating, original
modern jazz. The first number, befittingly titled "The Open Door," is an interesting,
improvisationally strong piece that begins with a sedate introduction, but soon enough lets its hair
down, allowing an unbridled avalanche of improvisation to break through.
Greco takes up the tenor sax on the title number. It is a spookily conceived,
dark and brooding scenario where the tenor often seems to be pleading to
the stars as it were –with Kendall Kay on drums displaying his own virtuosity, conjuring up a
Frankensteinesque background. The third piece, "Yvette," has Greco blowing his
heart out on the
flute, warmly incorporating a sense of restlessness, a touch of nostalgic yearning and a whole
host of other personally inward feelings that defy language and the spoken word. His flute takes
up where words fail, doing proper justice to the complex needs of expression. Somehow the piece
is reminiscent of a moonlit night in some uninhabited island with the dark trees swaying to an
unheard music, playful clouds playing hide and seek with the moon the damsel up in the sky…
beautiful, to say the least.
"Rains And Prayers" finds the soloist back to his tenor sax, now in almost
a prayerful mood as if sitting alone in the woods and trying to sculpt a full-fledged church around
himself with brick by brick with each carefully produced sound byte. This is not a mean
achievement, and he gets away with his brash attempt, too! The trio indulges in some frenetic give
and take here with Chris Colangelo on bass filling the blank spaces--and there hardly are
any--while Kendall Kay lends new hues and nuances to the whole assemblage of seductive
sounds. Greco sneaks in with the tenor and signs off in a stylistic whirl of sound.
"Innocence," the
next piece, is not for the faint of heart--it is chock full of intellectual improvisation that borders on
the outermost in terms of rhythm, tempo, and lyrical quality. Greco almost talks
to his audience through the alto sax. "The Flight Of A Bird Leaves No Trace" is also an
intriguing
but engaging improvisational number on the flute with a slightly somber tone and depth.
The uptempo "Ask" finds Greco back on alto, weaving
complexities with the ease and fluidity of an accomplished storyteller. His articulate and inspired
performance leaves no doubt about his musicianship. Chris Colengelo
provides an interesting bass solo. "Messages" is played engagingly by Greco on tenor
sax,
and the closer, "Afterthought,"
sees him on the tenor sax again. This is perhaps the most melodic piece on the whole album.
There is some beautiful soul-searching melodic expression here, with tight accompaniment from
both his bandmates.
On the whole this is a brilliant album, with special appeal for those amongst us who have never
been comfortable with free jazz or avant garde. Pleiadian Call has that proselytizing
power and the conviction to get even the most cynical listener hooked to a seemingly difficult style, a
grey area in jazz. A wonderful job.
Website: www.ejn.it/greco
~ Max Babi
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Track Listing: 1.The Open Door 6:58 2. Pleiadian Call 12:27 3. Yvette 7:49 4. Rains and Prayers 8:49
5.Innocence 6:16 6. The Flight of A Bird Leaves No Trace 10:53 7.Ask 5:44 8. Messages 6:11
9.Afterthought 5:55
Personnel: Chris Greco : Soprano, Alto, and Tenor Saxophones, Flute, Clarinet.
Chris Colangelo : Contrabass.
Kendall Kay : Drums, percussion.
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