Speaking of Now represents a new chapter of the Pat Metheny Group, maintaining the
leader’s hold on his own sound while clearly testing the capabilities of his new lineup.
For the band’s eleventh studio record, Metheny has added a younger generation of players:
Richard Bona, Cuong Vu and Antonio Sanchez – all from vastly different ethnic and musical
cultures. The music within is fresh but Metheny treads carefully here while he and collaborators
Lyle Mays and Steve Rodby cope with change. Much of this music defines how Pat Metheny sees
his own future. (And Speaking of Now 's gorgeous liner art serves in an attempt to discourage
MP3 file swapping. )
The record contains material to which we have become accustomed from PMG. “Proof” provides
multi-dimensional explorations that feature keyboard player Lyle Mays in typically wondrous
fashion. Metheny and Mays’ continued virtuosity is extended in “Another Life,” “The Gathering Sky”
and “You.”
The new band members introduce new energy. We straighten up with the
allure of trumpeter Cuong Vu’s three distinct solo forays. Drummer Antonio Sanchez declares a
more inclusive, rhythmically frenetic framework through much of this music. Richard Bona has
caused a tremendous stir in the New York jazz scene and it is easy to see why. His primary
instrument is bass, but here his vocals shine in exquisite beauty (especially on “Another Life”).
Metheny chose well.
According to the story, Cuong Vu’s membership hinged on a phone message. Metheny heard
Vu’s independent work on an internet radio broadcast and found that he also resided in New York
City. Imagine Vu’s predictable response to arriving home to a voice mail message suggesting that
he
meet Pat Metheny: “yeah right.” Metheny had to call again later before Vu believed it; he thought the
first message was a practical joke. Cuong Vu’s trumpet work is no joke.
The newness of PMG’s young blood does cause the group to noticeably vacillate between new
explorations and old sounds. If that mix doesn't work, immersion will likely fuse those distinctions in
future recordings, which bear great potential.
~ Gregory J. Robb