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Refractions is a beautiful album, one in which almost everything composer/arranger Kim
Richmond touches turns to gold. From one who was largely unimpressed by the Concert Jazz
Orchestra's previous endeavors, that's saying a lot. But I'm only too happy to change course and
sprinkle praise where it is due. If every album by a "concert orchestra" were as
picturesque and
persuasive as this one, I'd not hesite to give all of 'em an emphatic thumbs up. That's not usually
the case, however. Too often, it seems, the composer/arranger is more eager to flaunt his/her
mastery of the idiom than to write music that is charming and listener-friendly. Richmond has met
that challenge head-on and come away a clear winner.
But does the music swing? you may ask. In its own way, yes – but not, however, like Basie,
Herman,
Buddy Rich or other bands for whom swinging was the paramount goal. There are a number of
agreeably rhythmic passages and lissome solos by a wide variety of players, but all of
that is peripheral to the cause as Richmond keeps the ensemble and his visionary charts squarely
in the foreground.
As I said earlier, almost everything here turns to gold. The "almost" is required
because of
Richmond's lone extravagance, an over-the-top and at times less-than-palatable arrangement of the
venerable cowboy anthem "Tumbling Tumbleweeds." It does have its moments (lovely
intro, for
example) but tends to lose its wheels in midstream as Richmond, in his words,
"decomposes" the
orchestral theme (in other words, lets the brass and reeds run basically free) before returning to
solid ground, pretty much squandering respectable solos by himself, Berger, Jenkins and McMullen
and making Bill Roper's "narration" superfluous (not to mention largely
incomprehensible).
Elsewhere Richmond shows far more restraint, opening with the radiantly lovely
"Continued
Obscurity" and pressing on with what he refers to in the liner notes as "the centerpiece of
the album,"
the ethereal "Precious Promises," whose vibrant orchestral sonorities, fashioned by
double reeds,
multi-flutes and French horns, complement an exquisite prefatory statement by Bob Carr's bassoon
and a forceful solo by trombonist Fowler. If that's the centerpiece, one hardly knows how to
characterize Michel Legrand's hauntingly beautiful "You Must Believe in Spring," yet
another
breathtaking chart on which guest Bob Florence's unaccompanied piano introduces the melody and
Driskill and King append compelling remarks. The multifaceted "Variations," which
follows, was
written as a tribute to the late Bill Russo whose forward-looking compositions for the Stan Kenton
Orchestra and afterward followed a similar path.
The CJO closes the show with Mike Crotty's luminous arrangement of "America the
Beautiful," to
which Richmond has added an introduction and ending and on which he states the melody on
soprano sax while Yoakum weighs in with a gritty tenor solo. It's a great way to cap an essentially
marvelous album, one that has earned Kim Richmond's stylish Concert Jazz Orchestra at least one
ardent new champion.
Contact: OriginArts, 8649 Island Drive South, Seattle, WA 98118. Phone 206-781-2589.
www.origin-records.com
~ Jack Bowers
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Track Listing: Continued Obscurity; Precious Promises; Fantasy on You Must Believe in Spring; Variations; Franz;
Stella by Starlight; 3 Refractions; Tumbling Tumbleweeds; America the Beautiful (74:35).
Personnel: Kim Richmond, conductor, composer, arranger, alto, soprano sax; Jeff Driskill, alto, soprano sax,
flute, piccolo; Phil Feather, alto sax, oboe, flute; Glen Berger, John Yoakum, tenor sax, flute, clarinet;
Bob Carr, baritone sax, bass clarinet, bassoon; Mike McGuffey, Ron King, Steve Huffsteter, Clay
Jenkins, trumpet, flugelhorn; John Dickson, Paul Loredo, Jean Marinelli, French horn; Bruce Fowler,
Joey Sellers, Bill Tole, George McMullen, trombone; Morris Repass, bass trombone; Bill Roper,
tuba, voice; Tom Hynes, guitar; Rich Eames, piano; Trey Henry, Ken Wild, bass; Ralph Razze,
drums; Brad Dutz, hand percussion; David Johnson, mallet percussion (vibes, timps, orchestra bells,
chimes). Guest piano soloist -- Bob Florence ("You Must Believe in Spring").
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