This is G o o g l e's cache of http://www.allaboutjazz.com/reviews/r0903_049.htm.
G o o g l e's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web.
The page may have changed since that time. Click here for the current page without highlighting.
To link to or bookmark this page, use the following url: http://www.google.com/search?q=cache%3AlGtaBZVkpnAJ%3Awww.allaboutjazz.com/reviews/r0903_049.htm+&hl=en&ie=UTF-8


Google is not affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its content.

John Ettinger - August Rain
SEARCH
..
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER
..
Bookmark Us! - Contact Us - Comments - Help Wanted - Advertise - Media Awards - Submit Your Link - Tell A Friend - For Contributors  

MONTHLY GREETING
Pack Light


GETTING STARTED
Welcome to AAJ!
New to Jazz?
Building a Jazz Library
History of Jazz
Jazz Humor





Show All Titles
About AAJ Showcase



Smoky Dawn
Lynette Washington


Up For It
Keith Jarrett


Live!
Lynette Washington & Dennis Bell


Paesanos on the New B3
Tony Monaco


A Little Moonlight
Dianne Reeves


Azalea
LM Pagano


Three Guitars
Coryell, Assad & Abercrombie



Jon Mayer


.
August Rain
John Ettinger | Independent
Let's be honest. The best thing about what critics do is that we get the chance to listen to new music more or less constantly. So when something random falls out of the mailbox, we might just make a discovery. And have a chance to share it with the world, of course.

And so with that selfish mindset a given, John Ettinger just scored a whole heap of points this evening. August Rain comes from San Francisco and the artist put together a pretty miserable press sheet, along with a "maybe later..." web page, so there wasn't much to do but guess. And to be honest, it's brilliant. These West Coasters have a thing about music hovering between funk, the jam, free jazz, and good solid swing, simultaneously doing it all (and them all) right.

The secret in this case is John Ettinger, violinist and looper and effects man, sharing the stage with organ, bass, and drums. He has a way of popping in and out at opportune times to build a melody out of a groove, establish a specific mood, or carry on a burst of lyricism. The loops swirl all the time.

"Lead A Normal Life" grows out of a simple drone to acquire echoing background whispers, a child-like bass melody, Fender Rhodes chords – and then finally Ettinger pops in personally to take swinging pizzicato lines away from the organist and turn them into a rallying point for a few '70s dream sequences. And then, more or less without warning, everyone falls off a cliff into a smouldering dirge, emerging into one more of those childhood discovery moments and some straight up group polyrhythms.

That's one track, and you can guess how the rest work. Fortunately they do work, which is the frightening (and brilliant) thing about this music. You single out anyone from the band and he is more than competent. Drummer Scott Amendola in particular digs deep enough into each groove, whether organized or loose, to almost singlehandedly determine its rhythmic course. Rhodes man Art Hirahara and bassist Todd Sickafoose both hold their own in any case.

You don't often bump into this sort of thing, which makes it all the better when it's unexpected. (There's a whole lot of bad unexpected music in the world, trust me.) So score twenty for John Ettinger and his team. August Rain is a dream state with enough of both fantasy and reality to leave you wondering whether it's actually happening.

(This feels like an electric Cryptogramophone moment with violinist Jeff Gauthier swapped out, for those who appreciate that particular brand of off-kilter jam.)

Visit www.ettingermusic.com (maybe later) or email john@ettingermusic.com. Real world contact (415)265-3368.

~ Nils Jacobson

Track Listing: Shunyata; August Rain; Dogleg; Lead A Normal Life; El Cadejo; Obrigado; April Was On A Sunday.

Personnel: John Ettinger: violin, violin loops/processing; Art Hirahara: Fender Rhodes electric piano; Todd Sickafoose: acoustic bass; Scott Amendola: drums, drum loops/processing.



Search For Another CD Review...


Search by Artist Name, Record Label or Review Author

Contact Us   -   Help Wanted   -   Suggestion Box   -   Advertise   -   Submit Your Link   -   For Contributors
All material copyright © 1996-2003 All About Jazz and contributing writers. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy