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Bill McHenry, Reid Anderson and Ben Monder are members of a collective of musicians currently
based in Manhattan who have recorded for the
Catalonian label
Fresh Sounds, representing one
of jazz’s futures. They’re forward thinking, rejecting tradition in their composing and playing,
“Downtown” without being so far downtown as the Knit or Tonic, free without being classifiable as
avant-garde. Now 31, McHenry brings along a special guest drummer, the 70-plus Paul Motian, for
his
third release, taking the occasion to make the musical statement that bumps his game up the critical
notch to place him firmly in the vanguard of his generation.
Motian’s ensembles have made worthwhile investigation of the music’s great composers. Fitting
then that he’s attached himself here to this batch of new compositions by a fresh, new writer
brimming with ideas. Intriguing parallels in lineage reveal themselves when you consider that he’s
worked with Lovano, Frisell and Haden--and now, McHenry, Monder and Anderson.
McHenry’s melodies, indeed hooks, run deep and are defined by Clintonesque sensibilities--
“Keep it Simple, Songsmith.” Compare the heads to “Social Unconsciousness” and “Stars,”
for example. Both consist of ten second loops of simple ascending and descending phrases
incorporating catchy note groupings of a triplet with a single note. “Social” emphasizes the triplet
while “Stars” emphasizes an almost twinkling single note. McHenry can also turn on the
afterburners as a soloist, as evidenced when Anderson’s bass line signals his coming out party after
duo section between tenor and drums on “Alfombra Magica.”
“Idea #1” draws in the listener with McHenry’s intro, using phraseology that sounds like a series of
snippets clipped from endings of solo statements, as if he just left out their beginnings in his head.
Monder shadows the entire melody--sparser passages with chord paintings and faster ones
doubled with single notes--adding haunting harmonization to each phrase. “Two Chords” is full of
powerful melodic device, beginning with two single notes corresponding to its two chord harmony,
swaying left to right with the more sumptuous melody line seemingly contoured up and down.
“The Hit” comes out in low tones, McHenry shaded by Monder. Anderson’s ostinato, then walking bass
sets up Monder’s solo section, a reverb-drenched linear statement using repeating phrases, adding
slight changes to them as a device. Ben’s “guitar solo as mini-compositon technique” finds this set of
repeating phrases setting up an ascending section, more dramatic due to the context of what
preceded it, as is his successive interval-jumping exploration.
McHenry’s message is most readily found in “Music Has Meaning.” He actually had the presence of
mind to assign this the fifth track number, as the beginning of the tune is a series of five long tones
that
goes on for more than two minutes. These tones are supported by Monder’s hydrogen-pumped
chords, Anderson’s rubbery bass line and Motian’s skittering brushes, woven to form a plush
harmonic quilt. The five pitches shift in a manner that tugs at the ears and then the spirit. What
seems like the tune’s turnaround, full of lush life, yields to a single repeated note, falling out of the
mix to a pronounced bass ostinato counterpoint figure, Monder adding slapbacked, pressed swaths
of chords. The outro is actually the second hook, the same notes of the previous faux
turnaround. This isn’t just a series of unrelated parts that fit together--it’s one fascinating extended
song form, stretched from its original compositional kernel in an out of the ordinary way.
McHenry’s name appears annually on Ben Ratliff’s “alternative picks" list. Indeed, it’s a thrilling
alternative to some of that boring old, regular jazz!
~ Phil DiPietro
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Track Listing: 1)Alfombra Magica, 2)Social Unconciousness, 3)Time, 4)Dimensions, 5)Music Has Meaning,
6)Stars (heavenly Bodies), 7)Idea #1, 8)Two Chords, 9)The Hit
Personnel: Ben Monder-guitar, Reid Anderson-bass, Paul Motian-drums, Bill McHenry-tenor
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